Directed by John Ford is a documentary film directed by Peter Bogdanovich. Originally released in 1971, it covers the life and career of film director John Ford. Simply Raw: Reversing Diabetes in 30 Days is a 2009 American independent documentary film which examines the effect of a raw food diet on diabetes. Ayurveda is a 1997 documentary film directed by Bhanumurthy Alur. Baker Boys: Inside the Surge, is a 2010 four-part documentary series following the soldiers of Baker Company, Task Force 1-15 Infantry, 3d Heavy Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, during their deployment in Operation Iraqi Freedom at Combat Outpost Carver during the troop surge of 2007. Dancing With Myself is a 2004 documentary film directed by Judith Keil and Antje Kruska. Project 10 - Real Stories From a Free South Africa: Being Pavarotti is a 2003 film directed by Odette Geldenhuys. Attack! Battle of New Britain was a documentary/propaganda film produced by the US military in 1944. It detailed, as its name implies, the New Britain campaign, which was part of the New Guinea and Solomon Islands Campaigns during World War II. The film follows a rather standard format: it is a chronological narrative of the campaign from the arrival of the soldiers in New Guinea to their capture of most of the island. Opening with travelers book pictures of the area, reminding the audience what the average soldier image of what the South Seas would be like, and it then details the natural hazards of fighting, or even being in the jungle, including the insects, diseases and heat. The marines and soldiers set up a little tent city, with the significant help of the local natives or "fuzzy wuzzies". After the base has been established and enough men are ready, General Douglas MacArthur arrives in person to discuss the upcoming campaign with the unit's CO. Love is Stronger Than Death is a documentary film directed by Kwon Hyuk-man. Zion Canyon: Treasure of the Gods is a 1996 film directed by Kieth Merrill. Monk With A Camera is a 2013 documentary biographical film directed by Tina Mascara and Guido Santi. BURN is a 2012 documentary film directed by Tom Putnam and Brenna Sanchez. My Afghanistan – Life In The Forbidden Zone is a 2012 documentary historical fiction war film written and directed by Nagieb Khaja. Wild Blue Yonder is a 2007 film directed by Celia Maysles. 50 Years Of Silence is a 1994 documentary film directed by James Bradley, Ned Lander, and Carol Ruff. On March 24th 2004, fifteen year old Hussam Abdu was apprehended at an Israeli border checkpoint with live explosives strapped around his waist. Instead of detonating the bomb, Hussam voluntarily gave himself up to the Israeli army and is now serving time in the Ha-Sharon prison for attempted murder. In the weeks that followed Hussam's arrest, news media from around the globe received conflicting reports. The Palestinian Authority claimed that Hussam had been set up by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), while the IDF maintained that Hussam was the latest example of children recruited for suicide missions by terrorist organizations.Winner: Audience Choice Award for Best Film, 2006 United Nations Documentary Film Festival. Offical Selections: 2006 Anchorage International Film Festival, 2006 Whistler Film Festival, 2006 United Nations Film Exposition (London, England). Am Ende der Milchstrasse is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Leopold Grün and Dirk Uhlig. Complexo - Universo Paralelo is a 2011 Portuguese documentary film about life in the most dangerous favela in Rio de Janeiro, Complexo do Alemão, directed by Mário Patrocínio. Mario Wirz is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Rosa von Praunheim. Challenging Impossibility is a 2011 documentary film which chronicles the weightlifting odyssey of the spiritual teacher Sri Chinmoy, who in 1985 at the age of 54 took up weightlifting and performing feats of strength using the power of meditation. His lifts were featured on newscasts worldwide, inspiring people to transcend their personal limitations and to abandon their concepts of the restrictions of physical age. Directed by Natabara Rollosson and Sanjay Rawal. The film was an Official Selection of the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival and premiered April 22, 2011. Hunting Down An Angel or Four Passions of the Soothsayer Poet is a 2002 documentary film written by Odelsha Agishev and directed by Andrei Osipov. Buried Country is a highly regarded documentary film, book and soundtrack. It tells the story of Australian country music in the Aboriginal community, focusing on important musicians to tell the story. The book Buried Country: The Story of Aboriginal Country Music is written by Clinton Walker and was originally published by Pluto Press in 2000, and will be re-published in a new updated edition by Verse Chorus Press in 2015. Film Australia has produced a study guide. The soundtrack Buried Country: Original Film Soundtrack is a double CD produced by Clinton Walker and showcasing music by the Aboriginal artists featured in the film and book. The documentary was directed by Andy Nehl and written by Andy Nehl and Clinton Walker and shot by Warwick Thornton. Antartic Man: 'This Is Not A Place For Humans' is a documentary film directed by David Parer. Find Your Way: A Busker's Documentary is a music documentary film directed by Brian Nunes. Bomb It is an international graffiti and street art documentary directed by award-winning director Jon Reiss and premiered at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival. Filmed on 5 continents and featuring cities such as Cape Town, London, Paris, Amsterdam and Sao Paulo, the documentary explores the interplay between worldwide graffiti movements, the global proliferation of "Quality of Life" laws, and the fight for control over public space. George Kelling, co-author of Broken Windows, a seminal Atlantic Monthly article that formed the intellectual basis for Rudy Giuliani's widely imitated gentrification campaign, was interviewed for this film. Graffiti artists across the globe joined forces with Jon to create the film which features original footage from many controversial graffiti writers beginning with the first graffiti writer Cornbread, to those who saw the take off of the art, TAKI 183 to more contemporary writers Shepard Fairey and Os Gemeos. Holy Land Hardball is a documentary film about starting a professional baseball league in Israel. It is the story of the founding of the Israel Baseball League. Your Top 20 Celebrity Big Brother Moments is a 2009 documentary film written by Jack Whitehall. The Imposter is a 2012 British-American documentary film about the 1997 case of the French confidence trickster Frédéric Bourdin, who impersonated Nicholas Barclay, a Texas boy who disappeared at the age of 13 in 1994. The film includes interviews with Bourdin and members of Barclay's family, as well as archive television news footage and reenacted dramatic sequences. Karl Lagerfeld Sketches His Life is a documentary film directed by Loïc Prigent. The New Rijksmuseum is 2008 documentary film directed by Oeke Hoogendijk. School of the Americas Assassins is a 1994 American short documentary film about human rights abuses by graduates of School of the Americas. Produced by Robert Richter, it was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Devil's Playground is a 2002 American documentary film directed by Lucy Walker about the experiences of several Amish youths who decide whether to remain in or leave their community and faith during the period known as rumspringa. The film follows a few Amish teenagers in LaGrange County, Indiana who enter the "English" world and experience partying, drinking, illegal drugs, and pre-marital sex. Some teens in the film profess that they will eventually become baptized as adults in the Amish community. If they are baptized, then leave the church, they will be shunned by family and friends; one girl recounts her experience of this. 6 Days to Air: The Making of South Park is a 2011 television documentary film directed by Arthur Bradford that details the production process of the American adult animated sitcom South Park. The film follows the show's hectic, rushed six-day production schedule, in which a 22-minute episode is completed just hours before its original air date. The film premiered on October 9, 2011 on Comedy Central, and received positive reviews from critics. The documentary was nominated for an Emmy Award in the Outstanding Nonfiction Special category. Mathematically Alive: A Story of Fandom is an award-winning 2007 documentary film about fans of the New York Mets. Directed, produced and edited by Katherine Foronjy and Joseph Coburn, the film follows a wide variety of fans over the course of the 2005 and 2006 baseball seasons, culminating in an exciting 7 game series against the St. Louis Cardinals in the NLCS. Mathematically Alive shows the emotional attachment that fans develop for their team and how it can be the source of great joy or tremendous sadness. In addition to the hundreds of fans interviewed for the film, Coburn and Foronjy also caught up with former Mets players Bud Harrelson, Ron Swoboda, Ed Charles, Tim Teuffel and legendary broadcaster Ralph Kiner. The filmmakers also interviewed Dr. Daniel Wann, a sports psychology professor at Murray State University, who explains many of the psychological characteristics sports fans share. Of particular focus in the film are a group of female Mets fans whose favorite player is former catcher Mike Piazza. A Pupa is a documentary film directed by Junko Miura. Intense Wave is a 2009 documentary sport film directed by Anthony Gordon. Standing On The Edge Of A Thorn is a 2012 documentary film directed by Robert Lemelson. Jeff is an independent documentary film about serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer during the summer of his arrest. The film was directed by Chris James Thompson and stars Andrew Swant as Dahmer in fictionalized re-enactment segments which are interwoven with interviews of the medical examiner assigned to the case, the lead detective, and Dahmer's next door neighbor. The film premiered at the 2012 SXSW film festival where it received positive reviews and obtained sales representation from Josh Braun at Submarine Entertainment. The film also played at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival in Toronto, the Independent Film Festival of Boston, and the Maryland Film Festival in Baltimore. The documentary was picked up by IFC Films who re-titled it The Jeffrey Dahmer Files. Jonathan Sehring, President of Sundance Selects/IFC Films, said: “Chris James Thompson has made one of the creepiest documentaries of the year that lingers in the mind long after the film has ended. He’s approached the well-known subject of Jeffrey Dahmer in a new and inventive way that managed to completely unnerve us." De ayer y de mañana is a 1972 short documentary film directed by Angel Flores Marini. 25572 Büttel is a 2012 short experimental documentary film written and directed by Rainer Komers. Secrets of the Reef is a documentary film directed by Murray Lerner, Lloyd Ritter and Robert M. Young. Filmed in the early 1950s at Marine Studios/Marineland of Florida, the production was headed by Al Butterfield of New Jersey. Three cinematographers were hired to do the camera work: Robert Young, Murray Lerner and Lloyd Ritter. The film premiered in New York City in 1957. Subsequently, the original footage was divided into 13 one-half hour productions called "Wonders of the Sea" and was distributed for years to schools and media throughout the United States. All the original footage was shot in 16mm using the circular and rectangular oceanariums and special aquariums to house individual or multiple specimens. God's Children is a 2002 documentary film directed by Hiroshi Shinomiya. Und wenn sie nicht gestorben sind... Die Kinder von Golzow - Das Ende der unendlichen Geschichte is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Barbara Junge and Winfried Junge. “Ring Of Power” puzzles together the missing pieces of our human story. Find out how an illuminati network of international bankers and European royalty have turned the world’s nations and citizens into their debt slaves. Huxley on Huxley is a 2009 documentary film written by Mary Ann Braubach and Andrew Morton and directed by Mary Ann Braubach. The Story of Film: An Odyssey is a documentary film about the history of film, presented on television in 15 one-hour chapters with a total length of over 900 minutes. It was directed and narrated by Mark Cousins, a film critic from Northern Ireland, based on his 2004 book The Story of Film. The series was broadcast in September 2011 on More4, the digital television service of UK broadcaster Channel 4. The Story of Film was also featured in its entirety at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival, and it was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City in February 2012. It was broadcast in the United States on Turner Classic Movies beginning in September 2013. The Telegraph headlined the series' initial broadcast in September 2011 as the "cinematic event of the year", describing it as "visually ensnaring and intellectually lithe, it’s at once a love letter to cinema, an unmissable masterclass, and a radical rewriting of movie history." An Irish Times writer called the program a "landmark". The program won a Peabody Award in 2013 "for its inclusive, uniquely annotated survey of world cinema history." In February 2012, A. O. Chasing Santa Claus is a 2012 film directed by Hiroki Iwabuchi. Lost in La Mancha is a 2002 documentary film about Terry Gilliam's unfinished film The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, a film adaptation of the novel Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes. It was shot in 2000 during Gilliam's first attempt to make the film with the purpose of being its making-of, but Gilliam's failure in making the movie led it to be retitled Lost in la Mancha and to be released independently. Written and directed by Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe, Lost in La Mancha presents Gilliam's quest to make Don Quixote as a parallel to Quixote's quest to become a hero. It co-stars Johnny Depp, Jean Rochefort and Vanessa Paradis, all supposed to star in The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, and is narrated by Jeff Bridges. Centrefold is a 2012 short documentary animation biographical film directed by Ellie Land. My Name Is Not Ali is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Viola Shafik. A Wild Idea is a 2011 short documentary historical film directed by Veronica Moscoso. Tim Cahill: The Unseen Journey is a documentary which follows former Everton F.C. and Socceroo player Tim Cahill in the build up to the 2010 FIFA World Cup. The documentary premiered on Channel Seven at 6:30pm on 3 April 2010 in Australia. Autism: The Musical is an Independent documentary film by Tricia Regan. In April 2007, the film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City. The film recounts six months of the lives of five children who are on the autism spectrum in Los Angeles, California as they write and rehearse for an original stage production. Mummies: Secrets of the Pharaohs is a 2007 documentary family film directed by Keith Melton and written by Arabella Cecil. Guardianes de la fé is a 1991 short documentary film written by Enrique Escalona, Alfredo Robert, & Guillermo Sheridan and directed by Enrique Escalona. Tender Fictions is a 1996 autobiographical documentary film directed by American experimental filmmaker Barbara Hammer. It is the second of a trilogy of documentary films that includes Nitrate Kisses and History Lessons. Together, the three films are sometimes known as the "History trilogy". Tender Fictions details Hammer's life and her attempts to "construct" a self. The film was nominated for a prize at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival. The Papal Chase is a 2004 Canadian micro-budget feature-length guerrilla-style mockumentary directed by Kenny Hotz of Kenny vs. Spenny fame, and written by Hotz and Paul Johnson. The film features cameo appearances by Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and Ron Wood, as well as footage of Toronto mayoral candidate Kevin Clarke. It is also the only comedy feature that has an appearance by Pope John Paul II. Among its awards, the film won the Phillip Borsos Award for 'Best Canadian Feature Film' at the 2004 Whistler Film Festival, and won 'Best Documentary' at the 2005 Canadian Filmmakers' Festival. House of Yes: Live from House of Blues is a 2000 video album by Yes. Kurt Cobain: About a Son is a documentary about Kurt Cobain that debuted at the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival. It is directed by AJ Schnack. It was produced by Sidetrack Films. It features audio of interviews between Cobain and journalist Michael Azerrad done for the book Come as You Are: The Story of Nirvana, set over ambient cinematography of the places which Kurt Cobain called his home, mainly Aberdeen, Olympia, and Seattle. The film played at numerous film festivals, and was nominated for the 2007 Independent Spirit's Truer than Fiction Award. The DVD, which was released by Shout! Factory in February 2008, includes bonus interviews and commentary by Michael Azerrad and A.J. Schnack. Shout! Factory also put out the documentary's first Blu-ray edition on October 6, 2009. Last Flight to Berlin is a 2005 documentary tv movie written by Robert Linnell and Jill Brett, and directed by James Hyslop. Orchestra of Exiles is a 2012 documentary film directed by Josh Aronson. Wide-Eyed is a 1987 documentary film written and directed by Marille Hahne and Cathy Joritz. Licnoe delo Anny Achmatovoj is a 1989 film directed by Semeon Aranovitch. I Go Where I Want is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Olga Špátová. Martin Sheen hosts this fascinating documentary series produced by the award-winning National Geographic team. Plunge deep into the ocean and discover an eerie world of shipwrecks, steeped in secrets that hold the key to some of the most tragic maritime disasters in history. Includes "Secrets of the Titanic." Small Town Gay Bar is a 2006 documentary directed by Malcolm Ingram that focuses on two gay bars in the rural deep Southeast United States, one in Shannon, Mississippi, and one in Meridian, Mississippi. The documentary was produced by View Askew Productions with Kevin Smith serving as executive producer. Ich Dich auch is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Katja Dringenberg and Christiane Voss. I Learn America is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jean-Michel Dissard and Gitte Peng Bucarest, la memoria perdida is a 2008 historical, documentary and biographical film written and directed by Albert Solé. ""The Practice of the Wild" is a film profile of the poet and Pulitzer Prize winner Gary Snyder. Snyder has been a creative force in all the major cultural changes that have created the modern world. Along with Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, he was a central figure of the Beat generation. He helped bring Zen Buddhism into the America scene, was an active participant in the anti-war movement and an inspiration for the quest for human potential. All along he was a founding intellect, essayist and leader of the new environmental awareness that supports legislation and preservation without losing sight of direct wild experience -- local people, animals, plants, watersheds and food sources. This film, borrowing its name from one of Snyder's most eloquent non-fiction books, revolves around a life-long conversation between Snyder and his fellow poet and novelist Jim Harrison. These two old friends and venerated men of American letters converse while taking a wilderness trek along the central California coast in an area that has been untouched for centuries. They debate the pros and cons of everything from Google to Zen koans. The discussions are punctuated by archival materials and commentaries from Snyder friends, observers, and intimates who take us through the 'Beat' years, the years of Zen study in Japan up to the present -- where Snyder continues to be a powerful spokesperson for ecological sanity and bio-regionalism." Quoting the description from the film's official Facebook page. Oldschool Renegades is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Maurice Steenbergen. Antarctica: A Year On Ice is the first film by New Zealand filmmaker Anthony B. Powell. This documentary is set in Antarctica, specifically in the Ross Island region that is home to two research bases: United States' McMurdo Station and New Zealand's Scott Base. It chronicles a year of time spent living and working at these remote stations; the summer season when the sun shines 24 hours a day and the long dark winter where the sun goes down for four long months and darkness envelopes the environment. The film focuses on the everyday workers that keep the stations and the equipment running so the scientists can complete their work. Interviewees include a helicopter pilot, fireman, firehouse dispatcher, cook, mechanic, storekeeper, storeman, finance person, administrative person, and operations manager. The images Powell captured have also been screened on Discovery, National Geographic and were used in BBC's Frozen Planet. The film also touches upon topics such as 'T3 Syndrome,' a term that describes what happens to people during the winter, when the T3 hormone in the brain is reassigned to the muscles of the body in an effort to protect it against the extreme cold. Corso: The Last Beat is a 2009 documentary film, with on-screen narration by Ethan Hawke and appearances by Patti Smith, Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs and Gregory Corso. It has received high acclaim from audiences in Europe and the Middle East and is heading towards a US distribution and US festivals in early 2012. Bill Is a Photographer is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Clark Nikolai. In 2001, Japanese American painter Jimmy Mirikitani, over 80 years old, is living in the streets of lower Manhattan. Filmmaker Hattendorf takes an interest, and begins to engage with him to create a documentary of his life. After the World Trade Center destruction on September 11, 2001, the debris- and dust-choked streets are deserted. When Hattendorf looks for Mirikitani, he is still in his usual spot near Washington Square Park. She invites him to stay a while at her apartment nearby to recover from the devastation and unhealthy air in the streets. Gradually we learn who he is, and of his past...with amazing and unexpected results. (The cats of the title are featured in Mirikitani's artwork.) Self-portrait: Dancing At 47 Km is a 2013 documentary film directed by Zhang Mengqi. Occupy LA is a 2012 documentary drama western film written and directed by Joseph Quinn. Chekov In My Life is a 1984 documentary film written by and directed by Vadim Glowna. The Life of Brian is a documentary film directed by Henri Behar and Karim Akadiri Soumaïla. Done the Impossible is a 2006 documentary fan film of the TV series Firefly. Its main focus is on the fans themselves, how they came to love the show and ultimately, played a part in getting the film Serenity made. Natan is a 2013 biographical and historical documentary film written by David Cairns and directed by Paul Duane and David Cairns. Eye Of The Leopard, is a 2006 nature documentary film by National Geographic Channel that shows the journey, life, and growth of a young leopard cub named Legadema. The film is narrated by Jeremy Irons, who also voiced Scar in Disney's 1994 animated film The Lion King. Irons would later narrate The Last Lions, a 2011 National Geographic documentary film. The filming location of this documentary was in Okavango Delta, Botswana. Ryukyu through the eyes of Chinese envoy Xu Bao Guang is a 2013 film directed by Yoshiaki Hongo. Anarchism in America is a 1983 documentary, directed by Steven Fischler and Joel Sucher, and produced by Pacific Street Films. It has been re-released by AK Press to DVD. The film begins by explaining the filmmakers' interest in anarchism based on their involvement in the group Transcendental Students while in film school at NYU. The film includes interviews with influential anarchists Murray Bookchin, Paul Avrich, Jello Biafra, Mollie Steimer and Karl Hess, and with poet Kenneth Rexroth. It also discusses the Spanish Civil War, the Russian Revolution, the influence of Emma Goldman and the case of executed anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti. The film labels anarchism as the only ideology that is staunchly anti-authoritarian, and discusses how anarchist ideals align with the revolutionary, independent spirit of America from rural communities to urban zones. Mama Coca is a 2012 documentary film directed by Suzan Şekerci. Back to Land is a 2010 short documentary and drama film directed by Tijana Petrovic. We Maintain It Is Possible is a 1973 short documentary film directed by Chris Marker. War Feels Like War is a 2004 British documentary film. It was broadcast in the United States as part of the P.O.V. series. For three months, Spanish filmmaker Esteban Uyarra followed five reporters and photographers from Denmark, Norway, Poland, and the United States in Iraq. These journalists circumvented military media control to get access to a different perspective on the Iraq War. As the Coalition of the willing swept into Iraq, some journalists in Kuwait decided to travel in their wake, risking their lives to discover the impact of war on civilians. The journalists include best-selling author P.J. O'Rourke, who was working for ABC Radio, as well as reporters and photographers for news operations ranging from Poland's Radio Zet to Stephanie Sinclair, a photographer for the Chicago Tribune. "HIGH ON HOPE tells the story of the last British youth culture movement to threaten the establishment - Acid House. By using live action, interview and animation, as well as archive, the film gives life and energy to the characters' stories as they recall their jaw-dropping experiences. The magical journey from small gatherings to warehouses filled with 10,000 young people every week is only part of the story. As the friends dance in cavernous northern mills left derelict after the Thatcher years, we see a generation lost amidst greed and recession, fighting for their own happiness, strongly connecting with where we are today. A 10-year labour of love for director director Piers Sanderson, this film has been made in the same way as the parties themselves were put together – with passion, enthusiasm and innovation, using collaborations and a collective approach to tell as story that hopes inspire us to come together more positively in the 21st Century, as this might just be what we all need most. " Quoting the description from the 2010 IndieFest site. The Fighting Cholitas are a group of female lucha libre wrestlers who perform in El Alto, Bolivia. The Cholitas are part of a group called the Titans of the Ring, which includes both male and female wrestlers. The Titans perform each Sunday for an audience of hundreds at El Alto's Multifunctional Center; tickets to the exhibitions cost $1. The idea of including female wrestlers as a maneuver for publicity came from Juan Mamami, a wrestler and president of the Titans. They routinely attract over a thousand spectators to their bouts in El Alto and several hundred spectators when they travel with the Titans to smaller towns. Like the general population of El Alto, which consists almost entirely of Aymara and Quechua residents, the Cholitas are indigenous. They wear braided hair, bowler hats and multilayered skirts in the ring. According to a 2005 New York Times article, the Titans earn about $13 for each bout. Most of the wrestlers have other jobs besides their wrestling careers. The World According to Bush is a 2004 French documentary, co-written and directed by William Karel based on the book by Eric Laurent, about the presidency of George W. Bush and the history of the Bush family, including his grandfather Prescott Bush, who was on the board of German-owned companies during the Nazi period. The film examines and interviews Bush supporters, including the Christian right, neo-conservatives, and businesspeople, as well as Bush critics and shows televised statements made by Bush and his supporters, including Jerry Falwell. It was nominated for the Best Documentary Award at the European Film Awards and was to have been an Official Selection for the 2004 Cannes Film Festival but was rejected following the selection of Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11. The film features interviews with: Michael Ledeen David Frum Jim Hoagland, Washington Post Stanley Hoffmann, Harvard University Jerry Falwell James Robison Ed McAteer Arnaud de Borchgrave, Washington Post Robert David Steele, Central Intelligence Agency James Woolsey Richard Perle Robert Baer, Central Intelligence Agency Anthony Blinken David Corn, The Nation Ask a Silly Question is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by John Kastner. By Way of the Mountains is a 2012 documentary, fantasy and short film written and directed by Frédéric Aspisi and Lise Bellynck. 759: Boy Scouts of Harlem is a family documentary directed by Jake Boritt and Justin Szlasa about Boy Scout Troop 759, which meets in Harlem. The films premiered as a free community event on March 14, 2009 at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem on Malcolm X Boulevard. Two weeks later it screened on board the Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum in Manhattan, then on October 8, 2009 Senator Jeff Sessions and Senator Ben Nelson sponsored a screening on Capitol Hill. The film aired on public television stations around the country starting in August 2010, as presented by Maryland Public Television. Charleen is an observational documentary film directed and shot by Ross McElwee, about his friend and former poetry teacher, Charleen Swansea. McElwee follows Charleen over a month in her life in North Carolina, where she still teaches poetry, engages in interracial flirtation, and prepares to sell personal letters from Ezra Pound, one in which Pound bemoans Charleen's impending marriage. McElwee shot the film as part of his graduate thesis at MIT, where he studied under Richard Leacock and Edward Pincus. The film is 59 minutes long. Shipwrecked Among Cannibals is an American silent film travel documentary film featuring episodes from Siam, Java and New Guinea plus an apparently fictitious encounter with cannibals on a small island in the South Pacific. Filming among the tribes in Dutch New Guinea was done by William Alder and Edward Laemmle, who was the nephew of Carl Laemmle, founder of Universal Studios. Into the Mind is a 2013 documentary sports film directed by Dave Mossop and Eric Crosland. Spanish for Adults is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Tomas Tamosaitis. What Is Love is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Ruth Mader. The Wildest Show in the South: The Angola Prison Rodeo is a 1999 American short documentary film directed by Simeon Soffer. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Pulque Song is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Everardo González. East One is a 2013 documentary film directed by Hazuan Hashim and Phil Maxwell. We Are One: The Obama Inaugural Celebration at the Lincoln Memorial was a public celebration of the then forthcoming inauguration of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States at the Lincoln Memorial and the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on January 18, 2009. By some estimates the attendance was over 400,000. The event was musically directed by Rob Mathes of the Kennedy Center Honors. A backing band used by many of the artists was in the orchestra pit, and featured veteran session drummer Kenny Aronoff. The concert featured performances by Mary J. Blige, Jon Bon Jovi, Garth Brooks, Sheryl Crow, Renée Fleming, Caleb Green, Josh Groban, Herbie Hancock, Heather Headley, Beyoncé Knowles, Bettye Lavette, John Legend, John Mellencamp, Jennifer Nettles, Pete Seeger, Shakira, Bruce Springsteen, James Taylor, U2, Usher, will.i.am and Stevie Wonder. Several of the songs performed had been used by Obama's presidential campaign. The concert also featured readings of historical passages by Jack Black, Steve Carell, Rosario Dawson, Jamie Foxx, Tom Hanks, Samuel L. Moon Over Broadway is a 1997 documentary film starring Carol Burnett and directed by Chris Hegedus and D.A. Pennebaker. Towers & Comets is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Gonçalo Tocha. Come Together: A Night for John Lennon's Words and Music was a 2001 television program tribute to John Lennon. It aired on TNT and The WB. Originally planned to celebrate Lennon's accomplishments, the concert took place on October 2, 2001 at Radio City Music Hall in New York City, shortly after 9/11, and exactly one week before the 61st anniversary of Lennon's birth. It was dedicated to "New York City and its people" and presented as a fundraiser for the Robin Hood Foundation. The concert was named for Lennon's Beatles song, "Come Together". Jodorowsky's Dune is a 2013 American documentary film directed by Frank Pavich. The film explores Chilean-French director Alejandro Jodorowsky's unsuccessful attempt to adapt and film Frank Herbert's 1965 science fiction novel Dune in the mid-1970s. Daniel Schmid - Le chat qui pense is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Pascal Hofmann and Benny Jaberg. Anyone Can Play Guitar is a documentary film made by Jon Spira, examining the music scene in Oxford over the period starting 1978, but focusing on 1984–2007. The film takes its name from the Radiohead song of the same name. Through over 300 hours of interviews with band members and other key people in the Oxford music community, distilled down to one and a half hours, the film examines the roles of community, the music industry, and luck in a band gaining commercial success. Narrated by Stewart Lee, it features interviews and concert footage of several bands that have been nationally and internationally successful, as well as some that had moderate success, and many more that were not commercially successful. Creation of the film was self-funded by Spira, but finishing the sound mix and picture grade to a professional standard needed additional funding, which Spira sought through the Indiegogo crowd funding site. The initial target of $15,000 was reached before the campaign closing date, and the campaign was extended to $30,000 to raise funds for final music and film footage rights clearance. Frost on Satire is a 2010 tv documentary film written by Fred Metcalf and presented by David Frost. Männer in Öl is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Barbara Teufel. Yolki Palki is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Alexander Gentelev. Imagine Peace is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ari Alexander Ergis Magnússon. Saul Bass: A Selection of Short Films is a documentary film directed by Elaine Bass. Rate It X is a 1985 documentary film written by Claudette Charbonneau, directed by Lucy Winer and Paula De Koenigsberg. Cinemania is a 2002 German / American documentary about five obsessed cinemaphiles, who, throughout the year, each see two to five films a day. Jiro Dreams Of Sushi is a a 2011 documentary film directed by David Gelb. "An appetizing documentary in every sense, Jiro Dreams of Sushi follows 85-year-old master sushi chef Jiro Ono, paying lushly photographed homage to the process of preparing the artisan sushi that earned Ono’s esteemed Sukiyabashi Jiro restaurant three Michelin stars. From the complicated relationship between Jiro and his sons to the ins and outs of the tuna auction, this spirited film profiles all aspects of Jiro’s craft in tantalizing style and detail. In Japanese with English subtitles." Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. The Black Press: Soldiers Without Swords is a documentary film written by Jill Nelson, Stanley Nelson, Lou Potter, Marcia Smith and directed by Stanley Nelson. Faith School Menace? is a television documentary presented by Richard Dawkins which explores the effects of faith schools on the students in them and society in general by taking examples in particular from UK faith schools. It was first aired on More4 on 18 August 2010. Muzik Luvahaz is a 2013 documentary film directed by Benton Jeter. And the Oscar Goes To... is a documentary film directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. In Darkest Hollywood: Cinema & Apartheid is a 1993 film directed by Peter Davis and Daniel Riesenfeld. Battle of the Queens is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Nicolas Steiner. The Kingston Trio Story: Wherever We May Go is a 2006 documentary of the folk group The Kinston Trio. Mambéty For Ever is a 2008 documentary film. Lockerbie: A Night Remembered is a TV movie. Shut Up and Play the Hits is a 2012 documentary film directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace that follows LCD Soundsystem frontman James Murphy over a 48-hour period, from the day of the band's final gig at Madison Square Garden to the morning after the show. The film also features intermittent segments from an extended interview between Murphy and pop culture writer Chuck Klosterman. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2012, and was released in the USA for one night only on July 18, 2012. UK showings were held on 4 September 2012. James Murphy performs a duet with comedian and musician Reggie Watts for one song during the show. Several members of the band Arcade Fire provide backing vocals during a performance of "North American Scum". The film's title is a reference to the moment Win Butler of Arcade Fire shouts "shut up and play the hits" as James introduces the song. The film also features brief appearances from the Juan MacLean, and David and Stephen Dewaele from the band Soulwax. ABF-Memoirs is a 1993 documentary film written by Karlheinz Mund and Helga Schütz and directed by Karlheinz Mund. Hans Warns: My 20th Century is a 1999 film directed by Gordian Maugg. Rivers and Tides is a 2001 documentary directed by Thomas Riedelsheimer about the British artist Andy Goldsworthy, who creates intricate and ephemeral sculptures from natural materials such as rocks, leaves, flowers, and icicles. The music was composed and performed by Fred Frith and was released on a soundtrack, Rivers and Tides. The film received a number of awards, including the ‘Best Documentary’ awards of the San Diego Film Critics Society and the San Francisco Film Critics Circle. It is an Anglo-German co-production by Mediopolis Film and the British independent film company Skyline Productions. California Trout-pit River is 2012 short action documentary film written and directed by Mike E. Wier. Breadcrumb Trail is a 2014 documentary music film directed by Lance Bangs. Tapestries of Hope is a feature-length documentary that exposes the virgin cleansing myth that if a man rapes a virgin he will be cured of HIV/AIDS. The film focuses on the work human rights activist Betty Makoni has done to protect and re-empower girls who have been victimized through sexual abuse. Tapestries of Hope aims to bring awareness to the widespread abuse of women and girls as well as the efforts of the Girl Child Network and its founder, Betty Makoni. The film is directed by Michealene Cristini Risley, written by Susan Black and Michealene Cristini Risley, and produced by Michealene Cristini Risley, Susan Black, Christopher Bankston, Anand Chandrasekaran, and Ray Arthur Wang. "Tapestries of Hope" was theatrically released September 28, 2010 in over 100 theaters across the U.S. A lonely, crippled youth meets a stranger and discovers the boundaries of his world expanded in close friendship. Australia After Dark is a 1975 documentary directed by John D. Lamond. It was his first feature. Teen Mothers is a 2006 documentary film written by Bebeto Abrantes and directed by Sandra Werneck. American Drug War 2: Cannabis Destiny is a documentary film directed by Kevin Booth. Down The Line is a 2013 short documentary action adventure sports film directed by Francois-xavier De Ruydts. The Sphinx-what secrets lie behind its silent gaze? Hatsphepsut's Templewhy was the face of the Pharaoh erased? The valley of the kinds-how did the Pharoahs reach the afterflfe? Karnak Temple Complex-who tore it apart? Temple of Ramses the Great-low could it vanish for thousands of years? Chapters Treasures of Tutankhamen The Mark of the Maker is a 1991 American short documentary film about manual papermaking, produced by David McGowan. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Peace Out is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Charles Wilkinson. Il bacio di Tosca, une restauration numérique is a 2013 documentary film directed by Richard Szotyori. Under House Arrest is a 1981 film directed by Paulin Soumanou Vieyra. Meet the Police Commissioner is 2014 a documentary film. A Climate of Change is a documentary historical fiction film directed by Ray Kocur. Boxeo Constitución is a 2011 documentary film directed and written by Jakob Weingartner. The greatest "Whodunit" of the past 500 years! Secret Mysteries takes the mystery out of America's history. This video unfolds the fascinating history behind the founding of America, and exposes the esoteric underbelly of its design. Why is Washington D.C. build on the 77th Meridian? Are the Revolutionary War cities really built in perfect alignment with Stonehenge? If America was founded as a Christian nation, why are many of its symbols, buildings, and monuments based on Pagan traditions? There is no doubt that much of America’s national heritage was Christian, but just as a coin has two sides, our national heritage has a second side – one based squarely on occult secret societies and their values. To find the answer to these questions, we follow the journey of secret societies from England to the New World and learn of their ancient hope: to rebuild the lost empire of Atlantis. In the 16th century, Sir Francis Bacon was at the helm of the secret societies in England. When Bacon penned his classic work, ‘The New Atlantis’ he believed that America and Atlantis were one and the same. He outlined his vision for the perfect society, and some suggest the program he set forth has been the driving force behind the course of modern history. While he did not originate the concept, it was Bacon who articulated an ancient plan to be carried out by all the secret orders. As Chief of the Rosicrucians and the first Grand Master of modern Freemasonry, Bacon sent his followers to the new world. A 1910 Newfoundland stamp with his image upon it reads, ‘Lord Bacon: the Guiding Spirit in [the] Colonization Scheme.’ Because of his influence, Francis Bacon is considered by some to be ‘the real and true founder of America.’ For centuries, controversy has surrounded this figure who is said to be the illegitimate son of Queen Elizabeth I, and secret author of the Shakespeare plays; the man whom Thomas Jefferson considered one of the three most influential men in history. Is it possible that Bacon’s vision guides America today? Where The DaVinci Code meets National Treasure: Learn the incredible secrets of the esoteric traditions, hidden within the manifold layers of signs and symbols in our nation’s infrastructure. Find out why some believe that from ancient times America has been chosen to fulfill a secret destiny. Dead Birds is a 1963 documentary film by Robert Gardner about the Dani people of New Guinea. It was produced as part of the Harvard-Peabody Expedition to study the highlands of New Guinea, at that time one of the few remaining areas in the world uncolonized by Europeans. The premiere of Dead Birds took place at the Loeb Drama Center at Harvard University in October 1963. In 1998, this film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Inspirations is a 1997 documentary directed by Michael Apted. Resisting Enemy Interrogation is a 1944 American army training film, directed by Bernard Vorhaus and written by Harold Medford, that was designed to train U.S. Army Air Forces crews to resist interrogation by the Germans. The film, 62 minutes in length, received an Academy Award nomination for best feature-length documentary for the year 1944. It has been played recently on Turner Classic Movies. The cast includes Arthur Kennedy, Mel Tormé, Lloyd Nolan, Craig Stevens and Peter Van Eyck. Sinclair was a captain in the U.S. Army Air Forces when the movie was made. Heaven Come Down is a 2006 television documentary film about some unusual worship practices of some Pentecostal Christians in Appalachia, including snake handling, dancing with fire, speaking in tongues, and drinking of poison. The film was directed by Gabriel Wrye and Michael Mees and aired on the Sundance Channel in December 2006 as part of the Documentary Monday series. A book entitled Heaven Come Down, constituting one half of a DVD/photobook combo named Heaven Come Down: Snake Handlers, Sinners, and the Electrifying Spirit, was scheduled to be released November 2011 by Bazillion Points. Die Zeit die bleibt - Konrad Wolf: Ein Portrait is a 1985 documentary film written by Lew Hohmann, Wolfgang Kohlhaase, Christiane Mückenberger, Regine Sylvester and Gabriele Wojtiniak and directed by Lew Hohmann and Wolfgang Kohlhaase. Growing Up in the Universe was a series of lectures given by Richard Dawkins as part of the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures, in which he discussed the evolution of life in the universe. The lectures were first broadcast in 1991, in the form of five one-hour episodes, on the BBC in the United Kingdom. The Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science was granted the rights to the televised lectures, and a DVD version was released by the foundation on 20 April 2007. Dawkins' book Climbing Mount Improbable developed from the ideas presented in the lectures, and the title itself is taken from the third lecture in the series. The Savoy King: Chick Webb and the Music That Changed America is a 2012 biographical drama documentary film directed and written by Jeffrey Kaufman. Voices from the Attic is a 1988 documentary film written by Debbie Goodstein and Jim Butler and directed by Debbie Goodstein. The Ridge is a 2012 documentary film written by Pablo Iraburu and Migueltxo Molina and directed by Pablo Iraburu and Migueltxo Molina. Feurige Hochzeit is a 1952 documentary film directed by Ulrich Kayser. !Women Art Revolution is a 2010 documentary film directed by Lynn Hershman-Leeson. "Today’s art world has embraced visionaries such as Cindy Sherman, Barbara Kruger, Miranda July and Shirin Neshat. But only a generation ago, it was extremely rare to find female artists in major museums and galleries. Enacting that change was nothing short of a revolution. Director Lynn Hershman was an active participant in this feminist art movement and spent the past forty years chronicling its breakthroughs on video. Now she’s shaped that archive into a remarkable cultural history that stirs up vital questions about politics, equality and freedom of expression. Her story begins in the sixties, when the winds of liberation drew attention to gender inequality in the art world and everywhere else. The era’s radicalism prompted one Jewish art school graduate – inspired by the Black Panthers – to take the name Judy Chicago. She and Miriam Schapiro founded a women’s arts program at the California Institute of the Arts. Meanwhile, in New York, the work of women’s collective A.I.R. Publications – such as “Chrysalis” and “Heresies” – became tools for building awareness. As critic B. Ruby Rich recalls, “Everyone’s opinions counted equally. That was both wonderful and a total nightmare.” Factional in-fighting was another sign of the times. Hershman interviews a wide number of eyewitnesses, including artists, scholars and curators who were breaking barriers. Many notable women found their voice through performance art, such as Yoko Ono, Marina Abramovic and Yvonne Rainer. The eighties brought a new round of clashes when Judy Chicago’s epic installation The Dinner Party – with its vulva iconography – was attacked in Congress. The slow pace of change inspired a group of insurgents called the Guerilla Girls to stage witty demonstrations, under the anonymity of gorilla masks. Hershman incorporates her personal perspective and readily acknowledges the difficult choices that were made over what to leave out. Thanks to her, the revolution can now be televised. " Quoting Thom Powers from the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival site. A revealing documentary that reviews the music and career of one of rock music's most groundbreaking, bold and influential collectives. The African Cypher FLy On The Wall is a 2012 documentary action comedy drama film directed by Bryan Little Countryside 35 x 45 is a 2009 film directed by Yevgeni Solomin. The Yellow Star - The Persecution of the Jews in Europe 1933-45 is a 1981 documentary drama history film written by Albert Hemsing, Esther Hemsing and Gerhard Schoenberner and directed by Dieter Hildebrandt. Napa Valley Dreams is a short documentary film directed by Rodney Vance. Mondo Cane 2 is a 1963 documentary film directed by Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi. Life Running out of Control is a 2004 documentary film created by Bertram Verhaag. A Place Called Home is a documentary film directed by Persheng Vaziri. Aperana Street 52 is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Júlio Bressane. BIG JOY: The Adventures of James Broughton is a 2013 documentary film directed by Dawn Logsdon, Eric Slade and Stephen Silha. 51+ is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jung Yong-taek. Battle for Brooklyn is a 2011 documentary that follows the stories of a Brooklyn neighborhood as the residents fight to save their homes from being destroyed by an impending real estate project. The film attempts to show the unjust outcomes that are possible when moneyed interests partner up with government entities to outweigh the rights of citizens. Peak is the 2011 documentary film written by Hannes Lang and Mareike Wegener and directed by Hannes Lang. Rouge Parole is a 2011 historical documentary film directed by Elyes Baccar. Ten Years After is a 1969 German documentary film directed by Matthias Weiss. A documentary about Russia's ballet school, The Perms Order of Honour Choreographic School. Archie Shepp: I Am Jazz... It’s My Life is a 1984 documentary film directed by Frank Cassenti. Ich bin, Gott sei Dank, beim Film! is a 2003 film directed by Lothar Lambert. Visual Aids is a 1966 documentary film directed by Richard Need. Travesía de la obsesión is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Eduardo Gleason and Miguel Gleason. Oscar-nominated documentary which explores love, sacrifice and the creative spirit through the 40-year chaotic marriage of two Japanese artists in New York, by following the rivalries that emerge as the couple prepare for a joint exhibition. Surviving decades of hardship, thwarted aspirations and the husband's chronic alcoholism, they are a study in artistic symbiosis. Now 80 years old and finally sober, renowned 'boxing' painter Ushio still treats his wife Noriko as his assistant. Noriko, emerging from her husband's shadow, creates intimate drawings entitled 'Cutie' that tell the story of her challenging past with Ushio. The film moves fluidly between past and present, combining observational filming, archival footage and animated sequences of Noriko's drawings. A moving portrait of a couple wrestling with the eternal challenges of marriage, against a background of lives dedicated to art. Days Under is a 2003 short documentary film written and directed by Jiska Rickels. Hope in Baseco is a drama film directed by Kim Kyung-Sik. Diamond in the Dunes is a feature-length documentary produced by the Documentary Foundation about a Chinese-Muslim baseball team in Xinjiang Province, China. Shield and Spear is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Petter Ringbom. Tongzhi in Love is a 2008 30-minute documentary film directed by Ruby Yang which portrays the life of gay men in China. The film was produced by Thomas Lennon and features music by Bill Frisell and Brian Keane. The film's world premiere was at the Silverdocs Film Festival in Washington, D.C. on 18 June 2008 and the West Coast premiere at the Frameline Film Festival in San Francisco on 28 June 2008. "Tongzhi" means "comrade" and has become a slang term for "gay" in several Asian countries. This film was also shown at the 52nd San Francisco International Film Festival. The Human Boundaries is a critically acclaimed, award winning documentary film on the life of the Hindu refugees from Pakistan. The Back of Beyond is a feature-length award-winning Australian documentary film produced and directed by John Heyer for the Shell Film Unit. In terms of breadth of distribution, awards garnered, and critical response, it is Heyer's most successful film. It is also, arguably, Australia's most successful documentary: in 2006 it was included in a book titled 100 Greatest Films of Australian Cinema, with Bill Caske writing that it is "perhaps our [Australia's] national cinema's most well known best kept secret". The aim of the film, as requested by the Shell Company, was to associate Shell with the essence of Australia, with Australianism. Heyer took as his central motif the fortnightly journey made by mailman Tom Kruse, along the remote Birdsville Track from Marree, in South Australia, to Birdsville, in southwest Queensland. In 1957, Heyer wrote that this film, when viewed with Francis Birtles' earlier In the Track of Burke and Wills, "clearly suggest[s] that the true image of Australia is, and always has been, the image of Man against Nature". A Liar's Autobiography: The Untrue Story of Monty Python's Graham Chapman is a 2012 British animated comedy film that is a completely inaccurate portrayal of the life of Monty Python alumnus Graham Chapman. The film is loosely based on A Liar's Autobiography: Volume VI, a book written by Chapman and David Sherlock. The film received a limited theatrical release on 2 November 2012 in the United States, and aired on the Epix TV channel on the same day. Who Took Johnny is a 2013 documentary drama biographical mystery film written and directed by David Beilinson, Michael Galinsky and Suki Hawley. Unternehmen Paradies is a 2002 film directed by Volker Sattel. Brown is a 2012 short film directed by Dr. Kortney Ryan Ziegler. The Missiles of October is a 1974 docudrama made-for-television play about the Cuban missile crisis. The title evokes the book The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman about the missteps among the great powers and the failed chances to give an opponent a graceful way out, which led to the First World War. The teleplay introduced William Devane as John F. Kennedy and cast Martin Sheen as United States Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. The script is based on Robert Kennedy's book Thirteen Days: A Memoir of the Cuban Missile Crisis. Il canale is a 1966 short documentary film written and directed by Bernardo Bertolucci. Keep In Touch is a 1987 short documentary film directed by Jean-Claude Rousseau. Two Down and One to Go was a short propaganda film produced in 1945; as its title might suggest, its overall message was that the first two Axis powers, Italy and Germany, had been defeated, but that one, Japan, still had to be dealt with. Presented by the Secretary of War and narrated by Army Chief of Staff George Marshall, the film is notable for its heavy use of animated graphics, spliced with stock footage. Opening with a fasces being splintered over Italy, and a swastika being exploded over Germany, the film cuts to an Arthur Szyk caricature of Benito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler and Hideki Tōjō, an X being superimposed on the respective dictators, then turning to Tojo. Gen. Marshall informs the audience why the United States had chosen a Europe first strategy for the war, noting the supply lines where far shorter for Europe, and that the US simply did not have the material, in the early stages of the war, to launch an invasion of Japan. I Found a Thread is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Tangella Madhavi. 25km² is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Jana Mináriková. Marathon Beirut: For the Love of Lebanon is a 2008 documentary sport war film written and directed by Deborah Harse Crust (Chinese: Qiao) is a short documentary film directed by Wenhai Huang. Explore the band's background, their early years as a struggling Canadian rock group, their slow rise to the top, and the massive success they've achieved more recently. The film includes interviews with the band and those who know them best, and rare footage. Jewish American Princess is a 2006 documentary following the story of Jonelle, a 25-year-old woman, as she explores her heritage and searches for the perfect Jewish man. With the help of her family and friends Jonelle’s unique take on life leads her into many adventures, both romantic and otherwise. This modern documentary follows Jonelle’s search through contemporary Jewish culture, chronicling her quest for a Jewish mate. Set to current Jewish music, the film takes you from L.A. to New York and all the way to Israel. A Band Called Death is a 2012 American documentary film directed by Mark Christopher Covino and Jeff Howlett. The documentary is about the 1970s rock band Death and their new-found popularity decades after the group recorded their music. The film premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival in 2012 and was well received by film critics. Corazn de Fbrica is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Virna Molina and Ernesto Ardito. Walking Under Water is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Eliza Kubarska. An Encounter with Faces is a 1978 short documentary film directed by Vidhu Vinod Chopra and produced by K.K. Kapil. It was nominated in 1979 for an Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. Malfunkshun: The Andrew Wood Story is a 2005 documentary film based on the life of Andrew Wood, singer/songwriter for the Seattle-based alternative rock bands Malfunkshun and Mother Love Bone. The film includes interviews with fellow Seattle musicians such as Chris Cornell, Kim Thayil, Jeff Ament, and Stone Gossard. Wood died of a heroin overdose in 1990, just as Mother Love Bone were poised for commercial success. Upon Wood's death, members on Mother Love Bone formed Pearl Jam, one of the most successful rock acts of the 1990s. The film premiered at the Seattle International Film Festival. In October of the same year, the film was screened at the FAIF Film Festival in Hollywood, California. The Witnessing of Angels is a 2006 documentary directed by David McKenzie. The Beirut Apt is a 2007 joint Italian / British GBLT documentary directed by Daniele Salaris and produced by Gavin Hallier and co-produced by Popular Production and distributed by Malastrada Film about Lebanese gays and lesbians and comprises interviews and testimonials of their experiences conducted in a Beirut apartment, thus the title of the documentary. An official soundtrack was released. The documentary was an official selection of 22nd London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival, as well as the 23rd Turin International Lesbian & Gay Film Festival. Cómicos is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Marta Arribas. The Phantom Wolves Of Sun Valley is a 2011 documentary film directed by Desiree' Fawn. Braddock America is a 2031 documentary film directed by Gabriella Kessler and Jean-Loïc Portron. Ride Report is a documentary and adventure film directed by Matt Kendall and Tiernan Turner. Alan Moore writer, artist and performer is the world's most critically acclaimed and widely admired creator of comic books and graphic novels. In The Mindscape of Alan Moore we see a portrait of the artist as contemporary shaman, someone with the power to transform consciousness by means of manipulating language, symbols and images.The film leads the audience through Moore's world with the writer himself as guide, beginning with his childhood background, following the evolution of his career as he transformed the comics medium, through to his immersion in a magical worldview where science, spirituality and society are part of the same universe. Broad Street Bullies is a 2010 documentary film produced and directed by veteran documentary filmmaker George Roy for HBO Sports. It chronicles the National Hockey League's Philadelphia Flyers from their beginnings as an expansion team in 1967, to their back-to-back Stanley Cup championships, and three straight Finals appearances. The film includes clips and photos from the era, along with interviews with players, writers, broadcasters, and other individuals involved with the Flyers and/or NHL hockey during that period. It is narrated by Liev Schreiber. Colours of Earth is a 2001 Documentary film directed by Gogol Lobmayr. Under Snow is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Ulrike Ottinger. Zavorra is a 2012 documentary film directed by Vincenzo Mineo. Kevin is a 2011 documentary, biography, short, musical film written by J. Davis and Jay Duplass and directed by Jay Duplass. Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer is a documentary directed by Alex Gibney about former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer and the sex scandal that derailed his political career. It premiered at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival on April 24, 2010; on iTunes and Magnolia On Demand on October 1, 2010; and in movie theaters in limited release on November 5, 2010. The Cry of Reason: Beyers Naude – An Afrikaner Speaks Out is a 1988 American documentary film directed by Robert Bilheimer. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Frosh: Nine Months In A Freshman Dorm is a 1994 documentary film directed by Daniel Geller and Dayna Goldfine. Return Flight is a 2012 short documentary directed by Kevin White. Londoners is a 2012 short historical documentary film directed by Joseph Ernst. Wedding of Silence is a 2004 Russian documentary films directed by Pavel Medvedev. It won the Best Documentary Film award at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 2003. It uses Russian Sign Language. The Last Gladiators is a 2011 documentary film written by Jim Podhoretz and Larry Weitzman and directed by Alex Gibney. Kimjongilia is a documentary film directed by N.C. Heikin that tells the stories of North Korean prison camp survivors and escapees from the country. The film premiered at Sundance Film Festival in January 2009. Six Days to Saturday is a 1963 documentary short film written and directed by John Boorman. Over One Million Ways To Live is a 2014 documentary film directed by Chelsea Duck, Bethany Crews and Dustin Ly. Elizabeth Is Queen is a 2012 documentary film directed by Terry Ashwood. The Sundowner is an American documentary short film. It is the story of a civil engineer who builds a 53 foot yacht completely by himself, and tries to sail around the world. The film premiered at Slamdance Film Festival in Park City, Utah on January 25, 2010. It was produced by Alan Wigley and directed by Steve Christolos. Steve Bartman: Catching Hell is a documentary film directed by Alex Gibney that was to air as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30 but the airing was postponed. Air India 182 is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Sturla Gunnarsson. Dont Look Back [sic] is a 1967 American documentary film by D. A. Pennebaker that covers Bob Dylan's 1965 concert tour in the United Kingdom. In 1998 the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". In a 2014 Sight and Sound poll, film critics voted Dont Look Back the joint ninth best documentary film of all time. Thicker Than Paint Thinner is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Babak Afrassiabi. Campo de Flamingos sem Flamingos is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by André Príncipe. George Harrison: Living in the Material World is a 2011 documentary film directed by Martin Scorsese, based on the life of Beatles member George Harrison. It earned six nominations at the 64th Primetime Emmy Awards, winning two Emmy Awards for Outstanding Nonfiction Special and Outstanding Directing for Nonfiction Programming. Golden Age of Czech Puppet Animation is a documentary film directed by Miroslav Kaczor. Undefeated is a 2011 documentary directed by Daniel Lindsay and T.J. Martin. The film documents the struggles of a high school football team, the Manassas Tigers of Memphis, as they attempt a winning season after years of losses. The team is turned around by coach Bill Courtney, who helps form a group of young men into an academic and athletic team. Borealis is a 2008 documentary film by Frank Wolf that follows two friends on a 3,100 km canoe adventure through the northern Boreal forest of Manitoba and Ontario. The film looks at the industrial threats to the pristine, vast wilderness north of the 51st parallel from the perspective of those who live in the region. The film is notable for its quirky and humorous tone in spite of the subject matter. It won the Grand Prize as well as Prize for Best Canadian Film at the 2009 Vancouver International Mountain Film Festival and was one of the Top Ten Most Popular Canadian Films at the 2008 Vancouver International Film Festival. It aired multiple times on CBC's documentary in Canada in 2009-10. A Woman And A Half - Hildegard Knef is a 2001 German documentary film written and directed by Clarissa Ruge, with writing credits by Matthias Zuber. Bible Quiz is a documentary film directed by Nicole Teeny. Entertainment Experience is a film project in which two films are created: one user-generated film and one professional film. In the Netherlands the professionals version was made by Dutch director Paul Verhoeven. On 19 July 2014 the China edition of the project was launched. In China director John Woo and actress Zhang Ziyi will be the inspirational figures. The script consists of eight parts. Part one was written by Kim van Kooten. The "crowd" subsequently wrote the scripts for the seven following parts. Both Verhoeven and the participating film crews made their film based on those scripts. The process of making the film was shown in a TV show on Dutch channel Veronica. The project was launched on 21 September 2011 and finished at the end of 2012. Paul Verhoeven announced the name of the movie on 7 May 2012 on the television show De Wereld Draait Door. The international title of the movie is Tricked. On 24 September 2012, the movie premiered in Theater Tuschinski in Amsterdam. The version by Verhoeven as well as the version made by the public were shown. Dnestrovskiye melodii is a 1973 Soviet Moldavian musical film starring Sofia Rotaru in the main role, as well as Ion Suruceanu, Nadezhda Chepraga and Maria Cudreanu. The movie symbolizes the propaganda and ideology of the Soviet regime. The movie features songs in Romanian and Russian of Sofia Rotaru and other singers, as well as behind the scenes background voice monologues in Russian between the songs. Andrew Dice Clay: No Apologies is a 1993 documentary and comedy film written by Andrew Dice Clay and directed by David Bergman. Dear Jack is a 2009 American documentary film starring Andrew McMahon, the vocalist, pianist and primary songwriter for the bands Something Corporate and Jack's Mannequin. The documentary chronicles McMahon on a rollercoaster year, through the highs of recording and releasing a solo album and the lows of being diagnosed with leukemia and breaking up with his girlfriend. LaBendig is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Hannes Schönemann. The Minoans is a 2004 documentary film directed by Tim Kirby and Melanie Archer. Kumar Talkies is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Pankaj Rishi Kumar. The Interrupters is a 2011 documentary film, produced by Kartemquin Films, that tells the story of three violence interrupters who try to protect their Chicago communities from the violence they once employed. It examines a year in which Chicago drew national headlines for violence and murder that plagued the city. The film features the work of CeaseFire, an initiative of the Chicago Project for Violence Prevention. In 2004, Tio Hardiman created and implemented The Violence Interrupter concept. Violence interrupters Ameena Matthews, Cobe Williams and Eddie Bocanegra look back on their past experiences with street violence to try to steer young men and women in the right direction. Matthews, the daughter of former Chicago gang leader Jeff Fort, comes to the aid of the mother of Derrion Albert, a Chicago high school student whose death made national headlines when it was captured on videotape. Produced by Kartemquin Films, The Interrupters is directed by Steve James, director of the highly acclaimed documentary, Hoop Dreams, and co-produced by Alex Kotlowitz, author of the award winning book, There Are No Children Here. Two Million Minutes: The 21st Century Solution is a 2008 documentary film directed by Dan Treharne. Men's School is a 2011 documentady/drama/family film directed by Tommaso Cotronei. Genius on Hold is a documentary film directed by Gregory Marquette. Obaachan's Garden is a 2003 biographical documentary film written and directed by Linda Ohama. Casa cuna is a 2010 short documentary film written by Alicia Segovia Juárez. Seeking Netukulimk is a 2013 documentary drama history film written and directed by Martha Stiegman and Kerry Prosper. "Like BILDER FRÅN LEKSTUGAN (2009), … MIN FILMEN ÄR MIN ÄLSKARINNA was compiled on behalf of the Stiftelsen Ingmar Bergman. Stig Björkman put together film material that was shot after 1965 during the preparations and shooting of Bergman’s films. In a setting reminiscent of Bergman’s feature film SARABAND (2002/03), Liv Ullmann sits at a table covered with numerous photographs; from there she presents Björkman’s documentation. Seven renowned film directors, from Olivier Assayas to Woody Allen, can be heard commenting on Bergman’s works. The title of the compilation film is a play on the quotation: “The theatre is my wife, but film is my mistress.”" Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. This May Be the Last Time is a 2014 American documentary film produced and directed by Sterlin Harjo. The film had its world premiere at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2014. After its premiere at Sundance Film Festival, Sundance Channel acquired the distribution rights of the film. The film will have a TV premiere in Spring 2014. Jonas in the Jungle is a 2013 documentary film by Peter Sempel about the filmmaker Jonas Mekas. It is part of a long term series of films about Mekas. The earlier films were focused more on Mekas' work, while this film is more about the life of the 'legend of film avant-garde' as he enters his 90's, still working, and still maintaining relevance in the modern world. The film also explores the Anthology Film Archives, of which Mekas' was one of the cofounders The film premiered Oct 3, 2013, in Hamburg, Germany. Johnnie Got His Gun! is a 2010 documentary film directed by Yves Montmayeur. Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen is a black-and-white 1969 Portuguese documentary film by João César Monteiro, then using the name João César Santos, about the notable poet. It was Monteiro's first completed film. It is dedicated to the memory of Carl Theodor Dreyer. Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen is part of a series of short-films dedicated to relevant personalities of Portuguese arts and literature produced by the company Cultura Filmes with support from the Gulbenkian Foundation. Monteiro, at the time with no references besides having frequented the London School of Film Technique, was recommended to Ricardo Malheiro, the owner of Cultura Filmes and himself a director of documentary shorts, by Alberto Seixas Santos and António Pedro Vasconcelos. Initially, Monteiro was developing a project on 19th-century novelist Camilo Castelo Branco to be named Como Filmar Camilo?. The choice of the Gulbenkian Foundation to confine the series to living personalities made him turn to Sophia. The work opens with Monteiro reading the credits in voice-over. The poet is filmed among her children in the Algarve during the summer. Kvadrat is a 2013 documentary feature film written, co-produced, and directed by Anatoly Ivanov. The film explores the realities of techno DJing, using the example of Russian DJ Andrey Pushkarev. Filmed as a hybrid between a road-movie and a music video, Kvadrat not only illustrates the festive atmosphere of techno night clubs, but also reveals the lesser known side of this profession. Shot in Switzerland, France, Hungary, Romania and Russia, the film omits the typical documentary elements: no interviews, no explanatory voice-over, no facts, no figures. It gives priority to abundantly sounding techno music, leaving the detailed interpretation to the viewer. Cinematically, Kvadrat is of note for its distinctive color photography, intricate sound design, attention to details and lack of traditional dramatic structure, achieved on a very low budget. Suge Knight is a 2012 documentary film directed by Antoine Fuqua. Search for the Truth is an anti-Mormon video produced by Tri-Grace Ministries. The video begins with the claim that Jesus Christ and Joseph Smith Jr. were “two of the worlds most prominent and influential men.” It then presents what it claims to be the teachings of Joseph Smith Jr. and contrasts them to what it claims to be the teachings of Jesus Christ. A question is raised regarding whether the movements which the video classifies as “Christianity” and “Mormonism” are compatible, despite the claim by both that “Jesus is the Christ.” The video takes portions of the Book of Mormon and compares it to the Bible. The video implies that you have to follow Jesus or Joseph Smith but not both. Closed by Prescription is a 2008 Bulgarian documentary, written and directed by Malina Petrova. I Survived BTK, is a feature-length, true-crime/horror documentary produced by UNSUB Films and directed by Marc D. Levitz. The film focuses on Charlie Otero as he copes with discovering the truth behind the murders of four of his family members by Dennis Rader, a serial killer known as "BTK". I Survived BTK aired on DOC: The Documentary Channel on 15 January 2012, the 38th anniversary of the Otero family murder. Sliding Liberia is a 2007 film directed by Britton Caillouette and Nicholai Lidow. Documentary about the Los Angeles Northridge earthquake of 1994, showing extensive aftermath damage, including fires, highway damage, and collapse of the Northridge Meadows apartment complex. The Mosquito Problem and Other Stories is a Bulgarian documentary feature film directed by Andrey Paounov in collaboration with historian Lilia Topouzova. It was included in the 46th International Critics' Week of the Cannes Film Festival 2007 Cool It is a 2010 documentary film written by Terry Botwick, Sarah Gibson, Ondi Timoner and directed by Ondi Timoner. "Bjorn Lomborg is a provocative contrarian. He won unusual prominence for a Danish academic by writing The Skeptical Environmentalist, an international bestseller that questioned assumptions about environmental decline. Many critics weighed in harshly, asserting that Lomborg’s credentials as a political scientist didn’t make him an expert on environmental science. But Lomborg stood his ground, amassed data to counterattack and became a voice to be reckoned with. As an openly gay vegetarian who often challenges liberal doctrine, he remains hard to pigeonhole politically. In Cool It, he enters the contentious debate over global warming, amplifying points that he raised in a book of the same title. Lomborg doesn’t deny that climate change is occurring, but he believes activists need fresh responses. He takes issue with Al Gore and finds fault with prevailing strategies to control carbon emissions. Focusing on the world’s growing energy needs, Lomborg tours laboratories of future technologies such as water splitting, algae fuel and wave energy. He also raises the possibility to mitigate climate change through geo-engineering with experimental techniques such as cloud brightening. Whether you accept his views or not, the film brings a heady sense of urgency to confronting a global crisis. Director Ondi Timoner has proven herself a versatile filmmaker with larger-than-life characters in DIG!, about a rock and roll rivalry, and We Live in Public, about an Internet visionary. Both films won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. In Cool It, she briskly covers extensive territory, delving into Lomborg’s background as a Green Peace loyalist turned dissident, and detailing the free speech fight that nearly destroyed his career. She synthesizes Lomborg’s ideas with punchy visuals and includes testimony from his opponents, including Stephen Schneider, the Stanford University climatologist who recently died. Firing off ideas like a tennis ball machine, Lomborg comes across as eager for debate. This film should give him plenty more occasions to engage." Quoting Thom Powers from the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival site. Kilpisjärvellä is a 2013 short adventure documentary film written and directed by Axel Straschnoy. Gun To Tape is a 2012 documentary film directed by David Forbes. Beware of Christians is a 2010 American documentary film. It is directed by Will Bakke, produced by Michael B. Allen and Alex Carroll, and stars Michael B. Allen, Will Bakke, Alex Carroll, and Matt Owen. This is Will Bakke's second documentary film. Original Production began in April 2009 in Dallas, Texas and completed in April 2010. The film has had limited screening around the US since it premiered on April 3, 2010, and was released on DVD January 14, 2011. The film is notable for its controversial title and unique distribution model of "Name-Your-Own-Price". Great White Death is a 1981 documentary/mondo film about great white sharks narrated by Glenn Ford. The film is notable for its Faces of Death-like footage of actual shark attacks. Journey To Little Rock: The Untold Story Of Minnijean Brown is a 2001 documentary film directed by Rob Thompson. The Freshwater Plague is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Jake Chirico. Horowitz in Moscow is a TV movie. Biùtiful cauntri is a 2007 Italian documentary film about illegal toxic waste dumping in Southern Italy. It was directed by Esmeralda Calabria and Andrea D'Ambrosio and written by Calabria, D'Ambrosio and Peppe Ruggiero. It focuses on the progressive poisoning of thousands of square miles of Southern Italian agricultural land and the deadly effects upon people, animals, and plant life in the areas of Sicily and Naples, and behind that the interwoven relations between the Italian government, corrupt pseudo-legitimate businessmen, and the Italian organized crime group, the Camorra. The title is literally the Italian pronunciation of "beautiful country". A secondary focus of the film is governmental inaction, in some cases lasting over a decade and a half, despite the pleas of the people affected. Unzipped is a 1995 American documentary film, directed by Douglas Keeve. It follows fashion designer Isaac Mizrahi, Keeve's then boyfriend, as he plans and ultimately shows his fall 1994 collection. The film put such a rift in their relationship over Mizrahi's depiction that the two broke up over it. There are appearances by supermodels Cindy Crawford, Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista and Kate Moss, as well as many other celebrities and designers from the fashion world and beyond. The Second Cooler is a historical documentary directed by Ellin Jimmerson. High Price Of Gold is a 2012 short documentary drama film written by Diane Taylor and directed by Ross Domoney. Wired to Win is a 2005 documentary film directed by Bayley Silleck. ` Mabel and Fatty Viewing the World's Fair at San Francisco is a 1915 American short comedy-documentary film both starring and directed by Roscoe Arbuckle and Mabel Normand. Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man is a 2005 film by Lian Lunson about the life and career of Leonard Cohen. It is based on a January 2005 tribute show at the Sydney Opera House titled "Came So Far for Beauty", which was presented by Sydney Festival under the artistic direction of Brett Sheehy, and produced by Hal Willner. Performers at this show included Nick Cave, Jarvis Cocker, The Handsome Family, Beth Orton, Rufus Wainwright, Martha Wainwright, Teddy Thompson, Linda Thompson, Antony, Kate and Anna McGarrigle, with Cohen's former back-up singers Perla Batalla and Julie Christensen as special guests. The end of the film includes a performance by Leonard Cohen and U2, which was not recorded live, but filmed specifically for the film, in New York in May 2005. The film premiered at the Toronto Film Festival in September 2005, and was released the same month in Canada by Lions Gate films along with the Sundance Channel. It was subsequently released in various other countries during 2006 and 2007. The film is distributed by Lions Gate Entertainment. A soundtrack CD is also available from Verve. The DVD of the film contains extra performances. REAL PEOPLE. REAL PLACES. REAL MEMORIES. One of the most amazing tales in all sports. That's more than a team on the Marshall U. gridiron. It's a storied link to a college and a community that faced the worst and found its best. RETURN of the THUNDERING HERD tells the uplifting story of the school that overcame the deaths of most of its football team, coaches, and many devoted fans in a devasting 1970 plane crash.This superb sports documentary-with first-hand recall of events- takes you deeper into the amazing tale. Hear the stories of players who missed the flight. Meet the improbable replacment team that a town and a nation took to heart. Visit with Marshall stars now playing professionally. Out of the ashes rises a football program measured in wins, respect, and lasting tribute to events of a bitter November night, Go Herd! Mas alla de los Gritos is a 1999 documentary film featuring the Latino/Chicano punk movement from the late 1970s up until the early 1990s. Producer Martin Sorrondeguy singer of hardcore punk bands Los Crudos and Limp Wrist, also founder of record label, Lengua Armada Discos, documentary film director and a prominent figure in both the straight edge scene and the queercore scene, illustrates the repurposing and remixing of punk music in the major Latino cities on the U.S. This one of a kind documentary sheds light on the political D.Y.I. philosophy which aims to empower youth to emancipate themselves from society's oppression. The film is composed of interviews and live performances. The film focuses on the struggle of Latino/Chicano against globalization, poverty, and identity. Water Children is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Aliona van der Horst. Jake Shimabukuro: Life on Four Strings is a 2012 documentary, biography and music film written and directed by Tadashi Nakamura. Home Turf is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Ross Whitaker. Air! is a 1972 short animation documentary film directed by Paul Driessen. The 727 Days Without Karamo is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Anja Salomonowitz. The independent documentary "Swallow Your Pride" straps you into the back of the short bus for a hilarious, poignant, and intimately voyeuristic look at the people behind the growing sport of competitive eating. Out of Love is a 2009 short documentary film written by Peter Asmussen and directed by Birgitte Stærmose. The Silk Flower is a documentary film directed by Kim Jeong-Wook. Shadow Play: Indonesia's Year of Living Dangerously is a 2003 documentary film directed by Chris Hilton. Bongolo is a 1952 Belgian film directed by André Cauvin. It was entered into the 1953 Cannes Film Festival. Relationships (Vztahy) is a 2007 short documentary film under the direction and production of Inventura. La Rosière de Pessac is the title of two hour-long films directed by Jean Eustache. The films cover an annual ceremony, held in Eustache's place of birth, in which the Major and his associates nominate a girl as the town's most virtuous. Therefore, the girls chosen in the two stated years are eponymous subjects of these documentaries, presented with the director's trademark hands-off style. Black Kites is a 1996 short film written and directed by Jo Andres. OT: Our Town is a 2002 documentary film directed by Scott Hamilton Kennedy. It is set at Dominguez High School in Compton, California. The school has not produced a play in twenty years and has no budget, nor a stage. The film documents the efforts by two teachers and twenty-four students' to adapt and update Thornton Wilder's American classic Our Town, set in an all-white small town during the years 1901 and 1913, to better reflect the ethic background of Dominguez High School and Compton in the year 2000. The film documents rehearsals and the self-doubts experienced leading up to the performance on June 8–10, 2000 in the school's cafeteria. The Maltese Double Cross – Lockerbie is a documentary film about the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. Produced, written, and directed by Allan Francovich and financed by Tiny Rowland, the film was released by Hemar Enterprises in November 1994. Though it was never widely distributed, the film stirred up a great deal of controversy – particularly in the United Kingdom. Reviews of the film in major UK publications were mostly negative, even as they said that the film revealed certain problems in the mainstream account of the Lockerbie bombing. The film came in for fierce criticism from some American family members of victims of Pan Am 103 and from the governments of Britain and the United States. Other family members endorsed the conclusions of the film. Total Balalaika Show is a 1994 film by director Aki Kaurismäki featuring a concert with Leningrad Cowboys and Alexandrov Ensemble. The concert took place on 12 June 1993 on Senate Square in Helsinki, Finland. The event drew a crowd of approximately 70,000 people from two nations - Finland and Russia - that had been engaged in a state of "peaceful coexistence" during the Cold War. The concert featured an eclectic mix of Western rock and Russian folk music, and folk dancers performing to rock songs. The Wildest Dream is a 2010 theatrical-release feature documentary film about the British climber George Mallory who disappeared on Mount Everest in 1924 with his climbing partner Andrew Irvine. The film interweaves two stories, one about climber Conrad Anker returning to Everest to investigate Mallory's disappearance and the other a biography of Mallory told through letters, original film footage from the 1920s and archival photos. The film was released in the US and on giant screen cinemas around the world by National Geographic Entertainment in August 2010 as The Wildest Dream: Conquest of Everest. The film was released in the UK by Serengeti Entertainment in September 2010 as The Wildest Dream. This was Natasha Richardson's last film before her death on March 18, 2009. ½ Revolution is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Omar Shargawi and Karim El Hakim. Sretno dijete is a Croatian documentary film directed by Igor Mirković, and produced by Rajko Grlić, an Ohio University professor of film, in 2003. The film is a nostalgic autobiographical overview of the authors adolescence in SR Croatia in the former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia during the late 1970s and early 1980s which corresponded with the emergence of the Yugoslav Punk and the Yugoslav New Wave scene, both which the author affiliated to, thus turning this film into a rockumentary. The film features interviews and rare footage of some of the top former Yugoslav rock acts ever such as: Azra, Film and Haustor from the author's hometown Zagreb, Croatia where most of the story takes place; then members of Električni orgazam and Idoli whom the author visits in Belgrade, Serbia; as well as Pankrti and Buldožer from Ljubljana, Slovenia. Beside materials filmed around former Yugoslavia, the film also contains interviews with important former Yugoslav artists who currently live abroad. The Gerson Miracle examines many of the elements of the Gerson Therapy, explaining why we are so ill and how we have in our grasp the power to recover our health without expensive, toxic or mutilating treatments, using the restorative forces of our own immune systems.Even the most advanced cases of cancer can be successfully reversed using this method. While the results seem miraculous, the real "miracle" lies within our own body and its healing processes. Finnish Blood Swedish Heart is a 2013 documentary film by Mika Ronkainen about a Finnish father and son revisiting their former home in Sweden. The film won two Jussi Awards in 2014: Best Documentary and Best Music, and the Dragon Award for Best Nordic Documentary Film at the Göteborg Film Festival in February 2013. The film was released theatrically in Sweden with the title Ingen riktig finne on March 22, 2013, and in Finland titled Laulu koti-ikävästä on April 5, 2013. "The first prison in Russia for those sentenced to life – a single cell. “Prisoner Boris Bezotechestvo. Life sentence. Article 102. Triple murder”. Boris is communing with a God who is indifferent to his fate. He prays, but is not a believer. His words fill the air of the cell. He talks and listens to himself. The space within the cell consumes him. His world is four walls and the view from the window. The prison physically thrusts the prisoner into Time. A long succession of days and nights allotted to him, after which comes “hell” or “heaven”." Quoting the description from the 2010 Thessaloniki Documentary Festival site. Pintubi (ABC) is a documentary film that received the 1965 award for the AACTA Award for Best Documentary, Honourable Mention. Beautiful underwater shots from the most exotic diving paradises of the world, combined with modern Chill Out and Lounge Sounds from the Electro-Project. Performing Girl is a 2013 short documentary comedy film directed by Crescent Diamond. Le Cochon is a fifty-minute featurette co-directed by Jean Eustache and Jean-Michel Barjol in 1970. Shot in a cinema verité style, it documents the traditional killing of a plump pig in a French rural village. Eustache had directed his first version of La Rosiere de Pessac in much the same unobtrusive style two years previously. Love Meetings is a 1965 feature-length documentary, shot by Italian writer and director Pier Paolo Pasolini, who also acts as the interviewer, appearing in many scenes. Typical for him, Pasolini's subject is sex: he questions representatives from a variety of social brackets on topics such as virginity, prostitution, homosexuality and sex education. The overarching themes are sexual ignorance, confusion and conservatism. A Pizza in Jordbro is a 1994 Swedish documentary film directed by Rainer Hartleb. The film won the Guldbagge Award for Best Film at the 30th Guldbagge Awards and Hartleb was nominated for the award for Best Director. "New American Soldier contemplates two of the most debated issues in US politics today: immigration and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Through the stories of real people on the front lines, this powerful documentary gives us a better understanding of the people who are fighting this war, and what it means to be American. The film follows three immigrant soldiers through the ups and downs of training and deployment as they take steps towards achieving US citizenship. Seth Donker won the visa lottery and left his homeland of Ghana two years ago. A soft-spoken young man, he is now living out his Rambo daydreams as a Private in the US Army. Clarissa Calderon and her family emigrated from Peru when she was a girl. She never thought of enlisting until a recruiter told her that the Army would pay for medical school. Victor Toledo Pulido and his family walked across the US/Mexico border when he was seven. The Army offered a way out of the farmlands of California's Central Valley, but Toleda Pulido was killed in Iraq a year and a half after enlisting." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Shared Origins is a 2012 short documentary drama family film directed by Elena Rue Kaboul Ambulance is a 2011 film directed by Taj Mohammad Bakhtari. La Balena Di Rossellini is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Claudio Bondì. Turning a Corner is a 2012 short animated documentary film written and directed by David B. Levy. Georgie Girl is a documentary film directed by Annie Goldson and Peter Wells. "A brute, a drunk, and a maverick to the core, he was America’s greatest director. John Ford’s larger than life personality reflected the iron-willed, independent heroes that were a hallmark of his films. Best known for re-inventing the Western, and generally considered America’s greatest director, the artistic achievements of Ford’s films are sometimes forgotten; but what will always be remembered is the passion and humanity that are integral to his work." Quoting the synopsis from the 2008 Cinequest Film Festival site. Nails is a 1979 Canadian short documentary film directed by Phillip Borsos. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and was named Best Theatrical Short in 1980 at the 1st Genie Awards. The subject of the film was simply the manufacturing process used to make nails. Storefront Hitchcock is a music documentary film directed by Jonathan Demme. Escenas Previas is a 2012 documentary drama film directed by Aleksandra MacIuszek. Unfiltered is a 2005 documentary film directed by Brian Edelman, Sean Keegan and Luke Korver. Sahaja is a 1990 short and documentary film directed by G. Aravindan. The Gypsies of Svinia is a 1998 documentary film about the Roma population in Svinia, Slovakia. The film documents the people within the community, and follows David Scheffel, a Canadian anthropologist, as he attempts to gain the support of charitable agencies the Heifer Project International, the Canadian International Development Agency, and Habitat for Humanity International. The film was directed by John Paskievich, and produced by Joe MacDonald through the National Film Board of Canada. Woodshock is a 1985 short documentary film directed by Richard Linklater. Ik stond erbij is a 2012 documentary comedy drama family film written and directed by Niels van Koevorden. Ain't Misbehavin is a 2013 documentary biography film written and directed by Marcel Ophüls. Nostalgia for the Light is a documentary released in 2010 by Patricio Guzmán to address the lasting impacts of Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship. Guzmán focuses on the similarities between astronomers researching humanity’s past, in an astronomical sense, and the struggle of many Chilean women who still search, after decades, for the remnants of their relatives executed during the dictatorship. Patricio Guzmán narrates the documentary himself and the documentary includes interviews and commentary from those affected and from astronomers and archeologists. As a filmmaker Patricio Guzmán's filmography has focused mostly on the political and social issues that have plagued Chile. He explored Chile under Salvador Allende and his government, and Pinochet’s dictatorship and his human rights abuses and others. The latter film deals more so with the aftermath of those human rights abuses. The Seventh Python is a 2008 musical documentary film about the career, music and philosophy of pop satirist and songwriter Neil Innes, who has been known as the "seventh" member of the six-man Monty Python comedy troupe. The film, however, shows how Innes' influence and experience goes far beyond that chapter, to include his work with the Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band, The Rutles and other work. The Frozen Pictures film had its premiere at the American Cinematheque's Mods & Rockers Film Festival at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood in June 2008. The film was directed by Burt Kearns, and written and produced by Kearns and Brett Hudson. The film features Innes in performance in Los Angeles, Sussex, England and Melbourne, Australia and features Pythons John Cleese, Eric Idle, Terry Jones and Michael Palin, as well as singer-songwriter Aimee Mann, Matt Groening, and composer/arranger John Altman, among others. On 12 April 2009, the director and producer of The Seventh Python received the Las Vegas Film Festival's Golden Ace Award for "superior and standout filmmaking." Three days later, the film was chosen as the Opening Selection of the 2009 Pacific Palisades Film Festival. The Choir is a 2007 documentary, musical film written and directed by Michael Davie. Europe In 8 Bits is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Javier Polo. Smash & Grab: The Story of the Pink Panthers is a 2013 documentary by Havana Marking based upon the international jewel thief network called the Pink Panthers. The movie had a limited release on Jul 31, 2013 and had a wider release in the United Kingdom on September 27, 2013. The Ground Truth is a 2006 documentary film about veterans of the Iraq War. It was directed and produced by Patricia Foulkrod. Good Karma $1 is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Jason Berger and Amy Laslett. The War on Democracy is a 2007 documentary film directed by the British filmmakers Christopher Martin and John Pilger, who also wrote the narration. Focusing on the political states of nations in Latin America, the film is a rebuke of both the United States' intervention in foreign countries' domestic politics and its "War on Terrorism". The film was first released in the United Kingdom on June 15, 2007. Zaritsas: Russian Women in New York is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Russian-born American filmmaker Elena Beloff. The film was co-produced by American actor Vincent D’Onofrio. Zaritsas debuted at the Cine Gear Expo at The Studios at Paramount in June 2010. It screened at the Astoria Film Festival. The documentary was also screened at the Tribeca Grand Hotel and the at the Anthology Film Archives. The film also aired several times on RTVi in America, Russia, Poland, the Ukraine beginning on December 26, 2012. The film became available on Amazon.com on June 9, 2012. After living in New York City for a few years, Beloff made a film about American stereotyping of Russian women as mail-order brides and sex workers which dominated opinion in the early 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union. In the film Elena Beloff followed five Russian women for six months, interviewing each one in her environment: A rapper in a Sheepshead Bay Church; a salesperson at La Perla Madison Avenue Boutique; a model at home; a showgirl at a Brighton Beach Restaurant and an exotic dancer at Scores strip club. To Make a Farm is a 2011 documentary family film directed by Steven Suderman. “Adopted: We Can Do Better” is a 5-part companion to the documentary film, “Adopted”, presented together, here, as a combined collection. “Adopted: We Can Do Better” presents a who's-who of the adoption community and offers wisdom and advice to help today's adoptive families. It is comprised of 5 half-hour sessions on clarifying parental intentions, establishing identity, parenting a mixed-race family, grieving, and navigating the politics of adoption. “Adopted: We Can Do Better” cuts right to the heart of the issues deeply embedded in the rewarding, but complex journey of adoption. Documented is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jose Antonio Vargas. The Lisboners is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Sérgio Tréffaut. If You Take This is 2014 historical documentary, adventure,drama film directed by Craig Butta. Because of Who I Am is a 2011 short documentary animation film directed by Marcella Ernest. Chances: The Women of Magdalene is a 2006 documentary film produced and directed by Tom Neff, and written by Neff and Barry Rubinow. The documentary features the socially conscious organization known as "Magdalene," located in Nashville, Tennessee. The system of recovery practiced at Magdalene is based on the twelve steps and twelve traditions of Narcotics Anonymous. One Minute For Conductors is a 2013 documentary,music and musical film written and directed by Angel Esteban and Elena Goatelli. Der Letzte Jude Von Drohobytsch is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Paul Rosdy. Taiwan jinsei is a documentary film directed by Atsuko Sakai. Mr. George is a documentary film directed by James Carleton, Rob Tritton and Laura Suzanne Ward. Robert Altmans Jazz 34: Remembrances of Kansas City Swing is a 1996 documentary film directed by Robert Altman. The Great Confusion: The 1913 Armory Show is a documentary film by Michael Maglaras. Where Is God? is a 2013 short historical documentary film directed by Trent Anderson. Train Entering the Railroad Station is one of the earliest films ever produced in the Cinema of Azerbaijan directed by Azeri cinema pioneer Aleksandr Mişon. It was released in the summer of 1898. The film was shot on 35mm. Drew: The Man Behind The Poster is a 2013 documentary film directed by Erik Sharkey about the career of American film poster artist Drew Struzan. It debuted July 19, 2013 at the San Diego Comic-Con International. The Simpsons: Celebrity Friends is a 2010 documentary film directed by David Green. Burn Out is a 2013 documentary film directed by Samuel Bollendorff and Olivia Colo. Exit Wound is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Hunter Holcombe. Summerhill is England's only free school, where students legislate their own laws, manage their banks and have the freedom to attend class at their own discretion. When the British government threatens to shut down the school, students defend their institution by challenging Parliament and the political process. The results not only validate the school but they also demonstrate how effective this educational philosophy can be when liberating students and allowing them to determine their own creative and educational curriculum. The Sound of Mountains is a 2006 short film directed by Alexandru Belc. Immortal, Suspended is a 2013 short documentary mystery film written and directed by Deborah Stratman. Edith's Shopping Bag is an American short documentary about the life of Edith Massey. Imagine: John Lennon is a 1988 documentary film about English musician John Lennon. Imagine: John Lennon, with its wealth of stock Lennon footage and self-narration, proved to be a well-received film. Bridging his two musical phases together as a member of The Beatles and as a solo artist, Imagine: John Lennon is a career-spanning collection of Lennon's many musical highlights. In addition, there are a couple of heretofore unreleased recordings: an acoustic demo of "Real Love" taped in 1979 and a rehearsal take of "Imagine" in mid-1971 before the final take was captured. Matkalla Toven kanssa is a 1993 documentary film directed by Kanerva Cederström. Jessie's Dad is a documentary film by Boaz Dvir, that tells the story of Mark Lunsford's transformation from an uneducated truck driver to a child activist after the murder of his daughter Jessica by a convicted child molester. Black Picket Fence is a 2002 documentary film directed by Sergio Goes. My Words and I is a 2012 documentary/family film directed by Mirko Pincelli. New Life of a Family Album is a 2012 documentary film directed by Julia Ivanova. Return to the Land of Wonders is a documentary film made almost single-handedly by Maysoon Pachachi in 2003–04. Pachachi went returned to Iraq after an absence of 30 years when her father, Adnan Pachachi, was appointed to the Iraqi Governing Council in the aftermath of the invasion of Iraq. She brought a video camera with her to document conditions in Iraq and her father's participation in the drafting of Iraq's interim constitution. A Trip to Paramountown is a 1922 American short silent documentary film produced by Famous Players-Lasky and released through Paramount Pictures. The film runs about 20 minutes and features many personalities then under contract to Famous Players-Lasky and Paramount Pictures. In just over a century, cars have completely transformed our way of life. In many areas, cars are prioritised over people. 62% of urban space is now devoted to roads or car parks and garages are often larger than children’s rooms. Devoting so much public space to the least efficient form of transport has also changed the way we interact with our environment. Children go out much less and watch much more TV. This film examines the implications of our love affair with the car. Le Beurre et l'argent du beurre is a 2007 documentary film directed by Alidou Badini and Philippe Baqué. The title, which translates to "Butter and the money from butter", derives from a French idiom equivalent to the English phrase "Have one's cake and eat it too". Universal Newsreel (XII) is a 1945 short documentary film. Caretaker for the Lord is a 2010 short documentary directed by Jane McAllister. Titanic: Birth of a Legend is a 2005 TV documentary directed by William Lyons. The Flying Scotsman, film star, thoroughbred, and the peoples favorite. The worlds most famous locomotive is a vital part of our rich railway tradition. No, it's beginning a new phase in its 81 year history. Two months before the creation of this program, it appeared this priceless national asset might be sold abroad. But after a nail biting auction, The Scotsman was saved for the nation. Now, The Flying Scotsman is finally coming home! West of Memphis is a documentary film directed and co-written by Amy J. Berg, produced by Peter Jackson and Damien Echols, and released in the US by Sony Pictures Classics. Manny Pacquiao: The People's Champion is a 2004 documentary film. Tales of the Waria is a 2011 documentary and romantic film directed by Kathy Huang. Deserter is a 2002 short film written by Irina Semaško and Sergei Bosenko and directed by Sergei Bosenko. My Name Is Janez Janša is a 2012 documentary film about three contemporary artists, one of them the film director, who in 2007 all changed their name to that of Janez Janša, the Prime Minister of Slovenia. Signified as an artistic gesture this particular name change provoked a wide range of interpretations in art circles in Slovenia and abroad as well as among journalists and the general public. From banter to conspiracy. In the documentary individuals, artists and academics from all over the world share their thoughts about the meaning and purpose of one’s name from both private and public perspectives. Reasons for changing one's name are explored as the film draws references from history, popular culture and individual experiences. In Slovenia the film has been labelled as pornographic and as degenerate art by some of the press close to the government. On the other hand, the director of Slovenian Film Center in his analysis said that the film is not to be judged by politicians, but by film critics and the audience. La Vita Al Tempo Della Morte is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Andrea Caccia. L'imitateur is a 1982 Belgian documentary short film written and directed by Jaco Van Dormael. The short film was shot in 1982 in Belgium. L'imitateur tells the story of two mentally disabled which do a brief intrusion into the world of "normal people". The film was awarded the Best Documentary and Best Short Film at the 1983 Brussels Film Festival. In 2011, it appeared at the Sottodiciotto Filmfestival held in Turin in the retrospective dedicated to Van Dormael. Taxi For Two is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Dan Popa. From Scotland With Love is a documentary feature film directed by Virginia Heath, soundtracked by an original studio album by Scottish singer-songwriter King Creosote. The film was commissioned as part of the Cultural Festival accompanying the 2014 Glasgow Commonwealth Games. It was screened with live musical accompaniment on Glasgow Green on 31 July 2014. It was produced by Faction North, Crossover, National Library of Scotland and Scottish Screen Archive in association with BBC Scotland and Creative Scotland. The album was produced by David McAulay and released on July 21, 2014 on Domino Records. Regarding the album, and its film counterpart, Anderson stated: "It's basically just looking at ourselves in the past – it's like looking at your grandparents' or your great grandparents' generation goofing about, just doing what they're doing. But you have to remember that it wasn't the past for them - they were right at the cutting edge of time like we are now." Released to widespread critical acclaim, the album reached number twenty-one in the UK Albums Chart; Creosote's highest charting album to date. "From the acclaimed Naudet Brothers who produced & directed the spellbinding and riveting ""9/11"" (narrated by Robert DeNiro) This passionate Documentary follows Mickey and Negra as they train some of their most promising young protog?es for the biggest tournament in amateur boxing. Notebook from China is a 1987 documentary film written and directed by Jørgen Leth. 112 Weddings is a 2013 documentary romance film written and directed by Doug Block. Paul Cadmus: Enfant Terrible at Eighty is a 1984 documentary film directed by David Sutherland. Opening of the Kiel Canal is an 1895 British short black-and-white silent documentary news film directed and produced by Birt Acres. It was filmed between June 1895 and July 1895 and as the title suggests documents the opening of the Kiel Canal in Germany by Kaiser Wilhelm II on 20 June 1895. Unlike most of the films made by Birt Acres on this occasion, the video of this film survives and the original negative is held by the Science Museum. When Memory Speaks is a 1989 documentary film written and directed by Jeanine Meerapfel. Approaching the Elephant is a documentary film directed by Amanda Wilder. On A River In Ireland is a 2013 documentary film directed by John Murray. The Love Market is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Shalom Almond. Sagat: The Documentary stylized as SAGAT: The Documentary, SAGAT - Uncut or just SAGAT is a 2011 documentary on pornographic actor, gay icon and sex symbol François Sagat about his persona and impact on world culture directed by Pascal Roche and Jérôme M. De Oliveira. It was produced by ADL TV and after an idea by Brenda & Lucy Co. Miliband of Brothers is a 2010 satirical docu-drama following the lives and careers of British politicians David Miliband and younger brother Ed, who at the time were both contesting the 2010 Labour leadership contest. Written by David Quantick, the programme was first shown on More4. It was produced by the same production team as the similar 2009 documentary When Boris Met Dave. The documentary charted the Miliband brothers' paths into politics interspersed with interviews from Tony Benn, Neil Kinnock and Oona King amongst friends and teachers, looking into how they both ended up with jobs in the cabinets of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. To add to the familial similarity, David Miliband was played by Henry Lloyd-Hughes and Ed by his brother Ben Lloyd-Hughes. The title, a pun on the phrase "Band of Brothers" was inspired by a comment by Caitlin Moran's "Celebrity Watch" column. Sam Wollaston, reviewing the production in The Guardian wrote: "There are a few funny moments. Mostly it's just very hammy and very silly, as the Tory one was." Master Of The Universe is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Marc Bauder. Exploring the life and impact of the greatest spiritual and legal philosopher in Islamic history, this film examines Ghazali's existential crisis of faith that arose from his rejection of religious dogmatism, and reveals profound parallels with our own times. Ghazali became known as the Proof of Islam and his path of love and spiritual excellence overcame the pitfalls of the organised religion of his day. His path was largely abandoned by early 20th century Muslim reformers for the more strident and less tolerant school of Ibn Taymiyya. Combining drama with documentary, this film argues that Ghazali's Islam is the antidote for today's terror. Last Will and Embezzlement is a 2012 documentary film about the financial exploitation of the elderly. It stars veteran actor Mickey Rooney and is narrated by Artie Pasquale. One year earlier, Rooney testified before the United States Senate Special Committee on Aging about the years of financial abuse he said he suffered at the hands of his step-son, against whom a restraining order was subsequently issued. Hubble - Night Sky is a 2002 documentary film. Eid Mubarak is a 1960 short documentary film directed by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas. The Power of Forgiveness is a documentary by Martin Doblmeier about the process of forgiveness. It features interviews with renowned Buddhist teacher Thich Nhat Hanh, Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel, best-selling authors Thomas Moore and Marianne Williamson and others. The film had its world premier at the Dawn Breakers International Film Festival was broadcast on television stations across the United States. Abstich is a 1998 documentary film directed by Joachim Tschirner and Burghard Drachsel. Beyond This Place is a documentary film directed by Kaleo La Belle, screened at a number of film festivals. In it, La Belle reunites with his biological father Cloud Rock La Belle, a charismatic figure who was largely absent from his life. The film deals, in a personal and intimate way, with issues of parenting, issues of freedom versus responsibility, and with the aging of the 60's generation. The film won an award for Best Documentary over 60 minutes at the 2010 Krakow Film Festival and the "Prix création" award at the 2010 Visions du Réel film festival. The score of the film was written by Sufjan Stevens and Raymond Raposa. The film was screened with a live musical performance by the two musicians in the fall of 2011, including at the Castro Theater in San Francisco. Herbst der Gammler is a 1967 documentary film written and directed by Peter Fleischmann. Damansky Island Year 1969 is a 2004 Russian documentary film about two battles that took place on Damansky Island in 1969 between the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China. The film consists of interviews with participants and leaders from both sides of the conflict. Directed by Andrey Semenov, 2004 Issued: Studio GALAKON, 2004 Duration: 39 min. 22 sec Prison Valley is a World Press Photo Award-winning interactive documentary by Alexandre Brachet and Gregory Trowbridge. Putin's Games is a 2014 documentary film directed by Alexander Gentelev. She Male Snails is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Ester Martin Bergsmark. Breaking Rocks is 2009 documentary film written by Alan Miles. Alphee of the Stars is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Hugo Latulippe. Sukumar Ray is a 1987 Bengali short documentary film made by Satyajit Ray on his father, Sukumar Ray. It was released during the birth centenary year of Sukumar Ray, who was born on October 30, 1887. The thirty minutes documentary features the life and some of the works by Sukumar Ray in the form of paintings, photographs and readings. This is the last documentary made by Satyajit Ray as a tribute to his father, before he died in 1992. The documentary used Sukumar Ray's photographs and paintings than video recording as the film was considerably a new medium in India when Sukumar Ray died in 1923. Malwa is a 1963 documentary film directed by S. N. S. Sastry. A Man Among Giants is a documentary film directed by Rod Webber which documents the misadventures of Doug 'Tiny The Terrible' Tunstall, a black, republican little-person who ran for Mayor of Pawtucket, Rhode Island in 2006. As a former WWF pro-wrestler, and toy store elf, Tiny, a self-described "ghetto republican" has a difficult time being taken seriously. The fact that he is accused of having called in a threat to a local radio station doesn't help either. And yet, with the undying tenacity of the man, there is something bizarrely endearing about Tunstall. In the words of The Boston Globe, "He is afraid of no one and, in more lucid moments, he advocates for America’s have-nots in the heartfelt words of a guy who knows whereof he speaks." Peace to Their Soul is a 2004 documentary written by Pavel Stingl and Ivan Arsenyev and directed by Pavel Stingl. Memories from the Cross is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Vitor Carvalho. My Name is Salt is a 2013 family documentary film written and directed by Farida Pacha. Farmland is a documentary film about agriculture in the United States that was funded by the U.S. Farmers and Ranchers Alliance. Six farmers and ranchers across the United States describe their experiences of and views on modern agriculture. Critics view the farmers and ranchers as sincere and what they do as interesting, but they are critical of what is left out of the documentary and that it was funded by the U.S. Farmers and Ranchers Alliance. Walking the Camino: Six Ways to Santiago is a documentary adventure film directed by Lydia Smith. During the Evening of March 13 1997, thousands of Arizona residents witnessed a silent mile long V-shaped formating of lights slowly gliding overhead. The unexplained sightings garnered headline news, catching the attention of USA Today, Extra, CNN, MSNBC, national morning TV shows and evening news shows including: Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings and Dan Rather. One person, however; was not at all surprised by this, but simply grateful that the phenomenon she'd been witnessing and documenting for months was being validated. Dr. Lynne Kitei's M.D. first-hand experience, as well as, her startling photographs, are considered by optical physicists and experts in the fields as groudbreaking and historic. After seven years of meticulous research, she is coming forward with stunning data, personal interviews and in depth examination of the strange lights seen over Phoenix and witnessed by thousands on March 13th 1997. Includes testimonials from ordinary people, professionals, military people, police, a 911 dispatcher, a Phoenix council woman and the former governor of the State of Arizona! Loaded with DVD Extras! Including Media Montage and Interviews. PLUS: Astounding Official NASA Footage and Spectacular August 30th 2006 Sighting Revealed for the First Time! One Good Year is a 2014 historical documentary film directed by Mikal Jakubal. No Evidence of Disease is a feature-length documentary film about N.E.D., a rock band of six gynecologic oncologists who seek to bring more attention and awareness to women's cancers. The film tells the story of the band members - their personal lives, as doctors, and as musicians - and also takes a look into the world of GYN cancers, where patients struggle to fight the disease and advocacy groups and activists seek to raise awareness and research funds for gynecological cancer research and funding. The documentary is from Spark Media, directed by Andrea Kalin. Alan Bennett and the Habit of Art is a 2010 film directed by Adam Low. Kinshasa Symphony is a 2010 documentary film written by Claus Wischmann and directed by Martin Baer and Claus Wischmann. One more effort, Chinese, if you want to be revolutionaries! a.k.a. Peking Duck Soup is a 1977 film by Situationist director René Viénet. Unlike his earlier films Can dialectics break bricks? and The Girls of Kamare, which "detourned" drama films, in this one, Viénet uses a great variety of sources to compose a political documentary sharply critical of Mao's legacy in China. The title is a reference to the pamphlet "Français, encore un effort si vous voulez être républicains" featured in Philosophy in the Bedroom of Marquis de Sade. In the Flesh: three lives in prostitution is a 2003 independent documentary by Bishakha Datta about the lives of three Indian sex workers, written for a family audience. It is a low-budget film set in Calcutta and Mumbai that describes the everyday life of its subjects. It was filmed in 2000, and released in India in 2002, before an international release in 2003. The subjects of the documentary were chosen with help from the Durbar Mahila Samanwaya Committee and at Calcutta's Sex Workers Mela, an annual event held in the city's Salt Lake Stadium that attracts over 10,000 people a day. Immer bereit is an East German film. It was released in 1950. Black and White: A Portrait of Sean Combs is a 2006 Documentary (Biographical Film) directed by Derek Cianfrance. 10 + 4 is a 2007 experimental documentary film written and directed by Mania Akbari. Stones in the Sky is a 2002 documentary film written by Eryk Rocha and Bruno Vasconcelos directed by Eryk Rocha. Ricky Gervais Live 2: Politics is the title of a performance by British comedian Ricky Gervais. It was filmed at the Palace Theatre, London, United Kingdom in 2004. In this one-hour special, some of the biggest names in comedy pay tribute to the legendary stand-up stage founded in 1963 by Budd Friedman. From its earliest days in New York City to a Hollywood expansion and beyond, The Improv played a major part in the American stand-up explosion of the ‘80s and ‘90s. Interviewees include Jerry Seinfeld, Ray Romano, Jay Leno, Kathy Griffin, Jimmy Fallon, Sarah Silverman, Keenen Ivory Wayans and Judd Apatow. True Caribbean Pirates is a documentary which aired on The History Channel in 2006. The documentary tells about pirates of the Caribbean such as Blackbeard, Henry Morgan, Anne Bonny and Black Bart Roberts. Larger than life, more dangerous than legend - pirates and buccaneers set sail for plunder. True Caribbean Pirates recreates the rise of piracy in the Caribbean and its climactic, inevitable downfall. They Call Us Misfits is a 1968 Swedish documentary film directed, produced and written by Stefan Jarl and Jan Lindqvist. The film is an uncompromising account of the life of two alienated teenagers, Kenneth "Kenta" Gustafsson and Gustav "Stoffe" Svensson. The film, like its successor Ett anständigt liv takes a close but non-moralizing look at the joys and growing pains of mod and "junkie" street culture in Stockholm at the time. The Sky Turns (El cielo gira) is a 2004 documentary film written by Mercedes Alvarez and Arturo Redin and directed by Mercedes Alvarez. Ping Pong is a 2012 documentary film, that follows eight pensioners from around the world as they train for and compete in the over 80's table tennis world championship in Inner Mongolia. The film's world premier took place at Hotdocs in Toronto. It has since appeared at Sheffield doc fest, DMZ docs - South Korea, Zurich film festival, Calgary International film festival, Warsaw International film festival, Mumbai film festival, Guelph Fetival of moving Media and San Francisco doc fest. The film opened in the UK with a theatrical release on 6 July 2012 and has since been shown at cinemas across the UK. It premiered in the US at DOC NYC in November 2012. More Than the Rainbow is a 2012 documentary film directed by Dan Wechsler. Pola's March is a 2001 documentary made by Jonathan Gruber about a Holocaust survivor, Pola Susswein's emotional trip back to her childhood home in Poland after fifty years spent in Israel, trying to forget her painful past. The story of the death of cosmonaut Colonel Vladimir Komarov during the first flight of the Soyuz spacecraft and the cover-up. Lie of the Land is a 1985 film directed by Graham McLean. Paint is a 1967 short documentary film directed by Michael Heckford. Nick Nolte: No Exit is a 2008 documentary film directed by Tom Thurman. My Avatar and Me is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Bente Milton and Mikkel Stolt. Herblock - The Black & The White is a 2013 documentary film written by Sara Lukinson and Michael Stevens. The film was directed by Michael Stevens. Daughters of Two Worlds is a 1990 film written and directed by Serap Berrakkarasu. Ariane Moffatt: À la station C is a 2005 music documentary film directed by Dominique Laurence. Position among the Stars is a 2010 documentary film directed by Leonard Retel Helmrich. "This final installment of the trilogy follows the award-winning documentaries The Eye of the Day and Shape of the Moon (winner of the World Cinema Documentary Jury Prize at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival) as filmmaker Leonard Retel Helmrich concludes his in-depth portrait of Indonesia seen through the eyes of one family living in the slums of Jakarta. Grandmother Rumidjah, a poor old Christian woman, weathers a changing society and the influence of globalization reflected in the lives of her juvenile granddaughter, Tari, and her sons, Bakti and Dwi, who are Muslims. Modern-day Indonesia is entrenched in a tug-of-war between Christianity and Islam, young and old, rich and poor, and beset by encroaching globalization that threatens the simple life that Rumidjah knows so well. Forgoing interviews and voice-over narration, Position Among the Stars allows each exquisite detail to come together and construct a rich mosaic of Indonesia today. The result is poignant, breathtaking, and a singularly stellar vérité triumph." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site, For Example Fritz Lang is a 1968 film directed by Erwin Leiser. Dysfunktional Family is an American documentary and stand-up comedy film written, produced and starring comedian Eddie Griffin. It was released to theaters by Miramax Films on April 4, 2003 and stayed in theaters until May 18, 2003. The film earned $2,255,000 with its widest release being in 602 theaters. Dysfunktional Family is mainly a concert performance featuring Eddie Griffin filmed live at the Star Plaza Theatre in Merrillville, Indiana that also includes behind-the-scenes documentary footage filmed in Kansas City, Missouri detailing the stand-up comedian's personal life and family as he travels to a family reunion to reunite with the cast of characters who are the root of his comedy: his mother, an uncle who was an ex-pimp, and his Uncle Curtis, who pontificates on his career as a porno director. Moving to Mars, directed by Mat Whitecross, is a 2009 documentary following the story of two Burmese families from a refugee camp near the Thai/Burmese border moving to their new homes in the United Kingdom. Clint is a 1994 short documentary film directed by Shiva Kumar. Samsara: Death and Rebirth in Cambodia is a 1989 short documentary film about the people of Cambodia rebuilding after being ruled by Pol Pot and being sent to Killing Fields. The film was directed and produced by Ellen Bruno for her Stanford University master's thesis. In 2012, the National Film Registry selected the film for preservation. Superheroes is a 2011 comedy-action documentary film written by Theodore James and Michael Barnett and directed by Michael Barnett. Ueshkat is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Nemnemiss McKenzie. McLuhan's Wake is a 2002 documentary film directed by Kevin McMahon and David Sobelman. Points on a Line is 2010 short documentary film directed by Sarah Morris. Voices from the Shadows is a documentary film directed by Josh Biggs and Natalie Boulton. For Dearest Mother is a 1987 film directed by Roswitha Ziegler. Fire in the Night is a 2013 British documentary film about the Piper Alpha disaster directed by Anthony Wonke. It won the Audience Award at the 2013 Edinburgh International Film Festival. It was first shown on television on 9 July 2013 on BBC Two. The Price of a Record is a 1968 documenatry film written by John Pearson and John Pett and directed by Edward Joffe. 83 Zlota Street is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Ewa Borzecka. National Gallery is a 2014 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. Over five million people have died during the past decade as a result of the war in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Few people are aware of the unimaginable scale of human suffering, death, and destruction that has occurred in this vast country deep in the heart of Africa. In the aftermath of this brutal war, children have endured the brunt of the suffering. This 67 minute film documents the plight of thousands of street children living in Kinshasa and confirms the wide-spread accusations of child witchcraft, torture and child prostitution. The film also examines the efforts to reintegrate demobilized child soldiers, displaced refugees, and orphaned children following the eruption of the massive Nyiragongo volcano, near the city of Goma in Eastern Congo. These heroic efforts are finally bringing some measure of hope and stability to the lives of the Congolese people. Dan Balluff's "Children of Congo: From War to Witches" is a must see film, showing individuals and organizations that are implementing positive change for the children and the people of the Democtatic Republic of Congo. La Passion Noureyev is a 2013 documentary film directed by Fabrice Herrault. Blitzkrieg: The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich is a 2009 war historical documentary film. Method to the Madness of Jerry Lewis is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Gregg Barson. Pictures From A Revolution is a 1991 documentary directed by Susan Meiselas, Richard P. Rogers, and Alfred Guzzetti. Fragments: The Incomplete Films of Peter de Rome is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Ethan Reid. 4 Little Girls is a 1997 American historical documentary film about the 15 September 1963 murder of four African-American girls in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama, United States. It was directed by Spike Lee and nominated for an Academy Award for "Best Documentary". The events inspired the 1964 song "Birmingham Sunday" by Richard and Mimi Fariña. The song was used in the opening sequence of the film, as sung by Mimi's sister, Joan Baez. 4 Little Girls premiered Wednesday, June 25, 1997 at the Guild 50th Street Theatre in New York City. It was produced by 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks, Lee's production company, and Home Box Office. The Man with the Electric Boots is a 2007 film directed by Nicholas Berger. Pageant is a 2008 documentary film directed and produced together by Ron Davis and Stewart Halpern. The film explored the behind-the-scenes dramas and realities of the 34th Miss Gay America Contest. The film's central theme was the universal desire to be beautiful, noticed and chosen. The film garnered 10 film festival awards before airing on the Sundance Channel in 2010. Dream On Silly Dreamer is a 2005 American documentary film directed by Dan Lund and produced by Tony West. Lund and West were both special effects animators at Walt Disney Feature Animation, and the film chronicles the rise and fall of traditional animation at The Walt Disney Company from 1980 to 2005. Virginia Creepers: The Horror Host Tradition of the Old Dominion is a 2009 documentary film directed by Sean Kotz and Christopher Valluzzo about horror hosts from Virginia. Women of Hamas is a 2010 documentary film directed by Suha Arraf. Adjust Your Tracking is a documentary horror film directed by Dan M. Kinem and Levi Peretic. Extras is a 2001 fly on the wall Chinese documentary film by director Zhu Chuanming. The documentary has been seen as tinged with social criticism in its observation of the lives and dreams of China's poorly paid film extras. Le chant du Styrène is a 1958, 13 minutes French documentary film directed by Alain Resnais. The film was an order by French industrial group Pechiney to highlight the merits of plastics. The commentary, narrated by Pierre Dux, was written by Raymond Queneau, all in alexandrines. The Meaning Of Wild is a 2014 film written by Matt Hill and Ben Hamilton and directed by Ben Hamilton. Un Rêve d’indépendance is a 1998 documentary film by Monique Mbeka Phoba. Lost Ending is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Mario Sesti. "A poetic exploration of the sense and sensibilities of Indian lesbian poet and writer, Suniti Namjoshi. This moving and powerful portrait of a unique and brave woman weaves Namjoshi’s life and writings into a sensual tapestry." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Wings of Peace is a 2013 documentary film, news film, historical film, war and short film written and directed by Danielle Stolz. True Norwegian Black Metal is a 2007 5-part documentary produced by VBS/Vice Magazine. The documentary mainly covers some aspects of the life of black metal vocalist Gaahl - renowned for his work with Gorgoroth. Giuseppe Verdi's Rigoletto Story is a film version of Giuseppe Verdi's opera Rigoletto. Filmed in Siena in 2002, it was directed by Gianfranco Fozzi and produced by David Guido Pietroni and Maurizio De Santis. Rigoletto Story has obtained two nominations to the Grammy Awards in the categories "Best Surround Sound" and "Best Long For Music Video". The DVD Giuseppe Verdi's Rigoletto Story is distributed worldwide by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. Mojados: Through the Night is a 2004 documentary film directed by Tommy Davis. The film documents the journey of four men as they trek 120 miles across the Texas desert. The Bladesmiths is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Dru Carr and Ken Furrow. Rock 'N' Roll Exposed: The Photography of Bob Gruen is a 2011 documentary film directed by Don Letts. To celebrate its 50th anniversary year, ESO in 2012 released the documentary Europe to the Stars — ESO's first 50 years of Exploring the Southern Sky. The movie tells the story of ESO — what scientific discoveries it has been making and how it designs, builds and operates some of the most powerful ground-based telescopes. The movie consists of eight chapters each focusing on an aspect of an observatory, while also offering a broader view on how astronomy is made. From site testing and explaining the best conditions for observing the sky to how telescopes are built and what mysteries of the Universe astronomers are revealing. With a total duration of 61 minutes, it is produced in full HD and it is available on Blu-ray or DVD. It has a bonus section, narration and subtitles in several languages. Deaf Jam is a 2011 documentary film directed and produced by American filmmaker Judy Lieff. The film centers on the experience of Aneta Brodski, a deaf teenager living in Queens, New York, who becomes immersed in the dynamic and three-dimensional form of American Sign Language poetry. When Aneta, an Israel-born, ASL poet, eventually meets Tahani, a Palestinian, spoken word poet, the two begin to collaborate, creating a new form of poetry that gains recognition in Deaf and hearing communities alike. Deaf Jam premiered on PBS's Independent Lens program, and was awarded the 2012 Japan Prize for the Best Work of the Youth Category. "Deaf Jam" is a co-production of Made-By-Hand, LLC and the Independent Television Service. Water's Journey: The Hidden Rivers of Florida is a documentary film that tracks the path of water through the Floridan aquifer, where a team reveals the journey of water above and within the earth. Viewers are transported through a world that reveals how their lives are intertwined with the water they drink. Un Cineasta en La Codorniz is a short documentary film directed by Javier Rioyo. Women Against Aids in Zimbabwe is a 1993 documentary film directed by Peter Davis. A Different Kind of Boy is a 2014 documentary film directed by Ulrik Wivel. Fleetwood Mac, minus Lindsey Buckingham and plus Rick Vito and Billy Burnette, perform cuts from the Tango In The Night album, as well as classic Fleetwood Mac songs at the Cow Palace in San Francisco. Investigating Tarzan is a 1997 Canadian documentary film written and directed by Alain d 'Aix for InformAction Films to investigate the history and cultural impact of the character of Tarzan and the books and films in which the character was depicted. The Pain of Lusatia is a 1989 film directed by Peter Rocha. A Few Days More is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Op Srivastava. Meeting Charlie Parr is a documentary film directed by Francois-Xavier Dubois, Charles Dubois, Julien Bertrand and Nicolas Reverchon. The Fruit Hunters is a 2012 feature documentary film about exotic fruit cultivators and preservationists. It is directed by Yung Chang and co-written by Chang and Mark Slutsky, and inspired by Adam Leith Gollner’s 2008 book of the same name. In addition to documentary sequences, the film also uses CGI animation, models and performers to stage real and imagined moments in the history of fruit. Ghost Bird is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Scott Crocker. Excellence And Doubt is a 2013 documentary film written by Paule Muxel and Bertrand de Solliers and directed by Paule Muxel and Bertrand de Solliers. One Hundred Children Waiting for a Train is a documentary film directed by Ignacio Agüero. Royal American is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Michael Scalisi. Balloons and Spinifex is a 1958 documentary film directed by John Gray and Ian Dunlop. Catch Him! is a 2008 short film directed by Boris Sima. To Sang Fotostudio is a 1997 documentary written and directed by Johan van der Keuken. Dégage is a 2012 documentary drama film written and directed by Mohamed Zran. Shalom Abu Bassem is a documentary by Nissim Mossek about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that follows a New York Jewish settler and an Arab hummus vendor that are forced to live as neighbors in the heart of Jerusalem. The documentary spans a nearly twenty-year period, beginning before the First Intifada, to demonstrate how the nation's politics affect their neighborly relations. The film won Best Editing at the Haifa International Film Festival. Unfair Game: The Politics of Poaching is 2013 short documentary film written and directed by John Antonelli. Praxis is a 2012 documentary drama film directed by Bruno Moraes Cabral. Live in Atlantic City is a live concert film by American recording artist Beyoncé. It was released on November 22, 2013 by Columbia Records as part of the home media release of her autobiographical television film Life Is But a Dream. The concert film contains footage from Beyoncé's four-night residency show in the venue Revel Atlantic City in May, 2012 and was directed by Ed Burke and her. It encompasses live performances of twenty one songs, in addition to a new song of Beyoncé, "God Made You Beautiful". After the concert film was released, videos of three performances from the concert were released online on Beyoncé's YouTube channel—"Schoolin' Life", "Dance for You" and "Party". Live in Atlantic City was commercially successful charting in the top ten in various DVD charts worldwide. The two-disc set of Life Is But a Dream peaked at number one on the US Billboard Top Music Videos chart and the UK Music DVD Chart becoming the singer's fourth and first chart topper in the countries respectively. It was certified platinum by the British Phonographic Industry and gold by the Australian Recording Industry Association. Forever Yours is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Mia Halme. The Pervert's Guide to Cinema is a 2006 documentary directed and produced by Sophie Fiennes, scripted and presented by Slavoj Žižek. It explores a number of films from a psychoanalytic theoretical perspective. Fiennes and Žižek have completed shooting on a followup, The Pervert's Guide to Ideology. The format is similar, with Žižek speaking from within reconstructed scenes from films. Superchief is a documentary film directed by Nick Kurzon that is about a campaign and election for a new tribal chairman of the White Earth Ojibwe Reservation. The film's TV debut was on HBO Signature channel. Elvira at Loro River is a 2010 short, documentary film written and directed by José Villafañe. With a Kite is a sports documentary directed by Timothy M. Tewell and Adam Boozer. American Mormon is a 2005 comedic documentary that takes look at the real life misconceptions concerning the faith and culture of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Swear is a 2013 Documentary /Short/Comedy film directed by Lea Becker. Bears is a 2014 nature documentary film about a family of grizzly bears living in the coastal mountain ranges of Alaska. Directed by Alastair Fothergill and Keith Scholey and narrated by John C. Reilly, Bears was released theatrically by Disneynature on April 18, 2014. Romans d’ados 1 – La Fin de l’innocence is a 2010 documentary film written by Béatrice Bakhti and Nasser Bakhti and directed by Béatrice Bakhti. Ten Days that Shook the World is a 1967 documentary history film written by Grigori Aleksandrov, Derek Granger, Michael Murphy, Norman Swallow and John Reed. The Diary of an Affiliate is a 2008 documentary film written by Davide Barletti, Lorenzo Conte and co-director with Edoardo Cicchetti Satellite TV is illegal in Iran but it is also the nation’s secret obsession. An indulgence which has seeped into every pore of Iranian life. Satellite dishes are everywhere; illicitly crowding apartment rooftops, teetering on high-rise windowsills, even sheltering from dust storms behind remote nomadic tent villages. But ever careful to protect the populace from immoral outside influence, the Morality Police force entry into homes wielding wire cutters and sledgehammers; spoiling the fun. A wry and powerful documentary from Mohammad Rasoulof, one of Iran’s most skilled documentarians. Kids of Today is a 2011 documentary film written by Jérôme de Missolz and Jean-François Sanz and directed by Jérôme de Missolz. "A legendary 70’s rock critic takes hold of a group of young counter-culturalist. From Paris to Beijing, by way of New York, Montreal and Hong Kong, the nightdwellers ride a William Burroughsy wave. As the decadent pasts and urban futures interlace, music from yesterday and today pave a revolutionary road. With his skeleton silhouette coiffed with a big black chapka, the bizarre sixty-something introduces himself : 69-x-69, Yves Adrien’s testament executor, the inventor of punk, of novö, the famed music critic of times past. Or how Yves Adrien, an amusing and ghost-like dandy, reminds us that real life is here and now. Now or Never ! His is a subtle and electric invitation into the galaxy of « The Kids of Today ». « I believe very strongly in arrogance. I abhor the notions of submission and humility. This was one of the founding concepts of the « Ultra » movement : to never submit oneself to anyone or anything ». Yves Adrien (interview with Alain Pacadis, Libération, May 16/17, 1981, For a thermidor Rock). Gaëlle Vidalie, comité de sélection" Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Directors' Fortnight site. Volcanoes of the Deep Sea is a 2003 documentary film directed by Stephen Low in the IMAX format about undersea volcanoes. Action at Anguar is a 1945 short documentary film created by the United States War Department during World War II. The film was created for the 7th War Loan drive and documents the untried 81st Infantry "Wildcat" Division in the Battle of Angaur in the Palau Islands. Napoli Piazza Municipio is a 2008 documentary film writen by Bruno Oliviero and Caterina Serra and directed by Bruno Oliviero. Director Yaky Yosha's first documentary feature, Inherit the Earth documents the combined efforts of Christians and Jews to make the Pope's visit to the Holy Land a successful one. In the winter of 2000, Yosha and his crew documented all stages in the building of a massive amphitheater, for the one hundred thousand people scheduled to participate in an open air mass Pope John-Paul II would lead on the Mount of Beatitudes – where two thousand years earlier, Jesus of Nazarath gave the "Sermon on the Mount" to his followers. For six weeks, two-dozen Jewish contractors and Christian priests worked back to back and against all odds, confronting deadline as well as deadly weather conditions. Surviving Mumbai is a 2009 documentary film written by Phil Craig & Victoria Midwinter Pitt and directed by Victoria Midwinter Pitt. Oceano Nox is a 2011 documentary short film written and directed by George Wasner. Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry is a 2012 documentary film about Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei, directed by American filmmaker Alison Klayman. Director Klayman received a special jury prize at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival for the film, which also opened the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival in Toronto on 26 April 2012. The film received special prize during the opening ceremony at the Passion For Freedom Festival in 2012 in London. It was screened on the 9th of November 2012 as a part of the PFF festival. The End of America is a 2008 documentary film directed by Annie Sundberg and Ricki Stern, adapted from Naomi Wolf's 2007 book, The End of America: Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot. The film is an indictment of policy changes made during the Bush Administration, and makes the case that these changes threaten American democracy. Wolf investigates parallels between the state of civil liberties in the U.S. and those of dictatorships, fascist regimes, and other formerly free societies. Wolf discusses a number of deeply unsettling similarities — from the use of unofficial paramilitary organizations and secret prisons to the targeted suspension of the rule of law. Camera Arabe is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Férid Boughedir. Without My Daughter is a 90-minute documentary directed by Kari Tervo and Alexis Kouros. In 1987, a book titled Not Without My Daughter was published, based on the story of an American woman, Betty Mahmoody. According to the book, Mahmoody and her daughter Mahtob were taken by her Iranian husband, Sayed Mahmoody, for a "two-week holiday" to Iran, and he kept them there against their will. She managed to escape 18 months later, taking their 5-year-old daughter with her to Turkey and back to the United States. In 1991, a movie titled Not Without My Daughter starring Sally Field was released, based on the events described in her book. This documentary tells Sayed Mahmoody's side of that story. It goes beyond the personal and emotional desires of a father seeking to meet his daughter, and explores the wider political and global contexts underlying the case of the Mahmoody family. Seven Wonders of the World is a 1956 film in Cinerama about the Wonders of the World. Confete is a 2012 short documentary music film directed by Jo Serfaty and Mariana Kaufman. "This is the story of one boy's reluctant journey through elementary school in pursuit of the "American Dream." Told through the eyes of a Mexican boy named Pedro, this short documentary portrays the magic, the nightmare and mystery, the isolation and odd friendships, the trouble and anger, and the glimmers of hope of a childhood spent chasing the "American Dream." Misbehaving and failing at third grade, Pedro becomes isolated from other children and tries to befriend unsuspecting animals encountered along his way." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Mothers Day is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Bin Chuen Choi. Harbour of Hope is a documentary film directed by Magnus Gertten. The Endurance is a 2000 documentary film directed by George Butler about Ernest Shackleton's failed Antarctic expedition in 1914. The Endurance was the name of the ship of Shackleton's expedition. Houston, we have a problem is a 2009 documentary film directed by Nicole Torre and written by Sean McAllen and Nicolle Torre. Go to Shanghai is a 1999 documentary short film directed by Daniela Abke and Dorothee Brüwer. America: A Call to Greatness is a 1995 docudrama feature from Paige-Brace Cinema, chronicling United States history from its inception through the 20th century. It stars Charlton Heston, Mickey Rooney, Deborah Winters, Peter Graves, Jane Russell, and Rita Moreno among others and was written, directed and produced by Warren Chaney. Actors portray historical figures in American history, using dialogue mirroring words spoken or written by them. The two-hour movie incorporates music-video like production numbers centered on specific American themes. It employs such musicians as Lee Greenwood, Phil Driscoll, Greg X. Volz, The Imperials, Larnelle Harris, Sandi Patty and others. Gene Autry, former western actor, businessman, film and recording star also appeared in what was to be his final screen performance. Commentaries from known businessmen, U.S. Senators, Congressmen, and three former U.S. Presidents are interspersed throughout the picture. The production was filmed at the Disney-MGM Studios, Paige-Brace Studios and on location throughout the United States. It was shot on an estimated budget of $4.5 million. The True Meaning of Pictures: Shelby Lee Adams' Appalachia is a 2002 documentary film directed by Jennifer Baichwal. Black Che, the First Disappeared is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Alberto Masliah. Our Persian Rug is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Massoud Bakhshi. Death Row II is a 2012 documentary film directed by Werner Herzog. John F. Kennedy: Years of Lightning, Day of Drums is a ninety-minute filmed memorial tribute to President John F. Kennedy, who had been assassinated on November 22, 1963. It was completed in 1964, and released to theatres by Embassy Pictures in 1966. The film, containing both color and black-and-white footage, is narrated by Gregory Peck, and features extensive excerpts from President Kennedy's speeches, including color footage of his swearing in and inaugural address. It was written and directed by Bruce Herschensohn, who also composed the music - long before he was recognized as a noted conservative. "Years of Lightning..." was produced by the United States Information Agency, and was originally not intended for viewing by the general public. However, the quality of the film was considered so outstanding that a special act of Congress allowed it to be shown in regular motion picture theatres, a rare honor for USIA films. Two years after the film's actual completion, it made its debut in regular movie houses. A soundtrack album from the film, featuring both music and narration was also issued, but it is unavailable on CD. Jacob Sterling is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Todd Verow and David Pittu. A Question of Color is a 1993 documentary film written by Kathe Sandler and Luke Harris and directed by Kathe Sandler. Habap Fountains: The Story of a Restoration is a 2012 biographical documentary film directed by Dilek Aydin. Sound City is a 2013 documentary film produced and directed by Dave Grohl, in his directorial debut, about the history of recording studio Sound City Studios in Van Nuys, Los Angeles. After the closing credits there is a short, silent segment of a home movie showing a band getting set up. The picture freezes on one person and the following text appears: "In memory of Brian Hauge." He was the key grip of the film. Cursed for Gold is a 2008 French documentary film written and directed by the French writer and novelist Olivier Weber, former war correspondent, dealing with the new gold rush destroying the rainforest of Amazonia. Thaumazein is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Aleksander Motturi. Julia: All in Me is a 2002 film directed by Ivonne Belen. The Unreal Story of Professional Wrestling is a television documentary dealing with the true history of professional wrestling. The documentary talked about professional wrestling's beginnings right up until the Monday Night Wars era of professional wrestling. Much of the footage used in the documentary was filmed in 1997, with both the promotions of World Championship Wrestling and World Wrestling Entertainment taking part of the documentary. The special was narrated by Steve Allen. The documentary was produced and broadcast by the A&E Network in 1998. Cultures of Resistance is a 2010 documentary film directed by Iara Lee. David Bailey: Four Beats to the Bar and No Cheating is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jérôme de Missolz. Cage match fighting at its goriest! This film is chock full of high intensity extreme cage fighting and does not stop until the blood sweat and teeth hit the floor. For any extreme fighting fan Blood Sweat & Teeth should not be missed Men of Gariūnai is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Algirdas Tarvydas. A Sheep Of Some Importance is a 1962 film recognized by Honourable Mention for Best Documentary in the 5th Australian Film Institute Awards. The Best of The Beta Band - Music and The Best of The Beta Band - Film are retrospective best of collections by The Beta Band, on CD and DVD respectively, released on 3 October 2005. The cover artwork combines elements from the covers of each of the three EPs and three albums released by the band in its seven-year lifespan. Skin In The Game is a 2012 documentary film directed by Donald Taylor Black. It Was a Wonderful Life is a 1993 documentary film about homeless women in the United States. It won the Gold Award at the WorldFest-Houston International Film Festival. It was also nominated for an award by the International Documentary Association and for Best Documentary at the Hawaii International Film Festival. The film follows six homeless women who were once part of the middle class and explores what caused them to become homeless. It was narrated by Jodie Foster. Lou Hall, one of the homeless women in the film, took her own life on November 7, 1992. Images Of Ostend is a 1928 documentary short film directed by Henri Storck. Answering The Call: Ground Zero's Volunteers is a documentary film that pays tribute to the thousands of volunteers who answered New York City's call for help following the September 11 attacks in 2001. The film was directed by Lou Angeli and is narrated by actress Kathleen Turner, both of whom served at Ground Zero as volunteers. Many personal accounts have risen from the ashes of the World Trade Center Towers, and Answering the Call is a chronicle of the thousands of civilian emergency personnel who responded to the disaster. The documentary includes footage by Lou Angeli, a veteran volunteer firefighter and filmmaker, who himself was part of the rescue effort. With that first 72 hours as a backdrop, Answering the Call weaves the stories of rescue and support volunteers at Ground Zero as the site develops into an Emergency Village. “We were all a brother and a sister at Ground Zero", one subject recalls. Angeli was reluctant to make his footage public mainly due to the sensitive nature of this horrific event, and the wounds it inflicted in the hearts of Americans. "Recently described as surprisingly modern, at the time, certain critics seemed to take Étaix’s “bad taste” movie as a personal affront, with some lashing out at the director personally, and never seriously questioning his motives and apparent change of direction. Accompanying his wife Annie Fratellini on a singing tour in various locations throughout France, Étaix and a documentary cameraman shot more than twenty hours of footage of the French at play on their holidays, accompanied by audio interviews. Another look at modern living (as in As Long As You’re Healthy), but distilled over eight months from a huge amount of film and audio footage into a comprehensible comedy, Land of Milk and Honey became a personal tragedy for the filmmaker, effectively ending his big screen career almost completely." Quoting the description from the 2010 Mar del Plata Film Festival site. Onions for Vampires is a 2013 short family documentary film directed by Anita Norfolk. Michael & Me is an independent, self-financed 2005 American documentary film created by Los Angeles-based radio and television talk show host Larry Elder. The direct-to-DVD documentary attempts to disprove statements made by filmmaker Michael Moore in his 2002 documentary film Bowling for Columbine about the relationship between American culture, gun ownership and increased violence. The documentary mirrors Moore's landmark 1989 documentary, Roger & Me, in tone and interview style. The film is frequently presented at conservative film festivals. La Brèche is a 2007 documentary film. The Lebanon I Dream Of is a 2009 film documentary produced and directed by Lebanese director Pierre Dawalibi. The film was published online for people to download and watch for free, the main purpose behind it was to spread awareness for Lebanese and send them a wake up call to start making the right decisions. The 45 Minutes film was posted on YouTube on October 2011 and got over 150,000 Views Still Screaming: The Ultimate Scary Movie Retrospective is a 2011 documentary film directed by Ryan Turek. All Eyes on Us is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Eelyn Lee. Pearl Harbor: Day of Infamy: Vol. 1 is a 2002 documentary film. The Cure: Out Of The Woods delves into the truth about this astonishing band. Revealing how these masters of melancholy music achieved their success, how they've continued to be at the cutting edge of music for more than 25 years, and why they remain hugely relevant in today's music industry. Jim in Bold is a documentary about Jim Wheeler, a gay high school student in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, who committed suicide in 1997 because of constant harassment at school. The film was created by the Equality Forum and directed by Glenn Holsten. The original music was composed by Michael Aharon. "A witty and entertaining documentary about a small village in Eastern Slovakia and its application for a grant from the European Union. Osadné is a Rusyn village on the eastern border of Slovakia – the furthest reach of the European Union. Its population numbers just over 190 and, in the past five years, 50 villagers have been buried and only two children baptised. The mayor, Ladislav Mikulásko – who has been in office for 36 years and has outlasted several presidents – the local Orthodox priest Peter Soroka, and the Ruthenian activist Fedor Vico decide to apply for help to the EU in Brussels to create a heritage trail (or perhaps a Garden of Rest since that seems to be the facility most needed by the ageing population). Invited to Brussels by a friendly deputy, they search for support and experience the intricacies of European bureaucracy. The life of the villagers – certainly at odds with the new globalised reality – is portrayed with wit and humanity. Directed by Marko Škop (Other Worlds), who was also producer of Blind Loves, the film provides further evidence of the growing strength of Slovak documentary." Quoting Peter Hames My Thai Bride is a 2011 biographical documentary written by Ashleigh Hooker and directed by David Tucker. The Breath of the Tundra is a 2012 short documentary musical film written and directed by Mikhail Gorobchuk No Refunds is Doug Stanhope's third stand-up DVD. Recorded at the Gotham Comedy Club in New York, NY on March 12, 2007. The performance originally aired August 3, 2007 on Showtime. A historical look at the evolution and history of plastic surgery, from its earliest roots in the old Roman Empire, to the current hi-tech techniques, and even what may lie in the future. Nine Inch Nails Live: And All That Could Have Been is a double DVD set of video recordings of the songs performed on the live CD And all that could have been of the Nine Inch Nails. In the Name of the People is a 1985 American documentary film directed by Frank Christopher about the Salvadoran Civil War. The film follows four filmmakers who secretly entered El Salvador, marched with guerrillas across the country, and followed them into combat against government forces in San Salvador. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Donor Unknown is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jerry Rothwell and produced by Al Morrow and Hilary Durman. A 21st century tale of identity and genetic inheritance, this film tells the story of a sperm donor and the children who want to meet him. It follows JoEllen Marsh as she goes in search of the sperm donor father she only knows as Donor 150. Train of Freedom is a 2008 film directed by Karina Correa. American Promise is a documentary film spanning 13 years from directors Joe Brewster and Michèle Stephenson. The film captures the stories of Brewster and Stephenson's 5-year-old son Idris and his best friend and classmate Seun as these families navigate their way through the rigorous prep-school process. The film is set against the backdrop of a persistent educational achievement gap that dramatically affects African-American boys at all socioeconomic levels across the country. American Promise premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. The filmmakers also launched a national campaign at Sundance to help raise $100,000 and 100,000 volunteer hours for Big Brothers Big Sisters of America' Mentoring Brothers in Action program. Electronic Awakening offers insight into the inner workings of the brain and its metaphysical connection to the repetitive beats that create at sense of oneness, unity and freedom that millions feel on the dance floor. Firepower 2000: Vol. 4: Fast Strike is a 1999 military documentary film. Lo Que Falta is a 2010 documentary film directed by Camilo Matiz Zamorano. The Passion of María Elena is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Mercedes Moncada Rodríguez. Untucked is a 2014 documentary film written by Danny Pudi and Chris Marrs and directed by Danny Pudi. Commie Camp is a 2013 documentary, comedy, drama and historical fiction film directed by Katie Halper. Going Attractions: The Definitive Story of the American Drive-in Movie is a historical documentary film directed by April Wright. Transcendent Man is a 2009 documentary film by American filmmaker Barry Ptolemy about inventor, futurist and author Ray Kurzweil and his predictions about the future of technology in his 2005 book, The Singularity is Near. In the film, Ptolemy follows Kurzweil around his world as he discusses his thoughts on the technological singularity, a proposed advancement that will occur sometime in the 21st century when progress in artificial intelligence, genetics, nanotechnology, and robotics will result in the creation of a human-machine civilization. William Morris Endeavor distributed the film partnership with Ptolemaic Productions and Therapy Studios, using an original model involving a nationwide screening tour of the film, as well as separate digital and DVD releases. The film was also released on iTunes and On-Demand on March 1, 2011, and on DVD on May 24, 2011. Nazen moksori 2 is a 1997 film directed by Byun Young-joo. This documentary explores the love lives of convicted serial killers. It also takes an in depth look at the website WriteAPrisoner.com and interviews some of the inmates and free world citizens who use it as a love connection. The Panther Next Door is a 2012 documentary film directed by Bill MacGillivray. The Price of Sand is a documentary film directed by Jim Tittle. The Slim Dusty Movie is a 1984 Australian feature film directed by Rob Stewart and starring Slim Dusty, Joy McKean, Jon Blake and Mary Charleston. It was made for a budget of A$2.3 million. Come Hell Or High Water: The Battle For Turkey Creek is a 2013 documentary film directed by Leah Mahan. A Bitter Taste of Freedom is a 2011 history and documentary film written and directed by Marina Goldovskaya Cutaways of Jiang Chun Gen - Forward and Back Again is a 2013 documentary film directed by James T. Hong. Creole Connections is a 1986 Canadian documentary film produced by Montreal's InformAction, profiling the Creole language and culture in the Lesser Antilles. Its title comes from a song by Martinique singer Dédé Saint Prix. The film was shot in 1984 across four territories: Dominica, Guadeloupe, Martinique and Saint Lucia. Poor No More is a 2010 documentary film directed by Canadian filmmakers Bert Deveaux and Suzanne Babin. The executive producer is David Langille. Hosted by Canadian actor and comedian Mary Walsh, the film is set at the height of the late 2000s recession and looks at solutions for Canada's working poor. The film follows two working Canadians and Mary Walsh to Ireland and then to Sweden, where they take a closer look at how the Nordic Model has affected living standards for the Swedish. The characters are Durval Terceira and Liquor Control Board of Ontario employee Vicki Baier. Each compares their standard of living in Canada with the standard of living for the Swedes and Irish. The film discusses Canada's need for better social services in regards to unemployment insurance, universal health care, pensions, and full-time union-protected jobs. Poor No More shows how, in Sweden, the labour movement works hand-in-hand with corporate entities to ensure a stronger social safety net offering universal child care, and income and training systems for the unemployed. The Referee is a 2010 Swedish documentary short film produced by Freedom From Choice AB and Druid Film about Swedish top football referee Martin Hansson and his dramatic road to the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa. The filmmakers Mattias Löw, Valentina Santi Löw and Orvar Anklew followed the former firefighter from the village of Holmsjö in Blekinge, southern Sweden for a year. The film features French football player Thierry Henry, FIFA president Sepp Blatter, Arsenal F.C. manager Arsène Wenger, former football star Pelé, Swedish Football Association referee boss Bo Karlsson and acclaimed journalist and author Erik Niva. Selected newspaper comments: The Guardian, UK - "This is a gem of a documentary." Le Figaro, France - "A very engaging dark chapter." Dagens Nyheter, Sweden - "An outstanding, entertaining and exciting movie." The New York Times, USA - "A perceptive documentary on soccer refereeing a masterful portrait." Svenska Dagbladet, Sweden - "A nail-biter with a stylish dramaturgy." USA Today, USA - "This documentary is spectacularly intricate." Financial Times, UK - "Hansson’s story has meaning beyond football." Taking a Chance on God is a 2011 biographical historical documentary film written by Brendan Fay and Dan Messina, and directed by Brendan Fay. Janet Jackson: Design of a Decade is a 1996 film. Bakáts Square is a 1995 documentary film directed by Edit Köszegi, András Surányi and Janos Vészi. With beautiful visuals and inspiring stories, NOURISH: FOOD + COMMUNITY traces our relationship to food from a global perspective to personal action steps. NOURISH illustrates how food connects to such issues as biodiversity, public health, climate change, and social justice. Hosted and narrated by actress Cameron Diaz, NOURISH features interviews with best-selling author Michael Pollan, sustainable food advocate Anna Lappe, chef and author Bryant Terry, pediatrician Dr. Nadine Burke, and organic farmer Nigel Walker. NOURISH celebrates the role of good food in creating a sustainable future. The Mexican Tapes is a 1986 documentary film directed by Louis Hock. Bab Sebta is a Portuguese 2008 documentary film. "Schaub and Schindelm's documentary follows two Swiss star architects on two very different projects: the national stadium for the Olympic summer games in Peking 2008 and a city area in the provincial town of Jinhua, China. Architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron are literally building bridges between two cultures, two architectural traditions, and two political systems. Their work doesn't simply enhance China's great international debut, but serves the everyday needs of the Chinese population. "Bird's Nest" presents the Basle architects as they find solutions not in the comfort of an ivory tower but in encounters and friction on the ground." Quoting the program notes from the 2008 Siverdocs site. Rough Sea at Dover is an 1895 British short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Birt Acres and Robert W. Paul. Paul and Acres shot the film in mid-1895, originally with the intention of showing it via kinetoscope. Projected, the film premiered on 14 January 1896 at the Royal Photographic Society in Hanover Street, London. This was the first public screening of a film in Britain and followed a month after the first such screening by the Lumière Brothers in Paris. Following its successful screening in London the film was taken to the United States where it was shown on April 23, 1896 at Koster and Bial's Music Hall in New York with a series of American movies made by the Edison's company. Despite its simple nature, Rough Sea at Dover became one of the most popular and widely-screened early British films. A voyage into the underground world of rooster fighting. The film chronicles the harrowing and hilarious adventures of three wildly different characters. The first, Manuel, is a salty 73-year old who attends illegal cockfights in California and fights to preserve the ancient but embattled sport. The second, Clara, is a vibrant Latina who was forced to quit cockfighting when the sport was outlawed in Arizona. The third, Larry, is a firebrand ex-patriot exiled to Mexico where he fights roosters for a living. Cockfight pierces the veil of secrecy that cloaks this enormously popular yet controversial activity. I Am Soul is a 2013 documentary, historical documentary and music film written and directed by Johnathan Isom. Ken Bugul - Personne n'en veut is a documentary film directed by Silvia Voser. Last Call at the Oasis is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jessica Yu. Love Marriage In Kabul is a 2014 family romance documentary written and directed by Amin Palangi. LA Raeven - Beyond the Image is a 2010 documentary film directed by Lisa Boerstra. The Great Museum is a 2014 documentary film directed by Johannes Holzhausen. Suicide Killers is a documentary exploring the motivations of a suicide bomber. It includes rare and never-before-seen interviews with family members of terrorists, widows of suicide bombers and surviving terrorists whose suicide attacks failed. Also included is footage of a suicide bomber as he prepares for his mission. I'm Still Here: The Truth About Schizophrenia is a documentary film about schizophrenia. This 65-minute, black-and-white film was written and directed by Robert Bilheimer. Bilheimer began working on the film soon after being nominated for an Academy Award for the film The Cry of Reason: Beyers Naude – An Afrikaner Speaks Out. Psychiatrist Stephen Mark Goldfinger cowrote the film. The National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression aided in the film's production, which was complete by 1992, despite the film not being released until 1996. The following year, a VHS recording of the film was distributed by Wheeler Communications. Susan Gingerich appears in the film, as does Fredrick J. Frese. A National Health Service Corps reviewer called the film "extraordinarily moving." The Sinister Saga of Making "The Stunt Man" is a 114 minute documentary detailing the long journey of Richard Rush to make The Stunt Man. The documentary premiered at the American Cinematheque on 18 February 2000. Sur les bords de la caméra is a 1932 documentary short film from Belgium, directed by Henri Storck. Fire Ants 3D: The Invincible Army is a documentary film directed by Michael Watchulonis. Year of the Devil is a 2002 Czech film directed by Petr Zelenka. It stars musicians who act as themselves: Czech folk music band Čechomor, musicians and poets Jaromír Nohavica, Karel Plihal and British musician and composer Jaz Coleman. The soundtrack also includes two pieces by the Killing Joke: Frenzy and Exorcism. How Did They Ever Make a Movie of Facebook? is a 2011 video documentary directed by David Prior. The Ballet of Change is a series of four films, each one about a world famous landmark in London - London Bridge, Leicester Square, Trafalgar Square and Piccadilly Circus. Each film tells the history of its location using imagery and music. Taking as its starting point the earliest image available from museum and other archives and then dancing with the imagery from oil paintings, through photographs to High Definition Video in Present day. The Ballet of Change: Piccadilly Circus, the final film in the progressive series, was the first film to be broadcast through the famous Coca-Cola Billboard on Land Securities' Piccadilly Circus Lights in London. On 23 November 2007, as part of an event, that included screenings of films onto St. Martin in the Fields Church, Trafalgar Square and the façade of the Odeon Leicester Square, The Ballet of Change: Piccadilly Circus aired at 19:30 on the Coca-Cola billboard. Coca-Cola have had a sign at Piccadilly Circus since 1955 with the current version from September 2003, when the previous digital projector board and the site formerly occupied by Nescafé was replaced with a state-of-the-art LED video display that curves round with the building. Aerosol a 2004 short documentary film written by Miguel Ángel Rolland and Antonio García Mora and directed by Miguel Ángel Rolland. Touchstone: Dancing With Angels is a 2008 widescreen documentary focusing on the people, history, and current plight of Touchstone Farm in Easthampton, Massachusetts. The film was developed by director and cinematographer D.S. Fine, with the help of editor Rebecca Rideout, associate producer Holly Danyliw, and composer Peter Sky. My Big Red Purse is a 2010 short film written and directed by Giancarlo Iannotta. The Carpet Slaves: Stolen Children of India is a documentary film. Children of Mars is a 1943 American short documentary film directed by Frank Donovan. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. A FIGHTING CHANCE is the vivid, character-driven story of Kyle Maynard, a young man born without arms or legs. At 23 years-old, Kyle has already become a nationally ranked wrestler, ESPY award-winner, motivational speaker and bestselling author. However, when Kyle seeks an official Mixed Martial Arts match against an able-bodied fighter- a highly controversial and dangerous goal - Kyle has to face even greater challenges in a world that fails to see him as anything but "disabled." Mothers, 15 Cents A Minute is a 2011 documentary film written by Marina Seresesky and Julio Salvatierra and directed by Marina Seresesky. La Lluvia is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Mario Niño Villamizar. Trash, Manufactured is a documentary short biographical adventure film written and directed by Chris Jones. Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision is a 1994 documentary film made by Freida Lee Mock about the life of American artist Maya Lin, whose best-known work is the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. The film won the 1994 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Dear Jesse is a 1998 American documentary film by Tim Kirkman that was released theatrically by Cowboy Pictures in 1998. Using a first-person narrative style in the form of a "letter" to Senator Jesse Helms, the filmmaker explores the parallels and differences between himself — an openly gay man — and the staunchly anti-gay rights public servant. The film also features interviews with Helms' foes and fans, community activists, novelists Lee Smith and Allan Gurganus, openly gay Carrboro mayor Mike Nelson, and people in the street, including a brief interview with Matthew Shepard, then a student at Catawba College. The Great Passion is a 2011 documentary film written by Jörg Adolph and Stephan Szasz, and directed by Jörg Adolph. D'Annunzio's Cave is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Heinz Emigholz. We Want Roses Too is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Alina Marazzi. News from Home is a 1977 documentary film directed by Chantal Akerman. The film consists of long takes of locations in New York City, set to Akerman's voice-over as she reads letters her mother sent her between 1971 and 1973, when the director lived in the city. Mile High: How to Win... and Lose... the White House is a 2009 documentary film directed by Tod Lancaster and Cassandra Nichols. The Man Who Drove with Mandela is a 1998 film directed by Greta Schiller. Soldatenglück und Gottes Segen is a 2002 documentary film directed by Ulrike Franke and Michael Loeken. Brooklyn Castle is a documentary film about Intermediate School 318, an inner-city public school in Brooklyn, New York. Where an after-school chess program, having both dedicated educators and a supportive community, has triumphed over deep budget cuts to build the most winning junior high school chess team in the country, and the first middle school team to win the United States Chess Federation's national high school championship. The film follows five of the school's chess team members for one year, and documents their challenges and triumphs both on and off the chessboard. Remake rights have been acquired by Sony Pictures and producer Scott Rudin. Rudin's other works include co-producing the acclaimed film Searching for Bobby Fischer. Brooklyn Castle premiered at the South by Southwest film festival on March 11, 2012. Over the next several months it was shown during at least eleven other film festivals winning a total of three festival awards to date. The film was released to a limited number of U.S. theaters on October 19, 2012. I am Gay and Muslim is a 2012 biographical documentary film written and directed by Chris Belloni. Comacchio piange is a 1951 Italian film. "While female-to-male transgender visibility has recently exploded in this country, conversations about trans issues in the lesbian community often run into resistance from the many queer women who view transitioning as a "trend" or as an anti-feminist act that taps into male privilege. Boy I Am is a feature-length documentary that begins to break down that barrier and promote dialogue about trans issues through a look at the experiences of three young transitioning FTMs in New York City—Nicco, Norie and Keegan—as they go through major junctures in their transitions, as well as through the voices of lesbians, activists and theorists who raise and address the questions that many people have but few openly discuss." Quoting the description from the Official Site. Ocean Voyagers is a 2007 documentary film directed by Feodor Pitcairn and Joe Kennedy. The 25,000 Mile Love Story is a 2013 film directed by John Davies. Concerto for Orchestra is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Robert Parker. Stone, Time, Touch is a 2007 documentary made by Gariné Torossian about the relationship of three Armenian women from the diaspora with the land of Armenia. The young woman is visiting Armenia for the first time. The older woman, Arsinée Khanjian has a more conflicted and analytical perspective of her identity and her relationship with the fledgling democracy, one of the former Soviet Union republics. She has been to landlocked Armenia many times and comments on photos taken by French photographer Marc Baguelin. The third trajectory is more subtle and is represented by Gariné Torossian herself whose face is super imposed from time to time in this stylistically-layered documentary. The Irrational Remains is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Thorsten Trimpop. Battlestar Galactica: The Journey Ends - The Arrival is a 2009 film documentary. Naples Yellow is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Tylor Norwood. I'll Sing for You is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Jacques Sarasin. Theatre 2 is a 2012 doucumentary, drama, comedy, biographical film written and directed by Kazuhiro Soda. The McCourts of New York is a 1999 Documentary film written and directed by Conor McCourt. Status Quo? The Unfinished Business of Feminism in Canada is a 2012 documentary film about the state of feminism in Canada, directed by Karen Cho and produced by Ravida Din for the National Film Board of Canada. Videodiary 2-1-2006 To The Present is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Naomi Uman. Resurrect Dead: The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles, directed by Jon Foy, is a 2011 independent documentary film about the Toynbee tile phenomenon. The film was selected for the 2011 Sundance Film Festival in the U.S. Documentary category, and Foy won the category's Directing Award. War Is Not a Game is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Lode Desmet. Life of Villa is a 1912 silent war documentary set during the Mexican Revolution. Though some scenes are re-enacted after it happened, the movie is a real documentary on the struggle of Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa to overthrow dictator Porfirio Díaz. The Rehearsal is a 1974 film produced by Jules Dassin that is a cinemagraphic indictment of the Greek military junta of 1967–1974. Consider is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Panu Saeng-Xuto. Earth: The Operators' Manual - Powering the Planet is a 2012 documentary film. Show! is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Bohdan Bláhovec. Pittsburgh A To Z is a 2001 documentary created by Rick Sebak about 26 things about the City of Pittsburgh for every Letter of the Alphabet. Sebak included a larger area than just the city. In addition to the city, they include Somerset County, Fayette County, and Lawrence County. They had no rules about what to include. However, double usage of any letter gave it an added attraction. They skipped the letter H because the historic spelling of Pittsburgh did not include an H during a period of 20 years. Rampton, The Secret Hospital is a 1979 documentary film. Back to Babylon is a documentary film directed by the Iraqi-French film director Abbas Fahdel. Kudiattam is a 1986 documentary film on 2000 year old Sanskrit drama tradition of Kerala state of India, Kutiyattam. The film is directed by Prakash Jha. The film features greatest Kutiyattam maestro of modern times Guru Natyacharya Māni Mādhava Chākyār. The film has won Indian government's National Film Award for Best Arts/Cultural Film in 1987. Zendaya: Behind the Scenes is a documentary released by record artist Zendaya about the beginning of her solo music career. The 30-minute DVD was released on November 15, 2012. Witchcraft '70 is a 1970 documentary film written and directed by Luigi Scattini. "Rapping in Tehran is a documentary film focusing on the lifestyle and activities of rap music singers in Iran. Since the beginning of the 1990s, practically every kind of pop music has been forbidden in the Islamic Republic, but the state security forces crack down particularly hard on rappers. Their outfits, modeled on Western idols, their lyrics about identity conflicts and sexual deprivation, or the fact that young women sing about themselves and their problems are reason enough to keep raiding the few studios in town and closing down the Web sites of the most famous singers and bands. The only consequence is that every closed down site spawns four new ones; the studios that are closed in one place reopen somewhere else and become more attractive to the scene. Rapping in Tehran is about young people's tough struggle against the rigid rules of a government of old men whose resistance in the long run will be in vain, for the music keeps spreading: via the Internet, through exiled rappers who broadcast their lyrics into the country from Dubai, via mobile phones and secret parties. In any case, the courage with which they insist on the right to lead their own lives is cause for admiration." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. The Private From Odessa is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Luis Felipe Labaki. Untitled Public School Documentary is a 2012 documentary directed by Jason Pollock. Celine: Through the Eyes of the World is a documentary–concert film chronicling the life of Canadian singer, Celine Dion during her 2008–2009 Taking Chances World Tour. It premiered in Miami on 16 February 2010 and was released by The Hot Ticket in theaters in North America on 17 February 2010. It was also released in Australia and the United Kingdom. The film received mixed reviews from critics, with most of them indicating it is mainly for the fans. Celine: Through the Eyes of the World grossed $1,027,341 in Canada alone and became the number-one domestic movie there. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray on 29 April 2010 in Australia and in early May 2010 in Europe and North America. The home version of Celine: Through the Eyes of the World includes an additional hour of footage not seen in the film's limited theatrical run in February 2010. In the Francophone countries, it was entitled Céline: autour du monde. The DVD/Blu-ray release was commercially successful reaching number one on the charts in Canada, United Kingdom and Belgium, and number two in the United States, France, Australia, New Zealand, Netherlands, Sweden, Argentina and South Africa. Parvati is a 1977 short documentary film directed by Santi P. Choudhury. The Making of Star Wars is a television special produced by 20th Century Fox, which aired on the ABC Television Network on September 16, 1977. It was written by Richard Schickel and directed and produced by Robert Guenette. Intersexion is a documentary about intersex people. The film was researched and presented by activist Mani Mitchell, New Zealand's first "out" intersex person. It was written, directed and edited by Grant Lahood and produced by John Keir. Identites is a 2011 documentary film written by Rahal Eks, Eponine Cuervo Moll and Plato and directed by Rahal Eks. Peril of the Antilles is a 2011 experimental film directed by Fern Silva. Levitated Mass: The Story of Michael Heizer's Monolithic Sculpture is a 2013 documentary, biographical and historical film directed by Doug Pray. Princeton: A Search for Answers is a 1973 American short documentary film directed by Julian Krainin and DeWitt Sage. It won an Academy Award in 1974 for Documentary Short Subject. Go Tigers! is a documentary film created about the Tigers of Massillon, Ohio. This full-length video informs the viewer about the football team, the city, and its rivalry against the Canton McKinley High School Bulldogs. The film follows the team during the 1999 regular season. It features the players and mainly the co-captains and follows them around the whole school years and tells all their stories. Palenque is a 1972 short documentary film directed by Eugenia Rendon. The Water Tower is a 2013 documentary short film written by Peter McBride and Jake Norton and directed by Peter McBride. Kerouac is a documentary film directed by John Antonelli. Terror at Home: Domestic Violence in America is a 2005 documentary directed by Maryann DeLeo. The Palestinian is a 66 minute TV documentary from 1977. It was produced by and starred Vanessa Redgrave. "Through moments of sacrifice and also of joy, elderly Latinos find the courage to forge a new life in the United States. An elderly woman reads a poem from her newfound love. A little boy caresses his grandmother's tired face. Octogenarians study for their citizenship test. And a 98-year-old widow dances and prays for two more years of life." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. I Got Somethin' to Tell You is a 2013 documentary film directed by Whoopi Goldberg. The Art of Flight is a Red Bull sponsored documentary film about snowboarding and a successor to That's It, That's All. It was released on September 8, 2011 in the United States. The Sea [is still] Around Us is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Hope Tucker. Chenalho, el corazón de los altos is a 2001 documentary short film directed by Isabel Cristina Fregoso. Find out how Atlanta native Jonathan Smith AKA Lil Jon became the King of "Crunk" and came up with the saying "Okaaaay" and "Whaaaaat"! See how a shy high school skateboarder with glasses went to being one of the hottest DJ's in Atlanta to escape his shell and went on to work with some of the hottest acts in music: Usher, Ludacris, Jermaine Dupri, Xscape, Too Short, Public Enemy, Jadakiss, and Trick Daddy. Witness how this Southern rap pioneer had to do a lot of hard work punctuated by some serious crunk partying and where he's going from here. Setback is a 2013 short, documentary film written and directed by Bruno Jorge. Images d'Ethiopie is a 1948 documentary film directed by Jean Pichonnier and Paul Pichonnier. To Be a Romany is a 2001 documentary film directed by Helena Třeštíková. Akiko: Portrait of a Dancer is a documentary film directed by Sumiko Haneda. Huntington's Dance is a 2014 documentary biography family film written by Herbert H. Bennett and directed by Chris Furbee. The Last Magician is a documentary film directed by Tracey Holloway and Liz Thompson. Act of War - The Overthrow of the Hawaiian Nation is a 1993 film directed by Joan Lander and Puhipau. Por Sospecha de Comunista is a 2007 film directed by Cristbal Cohen and Marcelo Hermosilla. Cunnamulla is a 2000 documentary film directed by Dennis O'Rourke. Electric Blue 1 is a 1979 documentary film directed by Adam Cole. In the history of the Olympics, there's never been a controversy quite like what ensued over the 100 meter race at Seoul in 1988. The match brought together Carl Lewis (USA) and Ben Johnson (Canada) who had been fierce competitors. Lewis was known as a savvy careerist who became an American hero at the previous Los Angeles Olympics. Johnson was his chief rival, considered an underdog due to his recovery from a pulled hamstring. In less than 10 seconds, Johnson edged out in front of Lewis to win the Seoul race. But that wasn't the end. Three days later, in a reversal of fortune, the Olympic committee announced that Johnson had failed a drug test, losing his medal to Lewis in disgrace. A mystery still shrouds the race. Was Johnson exceptional in his drug usage or merely the fall guy for a widespread practice? Six of the eight finalists in the 1988 race have since been implicated for drugs -- although some still deny any wrongdoing. The Bug Trainer is a 2008 documentary film directed by Donatas Ulvydas, Linas Augutis, and Marek Skrobecki. Bovines Ou La Vraie Vie Des Vaches is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Emmanuel Gras. I Kill is a 2012 documentary film directed by Paul Wedel and David White. Wind on the Moon is a documentary film directed by Seung-jun Yi. Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession is a documentary about Los Angeles pay cable channel Z Channel which was directed by Xan Cassavetes, daughter of Hollywood director and actor John Cassavetes. It was screened out of competition at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. The documentary is about Z Channel which was one of the first pay cable TV stations in the US. Z Channel became famous for showing an eclectic variety of films, including foreign language, silent, documentary, director's cut, forgotten, overlooked, under-appreciated, erotic as well as mainstream films, without commercials and uncut and letterbox-ed when possible. The film also tells the story of Z Channel's programming director Jerry Harvey who was a true film lover, programming genius, and a man almost single handedly responsible for getting many great films shown to the public. It gives insights into Harvey's constant battle with personal demons which resulted in him ending his own life and the life of his wife in a murder-suicide. Throughout the film a variety of footage featuring some of the films shown on the Z Channel is used. Slam, ce qui nous brûle is a 2008 documentary film. Larisa is a 1980 short biographical film written and directed by Elem Klimov. Mothersbane is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Jason Jakaitis. Juku is a 2011 short documentary film written by Gilmar Gonzales and Kiro Russo and directed by Kiro Russo. Tupac Assassination: Conspiracy or Revenge is a documentary film about the unsolved murder of rapper Tupac Shakur produced by Frank Alexander, a Shakur bodyguard who was with the rapper at the time of the shooting, produced and directed by Richard Bond. The film was released October 23, 2007 on DVD. La puerta de no retorno is a 2010 film. "I Am Not What You See reveals how the gender minority in Nepal still experience deep discrimination and injustice by family, society, and the State. This compelling short documentary investigates the urgent need for long-term governmental policies and programs that protect the human rights and welfare of the gender minorities" Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Drawing Dead: The Highs & Lows of Online Poker is a documentary film directed by Mike Weeks. Champions Forever the Definitive Edition: Muhammad Ali - The Lost Interviews is a 2009 sports film directed by Dimitri Logothetis. The Shanghai Document is an early documentary film. This silent film was directed by Yakov Bliokh and was released in the USSR in 1928. The film portrays Shanghai, China in the early 1920s. It shows the contrasts between the world of Western expatriates who live in the luxurious Shanghai International Settlement, and that of the Shanghainese inhabitants, who spend their days laboring. The events which inspired the film revolve around the Chinese nationalist revolution, including the May Thirtieth Movement, and the First United Front of the Chinese Communist Party, and the Nationalists, and its collapse in February 1927 when Chiang Kai-shek ordered a purge of the Communists in Shanghai and in other cities held by the revolutionaries. Touch of the Light is a 2012 Taiwanese drama film directed by Chang Jung-Chi. The film was selected as the Taiwanese entry for the Best Foreign Language Oscar at the 85th Academy Awards, but it did not make the final shortlist. Shape of the Shapeless is a 2010 short, documentary film written and directed by Jayan Cherian. The Blank Generation is the earliest published D-I-Y "home movies" of New York punk's birth filmed by Amos Poe and Ivan Kral, legendary 1970s guitarist with Iggy Pop, Blondie and Patti Smith. Fanizzi's Gold is a 2011 short documentary biographical film directed by Georgia Gruzen. Children of Tsunami: The Journey Continues is a 2005 film that is the sequel of the film Children of Tsunami: No More Tears, released in 2005. American Scary is a 2006 American documentary film about the history and legacy of classic television horror hosts, written and directed by American independent filmmakers John E. Hudgens and Sandy Clark. The film features nearly 60 horror hosts, including interviews with and vintage clips of many of the genre's stars, such as Washington, DC's Count Gore De Vol, New York City's Zacherley, Los Angeles' Vampira, Cleveland's Ghoulardi, and Chicago's Svengoolie, among others. Non-host celebrities such as Neil Gaiman, Tim Conway, Forrest J Ackerman, Tom Savini, Leonard Maltin, Joel Hodgson, and Bob Burns appear to reminisce about the influence of horror hosts on their careers and/or lives, as well as many modern hosts who keep the tradition alive in modern shows on public-access television cable TV or the internet. The film premiered in October 2006 at the Hollywood Film Festival, and was released on DVD in February 2009. In April 2010, it won the award for Best Independent Production of 2009 at the 8th Annual Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Awards. Celsius 41.11 is a 2004 documentary film produced to be a rebuttal to Michael Moore's film Fahrenheit 9/11. 41.11 °C was chosen because, according to the makers of the movie, it is the temperature at which the brain begins to die. The film addresses five charges made against George W. Bush in Moore's film and criticizes 2004 Democratic Presidential candidate John Kerry. It was released during the run-up to the 2004 United States Presidential general election. It took six weeks to make Celsius 41.11. The production was funded and the film distributed to a limited number of movie theaters by Citizens United, a conservative political organization. Celsius 41.11 performed less well at the box office than comparable left leaning documentaries and significantly poorer than Fahrenheit 9/11. The producer attributed this to voter fatigue and to a time tabling clash with the World Series. The critics' response was described as "irk[ed]" by the BBC. A number of critics described the film as a campaign advertisement for George W. Bush. Several believed that the movie would appeal primarily to convinced supporters of George W. Freedom Downtime is a 2001 documentary film sympathetic to the convicted computer hacker Kevin Mitnick, directed by Emmanuel Goldstein and produced by 2600 Films. The documentary centers on the fate of Mitnick, who is claimed to have been misrepresented in the feature film Takedown produced by Miramax and adapted from the book by the same name by Tsutomu Shimomura and John Markoff, which is based on disputed events. The film also documents a number of computer enthusiasts who drive across the United States searching for Miramax representatives and demonstrating their discontent with certain aspects of the bootleg script of Takedown they had acquired. One of their major points of criticism was that the script ended with Mitnick being convicted to serve a long-term prison sentence, while in reality, at the time the film's production, Mitnick had not yet even had a trial but nonetheless was incarcerated for five years without bail in a high-security facility. Freedom Downtime also touches on what happened to other hackers after being sentenced. The development of the Free Kevin movement is also covered. Häxan is a 1922 Swedish/Danish silent horror film written and directed by Benjamin Christensen. Based partly on Christensen's study of the Malleus Maleficarum, a 15th-century German guide for inquisitors, Häxan is a study of how superstition and the misunderstanding of diseases and mental illness could lead to the hysteria of the witch-hunts. The film was made as a documentary but contains dramatized sequences that are comparable to horror films. With Christensen's meticulous recreation of medieval scenes and the lengthy production period, the film was the most expensive Scandinavian silent film ever made, costing nearly two million Swedish kronor. Although it won acclaim in Denmark and Sweden, the film was banned in the United States and heavily censored in other countries for what were considered at that time graphic depictions of torture, nudity and sexual perversion. Rosa’s Journey: The Story of a Nation is a 2009 documentary film directed by Luigi Acquisto. Vile Bodies: Naked is a 1998 documentary directed by Edmund Coulthard. Just For One Day is an Ethiopian 2008 short documentary film. Xenofolies is a 1991 short documentary film. The Last Shepherd is a 2012 biographical drama/documentary film written and directed by Marco Bonfanti. It premièred at the 2012 Tokyo International Film Festival and in Italy at the 2013 Turin Film Festival. In 2013 it was shown at the Dubai International Film Festival, at the Slamdance Film Festival and several other film festivals. Words of Advice: William S. Burroughs on the Road, is a 2007 documentary about William S. Burroughs directed by Lars Movin and Steen Møller Rasmussen and produced in Denmark. The documentary is based on never-before-seen footage from his visit to Denmark in October 1983, and from his later years in Lawrence, Kansas. Shortly thereafter he began touring and reading his work to new generations of readers and thus establishing himself as a cult figure. The film focuses on Burroughs' unique talent as a performer, and on his later work, especially what is known as The Last Trilogy. In addition to the historic footage there are new interviews with friends and colleagues such as James Grauerholz, John Giorno, Hal Willner, Jennie Skerl, Regina Weinreich, Ann Douglas. Music by Material, Patti Smith, and Islamic Diggers. The film premiered on 9 November 2007 at the Copenhagen International Documentary Festival in Copenhagen and the book and a Burroughs photo exhibition were launched the same night. The first international screening took place at the Paradiso in Amsterdam, as part of a Burroughs tribute event on 10 November 2007. Dialogues'99 is a 2004 short documentary film written and directed by Dirk Szuszies and Ferdinand Teubner. 'African Spirit' celebrates the diversity of Ethiopia's culture and wildlife. It journeys from North to South - spanning mountains, rainforests and the hottest place on Earth. It documents Muslims mixing with Christians as they have for over a millennia and the 'honey people' of the forest, filmed here for the first time. Visually stunning and unsentimental, this is Ethiopia as you've never seen it before. On Tiptoe: Gentle Steps to Freedom is a 2000 American short documentary film directed by Eric Simonson. It tells the story of South African singers Ladysmith Black Mambazo. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Oxhide, directed by Liu Jiayin, is a 2005 narrative independent Chinese film that portrays the director's family and their apartment in Beijing. Liu was 23 years old when the film was recorded. Bernau liegt am Meer is a 2003 film directed by Martina Döcker. Happy Birthday, Garfield is an hour-long television dedicated to the tenth anniversary of the Garfield comic strip, hosted by its creator Jim Davis. The special was first broadcast May 17, 1988 on CBS. It has only been released on VHS home video. ABEL RAISES CAIN is an unprecedented glimpse into the life and bizarre career of Alan Abel, the notorious media prankster who has made a name for himself several times over with stunts that are just ridiculous enough to be believable, especially to a media that feeds on salacious stories. In this loving portrait of an eccentric father, Alan's daughter, Jenny, takes the audience on a roller coaster ride through the myriad of elaborate hoaxes and schemes that Abel pulled off over the years, all of which were designed to provoke, amuse and make people question everything that they see, hear or read. El Símbolo Y El Cuate, Serrat & Sabina is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Francesc Relea. Art Is War is a 2013 documentary film and directed by Devon Riter. Born in Chicago is a 2013 music documentary film directed by John Anderson. Reverón is a 1952 short documentary film written and directed by Margot Benacerraf. No, Global Tour is a 2010 documentary film directed by Santiago Sierra. Kosi Katha: The Making of the Famine is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Jharna Anurag Singh. T.A.M.I. Show is a 1964 concert film released by American International Pictures. It includes performances by numerous popular rock and roll and R&B musicians from the United States and England. The concert was held at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium on October 28 and 29, 1964. Free tickets were distributed to local high school students. The acronym "T.A.M.I." was used inconsistently in the show's publicity to mean both "Teenage Awards Music International" and "Teen Age Music International". The best footage from each of the two concert dates was edited into the film, which was released on December 29, 1964. Jan and Dean emceed the event and performed its theme song, "Here They Come" written by Los Angeles composers P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri. Jack Nitzsche was the show's music director. The film was shot by director Steve Binder and his crew from The Steve Allen Show, using a precursor to High Definition television called "Electronovision" invented by the self-taught "electronics whiz," Bill Sargent. The film was the second of a handful of productions that used the system. Time Indefinite is an autobiographical 1993 documentary film directed by Ross McElwee and exploring themes of grief, mortality, and the convenient disconnection of watching life through a camera lens. The title comes from a passage from the Bible mentioned by a visiting Jehovah's Witness. McElwee is filming the interaction and focused on adjusting the exposure to try to catch the play of light over the man's face; distracted, he "hears" the phrase about 30 seconds after the man says it and understands it to refer to the unpredictable imminence of death. Aatsinki: The Story of Arctic Cowboys is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jessica Oreck. Listening to the Silences is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Pedro Flores. Doctor Who: The Crusade is a 1999 documentary film directed by Paul Vanezis and Douglas Camfield. Cidade Cinza is a historical biography documentary film directed by Marcelo Mesquita and Guilherme Valiengo. Roadmap to Apartheid is a 2012 historical documentary film directed by Eron Davidson and Ana Nogueira. HARVARD PARK documents how baseball greats Darryl Strawberry and Eric Davis, just prior to spring training, would return each year to the Los Angeles neighborhood where they grew up and give back to the community. The Writing in the Sky is a 2010 film directed by Garry Keane. In the wake of his stepfather’s death, Thomas Allen Harris embarks on a journey of reconciliation with the man who raised him as a son but whom he could never call "father." As part of the first wave of black South African exiles, Harris’s stepfather, B. Pule Leinaeng, and his eleven comrades left their home in Bloemfontein in 1960. They told the world about the brutality of the apartheid system and raised support for the fledgling African National Congress and its leader, Nelson Mandela. Drawing upon the memories of the surviving disciples and their families, along with the talent of young South African actors who portray their harrowing experiences, Twelve Disciples of Nelson Mandela tells an intimate story of family and home against the backdrop of a global movement for freedom. A co-production of the Independent Television Service (ITVS), in association with P.O.V./American Documentary and the National Black Programming Consortium. Orange Waistcoats is a 1992 film directed by Jurij Chascewatskij and E.Milova. Always a Bridesmaid is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Nina Davenport. El pabellón alemán is a 2009 documentary film directed and written by Juan Miguel Millares. "How does a poor Acapulco scuba diver end up marrying a top New York model? “Long Dog” lives fearlessly, scuba diving and hunting for the great white shark in colorful 1950‘s Acapulco. Enter a beautiful New York City model on vacation with her husband and her three-year-old son. More than a friendship develops, and what ensues effects the lives of everyone involved. Giving up her celebrity and sophisticated life in New York City, Robin decides to move to Acapulco with her son John to live with Long Dog. Not only does the redheaded Robin stick out, but John feels like an outcast as the freckled gringo. Robin and John are among the story tellers about this mismatched love affair that seems destined to failure. But despite the overwhelming culture shock, love prevails in a time and place which epitomizes romance and adventure." Quoting Sandy Wolf from the 2011 Cinequest Film Festival site. Unacceptable Levels is a 2013 documentary film about the widespread use of artificial chemicals and their effects on the natural environment and on human health. The life and death of the iconic British princess Diana; her impact on the people of her country and the rest of the world. Divine Food: 100 Years in the Kosher Delicatessen Trade is a 1998 American documentary film directed by Bill Chayes about how immigrant butcher Isaac Oscherwitz became the patriarch of a kosher food corporation that serves the dietary needs of Jewish people across the United States. The film reveals the step-by-step, behind-the-scenes process of butchering kosher meat, and also looks into the lives of the Oscherwitz family through personal interviews, family stories, and archival home videos. Sign Posts of Dr. Roy Walford is a 2007 documentary film directed by Chris Rowland. In Organic We Trust is a documentary film directed by Robert Kiplin Pastor. Secrecy is a 2008 documentary film directed by Harvard University professors Peter Galison and Robb Moss. According to its website, it "is a film about the vast, invisible world of government secrecy," and features interviews with a variety of people on all sides of the secrecy issue, including Steven Aftergood, Tom Blanton, James B. Bruce, Barton Gellman, Melissa Boyle Mahle, the plaintiffs in United States v. Reynolds, Siegfried Hecker, Mike Levin, and Neal Katyal and Charles Swift. It competed in the Documentary Competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival and at the Berlin Film Festival, among many other venues. The film was the winner of the Special Jury Award for Documentary Features at the Independent Film Festival, Boston, and was named Best Documentary at the Newport International Film Festival. Anestanaria - Das Fest der Feuerläufer von Lagadas is a 1984 film directed by Margarete Raspé. The Turandot Project is a music documentary film directed by Allan Miller. Epoca - The Making Of History is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Andreas Hoessli and Isabella Huser. Hollywood Don't Surf! is a 2011 documentary film that premiered in the 2010 Cannes Film Festival while a work in progress and held its North American premiere at the 2011 Telluride Film Festival, where it was presented to a packed park at the Abel Gance Outdoor theater by actress Daryl Hannah. Narrated by Robert Englund, the film explores the purportedly strained relationship between Hollywood film makers and the surfing community. After an irreverent and wild main title sequence, Hollywood Don't Surf! examines the legendary film Gidget and the subsequent surf exploitation genre that followed, centering on the ambitious John Milius written and directed 1978 Warner Bros. film Big Wednesday, a commercial disappointment at the time, and the smattering of surf films that followed as Big Wednesday enjoyed a subsequent rebirth as a cult film on home video. The documentary features: Quentin Tarantino Steven Spielberg John Milius Jan-Michael Vincent Robert Englund Stacy Peralta Gary Busey Lee Purcell Frankie Avalon John Stockwell Nia Peeples William Katt Laird Hamilton Greg Noll Kathy Kohner-Zuckerman Rick Dano Holly Beck "A documentary about the porn industry in eastern Europe (principally Prague). The director is a consumer of porn and wants to discover more about the industry and the people who make it. Instead of being a prurient exercise in getting closer to beautiful young men, von Heikkinen's journey reveals some of the human costs of the industry. He gets to meet porn producers and pornstars, and some of their parents. For an industry which acknowledges that a boy at 18 has probably 2 years work before he becomes unemployable, there are a lot of human casualties, some turning to drugs or prostitution or homelessness. The film accidentally captured a moment when the Prague porn explosion began to fail. One of the key interview subjects is Dan Fomar, producer, and one of his former stars Roda Prohacka, who was also for a number of years his boyfriend. BR" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. Furthest from the Wild is a documentary biographical drama historical fiction film directed by Alex Tello. Burroughs is a 1983 documentary film directed by Howard Brookner. If You Love This Planet is a 1982 short documentary film recording a lecture given to SUNY Plattsburgh students by physician and anti-nuclear activist Dr. Helen Caldicott about the dangers posed by nuclear weapons. The movie was directed by Terre Nash and produced by Edward Le Lorrain for Studio D, the women's studio of the National Film Board of Canada. Studio D head Kathleen Shannon was executive producer. Released during the term of the Reagan administration and at the height of Cold War nuclear tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union, If You Love This Planet was officially designated as "foreign political propaganda" by the U.S. Department of Justice and suppressed in the United States. The subsequent uproar over that action gave the film a publicity boost; it went on to win the 1982 Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. It appears that the first cinema showing of the film in Britain did not occur until April 2008, when it was screened by the London Socialist Film Co-op. Glickman is a documentary film directed by James L. Freedman. The Making of A Summer's Tale is a documentary film directed by Françoise Etchegaray and Jean-André Fieschi. Israel: A Home Movie is a 2013 documentary history film directed by Eliav Lilti. 12-12-12 is a documentary film that premiered on October 29, 2013 at the Directors Guild of America theater on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood. Filmed from 23 different camera angles, the documentary was originally to have been two separate movies, made by two separate production groups, one headed by Beatle legend, Sir Paul McCartney, and one from the Robin Hood Foundation's film team. After production crews encountered one another at Madison Square Garden during filming, the two teams joined forces to create one single movie using both companies' equipment and resources. On December 12, 2012, some of entertainment’s most iconic names came together at Madison Square Garden for a historic concert to benefit the victims of Hurricane Sandy, 12-12-12: The Concert for Sandy Relief. It was produced jointly by James Dolan, Executive Chairman of The Madison Square Garden Company; John Sykes, President of Entertainment Enterprises for Clear Channel Media Holdings.; and Harvey Weinstein, Co-Founder and Chairman of The Weinstein Company, and presented by Chase with all proceeds going to the Robin Hood Relief Fund. This program profiles writers of the 20s, 30s, and 40s, known as the Pulp Fiction-era. These writers created the iconic characters who live on today in our collective hearts and imaginations. It has even been estimated that 90-95% of the top blockbusters in Hollywood movies, were based on the stories from the Pulp Fiction-era. Children Without is a 1964 American short documentary film directed by Charles Guggenheim, about a young girl and her brother growing up in the housing projects of Detroit. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, losing to another film by Guggenheim, Nine from Little Rock. Évocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie is a 2012 documentary film that chronicles the history of The Morton Downey Jr. Show and Downey's influence on "trash TV." The film also looks at Downey's relationship with Al Sharpton and other important 1980s figures, as well as Downey's role as a predecessor for conservative commentators like Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh. An in-depth look about the controversy surrounding Kevin Smith's "Dogma", and the effects it had on those involved in its production. The Runners is a 2013 documentary film directed by Matan Rochlitz and Ivo Gormley. Land of Genesis is a 2010 documentary written by Idit Hahmovitz and Efraim Sidon and directed by Moshe Alpert. Walls of Fire is a 1971 documentary film directed by Herbert Kline and Edmund Penney. Narrated by Ricardo Montalbán, this documentary examines the history of Mexican murals and their artists. Among the works examined are those by José Clemente Orozco, Diego Rivera and David Alfaro Siqueiros. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The documentary was also won a Golden Globe award for Best Documentary film in 1972. Sports Illustrated: The Making of Swimsuit 2012 is a 2012 documentary film. The Shadow of Hate is a 1995 American short documentary film directed by Charles Guggenheim about racism. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Ed & Vern's Rock Store is a 2008 Short documentary film written and directed by Christopher Leps. Our Daily Bread is a 2005 documentary film directed, co-produced, and with cinematography by Nikolaus Geyrhalter. The script was co-written by Wolfgang Widerhofer and Nikolaus Geyrhalter. The film depicts how modern food production companies employ technology to maximize efficiency, consumer safety and profit. It consists mainly of actual working situations without voice-over narration or interviews as the director tries to let viewers form their own opinion on the subject. The names of the companies where the footage was filmed are purposely not shown. The director's goal is to provide a realistic view on the internal workings of multiple food production companies in our modern society. The Dotted Line is a 2011 documentary short film written by Jeremy Chilnick, Matthew Galkin and Morgan Spurlock and directed by Morgan Spurlock. From the East is a 1993 documentary film directed by Chantal Akerman. In the South of Ethiopia, in one of the driest regions in the world, the Borana people have become the guardians of the most precious common good: water. Once a year, when the dry season reaches its peak in Oromia, after long days of walking, the Borana herders gather with their livestock around their «singing» wells. While around the world there is a rush to privatize water resources, the Borana consider water as a common property and a right for everyone, allowing them to have access to water without any money being exchanged. Menstrual Man is a 2013 documentary film by Amit Virmani. The film tells the story of Arunachalam Muruganantham, an Indian social entrepreneur and inventor whose machines enable rural women to manufacture low-cost sanitary pads for their communities. It premiered at the 2013 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, and was voted a Top Ten Audience Favourite at both Hot Docs and IDFA the same year. The film was nominated for Best Feature Documentary at the Asia Pacific Screen Awards. 89 Millimeter is a documentary by filmmaker Sebastian Heinzel, filmed from 2004 to 2005 in Belarus. Born to Be Wild is a 2011 American nature documentary short film about orphaned orangutans and elephants. It was directed by David Lickley, written and produced by Drew Fellman. It was distributed in the United States by Warner Bros. Pictures and IMAX Pictures. The trailer was released in December 2010 during a Marcus Theatres showing of Yogi Bear. The film was released April 8, 2011 and is narrated by Morgan Freeman. There was a Premiere of the film in Montreal, Quebec on March 30, 2011 at 9:30 AM at the Montreal Science Centre IMAX Telus Theatre for Two Montreal Primary schools and two secondary schools. In March 2012, it won the Genesis Award for Best Documentary Feature from The Humane Society of the United States "for its celebration of the people rehabilitating baby elephants and orangutans orphaned by poaching and habitat encroachment." Maurice Sendak & All His Wild Things is a 1986 film written and directed by Herbert Danska. "Always My Son chronicles the transformation of Ed from a self-described “macho Mexican” to co-founder of his town’s first LGBT youth support group after his son came out. Director Vivian Kleiman lets a straightforward story speak for itself in this touching and inspiring short documentary." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Brian Pillman: Loose Cannon is a 2006 documentary sports film. Fenlands is a 1946 British film directed by Ken Annakin. An Inconvenient Truth...Or Convenient Fiction? is an American documentary film by Steven F. Hayward, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, who set to address what he observed as inconsistencies in the film An Inconvenient Truth. Elizabeth Wiltsee taught herself to read at age four. By age 10 she had taught herself classical Greek. And not long after, Chinese. A brilliant and creative intellectual with a 200 IQ, Elizabeth was a voracious reader, a voluminous writer and a standout student at Stanford University. Decades later she could be found sleeping outside the church doors in the small farming town of Watsonville, California, her beautiful mind ravaged by mental illness. Using Elizabeth's own personal letters, excerpts from her poems and books, and stories from those who knew her best, this moving documentary tells the story of a troubled soul and of the community that embraced her. Based on the memoir by Stanford English professor John Felstiner."An achingly beautiful documentary" S.Tavernetti, FilmFestivals.com"Opens a door to the divine...We don't often hear the personal histories of the homeless people around us, but in hearing Wiltsee's, we get a glimpse of something that isn't just human -- but spiritually compelling." K.Monk/Vancouver Sun"A haunting documentary...Tender and sympathetic-without ever being sappy... Offers valuable insight into the diverse paths than lead a person to sleeping, inconsolable, on the church house steps." John DeFore / Austin American Statesmen "Has the delicacy of chamber music...You won't leave the theater without being moved..." JHStape, Review Vancouver"A meditation on genius and disorder...Rich in strange, solemn beauty." RvBusack/MetroActive Abandoned Eden is a 2004 short drama film written by Eno Milkani and Besnik Bisha and directed by Eno Milkani. An intimate, hands on encounter with a maximum security juvenile correctional facility in Chino California, Broomfield's film becomes a 13 week odyssey into Hell, charting with great compassion many young men's struggle for survival in a brutal environment. The biting comedic satire of Mort Sahl and his rise to prominence in the 1960s. From Gulf to Gulf to Gulf is a 2013 historical and musical documentary film directed by Shaina Anand and Ashok Sukumaran. The Lost Sea is a 2013 documentary history war film written and directed by Chun-Hsiu Hung. I Am a Part of the Problem is a 2013 film written and directed by a group of artists named Canecapovolto. Fog City Mavericks is a 2007 documentary film directed by Gary Leva. It chronicles the San Francisco Bay Area's most well known filmmakers through interviews and rare archival footage. People featured in the film include: George Lucas Brad Bird Clint Eastwood Francis Ford Coppola Carroll Ballard Philip Kaufman Saul Zaentz John Korty Chris Columbus Steven Spielberg Cash Peters provided the voice of Charlie Chaplin. The film premiered at San Francisco's Castro Theater on April 29, 2007. George Lucas and John Lasseter attended as guest speakers. The film also shows some of the movies made by these filmmakers such as American Graffiti, Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Apocalypse Now, The Godfather, The Black Stallion, Home Alone, Mrs. Doubtfire, Toy Story and many others. The films shown in the documentary are considered the most successful films of all time. Beyond the Team is a 2012 Short film directed by Tim Kulikowski. Past Present is a 2013 documentary film directed by Tiong Guan Saw. Don't Drop It is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Barra Funda and Richard Linklater. Strong Enough to Break is a documentary film by Ashley Greyson that follows Hanson's struggle to release a follow-up to their fifth studio album, This Time Around, and the creation of their independent record label 3CG Records. The documentary was shown at many college campuses around the United States during their 2005 tour and also at the 10th Annual Hollywood Film Festival in 2006, where it was nominated for Best Documentary. The Strong Enough To Break DVD/CD can now be ordered via the official Hanson store. Orders began shipping September 14, 2009. Primo Levi: The Memory Of The Offence is a 1992 documentary film directed by Denys Blakeway. The Soul of a Man is a 2003 documentary film directed by Wim Wenders as the second installment of the documentary film series "The Blues" produced by Martin Scorsese. The film explores the musical careers of blues musicians Skip James, Blind Willie Johnson and J. B. Lenoir. The film is narrated by Laurence Fishburne in character as Blind Willie Johnson, and features performances by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Beck, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, James 'Blood' Ulmer, T-Bone Burnett, Eagle Eye Cherry, Shemekia Copeland, Garland Jeffreys, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Los Lobos, Bonnie Raitt, Lou Reed, Marc Ribot, Lucinda Williams, and Cassandra Wilson. The film won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography for Nonfiction Programming, and the Audience Award at the São Paulo International Film Festival. It was also screened out of competition at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival. Children of the Deployed is a 2012 short war documentary directed by Brad Pulliam. Getting to the Nutcracker is a documentary family film directed by Serene Meshel-Dillman. Gift is a 1993 experimental docudrama made by Perry Farrell and Perry's then-girlfriend, Casey Niccoli. The film prominently features Farrell's band, "Jane's Addiction". The majority of filming took place during the recording sessions of Ritual de lo Habitual, in 1990. "Gift" premiered to a limited audience on February 19, 1993, and was released to VHS by Warner Brothers on August 24, 1993. A laserdisc version was released in Japan, which features Japanese subtitles and obligatory censorship of visible genitalia. The film has achieved cult status among Jane's Addiction fans. The following Jane's Addiction songs are featured in the soundtrack: "Ain't No Right" "Classic Girl" "Of Course" "Stop" "Three Days" Rapper Ice-T, Body Count, and Jane's Addiction performed Sly and the Family Stone's "Don't Call Me Nigger, Whitey" in the film. Before My Eyes is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Clara Ivone Rivera Paredes. Nǃai, the Story of a ǃKung Woman is a film by ethnographic filmmaker John Marshall. The film was first broadcast in 1980 as part of the Odyssey series on PBS and is distributed by Documentary Educational Resources. It provides a broad overview of Juǀʼhoan life, both past and present, and an intimate portrait of Nǃai, a Juǀʼhoan woman who in 1978 was in her mid-thirties. Nǃai tells her own story, and in so doing, the story of Juǀʼhoan life over a thirty-year period. "Before the white people came we did what we wanted," Nǃai recalls, describing the life she remembers as a child: following her mother to pick berries, roots, and nuts as the season changed; the division of giraffe meat; the kinds of rain; her resistance to her marriage to ǀGunda at the age of eight; and her changing feelings about her husband when he becomes a healer. As Nǃai speaks, the film presents scenes from 1950s that show her as a young girl and a young wife. The uniqueness of Nǃai may lie in its tight integration of ethnography and history. While it portrays the changes in Juǀʼhoan society over thirty years, it never loses sight of the individual, Nǃai. Triage: Dr. James Orbinski's Humanitarian Dilemma is a 2007 film directed by Patrick Reed. Living Forever is a 1999 short animation documentary directed by Gary Goldberger, Lara Hannay and Peter H. Reynolds and written by Peter H. Reynolds. Dogora: Ouvrons les yeux is a 2004 film directed by Patrice Leconte which has been compared in its conception with the likes of the Qatsi trilogy. Al-Halqa - In the Storytellers Circle is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Ladenburger. When the Drum is Beating is a 2011 documentary film directed by Whitney Dow. Refused Are Fucking Dead is a 2006 documentary about the punk band Refused and the last year of their career. The film was directed by the band's guitarist, Kristofer Steen. It includes live performances of "Spectre," "Life Support Addiction," "Circlepit," "New Noise," and "Rather Be Dead." The DVD includes two of Refused's music videos as well as live performances of all the songs on The Shape of Punk To Come as bonus features. The film shares its name with one of the band's songs on The Shape of Punk to Come and is a reference to a song titled "Born Against Are Fucking Dead" by the New York Hardcore band Born Against. Dorf im Herbst is an East German film. It was released in 1953. The Old Fool Who Moved the Mountains is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Joanna Vasquez Arong. Until recently, the extraordinary phenomena of Russian parapsychology have been hidden from the eyes of the West. Now the icy veil of secrecy has melted and we can finally investigate their powerful and mystifying work. Born in 1895, Alberta Hunter first rose to fame as a blues singer in the early '20s; Louis Armstrong, Eubie Blake, and Sidney Bechet all played on her records, she headlined nightclubs in the United States and Europe, and starred with Paul Robeson in the British production of Showboat in 1928. In 1956, after almost 35 years in show business, Hunter decided to retire from performing, and took a job as a nurse. In 1977, the hospital where she worked, believing her to be 65 years old (they were off by 17 years), gave her mandatory retirement. With little to do, Hunter began performing at a night spot in New York's Greenwich Village called the Cookery; singing with even greater force and personality than she had in her youth, Hunter's shows wowed jazz critics, and she went on to record three successful albums for Columbia Records and score the film Remember My Name before she passed on in 1984. Alberta Hunter: My Castle's Rockin' is a warm and fascinating portrait of Hunter's personal and professional lives, featuring plenty of footage of the ageless diva performing for an enthusiastic audience. Billy Taylor narrates. Malberiyum Pattunoolum is a 1991 film directed by P. P. Govindan. El reto is a 1978 short documentary film written and directed by Lisskulla Moltke-Hoff. The Young Romantic: A Portrait of Yundi is a 2008 documentary film directed by Barbara Willis Sweete. Song of the New Earth is a 2014 documentary, biography and music directed by Ward Serrill. The Lady in Question is Charles Busch is a 2005 documentary biographical film written and directed by John Catania and Charles D. Ignacio. Sara dar dah daghigh-eh is an Iranian short documentary film co-produced and directed by Sadaf Foroughi. A sculpture comes alive in clay, dies in plaster and is reborn in marble – this is a process that has rarely been documented. Follow master sculptor Emmanuel Fillion as he conceives a new piece, and witness the many steps he must take before it is ready to be immortalized. Travel through the limestone tunnels, to the monuments of France and the magnificent marble mountains of Italy in order to walk in the footsteps of the masters. Historic footage evokes rich traditions dating back to Michelangelo’s day. First Graders is a 1984 Iranian documentary feature film directed by Abbas Kiarostami, in which a hidden camera follows a group of first graders during a day at school. Spain in Flames is a 1937 compilation film made by Helen van Dongen during the Spanish Civil War. Hal Erickson has written that the film "... is remarkable in its willingness to offer both sides of the conflict -- though its sympathies are firmly with the Loyalists." The film consists of two parts. The first, "The Fight for Freedom", was based on film footage from a Spanish government documentary Spain and the Fight for Freedom. The second part, "They Shalt Not Pass", was based on a short film No Pasaran! done by the Artkino Film Company of the Soviet Union, where van Dongen was working at the time the film was made. John Dos Passos narrated parts of the film, and the commentary was written by Dos Passos, Ernest Hemingway, Archibald MacLeish, and Prudencio de Pareda. Erickson writes that, "The horrendous images of battlefield carnage, not to mention the close-ups of suffering and dying Spanish children, still pack a wallop when seen today." Later, Hemingway, Dos Passos, Lillian Hellman and others founded the company Contemporary Historians, which produced another film called The Spanish Earth, directed by Joris Ivens and edited by van Dongen. KanZeOn: The Magical Potential of Sound is a 2011 music documentary film directed by Neil Cantwell and Tim Grabham. Home Front is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Richard Hankin. "The story of Ayrton Senna, perhaps the greatest race car driver who ever lived, is an epic tale that literally twists at every turn. In the mid 1980s, Senna, a young, gifted driver, exploded onto the world of Formula One racing. As a Brazilian in a predominantly European sport, a purist in a world polluted with backroom deals, and a man of faith in an arena filled with cynicism, Senna had to fight hard—both on and off the track. Facing titanic struggles, he conquered Formula One and became a global icon who was idolized in his home country. Told solely through the use of archival footage, Asif Kapadia’s documentary is a thrill ride worthy of its daring subject. Adrenaline will be pumping as cameras from inside Senna’s car put you smack-dab in the driver’s seat. Buckle your seat belt; Senna will take you on a trip you do not want to miss." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Who Is Henry Jaglom? is a 1997 documentary film directed by Henry Alex Rubin and Jeremy Workman. Strip Jack Naked is a 1990 documentary film written by Paul Hallam and Ron Peck and directed by Ron Peck. DRY WOOD is a 1973 short documentary film directed by Les Blank. The Infamous T is a 2013 short documentary and drama film directed by Melissa Koch. Jambo Amani is a 2013 documentary, drama and war film written and directed by Unai Aranzadi. A Difference is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Zion Free Johnson and Ray Rea. Since Pearl Harbor is a 1943 short documentary film commissioned by the United States Government during World War II. It is a "report to the American People" regarding the wartime activities of the American Red Cross since the Attack on Pearl Harbor. The LIP Factor - Imagination in Power is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Christian Rouaud. You Won't Regret That Tattoo is a 2013 short, documentary, biographical film written and directed by Angie Bird. This revealing program explores the degree to which money and expediency has corrupted science and the ways in which the scientific method can expose those who commit it. The Killing of America is a 1982 American documentary film directed by Sheldon Renan and Leonard Schrader. The film was premiered in New York City in February 1982 and was recently shown at the 2013 Fantasia Festival. Gerhard Richter Painting is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Corinna Belz. Voluntad & Paz is a 2012 documentary short drama film written and directed by Carlos P Beltran. A Little Monastery in Tuscany is a 1988 documentary film directed by Otar Iosseliani. Svetlana about Svetlana is a 2008 film that explores the life and literary works of Svetlana Alliluyeva, Joseph Stalin's daughter. It is the story of Lana Parshina and her attempt to find Svetlana Alliluyeva and, ultimately, to find some answers to the questions about Alliluyeva's autobiographical book Twenty Letters to a Friend that Lana read when she was ten. Bully is a 2011 documentary film about bullying in U.S. schools. Directed by Lee Hirsch, the film follows the lives of five students who face bullying on a daily basis. Bully premiered at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival. It was also screened at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival and the LA Film Festival. Bully had its global premiere at Italy's Ischia Film Festival on July 17, 2011. Bully was acquired by The Weinstein Company immediately after its premiere at Tribeca Film Festival. The film was released in United States theaters on March 30, 2012. On the official website the filmmakers are promoting Bully as an important advocacy tool against bullying and in facilitating an anti-bullying movement. Contrary to the filmmaker's goals, the film suffered from a lack of accessibility in theatres due to MPAA rating controversy and from an extended downtime between theatre and home release. The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD on February 12, 2013 only with the PG-13 rated version. Shoot Down is a 2006 documentary regarding the events surrounding the Brothers to the Rescue organization and the eventual shootdown of two of its aircraft. Based on 5 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes, 80% of the critics enjoyed Shoot Down with an average rating of 7/10. Be Home Soon: Letters From My Grandfather is a 2012 documentary film directed by Melissa Howden. Mariage Blanc is a short documentary film directed by Gustav Deutsch and Mostafa Tabbou. The Dawn Fraser Story is a documentary about Australian swimmer Dawn Fraser. It was made by Joy Cavill, who later made a feature film about Fraser, Dawn!, and had a romantic relationship with her. It is one of the few Australian documentary films of the time to be directed by a woman. While filming at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, Cavill suffered a heart attack. Live Action Radio is a 2008 short documentary film written by Tomasz Jurkiewicz and Tomasz Wozniczka and directed by Tomasz Jurkiewicz. "Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset are a Danish-Norwegian couple, both artists, who have been working together since 1995 and have had a joint studio in Berlin since 1997. Michael Elmgreem was born in Copenhagen in 1961 and Ingar Dragset was born in Trondheim in Norway in 1968. The couple’s work is shown internationally; in Germany they gained a name for themselves for the memorial in memory of homosexual victims of the Nazi regime that was unveiled on 27 May, 2008 at the edge of Berlin’s Tiergarten Park. This film does not only present a selection of their work and its genesis; it also shows the couple’s own unusual trajectory which reached a highpoint in 2009 with their design of Danish and Nordic Countries pavilions at the Venice Biennale. The pair first met in the mid-nineties and fell in love at once. At the time, Michael Elmgreen was working on installations and Ingar Dragset was a talented clown – and enthusiastic knitter. They presented their first joint work – programmatically titled ‘Instant Baby’ – at Malmö Konsthall museum in Sweden. Their output has often provoked controversy, as in the case of the large mirror which they set up in front of the Little Mermaid in Copenhagen in order to broach the egocentricity of their fellow Danes, or the video of the kissing homosexual couple inside the cube of their Berlin memorial, which has often been the target of homophobic attacks." Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. An Affair of the Heart is a 2012 documentary directed by Sylvia Caminer. Follow My Steps is a 2013 documentary/short/drama film directed by Andrew Hida. The Space Invaders: In Search of Lost Time is a historical documentary film directed by Jeff Von Ward. Town Nurse, Country Nurse is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Don Higgins. Severe Clear is a 2009 documentary film directed by American documentary maker Kristian Fraga, starring and using footage shot by First Lieutenant Mike Scotti of United States Marine Corps Bravo Company, 1st Battalion 4th Marines. The film explores the Marine drive to Baghdad during the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Mushrooms of Concrete is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Martijn Payens. Das Schiff des Torjägers is a 2010 film written by Christine Kretschmer and Heidi Specogna and directed by Heidi Specogna. Robert Mayer – der Arzt aus Heilbronn is an East German film. It was released in 1955. Unwieldy Beast is a 2012 short biographical documentary directed by Brandon Loper. SEVDAH: The Bridge That Survived is a 2004 documentary directed by Mira Erdevicki. The Paedophile Hunter is a 2014 TV documentary directed by Dan Reed. Mein Vater is a 1982 documentary film directed by Fritz Poppenberg. Brother Against Brother: The American Civil War is 2011 documentary film. Sumo East and West is a feature documentary about Americans in the ancient Japanese sport of sumo wrestling. The film had its World Premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City in May 2003 and was broadcast nationally on PBS’s Independent Lens on June 8th, 2004. "Why are lesbians literally attached to their wallet chains? Chained! is a quirky look in to the lives of women who define themselves through their chains." Quoting the synopsis fro the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Love Lust & Lies is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Gillian Armstong. Jack Johnson is a 1970 American documentary film directed by Jimmy Jacobs about the American boxer Jack Johnson. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Cayton asked jazz artist Miles Davis to record music for the documentary, which resulted in Davis' 1971 album of the same name. Barcelona, abans que el temps ho esborri is a documentary film directed by Mireia Ros. 20 Hz is a 2011 experimental documentary short film directed by Joe Gerhardt and Ruth Jarman. Groupies is a 1970 documentary film directed by Ron Dorfman and Peter Nevard. Corumbiara: They Shoot Indians, Don´t They? is a 2009 documentary film directed by Vincent Carelli. Songs From The Nickel is a 2010 documentary film directed by Alina Skrzeszewska. Vater Mutter Kind is a 2012 documentary directed by Detlef Gumm and Hans-Georg Ullrich. Hitlers Hat is a 2003 documentary film directed by Jeff Krulik. Looks at the 1945 atomic bombing of Hiroshima through the eyes of those who lived through it, and those who live in the city now. The film follows a Japanese family who lives in modern Hiroshima as they take their children to the 50th year ceremony. "The fascinating life of Michel Vajour, perpetrator of France's most audacious prison escapes, told in his own words. A snippet from mid-80s television shows a daring escape – a prisoner snatched from a Paris prison roof by a helicopter piloted by his wife. Although this reads like the stuff of fiction, it is in fact simply the best known of five audacious escapes made by former thief and mobster Michel Vaujour. Born into a background of limited prospects, a life of crime came early to Vaujour. In total he spent 27 years in jail, 17 of them in solitary confinement, but throughout his prison life, he repeatedly tried to break for freedom. Undeniably dramatic and newsworthy though the escapes were, documentary filmmaker Fabienne Godet devotes at least as much attention to other concerns – Vaujour's relationship with his family; his close friendship with his partner-in-crime; his ability to withstand years of isolation; and the self-awareness that provided the most hard-won freedom of all. Vaujour's story is fascinating, and as told in his own words to camera, moving and troubling too." Quoting Sandra Hebron Compound Eyes 5: Caridea and Ichthyes is a 2011 short documentary film produced and directed by Paul Clipson. Major League Baseball: All Century Team is a 2000 short documentary history film. Las tecnologías pesqueras is a 1975 Mexican film. It was directed by Gustavo Alatriste. Shape of the Moon is a Dutch/Indonesian documentary film from 2004 directed by Leonard Retel Helmrich. The documentary released on 24 November 2004 as opening film of IDFA. The documentary is the continuation of Eye of the Day and follows again the family Sjamsuddin, consisting of three generations living in the slums of Jakarta, Indonesia. The Monsoon Oracle is a 2013 documentary film directed by Shrenik Rao. Balkan Spirit is a 2013 documentary film directed and written by Hermann Vaske. Over the millennia, thousands of creatures have developed that most sophisticated of biological and chemical weapons: venom. These complex chemicals can scramble your brain signals, paralyze your muscles, puncture your blood cells, even begin digesting you from within. But nature's most potent toxins might also contain the keys to a new generation of advanced drugs. Such drugs might help doctors treat heart attacks, cancer, diabetes, and other serious illnesses. Follow NOVA crews as they join scientists on a dangerous quest to track down and capture the world's most venomous animals - to find out both how they can kill us, and how they can save us. Unidentified Flying Objects is a 1956 semi-documentary about the development of the UFO phenomenon in the United States. Video clips from the documentary have often been used in other UFO documentaries and television episodes related to UFOs. Waltz with Bashir is a 2008 Israeli animated war documentary film written and directed by Ari Folman. It depicts Folman in search of his lost memories of his experience as a soldier in the 1982 Lebanon War. This film and $9.99, also released in 2008, are the first Israeli animated feature-length films released theatrically since Alina and Yoram Gross's Ba'al Hahalomot. Waltz with Bashir premiered at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival where it entered the competition for the Palme d'Or, and since then has won and been nominated for many additional important awards while receiving wide acclaim from critics. It won a Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film, an NSFC Award for Best Film, a César Award for Best Foreign Film and an IDA Award for Feature Documentary, and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, a BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language and an Annie Award for Best Animated Feature. The film is officially banned in Lebanon. This 'behind the scenes' film takes you back to the early days when Madonna first arrived in New York and her subsequent rise to fame. It contains exclusive and previously unseen film footage including in-depth interviews with those that worked closely with Madonna during this period, including journalists, producers, engineers, studio owners, her make-up artist, old classmates and ex-boyfriends. Packed with interviews and rare footage, this documented film Madonna - Sex Bomb now tells the complete and unauthorized story behind this extraordinary and successful woman for the first time; a must for any fan's collection. The Flogsta Roar is a 2013 short documentary, biography, comedy and drama film directed and produced by Johan Palmgren. The Hoolock Gibbons of Bangladesh have been brought to the brink of extinction by the relentless destruction of their forested habitats throughout the country, even in the most highly protected forest reserves. This species used to number in the tens of thousands, but are now down to the last 200 or so. Concert for Diana was a concert held at the then new Wembley Stadium in London, United Kingdom in honour of Diana, Princess of Wales, on 1 July 2007, which would have been her 46th birthday; 31 August that year brought the 10th anniversary of her death. The concert was hosted by Diana's sons, Princes William and Harry, who helped to organise many of the world's most famous entertainers and singers to perform at the concert. The concert was broadcast in 140 different countries across the world with an estimated potential audience of 500 million. In December 2006, 22,500 tickets were made available for purchase for the concert, selling out in just 17 minutes, while 63,000 people turned out to Wembley Stadium to watch the performances to commemorate Diana. At the end of the performances, a video montage of Diana as a child was presented, accompanied by the Queen song "These Are the Days of Our Lives". The concert started at 16:00 BST and finished at approximately 22:15 BST – there were two short intermissions during the concert. A 2-Disc DVD set of the full concert was released on 5 November 2007. Anchored is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Carlota Nelson. This Is My Picture When I Was Dead is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Mahmoud al Massad. Hier encore je t’espérais toujours is a Canadian 2008 documentary film. Remarks on a Square is a 2011 film directed by Jasmina Metwaly. Prison Ball is a 2004 American documentary film directed by Jason Moriarty and written by Jeff Scheftel. The 90-minute film is narrated by Ice-T. Prison Ball is about prison basketball as practiced by prisoners within prison walls. The documentary interviews various inmates and prison officials and specialists on the matter and tackles as well "prison basketball leagues" operating within prison systems. It focuses on four Louisiana state prison teams, it was shot mainly in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. Korn: Who Then Now? is a 1997 short documentary film directed by Joseph McGinty Nichol. Living on One Dollar is a 2013 documentary film directed, produced and edited by Chris Temple, Zach Ingrasci, Sean Leonard, and Ryan Christofferson. What are the challenges in crafting a vibrant urban village from an ethnically, culturally, and economically diverse population? This perceptive documentary examines complex issues of community development, philanthropy and civic engagement by chronicling the long-term redevelopment of an older, deteriorating neighborhood called City Heights, often referred to as the Ellis Island of San Diego. The film probes both the potential and the pitfalls of public/private partnerships in addressing the problems of inner city decay, as well as the thorny questions raised by the gentrification of multicultural urban neighborhoods.Thirty years of non-European immigration to City Heights was spurred by the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which replaced preferences based on national origin with priorities favoring family reunification. The result in City Heights is a rich mix of cultural values and people, including immigrants from Mexico and Latin America and refugees from Southeast Asia and East Africa. Profound redevelopment plans placed this poor and largely powerless community in an unlikely partnership with businessman and philanthropist Sol Price (the founder of the Price Club and widely recognized as the "father" of the discount warehouse industry) and William Jones, an African-American real estate developer who was the youngest person ever elected to the San Diego City Council.The Price of Renewal demonstrates how urban redevelopment is a double-edged sword as it explores what is gained and what is lost as the community develops and improves itself. It was directed by award-winning filmmaker Paul Espinosa. Dancing Figure is a 2003 documentary and dance film written and directed by Ferenc Grunwalsky. Ownerbuilt is a 2013 documentary and animation film written and directed by Lawrence Andrews. Still Kicking: The Fabulous Palm Springs Follies is a 1997 American short documentary film directed by Mel Damski. It was nominated at the 70th Academy Awards for Best Documentary Short Subject. It features The Fabulous Palm Springs Follies, which is staged at the Palm Springs, California Plaza Theatre. Riff Markowitz is presented as the host and creator of the Follies. Some of the featured performers include Dorothy Kloss, Henry LeTang and Tempest Storm. Orchids of Manipur is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Aribam Syam Sharma. Madness and Glory: The History of the Satyricon is a documentary film directed by Mike Lastra. The Gardener is a poetic film by Mohsen Makhmalbaf. It had its Asian premiere at Busan International Film Festival, its European premiere at Rotterdam International Film Festival, and North American premiere at the Vancouver International Film Festival. It is the first film in decades to be made by an Iranian filmmaker in Israel. The film has been shown in more than 20 film festivals and won the Best Documentary award from Beirut International Film Festival and the special Maverick Award from Motovun Film Festival in Croatia. The film was selected as "Critic's Pick of the Week" by New York Film Critics Circle, "Best of the Fest" at Busan Film Festival by Hollywood Reporter, and "Top Ten Films" at Mumbai Film Festival by Times of India, and its script was added to the Library of Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Blue Collar Comedy Tour: The Movie is a 2003 stand-up comedy film from Warner Bros. Pictures. It stars renowned comedians Jeff Foxworthy and Bill Engvall and fellow Blue Collar comics Ron White and Larry The Cable Guy. The movie is similar in nature to that of The Original Kings of Comedy. It was followed by two direct-to-video sequels, Blue Collar Comedy Tour Rides Again and Blue Collar Comedy Tour: One for the Road. The film has been praised for its jokes and irreverent humor and is considered to be the best film the group has done. Massacred For Gold is a 2013 historical mystery documentary film written by R. Gregory Nokes and directed by Jennifer Anderson and Vernon Lott. Bill W. is an 2012 American biographical film directed by Dan Carracino and Kevin Hanlon, about William Griffith Wilson, the co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, and the first feature length documentary on Wilson. Outros (Doces) Bárbaros is a 2002 music documentary written and directed by Andrucha Waddington. Sasquatch: Legend Meets Science is a 2003 documentary television film which originally aired on the Discovery Channel on January 9, 2003. The program features scientists from various disciplines analyzing the most compelling evidence for the existence of Bigfoot, including the Skookum cast and the Patterson-Gimlin film. The documentary has since been released on DVD and VHS. A companion book to the documentary written by anthropologist Jeffrey Meldrum was published in 2006. "First-time director Ahmed Ahmed takes us on a hilarious tour from Dubai to Beirut, Riyadh to New York with a gaggle of other stand-up talent, including: Maz Jobrani, Tom Papa, Ted Alexandro, Tommy Davidson, and Omid Djalili (The Infidel). Along the way, taboos of culture and geopolitics are exploded, and a younger generation of both comedy talents and audiences is born." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Baseball Boys is a 2009 film directed by Ching-Yao Liao and Ko-shang Shen. The Cartel is a 2009 American documentary film by New Jersey-based television producer, reporter and news anchor Bob Bowdon, that covers the failures of public education in the United States by focusing on New Jersey, which has the highest level of per-student education spending in the U.S. According to The Internet Movie Database, the film asks: "How has the richest and most innovative society on earth suddenly lost the ability to teach its children at a level that other modern countries consider 'basic'?" The film regards teachers' unions as the cause of the problems, due to, among other things, the obstacles they put in place to firing bad teachers, through tenure. It also makes the case for school vouchers and charter schools, suggesting that the increased competition will revitalize the school system, leading to improved efficiency and performance in all schools, both district and charter. The film debuted at the Hoboken International Film Festival on May 30, 2009 and was awarded "Best of the Festival". It opened in New York City and Los Angeles on April 16, 2010, Houston on April 23 and in Denver, Minneapolis, Boston, Washington D.C., St. Justifiable Homicide is a 2002 documentary film directed by Jon Osman. Cocksucker Blues is an unreleased documentary film directed by the still photographer Robert Frank chronicling The Rolling Stones American Tour 1972 in support of their album Exile on Main St. Die Steine is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Ingo Kratisch and Jutta Sartory. Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer is a 1975 documentary film directed by Thom Andersen about the English photographer Eadweard Muybridge. American Coup is a 2010 history, news documentary film written and directed by Joe Ayella. Pride And Joy is a 2013 documentary biographical film directed by Joe York. Timeless: Live in Concert is a 2001 music documentary directed by Don Mischer and Barbra Streisand. Made in New Mexico is a documentary film directed by Brent Morris and David J. Schweitzer. Kids Rights: Alexandra is a 2010 documentary film directed by Marjoleine Boonstra. Frank and Ollie is a 1995 documentary film about the life and careers of Frank Thomas and Ollie Johnston, two chief animators who had worked at Walt Disney Animation Studios during its early years, up until their retirement in the late 1970s. It was directed, produced and written by Theodore Thomas, Frank Thomas' son. A number of other important figures in the animation business are also interviewed about Frank and Ollie's influence of modern animation, and about their personal friendship. Breathing Earth is a 2012 documentary and biographical film written and directed by Thomas Riedelsheimer. Frida Kahlo: A Ribbon Around a Bomb is a 1992 documentary biographical film written by Abraham Oceransky and directed by Ken Mandel. Shattered Dreams: Picking Up the Pieces is a 1988 documentary film written by Jenifer Millstone and Victor Schonfeld and directed by Victor Schonfeld. Charles Manson Superstar is a documentary film about Charles Manson, directed by Nikolas Schreck in 1989. Most of the documentary was filmed inside San Quentin Prison. Schreck and Zeena narrated the segments while images were shown, and music played in the background. There was brief footage of Spahn Ranch, and a short clip of James M. Mason being interviewed about the Universal Order, and Manson. Olivier Messiaen's "Death and Resurrection," Bobby Beausoleil's "Lucifer Rising," Krzysztof Penderecki's "Apocalypsis," and Anton LaVey's "The Satanic Mass," and Manson's own songs "Clang Bang Clang" and "Mechanical Man" from the album Lie: The Love and Terror Cult, were played during the film. The film was remastered and uploaded to YouTube by an alternative news production company in 2012 Robin Boyd: Australian Beauty is a 2013 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Kerry Gardner. Peace with Seals is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Miloslav Novák. Nothing Like Chocolate is a 2012 documentary film written by Kum-Kum Bhavnani, Cristina Malavenda and Ryan Pettey and directed by Kum-Kum Bhavnani. The Ethnographer is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Ulises Rosell. Magino Story: Raising Silkworms is a documentary film directed by Shinsuke Ogawa. Bill T. Jones: Dancing to the Promised Land is a 2004 documentary film directed by Mischa Scorer "While attempting to produce a film in China inspired by her parents’ involvement with the Student Democracy Movement of the 1980s, a young filmmaker's life and work quickly begin to parallel her parents’ trials and feelings of alienation when the film is shut down and she is ordered to leave the country. A MOTH IN SPRING is a rare and intimate look at the challenges to artistic freedom in China." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Silverdocs site Divine Pig is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Hans Dortmans. Life For a Child is a 2008 film directed by Ed Lachman. New York: A Documentary Film is an eight-part, 17½ hour, American documentary film on the history of New York City. It was directed by Ric Burns and originally aired in the U.S. on PBS. The film was a co-production of Thirteen New York and WGBH Boston. The series was written by Burns and James Sanders and produced by Burns's company, Steeplechase Films. Several noted New York City historians, including Mike Wallace, Kenneth T. Jackson, David Levering Lewis and Robert Caro participated in the making of the series as consultants, and appeared on camera. It was narrated by David Ogden Stiers. Other notable figures who appeared in the series include Rudolph Giuliani, former mayor Ed Koch, former New York governor Mario Cuomo, former U.S. Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, poet Allen Ginsberg, novelists Alfred Kazin and Brendan Gill, director Martin Scorsese, journalist Pete Hamill, former Congresswoman Bella Abzug, historian Niall Ferguson, philosopher Marshall Berman, writer Fran Lebowitz, engineer Leslie E. Robertson, high wire artist Philippe Petit, billionaire Donald Trump, and author David McCullough. Celebrate Special Occasions: The Best Recipes of Via Mare is a 2006 documentary film. Mimos is a 2012 drama short documentary film directed by Haya Waseem God's Eaters is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Anastasija Piroženko. Monseigneur Lefebvre, un évêque dans la tempête is a 2012 documentary film by French director Jacques-Régis du Cray, primarily based on the biography A biography of Archbishop Lefebvre written by Bishop Bernard Tissier de Mallerais. Marcel Lefebvre was a French Roman Catholic archbishop. Following a career as an Apostolic Delegate for West Africa and Superior General of the Holy Ghost Fathers, he took the lead in opposing the changes within the Church associated with the Second Vatican Council. In 1970, Lefebvre founded the Society of St. Pius X. In 1988, against the express prohibition of Pope John Paul II, he consecrated four bishops to continue his work with the SSPX. The Holy See immediately declared that he and the other bishops who had participated in the ceremony had incurred automatic excommunication under Catholic canon law. The documentary project, which started in 2006, was endorsed and received the active support of Bishop Bernard Fellay, Superior General of the Society of St. Pius X. It collects the stories of bishops, priests, the communities Archbishop Lefebvre served, as well as interviews of the surviving members of the Archbishop's family. The Tightrope is a 2012 documentary film written by Peter Brook and Simon Brook and directed by Simon Brook. Mohammed To Maya is a 2012 documentary, drama, adventure, comedy film directed by Jeff Roy. Waiting for Harry is a documentary film directed by Kim McKenzie. Gackt Live Tour 2003: Jougen no Tsuki - Saishu-Shou is a documentary film directed by Makoto Hasegawa. A Balloon for Allah is a 2011 documentary written and directed by Nefise Özkal Lorentzen. Men Who Swim is a 2010 documentary film directed by Dylan Williams. Voyage De Nuit is a 1981 short film. A Walk with Nigel is a 2010 short history documentary film written and directed by Louis Henderson. Pilcuicatl is a 1977 short documentary film directed by Victor Rapaport. Autofocus is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Boris Poljak. Which Way Is East: Notebooks from Vietnam is a 1994 documentary directed by Lynne Sachs. Live Facelift is a video released in 1991 by the American rock band Alice in Chains containing live footage of songs off of their debut album, Facelift. The video has been certified gold by the RIAA with excess sales of 50,000 copies. Can a root that grows in West Africa successfully treat heroin addicts and break the cycle of addiction? Dave is a former stockbroker whose life has spiraled out of control due to heroin addiction. A one-time millionaire, he is now reduced to petty theft as a means to supply his habit. Desperate to get help, Dave travels to Mexico for treatment with Ibogaine, a controversial plant-based drug reported to be the most powerful known treatment for drug addiction. FACING THE HABIT is an intimate look into the life of an addict, before, during, and after this last-ditch attempt at hope. Honor The Treaties is a 2012 short biographical-documentary film directed by Eric Becker. The Curse of the Bambino is a 2003 documentary TV movie. Kyoto, My Mother's Place is a 1991 documentary film written and directed by Nagisa Oshima. Deep Love is a 2013 Documentary film directed by Jan P.Matuszynski. Slomo is a 2013 short documentary drama and biographical film directed by Josh Izenberg. Synthetic Pleasures is a documentary film by Iara Lee that explores the implications of virtual reality, digital and biotechnology, plastic surgery and mood-altering drugs. Novemberdays is a 1990 documentary film directed by Marcel Ophuls. Extract: Mike Judge's Secret Recipe is a 2009 short documentary film starring Jason Bateman and Mila Kunis. Life May Be is a 2014 Documentary film written and directed by Mania Akbari and Mark Cousins. Le rêve plus fort que la mort is a 2002 French documentary film directed by Jean Rouch and Bernard Surugue. The Ball Game is an 1898 American short black-and-white silent documentary sports film produced and distributed by Edison Manufacturing Company. Yasukuni is the title of a 2007 film made by Japan-resident Chinese director Li Ying. It took ten years to complete and had been screened at the Pusan International Film Festival 2007, World Cinema Competition Sundance Film Festival 2008 and Berlin Film Festival 2008. It also won the best-documentary award at the Hong Kong International Film Festival. The film looks at the history of Yasukuni Shrine in Chiyoda, Tokyo, where more than 2 million of Japan's war dead are enshrined. More than 1,000 of them are war criminals convicted at the 1946–48 Tokyo tribunal, including 14 Class-A war criminals, Hideki Tōjō among them. The film shows not only the widely reported political incidents associated with the shrine, but also takes an in-depth look at the shrine's sword-making tradition, the Yasukuni sword being the film's underlying motif. Interspersed with other scenes filmed at the shrine is serene footage of the last living Yasukuni swordsmith, 90-year-old Naoji Kariya, working on presumably his final creation. Li Ying stated that the film was a joint Asian project—the editor was Japanese, as was the cameraman, who had a relative enshrined in Yasukuni. We Could be King is a 2014 film directed by Judd Ehrlich. Rock N Roll Mamas is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jackie Weissman. The Truth Be Told: The Cases Against Supinya Klangnarong is a 2007 documentary film directed by Pimpaka Towira. The Lifer and the Lady is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by John Kastner. Muktir Gaan is a 1995 Bangladeshi documentary film Directed by Tareque Masud and Catherine Masud. This is a documentary film which explores the impact of cultural identity on the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, where music and song provided a source of inspiration to the freedom fighters and a spiritual bond for the whole emerging nation. Black and Gold: The Story of the Almighty Latin King and Queen Nation is a 2001 documentary directed by Rick Rowley and Jacqueline Soohen. "This animated film places the computer in historical perspective and shows how creative people use computers to help define and solve problems. Produced for the IBM exhibit at the Brussels World Fair." Quoting the synopsis from IMDB. BCN 08001 is a 2004 documentary film directed by Antoni Verdaguer. Elvis Costello & the Imposters: Live in Memphis is a 2005 documentary music film directed by Michael B. Borofsky Millions of Years Ahead of Man is a 1975 West German short documentary film produced by Manfred Baier. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Looking for Lenny is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Elan Gale. The Third Jihad: Radical Islam's Vision For America is a 2008 documentary film about the threat of radical Islam in the United States. The film, narrated by Dr. M. Zuhdi Jasser, a Muslim American, centers around a Muslim Brotherhood document accepted as evidence in the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development terror financing trial. The filmmakers contend, based on that document, that radical Islamists are engaging in a "multifaceted strategy to overcome the western world," waging a "cultural jihad" to "infiltrate and undermine our society from within". The film was directed by Wayne Kopping of South Africa and Erik Werth, and produced by Erik Werth and Raphael Shore, a Canadian-Israeli, with financing from the Clarion Fund. The Telco Story is 1962 documentary film directed by Clement Baptista. Apuda is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by He Yuan. God’s Doorkeeper: St. André of Montreal is a 2010 television documentary film about St. André Bessette. It was produced by Salt and Light Catholic Media Foundation, a Canadian-based media initiative and registered charity that arose from World Youth Day 2002. The documentary was later released on DVD. Directed by a team of filmmakers at Salt + Light, the documentary features interviews and footage filmed in Quebec, New Hampshire, Indiana, Oregon and Rome. Interviews include those in the religious order who continue André’s legacy. On October 17, 2010, Br. André became the first Canadian-born male saint. The majority of God's Doorkeeper premiered on Salt + Light television two days earlier in anticipation of André's canonization. Footage of the canonization itself was shot and included in the final version of the film. El productor is a 2006 Documentary film written by Pedro González Bermúdez and directed by Fernando Méndez-Leite The Making of 'A Charlie Brown Christmas' is a 2001 TV Special directed by Lee Mendelson. The Auctioneer is a 2012 documentary film written by Clark Banack and directed by Hans Olson. Fate of a Salesman is a 2013 short family history biography documentary film directed by Ben Crosbie and Tessa Moran. God Grew Tired of Us is a 2006 documentary film about three of the "Lost Boys of Sudan", a group of some 25,000 young men who have fled the wars in Sudan since the 1980s, and their experiences as they move to the United States. The film was written and directed by Christopher Dillon Quinn. The Punk Rock Movie was assembled from Super 8 camera footage shot by Don Letts, the disc jockey at The Roxy club during the early days of the UK punk rock movement, principally during the 100 days in 1977 in which punk acts were featured at The Roxy club in London. Spice Girls: Giving You Everything is a documentary released to coincide with the 2007 reunion tour of the British all-female pop group the Spice Girls. Two childhood friends head out from San Francisco one summer to see how far they can go hitching rides by freight train. Into the Innards is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Nicole Vögele. In the Hands of the Gods is a 2007 documentary. The film follows five English freestyle footballers as they try to raise money by showcasing their skills, in order to fund a trip to Buenos Aires to meet their idol Diego Maradona. Their names are Sami Hall, Danny Robinson, Paul Wood, Jeremy Lynch and Mikey Fisher. They have no money for food, travel or accommodation. Two of them were actually living on the streets prior to starting their mission. Their journey takes them through North, Central and South America and tests them both physically and mentally. It is a journey that takes them far from their homes on a trip that will change their lives forever. The title is a reference to Maradona's famous Hand of God goal. The film was made by Fulwell 73, a UK-based production company, founded and run by Leo Pearlman, Gabe Turner, Ben Turner and Ben Winston. The film was directed by the Turner brothers and produced by Leo Pearlman and Ben Winston. Lionsgate distributed the film in the UK and it was released on the opening weekend in over 60 screens, making it the widest released documentary ever in the UK. In 2008 Jeremy Lynch reached the semi-finals of Britain's Got Talent. Beautopia is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Katharina Otto-Bernstein. Geil of Doylestown: Forgotten Explorer is a documentary film directed by Karl Stieg. Himalaya, le chemin du ciel is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Marianne Chaud. Vanishing Pearls: The Oystermen Of Pointe À La Hache is a documentary, biographical and historical film directed by Nailah Jefferson. Father Bernard Hubbard, S.J., the Glacier Priest, narrates a look at Alaska. After a look at Alaska's size, we visit the state's three regions: the Yukon, where dogs are man's best friend and the Eskimo winter because of abundant food. Then to the southeast, where Juneau is as warm as Washington, D.C. Then on to the peninsula and Aleutian Islands, the cradle of storms. Here the salmon are nature and the economy's life blood. We watch the spawning, the fishing, and the canning The Armenian Bread is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Armen Gasparyan. A Time for Burning is a 1966 American documentary film which explores the attempts of the minister of Augustana Lutheran Church in Omaha, Nebraska, to persuade his all-white congregation to reach out to "negro" Lutherans in the city's north side. The film was directed by San Francisco filmmaker William C. Jersey and was nominated as Best Documentary Feature in the 1967 Academy Awards. The film was commissioned by the Lutheran Church. The film is shot in "cinéma vérité" style. The film chronicles the relationship between the minister, the Rev. L. William Youngdahl, his white Lutheran parishioners and black Lutheran parishioners in the community. Youngdahl was the son of a former governor of Minnesota and federal judge, Luther Youngdahl. The film includes a meeting between Youngdahl and a black barber named Ernie Chambers who tells the minister that his Jesus is "contaminated." At one point another Omaha Lutheran minister, the Rev. Walter E. 140 Days Under the World is a 1964 New Zealand short documentary film about Antarctica. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Coração do Brasil is a 2013 Brazilian documentary film directed by Daniel Solá Santiago and released on April 19, 2013. The film takes place fifty years after the shipment of the Villas-Bôas brothers to demarcate the geographical center of Brazil, three participants of this journey retake the same path, revisiting villages, reuniting characters and noting the dramatic evolution of Indigenous status over the years. The Five Obstructions is a 2003 Danish film by Lars von Trier and Jørgen Leth. The film is a documentary, but incorporates lengthy sections of experimental films produced by the filmmakers. The premise is that Lars von Trier has created a challenge for his friend and mentor, Jørgen Leth, another filmmaker. Von Trier's favourite film is Leth's The Perfect Human. Von Trier gives Leth the task of remaking The Perfect Human five times, each time with a different 'obstruction' given by von Trier. Chouïa cinema is a French 2003 documentary film. Howard Hawks, San Sebastián 1972 is a documentary/short film written and directed by Samuel Martínez Age of the Buffalo is a 1964 short documentary film written by M. Charles Cohen and directed by Austin Campbell. Terezín Diary is a 1989 documentary film written by Zuzana Justman and directed by Dan Weismann. Fordson: Faith, Fasting, And Footbal is a 2010 independent documentary film directed by Rashid Ghazi and written by Ruth Leitman. Four high school football players from Dearborn, Michigan train for the biggest game of season while simultaneously fasting for Ramadan in this documentary that challenges our concepts of what it means to be an American. September 11, 2009: the Muslim athletes of the Fordson High School football team are in the middle of observing Ramadan while training to take on their biggest rivals. Despite a grueling training regiment, the players remain determined to observe the tenants of their faith by fasting from dawn to dusk. In the process of clinging to their Islamic faith while devoting their lives to a game that is uniquely American, the athletes of the Fordson High School football team learn that you can't define a patriot by their faith or the color of their skin, but instead by their staunch determination to succeed, and their unwavering integrity in the face of incredible adversity. The Dead Weight of a Quarrel Hangs is a 1998 short documentary film directed by Walid Raad. The Musical Mariner (Part One) is a documentary film directed by Bill Leimbach. The Undeclared War is a 1991 film directed by Bertrand Tavernier. Wader Wecker Father Land is a 2011 documentary film written by Matthias Leitner and Rudi Gaul and directed by Rudi Gaul. Quelques veuves de Noirmoutier is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Agnès Varda. The Messenger: 360 Days of Bolivar is a 2009 drama documentary film written by Shawn S. Welling and Roger Scott Budge, and directed by Shawn S. Welling. In the Wee Wee Hours... is a 1987 American short documentary film about homeless people in Los Angeles, directed by Izak Ben-Meir. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Impressionen unter Wasser is a documentary film released in 2002. It was directed by Leni Riefenstahl. After the premiere of her film Tiefland in 1954, for decades it was generally thought this would be Riefenstahl's last film. However, a few days before her 100th birthday, saw the release of Impressionen unter Wasser premiered in Berlin 48 years after Tiefland. Nollywood the young side of film is a 2005 documentary film. Heaven, Hell (Czech: Nebe, peklo) is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by David Čálek. One of the defining documentaries of the 20th century, The Atomic Cafe offers a darkly humorous glimpse into mid-century America, an era rife with paranoia, anxiety, and misapprehension. Whimsical and yet razor-sharp, this timeless classic illuminates the often comic paradoxes of life in the "Atomic Age," while also exhibiting a genuine nostalgia for an earlier and more innocent nation. Roman Diary is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Michael Pilz. The Guns of August is a 1964 war history documentary film written by Arthur Tourtellot and directed by Nathan Kroll. DDR-ohne Tite is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Harry Rag. Fix: The Story of an Addicted City is a 2002 documentary film directed by Nettie Wild. Escape to Life: The Erika and Klaus Mann Story is a 2002 documentary film directed by Andrea Weiss and Wieland Speck. Gloria Estefan: Live in Atlantis is a TV special. Cyndi Lauper: 12 Deadly Cyns... and Then Some is a 1994 documentary, comedy, music film directed by Patricia Birch, Edd Griles, Scott Kalvert, John Maybury and Andrew Morahan. Henk Otte lives on disability with his wife and son outside of Amsterdam. Though the Dutchman is white, he has been found to be a reincarnated king in the West African nation of Ghana - his wife's homeland. The documentary follows Otte from Holland to Ghana, where he's set to celebrate his fifth anniversary as the leader of Mepe, the region of 300,000 people who installed him. St. Paul in Greece is a 2000 documentary directed by David Dunn. Superhero Me is documentary feature film directed by Steve Sale. The Atomic States of America is a 2012 documentary and historical film written by Kelly McMasters and directed by Sheena M. Joyce and Don Argott. Point of View is a 1965 American short documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Views on Vermeer - 12 Short Stories is a 2009 documentary film directed by Koos de Wilt and written by Hans Pool and Koos de Wilt. Force of Nature is a 2011 documentary and biographical film directed by Katrina McPherson. Couldn't Be Fairer is a 1984 Australian documentary film directed by Dennis O'Rourke, which paints a disturbing portrait of aboriginal life in Queensland, Australia in the 1980s. The title is from a 1983 statement regarding aboriginal people by then Premier of Queensland, Joh Bjelke-Petersen: "We treat them the same as everyone else – couldn't be fairer." Aboriginal activist Mick Miller narrates and features in the film, which reveals how native Australian people are still suffering from social oppression and alcoholism. Aboriginal land rights are a central theme: Miller clearly demonstrates the contrast between modern civilization, which values land only as a resource to mined, grazed and developed, and traditional people who regard their land as sacred. Archival footage compares the original lifestyle of Australian aborigines to their current pitiful condition, and shows how European settlers attempted to "civilize" mixed blood children by taking them away from their parents and enrolling them in boarding schools. National Geographic: Beyond the Movie - The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King is a 2003 documentary film written by John B. Bredar, Helen Fitzwilliam and Rachel Allen. Romance novels comprise nearly half the paperback books sold in America. Chiffon-shrouded, jewel-laden, flower-bedecked Barbara Cartland has written hundreds of them. And filmmaker George Csicsery has given his heart to this fascinating subculture where all the women are beautiful, all the men are mysterious and all the endings are happy. The Ossuary is a 1970 animated short film directed by Jan Švankmajer. Ronaldo: Tested to the Limit is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Mike McDowall. Keats and His Nightingale: A Blind Date is a 1985 American short documentary film directed by Jim Wolpaw. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Král komiků is a Czech comedy film starring Vlasta Burian. It was released in 1963. Slavery exists despite the fact that it is illegal everywhere. Today, there are more slaves in the world than at any given point before in history. Trafficking, child labour, sex slavery, debt slavery and child soldiers are among the most common forms of modern slavery. In the film we meet slaves from Uganda, India, Moldova, Cambodia and France. Why does slavery still exist and what will it take to finally get rid of it? Ending a cane is a 2005 documentary film. Bougafer 33 is a Moroccan 2010 documentary film. Flashback Memories is a 2012 documentary film directed by Tetsuaki Matsue. Wild Australia - At the Edge of the Salt Plain is a 1971 TV documentary directed by Ken Taylor. Hot Coffee is a 2010 documentary film directed by Susan Saladoff. "For many Americans, the famous McDonald’s coffee case has become emblematic of the frivolous lawsuits that clog our courts and stall our justice system. Or is that exactly what McDonald’s wants us to think? Enter intrepid filmmaker Susan Saladoff. Using the now-infamous legal battle over a spilled cup of coffee as a springboard into investigating our civil-justice system, Saladoff exposes the way corporations have spent millions distorting this case to promote tort reform. Big business has brewed an insidious concoction of manipulation and lies to protect its interests, and media lapdogs have stirred the cup. Following four people whose lives have been devastated by their inability to access the courts, this searing documentary unearths the sad truth that most of our beliefs about the civil-justice system have been shaped or bought by corporate America. Informative, entertaining, and a stirring call to action, Hot Coffee will make your blood boil." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Transit Levantkade is a 1990 documentary film directed by Rosemarie Blank. Through the Veil of Exile is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by David Benchetrit. Submarine Warfare World War II era documentary about how the US Navy detected, collected information on and fought enemy submarines. Cinema is Everywhere is a 2011 documentary film by writer, director and cinematographer Teal Greyhavens that weaves together three stories from India, Scotland and Tunisia, each featuring personal perspectives on the effects of local, regional and international cinema on people's lives. It is based around the idea that cinema is a universal visual language that people of almost any culture can enjoy and even create regardless of where they are, who they know or how much money they have. It has been called "the global story of cinema and how it affects our everyday lives." The documentary was filmed by Greyhavens in 2009 while he traveled on a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship. Martin Slivka - “The Man Who Planted Trees” is a 2007 documentary film directed by Martin Šulík and co-written with Ingrid Mayerová, Rudolf Urc. My Father Who Art In Nature is a 2012 documentary, drama, family, biographical film directed by Alden Olmsted. Ikkatsu: The Roadless Coast is a 2013 documentary film directed by Steve Weileman and Ken Campbell. This program, hosted by Roger Moore, investigates the many probes and projects sponsored by the KGB to look into paranormal matters. Along the way, viewers will learn much about the KGB's bizarre view of American history and the effects certain paranormal events had on it. Included is never before seen footage. My Neighbourhood is a 2012 documentary film directed by Julia Bacha and Rebekah Wingert. The Warriors of Qiugang is a 39-minute documentary film that chronicles the story of the Chinese village of Qiugang, in the suburbs of Bengbu City in Anhui Province in central-eastern China. It tells how a group of Chinese villagers put an end to the poisoning of their land and water by three chemical plants, the worst being Jiucailuo Chemical. It was directed and produced by Academy Award winners Ruby Yang and Thomas F. Lennon, respectively. Guan Xin was the field producer and cinematographer. The film was nominated for an Oscar for best Documentary Short Subject but lost to Strangers No More. Bahrain: Shouting in the Dark is a television documentary film produced by Qatar-based news channel Al Jazeera English about the Bahraini uprising. The film was first aired on 4 August 2011, featuring footage recorded during protests and police crackdowns, interviews with activists and physicians, as well as footage aired by state-owned television. Serpentinen Tanz is an 1895 German short black-and-white silent documentary film, directed and produced by Max Skladanowsky, one of the German-born brothers responsible for inventing the bioskop. It was one of a series of films produced to be projected by a magic lantern and formed part of the Wintergarten Performances, the first projections of film in Europe to a paying audience. The film titles for the initial program were: Italienischer Bauerntanz, Komisches Reck, Serpentinen Tanz, Der Jongleur Paul Petras, Das Boxende Känguruh, Akrobatisches Potpourri, Kamarinskaja, Ringkampf and Apotheose. Each film lasted approximately 6 seconds and would be repeated several times. In 1995 this film was incorporated into Gebrüder Skladanowsky a drama telling the story of the Skladanowsky Brothers and the early days of German film projection.. The Paper Mirror is a 2012 documentary film directed by Charissa King-O’Brien. As If We Were Catching a Cobra is a 2012 documentary film directed by Hala Alabdalla. The Belovs is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Victor Kossakovsky. Shored Up is a 2013 documentary film, produced and directed by Ben Kalina. The film premiered at 2013 Montclair Film Festival on May 5, 2013. The Film broadcast on DirecTV on October 23, 2013. It had a theatrical release in United States on November 29, 2013. It won the Hilton Worldwide LightStay Sustainability Award at 2014 Sundance Film Festival. The film was banned from screening at North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. Angano... Angano... nouvelles de Madagascar is a 1989 documentary film. Requiem For Billy The Kid is a 2006 documentary film directed by Anne Feinsilber and co-written with Jean-Christophe Cavallin. Les Marches, Etc. is a 2003 documentary short film directed by Gilles Jacob. Bansuri Guru is a 2013 Indian documentary film about the life of classical instrumentalist Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia. Directed by Rajeev Chaurasia as his directorial debut, the film is introduced by Amitabh Bachchan. Rokk í Reykjavík is a documentary directed by Icelandic Friðrik Þór Friðriksson during the Icelandic winter of 1981-1982 and released for the local television the same year. With this documentary, Friðriksson showcases the alternative music scene through several performances of the post-punk/new wave most important bands at that time taken from different concerts and accompanied by, some times, short interviews with musicians, and it portrays the lifestyle of the Icelandic youth faced to the establishment and advocated to anarchy, who were trying to find their own identity. Rokk í Reykjavík is today considered as one of the most important documentaries about the Icelandic music culture and it included several important bands. For instance, Tappi Tíkarrass, a punk/pop band led by vocalist Björk Guðmundsdóttir contributed with two of their works: “Hrollur” and “Dúkkulísur”. The New Wave band Þeyr, today considered as one of the legendary Iceland bands of the early eighties, is featured here with their songs “Rúdolf” and “Killer Boogie”. Jards is a 2012 documentary film directed by Eryk Rocha. A Painting of Roses is a short documentary by Miguel Ribeiro. It was produced in 2003 by Bookcase, an independent Portuguese film company. Harmontown is a weekly live comedy podcast that began airing on June 6, 2012. It is currently co-hosted by writer Dan Harmon, best known as the creator of NBC's Community, and actor Jeff B. Davis, known for his work on Whose Line Is It Anyway? Harmontown originally began as a monthly live comedy show in LA, California at the Nerdmelt theater on May 23, 2011, but after Harmon's firing from Community, the show became weekly. On the summer of 2012, Harmontown began broadcasting live as part of the Feral Audio podcast collective founded by Dustin Marshall . Many notable people in the world of comedy, film, TV, and music have appeared on the program, including Kumail Nanjiani, Greg Proops, Bobcat Goldthwait, Patton Oswalt, Jason Sudeikis, Robin Williams, Mitch Hurwitz, Eric Idle, and Steve Agee. On March 8, 2014, a documentary also called Harmontown premiered at the SXSW Film Festival. Belarmino is a 1964 film. It charts the life and times of ex-boxer Belarmino Fragoso. It is one of the first films of the Portuguese Cinema Novo, itself part of a wave of New Cinemas sweeping the world in the 1960s, and a break from the previous tradition of Portuguese cinema exemplified by the comédia à portuguesa. Lopes’s film was shown at the festivals of Pesaro and Salso-Poretta in Italy, garnered favourable reviews throughout Europe and won the Prémio da Casa da Imprensa back in Portugal. "Crowned & Bound shares the history of International Mr. Leather, highlights the brotherhood among contestants and packs in plenty of “Pecs & Personality” as it goes behind the scenes of IML 2010. " - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Cosmic Voyage is a 1996 short documentary film produced in the IMAX format, directed by Bayley Silleck, produced by Jeffrey Marvin, and narrated by Morgan Freeman. The film was presented by the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, and played in IMAX theaters worldwide. The film is available in the DVD format. Alekesam is a 2011 short film written by Jason Bergh and Kevin Barth and directed by Jason B. Bergh. Prison Island Bastøy is a 2010 documentary film directed by Michel Kapteijns. The Italian Character is a 2013 documentary music film written and directed by Angelo Bozzolini. The film, directed by Steven Pressman, chronicles the story of the daring mission by the Krauses to travel to Nazi Germany in the spring of 1939, and their ultimate achievement of bringing 50 doomed Jewish children to the United States. They did this despite the nation’s harshly restrictive immigration laws, rampant anti-Semitism and strong efforts by major Jewish leaders in Philadelphia to get them to call off their mission. Veronika is a 2011 documentary animation film directed by Mark Michel. Crossed Out is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Roberto Duarte. Polis Is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place is a 2007 documentary film about the life of the poet Charles Olson produced and directed by independent film-maker, Henry Ferrini. It was called “the best film about an American poet ever made” by William Corbett of the Boston Phoenix. The film was also an Official Selection at the 2007 Berkeley Film and Video Festival. SlamNation is a documentary film by director Paul Devlin. The film follows the National Poetry Slam in Portland, Oregon. It follows the 1996 Nuyorican Poetry Slam team as they competed at the 1996 National Poetry Slam held in Portland, OR. The film also features performances by Marc Smith, Patricia Smith, Taylor Mali, Alexandra Oliver and Bob Holman, among many others. The film is one of the first films to document the art and competition of the poetry slam: a spoken word competition where judges, randomly chosen from the audience, score poets on a scale from one to ten and the poet with the highest score at the end of the evening wins. SlamNation premiered at the 1998 SXSW Film Festival and was awarded Best Documentary at the 1998 Northampton Independent Film Festival. SlamNation was broadcast on Cinemax/HBO and Starz/Encore, 2000-2002. Though it would only enjoy a limited theatrical run, the film was nonetheless critically well received. Roger Ebert wrote a glowing review, calling the poetry slam "a pop culture phenomenon". Dos estrellas is a 1987 short documentary film directed by Ciro Cabello. David eller Goliath - En film om verdenspressen in Jerusalem is a 1988 documentary film directed by Anne Wivel. Sanda is a 2013 documentary film directed by Mire Kim. Another Road Home is a 2004 documentary film directed by Danae Elon. Too Much is Enough is a 1995 Canadian documentary film by Richard Brouillette. It won the M. Joan Chalmers Award for best Canadian documentary, in 1996. Entre las nubes is a 2006 documentary written and directed by Yunuen Peréz Martínez. K Foundation Burn a Million Quid was an action on 23 August 1994 in which the K Foundation burned cash in the amount of one million pounds sterling in a disused boathouse on the Ardfin Estate on the Scottish island of Jura. The money represented the bulk of the K Foundation's funds, earned by Drummond and Cauty as The KLF, one of the United Kingdom's most successful pop groups of the early 1990s. The incineration was recorded on a Hi-8 video camera by K Foundation collaborator Gimpo. In August 1995, the film—Watch the K Foundation Burn a Million Quid—was toured around the UK, with Drummond and Cauty engaging each audience in debate about the burning and its meaning. In November 1995, the duo pledged to dissolve the K Foundation and to refrain from public discussion of the burning for a period of 23 years, but Drummond spoke about the burning in 2000 and 2004. At first he was unrepentant but in 2004 he admitted to the BBC that he regretted burning the money. A book—K Foundation Burn A Million Quid, edited and compiled by collaborator Chris Brook—was published by Ellipsis Books in 1997, compiling stills from the film, accounts of events and viewer reactions. The Chaperone 3D is a 2013 documentary, animation, comedy, short film written and directed by Fraser Munden and Neil Rathbone. Hidden Colors 2: The Triumph of Melanin is a documentary film directed by Tariq Nasheed. Das Richter Fenster is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Corinna Belz. Hugh Hefner: Once Upon a Time is a 1992 documentary film written by Michael Gross, Gary H. Grossman and Robert Heath and directed by Robert Heath. Creed Live is the first concert film by the American rock band Creed, recorded on September 25, 2009 in Houston and released on December 8, 2009. The performance broke the world record for the most amount of cameras used at a live music event and was available for viewing for free on Rockpit and MyContent. All of the band's hits, including the new single "Overcome," were performed. It also features usage of the "big freeze" technology, popularized by the movie The Matrix. The DVD is dedicated to the military troops fighting overseas. The DVD also includes a documentary film about the band's 2009 reunion and a photo gallery. A limited 3-disc deluxe edition was said to be available early 2010, but details have yet to surface. '9': U-Control Picture in Picture is a 2009 documentary film. Cuba, an African Odyssey is a French 2007 documentary film. La Eterna Noche de las Doce Lunas is a 2013 Documentary film written and directed by Priscilla Padilla. Truth in Motion: The U.S. Ski Team's Road to Vancouver is a 2010 documentary film, commissioned by Audi of America. The film focuses on a select group of elite American skiers at different stages of their careers through the crucial months of training leading up to the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver. The White Widow: Searching for Samantha is a 2014 documentary film directed by Adam Wishart. Trinidad is an American documentary film by Jay Hodges and PJ Raval. The film was screened at the IFP Market and IFP Rough Cuts Lab. In 2009, the film premiered on Showtime. Woodcutters of the Deep South is the sixth and final feature-length film produced and directed by American independent filmmaker Lionel Rogosin. The film looks at workers who organize to resist exploitation by pulpwood corporations. Rogosin made one more short film, Arab Israeli Dialogue, released in 1974, but for the next 25 years he struggled to find support for a number of unrealized projects. The Dark Matter of Love is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sarah McCarthy. Jamol's Vision For Youth Peace is a 2009 film directed by Tony Bennis. Fighting for Life is a 2008 documentary film written by Terry Sanders, Christine Z. Wiser and directed by Terry Sanders. Waarom heeft niemand mij verteld dat het zo erg zou worden in Afghanistan is the first full length feature film shot with a mobile phone. The films is about a Dutch Afghan War veteran who recalls his experiences during the war and tells how he came to cope with them. The film premiered at major film festivals: the International Film Festival Rotterdam 2007, Tribeca Film Festival 2007, the San Francisco International Film Festival 2007, Pesaro 2007, and many others. Directed by Cyrus Frisch and mostly filmed in the Netherlands. Nanook of the North is a 1922 American silent documentary film by Robert J. Flaherty, with elements of docudrama, at a time when separating films into documentary and drama did not yet exist. In the tradition of what would later be called salvage ethnography, Flaherty captured the struggles of the Inuk man named Nanook and his family in the Canadian Arctic. The film is considered the first feature-length documentary. Some have criticized Flaherty for staging several sequences, but the film is generally viewed as standing "alone in its stark regard for the courage and ingenuity of its heroes." In 1989, this film was one of the first 25 films to be selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". The September Issue is a 2009 American documentary film about the behind-the-scenes drama that follows editor-in-chief Anna Wintour and her staff during the production of the September 2007 issue of American Vogue magazine. The film is directed by R.J. Cutler and produced by Eliza Hindmarch and Sadia Shepard. It was released in Australia on August 20, 2009 after being screened at numerous film festivals including Sundance, Zurich, Silverdocs and Sheffield Doc/Fest. The movie was released in American theaters on August 28, 2009. Laguna de dos tiempos is a 1982 film directed by Eduardo Maldonado. New World Order is a 2009 American documentary film directed by Luke Meyer and Andrew Neel. It explores conspiracy theorists who are committed to vigorously opposing what they believe to be an emerging "New World Order". He's Coming South is a 2005 documentary film written by Keith Thompson and directed by Damien Lay. Ninja Gaiden II: The Way of the Warrior is a 2008 documentary television film directed by Peter Iannuccilli and Todd Pellegrino. Tell Them Anything You Want: A Portrait of Maurice Sendak is a 2009 television documentary film directed by Lance Bangs and Spike Jonze about children's author Maurice Sendak. The Last Mountain is a feature-length documentary film directed by Bill Haney and produced by Haney, Clara Bingham and Eric Grunebaum. The film premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival and went into general release on June 3, 2011. The film explores the consequences of mining and burning coal, with a particular focus on the use of a method for coal strip-mining in Appalachia commonly known as mountaintop removal mining. Based in part on Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.'s 2005 book, Crimes Against Nature and featuring Kennedy and a cast of activists and experts, the film considers the health consequences of mining and burning coal and looks at the context and history of environmental laws in the United States. Exploring a proposal to build a wind farm on a mountain in the heart of "coal country," rather than deforesting and demolishing the mountain for the coal seams within, the film suggests that wind resources are plentiful in the U.S., would provide many domestic jobs and that wind is a more benign source of power than coal and has the potential to eliminate the destructive aspects of coal. We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks is a 2013 American independent documentary film about the organization started by Julian Assange, and people involved in the collection and distribution of secret information and media by whistleblowers. It covers a period of several decades, and includes considerable background material. Everything Will Be is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Julia Kwan. William Kunstler: Disturbing the Universe is a documentary film about the late American civil rights attorney William Kunstler directed by daughters Emily Kunstler and Sarah Kunstler that premiered at the 25th Sundance Film Festival in January 2009. William Kunstler was a famous 20th-century lawyer whose clients included Martin Luther King Jr., Larry Davis, Malcolm X, Phillip and Daniel Berrigan, Abbie Hoffman, H. Rap Brown, Stokely Carmichael, Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., Filiberto Ojeda Ríos and Leonard Peltier. The New York Times called him "the most hated and most loved lawyer in America". Kunstler served as the negotiator for inmates at the prison uprising at Attica State Prison in New York in 1971. This film is a co-production of the Independent Television Service and was broadcast on the PBS television series P.O.V. in June 2010. The film was an official selection of the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. It also received a 2008 grant from the Foundation for Jewish Culture's Lynn and Jules Kroll Fund for Jewish Documentary Film. Arthouse Films released the film theatrically in North America in 2009. Mary Tyler Moore: The 20th Anniversary Show is a retrospective television special commemorating the 20th anniversary of the 1970-77 sitcom The Mary Tyler Moore Show which aired on CBS on February 18, 1991. It was hosted by Mary Tyler Moore and featured clips from the show's seven-year run, including a reunion with co-stars Edward Asner, Georgia Engel, Valerie Harper, Cloris Leachman, Gavin MacLeod and Betty White as they all gathered together to reminisce about the series and their characters. In 2002, Mary and the cast reunited for another CBS retrospective special, The Mary Tyler Moore Reunion. Collateral Murder is a 2010 short documentary film. Journey Around My Room is a 2008 short film written and directed by Olivier Smolders. Times of Troubleis a 2012 documentary drama film directed by Paddy Hayes. A Slaughterhouse of Dreams is a 1996 drama film written by Irakli Solomonaschvili and Giorgi Chaindrawa and directed by Giorgi Chaindrawa. One Way Ticket to Bussum is a 2011 documentary short film written and directed by Renée Wilna Span. The Life and Mind of Mark DeFriest is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Gabriel London. I Loved You is a 2000 documentary directed by Victor Kossakovsky. Lynch is a 2007 documentary film directed by blackANDwhite. Elemental is a 2012 documentary film directed by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee and Gayatri Roshan. The film premiered at the Mill Valley Film Festival on October 9, 2012 in Mill Valley, California. Cuckoos Children is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Inesa Kurklietytė. Yad Vashem: Preserving the Past to Ensure the Future is a 1989 American short documentary film produced by Ray Errol Fox. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Before The Nickelodeon: The Early Cinema Of Edwin Porter is a 1982 documentary film directed by Charles Musser. Britain's best-loved broadcaster brings his favourite extinct creatures back to life in David Attenborough's Natural History Museum Alive. In this ground-breaking film, Sir David takes us on a journey through the world-famous Natural History Museum in London in a captivating tale of discovery, adventure, and magic, where 3D technology, state-of-the-art CGI, science, and research combine to bring the museum's now long-extinct inhabitants to life to discover how these animals once roamed the planet. As the doors are locked and night falls, Attenborough stays behind and meets some of the most fascinating extinct creatures which come alive in front of his eyes; dinosaurs, ice age beasts, and giant reptiles. The film fulfils a lifelong dream of the nation's favourite naturalist, who said: "I have been coming to the Natural History Museum since I was a boy. It's one of the great places to come to learn about natural history. SAGRADA - The Mystery of Creation is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Stefan Haupt. Known for his epic defeat of the Romans after a famous trek through the Alps that saw the Carthaginian general leading his troops on the backs of elephants, Hannibal is regarded as one of history's greatest military minds. Drawing on the expertise of historians, military experts and archaeologists, this incisive feature chronicles the life of the great war strategist, from his swift rise to prominence to his ultimate defeat in 203 BC. Sari's Mother is a 2006 American short documentary film directed by James Longley. It looks at an Iraqi mother seeking health care for her 10-year-old son, who is dying of AIDS, against the background of war and occupation. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Children of Golzow is a documentary by the German filmmaker Winfried Junge that was started in 1961 and lasted until 2007, when the series concluded. The film is a prolonged observation of the lives of several people in the Brandenburg town of Golzow. In 1985, the episode "Lebensläufe" was included in the Guinness Book of World Records as the movie with the longest production period. There is also a museum about the documentary in Golzow. Der Platz is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Uli M.Schüppel. Bad 25 is a 2012 documentary film about the 25th anniversary of Michael Jackson's 1987 album Bad. The film was directed by Spike Lee who previously directed Jackson in the music video for "They Don't Care About Us", as well as directing the posthumous music video for the song "This Is It". A 25th anniversary edition reissue of the Bad album was also released on September 18, 2012 sharing the same name as the film. The film was first screened at the 69th Venice International Film Festival on August 2012 and was shown for a limited time in New York and Los Angeles theaters on October 19, 2012. The film made its television premiere on German television channel VOX on October 20, 2012 and in the United Kingdom on BBC2 on December 1, 2012. A 90-minute edited version of the film, running for 64 minutes without commercials, premiered in North America on ABC on November 22, 2012. The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD on July 2, 2013. The film is also available on the iTunes Store. Feldzug in Polen is a 69 minute Nazi propaganda film depicting the 1939 invasion of Poland and directed by Fritz Hippler. Portraying the Poles as aggressors and ethnic Germans living in Poland as an oppressed minority, the film alleges that the Poles employed unheroic tactics in the war and characterizes as senseless the defence of a besieged Warsaw. The film was often screened by German minorities overseas to clarify the German point of view. The Gleiwitz incident was part of Operation Himmler run by the SS and SD to justify German aggression. It involved dressing Nazi concentration camp prisoners as Polish soldiers who apparently attacked a German radio station. The prisoners were murdered by the SS/SD, appearing to have been shot by heroic German defenders. Other parts of Operation Himmler involved terrorist attacks on the Polish Railways and attacks by ethnic Germans on Polish property. French involvement was de-emphasized, in order to present Great Britain, in its attempt to encircle Germany, as the villain, to justify the Nazi-Soviet pact. Los Ulises is a 2011 documentary film directed by Alberto García Ortiz and Agatha Maciaszek. Chet's Romance is a 1988 short documentary film written and directed by Bertrand Fevre. The Fall of the Romanov Dynasty is a 1927 documentary film by written and directed by Esfir Shub. Guerrilla Girl is a documentary film directed by Frank Piasechi Poulsen. It tells the story of a young girl -Isabel- who enters the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, the largest Marxist-Leninist revolutionary guerrilla organization in South America. Divine Trash is a 1998 documentary film directed by Steve Yeager about the life and work of John Waters. Recognition of the Japanese Zero Fighter is an educational dramatic short produced by the United States Air Force during World War II. The film's purpose was to instruct pilots in the Pacific theater about recognizing hostile planes at long distances and avoid "friendly fire" incidents. Steypa is a 2007 film directed by Markus Andresson and Ragnheidur Gestsdottir. Under Ground is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Sha Huang. Creating Reaction: A Portrait of a Society in Crisis is a 1973 Canadian documentary film directed by Robin Spry and produced by the National Film Board of Canada. The film was shot during the October Crisis and concentrates on the personal reactions of English-speaking Quebecers to the crisis and the threat of the Quebec nationalist group, Front de libération du Québec. Celebrity Train Layouts: Tom Snyder is a 2002 short documentary film written by Tom McComas and directed by Tom McComas and Joseph Stachler. Men At Lunch is a 2012 documentary film directed by Seán Ó Cualáin. Mumbai Disconnected is a 2009 documentary film directed by Camilla Nielsson and Frederik Jacobi. Change Your Name Ousama! is a 2012 documentary drama film written by Bill Gillepsie and directed by Fuad Chowdhury Strong – A Recovery Story is a 2011 adventure drama documentary film written by András Kollmann and Ádám Tősér and directed by András Kollmann. Asparragos is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Laura Zuallaert. Women – for America, for the World is a 1986 American short documentary film directed by Vivienne Verdon-Roe about women anti-nuclear activists. It won an Academy Award in 1987 for Documentary Short Subject. Whistlin' Dixie: Queer Sounds, New South is a 2011 short, music documentary film directed by Meredith Heil. The Stairs is a 1950 American short documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Flaschenpost is a 2012 documentary film directed by Gabriele Mathes. The One Percent is a 2006 documentary about the growing wealth gap between the wealthy elite compared to the overall citizenry in the United States. It was created by Jamie Johnson, an heir to the Johnson & Johnson fortune, and produced by Jamie Johnson and Nick Kurzon. The film's title refers to the top one percent of Americans in terms of wealth, who controlled 42.2 percent of total financial wealth in 2004. The film premiered on April 29, 2006, at the Tribeca Film Festival. It was reported to have been purchased by HBO and a revised version of the film, substantially re-edited and incorporating footage shot since the 2006 festival screening, premiered on February 21, 2008 on HBO's Cinemax. Life at the Zoo is a 1946 Soviet short documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Working the Scene: A Look Behind the Scenes of 'Criminal Minds Season 4' is a 2009 documentary short action crime drama film. Jonas: To Walk Upright is a 1982 film directed by Angelika Kettelhack. Bridges of Sarajevo is a 2014 documentary anthology film directed by thirteen different directors. It was selected to be shown in the Special Screenings section of the 2014 Cannes Film Festival. We're Livin On Dog Food is a 2009 documentary film directed by Richard Lowenstein. S.P.I.T.: Squeegee Punks in Traffic is a Canadian 2001 documentary film by Daniel Cross. The narrative unfolds from the point of view of squeegee kids. Mid Century: Half Way to Where? is a 1950 short documentary film. The Presidential Tour is a 1966 short documentary film. 120 Days is a 2013 family drama documentary film written and directed by Ted Roach. Kangaroo Dundee is a 2013 documentary film directed by Andrew Graham-Brown and Tom Mustill. One of My Kind is a 2009 documentary filmed about Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band. It documents their tour, life in Mexico, and the recording of their new album, Outer South. This documentary was provided for free, in hopes that the viewers would donate to one of the numerous charities on the sponsoring website. In May 2012, the film was released on DVD by Team Love. The DVD was accompanied by an album of outtakes by The Mystic Valley Band, and all the tracks from Gentleman's Pact. Beyond Fitna is an English-language Iranian documentary film released in 2008. The film was produced by "NGO Islam and Christianity" in response to Fitna by Dutch lawmaker Geert Wilders, which made the case that Islamic texts promote violence and intolerance. The NGO's spokesman, Mohammad Karimi, explains that the film was made in response to rising anti-Islamic sentiments in the West, seeking to find harmony and respect among all monotheistic religions. As such, it involved feedback from various religious scholars, as well as professional documentarians fluent in English, Persian, and Arabic. Tiempo de correr is a 1975 short documentary film directed by Arturo Ripstein. Anders & Harri is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Åsa Blanck and Johan Palmgren. This Ain't No Mouse Music! is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Maureen Gosling and Chris Simon. Finnigan's War is a 2013 documentary film directed by Conor Timmis. Portland, Oregon has been hailed to as one of the most environmentally conscious, green cities in the United States. It ranks highly among the most bicycle-friendly cities in the world and is cutting edge about getting people out of their cars. Learn more about the city's progressive approach to get its citizens walking and using alternative transportation. See how programs like "Portland Sunday Parkways" connect neighborhoods and people through a series of free events that open the city’s streets, and how Safe Routes to School's efforts are getting kids walking and reducing childhood obesity. "Her passport said she was Cha Jung Hee. She knew she was not. So began a 40-year deception for a Korean adoptee who came to the US in 1966. Told to keep her true identity a secret from her new American family, this 8-year-old girl quickly forgot she was ever anyone else. But why had her identity been switched? And who was the real Cha Jung Hee? In the Matter of Cha Jung Hee is the search to find the answers. It follows acclaimed filmmaker Deann Borshay Liem as she returns to her native Korea to find her "double," the mysterious girl whose place she took in America. Traversing the landscapes of memory, amnesia and identity, while also uncovering layers of deception in her adoption, this moving and provocative film probes the ethics of international adoptions and reveals the cost of living a lie." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Freestyle: The Art of Rhyme is a 2000 documentary film directed by Kevin Fitzgerald about the art of freestyle, improvisational hip-hop. Taking more than seven years to make, the documentary includes performances and commentary by artists such as Supernatural, Mos Def, The Roots, Notorious B.I.G., Jurassic 5, and Pharoahe Monch. DIRECTED BY ANDREI TARKOVSKY is an homage, a fluid and captivating documentary that presents the brooding as well, the more playful side of a genius. Hästdans på Hovdala is a 2013 documentary dance film directed by David Fishel. Satoumi Story of Hachiro Lake is a 2011 documentary film directed by Masanori Iwasaki. Does a supermassive blackhole lurk in the center of our galaxy? Cinematherapy is a 2010 documentary film written by Ivan Vojnár and Tomas Bojar and directed by Ivan Vojnár. BBS: The Documentary is a 3-disc, 8-episode documentary about the subculture born from the creation of the bulletin board system filmed by computer historian Jason Scott Sadofsky of textfiles.com. Production work began in July 2001 and completed in December 2004. The finished product began shipping in May 2005. Although the documentary was released under the Creative Commons Attribute-ShareAlike 2.0 License, meaning that anyone can legally download it for free, Jason Scott Sadofsky has made it known that the downloadable version is only a taste of the full experience and recommends that individuals purchase the documentary DVDs. The Liberace of Baghdad is a 2005 British documentary film by filmmaker Sean McAllister focusing on the life and music of Iraqi pianist Samir Peter and his family in wartime Baghdad. The film received a 2005 Sundance Film Festival Special Jury award as well as the 2005 British Independent Film Award for Best British Documentary. Samir Peter previously appeared in the 2004 documentary Voices of Iraq. The Century of Czesław Miłosz is a 2011 documentary film written by Pranas Morkus and directed by Juozas Javaitis. Stay the Same is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Sam Firth. Of Men And War is a 2014 documentary film written by and directed by Laurent Bécue-Renard. Last Days Here is a 2011 American documentary film featuring Bobby Liebling, lead singer of the American heavy metal band Pentagram. Directed by Don Argott and Demian Fenton, the film had its world premiere at the South by Southwest film festival on March 14, 2011. It is distributed by Sundance Selects. ABC Africa is a 2001 Iranian documentary feature film directed by Abbas Kiarostami. It was screened out of competition at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival. Invited by the United Nations to study the endeavors of the Uganda Women’s Effort to Save Orphans, director Abbas Kiarostami went to the country to scout locations but ended up shooting all the footage for the documentary on digital video. Once more he was working with children, but for the first time it was outside his homeland and using a format with which he was familiar. Nevertheless, Iran’s foremost film-maker has succeeded in locating reasons for optimism among the nearly two million orphans left helpless by the ravages of war and AIDS. Area 51 Base: Is Area 51 America's Hidden Spaceport? is a 2005 science fiction documentary film. American Experience: Minik: The Lost Eskimo is a 2008 historical fiction documentary film written and directed by Axel Engstfeld. The Singularity is a 2012 documentary film about the technological singularity, produced, directed and edited by Doug Wolens. Wolens self-distributed the film, beginning with a digital only release through iTunes in December 2012 followed by the theatrical release in September 2013 at the 1400 seat Castro theatre in San Francisco. Wolens’ distribution model focuses on art house theatres, arts centers, museums, as well as point pointing conferences related to future technologies, where Wolens can attend and participate in post-screening discussion and Q and A. The Battle of Amfar is a 2013 short documentary film written by Sharon Wood and directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. Spain Will Live is a 1938 film directed by Henri Cartier-Bresson. Darwin is a 2011 documentary film directed by Nick Brandestini. It is a portrait of the small and remote community of Darwin, located in California’s Mojave Desert. The film was released to good reviews at film festivals throughout the world and also had a limited theatrical release in the USA. We Are Wisconsin is a 2012 documentary historical film directed by Amie Williams. Khomeini's Boys is a Channel 4 documentary film centering on the lives of two friends and their families in Iran during the time of the Iran-Iraq War which spanned from 1980 to 1988. The film was made in Denmark by Iranian refugees who fled the country after the Iranian Revolution which saw the overthrow of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and rise to power of the Ayatollah Khomeini, who founded the Islamic Republic of Iran. S-21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine is a 2003 documentary film directed by Rithy Panh. Rithy, himself a survivor of the Khmer Rouge, brought together two former prisoners of the regime with their former captors at Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, the former Security Prison 21 under the Khmer Rouge. Adventures in Listening - Kurt Masur is a 2008 music documentary film written by Amit Breuer and Rebecca Yogev and directed by Amit Breuer. Last year, in the chaos of the earthquake that devastated Haiti, thousands of the country's worst criminals seized the opportunity to stage a mass escape from the National Penitentiary. One year later, the gang leaders are reasserting control in the capital, threatening the country's stability. With unique access to the police units trying to hunt down the gangsters -- and revealing encounters with the gangsters themselves -- FRONTLINE examines the uphill fight to rebuild Haiti in the face of deep-rooted corruption and intimidation. The film also offers intimate portraits of the fearful lives many Haitians are living, as the central government and judicial system routinely fail to maintain order. "Haiti is a nation that committed collective suicide some time ago," the chief of the UN mission tells FRONTLINE. If the gangs are not defeated, many now believe a new Haiti cannot be born. Plastic Memory is a 2013 documentary film directed by Romina Ruda. Would You Have Sex with an Arab? is a feature length documentary film by French director Yolande Zauberman. It was released in France on 12 September 2012 and is 85 minutes long and in full color. Shot in Israel, the film is an orchestration of interviews with people who all answer the same questions posed by the author - "Would you have sex with an Arab?" and "Would you have sex with an Israeli Jew?". Most, if not all of the scenes are shot at night in dance clubs, bars, cafes, public spaces, and personal homes in Tel Aviv, Israel. Interviews are conducted in French, Hebrew, Arabic and English. The film is currently available with both French and English subtitles. Wadi 1981-1991 is a 1991 film directed by Amos Gitai. The Genius of Lenny Breau is a 1999 music documentary directed by Emily Hughes. A Year Along the Abandoned Road is a Norwegian short film shot over a period of 105 days in 1988/1989 and released in 1991. Directed by Morten Skallerud, the film was shot in Super Panavision 70 and shows a whole year passing by in Norway's Børfjord at 50,000 times the normal speed in just 12 minutes. The camera was moved slightly each day, and so the film gives the viewer the impression of seamlessly travelling around the fjord as the year goes along, each day compressed into a few seconds. The film which premiered at the Kortfilmfestivalen Grimstad in June 1991, has been screened at over 300 film festivals throughout the world and won 12 different awards, among which the Norwegian Amandaprisen for best short film in 1991, and the Grand Prix at the Tampere Film Festival in 1992. The film is traditionally the opening movie of the annual 70 mm film festival held at the Cinemateket film club in Oslo. In 2002 director Jesper Hiro used footage from the film in a-ha's "Lifelines" music video. Secundaria is a Documentary, Drama, and Music film directed by Mary Jane Doherty. Sweet Crude Man Camp is a 2013 short documentary drama film directed by Isaac Gale. Three Songs About Lenin is a documentary silent film by Russian filmmaker Dziga Vertov. It is based on three admiring songs sung by anonymous people in Soviet Russia about Vladimir Ilyich Lenin. It is made up of 3 episodes and is 57 minutes long. In 1969 it was re-edited by Elizaveta Svilova, Ilya Kopalin and Serafima Pumpyanskaya as part of the 1970 Lenin centenary. Future of Hope is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Henry Bateman. The Invisible Men is a 2012 documentary, drama film written by Yariv Mozer and Adam Rosner and directed by Yariv Mozer. Nata Sarvabhouma is a 1968 documentary film on Rajkumar directed by Aaruru Pattabhi. It was made coinciding the occasion of the release of his 100th film Bhagyada Baagilu. The documentary introduced Rajkumar's village, home, family members and also contained clippings of some of his films. It also has the footage of his felicitation by Gubbi Veeranna and conferring him the title "Nata Sarvabhouma". Der Angriff der Gegenwart auf die übrige Zeit is a documentary film made in West Germany in 1985. It is written and directed by Alexander Kluge. The entire film was filmed in Frankfurt am Main, Hessen, Germany. The film's working title was Unheimlichkeit der Zeit. The film is known as L'attaque du présent sur le temps qui reste in France. An alternate English title of the film is The Blind Director. NYman with a Movie Camera is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Michael Nyman. Laatste Zeven Maanden van Anne Frank is a 1988 Dutch television documentary directed by Willy Lindwer about the last seven months in the life of diarist Anne Frank. Seven different women, who were fellow prisoners of Anne Frank in the Westerbork transit camp and the Auschwitz, and Bergen-Belsen concentration camps, gave interviews about Anne's last months in this documentary. Among them are Hanneli Goslar, Anne's childhood friend and fellow prisoner in Bergen-Belsen, and Janny Brandes-Brilleslijper, Anne's fellow prisoner in all three camps. Both women are believed to be among the last known people to have seen Anne alive. Anne and Margot were cell mates with them. The documentary won an International Emmy Award. The interviews appeared as a book in 1992: The Last Seven Months of Anne Frank, Willy Lindwer. Anchor, ISBN 0-385-42360-8. Visions of Eight is a 1973 American documentary film, produced by David L. Wolper and Stan Margulies, offering a stylized look at the 1972 Summer Olympics, directed by eight different directors. It was screened at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival, but wasn't entered into the main competition. It was later shown as part of the Cannes Classics section of the 2013 Cannes Film Festival. Some visuals of the Munich stadium from the documentary were used in Without Limits. The struggle of America's first African American fighter pilots is explored as narrator Ossie Davis tells the inspiring tale of the brave Tuskegee Airmen and the bold steps they took to prove they had the skills and abilities to take to the skies and defend their nation. In Memory of Friends is a biographical documentary film directed by Anand Patwardhan. Beyond Sorrow, Beyond Pain is a 1983 Swedish documentary film directed by Agneta Elers-Jarleman. The film won the Guldbagge Award for Best Film at the 20th Guldbagge Awards. My Run is a 2009 documentary film directed and produced by Tim VandeSteeg and produced by Mark Castaldo. The film chronicles Terry Hitchcock's journey of completing 75 marathons in 75 consecutive days to raise awareness for single parent families. It first screened at the Austin Film Festival on October 23, 2009. Bird Now is a 1987 film written and directed by Marc Huraux. On the Trail of Sigmund Freud is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Koschka Hetzer-Molden. Citizen Architect: Samuel Mockbee and the Spirit of the Rural Studio is a 2010 biographical, documentary, drama film by Sam Wainwright Douglas. Born Naked (MLB) is a documentary and biography film written by Paula Alamillo, Andrea Esteban, Clara T. Lopez, Eloísa Muñoz and directed by Andrea Esteban. "Created as an empowerment tool by LYRIC’s Work It! Queer Youth Action Project, this video serves as a model of how queer sex issues can be covered in high school sex education classes." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Tres semanas después is a 2010 documentary film directed by José Luis Torres Leiva. We Are Still Here is a 2011 short documentary drama film directed by Sterlin Harjo and Matt Leach. Richard Pryor: I Ain't Dead Yet, #*%$#@!! is a documentary short film about and featuring comedian Richard Pryor. It was produced and aired by Comedy Central. It features commentary from different actors, comedians, and Pryor's own family members on the aspects and influence of his life and work. It was released just over two years before his death on December 10, 2005. It was played multiple times on Comedy Central then re-edited and broadcast after his death. Cairo Garbage is a 2009 documentary film directed by Mikala Krogh. Beyonce Giselle Knowles has evolved into one of the greatest performers of all time. Her strong voice and theatrical performances are unparalleled. Beyonce is the hardest working performer in music! This documentary film goes beyond the music and explores her challenges and triumphs. Rachel Is a 2009 documentary film directed by Charlotte Glynn. In the Name of God: Scenes from the Extreme is a documentary film. Tokiori - As margens do tempo is a 2013 Brazilian documentary film directed by Paulo Pastorelo. The film follows the memory of five families of Japanese immigrants who settled in Brazil in the 30s. Know Your Enemy: Japan is an American propaganda film directed by Frank Capra, commissioned by the U.S. War Department. Completion was delayed by disputes between the Hollywood producers and Washington. The original intention of the film was to prepare U.S. soldiers for war before deployment in the Pacific, though ultimately it never realized this purpose due to the war’s abrupt end soon after its completion. The film’s first public screening was in 1977 as part of a PBS special. U2 is a musical documentary film directed by Andrea Doubek and Joe Stohel Children of Srikandi is a 2012 documentary/drama film written by Laura Coppens and directed by Laura Coppens, Hera Danish, Yulia Dwi Andriyanti, Dian Eggie, Oji Ijo, Angelika Levi, Stea Lim, Afank Mariani, Imelda Taurinamandala and Winnie Wibowo. In Search of the Papin Sisters is a 2000 film directed by Claude Ventura. James Blunt: Return to Kosovo is a 2007 documentary film recorded in September 2006, when musician and former British Army Captain James Blunt returned to Kosovo to perform a concert for serving NATO troops, and to visit places and people he had encountered whilst serving in Kosovo in 1999. The documentary was directed by Steven Cantor. State Of Mind is a film directed by Djo Tunda Wa Munga. Warheads is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Romuald Karmakar. No Name Stars is a documentary film directed by Kim Taeil. Helena: First Pilgrim to the Holy Land is a 2003 history film directed by Chris Hooke and written by Gerry Branigan and Julian Norridge. Pumping Iron II: The Women is a documentary film about female bodybuilding, focusing on several women as they prepare for and compete in the 1983 Caesars World Cup. This program features Lech Kowalski's 2003 documentary feature about the life and times of Ramones bassist and all-star burn out, Dee Dee Ramone (1952-2002). Dee Dee's life is a fascinating character study of a punk rock legend who never grew up. Listen to Dee Dee's account with director Lech Kowalski, ... to discuss Johnny Thunders for the film 'Born to Lose.' Relive the battlefield history of rock and roll through the memories of this ordinary, yet extraordinary guy from Queens whose songs distilled frustration, humor, and pleasure, into the energetic melodies that made the Ramones a worldwide influence! Jimbo is a 2013 short comedy drama documentary film written and directed by Ryan Flowers. Karl Marx Among Us is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Jurij Meden. Gregg Treinish: A MoveShake Story is a 2013 short adventure biographical documentary film directed by Alexandria Bombach. Peter in Radioland is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Johanna Wagner. Humans cannot resist the urge to play god and Yellowstone is paying the price. YELLOWSTONE: AMERICA'S EDEN celebrates the wilderness that has been preserved, but reveals the devastating reality that the wilderness is dying. 80 TO 90 FT is a 2014 documentary short drama family film directed by Jason B. Kohl. The Shakshuka System is a 2008 Israeli documentary film created by the Israeli investigative journalist Mickey Rosenthal and the Israeli director Ilan Abudi. The film focuses on the connection between private capital and government in Israel and suggests that a system exists whereby the State of Israel sells its limited resources, cheaply, to a handful of wealthy families. The film shows this by specifically focusing on the business relationship between the political leadership in Israel and one of the wealthiest families in the Israeli economy – the Ofer family. The film won the Ophir Award for Best Documentary film in 2009. While the film was being produced, the Ofer Brothers Group filed a lawsuit against the creators of the film and no Israeli TV channel would show it. Initially the film was screened in Cinematheques, different events, and in the Knesset. A year after the premiere, it was broadcast on Channel 1, followed by a film produced by the Ofer Brothers in response. In February 2010 the lawsuit was dismissed. The Gate of Heavenly Peace is a 1995 documentary film, produced by Richard Gordon and Carma Hinton, about the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. The Road to Albertane is a 1998 documentary that follows the American teenage band Hanson on their first major concert tour - the Albertane Tour. Sean Morton's expeditions of Area 51 made front page news in the 80's and 90's. Now Morton exposes the deceit, manipulation and control the government imposes. With Marilyn Higgins. It Girls is a feature documentary film directed by Robin Melanie Leacock that aired on the Women's Entertainment channel on April 2 and 7 2002. It features wealthy socialites including Casey Johnson, Elisabeth Kieselstein-Cord and Nicky Hilton, as well as appearances by Diane Von Furstenberg, Marisa Berenson and other women. It was filmed in Manhattan during Fashion Week. The premise of It Girls is that anyone can be an it girl. In the documentary von Furstenberg says "It's really about being a forever girl !" Ghosts of the West is a historical documentary film directed by Ethan S. Knightchilde. Life with Murder is a 2010 documentary film directed by John Kastner. Honor Flight is a 2012 historical war documentary film directed by Dan Hayes. Jigéen is a 2012 documentary film written by Amelia Valero and Jorge Meyer and directed by Jorge Meyer. Number Our Days is a 1976 American short documentary film about a community of elderly Jews living in Venice, California. Directed by Lynne Littman, it won an Academy Award in 1977 for Documentary Short Subject. Mandatory Service is a 2008 film directed by Jessica Habie. The Do Gooders is a 2013 documentary family biographical film written and directed by Chloe Ruthven. The Sons of Eilaboun is a 2007 documentary film by Palestinian artist and film maker Hisham Zreiq, that tells the story of the Nakba in Eilaboun and Eilabun massacre, which was committed by the Israeli army during Operation Hiram in October 1948. The film tells the story of the Palestinian exodus of 1948 in Eilaboun, a village in the Northern Galilee between Nazareth and the Sea of Galilee. In the incident, fourteen men were killed and twelve of them were executed. The villagers were expelled to Lebanon and became refugees for few months, before managing to return clandestinely. The film is the story of the film maker's family, and specially his father's story. Hisham Zreiq explained why he made the film when he said "He choked and his eyes were full of tears, and with a trembling voice he said 'I remember it as if it has just happened' -- this is the way he ended the story, the story of a nine-year-old boy from a small village called Eilaboun, in Palestine 1948, the story of my father, when he was a refugee". Hisham Zreiq was honored by Ramiz Jaraisy the mayor of Nazareth and by Dr. Bald: The Making of THX 1138 is a short film directed by George Lucas and released in 1971 to promote his first feature-length film, THX 1138, released the same year. The film features a conversation between Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola, producer of THX 1138. They discuss Lucas' vision for the film, including his ideas about science fiction in general and in particular his concept of the "used future" which would famously feature in his film Star Wars. Intercut with this discussion is footage shot prior to the start of production of THX 1138 showing several of its actors having their heads shaved, a requirement for appearing in the film. In several cases the actors are shown being shaved in a public location. For example, Maggie McOmie is shaved outside the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco, while Robert Duvall watches a sporting event as his hair is cut off. Another actor, Marshall Efron, who would later play an insane man in the film, cut off his own hair and was filmed doing so in a bathtub. The film is included as a bonus feature on the 2004 DVD release of The George Lucas Director's Cut of THX 1138. Mayan Renaissance is a 2012 American documentary film by director Dawn Engle about the Maya peoples of Guatemala and Central America. It describes the ancient Maya civilization, the conquest by Spain during the 1520s, hundreds of years of oppression, and the modern struggle by Mayans for self-determination and a Mayan renaissance. Its première screening at the United Nations Headquarters was on 16 May 2012 and its broadcast première on Colorado Public Television was on 6 June 2012. The film contains interviews of 1992 Nobel Peace Prize winner, Rigoberta Menchú, a Mayan indigenous rights activist and politician, and other Guatemalan and foreign contributors. It was awarded the Best Colorado Filmmaker Documentary Award at The Film Festival of Colorado in July 2012. The documentary is the first of a planned ten-part Nobel Legacy Film Series. Life in a Foreign Land: Burmese in Japan is a 2012 documentary film directed by Toshikuni Doi. I Just Am Who I Am... is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Megan Baxter. Showfolk is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Ned McNeilage. My Son Shall Be Armenian is a 2004 Canadian documentary by Hagop Goudsouzian, who travels to Armenia and Syria with five other members of Montreal's Armenian community who lost relatives in the Armenian Genocide, to speak with survivors. In Syria, Goudsouzian films in Deir ez-Zor, where thousands of Armenians were said to have been killed. In one scene, he scrapes the soil around a church and discovers the remains of what appears to be a mass grave, scooping up bones, a wedding ring and a bullet. In Armenia, Goudsouzian visits villages that had been renamed for former settlements, finding elders who recount what had occurred to their parents and siblings. My Son Shall Be Armenian incorporates archival photographs and footage from a Hollywood silent movie based on the accounts of one survivor who escaped to the United States during the genocide. Participants in the film include Canadian TV host Patrick Masbourian. My Son Shall Be Armenian was produced in French by the National Film Board of Canada. Dance Up From The Street is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Peter Goldsmid. Ain't in It for My Health: A Film about Levon Helm is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jacob Hatley. What Makes a Battle was a propaganda short produced by the US Army Pictoral Service in 1944. It documents the taking of the Marshall Islands while also encouraging increased war production. The film opens with the narrator asking "What makes a battle?" while the camera is focusing on shipments of industrial transports, "This is what it takes to make a battle." This statement sets up the dual nature of the entire film. War supplies are pouring in from every part of the country, from every type of American "Republican and Democrat, white and colored." Industrial production is the backbone of war, according to the film, if it is destroyed, not made with quality, or not replaced in time, the battle cannot happen. Then the film abruptly changes direction, and presents a summary of the American battle plan for taking the Marshalls, how the outer islands were bombed to fool the enemy, and how a sneak attack was planned against the inner islands. But this couldn't happen until all the supplies were ready. When the invasion does begin there is fierce fighting on the main islands. "The German would have surrendered, but not the Jap...Out of a garrison of 6000, 230 surrender." Hunger for Profit is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Caroline Nokel and Valentin Thurn. Elaine Stritch: Shoot Me is a 2013 documentary film directed by Chiemi Karasawa about the life and career of Elaine Stritch. Alec Baldwin and Broadway producer Cheryl Wiesenfeld served as executive producers on the film. It opened in theaters on 21 February 2014, shortly before Stritch's death in July 2014. The Specialist: Portrait of a Modern Criminal is a 1999 documentary film directed by Eyal Sivan. Fight or Flight is a 2007 documentary film produced by Peter J McCarthy and directed by McCarthy and Shane Sutton. The film won "Best Foreign Documentary" at the Long Island Film Festival as well as "Best Documentary" at festivals in Hamburg, Toronto and California. The film took over five years to make and was first premiered at the DocNz International film festival in Auckland, New Zealand in October 2007. It is based on a man's journey into the heart of Thai boxing in Thailand. The film was funded by the Irish Film Board. The production involved two years of travelling throughout Thailand's ring fighting scene. Fight or Flight was in production at the same time Ong Bak was released. Fight or Flight is being broadcast in 2010 on Halogen TV, Viasat and Filmmaster. Of Cows And Men is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Emily Fraser. Einstein Revealed is a 1996 documentary biographical film written by Thomas Levenson and Peter Jones. Karl-Heinz is a 1973 short film written and directed by Michael Lentz. A La Bizkaina is a 2013 documentary film written by Berta López and directed by Aritz Galarza. Delta Padano is a 1951 Italian film. Marina Abramovic: The Artist is Present is a 2012 documentary historical biographical film directed by Matthew Akers and Jeff Dupre. Notabene Mezzogiorno is a 1964 documentary film directed by Hans Rolf Strobel and Heinrich Tichawsky. Hubert H. Humphrey: The Art of the Possible is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Mick Caouette. Quicker'n a Wink is a 1940 American short documentary film about stroboscopic photography, directed by George Sidney. It won an Academy Award in 1941 for Best Short Subject. Candidates is a documentary film directed by Toshimitsu Fujioka. North of Superior is a 1971 Canadian IMAX film directed by Graeme Ferguson. It is a travelogue of the area of Ontario, north of Lake Superior. It was commissioned for the new Ontario Place and was one of the first IMAX films made. Designed to show off the large size screen and detail of IMAX images, the film continues to be shown in IMAX festivals, and has been exhibited internationally. It used extensive flying scenes that provide an in-flight effect that would become widely imitated in future IMAX films. Tiny: A Story About Living Small is a 2013 documentary film directed by Christopher Smith and written by Merete Mueller. Something from Nothing is a documentary film directed by Hal Samples. Kafi's Story is an Ethnographic film directed by Amy Hardie and Arthur Howes. Hidden Rivers Of Southern Appalachia is a 2013 short documentary film directed by David Herasimtschuk and Jeremy Monroe. Gagarin's Pioneers is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Vitalij Manskij. I'm a Stripper is a 42-minute 2013 documentary film directed by Charlie David and produced by Nickolaos Stagias and David's own Border2Border Entertainment following the lives of a number of male strippers from various backgrounds in a number of locations in United States and Canada. The full title I'm a Stripper: The Real Life Magic Men refers to the popularity of Steven Soderbergh's film Magic Mike starring Channing Tatum. The film was launched on 3 April 2013 for television and has been featured in American Logo for its 'WHAT!?' documentary series features and on Canadian OUTtv specialized stations. The Union is a 2011 documentary film by Cameron Crowe exploring the creative process of musician Elton John and the making of 2010 album The Union. Broken Morning is a 2003 documentary television film directed by Jack Bond. Silent Minority is a 1981 British documentary film made by Nigel Evans for ATV which aired in June 1981 on ITV. The film spotlights the conditions of mental patients at the Borocourt Hospital near Reading, Berkshire and the St. Lawrence Hospital in Caterham, Surrey. Part polemic, part narrative, it came just before the transitioning of the British mental health system from an asylum-based system to one of care in the community. This American Journey is a 2013 documentary, comedy, and drama film directed by Paul Blackthorne. Out Here: A Queer Farmer Film Project is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jonah Mossberg. Rock Me To The Moon is a 2013 Taiwanese documentary film directed by Huang Jia Jun. Donkeymentary is a 2012 documentary film directed by Arman Yeritsyan. The Rise of Man is a 2007 film directed by Jacques Malaterre. Maroosya is a 2013 documentary film directed by Navid Mikhak. Amazon is a 1997 American short documentary film directed by Kieth Merrill. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The film features ethnobiologist Mark Plotkin, who discusses the role of rainforest conservation and the benefits of investigating it further in the interest of medical and scientific knowledge. Independent Living: The Funk Volume Documentary is a documentary film. Under the Hood: A Voyage into the World of Torture is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Patricio Henríquez. Flüstern & Schreien - Ein Rockreport is a 1988 documentary film written by Dieter Schumann and Jochen Wisotzki and directed by Dieter Schumann. Gib mich die Kirsche! - die 1. deutsche Fußballrolle is a 2004 documentary film written by Oliver Gieth and Peter Hüls directed by Oliver Gieth and Peter Hüls. Joy of Man's Desiring is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Denis Côté. A Space to Grow is a 1968 American short documentary film produced by Thomas P. Kelly Jr.. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Batuque, the Soul of a People is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Júlio Silvão Tavares about the batuque musical group Raiz di Tambarina, and roots of this musical genre in Santiago, Cape Verde. "Andrew Blubaugh’s affair with an older man left long-lasting marks on his life and relationships. Now a filmmaker, Blubaugh tries to make sense of that relationship by juxtaposing art and real life — with fascinating results. A truly “meta” look at a tale of a teenaged boy and his older lover, The Adults In The Room is no ordinary narrative. Interspersed with a superbly-acted story that is based on his real-life relationship fifteen years ago, we also see a documentary about the filmmaker’s process of making the film. As we watch the tale of a sexual relationship between a young Andy and a man twice his age unfold, the filmmaker uncovers feelings of unfinished business as he unearths deep insecurities and discovers past hurts long submerged. In this bravely unvarnished look at his past, Blubaugh brings his story to life through his actors while taking the audience through the creative process taking place when an artist mines his past for material. As the relationship unfolds, the film poses larger questions about a relationship that had a significant age difference and who is ultimately responsible for each person’s well-being. Interviews with school counselors, conversations with Blubaugh’s friends and a discussion with sex columnist Dan Savage round out this fascinating genre-bending, introspective look at what goes into creating such an honest, personal and heartfelt film.: Quoting Nora Isaacs from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Super Local Hero is a 2014 documentary, family, drama and music film directed by Toshinori Tanaka. Czechoslovakia 1968 is a 1969 short documentary film about the "Prague Spring", the Russian invasion of Czechoslovakia. The film was produced by the United States Information Agency under the direction of Robert M. Fresco and Denis Sanders and features the graphic design of Norman Gollin. It won the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject and in 1997, was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress having been identified as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Prater is a 2007 documentary film directed by Ulrike Ottinger. Terry Pratchett: Choosing to Die is a 2011 one-off television documentary produced by KEO North for BBC Scotland on the subject of assisted suicide, directed and produced by Charlie Russell. It is presented by Terry Pratchett and features Peter Smedley, a 71-year-old motor neurone disease sufferer, committing suicide at the Swiss assisted dying organisation, Dignitas. The film sparked strong controversy and was criticised by Christian and pro-life organisations as "biased"; the accusations were denied by the BBC, the pro-assisted death organisation Dignity in Dying, and Terry Pratchett himself. The Final Journey is a 2010 documentary that chronicles the largest of the Nazi concentration camps that were scattered throughout Germany during the Third Reich. Created and directed by film maker R.J. Adams and narrated by Paul Kirby, the program focuses entirely on the how and who played key roles in their contribution to the tragedy of the Holocaust. South Bay Hardcore is a 2013 Documentary film directed by Rale Sidebottom. The Comeback is a 1980 documentary film directed by Kit Laughlin starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. It follows Schwarzenegger as he returns from professional bodybuilding competitions in order to participate in the 7th Annual Body Building World Championships to try and regain the title of Mr Olympia. Arthur Ashe: Citizen of the World is a 1994 sports documentary film written by Frank Deford and directed by Julie Anderson. Y Can't I Run? The Story Of Santhi Soundarajan is a 2010 short, LGBT, documentary film directed by Payoshni Mitra. Mère-Bi is a 2008 documentary film about Annette Mbaye d'Erneville by her son, director William Mbaye. The first Senegalese female journalist, she was deeply involved in the development of her country. Both an activist and a non-conformist, she fought for the emancipation of women from the beginning. She divided her life between France, where she studied, and Senegal, where she returned in 1957, sensing that independence was on its way. Don Hermenegildo y Joaquina is a 1985 documentary, drama and short film written and directed by Rafael Castanedo. 100% Human is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Trond Winterkjær and Jan Dalchow. Arraianos is a 2012 drama and documentary film written by Eloy Enciso, José Manuel Sande, Mauro Herce and Manuel Muñoz Rivas and directed by Eloy Enciso. Step By Step is a documentary film directed by Antonio Colacino. Dui Paatan Ke Beech Mein is a 1999 documentary film produced and directed by Arvind Sinha. Czech Women: Now We Are Free is a documentary film directed by Zuzana Justman. A Bit of Scarlet is a 1996 documentary film written by Stuart Marshall and directed by Andrea Weiss. The Pixar Story, directed by Leslie Iwerks, is a documentary of the history of Pixar Animation Studios. An early version of the film premiered at the Sonoma Film Festival in 2007, and it had a limited theatrical run later that year before it was picked up by the Starz cable network in the United States. The film was released, outside North America, on DVD in summer 2008 as part of the "Ultimate Pixar Collection," a box set of Pixar films. It was then included as a special feature on the WALL-E special edition DVD and Blu-ray releases, which were launched on November 18, 2008. The film premiered on BBC in the United Kingdom on August 24. Oxyana is a 2013 documentary film directed by Sean Dunne. The Letter: An American Town and the 'Somali Invasion' is a 2003 documentary directed by Ziad Hamzeh. It was filmed in the town of Lewiston, Maine. Four Days in October is a baseball documentary produced by Gary Waksman, ESPN and MLB Productions. It chronicles the last four games of the 2004 American League Championship Series between the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees. The series become famous when the Red Sox — who lost the first three games of the series to the Yankees — became the first team in Major League Baseball history to win a best of 7 playoff series after falling behind 3–0. The documentary begins with few highlights of the Yankees–Red Sox rivalry over the years and then some highlights from Game 3 which was won by the Yankees 19–8 at Fenway Park. The show's narrative begins with Game 4. The Yankees stood three outs away from sweeping the Red Sox at Fenway and advancing to their 40th World Series appearance. The series turned when the Red Sox rallied to tie the game in the 9th inning. They would win it on a home run by David Ortiz and keep the series alive. The ninth inning rally proved to be the turning point of the series as the Red Sox would win the next three games, clinching the series at Yankees Stadium. The Red Sox would go on to sweep the St. Traffic with the Devil is a 1946 American short documentary film about traffic problems in Los Angeles, directed by Gunther von Fritsch. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Awakenings: The Real Story is a 1998 documentary film. The Bodybuilder and I is a feature-length documentary film written and directed by Bryan Friedman, taking viewers on a journey into the subculture of geriatric bodybuilding as the filmmaker tries to reconnect with his father. The film is co-produced by January Films and the National Film Board of Canada. 5 Sides of a Coin is a indie hip hop documentary directed by Paul Kell. Faubourg Tremé: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans, is a documentary film directed by Dawn Logsdon and co-directed and written by Lolis Eric Elie. Featuring a cast of local musicians, artists and writers, the film relates the history of New Orlean's Tremé neighborhood. Detailing the rich existence of the oldest black neighborhood in America, and its significance as the origin of the Southern Civil Rights Movement and birthplace of jazz, the film has taken a relatively unnoticed neighborhood and brought it to the world’s attention, out from under the shadow of other areas, like the French Quarter, sharing a rich history that in turn enhances the way we view the American experience and the history of the United States. Filmmaker Logdson and writer Elie, both New Orleans natives, began work on this project in 2000, five years before Hurricane Katrina hit. They began a process of documenting the vibrant culture of Faubourg Treme, in the hopes of uncovering Treme’s unique and hidden history. Les Accords de Bella is a 2007 anthropological documentary film directed by David Constantin. It was selected by the African Film Festival of Cordoba - FCAT. Free the Mind is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Phie Ambo. Off the Charts: The Song-Poem Story is a 2003 documentary film directed by Jamie Meltzer. Truth in Numbers? Everything, According to Wikipedia is a 2010 American documentary film that explores the history and cultural implications of the online, user-editable encyclopedia Wikipedia. The film considers the question of whether all individuals or just experts should be tasked with editing an encyclopedia. The site's history and background is given, along with commentary from Wikipedia founders Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger. Commentators that appear in the film include author Howard Zinn, Len Downie of The Washington Post, Bob Schieffer of CBS News, former Encyclopædia Britannica chief Robert McHenry and former Central Intelligence Agency director James Woolsey. The documentary discusses incidents that shed a negative light on Wikipedia, including the Essjay controversy and the Wikipedia biography controversy. The long-delayed film premiered at Wikimania 2010 in Gdańsk in July 2010, and was screened at the Paley Center for Media in New York City in October 2010. It was shown as part of the Savannah Film Festival on November 3, 2010, at Savannah College of Art and Design's Trustees Theater. Truth in Numbers? The Great Flight is a 2012 documentary film written by Jung-min Ha and directed by Jae-un Chin. Richer than Frank Lucas. More powerful than the Mafia. Rumor has it, he was arrested and paid bail, but fled the United States with fifteen million dollars. He has never been seen again. Nearly four decades later, the fate of Frank Matthews remains a complete mystery. It's as if Matthews dropped off the face of the earth, explained Mike Pizzi, a retired U.S. Marshal who was involved with the hunt for Matthews, the fugitive, for several years. This film features rare archival footage, interviews with numerous sources who previously haven t talked on camera about Frank Matthews and never before seen photos of Matthews. The Battle of the Somme is a 1916 British documentary and propaganda film, shot by two official cinematographers, Geoffrey Malins and John McDowell. The film depicts the British Army in the preliminary and early days of the battle of the Somme. The film had its première in London on 10 August 1916 and was released generally on 21 August. The film depicts trench warfare, showing marching infantry, artillery firing on German positions, British troops waiting to attack on 1 July, treatment of wounded British and German soldiers, British and German dead and captured German equipment and positions. A scene where British troops crouch in a ditch then "go over the top" was staged for the camera behind the lines. The film was a great success, was watched by c. 20 million British people in the first six weeks of exhibition and the film was distributed in eighteen more countries. A second film covering a later phase of the battle, was released in 1917 as The Battle of the Ancre and the Advance of the Tanks. In 1920 the film was preserved in the film archive of the Imperial War Museum and was inscribed on UNESCO's Memory of the World Register. Terrence Fisher lives in a housing project in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn. Before he was 19 years old, seven of his friends had been shot and killed in the war zone around his home. Terrence is not a gang member or a drug dealer-he is just a normal teenager who likes making hip-hop music with his friends. What could Terrence do to stop gun violence in Bed-Stuy before losing another friend, or his own life? Terrence and a fellow teen filmmaker, Daniel Howard, picked up a camera to tell the story about their mean streets.A few months into the production, Terrence lost another friend. Timothy Stansbury, who was his best friend from elementary school, was shot and killed by a police officer right in front of Terrence. Terrence was traumatized by this incident and Bed-Stuy residents were outraged by the killing of an innocent teenager. However, the Grand Jury decided that the shooting was a tragic accident. No indictment was issued against the officer involved. Terrence and his friends were furious, but instead of retaliating or starting a riot, they organized protests and finished this documentary, so that Timothy's sad story would spread to the world outside of Bed-Stuy.This documentary contains images that could only be captured by someone like Terrence, who has spent his entire life in the projects and experienced the tragedy of gun violence in his everyday life. Lands is a 2009 film directed by Maya Werneck Da-Rin. America the Beautiful is the first 360 film created using 360 film techniques and 360-degree cameras. It was first shot in 1955 and run in Disney Circle-Vision 360 film theaters. Circle-Vision 360 is a film technique that uses multiple cameras arranged in a circle. The viewing image is display on a large circular screen. The film's rendition of the title song would later be used in Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln. 360 film technology was created and refined by Disney Legends Don Iwerks and Ub Iwerks in the 1950s. RiP!: A Remix Manifesto is a 2008 open-source documentary film about "the changing concept of copyright" directed by Brett Gaylor. Created over a period of six years, the documentary film features the collaborative remix work of hundreds of people who have contributed to the Open Source Cinema website, helping to create the "world's first open source documentary" as Gaylor put it. The project's working title was Basement Tapes, but it was renamed RiP!: A Remix Manifesto prior to theatrical release. Gaylor encourages more people to create their own remixes from this movie, using media available from the Open Source Cinema website, or other websites like YouTube, Flickr, Hulu, or MySpace. Gaylor traveled the world to find like-minded people who would help him draft the "Remixer's Manifesto" that makes up the structure of his open source documentary. The manifesto reads as follows: 1. Culture always builds on the past. 2. The past always tries to control the future. 3. Our future is becoming less free. 4. To build free societies you must limit the control of the past. To further his point, Gaylor separates the corporations from the public domain. The Genius of the Place is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Galina Adamovich. La Música Silenciada is a short documentary film directed by Andrea Oliva. Independents is a documentary film by Chris Brandt that explores the creative process and the artistic spirit. It is narrated by James C. Kaufman, and features interviews with over two dozen comic book creators, including Robert Williams, Kevin Eastman, Eric Powell, and Wendy Pini. It was screened as an independent film at the 2008 San Diego Comic-Con. The Kid and the Clown is a 2011 documentary film directed by Ida Grøn. Exit is a 2013 documentary film directed by Klaus Erik Okstad, Olav Njaastad, Anders Somme Hammer and Marius Arnesen. Underground On The Surface is a 2013 documentary film directed by Salma Al Tarzi. In the Shadow of Memory is a 1998 documentary film directed by Jacky Comforty. Belmondo, itinéraire... is a 2011 documentary film written by Vincent Perrot and Jeff Domenech, and directed by Vincent Perrot. Dizzy Gillespie is a 1965 short music documentary film directed by Les Blank. Amour, sexe et mobylette is a 2008 documentary film. Images of the World and the Inscription of War is a 1989 documentary film written and directed by Harun Farocki. "20 Straws is a touching and heartfelt film about 9 gay and lesbian youth coming out and staying out in high school." Quoting the description from the 2008 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. My Name Is Bertolt Brecht-Exil in den USA is a 1988 documentary film directed by Norbert Bunge and Christine Fischer-Defoy. Great White Shark: The Truth Behind the Legend is a 1995 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Cinematography nominated/winning TV Program. Grandpa & Me And A Helicopter To Heaven is a 2013 film written by Åsa Blanck and directed by Johan Palmgren and Åsa Blanck. Gideon's Army is a 2013 documentary film about three black public defenders in the Southern United States. The movie is directed by Dawn Porter. The film received the Ridenhour Documentary Film Prize in 2014, as well as the Candescent Award at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. Circo is a 2010 documentary drama film written by Mark Becker and directed by Aaron Schock. Ko Bongisa Mutu is a 2002 documentary film. The Breath Courses Through Us is a documentary historical fiction music film directed by Alan Roth. Woman Dancing on the Roof Woman is a 2008 documentary and short film directed by Janina Lapinskaite. K.364 A Journey by Train is a 2010 documentary film directed by Douglas Gordon. My Friend Hussain is a documentary film directed by Bhavana Sresht. The Skin Horse is a documentary television program. You Drive Me Crazy is a 2012 documentary comedy film written by Lia Jaspers and directed by Andrea Thiele. Mythos Amazonas is a 2010 documentary film written by Sue Western and Lothar Frenz and directed by Christian Baumeister. Survivors: The Blues Today is a 1984 documentary film directed by Cork Marcheschi and Robert Schwartz. Big River Rising is a 2012 documentary film directed by Emma Wigley and Matthew Gonzalez Noda. Chang: A Drama of the Wilderness is a silent film about a poor farmer in Issan and his daily struggle for survival in the jungle, the film was directed by Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack. It was released by Famous Players-Lasky, a division of Paramount Pictures. Fall and Winter is a 2013 documentary film directed by Matt Anderson. Ladyboys is a 1992 documentary film about the struggle of two teenage kathoey, or Thai male-to-female transgender persons, to leave the rural countryside and become famous transvestite performers in the glamorous cabarets of Pattaya. The film was produced by Jeremy Marre. It was made by Harcourt TV for Channel 4. The documentary opened at the San Francisco Film Festival. Bioscope is a 2008 Malayalam film produced by National Film Development Corporation of India and directed by K. M. Madhusudhanan. The film won a Special Jury award at the 56th National Film Awards and also won 5 awards in the 2008 Kerala State Film Awards. Stolen Honor is a 45-minute video documentary that was released in September 2004. It features interviews with a number of American men who were prisoners of war in North Vietnam, who contend they suffered increased maltreatment while prisoners as a direct result of John Kerry's Fulbright Hearing testimony in April 1971. The subtitle of the film is Wounds That Never Heal; on the production company's website the complete title is given instead as Stolen Honor: John Kerry's Record of Betrayal. Its name was based on the book Stolen Valor: How the Vietnam Generation Was Robbed of Its Heroes and Its History by B.G. Burkett and Glenna Whitley The production company's website states that "Stolen Honor investigates how John Kerry's actions during the Vietnam era impacted the treatment of American soldiers and POWs. Using John Kerry's own words, the documentary juxtaposes John Kerry's actions with the words of veterans who were still in Vietnam when John Kerry was leading the anti-war movement." According to conservative commentator Deroy Murdock, Nyman in Progress is a 2010 documentary film directed by Silvia Beck. It was written by Silvia Beck and Oliver Becker. Everyday Rebellion is a 2013 documentary, action and drama film written by Arash T. Riahi and Arman T. Riahi and directed by Arman T. Riahi. America As Seen by a Frenchman is a 1960 French documentary film directed by François Reichenbach. It was entered into the 1960 Cannes Film Festival. Chris Waddell's life changed drastically when he broke his back skiing racing. This divergence in his life rocketed him to dominance in adaptive ski racing. Unsatisfied with retirement, Waddell felt compelled to return to sport and honor the achievements of those who paved the way for his career. The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years is a documentary film directed by Penelope Spheeris about the Los Angeles heavy metal scene from 1986 to 1988. It is the second film of a trilogy by Spheeris depicting life in Los Angeles at various points in time. The first film The Decline of Western Civilization dealt with the punk rock scene during 1979-1980. The third film The Decline of Western Civilization III chronicles the gutter punk lifestyle of homeless teenagers in the late 1990s. The film features concert footage and interviews of legendary heavy metal and hard rock bands and artists such as Aerosmith, Alice Cooper, Kiss, Megadeth, Motörhead, Ozzy Osbourne and W.A.S.P. The film premiered at The Wiltern Theatre and featured David F. Castagno, Publisher/Editor of Screamer Magazine as the master of ceremony. The film has been released in Region 3: Asia DVD Only. Rigei is a documentary film directed by Hiroaki Inui. Wayfarers (Podorozhni) is a 2005 short film written by Natalya Kononchuk and directed by Igor Strembitsky. Crystal Harvest is a 2003 short documentary film directed by Annelise Wunderlich. Yellow Fella is a 2005 short documentary film written by Tommy Lewis and Fleur Parry and directed by Ivan Sen. The Startup Kids is a documentary about young web entrepreneurs in the U.S. and Europe. It contains interviews with founders of Vimeo, Dropbox, Soundcloud, Debito and more who talk about how they started their company and their lives as an entrepreneur. Along with that people from the tech scene speaks about the startup environment including the venture capitalist Tim Draper and MG Siegler, tech blogger at Techcrunch. It features: Brian Wong Alexander Ljung Jessica Mah Leah Culver Ben Way Zach Klein Johar Carreon The documentary is available as download on iTunes or DVD. - and received 6,5 out of 10 on IMDb The official homepage for the documentary is www.thestartupkids.com Startup Kids is also a Danish blog for entrepreneurs, founded by the two Danish entrepreneurs Christoffer Baadsgaard and Morten Holst Henriksen. The blog was named before the documentary. "Poppa Neutrino has all the characteristics of a man who could have built a fortune," asserts The New Yorker's Alec Wilkinson, who is featured in RANDOM LUNACY. Yet the radically itinerant Neutrino's belief that "rent is the thing that beats us," caused him instead to choose a homeless existence for himself and his family.Unencumbered by possessions, save for a video camera kept rolling since the 80's, he led his "tribe" on a quest for pure freedom and adventure."Some people are nomadic by nature," claims his wife, Betsy. The self-taught family band called THE FLYING NEUTRINOS was literally singing for its supper as it roamed the world, while Poppa's camera recorded first-hand a life of sleeping in cars, trucks, and on remote beaches, as well as the family's time spent traveling with a Mexican circus. The rafts they built from street scraps, which they then would live aboard, exemplified their consummate ingenuity. Eventually one such vessel was pitted against the Atlantic Ocean. I wanna be a beauty queen is 1980 documentary film directed by Richard Gayor. Flight of the Butterflies is a 2012 Canadian documentary film directed and co-written by Mike Slee for 3D IMAX, starring Megan Follows, Gordon Pinsent, and Shaun Benson. The film covers Dr. Fred Urquhart's nearly 40-year-long scientific investigation into the monarch butterfly, tracking the details of what is considered one of the longest known insect migrations: the flight of the monarch butterfly from Central Mexico to the United States and Canada and back. Mama, I'm Gonna Kill You is a family drama documentary film directed by Elena Pogrebizhskaia. Flying Scotsman. It's the most famous steam engine in the world, and at its new home-the National Railway Museum in York- they're getting the old girl ready for her summer excursions to Scarborough. Running the Legend offers a fascinating look behind the scenes as the Museum's engineers race to get the engine certified and tested in time for the trips.Then join the footplate crew, former owners and Scotsman drivers on a journey of pure nostalgia through the beautiful countryside of Yorkshire. With exclusive footplate access, evocative archive film and stunning aerial pictures Running the Legend is based on the popular ITV programs and includes additional unseen material. Documentary which goes on an imaginative tour from the Colorado grave where Dick is buried to the suburbs of California where he lived and worked. Talks to his ex-wives, friends and biographers. Lunarcy! is a 2012 Canadian documentary film directed by Simon Ennis, and produced by Jonas Bell Pasht, Ron Mann and Jonah Bekhor. The film premiered at the 2012 Toronto Film Festival on September 8, and was distributed worldwide through German Screen. The film draws from a cast of real people who each have a unique connection to the moon, including an astronaut who once walked on the moon and a person who claims personal ownership of the moon. One of the characters in this documentary is Professor Jaymie Matthews, an astrophysics professor at the University of British Columbia. At age 13 he lied about his age to be selected as the Youth Ambassador from Canada for the 1972 launch of Apollo 17. After the launch, the United States sent 13-year old Matthews Canada's $5 million Apollo 17 Goodwill Moon Rock, which he kept under his bed for months. Upon recovering the rock from Matthews, Canada lost track of it for decades, incorrectly believing it to have been stolen. Uplifting and courageous, this dramatic seven-time award-winning film by Zach Niles and Banker White tracks the journey of Sierra Leone's Refugee All Stars - a group of six musicians who formed a band after being displaced from their home during the brutal decade-long civil war in Sierra Leone - as they rise from the ashes of war and inspire a nation to believe in the healing power of music.SIERRA LEONE'S REFUGEE ALL STARS follows band mates Reuben Koroma, Francis "Franco" Langba, Efuah Grace, Mohammed Bangura, Arahim Kamara and Alhadji "Black Nature" Kamara through their tour of local refugee camps, debut recording session and painful return to their country for the first time since the war. The band's sound, a mixture of home-grown beats from West Africa, roots-reggae and Western-influenced rhythm and blues combined with heartfelt lyrics which condemn war and encourage social change, have been praised around the world, leading to the band's first American tour. Celebrating its 10th anniversary with continued record-breaking sales, this is the uplifting, inspiring story of Texas' greatest college football legend -- Darrell Royal. A tradition-filled, top-notch look at the man who led the University of Texas Longhorns to three football National Championships, became a father to thousands of players and acted as a hero a millions of fans.Made by renowned Hollywood filmmakers, this is generally considered by college football fans to be the most definitive film ever made about the winning tradition of Texas football. It is shown each year to the University of Texas football players and to sports teams around the nation.Features Matthew McConaughey narrating, with a star-studded cast including Willie Nelson, President George W. Bush, Earl Campbell, ABC's Keith Jackson and more. 28 Up is a 1984 biographical documentary film directed by Michael Apted. The Wind River Reservation H.S. basketball team is the pride of the reservation. Basketball is the vehicle they use to find their way in the white man's world. No ano de comemoração dos 100 anos do Corinthians, o documentário resgata imagens de arquivo inéditas, como o primeiro registro em movimento do Corinthians, datado de 1929, que foi restaurado e tratado, além de cenas das décadas de 40 e 50. O filme traz gols históricos, símbolos, mascotes, uniformes e torcedores ilustres que dedicaram sua vida ao Timão. Cirque du Soleil: Quidam is a 1999 family documentary film directed by David Mallet. Chain is a "narrative/documentary" film written and directed by Jem Cohen. The movie is about two women, a corporate executive and a young drifter whose lives are changed by the loss of regional identity due to the similarity of retail culture worldwide. Although the ladies' lives seem very distinct at the start, by the end of the film they have been reduced to similar viewpoints in their lives. Money for Nothing: Inside the Federal Reserve is an independent feature-length American documentary about the Federal Reserve written and directed by Jim Bruce, and narrated by Liev Schreiber. It examines 100 years of the Federal Reserve's history, and discusses its actions and repercussions the US economy leading to the late-2000s financial crisis. Bruce believes "a more fully and accurately informed public will promote greater accountability and more effective policies from our central bank". The film features interviews with Paul Volcker and Janet Yellen as well as current and former Federal Reserve officials, top economists, financial historians, famous investors, and traders who provide insight on the Federal Reserve System. The film was released in US theaters on September 6, 2013. Dreams from My Real Father: A Story of Reds and Deception is a 2012 American documentary-style film by Joel Gilbert which claims that U.S. President Barack Obama's biological father was Communist Party USA activist Frank Marshall Davis. The title derived from the title of Obama's memoir Dreams from My Father. Woman Rebel is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Kiran Deol. Berlin Alexanderplatz: Remastered. Teil 10 is a 1979 film directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder. Wine Road of The Samurai is a feature film based on a true story about a delegation of 34 samurai to Europe in 1863. It was directed by Sone Eiji and starred Shin Koyamada as himself and the narrator. This national TV show was first aired throughout Japan on March 21, 2006. A Time for Justice is a 1994 American short documentary film produced by Charles Guggenheim. It won an Academy Award in 1995 for Documentary Short Subject. The film was produced by Guggenheim and the Southern Poverty Law Center. This 38-minute film, narrated by Julian Bond and featuring John Lewis, presents a short history of the civil rights movement, using historical footage and spoken accounts of participants. Events recounted are the Montgomery bus boycott; school integration in Little Rock, Arkansas; demonstrations in Birmingham; and the 1965 march for voting rights. Silvio, One of Us is a 2011 documentary film written by Marzia Mete and Andreas Pichler and directed by Antonio Bellia, Elisa Bolognini, Marzia Mete, Valentina Monti, Gianfranco Pannone and Andreas Pichler. Bunso is a documentary by Filipino filmmakers Ditsi Carolino and Nana Buxani. It is about three boys – Tony, 13, Diosel and Bunso, 11 – struggling to survive in a crowded Cebu jail alongside adult rapists and murderers. The two street-smart boys paint a picture of the world of children caught between extreme poverty and the law. Ditsi Carolino received the Best Director award for the documentary film Bunso at the OneWorld 2005 documentary films festival held in Prague, Czech Republic. Bunso is about three boys named Tony, Diosel, and Bunso who are detained in a city jail. There, they share dingy spaces with adult criminals convicted of rape, murder and drug dealing. OneWorld is an international human rights film festival. The Grand Jury honored Ditsi Carolino along with Pirjo Honkasalo for the film Three Rooms of Melancholia, an entry from Finland. In a statement by the Grand Jury, Carolino was noted for achieving "empathy and closeness to her characters who are children held in atrocious conditions in a jail." "Filmed from not above or below their level, the film intermingles humor and despair as the children are allowed to speak for themselves as equals." Benito Mussolini is a 1929 documentary short film. Er nannte sich Hohenstein...+ Epilog:Drei Frauen aus... is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Hans-Dieter Grabe. OKIE NOODLING profiles the culture and sport of noodling, the deep-rooted Southern practice of barehanded fishing. This intimate, and often violent, tradition has its roots in Native American hunting practices and has been passed through generations of southerners for hundreds of years. The Sooner State is one of the last to allow this ancient and controversial fishing technique. Through personal stories of Oklahoma - fisherman, game wardens, noodlers and historians, OKIE NOODLING, a one-hour documentary, gives a voice to this vanishing feature of American rural life. Noodlers dive into creeks, rivers and lakes swimming under embankments in search of catfish nesting holes. As Burkhard Bigler of the Atlantic Monthly explains, "Wading along the shore or diving to the lake bottom, (the noodler) reaches into likely nooks and crevices, wiggling his fingers and waiting for a nip. When it comes, he hooks his thumbs into the attacker's mouth or thrusts an arm down its throat and waits for the thrashing to stop. If he's lucky, the thing on the end of his arm is a catfish." The result is scraped and bloodied limbs and occasionally broken bones. Each noodler bears the scars of the battle. A Resident of the City is a 2011 Egyptian film directed by Adham El Sherif. Stonefaced is a 2012 Biography short documentary film directed by Vivian Ducat. Anatomy of Desire is a 1995 documentary film written by David Wilson and directed by Peter Tyler Boullata and Jean-Francois Monette. The Blocher Experience is a 2013 Documentary film written and directed by Jean-Stéphane Bron. Piece By Piece is a documentary film directed by Nic Hill. The film documents San Francisco's graffiti culture from the early 1980s to 2004. It is narrated by San Francisco graffiti artist Senor One, better known as Renos. The San Francisco Bay Guardian's Cheryl Eddy singled the film out as the highlight of the 2006 Hi/Lo film festival, calling it "an educational experience" and "a thoughtful document". In a full review for that same paper, Johnny Ray Huston said it was "a thorough history that still makes time ... for abstract, lyrical flowing passages". Huston complained that sections such as those featuring Tie One or Reminisce could make movies in themselves, and wished to see more detailing of artists' entries into the legitimate art world. He concluded that the film and director "succeeded at a mighty task" and were interested in displaying "a deep but entertaining understanding of the city as both a historical site and a nexus for contemporary change". Rory L. Aronsky in Film Threat wrote that the documentary "gets this graffiti culture completely right" while for Dennis Harvey in Variety it was "an excellent overview of two decades' graffiti in San Francisco". Soul In The Hole is a 1997 documentary about aspiring basketball coach Kenny Jones, his playground dream team "Kenny's Kings," the relationship between him and his players and life in Brooklyn during the summer. It won the Independent Spirit: Truer Than Fiction Award and was nominated for an International Documentary Association Award. Named Top Ten Gem by Premiere Magazine; twice-named Top Ten Film and called "...The best film made about basketball--and about growing up black, male and street..." by the Village Voice . Selected in competition or otherwise screened at the Rotterdam, Berlin, Munich, Cologne, Helsinki, Festival des Femmes, New Zealand and other international film festivals. Louis B. Mayer: King of Hollywood is a documentary film directed by F. Whitman Trecartin that takes a look at life of filmmaker Louis B. Mayer, who as head of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios, came to rule over movie stars. The film takes a look at the personal price that Mayer paid for that success. "After the success of March of the Penguins (LFF 2005) and Arctic Tale, it's the small, loggerhead turtle that achieves big screen exposure in this charming documentary. Charting its long journey as it migrates from the Sargasso Sea to the North Atlantic Ocean via the Gulf Stream, this fascinating creature is at risk from the outset, whether it be from the crabs who try to pick-off the vulnerable newborns, the predatory birds and sea creatures who fancy a tasty treat or the indiscriminating fishing techniques of the human world. This heartfelt, labour of love from film maker Nick Stringer is at its best when showing off the beauty of the underwater landscape in a variety of different locations and seasons as we join the turtle and celebrate the epic journey that has been undertaken against all odds." Quoting Justin Johnson Klunkerz: A Film About Mountain Bikes documents mountain bike history during its formative period in Northern California and examines the relationships of the Marin County hippies, athletes, and entrepreneurs who were directly responsible for popularizing off-road cycling. The film includes many interviews with those present during the embryonic stages of the sport, including Gary Fisher, Charlie Kelly, Joe Breeze, Tom Ritchey, Mike Sinyard, and Otis Guy, and covers "the treacherous old Repack races." The film was written, produced, and directed by independent California filmmaker Billy Savage and released on October 8, 2006. Is It Better Here Or There? is a 2013 documentary film directed by Elena Avdija. The conditions in Iran after the revolution had progressively grown worse in areas of women’s rights and civil liberties. Rather than live under these conditions, Mehrangiz Kar, a lawyer, decided to challenge the court and push for reform. She has become an outspoken critic of the government. Crave: The Documentary is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Erwin Raphael McManus. Aviary is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Katherin McInnis. Amazonia for Sale is a documentary film about the struggle of the Peruvian indigenous peoples Awajún for the preservation of their lands and the survival of their people and culture. The documentary was produced by Ore Media, the International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs and the Organization for the Development of Border Communities of the Cenepa River, a group made up of 56 Awajun and Wampis communities. East Side Showdown is a 1998 documentary directed and written by Robin Benger. Wrath of Gods is a 2006 documentary film directed by Jon Gustafsson. It tells the story of the dramatic circumstances Canadian director Sturla Gunnarsson and his crew had to go through during the making of the film Beowulf & Grendel. The main focus of the documentary is on director Sturla Gunnarsson, but other participants are Gerard Butler, Paul Stephens, Eric Jordan, Stellan Skarsgård, Peder Pedrero, Wendy Ord and Sarah Polley. The director of Wrath of Gods, Jon Gustafsson, was hired to play one of Beowulf's warriors and he is credited in Beowulf & Grendel as Geat Warrior #2, Gerard Butler and Martin Delaney co-produced the film. The music was composed by Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson. "Jackie, Mildred, Eureka, Sdudla, and Thuli are the women behind Bobbi Bear, a nonprofit organization based in Durban, South Africa, that counsels sexually abused children and works to bring their abusers to justice. Born out of a recognition of cultural stigmas that discourage reporting abuse and inadequate methods of communicating with young victims, Bobbi Bear developed a method of letting children use teddy bears to explain their abuse. Since 1992, the multiracial staff has become the fearless and powerful voice for those victims who would otherwise continue to live in fear, powerless against their oppressors and ignored by the legal system.Director Kim Longinotto (The Day I Will Never Forget screened at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival) adeptly and intimately follows Bobbi Bear staff in difficult direct sessions with children and consultations with family members, and on raids with authorities to arrest the perpetrators of these heinous acts. Facing tragedy daily as part of their advocacy work and, heartbreakingly for some, in their personal lives, the women draw strength from each other and find hope despite the suffering around them.Equally as compassionate to the young victims as they are steadfast in their pursuit of justice, these five exceptional women have found themselves transformed by their mission into ""rough aunties,"" crossing barriers of race, culture, and socioeconomic status to become formidable agents of change in their community." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Cambodge, entre guerre et paix is a 1991 French-Cambodian documentary film directed by Rithy Panh. The film, shot at the end of 1991 at the time of Norodom Sihanouk’s return to Cambodia, questions the Cambodian people and explores the horrors and effects of the Khmer Rouge on them and what future they may look forward to. Cowboy, Maria In Town is a documentary film directed by Annie Stiven and Les McLaren. Kumbia Queers: More Louder Bitte! is a 2013 short, documentary, LGBT film directed by Natalia Sanhueza and Almut Wetzstein. Big Like Me is a documentary and comedy film directed by Gregory Bergman and Aaron Freese. We're Not Broke is a 2012 documentary film directed and written by Victoria Bruce and Karin Hayes. Red Red Red is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by David Oscar Harvey. Wadd: The Life & Times of John C. Holmes is a 1998 documentary produced and directed by Cass Paley, about adult film icon John C. Holmes. It was the winner of Best Feature Documentary at the 1999 South by Southwest Film Festival held annually in Austin, Tx. A re-release and national art-house tour are being planned by The Sager Group. Banyan Deer is a 1959 children's film directed by Ahmed Lateef, Shanti Verma and G. G. Saraiya. Reconstructing Faith (Chinese: Xifang qu ci bu yuan) is a documentary film directed by Wenhai Huang. Maxed Out: Hard Times, Easy Credit and the Era of Predatory Lenders is an independent feature-length documentary film and book that chronicles abusive practices in the credit card industry. Written and directed by James Scurlock, the film and book use interviews with creditors, debtors, academics, and others to illustrate its story. The film, premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas, USA, in 2006 where it claimed the Special Jury Prize, went on to several film fests including Seattle, Full Frame Documentary, Maui, New Zealand, Milwaukee International, Woodstock, Bergen, Leeds International, Oxford and IDFA film festivals. Henry Rollins selected Maxed Out when invited to host a favorite film within Maryland Film Festival 2007. The film was released in movie theaters in select cities in the United States in March 2007 through Magnolia Pictures. The DVD was released nationally on June 7, 2007, in the joint effort of Magnolia Pictures and Red Envelope Entertainment. The book Maxed Out is published by Scribner, a division of Simon and Schuster. It was published in March 2007 in hardcover and in December 2007 in paperback. Ist Faust Schön? is a 2008 music documentary film written and directed by Julien Perrin. Two Brothers: The 5000 Day Project is a 2012 family drama biographical documentary film directed and written by Rick Stevenson and Kevin Klar. BLAST! is a feature-length documentary by Paul Devlin. The film follows a team of astrophysicists who launch a telescope, upon a high altitude balloon from northern Sweden and again from Antarctica. The film follows the crew of scientists as they travel on a search to answer humankind's most basic question, how did we get here? An approach rarely seen in science programming, BLAST! de-emphasizes talking-head interviews and dispenses with anonymous narration in favor of capturing the action as it happens. Through dynamic storytelling, BLAST! reveals the human side of scientific pursuit, the personal sacrifices of scientists and the philosophical perspectives of discovering the origins of the universe. A Drummer's Dream is 2010 documentary film written and directed by John Walker. Primitive Peoples is a three-part documentary about the people of Arnhem Land. It was narrated by Peter Finch who also worked as camera assistant during filming. The Beautiful Game is a 2012 documentary film directed by Victor Buhler. Dragan Wende - West Berlin is a 2012 documentary film written by Vuk Maksimovic, Lena Müller, and Dragan von Petrovic and directed by Lena Müller and Dragan von Petrovic. City of Emptiness is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Ali Sheikh Khudr. "With the geometric, Bauhaus-inspired hairstyles he pioneered in the '60s and his "wash and wear" philosophy that liberated generations of women from the tyranny of the salon, Vidal Sassoon revolutionized the art of hairdressing. This fun, fast-paced documentary traces with visual gusto the life of a self-made man whose passion and perseverance took him from a Jewish orphanage in London to the absolute pinnacle of his craft." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival. En La Puna is a 2013 documentary film directed by Lucas Riselli. Noted Egyptologist Zahi Al-Hawass showcases the most up-to-date archaeological work going on in Egypt and reveals new discoveries that may shed light on some of the most enduring mysteries of the pyramids. You'll witness the opening of Egypt's oldest intact sarcophagus and follow a specially-designed robot as it reveals what lay beyond a blocking stone in the Great Pyramid's mysterious southern shaft. You'll learn more about how the Great Pyramids were built as a worker's city is unearthed and its clues revealed for the first time. In God's Hands is a 2007 International Emmy Award nominated documentary. 7 Sins is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Kristina Inciuraite. Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt is a 1989 documentary film that tells the story of the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt. Narrated by Dustin Hoffman with a musical score written and performed by Bobby McFerrin, the film focuses on several people who are represented by panels in the Quilt, combining personal reminiscences with archive footage of the subjects, along with footage of various politicians, health professionals and other people with AIDS. Each section of the film is punctuated with statistics detailing the number of Americans diagnosed with and dead of AIDS through the early years of the epidemic. The film ends with the first display of the complete Quilt at the National Mall in Washington, D.C. during the 1987 Second National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights. The film, made for HBO, was based in part on the book The Quilt: Stories From The NAMES Project by Cindy Ruskin, Matt Herron and Deborah Zemke. The film relates the lives of six people memorialized with panels: Dr. Tom Waddell, founder of the Gay Games; his story is told by his friend and the mother of his child, Sara Lewinstein. The Way Back to Yarasquin is a short documentary film directed by Sarah Gerber. Painting People is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Tim Burstall. Requiem für Frau H. is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Philipp Hartmann. New Hyperion or Liberty, Equality, Brotherhood is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Karel Vachek. Sixteen Days in China is a 2008 music documentary film directed by Martin Atkins. Greetings From Africa is a 1994 documentary short film directed by Cheryl Dunye. Mad Cow Sacred Cow is a 2009 documentary film directed by Anand Ramayya. Die Stieg Larsson Story is a 2011 documentry film written and directed by Martin Uhrmeister. A Story of People in War and Peace is a 2007 Armenian documentary film about Armenian filmmaker Vardan Hovhannisyan personal understanding of the human costs of war. Prompted by a question from his son, Hovhannisyan embarks on a journey to find his surviving trench mates from the Nagorno-Karabakh War of the early nineties with neighboring Azerbaijan and examines the lasting effects of the war during a time of peace. Timely and universal, A Story of People in War and Peace wrestles with the question of how to maintain dignity in the face of terror. Tribeca Film Festival Executive Director Peter Scarlet comments '... what the film offers is something quite remarkable: it's made by a filmmaker who covered the war at the time, and who inter-cuts his old footage with interviews he's filmed now with the surviving soldiers ... it succeeds heartbreakingly in driving home the fact that somehow we know that nothing justifies the fact of taking the precious, irreplaceable life of even a single human being.’ Historians cite the Karabagh war as one of the first signs of the Soviet Union's collapse. No Problem! Six Months With The Barefoot Grandmamas is a 2012 documentary film directed by Yasmin Kidwai. Jim Morris: Lifelong Fitness is a 2013 short documentary biography film directed by Ryan Vance. The Greatest Wish 3 is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Olga Spátová. The Voyage That Shook The World is a 2009 dramatised documentary film commissioned by Creation Ministries International, a Christian Young Earth creationist organisation, and produced by Fathom Media. It was released to mark the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin's birth and the 150th anniversary of the publication of his seminal work On the Origin of Species. A historian featured in the film has stated that the creationist backing of the film had been concealed when he agreed to take part, that the editing of his words could give a false impression of his views, and that the film presents a historically distorted portrait of Darwin. Creation Ministries agreed that they had set up a "front company" to approach experts. They denied any deception and stated that one of the interviewees had admitted that while the producers had "cherry picked" comments they "didn't distort what we said", and compared their approach to that used by the BBC in making documentaries. The three historians featured in the film subsequently issued a statement that they had been misrepresented by the film company's selective reconstruction of Darwin's voyage. A Hospital Remembers is a 2000 documentary film written by Marie-Christine Poucheliz and directed by Mark Kidel. Goulag is a 2000 documentary film directed by Hélène Chatelain and Iosif Pasternak. This Is Not a Film is an Iranian documentary film by Jafar Panahi and Mojtaba Mirtahmasb. It was released on 28 September 2011 in France, distributed by Kanibal Films Distribution. The film was smuggled from Iran to Cannes in a flash drive hidden inside a birthday cake. It was specially screened at the 2011 Cannes Film Festival and later at the New York Film Festival, and others. It also took part in the International Competition of the 27th Warsaw International Film Festival. Our Munster Memories is an upcoming documentary film written and directed by Frank McGowan. Celebrity Naked Ambition is a 2011 tv documentary film directed by Verity Maidlow. Euro 2012: The Score is a 2012 documentary directed by Jack Weatherley. Athlete is a 2010 sports documentary film directed, edited and produced by Dave Lam that examines the popularity of endurance sports through the profiles of four individuals – a cancer survivor, a blind senior citizen and twin sisters – who compete in marathons and triathlons. The film was released on DVD and video on demand on March 9, 2010. "As an impoverished boy in Kenya, Chris Mburu's life was dramatically changed when an anonymous Swedish woman sponsored his primary and secondary education. Now a Harvard-educated human-rights lawyer, he hopes to replicate the generosity he once received by founding his own scholarship fund to aid a new generation. The challenges Mburu faces instituting his new program seem at times insurmountable but lead him down the path to discovery. Who is Hilde Back, the person who signed the checks that gave him a chance to succeed? With clarity and grace, Jennifer Arnold's film bears cinematic witness to the lasting ramifications of a small ripple of human kindness. Using a strong narrative thread, she unearths fascinating accounts and weaves them together seamlessly. It doesn't hurt that her subjects have pure motivations and back stories to match. The secret of A Small Act was destined to be discovered, if only to remind and inspire others to take such a chance—and change a life." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks is a Chinese documentary film by Wang Bing. Over 9 hours long, the film consists of three parts, "Rust," "Remnants" and "Rails." Tie Xi Qu was filmed over the course of two years between 1999 and 2001 and details the slow decline of Shenyang's industrial Tiexi district, an area that was once a vibrant example of China's socialist economy. With the move towards other industries, however, the factories of Tiexi have all begun to be closed down, and with them, much of the district's worker-based infrastructure and social constructs. The English subtitle "West of the Tracks" is a literal translation of "Tiexi." In this documentary we follow hundreds of musicians as they travel all over Mali from Bamako to Tombuctú with the magnificent sound of their djembes. VICE Guide to Congo is a 2011 documentary film hosted by Suroosh Alvi. The Rubi Girls is a short documentary directed by Jonathan McNeal. Cowboys in Paradise is a 2009 documentary film directed by Amit Virmani. The Day Has Conquered the Night is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jean-Gabriel Périot. Gay Women Will Marry Your Boyfriends is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Adrianna DiLonardo and Sarah Rotella. The Rascals is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Thomas R. Bond II. Supershow was a music documentary film made in 1969, which was directed by John Crome and produced by Tom Parkinson. This film was intended to be Britain's first music 'super session', with several famous blues, jazz and rock artists of the time coming together to be filmed whilst performing. The project was instigated by the Colour Tel film company, the recent credits of which included The Rolling Stones' Rock 'N' Roll Circus and Jimi Hendrix at Royal Albert Hall. Filming took place over a two-day period in March 1969 in a disused linoleum factory at Staines, England. Artists who were filmed on March 25 included Led Zeppelin, Buddy Guy, Jack Bruce, Buddy Miles, Dick Heckstall-Smith and Chris Mercer. Those filmed on March 26 included Eric Clapton, Jon Hiseman's Colosseum, Buddy Guy, Roland Kirk and Stephen Stills. This project also marks one of the rare film appearances of Glenn Campbell and The Misunderstood. Allegedly Jimi Hendrix was due to appear but missed the plane from New York. The whole project was planned with great secrecy and filming went ahead at a reputed cost of £100 per minute. Territories is a 1984 short documentary film directed by Isaac Julien. El Dificil Arte Del Paseo is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Ivan Garcia. Siete Instantes is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Diana Cardozo. Pump! is a documentary film directed by Joshua Tickell and Rebecca Harrell Tickell. Aim High in Creation is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Anna Broinowski. Burden of Dreams is a feature-length documentary and making-of directed by Les Blank, shot during and about the chaotic production of Werner Herzog's 1982 film Fitzcarraldo, filmed in the jungles of South America. The film poster was created by Montana artist Monte Dolack and Eduardo Sanguinetti. Due to his use of long, uninterrupted takes, his rejection of scripting set pieces and his films’ tendency to document without making overt arguments through narration, dramatic reinterpretation or other techniques, Les Blank’s work has often been tied to the cinema vérité documentary movement. Blank himself has denied Burden of Dreams’ connections to cinema vérité. In a 2011 interview with Ben Terrall for the website El Cerrito Patch, Blank discusses a film he is making about the vérité director Richard Leacock and says that Leacock argued that Blank was not a vérité director. Terrall writes that “Leacock criticized Blank for using lights and a tripod, but Blank said he [was] interested in using whatever tools [could] make his films better." Blank is quoted in the article as saying he is “sympathetic” to cinema vérité, but is not a purist. Sikkim is a 1971 Indian documentary about the nation of Sikkim, directed by Satyajit Ray. The documentary was commissioned by the Chogyal of Sikkim at a time when he felt the sovereignty of Sikkim was under threat from both China and India. Ray's documentary is about the sovereignty of Sikkim. The film was banned by the government of India, when Sikkim merged with India in 1975. In 2000, the copyright of the film was transferred to the Art and Culture Trust of Sikkim. The ban was finally lifted by the Ministry of External Affairs in September 2010. In November 2010 the director of the Kolkata film festival stated that upon filming the documentary for the first time, he received an injunction from the court of Sikkim again banning the film. The War Reports is a TV program. Au Pair is a 2011 documentary film directed by Heidi Kim Andersen and Nicole Nielsen Horanyi. Give Trees a Chance: The Story of Terania Creek is a 1980 documentary film directed by Jeni Kendall. Fade to Black is a 2004 documentary about the career of US rapper Jay-Z. It also features many other famous names in hip hop music. This live concert at Madison Square Garden was meant to be Jay-Z's final performance, as he announced his intentions to retire from the industry. Fade to Black runs through some of the major parts of Jay-Z's Madison Square Garden performance while cutting to Jay-Z and his exploits and showing the viewers where his inspiration comes from. The Golden Gate is a 1992 film directed by Jürgen Reble. Cartoonists - Foot Soldiers of Democracy is a 2014 documentary film directed by Stéphanie Valloatto about 12 cartoonists around the world who risk their lives to defend democracy. The film premiered in the Special Screenings section at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival. Black Holes: The Other Side of Infinity is a 2006 short documentary film directed by Thomas Lucas. What Do You Say to a Naked Lady? is a hidden-camera style reality film released in 1970, and directed by Candid Camera creator Allen Funt. In the film, Funt secretly records people's reactions to unexpected encounters with nudity or sexuality in unusual situations. This was the first of two Candid Camera-style theatrical films to be produced and directed by Funt, the other being Money Talks. While the film does contain some titillating material and both male and female full frontal nudity, a large amount of the film involves Funt talking to people about sexuality and sexual topics. Whereas Funt's other productions had to fall within Federal Communications Commission guidelines prohibiting nudity and sexual content on the airwaves, film was outside the FCC's jurisdiction and Funt was free to incorporate them into the film. In the U.S., the film was originally rated X by the Motion Picture Association of America; an edited version was rated R in 1982. When submitted to the British Board of Film Classification in 1970, the film was originally rejected, then rated X; a 1988 video release was rated 18. The film was released on VHS in the 1980s, with a DVD released on December 6th, 2011. A documentary about the Indian Point power plant and it's virtual lack of security following the tragic events of September 11, 2001. William Carlos Williams is a 1986 documentary film written by Jill Janows and directed by Richard P. Rogers. Crustáceos is a 2013 drama film written and directed by Vicente Pérez Herrero. She Paid The Ultimate Price is a 2011 documentary produced, directed and co-written by Iryna Korpan, a Ukrainian-Canadian television personality. The film is based on the life of her own grandmother Kateryna Sikorska, who was executed by the Nazis in 1943 for hiding a Jewish family in her cellar. Kateryna Sikorska was eventually awarded the title of "Righteous among the Nations". The film's soundtrack incorporateses music by Maksym Berezovsky, Levko Revutsky, Myroslav Skoryk, Victor Mishalow, Roman Turovsky and Michael Alpert. This DVD is a review and critique of Pink's incredible career and exceptional music across the past 10 years. Featuring rare and classic footage of Pink, exclusive interviews from those who've known her best, this documentary review contains everything about the girl who got the party started. A Grin Without a Cat is a 1977 French essay film by Chris Marker. It focuses on global political turmoil in the 1960s and '70s, particularly the rise of the New Left in France and the development of socialist movements in Latin America. Using the image of Lewis Carroll's Cheshire Cat, the film's title evokes a dissonance between the promise of a global socialist revolution with its actual nonexistence. The film's original French title is Le fond de l'air est rouge, which means "The essence of the air is red", and has a subtext similar to the English title, implying that the socialist movement existed only in the air. The title is also a play on words: The original expression in French is "Le fond de l'air est frais", meaning "there is a chill/a nip in the air". Chris Marker replaced the last word with "rouge", so the original title translates to There are Reds in the Air. To the People of the United States is a short propaganda film produced by the US Public Health Service in 1943 to warn the American GIs against syphilis. It was directed by Arthur Lubin. The film opens with the ground crew of a flying fortress talking to their colleagues about being grounded. It seems the other planes in their unit are off to fight the enemy, but they and their plane lay idle because their pilot is "sick". The pilot, whose face is never shown, talks with a doctor, feeling very embarrassed and guilty about what has happened. The doctor assures him that he will fly again when he gets better. When the pilot interjects that he has heard he wouldn't, the doctor asks "Heard from who? The kid next door or the drug patent salesman? Surely not anyone who knew what he was talking about." The doctor then informs him that if the disease is caught early, and he keeps up a strict treatment he will be able to go about his business normally again. Once the pilot leaves the doctor addresses the audience "Do you want the facts? Well the first question is the extent of syphilis in America." Hidden Wounds is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Tomas Kaan and Arnold van Bruggen. Just Visiting This Planet is a 1990 documentary film directed by Peter Sempel. Live Parc des Princes Paris is Mika's second live DVD. It is a one-off stadium show with a crowd of 55,000 recorded at Paris on 4 July 2008. The DVD also features a documentary following the initial idea of the show through to the production. In Bonus Features it includes the music video for the song "Lollipop", a live performance of "Grace Kelly" and the making-of the design and others in the show. To Whom It May Concern is a 2006 short film directed by Mitch McCabe. If It Weren't for You is a 2011 documentary, adventure, Family and Romance film written and directed by Anne-Marieke Graafmans. Folley - Bush Spirits Dance In Smoke is a 1990 film directed by Marlene Dittrich-Lux. "“How do we reconcile the contradictions between our personal family memories and our country’s collective memory?” When filmmaker Natalia Almada asks this question, the answer is her latest film, a tour de force of cinematic imagination bristling with beauty, contradiction, and the epic scope of Mexico’s last 100 years of history. Stunningly realized, Almada’s filmic meditation is framed as a search through the memory of her grandmother, whose reminiscences revolve around her father, Plutarco Elías Calles, one of Mexico’s most prominent and controversial presidents. A general during the Mexican Revolution and then president from 1924 to 1928, Calles was known both for his deeds as a revolutionary hero and the brutal tactics he employed during his presidency. His life and legacy embody both the promise and betrayal of Mexico’s poignant history. For Almada, the exploration of her extraordinary personal link to Mexico’s past becomes a lens through which she explores the qualities of cinema that have formed the fulcrum of her artistic practice over her career. Archival and original footage, Hollywood films, and still photographs are woven with original music and meticulously edited audio archives to reveal a hypnotic and deeply compassionate portrait of the Mexican people and the forces that have shaped their country." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Fla X Flu is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Renato Terra. Serambi is a 2005 documentary film directed by Garin Nugroho, Tonny Trimarsanto, Lianto Suseno, and Viva Westi. Eurocrime! The Italian Cop and Gangster Films That Ruled the '70s is a documentary action film directed by Mike Malloy. Vultures Of Tibet is a 2012 documentary short drama film directed by Russell Bush. This film reveals the extraordinary story of Fall Out Boy, with a collection of filmed interviews with the band during which they discuss the defining moments of their career. Featuring rare band footage, seldom seen live and studio clips. Die Jüdin und der Hauptmann is a 1994 dramatic documentary film written and directed by Ulf von Mechow. Goodnight Cleveland is a documentary film directed by Jim Heneghan for 8th Grade Films chronicling The Hellacopters North American tour in 2002 in support of their album High Visibility. The film was shot with one camera and a sound person using the techniques of Direct Cinema and Cinéma vérité. Goodnight Cleveland is noted for its lack of dramatic arc which captures the boredom and tedium of touring life in a very realistic way. The title Goodnight Cleveland is heard in the film when Hellacopters lead singer Nicke Andersson yells "goodnight Cleveland" to the audience at the end of the Agora Ballroom show, an inverted reference to the mockumentary film This Is Spınal Tap, in which bass player Derek Smalls yells, "Hello Cleveland" to an unseen audience as the band attempts to find their way to the stage, while lost in the boiler room of the theater before a concert. White Rock is a 1977 documentary film about the 1976 Winter Olympics held in Innsbruck, Austria. The narrator was James Coburn. The film was directed by Tony Maylam, who at around the same time had also made a concert film featuring the rock group Genesis, Genesis: In Concert. The two films were shown as a double bill in British cinemas in 1977. A soundtrack, "White Rock" was done by Rick Wakeman in 1977. El Maule is a 1983 documentary film written by Patricio Bustamante and directed by Patricio Bustamante and Juan Carlos Bustamante. Holding Still is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Florian Riegel. Windjammer is a 1958 documentary film that recorded a 17,500-nautical-mile voyage of the Norwegian sail training ship Christian Radich. Windjammer was produced by Louis de Rochemont and directed by Louis de Rochemont III. It was the only film to be shot in the widescreen Cinemiracle process, which came with a seven-track stereophonic soundtrack. The Christian Radich and its Norwegian crew were filmed while sailing from Oslo, via the island of Madeira, across the Atlantic to the Caribbean, to New York City, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and then back home to Bergen in Norway. The movie featured a score by Morton Gould, with additional musical performances by cellist Pablo Casals and Arthur Fiedler conducting the Boston Pops Orchestra. The film also features a meeting with the German ship Pamir, which sank in a hurricane in September 1957. The world premiere was at Grauman's Chinese Theatre, Hollywood on April 8, 1958 where the movie ran for 36 weeks. The East Coast premiere took place at New York's Roxy Theatre on April 9 where it was shown for 24 weeks on a special curved screen 100 by 40 feet in size. Rednecks + Culchies is a documentary, drama and biographical film directed by Tony Monaghan. For Tomorrow: The First Step of the Revolution is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Kenneth Kokin. The Making of Anatomy of a Murder is a 1959 short film directed by Otto Preminger. Marilyn Monroe: The Final Days is a 2001 biography and documentary film written by Monica Bider and directed Patty Ivins Specht. Musique(s) électronique(s) is a documentary film shot between 2010 and 2012 by the filmmaker Jérémie Carboni. Serious Moonlight is the title of a David Bowie concert video; originally filmed on the singer's 1983 "Serious Moonlight Tour" in Vancouver, it was released on video and laserdisc in 1984 and on DVD in 2006. The concert includes most of the songs from the concert although Star, Stay, The Jean Genie, Red Sails and Modern Love were left off the release due to time constraints. A live version of "Modern Love", recorded in 1983 at a show in Montreal and originally released as the b-side to the studio version of the same song, can be found elsewhere on the 2006 DVD release as background music for the photo gallery. "The Promise: The Making of Darkness on the Edge of Town takes us into the studio with Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band for the recording of their fourth album. Grammy and Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Thom Zimny has collaborated with Springsteen on this documentary, gaining access to never before seen footage shot between 1976-1978, capturing home rehearsals and recording sessions that allow us to see Springsteen’s creative process at work." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 TIFF site. Quilombo Country is a documentary film directed by Leonard Abrams. Die Mission - Film vom Frieden und seinem Krieg is a 1983 documentary film directed by Günter Borrmann and Jo Baier. The Other Autumn is a 2004 short documentary film written by Marcin Dos, Marion Neumann and Pawel Siczek and directed by Pawel Siczek. One of These Mornings is a 2009 documentry,short,history,music and news film directed by Valery Lyman. Oil Sands Karaoke is a 2013 feature documentary film directed by Charles Wilkinson. The film follows five people working in or around the infamous oil sands of Northern Alberta as they compete in a karaoke contest held at local watering hole Bailey's Pub. "CBS Reports: Hunger in America" is a 1968 television document written by Martin Carr and Peter Davis. It won a Peabody award in 1968. Ingen sorg bakom kameran is a 2013 Swedish short documentary film directed by David Färdmar. Art Of Motion is a 2013 Documentary Short story by Rhodri Williams and directed by Ollie Elliot, Rhodri Williams. To Be and To Have is a 2002 French documentary film directed by Nicolas Philibert about a small rural school. It was nominated as an "Out of Competition" film at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival and achieved commercial success. The film became the subject of an unsuccessful legal action by the school's teacher, who said that he and the childrens' parents had been misled about the film's intended audience, and that he and the children had been exploited. The documentary's title translates as "to be and to have", the two auxiliary verbs in the French language. It is about a primary school in the commune of Saint-Étienne-sur-Usson, Puy-de-Dôme, France, the population of which is just over 200. The school has one small class of mixed ages, with a dedicated teacher, Mr Lopez, who shows patience and respect for the children as we follow their story through a single school year. The film won several awards, including the 2003 Sacramento French Film Festival Audience Prize. Terra Deu, Terra Come is a documentary film directed by Rodrigo Siqueira. The L Riders is a 2013 documentary short action drama sport film written and directed by Zane Schwartz, Eric Ward, Johnny Wilcox and Kevin Wolf. Empire of Dust is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Bram van Paesschen. The Chinese Are Coming to Town is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Ronja Yu. Sculptures sonores is a 1982 short, documentary film directed by Jacques Barsac. Guitarra De Palo is a music documentary film directed by Andrea Zapata Girau. Two Million Minutes: In China is a documentary film. Branson is a 2009 documentary film directed by Brent Meeske. The Monks of Vina is a 2013 documentary film directed by John Beck. Blue Water, White Death is a 1971 American documentary about sharks. Deserter USA is a 1969 Swedish film about Americans living in Sweden to avoid the draft. The director Lars Lambert later went to jail for refusing the draft in Sweden. Wheel of Time is a 2003 documentary film by German director Werner Herzog about Tibetan Buddhism. The title refers to the Kalachakra sand mandala that provides a recurring image for the film. The film documents the two Kalachakra initiations of 2002, presided over by the fourteenth Dalai Lama. The first, in Bodhgaya India, was disrupted by the Dalai Lama's illness. Later that same year, the event was held again, this time without disruption, in Graz, Austria. The film's first location is the Bodhgaya, the site of the Mahabodhi Temple and the Bodhi tree. Herzog then turns to the pilgrimage at Mount Kailash, after which the film then focuses on the second gathering in Graz. Herzog includes a personal interview with the Dalai Lama, as well as Tibetan former political prisoner Takna Jigme Zangpo, who served 37 years in a Chinese prison for his support of the International Tibet Independence Movement. Raw Deal: A Question of Consent is a 2001 documentary film directed by Billy Corben. Hanuszka is a 2006 film by Nurit Kedar that tells the true story of a Jewish girl who survived the Holocaust in a convent, where she got to know Pope John Paul II. The film blends documentary and narrative elements to tell the atypical story of how Hanna Mandelberger escaped the Warsaw Ghetto. Jonestown: Paradise Lost is a 2007 documentary television film on the History Channel about the final days of Jonestown, the Peoples Temple, and Jim Jones. From eyewitness and survivor accounts, the program recreates the last week before the mass murder-suicide on November 18, 1978. Pulp is a 2014 documentary film written by Peter O'Donoghue and directed by Florian Habicht. Vienna's Lost Daughters is a 2007 documentary film written by Mirjam Unger, Sonja Ammann, and Lisa Juen and directed by Mirjam Unger. Mark is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mike Hoolboom. The City of Light is the second DVD released by Australian hip-hop band Hilltop Hoods. It was released in December 2007 by Obese Records. The City Of Light, documents the making of the platinum certified The Hard Road and the 2007 ARIA award winning The Hard Road: Restrung albums and the touring undertaken by the group in promoting these albums, allowing an insight into the creative dynamic of the group. The City Of Light incorporates two hours of exclusive interviews and music videos, including extensive live and behind the scenes footage from the The Hard Road: Restrung album launch. This performance saw the Hilltop Hoods perform alongside the 31 piece Adelaide Symphony Orchestra to a full house at the Adelaide Entertainment Centre. The City of Light was nominated for an ARIA in 2008 in the category of 'Best Music DVD'. The First Millimeter: Healing the Earth is a documentary film directed by Chris Schueler. Kardiopolitika is a 2014 documentary film directed by Svetlana Strelnikova. India was the romantic literary muse of the famous 19th century English writer Rudyard Kipling. Out of this romance came his most famous book Kim whose central is an English boy, disguised as an Indian, who spies for his British masters against Russian designs to conquer India. This was a tale of imperialism, knowledge and power that gave universal recognition to the term Great Game and also endowed the British Raj’s intelligence service and its mapmakers with an adventurous mystique, in their shadowy game of domination with the Russian empire in 19th century Central Asia. This was the playing field of the Great Game; a vast swathe of land that stretched from Lhasa, the capital of Tibet in the East to Ashkabad, the capital of what was then Russian Turkistan in the West. This distance of several thousand kilometers, following ancient caravan trails, encompassed the great mountain ranges of the Pamirs and the Himalayas, great rivers like the Indus and the Oxus, the worlds highest passes, grassy and sandy steppes and salt marshes, great lakes, remote cities and fierce and indestructible people. In this film, Iqbal Malhotra follows in the footsteps of Kip ling’s Great Gamers’ and tries to juxtapose the lessons of the past with the reality of the present. The result is an unusual travelogue about Central Asia set in the backdrop of history and politics. The film captures unusual images of this region that are interconnected to one another and transcends the boundaries of time. People In Motion is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Cedric Dahl. The Sunshine Boy is a 2009 documentary film directed by Friðrik Þór Friðriksson. Cinéma Vérité: Defining the Moment is 1999 Canadian documentary film directed by Peter Wintonick about cinéma vérité filmmaking. The film looks at the work of such notable documentary filmmakers as Jean Rouch, Frederick Wiseman, and Barbara Kopple, as well as the contributions of the National Film Board of Canada, with excerpts from the NFB documentary Lonely Boy and Primary. The film also looks at the influence of cinéma vérité on the pioneering found footage horror film The Blair Witch Project, and interviews video-auteur Floria Sigismundi. Cinéma Vérité: Defining the Moment was produced by the NFB. Just Passing By is a 2013 short documentary drama film directed by Susanne Dollnig. Hidden Colors is a documentary film directed by Tariq Nasheed. Beyond Our Differences is a documentary film aired December 26, 2008 on the Bill Moyers Journal on PBS. A production of New York documentary film company Entropy Films, Beyond Our Differences has been featured at film festivals including the Non-Violence International Film Festival, Global Peace Film Festival, West Hollywood International Film Festival, and many others. Entropy Films sold the 74 minute film to PBS and PBS International in late 2008 for worldwide distribution. The film features interviews with His Holiness The Dalai Lama, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Professor Robert Thurman, Congressman Brian Baird, Former President of Iran Mohammad Khatami, Peter Gabriel, Paulo Coelho, Karen Armstrong, Ela Gandhi, Klaus Schwab, Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev, Ambassador Andrew Young, Marianne Williamson, and many other politicians, kings, queens, heads of state, and social activists. Beyond Our Differences was produced by Peter Bisanz, Tonko Soljan, Vladimir Trushchenkov and Catherine Tatge. Exposed is a 2013 comedy documentary film, directed by Beth B. In the late 20th Century the distinction between soldier and mercenary became blurred. The recent use of private military companies (PMCs) in Iraq has been more extensive than at any time in modern history. The brutal killing of four PMC employees in Fallujah in April 2004 made it clear that these “contractors” are not merely workers in a foreign land. But are the lives of such men the only thing at risk when we privatize warfare?SHADOW COMPANY explores the moral and ethical issues private military solutions create for PMC employees, for the Western governments who foot the bill for their salaries, and for everyday citizens like you. The filmmakers traveled the globe to expose all sides of the issue, interviewing PMC staff, owners and lobbyists, former mercenaries, academics, journalists and top authors. So what is really at risk? Los Sikhs De Kabul is a 2012 family documentary film directed by Bobby Singh Bansal. Heart of the Sea is an hour-long documentary about Hawaiian legend Rell “Kapolioka'ehukai” Sunn who died in January 1998 of breast cancer at the age of 47. Known worldwide as a pioneer of women’s professional surfing, in the Islands Rell Sunn achieved the stature of an icon — not only for her physical power, grace and luminous beauty, but for her leadership in a community that loved her as much as she loved it. Named one of Hawai’i’s most influential women of the 20th century by ABC television, Sunn - whose Hawaiian name means Heart of the Sea - was eulogized in the New York Times for having “captured the heart of Hawai’i during a 14-year battle with cancer.” Ray Charles: 50 Years in Music is a 1991 documentary music film directed by James Yukich. Consisting primarily of footage filmed along with the stunt for Jackass 3, the direct to video Jackass 3.5 features Johnny Knoxville, Bam Margera, Chris Pontius, Steve-O and the rest of the game performing painful stunts and practical jokes that stretch the boundaries of good taste. Hey, Hey, It's the Monkees is a one-hour comedy special televised on the ABC Network on Monday February 17, 1997. The show features all four of the original Monkees and would be the last time Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones, Michael Nesmith, and Peter Tork would appear together. Michael Nesmith wrote and directed the program. If The Flaming Lips have had an accidental career then this documentary is indeed an accident. In 1991, I was simply Wayne's art school neighbor in Norman, Oklahoma with a film camera and some tenacity. They were in need of a willing and somewhat competent cinematographer and I was on a constant hunt for action-packed stories and oddball characters. And thus a relationship built of geographic convenience and a mutual desire to create ourselves.And now, 15-years later, I have thankfully made my filmmaking career through working with The Flaming Lips. After combing 400 hours of footage that includes a decade of home movies, personal interviews, live shows, music videos, and behind the scenes of Christmas on Mars, The Fearless Freaks is at last realized. Although I am certainly excited and ready to share this film with the world I have to admit it's bitter sweet. I can't image not filming a Lips concert, a Drozd brother jam session or the Coyne family Christmas. I am forever grateful to Wayne, Steven and Michael for their patience and trust. Without the unbelievable access that the band allowed this film would just be another okay rockumentary. Instead, together we have created an insightful and personal piece of cinema.- Bradley Beesley Country Boys is a 6-hour documentary film centered on Cody Perkins and Chris Johnson, two teenage boys from David, Kentucky. They attended the David School, a non-denominational private high school with a mission to serve underprivileged and struggling students. The film covers the 3-year period from 1999 to 2002 in which the boys' ages range from 15 to 18. It was directed by David Sutherland. It was a three-part edition of Frontline on PBS, with each part running for two hours, originally broadcast in January 2006. The focus of the film is Cody and Chris' struggles with the problems of growing up in a rural, relatively impoverished environment. In addition, both boys have unique challenges. Chris, growing up in a family without strong role models and parents who limit him in a variety of ways, struggles to motivate himself to do well in school and life. Cody deals with how to find acceptance among his peers and reconcile his Christianity with his alternative lifestyle. The film is set in rural Kentucky. As a result, the film addresses a wide range of topics. Some of these topics include the gun culture, religion and science. This documentary tells the tale of three teens who became millionaires by entering into the lucrative New York City drug trade and whose experiences on the streets inspired the film Paid in Full. Scott Walker: 30 Century Man is a 2006 documentary film about Scott Walker. The film gets its title from the Scott 3 song "30 Century Man". It is directed and co-produced by Stephen Kijak, with Grant Gee serving as director of photography. It charts Walker's career in music, with a focus on his songwriting, and features exclusive footage of recording sessions for his most recent album, The Drift including a memorable sequence in which Walker oversees the recording of the punching of a joint of pork, for the percussion on the song Clara. Rock legend David Bowie, who often professes to have been inspired by Walker, acted as executive producer of the film. Actor Gale Harold is one of the associate producers. The film received its world premiere at the London Film Festival on 31 October 2006 and debuted internationally at the 2007 Berlin International Film Festival in the Panorama. It was released later in 2007 in cinemas and on DVD in the UK by Verve Pictures and went on to become one of the most critically acclaimed documentaries released there that year. It had its US premiere at the South by Southwest Film Festival in March 2007. The Lynching Of Bert Dudley is a 2013 short documentary history film written and directed by Greg Sheffer. De Prijs van de Hemel is a 2012 documentary film produced and directed by independent Dutch filmmaker Jack Janssen. The film premiered 14 May 2012 at the Rialto Theater in De Pijp, Amsterdam. The film is entirely spoken in Dutch, but subtitles are shown. The Apprentice is a 2011 short, biographical, documentary film directed by Mahen Bala and John W.J. Cho. In 1985, Apple aired the commercial Macintosh the Computer for the Rest of Us offering the general public the possibility of using computers in their homes for the first time. MacHeads follows the story of the Macintosh community and its unconditional devotion to Apple Inc. For them the Mac was not just a machine - it came with a social movement, a whole community which believed they were going to change the world. MacHeads is a feature length documentary that explores the loyalty of Apple Fanatics and their obsession. The film takes an in-depth examination of just what makes the Mac, the iPhone, and Apple's other products seem like cultural phenomena rather than just consumer electronics. The Dancing Soul of the Walking People is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Paula Gladstone. Profiles Farmers: Daily Life is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Raymond Depardon. Forgotten Bird of Paradise is a 2009 documentary film directed by British filmmaker Dominic Brown, about the struggle for independence being fought in the Indonesian region of West Papua. The film was shot undercover, and includes interviews with human rights victims and political prisoners, as well as footage of rebels at their jungle stronghold. This film examines the foundations of Springsteen's craft and illustrates the huge influence that artists such as these have had on him throughout his career. This program also looks broadly at the political, literary and cultural influences that have affected New Jersey's favorite son. Guru of Go is a documentary film directed by Bill Couturié that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. Willow Creek is a 2013 independent found footage film about a couple interested in Bigfoot lore, written and directed by Bobcat Goldthwait. The film was premiered at the 2013 Independent Film Festival of Boston, and subsequently screened within such festivals as Maryland Film Festival. 14 Up Born in the USSR is a 1998 documentary film directed by Sergei Miroshnichenko. We'll Be Keepin On is a 1999 documentary film directed and written by Wolfgang Ettlich. Division is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Johan Rijpma. PetroApocalypse Now? is a 2008 documentary television film about the future of global oil production and peak oil. LSD 25 is a 2000 short documentary by directors Doug Karr and Walter Forsyth. Stand is a short music documentary family drama film written and directed by Melanie D'Andrea. The Grain That Built a Hemisphere is a 1943 short animated propaganda film about corn produced by Walt Disney for the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1943. Hef's Runaway Bride is a 2011 documentary film directed by Kevin Burns. A Very Short War is a one-hour documentary produced in 2010 by Karl Conti of Conti Bros Films. It was written by Susan Young and directed by Bill Young and Myles Conti. It was publicly and privately funded, with support from Screen Australia, The History Channel, and NRK2. George Carlin: What Am I Doing in New Jersey? is a 1988 documentary and comedy film written by George Carlin and directed by Bruce Gowers. Kismet is a documentary film by Nina Maria Paschalidou. Turkish soap operas are incredibly popular - and not just in Turkey. Throughout the Middle East, North Africa, the Balkans and Asia, millions of viewers are glued to every episode of series such as Noor, Fatmagul, Suleiman and Life Goes On. The Turkish cities used as locations have become tourist attractions, and huge numbers of parents name their children after the main characters. Kismet seeks out the secrets behind the soaps, which while breaking taboos also count many strict Christians and Muslims among their loyal audience. The film alternates interviews with the stars, directors, and scriptwriters with analyses by sociologists and portraits of faithful fans - most of them female - from Abu Dhabi, Cairo, Athens, Mostar, Sofia and Istanbul. The soaps transcend cultural and religious boundaries, and their devotees see them as much more than a temporary escape from their often-dismal social reality. They may swoon at the hotly debated romantic intrigues, but they are also emboldened by the female characters, all of whom are strong, independent fighters. Alongside illustrative scenes from the series, the documentary brings us the personal stories of women who followed in the footsteps of their heroines to fight for their rights, and to ultimately break free of oppressed lives. Folk is a 2002 short documentary film directed by Ryan Feldman. The Past is a Grotesque Animal is a documentary music drama biographical film directed by Jason Miller. For Those About to Rock: The story of Rodrigo y Gabriela is a 2014 documentary, music film written and directed by Alejandro Franco. Symbols of the Illumanati in New Orleans is a documentary film directed by Tony Green. "Every day, across all corners of the globe, hundreds of thousands of users log onto Second Life, a virtual online world not entirely unlike our own. They enter a new reality, whose inhabitants assume alternate personas in the form of avatars—digital alter egos that can be sculpted and manipulated to the heart’s desire, representing reality, fantasy, or a healthy mix of both. Within this alternate landscape, escapism abounds, relationships are formed, and a real-world economy thrives, effectively blurring the lines between reality and "virtual" reality. Director Jason Spingarn-Koff digs deeply into the core of basic human interaction by assuming his own avatar and immersing himself in the worlds of Second Life residents, whose real lives have been drastically transformed by the new lives they lead in cyberspace. In doing so, he manages to create an intimate, character-based drama that forces us to question not only who we are, but who we long to be." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Von Griechenland is a 1965 short documentary film written by Peter Nestler and Reinald Schnell and directed by Peter Nestler. To commemorate the 10th anniversary of 9/11, NOVA presents an epic story of engineering, innovation, and the perseverance of the human spirit. With extraordinary access granted by The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, “Engineering Ground Zero” follows the five-year construction of One World Trade Center (1 WTC) and the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. Drivers Wanted is a 2012 documentary film about 55 Stan, a New York City taxi depot in Queens, NY. It was directed by Joshua Z Weinstein and produced by Jean Tsien. As well as directing, Weinstein participated in the film, often riding in the passenger seat of the taxi. The film features Johnnie Spider Footman, New York City's oldest taxi driver. Mr. Footman died on September 11, 2013. He was 94 years old. The documentary was screened at the Silverdocs 2012 Film Festival. It also played at the Simons Center for the Arts as part of the Southern Circuit Tour of Independent Filmmakersand the reRun Gastropub. The film was also shown at the DOC NY film festival. Monkey Dance is a 2004 documentary film by Julie Mallozzi, a filmmaker based in Boston. The film follows three Cambodian-American teens growing up in Lowell, Massachusetts as they face the challenges of urban America, learn from traditional culture and dance, and reflect on the sacrifices of their parents, survivors of the Khmer Rouge. The Angkor Dance Troupe in Lowell, and other artists of traditional Cambodian folkloric dance, play centrally in the film as a unifying peaceful, historical, and creative activity for the youngsters and community. Monkey Dance premiered on public television in May 2005 and has shown at numerous festivals, schools, museums, and youth organizations. Use Your Illusion I is a live VHS/DVD by Guns N' Roses. Filmed live at the Tokyo Dome, Japan on February 22, 1992 during the Japanese leg of the Use Your Illusion tour, this recording features the first half of the concert, the second half appearing on sister volume Use Your Illusion II. The VHS titles were distributed by Geffen Home Video in 1992. The concert was originally recorded by Japan Satellite Broadcasting, Inc. for a programme to be aired on their TV channel, and that programme is split between the two DVDs. The songs "Pretty Tied Up", "Don't Cry", "November Rain" and the second part of "Patience" from this event were used in the band's 1999 live album Live Era: '87-'93. The cover is similar to the band's single cover used for "Live and Let Die". They may be sexy in front of the camera, but when twelve of the hottest models around allow viewers a peek behind-the-scenes after the shoot, what follows is a rare opportunity to witness beauty in motion and find out what it truly takes to strike it big in the world of modeling. Whether you're simply a fan of the female form or an aspiring model curious to learn more, this release offers an informative, stimulating, and realistic view of what life is really like in an industry where beauty is paramount, and the simple flash of a bulb is enough to produce a star. Produced as part of the PBS "American Masters" series, this documentary covers the life and artwork of painter, photographer, sculptor and filmmaker Man Ray (born in Brooklyn as Emanuel Radnitsky). The profile includes a look at Man Ray's disassociation with the New York art world in the early 1900s, his name change and his move to Paris, where he was embraced by the Dadaists. The program also includes a look at his Paris studio and home. Towards Mathilde is a 2005 film directed by Claire Denis. Gharsallah, la semence de Dieu is a 2007 documentary film. "Real-life archives become the stage where fact and fiction collide, belief runs amok, and unruly images acquire a life of their own." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Shinya Kimura is a 2010 short film written and directed by Henrik Hansen. Gala is a biographical documentary film directed by Silvia Munt. Dear Master: Josip Plechnik, Prague Castle Architect is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Pavel Koutecký. Finding Refuge In Ishinomaki is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Keizô Fujikawa. The Game Must Go On is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Angeli Andrikopoulou and Argyris Tsepelikas. Certain Doubts of William Kentridge is a 2000 documentary film directed by Alex Gabassi. Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price is a 2005 documentary film by director Robert Greenwald and Brave New Films. The film presents a negative picture of Wal-Mart's business practices through interviews with former employees, small business owners, and footage of Wal-Mart executives. Greenwald also uses statistics interspersed between interview footage, to provide an objective analysis of the effects Wal-Mart has on individuals and communities. Sisters in Law: Stories from a Cameroon Court is a feature-length documentary film by Florence Ayisi and Kim Longinotto portraying aspects of women's lives and work in the judicial system in Cameroon, West Africa. Our Brand Is Crisis is a 2005 documentary film by Rachel Boynton on American political campaign marketing tactics by Greenberg Carville Shrum in the 2002 Bolivian presidential election. The election saw Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada elected President of Bolivia ahead of Evo Morales. The film is distributed by Koch-Lorber Films. "This film is a cautionary tale which comes at a very timely moment," said Koch-Lorber Films president Richard Lorber in a statement to indieWIRE. "The parallels to the current U.S. administration's approach to selling the war in Iraq are staggering." Jim Brown: All-American is a 2002 documentary film directed by Spike Lee. The film takes a look at the life of NFL hall-of-famer Jim Brown. The film delves into his life—past, present and future—focusing on his athletic career, acting and activism. Many people from Hollywood and sports backgrounds were interviewed for the film. Members of Brown's family were also interviewed for the film. It debuted on HBO and is subsequently aired at various times. World's Largest is a 2010 documentary film directed by Amy C. Elliott. A Queen Is Crowned is a 1953 British Technicolor documentary film written by Christopher Fry. The film documents the 1953 Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, with a narration of events by Laurence Olivier. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Chicken, The Fish And The King Crab is a 2008 film written by José Luis López-Linares and Antonio Saura, and directed by José Luis López-Linares. Conversation With Two Writers - Albee And Rodrigues is a 1969 documentary film directed by João Bethencourt. "Arpad Pusztai and Ignacio Chapela have two things in common. They are distinguished scientists and their careers are in ruins. Both scientists chose to look at the phenomenon of genetic engineering. Both made important discoveries. Both of them are suffering the fate of those who criticize the powerful vested interests that now dominate big business and scientific research. Statements made by scientists themselves prove that 95% of the research in the area of genetic engineering is paid by the industry. Only 5% of the research is independent. The big danger for freedom of science and our democracy is evident. Can the public still trust our scientists? This is a documentary thriller about how agro-chemical multinational corporations victimize international scientists to prevent them from publishing their disturbing findings." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Here We Are, Waiting For You is a 1999 documentary film directed by Marcelo Masagao. Jesse James Miller's documentary Uganda Rising charts the lengthy war between Ugandan president Yoweri Museveni's army and the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), a rebel group led by Joseph Kony, a man who claims to converse with higher powers. The LRA add to their numbers by kidnapping children in Uganda and training them to become mercenaries, occasionally committing atrocities against their very own families. Museveni responds to these tactics by rounding up citizens into camps that have on occasion been as deadly as the LRA. Rock School is a 2005 documentary film about The Paul Green School of Rock Music. "Award-winning documentary Lorelei Lee grants viewers intimate access to the porn performer and writer’s inner machinations about work, family, and love. Her candor and insight force those around her to re-examine preconceptions about sexuality, power, and gender." Quoting the synopsis form the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Dogs on the Inside is a documentary film directed by Brean Cunningham and Douglas Seirup. The Labèque Way is a 2012 musical documentary film written and directed by Félix Cábez. Blues can be subdivided into several subgenres ranging from country to urban blues that were more or less popular during different periods of the 20th century. Best known are the Delta, Piedmont, Jump and Chicago blues styles. World War II marked the transition from acoustic to electric blues and the progressive opening of blues music to a wider audience. In the 1960s and 1970s, a hybrid form called blues rock evolved. The America's Music Legacy series was recorded 1983-85 and produced by 20TH Century Home Entertainment. It showcases the musical legends performing the songs that continue to attract and entice the whole world, because they truly are the best of all that is America. The program is hosted by Brock Peters and features performances by B.B. King, Buddy Guy, Pee Wee Crayton, Jimmy Rushing, Ernie Andrews, and many more. It Came from Hollywood is a 1982 comedy film compiling clips from various B movies. Written by Dana Olsen and directed by Malcolm Leo and Andrew Solt, the film features wraparound segments and narration by several famous comedians, including Dan Aykroyd, John Candy, Gilda Radner, and Cheech and Chong. Sections of It Came from Hollywood focus on gorilla pictures, anti-marijuana films and the works of Edward D. Wood, Jr.. The closing signature song was the doo wop hit "What's Your Name" by Don and Juan. As Sete Mortes De Pedro, O Garoto Que Colecionava Caveiras is a 2012 short documentary film, written, directed, and produced by Fabricio Brambatti. In the last thirty years global demand for food has doubled. In a race to feed the planet, scientists have discovered how to manipulate DNA, the blueprint of life, and produce what they claim are stronger, more disease-resistant crops. However, fears that genetically modified food many not be safe for humans or the environment has sparked violent protest. Pan de Azúcar is a 2008 documentary short film written and directed by Hermes Paralluelo. (R)esistenza is a documentary, crime, drama film directed by Francesco Cavaliere. Robert Kennedy Remembered is a 1968 American short documentary film produced by Charles Guggenheim. It won an Academy Award in 1969 for Best Short Subject. Luna And Cinara is a 2012 documentary film directed by Clara Linhart. What You See Is Where You're At is a 2001 short documentary film directed by Luke Fowler. Herpers is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Dav Kaufman. Why Do I Study Physics? is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Xiangjun Shi. Fat Camp: An MTV Docs Movie Presentation is a documentary television film about five teens at a fat camp called Camp Pocono Trails, in the Poconos, Pennsylvania. Derren Brown: Miracles for Sale is a 2011 documentary film written by Derren Brown and directed by Simon Dinsell. Rock'n'Roll is a 1959 Australian documentary from director Lee Robinson. It is a filmed version of a rock concert at Sydney Stadium presented by Lee Gordon, Lee Gordon's 1959 Rock'n'Roll Spectacular, with some additional scenes such as Fabian arriving at Sydney airport. Only a small portion of footage from the documentary survives today and it is considered a "substantially lost" film. Germany in Autumn is a 1978 West German omnibus film about the German Autumn. The film is composed of contributions from different filmmakers, including Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Edgar Reitz and Volker Schlöndorff. It was entered into the 28th Berlin International Film Festival, where it won a Special Recognition award. In the Studio with Navajo Artist Clifford Brycelea is a 2014 documentary film, directed by YCM. Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple, is a 2006 documentary film made by Firelight Media, produced and directed by Stanley Nelson. The documentary reveals new footage of the incidents surrounding the Peoples Temple and its leader Jim Jones who led over 900 members of his religious group to a settlement in Guyana called Jonestown, where he orchestrated a mass suicide with poisoned Flavor Aid, in 1978. It is in the form of a narrative with interviews with former Temple members, Jonestown survivors, and persons who knew Jones at various stages. Stroker of Delerium is a 2012 documentary film directed by Gustavo Domínguez. Design for Death is a 1947 American documentary film that won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It was based on a shorter U.S. Army training film, Our Job in Japan, that had been produced in 1945-1946 for the soldiers occupying Japan after World War II. Both films dealt with Japanese culture and the origins of the war. Following the war, Peter Rathvon at RKO, who had seen Our Job in Japan during his own military service, decided to produce a commercial version of the film. He hired the original writer and editor to work on the new project. Theodor S. Geisel, who is better known by his pen name Dr. Seuss, co-authored Design for Death with his wife Helen Palmer Geisel. Elmo Williams was the editor for both films. Subsequently, Sid Rogell replaced Rathvon, and became the film's producer. The film was given wide release in January 1948; a review in Daily Variety characterized it as, "a documentary of fabulous proportions ... one of the most interesting screen presentations of the year". The Souvenirs of Mr. X is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Arash T. Riahi. Leaving Fear Behind, also known as Leaving Fear behind: I Won't Regret to Die, is a documentary movie from Dhondup Wangchen and Jigme Gyatso about communist Chinese repression of Tibet. It was premiered in 2008 in the year when the 2008 Summer Olympics took place in Beijing, China. War on Terror is an Austrian documentary film about the "War on Terror" initiated by U.S. president George W. Bush in 2001. The film features interviews with Manfred Nowak, who was United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture from 2004 to 2010, Amy Goodman, the host and co-founder of Democracy Now! and the U.S. historian Alfred W. McCoy. Two former detainees from the Guantanamo Bay detention camp are introduced in the film, Murat Kurnaz and Mustafa Ait Idir. It was theatrically released in Austria on December 9, 2011. War on Terror is the third film from Parallel Universe. The Triangle of Death, directed by Folleh Shar Francis Tamba, is a 2009 documentary about the Iraq War. Songs of Redemption is a 2013 documentary film written by Amanda Sans and directed by Miquel Galofré, Amanda Sans. Farewell, Herr Schwarz is documentary film directed by Yael Reuveny. Il Bacio di Tosca is a 1984 film directed by Daniel Schmid, a documentary of life in the Casa di Riposo per Musicisti of Milan, the world's first nursing home for retired opera singers, founded by composer Giuseppe Verdi in 1896. The New York Times review called it "Bravissimo!" Dustin Hoffman cited Il Bacio di Tosca as a direct inspiration for his 2012 film Quartet. The Last Beekeeper is a 2009 documentary film. American Meth is more than a movie, it's a movement. Narrated by Val Kilmer, this documentary explores the devastation this drug is unleasing on America, and provides a glimpse into how it dismantles an American family. La Fortresse is a 2008 film directed by Fernand Melgar. The Red Army is a 2011 comedy documentary short film directed by Paul Ryan. International Boulevard A Documentary is a 2013 film directed by Rebecca Dharmapalan. The Man Who Ate New Orleans is a drama documentary film diracted by Michael Dunaway. That First Glide is a documentary film directed by Mike Waltze. Coal Cocked is a 2013 Documentary Short film written and directed by Gene Bernofsky. Memorandum is a one-hour 1965 documentary co-directed by Donald Brittain and John Spotton, following Bernard Laufer, a Jewish Holocaust survivor, on an emotional pilgrimage back to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Produced by John Kemeny for the National Film Board of Canada, the film received several awards including a Golden Gate Award from the San Francisco International Film Festival. Considered by many critics to be Brittain's finest work, the film’s title refers to Hitler’s memorandum about the “final solution.” A detailed analysis of the film's structure is available in Ken Dancyger's The Technique of Film and Video Editing: History, Theory and Practice. 2007 Before the Tracks Are Lost On the Wind is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Renate Günther-Greene. The Legions of Rome: Punic Wars is a 2001 history war documentary film. FLicKeR is a Canadian documentary film written and directed by Nik Sheehan, produced by Maureen Judge and Silva Basmajian. The film is based on the book Chapel of Extreme Experience by John G. Geiger about the work of artist Brion Gysin and his Dreamachine. Gysin's Dreamachine used a 100-watt light bulb, a motor, and a rotating cylinder with cutouts. Its users would sit in front of it, close their eyes, and experience visions as a result of the flashes of light. Gysin believed that by offering the world a drugless high the invention could revolutionize human consciousness. The documentary features interviews with many prominent figures from the beat movement who had experimented with Gysin's invention and discuss his life and ideas in the film. Notable figures include Marianne Faithfull, DJ Spooky, The Stooges, Iggy Pop, Lee Ranaldo, Genesis P-Orridge, John Giorno, Floria Sigismondi, and Kenneth Anger. The film premiered in Toronto in 2008 at the international documentary film festival Hot Docs and received the festival's Special Jury Prize for the best Canadian Feature Length Documentary. Jews of Iran is a 2005 documentary film by Iranian-Dutch filmmaker Ramin Farahani. The film examines the lives of Persian Jews living in Iran's predominately Islamic society. Although they face discrimination, they choose to remain in their homeland rather than flee the country. The documentary breaks ground as the first film to cover this subject, capturing both friendships among Muslims and Jews and the prejudices against the Jewish minority. Farahani states that Jews of Iran is meant to "help westerners correct their image" of the Middle East and allow them to "see the nuances" within the culture. Erään Hyönteisen Tuho (The Death of an Insect) is a 2010 short experimental film directed by Hannes Vartiainen and Pekka Veikkolainen. "In a lifeless urban landscape where time itself has stopped its crawl, a mad ballet is commencing and a newly hatched butterfly is about to die. This tragic story was created using dead insects gathered from forgotten attics and tool sheds, between window panes and spiders' webs. It combines a number of animation techniques, from classic stop-motion animation to animated 3-D models that have been scanned with x-rays. No one would give these a second glance, until they found their way into the viewfinder of Finnish directing duo Hannes Vartiainen and Pekka Veikkolainen. In their film, the creatures float, seemingly aimlessly, around the town, before finally flying off to the moon. It is only in close-up that we see how ravaged they are. It turns out that an insect with a vague shape can transform into a symmetrical pattern or an attractive strand of DNA. The little dead animals are lifelike and abstract at the same time. The directors' last film, Hanasaari A, was an experimental documentary about the demolition of a power plant: an old industrial landscape making way for new residential developments." Quoting the description from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site. The Sexperience 1000 is a 2011 documentary film. The Water Tank is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Ian Ingelmo Ros. Taylor Chain I & II are a pair of documentary films, produced by Kartemquin FIlms, that first examine a seven-week workers' strike at a Hammond, Indiana chain manufacturing plant and then follow the collective bargaining process of the same plant one decade later. Originally released by Kartemquin as two separate short documentaries in 1980 and 1984, Taylor Chain I & II were released together to show how the decade-long labor movement was effected by the recession and anti-union legislation of the early 1980s. Taylor Chain I: The Story in a Union Local begins in the 1970s, as workers at the Taylor Chain manufacturing plant begin negotiations with management for a new contract. Cameras go from the factory floor into the union hall, as workers both young and old argue about stipulations within proposed contracts. The negotiations lead to a seven-week strike, as the union takes to the picket line. Eventually, both sides make concessions and the workers return to work. Forget Baghdad: Jews and Arabs – The Iraqi Connection is a 2002 documentary film about the Mizrahim, or Jewish community of Iraq. It was written and directed by Samir, an Iraqi born in Baghdad in 1955 and living since 1961 in Switzerland. The film focuses on five expatriate Iraqi Jews, most living in Israel: Shimon Ballas, Moshe Houri, Sami Michael, Samir Naqqash, and Ella Habiba Shohat. The film's music is by Rabih Abou-Khalil. It was produced by Karin Koch and Samir and edited by Nina Schneider and Samir. The directors of photography were Nurith Aviv and Philippe Bellaiche. The film was a coproduction between TagTraum Cologne, Gerd Haag, SF DRS, Teleclub, and Dschoint Ventschr Filmproduktion. It is 112 minutes in length. The DVD, which is distributed by Arab Film Distribution, comes with a 30-minute "Making of the film" featurette. The DVD has multiple audio tracks and subtitles in English, German, French, Arabic, Hebrew, Italian, and Spanish. Kyrgyzstan today: Just married Alisher (18y) has to leave his pregnant wife Dildora (17y) to work in Russia, 3.500 km from home. He’s one of the 12-16 million Russian guest workers, who are forced to leave their countries and work, mostly illegally, under harsh conditions in low-paid jobs in order to support their families. After eight months of hardship in Moscow, Alisher decides to return to his young family, although he has failed to earn enough money to provide for them.This is a love story clouded by migration and modern slavery. The Crown Jewels Of Iran is a 1965 documentary short film directed by Ebrahim Golestan. Los Zapaticos me Aprietan is an award winning Cuban short film that uses documentary footage of people's shoes to convey a political message. The film was directed by Humberto Padrón Compared To What: The Improbable Journey Of Barney Frank is a 2014 documentary, biographical and drama film written and directed by Sheila Canavan and Michael Chandler. An intimate portrait of painter Joe Coleman, who is known around the world as a shamanic, moral voice diagnosing the ills of 21st century America. Coleman holds nothing back, telling us of a world wracked with tumorous cities, perversion, divorce, violence, atomic bombs, and a human race destroying itself "simply because we are born." White Wilderness is a nature documentary produced by Walt Disney Productions in 1958 noted for its propagation of the misconception of lemming suicide. The film was directed by James Algar and narrated by Winston Hibler. It was filmed on location in Canada over the course of three years. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Jan Villa is a 2010 short film written and directed by Natasha Mendonca. From NFB to Box-Office is a 2009 documentary by Quebec film director and producer Denys Desjardins. The film documents the development of Quebec cinema, from the founding of the National Film Board of Canada in 1939 to the creation of the Canadian Film Development Corporation in 1968, recounting the stories of Quebec filmmakers who never gave up on their dream to produce feature-length fiction films, and creating a Quebec film industry. Die ArbeiterInnen verlassen die Fabrik is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Katharina Gruzei. Moments with Fidel is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Rebeca Chávez. Helsinki, Forever is a 2008 documentary, history film written and directed by Peter von Bagh. Buffalo Dance is an 1894 American 16-second black-and-white silent film shot in Thomas Edison's Black Maria studio. The film was made at the same time as Edison's Sioux Ghost Dance. It is one of the earliest films made featuring Native Americans. In this film, produced by William K. L. Dickson with William Heise as cinematographer, three Sioux warriors named Hair Coat, Parts His Hair and Last Horse dance in a circle and two other Native Americans sit behind them and accompany them with drums. According to the Edison catalog, the actors were "genuine Sioux Indians, in full war paint and war costumes." They were also apparently veterans of Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show. When the Dragon Swallowed the Sun is a 2010 documentary film directed by Dirk Simon. Air Force, Incorporated is a 2006 Argentine documentary written and directed by Enrique Piñeyro. The picture was executive produced by Aqua Films' Verónica Cura and produced by Enrique Piñeyro. American Experience: Alexander Hamilton is a 2007 historical fiction documentary film written by Ronald Blumer and directed by Muffie Meyer. Do Not Enter is a 2013 biographical short documentary film written and directed by Martin O'Donoghue. Deceptive Practice: The Mysteries and Mentors of Ricky Jay is an American 2012 documentary film about the magician Ricky Jay. The Kingdom of Survival is a 2011 history documentary film written and directed by M.A. Littler. Le toasteur is a 1982 short film. There is a Garden is a 2014 short documentary film written by Masoud Raouf & Robin Gorn and directed by Masoud Raouf. Smut Capital of America is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Michael Stabile. Tales of Intransigence is a 2004 documentary film directed by Reis Çelik. FrackNation is a feature documentary created by Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney, the directors of Not Evil Just Wrong and Mine Your Own Business, and Magdalena Segieda, that aims to address what the filmmakers say is misinformation about the process of hydraulic fracturing, commonly called fracking. The film looks at the process of fracking for natural gas and seeks to address the concerns surrounding the process that were highlighted in the fracking-critical film Gasland. The film interviews many individuals directly affected by fracking, most of whom support the process. Brother's Keeper is a 1992 documentary directed by Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky. The film is about an alleged 1990 murder in the village of Munnsville, New York. The film is in the "Direct Cinema" style of the Maysles brothers, who had formerly employed Berlinger and Sinofsky. The film contrasts two groups of society; people from rural areas and those from larger cities. It also exhibits how the media flocked to the town to cover the story. This movie displays two completely opposite views of the Ward brothers. One opinion is that of the locals, who defend the Ward brothers as simple country folk. The other is that of the press, who stereotype the brothers as uneducated hicks. The Ward sister was not featured in this film because of her death in the 1980s. However, her daughter Pat makes an appearance in the DVD's special features. Emoticons is a 2007 documentary drama film directed by Heddy Honigmann. The Lonely is a 2009 documentary film directed by Brent Stewart. We Are Astronomers is a documentary short film directed by Max Crow. The Other Side Of The Heart Is White is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Leonardo Pansier. The Mighty Spirit is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Eduardo Coutinho Independent Lynchburg is a 2013 documentary film directed by Nicolle Fagan. Welcome Europa is a 2006 documentary film written by Jean-Pol Fargeau, Florent Mangeot and Bruno Ulmer and directed by Bruno Ulmer. Terminus is a 1961 British Transport Film documentary directed by John Schlesinger which presents a "fly-on-the-wall" look at an ordinary day at Waterloo Station in London. Along with most British Transport Films, it was produced by Edgar Anstey. It was nominated for a BAFTA Film Award for Best Documentary. Original music was by Ron Grainer. Many of the "reportage" shots were actually staged. Schlesinger makes a cameo appearance as a passing, umbrella-carrying business man and one of the main characters in the film, a tearful and apparently lost five-year old, Matthew Perry, was abandoned deliberately by his mother Margaret, an actress relative of Schlesinger. Other characters, including handcuffed convicts and a confused elderly woman, were actors. A Trip Down Market Street is a 13-minute actuality film recorded by placing a movie camera on the front of a cable car as it travels down San Francisco’s Market Street. A virtual time capsule from over 100 years ago, the film shows many details of daily life in a major American city, including the transportation, fashions and architecture of the era. The film begins at 8th Street and continues eastward to the cable car turntable, at The Embarcadero, in front of the San Francisco Ferry Building. It was produced by the four Miles brothers: Harry, Herbert, Earle and Joe. Harry J. Miles cranked the Bell & Howell camera during the filming. The film is notable for capturing San Francisco shortly before the city's devastating earthquake and fire, which started on the morning of Thursday, April 18, 1906. The Miles brothers had been producing films in New York including films shot in San Francisco. In September 1905 they shot the fight between Oscar "Battling" Nelson and Jimmy Britt in Colma, California, just south of San Francisco city limits. The Miles brothers established a studio at 1139 Market Street in San Francisco in early 1906. Six Million and One is a 2011 Israeli documentary film, a Fisher Features Ltd. release, written directed and produced by David Fisher. This is the third and final film in the family trilogy created by Fisher after Love Inventory and Mostar Round-Trip. Kehinde Wiley: An Economy of Grace is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jeff Dupre. Last to Know is a 2005 documentary short film written and directed by Marc Bauder and Dörte Franke. In the Realms of the Unreal is a 2004 documentary about outsider artist Henry Darger. An obscure janitor during his life, Darger is known for the posthumous discovery of his elaborate 15,143-page fantasy manuscript entitled The Story of the Vivian Girls, in What is Known as the Realms of the Unreal, of the Glandeco-Angelinnian War Storm, Caused by the Child Slave Rebellion, along with several hundred watercolor paintings and other drawings illustrating the story. Wrestling with Iowa is a 2013 documentary sports film directed by Tim Jackson. Jupiter's Wife is a TV program. Beyond the Call is a 2006 documentary film about three middle-aged men who are former soldiers and modern-day knights. They travel the world delivering life saving humanitarian aid directly into the hands of civilians and doctors in some of the most dangerous yet beautiful places on Earth, the front lines of war. It is the directorial debut of Academy Award nominee Adrian Belic. The film has been screened in over 80 film festivals on five continents, winning 25 awards so far. PBS aired a 60-minute version of Beyond the Call on January 23, 2007 as part of its Independent Lens series. Music by Prudence is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Roger Ross Williams. It tells the uplifting story of the now 24-year-old Zimbabwean singer-songwriter Prudence Mabhena, and follows her remarkable transcendence from a world of hatred and superstition into one of music, love, and possibilities. Music by Prudence won the 2010 Academy Award for Best Documentary. The film premiered on HBO on May 12, 2010. The Heir is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jeremy De Ryckere. Blood of the Beasts is a 1949 short French documentary film written and directed by Georges Franju. Blood of the Beasts was Franju's first film and is narrated by Georges Hubert and Nicole Ladmiral. The film features on The Criterion Collection DVD for Eyes Without a Face. Die Stellvertreterin is a 1981 short film directed by Christian Frei. The Best Fight is a short documentary drama film directed by Jonathan Hayes. Number Two, by Jean-Luc Godard and Anne-Marie Miéville, is a 1975 experimental film about a young family in a social housing complex in France. The film's distinct style involves presenting two images on screen simultaneously, leading to multiple interpretations of the story and to comments on the film-making and editing process. Project 10 - Real Stories From a Free South Africa: Through the Eyes of My Daughter is a 2003 film directed by Zulfah Otto Sallies. Latinos Beyond Reel is a 2013 documentary film directed by Miguel Picker and Chyng Sun. A Time for Champions is a 2009 documentary film produced by Bud Greenspan's Cappy Productions and St. Louis PBS affiliate KETC. It chronicles the Saint Louis University soccer dynasty of the 1960s and 1970s. It includes interviews with 1950 US World Cup team members Frank Borghi, Harry Keough, and Walter Bahr, as well as Bob Costas and St. Louis native Yogi Berra. The Stuntmen is a one hour documentary for Australian TV written and directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith. It was through this movie that Trenchard-Smith met Grant Page, who he put under a five-year contract and featured in a number of movies. The film also acted as a "calling card" which enabled the director to get finance for The Man from Hong Kong. Lilli is a 2007 short documentary film written by Lilli Nuutinen and directed by Oliwia Tonteri. The Love Competition is a 2012 short romance documentary film directed by Brent Hoff. Burning Down Tomorrow is a 1990 American short documentary film produced and directed by Kit Thomas. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Gifted and Challenged is a short documentary film on the making of the film Shortbus. It was directed by M. Sean Kaminsky. Eye Candy is a 2012 short documentary comedy film directed by Alexis Manya Spraic. Beat This: A Hip-Hop History is a 1984 BBC documentary film about hip-hop culture, directed by Dick Fontaine. The cast includes Afrika Bambaataa, DJ Kool Herc — the film includes footage from Herc's original dance parties — The Cold Crush Brothers, Jazzy Jay, Brim Fuentes, and The Dynamic Rockers. It is narrated by Imhotep Gary Byrd. Originally part of the Arena television series, it was among the first crop of documentaries about hip-hop. SÁmi Jienat – Voices Of SÁpmi is a 2013 documentary, music film written by Lisa Jokivirta and Ville Soderbaum and directed by Alistair Fowler. In 1999, two filmmakers set out to uncover the truth about famed filmmaker Lucas James Booth?Four months after they began, everyone involved disappeared? Honest Man: The Life of R. Budd Dwyer is a 2010 documentary film by James Dirschberger that chronicles the Computer Technology Associates scandal that led to Treasurer R. Budd Dwyer's public suicide. The documentary features new interviews with Dwyer's family, friends, and colleagues. These interviews include Dwyer's widow Joanne and William T. Smith, the man whose testimony convicted Dwyer. Smith reveals in the film that he gave false testimony under oath and that he thus is 'responsible' for Dwyer's death. The film premiered on October 9, 2010 at the Carmel Art & Film Festival in Carmel, California where it received positive reviews. In November 2010 the film premiered in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and ran for one week at the Midtown Cinema. The director and the Dwyer family attended the screening and participated in a Q&A with the audience. In addition to more screenings around the country, the film was released on DVD on December 7, 2010. In December 2010, the documentary was broadcast on the Pennsylvania Cable Network. Cooking History is a 2009 documentary film directed by Peter Kerekes. The Choice Is Yours is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Bill Myers. Released is a 2013 documentary film directed by Philip Frank Messina. "More than half a million women each year die from preventable complications during pregnancy or childbirth. In her gripping directorial debut, Christy Turlington Burns shares the powerful stories of pregnant women in four parts of the world, including a remote Maasai tribe in East Africa, a slum of Bangladesh, a post-abortion care ward in Guatemala, and a prenatal clinic in the United States." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Before Vanishing is a Syrian documentary film by director Joude Gorani. The filmmaker travels from the beginning to the end of the Barada river that surrounds the capital city of Damascus. Often deemed iconic of nature's wondrous beauty, the film reveals how the Barada river has suffered from exploitation, neglect, pollution and unplanned urbanization. The film also uncovers the transformation of the river's social life and provides an intelligent measure of the distance between ideology and reality in contemporary Syria. Island Green is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Millefiore Clarkes. A raw, unique and personal account of Mark 'Chopper' Read's life in his own words. In this documentary Mark shares graphic and brutally honest stories of violence, blood, love and survival. From mental hospitals to the infamous Pentridge H division, this jaw-dropping documentary will leave you with a different understanding of the man that is 'Chopper'. Letter to the President is a 2005 documentary music film directed and written by Thomas Gibson. To Live or Let Die is a 1982 American short documentary film directed by Terry Sanders. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. "In recent years, Israeli cinema has risen to prominence through acclaimed films such as The Band's Visit, Jellyfish and Waltz with Bashir. The diversity of output defies generalization, but two characteristics are prevalent: a soul-searching over the country's problems and a penchant for comic relief. A History of Israeli Cinema helps us to better understand the complex background of this vital movement. Its epic length is earned by having a lot to say. The documentary's two halves are as distinct from each other as the historical periods they represent. Each part can be viewed independently, but a taste of one will surely give you the appetite for the other. If you don't know much about Israeli cinema, you needn't worry. Director Raphaël Nadjari has crafted this work for both outsiders and insiders. He serves up generous excerpts of Israeli films, contextualized by insightful commentary from filmmakers, scholars and critics. While following the country's cinema, we simultaneously learn about Israel's political and social history. The interviewees discuss not only what the cinema recorded, but also what it left out. Part 1 spans the years 1933 to 1978, covering the Zionist struggles to form a state, expand its boundaries and shape its identity. Early films of the thirties shared the propagandistic qualities of revolutionary cinema, celebrating the land then known as Palestine. In Avodah, Helmar Lerski's 1935 documentary, the utopian imagery verges on the erotic in a scene where a Zionist male drills a well for a young woman to drink. After the Second World War, the iconography of the pioneer gave way to the fighter. Paul Newman's starring role in Otto Preminger's 1960 epic, Exodus, raised enormous international sympathy and spurred donations for Israel. The garrulous producer Menahem Golan describes how he moved past message films to entertainment in titles such as Ephraim Kishon's 1964 comedy Sallah Shabati, about a newly arrived Sephardic immigrant. Israelis are never short on opinions, so a synopsis can't begin to describe all the ideas contained in this history. They spill out like fruit from a cornucopia, some bitter, some sweet." Quoting Thom Powers on the 2009 TiFF site. Bilo jednom... is a 2006 rockumentary by Serbian filmmaker Jovan Đerić. The film's premiere in a packed Arena cinema, was followed by live sets from punk-rock bands Mitesers and Generacija bez budućnosti. The film is about the punk-rock scene of Serbia's second city, Novi Sad, in the first half of the 1990s. People who made up this scene talk 15 years later about the rise and reasons for the fall in interest in this kind of music, widely popular in Serbia during the rule of the late Slobodan Milošević. As many of interviewees state, a common enemy - Milosevic and his regime - was a good focal point for the energy their music was making. When this enemy disappeared, the whole movement lost its edge and these days the story is very much low profile. Film was part of "Made in Vojvodina" program of 2007 Motovun Film Festival, presenting cinematography of Vojvodina, and also as part of four-day event - "Enter UK" - about cultural influence of British sub-culture in Serbia, held in Novi Sad during the EXIT festival 2007. "Bilo jednom..." was part of the program of several festivals, and had a theatrical screenings in Warsaw, Poland and Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Kings and Queens of England: Vol. 1 is a 1993 film written by Kate Dunn and directed by Graham Holloway. Trucker and the Fox is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Arash Lahooti. Rabo de Peixe is a 2003 documentary film directed by Nuno Leonel and Joaquim Pinto. Rhyme & Reason is a 1997 documentary film about rap and hip hop. Documentary filmmaker Peter Spirer interviewed over 80 significant artists in rap and hip hop music. This documentary explores the history of hip hop culture, how rap evolved to become a major cultural voice, and what the artists have to say about the music's often controversial images and reputation. Interview subjects range from veteran old-school rappers, such as Kurtis Blow, KRS-One and Chuck D, to west coast rap icons Ice-T, Dr. Dre, and MC Eiht, to several current rap hitmakers, including Wu-Tang Clan, The Fugees, and Sean "Puffy" Combs. The film was released to 280 theaters, earning $1,608,277 during its theatrical run. Jabe Babe – A Heightened Life is a 2005 Australian documentary film directed by Janet Merewether. The subject of the film is Jabe Babe, a woman diagnosed with marfan syndrome, a hereditary disorder which affects organs including the skeleton, lungs, eyes, heart, and blood vessels. The disorder has resulted in Jabe Babe growing to 188 centimetres in height. After being told she only had a short time to live, Jabe Babe embarks on living life as though her time is nearly through, which includes working as a dominatrix.The film follows Jabe as she strives for a more "normal" life by pursuing a career in the funeral industry. The film won the award for Best Documentary Directing Award at the 2005 Australian Film Institute Awards, Best Australian Documentary at the 2005 Inside Film Awards and the Merit Award TIDF Taiwan International Documentary Festival. Jabe died on 6 April 2008 from heart complications Orania is a 2012 German documentary film written and directed by Tobias Lindner. The film is an insight into the social experiment of the town of Orania, Northern Cape, an exclusively Afrikaner enclave in South Africa. The film explores cultural identity and the line between self-determination and discrimination. On 12 April 2012 a teaser trailer was released. The film received its World Premiere at the Raindance Film Festival on 28 September 2012 in London where it competed in the Best Documentary category. We Are Wizards is a 2008 Documentary film directed by Josh Koury. Proud to Be Loud is a 2013 documentary short biographical film written and directed by Jeremie Sunico. The story of one of the West's most influental playwrights, the man who created realistic drama for the stage. Jackson Pollock is a 1987 documentary film directed by Kim Evans. L'arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Auguste and Louis Lumière. Contrary to myth, it was not shown at the Lumières' first public film screening on 28 December 1895 in Paris, France: the programme of ten films shown that day makes no mention of it. Its first public showing took place in January 1896. Andrew's Stone is a 1999 documentary film directed by Victor Asliuk. Mitt is a 2014 American documentary film that chronicles the 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns of former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney. Mitt premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. The film was released on Netflix on January 24, 2014. Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom is an educational Adventures in Music animated short film produced by Walt Disney Productions, and originally released to theaters by Buena Vista Distribution on November 10, 1953. A sequel to the first Adventures in Music cartoon, the 3-D short Melody, Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom is a stylized presentation of the evolution of the four orchestra sections over the ages with: a horn, a flute, a guitar, and a drum. The first Disney cartoon to be filmed and released in widescreen CinemaScope, Toot, Whistle, Plunk and Boom won the 1954 Academy Award for Best Short Subject. In 1994, it was voted #29 of the 50 Greatest Cartoons of all time by members of the animation field. Like many of Disney's early CinemaScope films, a "flat" version shot in 4:3 ratio was made for theaters that were not equipped for CinemaScope. This required rearranging the artwork for some shots to accommodate the smaller screen. Shots of multiple repeated characters were cut in half, using two repetitions instead of four. The most notable change comes at the transition from the end of the "Boom" section to the parade that starts the finale. The Lives of Mount Druitt Youth is a 2010 documentary film produced, and directed by Saad Adam, covering multiple subjects with intentions of "living a good life in Mount Druitt", inspired by Mount Druitt, NSW, Australia, being the place where the director was raised. L'Entrefilm is a 2012 documentary film directed by Francesca Solari. Pulse: A Stomp Odyssey is a 2002 short documentary film inspired by the Theatrical Production Stomp. The film begins with the members of "Stomp" pounding out a beat from the windows and fire escapes from several floors of a rundown NYC apartment building and proceeds with brief segments, cut together with often clever segues, depicting the various international troupes performing on their own turf.” Some featured performances include Brazil's Timbalada, South Africa's Bayeza Cultural Dancers and Les Percussions de Guinée. Stomp was directed by Luke Cresswell and Steve McNicholas. It was produced and distributed by Walden Media. It won the 2004 Giant Screen Theater Association Film Achievement Award for Best Film and for Best Sound in 2003. The Motion Picture Sound Editors also nominated it for best Sound Editing in Special Venue Award in 2003. Ann Richards' Texas is a 2012 biography comedy documentary film directed by Jack Lofton and Keith Patterson. Into the Clouds We Gaze is a 2014 documentary film written by Josef Krajbich and Martin Dusek and directed by Martin Dusek. Depicts the history of Russia from the very beginning of the country till post communist Russia. The film describes the most famous people and events, who influenced the history and development of Russia. Vineland is a short film directed by Laura Kraning. Rising Tones Cross is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Ebba Jahn. Interview: The Documentary is a documentary film, directed by Scott Shaw, that details the creation of the first two films that were created in the distinct style of filmmaking known as Zen Filmmaking. This documentary takes place in Hollywood, California on Hollywood Blvd.. It centers around an impromptu interview with Scott Shaw and Donald G. Jackson. In this interview, the two discuss the process of Zen Filmmaking and the evolution they followed as filmmakers in creating the first films in this style: The Roller Blade Seven and Return of the Roller Blade Seven. This film also shows behind the scenes clips from the making of The Roller Blade Seven. Though this documentary was filmed in 1992 it was not released until 2005. One Designer - Two Designer is a short animated documentary film directed by Alex Stitt. To Age or Not to Age is a documentary film directed by Robert Kane Pappas with Steven N. Austad, Ph.D., Rev. Nicanor Pier Giorgio Austriaco, O.P., Ph.D., Nir Barzilai, M.D., Troy Duster, Aubrey de Grey, Leonard P. Guarente, Cynthia Kenyon, Tom Kirkwood, Gordon Lithgow, Ph.D., David Sinclair and Christoph Westphal. The screenwriter was Robert Kane Pappas. The movie was produced by Miriam Foley and Joseph Zock. The film opened at the Village East Cinema in New York City on July 16, 2010 and was extended to at least a second week at the time of this writing. Celebration at Big Sur is a film of the 1969 Big Sur Folk Festival in Big Sur, California, featuring Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell and others. Released in 1971, the film was directed by Baird Bryant and Johanna Demetrakas. A young Gary Weis was among the cinematographers; other members of the camera and sound crew also went on to become famous in their fields, including Peter Smokler, Peter Pilafian, and Joan Churchill. As of 2011, the film has finally been released as at least a Region 1 DVD. The festival, one in an annual series of concerts held on the grounds of the Esalen Institute in Big Sur from 1964 to 1971, was held on the weekend of September 13–14, 1969, only one month after the famous and considerably larger Woodstock Music & Art Fair, which is referred to repeatedly. Celebration at Big Sur did not receive the same critical acclaim as the 1970 Woodstock film. The Spirit of '43 is an American animated World War II propaganda film created by Walt Disney Studios in 1942 and released in January 1943. The film stars Donald Duck, and arguably contains the first appearance of the character Scrooge McDuck, although Scrooge is not named in the film. It is a sequel to The New Spirit. The purpose of the film is to encourage patriotic Americans to file and pay their income taxes faithfully in order to help the war effort. The repeated theme in the film is "Taxes...To Defeat the Axis." The film, along with Der Fuehrer's Face and others like it, was released on DVD by Disney in 2004. The film was released in Digiview's Cartoon Craze Presents - Donald Duck/Woody Woodpecker Pantry Panic but was pulled from sales due to Disney's and Universal Studios' copyright claims. Yap...How Did You Know We'd Like TV is a 1980 documentary film written and directed by Dennis O'Rourke. It's dirt biking at its best and this video features more than an hour of amazing footage. From Scotland to Vermont, the world's best riders travel around the globe in pursuit of action. Covering the 2003 downhill World Cup and BMX racing action, this thrilling documentary from the creators of Dirt magazine includes interviews with riders, a look at trails and minibikes and a killer soundtrack. Seeds of time is a 2013 historic documentary film directed by Sandy McLeod. Nosey Parker is a 2003 film directed by John O'Brien. Guggenheim Symposium is a documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. Ciao! Manhattan is a 1972 American avant garde film starring Edie Sedgwick, one of Andy Warhol's Superstars. A scripted drama in which most of the actors play themselves, it centers on a character very closely based on Sedgwick, and deals with the pain of addiction and the lure of fame. Peaches Does Herself is an electro rock opera stage show that tells a mythical history of the musician Peaches. Peaches Does Herself follows the musician Peaches through her journey from bedroom wannabe musician to Rockstar. Through a selection of songs from Peaches 4 official albums, a mythical biography is told based on the misconceptions surrounding Peaches image. On the advice of a 65-year-old stripper, Peaches makes music that is sexually forthright. Her popularity grows and she becomes what her fans expect her to be, transsexual. She falls in love but Peaches gets her heart broken and has to realize who she really is. Described as an anti jukebox musical. Peaches wrote directed and played the role of Peaches. This is Peaches first feature film. The video was made available via both streaming and download on June 14th, 2014. Something More Than Night is a 2003 film directed by Daniel Eisenberg. Viktor & Rolf: Because We're Worth It! is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Femke Wolting. Blue Blood is a documentary film that was released in UK cinemas in 2007 and showed on BBC2's Storyville in 2008. The film follows the paths of five students from Oxford University as they try to win a place on the Oxford University Amateur Boxing Club Varsity squad. Those who do will face off against students from the University of Cambridge and earn the right to call themselves a "Blue". Mashalla is a 2004 Documentary film Directed by Eytan Harris. JOHNNY BERLIN PART 2: NOTES FROM THE DUMPSTER, picks up right where the original JOHNNY BERLIN left off, right after the wannabe novelist's tour of duty as a porter aboard a luxury train ended. In the first movie, Johnny talks about wanting to go on a "writing sabbatical" to Cambodia, where he is sure he can live cheaply for months and have time to write his unfinished novel about a man who rolls across America. In JOHNNY BERLIN PART 2, we find Johnny lying in a hotel room bed, talking about how he gambled away almost all of the money he had saved for his trip while working on the train, and thus ended up destitute in Phnom Penh where he had visions of jumping off of a bridge into the Mekong River. Which Way Is The Front Line From Here? The Life and Time of Tim Hetherington is a 2013 documentary film directed by Sebastian Junger. Before the Mountain Was Moved is a 1970 American documentary film produced by Robert K. Sharpe. The film portrays the struggle by the inhabitants of Raleigh County, West Virginia, to preserve their land from the ravages of strip mining, and their efforts to pass state legislation to this end. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Le défilé is a 1986 short documentary film directed by Marc Caro. American Justice Set is a 2000 documentary horror film. Bugs!: A Rainforest Adventure is a 2003 short and documentary film written by Mike Slee and Abby Aron. It is also directed by Mike Slee. Pilates For Indie Rockers is a fitness video that matches a traditional pilates workout with contemporary indie rock music and attitude. The DVD features certified yoga instructor Chaos running a mat-style pilates workout with the assistance of Rage Burner, who demonstrates the beginner moves. The DVD also features a Beginner's Session and three audio "channels" of musical soundscapes: pop-punk, indie, and heavy. The DVD is slated for a November 13, 2007 nationwide release by HALO 8 Entertainment. Its sister-release Yoga For Indie Rockers was released on October 30, 2007. Rose Apple Tree Island is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Alex Cunningham and Allison Usavage. Happy Anniversary, Charlie Brown is a TV documentary that celebrates 25 years of the Peanuts comic strip. The special first aired January 9, 1976. Carl Reiner hosted. Bûka Baranê is a 2013 documentary and history film written by İrfan Aktan and directed by Dilek Gökçin. TODD P GOES TO AUSTIN is a cultural snap-shot of America’s underground, do-it-yourself music scene. Featuring unforgettable live performances from Matt and Kim, Dan Deacon, Mika Miko, The Death Set and many more. As record labels die, independents thrive. In the wake of Napster, MySpace and Facebook there is a generation of artists creating and performing music on their own terms. With the help of legendary DIY rock promoter Todd Patrick, Brooklyn has become ground zero for these exciting young musicians. Using never-before-seen footage, including material shot by the bands themselves, TODD P GOES TO AUSTIN exposes what life is like surviving and touring at the underground level. Interviews with Todd about the necessity of independent music and creativity connect the bands as they tour down to Austin, TX to appear in the DIY music scene's answer to the SXSW Music Festival. Warum halb vier? is a 2005 documentary film written by Lars Pape and Axel Pape directed by Lars Pape. Pinned is a biographical sports drama action documentary film directed by Patrick Norman and Mike Norman. These Heathen Dreams is a 2014 Biographical documentary film directed by Anne Tsoulis. The Art Of Observing Life is a 2013 documentary film directed by Marina Goldovskaya. Purple Skies is a documentary, family and historical film directed by Sridhar Rangayan. Timothy Findley: Anatomy of a Writer is a 1992 documentary film directed by Terence Macartney-Filgate. Empathie und panische Angst is a 1989 film directed by Christine Noll Brinckmann. The Fairy Faith is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by John Walker. The Videos 86>98 is a music video compilation by Depeche Mode, featuring almost two dozen music videos directed by a variety of directors, released in 1998. It coincides with The Singles 86>98. The original movie was released on VHS and DVD. There was however a special edition, DVD only, called Videos 86>98 + released in 2002. The DVD was two discs, the first disc being identical to the only disc in the original DVD, while the second DVD contains bonus material not found in the original release. This documentary from the slums of Brazil is told in five chapters. Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Cannes Film Festval site: "SOURCE OF INCOME Directors: Manaíra Carneiro and Wagner Novais A young man fulfils his dream to go to Law University, but is faced with difficulties paying up his expenses with books and transport. He feels tempted to sell drugs to his friends at university, thus raising the money to fund his studies. RICE AND BEANS Director: Rodrigo Felha and Cacau Amaral Wesley, a young boy, listens to a confession by his father: he is tired of the household menu, always consisting of a plate filled with rice and stewed beans. The boy, joined by his friend Orelha, decides to find some money to buy a chicken. CONCERT FOR VIOLIN Director: Luciano Vidigal The children Márcia, Jota and Ademir vow to remain friends for ever. Later, in their adulthood, Jota is involved in drug trafficking while Ademir has joined the police force. If the two are brought against each other, Márcia may be prevented from fulfilling her dream to play the violin. LET IT FLY Director: Cadu Barcelos Flávio lets his friend’s kite fall across the other quarter of the favela, which is run by a rival gang. Even though he is aware of the prohibition, Flávio decides to collect the kite. LET THERE BE LIGHT Director: Luciana Bezerra On Christmas Eve, the shanty town hill has been out of power for three days. The engineers who have been sent over by the power utility company do not manage to fix the problem. The residents kidnap one of the engineers, taking him as a hostage until the light supply is restored." 10 MPH is a documentary film directed by Hunter Weeks and starring Josh Caldwell with his Segway HT, the two-wheeled electronic scooter. This film, which takes its name from the Segway's average speed, documents Caldwell's 100-day, coast to coast journey across the United States riding the "Human Transporter". The trip started in Seattle, Washington on August 8, 2004 and ended in Boston, Massachusetts on November 18, 2004. 10 MPH has had a favorable reaction at screenings and film festivals and has won several awards. Martinikerk Rondeau is a 110 minute documentary film directed by Will Fraser and produced by Fugue State Films for Boeijenga Music Publications, about the historic organs of the Dutch province of Groningen. Centred on the organ of the Martinikerk, Groningen, it also includes the organs of Krewerd, Zeerijp, Loppersum, Noordwolde, Kantens, Uithuizen, Noordbroek, Nieuw-Scheemda, Der Aa-kerk, Groningen, Leens, Zandeweer, Zuidbroek, Farmsum, and Middelstum. The film includes interviews with organ builder Jurgen Ahrend, organ consultant Cor Edskes and organ builder Bernhardt Edskes. It was released as part of the boxed set Pronkjuwelen in Stad en Ommeland in 2009. They Are Giants is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Koert Davidse. Raw Opium is a 2011 documentary film and two-part TV series produced by Robert Lang of Kensington Communications, directed by Peter Findlay and written by Peter Findlay and Robert Lang. The documentary examines the worldwide opium trade, and the vast criminal and public health issues that have arisen alongside. Raw Opium is a journey around the world and through time, where conflicting forces do battle over the narcotic sap of the opium poppy. From an opium master in southeast Asia to a UN drug enforcement officer on the border of Afghanistan hunting down the smugglers of Central Asia; from a former Indian government Drug Czar and opium farmer to a crusading Vancouver doctor and Portuguese street worker who daily confront the realities of drug addiction. We see how this flower has played, and continues to play, a pivotal role – not just in the lives of people who grow, manufacture and use it – but also in the increasingly tense sphere of international relations. In the process, our assumptions about addiction and the War on Drugs are challenged. Blood Earth is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Kush Badhwar. The Promise of Tomorow 1940-1960 is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Anna Giannotis. The story of how Sam Phillips founded the record company that pulled together some of the early legends of American Rock 'n' Roll. Stateless is a 2013 documentary film written by Scott Erlinder, Javi Reszczynski and Priya Yavagal; directed by Scott Erlinder. Nirvana: Live! Tonight! Sold Out!! is a video album released by the grunge band Nirvana on laserdisc and VHS on November 15, 1994. The DVD version was released November 7, 2006. The video was originally conceived by Kurt Cobain himself and it was to loosely chronicle the band's rise to fame and the Nevermind era. When Kurt Cobain died in 1994 the video lay unfinished so remaining Nirvana band members Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic stepped in to finish it. The video includes live performances as well as interviews with the band. Amongst the live performances is a "disturbing" performance of "Love Buzz" in which Cobain gets into a fight with an over aggressive bouncer. Most of the live footage is from 1991 and 1992, with home video footage dating back to late-1990. The latest footage is from January 23, 1993 at the Hollywood Rock Festival in Brazil. A rough outline of the video appears in the book "Journals", a published book of Kurt Cobain's journals. Jan Křížek Sculptures and Bees is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Martin Řezníček. "The colorful and heartfelt journey of a first-time business owner from Jalisco, Mexico to Oakland, CA where she owns and operates a successful restaurant called the Cock-A-Doodle Cafe (The Cock). " Quoting the description from the 2008 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Gregory Crewdson: Brief Encounters is a documentary film directed, produced, and shot by Ben Shapiro. It premiered March 10, 2012 at the South by Southwest Film Festival and is distributed by Zeitgeist Films. Kintaro Walks Japan is a documentary film produced and directed by Tyler MacNiven. It is an account of MacNiven's journey walking and backpacking the entire length of Japan from Kyūshū to Hokkaidō, more than 2000 miles in 145 days. MacNiven cited three reasons for the journey. On his first trip to Japan in 2002, he fell in love with the country. It was on this trip that a friend nicknamed him "Kintaro," which means "Golden Boy," because of his blond hair. Occasionally accompanying him on the trip was his girlfriend, Ayumi, whose father, George Meegan, completed the longest unbroken walk in recorded history - a nearly 7 year sojourn from the southern tip of Argentina to the northern tip of Alaska. Inspired by their story, MacNiven conceived of the task after learning that his father, whose parents were foreign missionaries, was born in an unknown location in Hokkaidō. Armed with a desire to impress Ayumi and find his father's birthplace, as well as an interest in Japanese culture, MacNiven set sail to Japan. With only a drawing of the birthplace to aid him, MacNiven walked the length of Japan with hope of finding his father's birthplace. Unprecedented: The 2000 Presidential Election is a 2002 47-minute documentary made by Richard Ray Pérez and Joan Sekler and narrated by Peter Coyote about the contested 2000 presidential election in Florida. It was re-released in an extended 56-minute 2004 Campaign Edition presented by Danny Glover to tie in with the 2004 US Presidential Election. A Robert Greenwald Productions Films, it was co-executive produced by Greenwald and Earl Katz of Public Interest Pictures. Greenwald later made this the first of his “Un- Trilogy," which also includes Uncovered: The War on Iraq and Unconstitutional: The War on Our Civil Liberties. Chanson pour un marin is a 1989 documentary, short film directed by Bernard Aubouy. Criminals is a 1997 documentary film written by C.K. Williams and directed by Joseph Strick. Taveez is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Purushottam Berde. Morrinha, Nostalgia De La Tierra Natal is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Esther Goris. Höllentour is a 2004 German film. The US release was titled Hell on Wheels. The film is a record of the 100th anniversary Tour de France in 2003 from the perspective of Germany's Team Telekom, focusing on rider Erik Zabel. The film is directed by Pepe Danquart who won an Academy Award for Live Action Short Film in 1993 for Black Rider. In 2004, Mona Bräuer won a German Film Critics Award for Best Editing. People's Champion is a 2011 documentary film directed by Trent Babbington and Walker Warren. Give Us the Money is a 2012 documentary film directed by Bosse Lindquist. The Short Game is a 2013 documentary film about 7- and 8-year-old golfers. Directed by Josh Greenbaum, it presents eight entrants in the 2012 U.S. Kids Golf World Championship. The movie premiered in 10 cities on September 20, 2013. Pretty Bloody: The Women of Horror is a television documentary film that premiered on the Canadian cable network Space on February 25, 2009. The hour-long documentary examines the experiences, motivations and impact of the increasing number of women engaged in horror fiction, with producers Donna Davies and Kimberlee McTaggart of Canada's Sorcery Films interviewing actresses, film directors, writers, critics and academics. The documentary was filmed in Toronto, Canada; and in Los Angeles, California and New York City, New York in the US. God's Stone Quarry (One Year in North Bohemia) is a 2005 documentary special written and directed by Bretislav Rychlík. Account of the 2010-11 boys' basketball season at St. Patrick High School, located in a hardscrabble neighborhood of Elizabeth, New Jersey. Goodbye, How Are You? is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Boris Mitic. Dreaming by Numbers is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Anna Bucchetti. Intemperie En Chapicuy is a 2013 documentary film directed by Andrés Levinson. Hindenburg Disaster Newsreel Footage refers to the footage filmed by several newsreel companies of the Hindenburg disaster where the zeppelin Hindenburg crashed and burned on May 6, 1937. The film is frequently played with narration by Herbert Morrison, who was there to watch the zeppelin's arrival in the United States. Morrison was a 31-year-old Chicago radio reporter, and his commentary was recorded, and not broadcast until later. It has since been combined with the separately filmed newsreel footage. To modern eyes it may appear to have been a live broadcast with pictures and sound, but it was not. Most of the original newsreels have their own narration, and many composite edits have been made for documentaries. One well-known newsreel found on the internet is a silent film with Pathe footage of the first 1936 landing at Lakehurst and Hearst News of the Day Newsreel footage of the disaster, called a "Pathegram" by Eugene Castle of Castle Films. Another edit popularized on video-sharing sites like YouTube uses footage of the Disaster from Paramount and Movietone Newsreel with Herb Morrison's recording. "A dead soldier's blood-soaked t-shirt; a nun kissing a priest; a gaunt young man with AIDS; all were images used by the fashion label Benetton to advertise its clothing in the 90s. The provocative campaign was the work of Italian photographer Oliviero Toscani, a man who brought topics such as war, racism, the death penalty, and the misery of refugees into the business of advertising. His posters set off a storm of indignation throughout the world; in many places they were banned. Toscani's "Reverse Psychology Marketing" challenges the intelligence and the consciousness of its audience; rather than praising products and tempting people to buy, it seeks to enlighten. The Rage of Images examines the now 68-year-old artist and pioneer of anti-advertising whose career began with fashion shoots for labels such as Fiorucci, Armani and Esprit. It also looks at the private man who broke with Benetton in 2001 and now works independently, designing ad campaigns that go far beyond the mainstream." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Im Glanze dieses Glückes is a 1990 documentary film directed by Johann Feindt and Helga Reidemeister. Fire With Fire is a 2012 documentary and short film directed by Ross Kauffman. The Great Match is a 2006 comedy film written by Chema Rodríguez and Gerardo Olivares directed by Gerardo Olivares. A Play for Freedom is a 2012 documentary film directed by Niko Apel. Shocking Asia II: The Last Taboos is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Rolf Olsen. Slums: Cities of Tomorrow is a biographical documentary film directed by Jean-Nicolas Orhon. One A.M. is the title of an unfinished Jean-Luc Godard project filmed in America in 1968. Documentary filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker, who had collaborated with Godard on the film and had shared duties as cinematographer with Richard Leacock, edited the leftover footage in 1972 to make One p.m.. Bring on the Night is a 1985 documentary film directed by Michael Apted, focusing on the jazz-inspired project and band led by the British musician Sting during the early stages of his solo career. Some of the songs, whose concert rehearsals are featured in the film, appeared on his debut solo album The Dream of the Blue Turtles. Each musician in the band, through the course of the film, is interviewed. The film won the Grammy Award for "Best Music Video, Long Form" at the 1987 Grammy Awards. The film was released as DVD in 2005. Bring on the Night is also the name of Sting's 1986 live album featuring music recorded during the 1985 tour chronicled in the film. May You Live in Interesting Times is a documentary film directed by Fiona Tan. A Flea's Skin Would Be Too Big For You is a 2013 documentary film directed by Anja Dornieden and Juan David González Monroy. Mauvaise Conduite or Improper Conduct is a 1984 documentary film directed by Néstor Almendros and Orlando Jiménez Leal. The documentary interviews Cuban refugees to explore the Cuban government's imprisonment of homosexuals, political dissidents, and Jehovah's Witnesses into forced-labor camps under its policy of Military Units to Aid Production. The documentary was produced with the support of French television Antenne 2 and won the Best Documentary Audience Award at the 1984 San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. In Shifting Sands: The Truth About Unscom and the Disarming of Iraq is a 2001 documentary by Scott Ritter that discusses the UNSCOM inspections in Iraq. Ritter was a chief United Nations weapons inspector in Iraq from 1991 to 1998. These inspections were in search of "weapons of mass destruction" during the later years of the regime of Saddam Hussein. The film was completed and distributed for theatrical release prior to the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Ce siècle a cinquante ans is a 1950 documentary film directed by Werner Malbran, Denise Tual and Roland Tual. Xandra: Gender Warrior is a 2013 documentary short film directed by George Hirst and Penelope Sheridan. One Bad Cat: The Reverend Albert Wagner Story is a 2008 documentary film directed by Thomas Miller. Autopsy 8: Dead Giveaway is a 2002 documentary film directed by Arthur Ginsberg. The Handicapped Colony is a 2013 short documentary film written by Kausheek Patel and directed by Samir Nerkar. "oe Frazier and Muhammad Ali fought three times. Their first encounter aroused such anticipation it was dubbed the ""fight of the century"" before either boxer entered the ring. But it was their third and final confrontation on October 1, 1975, in the Philippines, that cemented their rivalry as one of history's greatest. By the late rounds, the fight had become “a contest of pure will” with both men on the verge of collapse. That moment—when a fight becomes more important than life and death—explains both the romance and the sickness of the sport. It wasn’t a fight for a belt; it was a war. What’s remarkable about Thriller in Manila is how dramatically it conveys both the depths of this rivalry as well as the complex racial politics of the time. Using extensive archival footage and interviews (from cornermen in both camps, biographers, journalists, and Frazier himself), director John Dower tells the story from Frazier’s point of view, clearly finding in him not only an unsung hero but a counterpoint to Ali’s mystique. Though Ali famously disparaged all his opponents, Dower argues that his verbal taunting of Frazier was particularly vicious, racially charged, and a betrayal of their onetime friendship.Thriller in Manila reminds us that to be captivated by a great sporting event is to be captivated by a great story. Surely this is both." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. People I Could Have Been and Maybe Am is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Boris Gerrets. "During the period covered in part 1 of this history, Israeli filmmakers tended to focus on the dream of their country. Part 2 picks up in 1979, when they were starting to explore the gap between the dream and reality. Films like 1982's Chamsin began taking a sympathetic look at Palestinians, breaking with the conventions of Israeli cinema that treated Arabs the way American westerns treated Indians, as the default bad guys. “We were much closer to peace in 1984 than we are now,” says the actor and filmmaker Mohamed Bakri, who played a Palestinian freedom fighter in the 1984 prison drama Beyond These Walls. The Israeli cinema of the eighties was full of Romeo and Juliet stories between Jews and Arabs. A dialogue between the two cultures was taking place in the movies a decade before it began among political leaders. In the 1986 film Avanti Popolo, set during the Six-Day War, director Rafi Bukai flips around Shylock's monologue from The Merchant of Venice. In this case, it's an Arab who says, “If you prick us, do we not bleed?” The film critic Nachman Ingbar stands out as an eloquent voice interpreting this period. “At a certain stage,” he says, “you'll have to ask yourself if your truth is better than the truth of whoever you're fighting against.” The 1992 film Life According to Agfa typifies the relentless questioning of Israeli society. Its harsh depiction of the Israeli Defense Forces was extra shocking, given that director Assi Dayan is the son of the country's military hero Moshe Dayan. Over the past fifteen years, Israeli cinema widened to explore issues of sex, religion and new immigration. Director Amos Gitaï discusses taking on religious conservatives in Kadosh, released in 2000. The actress and filmmaker Ronit Elkabetz describes the emergence of female voices with a clip from her 2004 film, co-directed with her brother Schlomi Elkabetz, To Take a Wife. And Dover Kosashvili, the director of the 2001 international breakthrough Late Marriage, speaks of not wanting to choose between hope and despair. As he puts it, “Reality always contains everything.”" Quoting Thom Powers on the 2009 TiFF site. AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Fred Astaire is a 1981 documentary TV movie written by Joseph McBride and George Stevens Jr. and directed by Marty Pasetta. TAD: BUSTED CIRCUITS AND RINGING EARS chronicles the rise and fall of the pioneering Seattle grunge band TAD. It follows the band from their height - when they were one of the most influential bands of the Seattle scene -- to their low, when they were riddled with lawsuits and dumped by their label. Featuring rare footage of the band, from its club days to the arenas, as well as perspectives from other grunge-era musicians such as Mudhoney's Mark Arm and Soundgarden's Kim Thayil, TAD: BUSTED CIRCUITS AND RINGING EARS is a story of the band that could have been. Uninsured in America is a part of documentary short film series, The Free Market Cure. Lolaab is a 1990 documentary film directed by Mohi-Ud-Din Mirza. Carol Burnett: The Special Years is a 1994 documentary. Bittersweet Motel is a documentary about the rock group Phish. The film was directed by Todd Phillips and covers the band's summer and fall 1997 tours, plus footage from their 1998 spring tour of Europe. The documentary ends with The Great Went, a giant two-day festival held in upstate Maine which attracted 70,000 people. The film's title comes from a Phish song of the same name, which is featured at the end of the movie. Farewell Ceremony for His Majesty Emir of Bukhara on Velikiy Kniaz Alexei Steamboat or Azerbaijani: Əlahəzrət Buxara Əmirinin Veliki Knyaz Aleksey Paroxodunda Yolasalma Mərasimi is one of the earliest films ever produced in the Cinema of Azerbaijan directed by Azeri cinema pioneer Aleksandr Mişon. It was released in 1898. The film was shot on 35mm. 41 is an independent feature-length documentary about Nicholas O'Neill, the youngest victim of the Station nightclub fire, which claimed the lives of 100 people in West Warwick, Rhode Island on February 20, 2003. The documentary, which was co-created by filmmakers Christian de Rezendes and Christian O'Neill, interweaves the story of Nicholas' life, as described by his family and friends and illustrated with home videos, with footage from the film They Walk Among Us, which is based on a play of the same name written by Nicholas a year before he passed. The titular number, as described by the film, was of spiritual significance to Nicholas, although the reasons behind this are not fully known. The film also details how his family and friends believe that Nicholas may have prophetically known that he would die at a young age, and that he continues to communicate with them as a spirit, often through "signs" involving the number 41. Spring & Arnaud is a 2013 documentary film directed by Marcia Connolly and Katherine Knight. All the Love You Cannes! is a 2002 documentary film directed by Lloyd Kaufman The film documents Troma Entertainment's annual pilgrimage to the Cannes Film Festival in order to take on what they describe as "the elitist media conglomerates" and features interviews with Quentin Tarantino and Claude Chabrol. Troma are currently working on a follow-up to this movie, entitled Occupy Cannes. The Sound of the Violin in My Lai is a short film that examines the history and legacy of the My Lai massacre, an incident of the Vietnam War in which hundreds of Vietnamese civilians were massacred by U.S. Army soldiers. The film investigates the effects of the massacre, with the story centering on the return of American soldiers Hugh Thompson and Larry Colburn to My Lai on the 30th anniversary of the event. The film was commissioned by the Vietnamese government. It garnered director Tran Van Thuy the Best Documentary Prize at the Asia Pacific Film Festival in year 2000. The violin referenced in the title is that of American Vietnam veteran and peace activist Roy Boehm. "If we never tire of seeing love stories in the cinema, it must be to do with the unfathomable secret of how different times and places play a role in how scripts are written. The love story between the transsexual Mary and Enzo, a Sicilian with a moustache and a heart of gold, started in prison and takes its course in Genoaʼs harbor district, a world that is close to disappearing. Pietro Marcello also sets a parallel plot in the same district, which documents and reconstructs the lives of Mary and Enzo in a simultaneously truthful and fictitious manner. Combining scenes from today and images from the past that Marcello found in various public and private treasure chests, "La bocca del lupo" uncovers a city both melancholy and audacious, where the women at the bars speak in voices nearly as deep of those of the men with whom they drink and where those stranded there have never been able to escape the unreal, forgotten places of the harbor. Itʼs as if Genoaʼs harbor district actually invented the love story between Mary and Enzo. Pietro Marcello has reconstructed this love story in the form of a script for a documentary, which uses distinctive music, memories and archive material to bring a barely visible past back to life." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Berlin Film Festival site. Intonation. Vladimir Yakunin is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Alexander Sokurov. Their War is a 2007 documentary film. Seldom has society come full circle in the cycle of a disease from illness, to an epidemic to cure. Polio is the 20th century's most notable exception.Every baby boomer remembers collecting dimes in their dime cards, hearing about the success of the Salk shot, and lining up for oral vaccine in a sugar cube. But few know the story of how polio came to America in 1916 and grew into the frightening epidemics of the 1940's and 50's when the diseases crippled tens of thousands of children every summer. Led by a president crippled by the virus himself, the battle against polio was the first, and perhaps most successful fight against a disease.This fascinating story is told here using thousands of photographs and films along with interviews with polio survivors, their families, nurses, doctors, and community leaders, brining to life an America that was both brave and innocent= when people believed in scientists, government, and the power of every person in the fight to protect the children. Ballads, Blues, and Bluegrass is a 1961 short documentary film directed by Alan Lomax. On July 17, 1918, the last Czar of Russia, and his family, were brutally murdered and their remains hidden. Following the positive identification of the bones, a controversy has raged over their fate. A documentary about the US government's broken promise to keep our airlines secure, and the personal stories of a few people who know the truth - congressmen, air marshals, aviation security employees. It will make you angry and flying in an airplane may never be the same again. Documentary about Fred Leuchter, an engineer who became an expert on execution devices and was later hired by revisionist historian Ernst Zundel to "prove" that there were no gas chambers at Auschwitz. Leuchter published a controversial report confirming Zundel's position, which ultimately ruined his own career. Most of the footage is of Leuchter, puttering around execution facilities or chipping away at the walls of Auschwitz, but Morris also interviews various historians, associates, and neighbors. I've Got This Idea For A Film is a 2011 documentary film directed by James Arneman and Katie Mitchell. The soundless fall of gravitation is a 2008 film directed by Saša Orešković. Housing is a 2009 film written by Federica Di Giacomo and Antonella Gaeta and directed by Federica Di Giacomo. Pax Americana and the Weaponization of Space is a documentary film by Denis Delestrac with a music score by Amon Tobin. The film deals with the issue of space weapons and their politics, featuring interviews with several key United States military personal, academics such as Noam Chomsky and others, including Martin Sheen. The film won the Best Documentary award at the 2009 Whistler Film Festival and has been selected in a number of international film festivals. Rock and Roll's Greatest Failure: Otway the Movie is a feature-length documentary directed by Steve Barker about English singer-songwriter John Otway. Troubled Water is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by John Antonelli,Tom Dusenbery and Will Parrinello. Utshestiapi Akushun is a 2012 public information film directed by Jean-Baptiste Pinette. This Is Normal is a 2012 short documentary biography film directed by Derek Watson. Untitled Jamie Foxx Documentary is a 2012 documentary film directed by Marques T. Owens. The Great Warming is a 2006 documentary film directed by Michael Taylor. The film was hosted by Alanis Morissette and Keanu Reeves and even before its November 3, 2006 première helped establish an alliance between Democrats and Evangelicals trying to shake the administration out of its inertia on Climate change mitigation. It is also the anchor for a broad, pro-active coalition ranging from Friends of the Earth to Union of Concerned Scientists to Churches of Christ. Theatre giant Regal Cinemas released the film in its top 50 markets on the weekend of November 4 to November 5, 2006, which makes the launch three times larger than for any other film of its kind, and highlights the growing currency of the global warming issues in the mainstream.A special program was developed for faith communities, and the film was distributed to over 500 churches, synagogues and mosques across the US. Featuring elements of the 2005 Public Broadcasting Service special Global Warming: the Signs and the Science, The Great Warming, it talks to key researchers and reports on social justice and day-to-day impacts as well as emission statistics. Oh Yeah, She Performs! is a 2012 documentary film written by Mirjam Unger and Veronika Weidinger, and directed by Mirjam Unger. Human Touch is a 2004 film directed by Paul Cox and starring Jacqueline McKenzie, Chris Haywood and Aaron Blabey. The plot follows the story of Anna who is a singer trying to raise money for her choir's trip to China. She does this by posing nude for an ageing artist and upon seeing the finished results goes on a journey of self-discovery. Bending Steel is a 2013 documentary film written by Dave Carroll and Ryan Scafuro and directed by Dave Carroll. Au chic resto pop is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Tahani Rached. The Sorrow and the Pity is a two-part 1969 documentary film by Marcel Ophüls about the collaboration between the Vichy government and Nazi Germany during World War II. The film uses interviews with a German officer, collaborators, and resistance fighters from Clermont-Ferrand. They comment on the nature of and reasons for collaboration. The reasons include antisemitism, anglophobia, fear of Bolsheviks and Soviet invasion, the desire for power, and simple caution. Naomi´s Corset is a 2004 film directed by Gérard Allon. Tree of Wealth is a 1953 documentary film directed by A. Bhaskar Rao. The Skies are Closer in Homesh is a highly personal documentary that follows a newly wed Jewish couple through their first few years of married life on a dangerous Israeli settlement. A Life In Pop is a 2006 documentary about English electronic dance music duo Pet Shop Boys. It was originally broadcast on Channel 4 in May 2006 and an expanded version followed on DVD in October. The documentary was directed by George Scott and produced by Nick de Grunwald. Contributors included Robbie Williams, Brandon Flowers, Peter Robinson, Tim Rice-Oxley, West End Girls, Jake Shears, and Bruce Weber. Beyond Conviction is a feature documentary directed and produced by Rachel Libert that tells the story of three crime victims as they prepare to meet those that have committed these crimes. The film follows participants in a program based on the principals of restorative justice run by the state of Pennsylvania in which victims of the most violent crimes meet face-to-face with their perpetrators. In 2006, the film was presented at the Los Angeles Film Festival, the Woodstock Film Festival, the Viennale, and the Leeds Film Festival. The film won the Audience Award at the Woodstock Film Festival. Point of Order! is a 1964 documentary film by Emile de Antonio, about the Senate Army-McCarthy Hearings of 1954. L' Isola bianca is a 1950 Italian short documentary film directed by Dino Risi. Dryland is a 2013 documentary drama family sports film written by Sue Arbuthnot and directed by Sue Arbuthnot and Richard Wilhelm. Ernesto Che Guevara: The Bolivian Diary is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Richard Dindo. Late For My Mother's Funeral is a 2013 documentary comedy drama film written and directed by Penny Allen. My American Life is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Mohammed Yakub. Welcome to New Hope Pennsylvania, where even death it would seem is not the final departure for many of the town's residents. Paranormal sightings and stories from townspeople and visitors alike are as numerous as they are unexplainable in this exciting documentary. Witness firsthand images of spirits in various forms exactly as they were revealed to the cameras! Goodnight, Thank You, You've Been a Lovely Audience is a DVD featuring Sinéad O'Connor. It was released on August 26, 2003 and contains footage from her goodbye concert in her hometown Dublin in 2002. In addition to the concert performance, the DVD contains extra material consisting of a documentary about the making of the album Sean-Nós Nua and various interviews and behind the scenes footage as well as 6 bonus videos. The World of Adrien is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Katerine Giguère. Hank: 5 Years from the Brink is a 2013 documentary, biography film directed by Joe Berlinger. Gravity Is My Enemy is a 1977 American short documentary film about quadriplegic visual artist Mark Hicks, directed by John C. Joseph. It won an Academy Award at the 50th Academy Awards in 1978 for Documentary Short Subject. "Everyday to Stay is a gritty and vulnerable glimpse at the lives of two couples as they navigate love, identity and commitment through one partner's transition." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. My Father is Still a Communist, Intimate Secrets to be Published is a 2011 documentary short film written and directed by Ahmad Ghossein. Flo is a 2013 short biographical documentary film directed by Riley Hooper. Maas Observation is a 1997 short, silent documentary film directed by Karel Doing and Greg Pope. Snow, Sand and Savages is a 1973 documentary film directed by Anthony Buckley. Heart of Sky, Heart of Earth is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Erick Black and Frauke Sandig. Documental De La Gira "Soltando Al Perro" is a documentary music film directed by Rubén R. Bañuelos. Vulkanovka. After the Great Cinema is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Giedre Beinoriute. The Divided Earth is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Rosemarie Blank. Pandas: The Journey Home is a documentary film directed by Nic Brown. From Place to Place is a documentary film directed by Paige Williams. X: The Unheard Music is a 1986 rockumentary film directed by W.T. Morgan about the Los Angeles punk band X. The film stars John Doe, Exene Cervenka, Billy Zoom, and D.J. Bonebrake. In the late 1970s, a new sound burst upon the Los Angeles music scene – the music made by a four-person rock band with the enigmatic name of X. Playing in clubs like the Whisky and the Starwood, X set a new standard for driving, forceful songs that both critics and the public felt revolutionized the California sound. X: The Unheard Music takes long, detailed, and often funny look at this scene but focuses on the group that critics have singled out as the leader of the underground pack. X: The Unheard Music was filmed by Angel City Productions between 1980 and 1985 in around Los Angeles. Post-production was completed almost five years to the month after shooting began. The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray through MVD on December 7, 2011. Special features include footage of John Doe and Exene Cervenka in discussion as well as an interview with Angel City, the company behind the film. A live outtake and a trailer for the feature are also included on the disc. Silver Screen: Color Me Lavender is a 1997 documentary historical drama directed by Mark Rappaport. Slow Food Story is a 2013 Italian documentary film written and directed by Stefano Sardo. Night Labor is a 2013 mystery documentary film directed by David Redmon and Ashley Sabin. YUMI KATSURA Mother of the Bride is a documentary film directed by Kim Seung Yong. The Beatles at Shea Stadium is a fifty-minute-long documentary of The Beatles' August 15, 1965, concert at Shea Stadium in New York City, the highlight of the group's 1965 tour. The documentary was produced by Ed Sullivan, NEMS Enterprises Ltd., and the Beatles company Subafilms Ltd. The project, placed under the direction of manager of production operations M. Clay Adams, was filmed by a large crew led by cinematographer Andrew Laszlo, used fourteen cameras to capture the euphoria and mass hysteria that was Beatlemania in America in 1965. The documentary first aired on the BBC on May 1, 1966. However other sources place first transmission on the BBC as being March 1, 1966. In West Germany, it aired on August 2, 1966. It aired in the United States on ABC on January 10, 1967. Ocean Wonderland is a 2003 short, documentary, and family film directed by Jean-Jacques Mantello. Fangio: Una vita a 300 all'ora is a 1981 documentary film about Formula One champion Juan Manuel Fangio. It was directed by Hugh Hudson and stars Fangio as himself. It was written by Gualtiero Jacopetti. It was filmed at Titanus studios. The movie poster depicts Fangio driving a Maserati F1 car, most likely a 250F. The movie was rated G by the MPAA and runs for 84 minutes. The film has only been released in the PAL region. The Wild Years is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ventura Durall. VICE Guide to Belfast is a 2011 documentary film hosted by Michael C. Moynihan. Wildwood, NJ is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Ruth Leitman and Carol Weaks Cassidy. 60 Years On: From Despair to Joy is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Clive Gershon. With Tie and Melon is a 1989 film directed by Pierre Bouchez. See You at the Pillar is a 1967 British short documentary film about Dublin combining contemporary footage, folk music and quotations from past residents such as George Bernard Shaw, Oscar Wilde and Brendan Behan. The film is narrated via a "conversation" between Anthony Quayle and Norman Rodway. Produced by Robert Fitchet, it was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Reviving The Freedom Mill is a 2013 short documentary film directed by David Conover. Aluna is a feature-length documentary film sequel to the BBC documentary The Heart of The World: Elder Brother's Warning. The first documentary showed an ancient Kogi tribe civilisation who emerge to offer their concern for people of the modern world. Younger Brother is urged to change or suffer environmental disaster. After offering the warning the Kogi retreat back to civilisation hidden in a mountain in Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia. The Kogis have re-emerged. Long-ago realising that the importance of their warning had not been grasped. As well as warning Younger Brother they have decided to share their secret sciences in the belief that sharing these new sciences will share their burden of changing the world for the better. Playboy: Naturals is a 1998 documentary film directed by Steve Silas. Sadhana is a 1989 documentary film written by Sid Goldberg, Jean-Pierre Piché and Marcel Poulin and directed by Jean-Pierre Piché. Brunswick St. is a 2012 short family biography historical documentary film written and directed by Halley Roback. Does Your Soul Have a Cold? is a 2007 documentary film directed by Mike Mills. Erfüllung is a 2000 film directed by Rosi S.M.. Stuttgart 21 - Think to Remember! is a 2011 film directed by Lisa Sperling and Florian Kläger. After the Harvest: Fighting Hunger in the Coffeelands is a 2011 Documentary and News film directed by Brian Kimmel. Pets or Meat: The Return to Flint is a 1992 American short PBS documentary film, directed by Michael Moore, featuring the director returning to his hometown of Flint, Michigan to catch-up with some of the characters featured in his previous film Roger & Me. The film's title refers to Rhonda Britton, a Flint resident featured in both films, who sells rabbits as either pets or meat. My Own Man is a 2013 documentary, comedy, family and drama film directed by David Sampliner. Nein! Zeugen des Widerstandes in München 1933-1945 is a 1998 documentary film directed by Katrin Seybold. A Darkness Visible: Afghanistan is a 2011 short documentary film. The People Speak is a 2009 American documentary feature film that uses dramatic and musical performances of the letters, diaries, and speeches of everyday Americans. The film gives voice to those who, by insisting on equality and justice, spoke up for social change throughout U.S. history and also illustrates the relevance of this to today's society. The film is narrated by historian Howard Zinn and is based on his books A People's History of the United States and, with Anthony Arnove, Voices of a People's History of the United States. The People Speak is produced by Matt Damon, Josh Brolin, Chris Moore, Anthony Arnove, and Howard Zinn. It is co-directed by Moore, Arnove and Zinn. God Is the Bigger Elvis is a 2011 documentary film about actress Dolores Hart, who abandoned her successful career at the age of 24 to become a Benedictine nun. The film was nominated for the 2012 Academy Award for Best Documentary. In 1957, Dolores Hart co-starred with Elvis Presley in the Paramount motion picture Loving You. It was in this film that she kissed Elvis. This was Elvis' very first on-screen kiss in a movie. Both Dolores and Elvis would reunite the following year in Michael Curtiz's King Creole. Crazywater is a 2013 documentary film directed by Dennis Allen. Song Sung Blue is a 2008 film directed by Greg Kohs. Murderball is a 2005 American documentary film about physically disabled athletes who play wheelchair rugby. It centers on the rivalry between the Canadian and U.S. teams leading up to the 2004 Paralympic Games. It was directed by Henry Alex Rubin and Dana Adam Shapiro, and produced by Jeffrey V. Mandel and Shapiro. It was nominated for Best Documentary Feature for the 78th Academy Awards. Murderball was the first MTV film released through ThinkFilm as well as Participant Media. Gender Games is a 2013 short documentary film written by Meg Smaker and directed by Veronica Lopez and Meg Smaker. Towards Unity in Papua and New Guinea is a 1963 short documentary film directed by Shan Benson. JESSICA WATSON - TRUE SPIRIT is a 2010 documentary film narrated by Sir Richard Branson. Worshiped as a symbol of life in ancient Egypt, and coveted by sea captains and farmers for centuries, the cat is one of the most beloved animal in history. Through the ages, it was the cat's extraordinary ability to hunt and kill rodents that endeared it to humans. Today, cats are adored for their beauty and unique personalities. Nevertheless, the soul of a killer still lurks inside every kitty. In the time it takes to watch this film, house cats in the U.S. will catch as many as 100,000 small mammals and more than 30,000 birds. From the county parks of Florida to the outback of Australia, domestic cats and their feral cousins are stalking some creatures to the brink of extinction. What is your cat doing when it slips out of the house? You'll learn more about your pet than you might want to know! Smiling Through the Apocalypse is a 2012 biographical historical documentary written and directed by Tom Hayes. "Gary and Tony Have a Baby" is an episode of the CNN documentary series ...In America. The episode, anchored by Soledad O'Brien, follows Gary Spino and Tony Brown, a gay male couple, as they try to have a child through surrogacy. The program aired June 24, 2010. Protesting the Dixie Chicks is a documentary by American filmmaker Christopher Fleeger, independently released on DVD in 2006. The film captures the storm of controversy ignited by the remarks of Natalie Maines, lead singer of the Texas pop-country trio the Dixie Chicks. On March 10, 2003, Natalie Maines, at a concert in London, stated that her group was "ashamed" to be from the same state as President George W. Bush. In the man-on-the-street style of "Heavy Metal Parking Lot", anonymous fans and protesters are interviewed outside the arenas of the Dixie Chicks 2003 USA tour, while the context of the drama is reenacted with toys and action figures of Natalie Maines, Toby Keith, General John Abizaid, Senator Richard Lugar, Senator John McCain and President George W. Bush. Floored is a 2009 documentary film about the people and business of the Chicago trading floors. The film focuses specifically on several Chicago floor traders who have been impacted by the electronic trading revolution and whose jobs have been threatened by the use of computers in the trading world. Directed by James Allen Smith, the film runs for 77 minutes. The film has become particularly relevant in light of the U.S. financial crisis of 2009; Greg Burns of the Chicago Tribune has said of the film's director, "By dealing with hard times in the workplace, Smith taps into a vein running through millions of lives in this brutal recession, as the nation’s unemployment rate soars toward 10 percent" Critics have suggested a meta-fictional subtext to the documentary, linking the film's storyline about Chicago traders to the plight of independent filmmakers in a time of the declining influence of film festivals and the ubiquitousness of free internet content. Ironically, the documentary itself is available widely on video sharing sites but will make its official "web premiere" on September 6, 2013. Coping with Herpes, Virus of Love is a 1979 short documentary film directed by Karen Mooney and Leandra Strobing. The Possibilities Are Endless is a documentary biographical musical film directed by James Hall and Edward Lovelace. Director John Walter’s 2008 documentary film Theater of War uses the rehearsal process of a play production as a lens through which to investigate German playwright Bertolt Brecht's ideas on theater, politics, and war. The chosen production is a 2006 staging of "Mother Courage and Her Children," a play that Tony Kushner calls the greatest of the 20th century. Staged by the Public Theater in New York's Central Park, the production starred Meryl Streep and Kevin Kline, and was helmed by George C. Wolfe. Theater of War provides unprecedented access to the work process of some of the greatest actors of our time, as they struggle to convey Brecht's political and artistic insights. In parallel, the film considers the three wars that ground the Central Park production: the Thirty Years War that forms the setting for "Mother Courage"; the World War II context in which Brecht wrote the play, while in exile from Nazi Germany; and the current day Iraq war, which inspired Streep and her collaborators to stage the piece. The film plumbs the many elements of preparing a stage production. Aida: A Natural-Born Artist is a 2011 documentary film directed by Shogo Watanabe. Taqwacore: The Birth of Punk Islam is a 2009 documentary film, directed by Omar Majeed and produced by EyeSteelFilm, about various Taqwacore bands and performers touring the United States and Pakistan. The documentary was filmed between 2007 and 2009. Harto The Borges is a documentary film created by Eduardo Montes-Bradley. Harto The Borges escapes the unwritten rule of biographical films on Latin American writers by exploring the narcissistic side of the author, his frequent and often criticized comments to the press, his distinctive and gentle ironies. Harto The Borges had a Theatrical release in Buenos Aires in September 2000, and was well received by the critics. Since them has been frequently exhibited at forums, campuses, and film festivals. On October 4, 2011, Harto The Borges was made available to the general audience in Argentina through the On Line version of Revista Cultura Ñ, in Buenos Aires. The film was released alongside an article in which the director views the film ten years after its premier at the Cine Cosmos. New Urban Cowboy: Toward a New Pedestrianism is a 2007 documentary film, and DVD release, about American artist and urban designer Michael E. Arth, his New Pedestrianism movement, and his efforts to rebuild the cities, beginning with “Cracktown,” an inner city slum in DeLand, Florida. This 83-minute international edition—with subtitles in Spanish, French, German, Japanese, and Chinese—was re-edited from a 100-minute version that made the film festival circuit in 2007. The earlier version was titled New Urban Cowboy: The Labors of Michael E. Arth. We Have Never Seen Love is a 1997 documentary film directed by Murat Mamedov. The Collective Evolution III: The Shift is a 2014 documentary, biography and drama film directed by Joe Martino. Empathy is a 2004 documentary indie film written and directed by Amie Siegel Nefandus is a short 2013 history documentary film written and directed by Carlos Motta. Kennedys' Home Movies is a 2011 documentary film written by Gary Parker. Examines the global Independent Scientology movement and the high level defectors who have publicly renounced their membership of the Church of Scientology. Street Bangaz is a 2008 documentary film directed by David Cortorreal and Joswell Valdez. China: The Rebirth of an Empire is an American documentary film directed by brothers Jesse and Jeremy Veverka that was released in 2010. The film examines China's economic and political rise in the context of its relationship with its neighbors and a declining United States. The film was named Best Documentary at the 2011 River Bend Film Festival, the 2010 Central Florida Film Festival, the 2010 Astoria/Long Island City Film Festival, and the 2010 Big Easy International Film Festival. It was reported that the film may have contributed to the Chinese government blocking access to the Internet Movie Database in early 2010 due to political censorship. The film features interviews with late Asia expert Chalmers Johnson. Freedom on My Mind is a 1994 documentary film about the efforts to register African-American voters in 1960s Mississippi and the formation of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Participants interviewed include Robert Parris Moses, Victoria Gray Adams, Endesha Ida Mae Holland, and Freedom Summer volunteers Marshall Ganz, Heather Booth, and Pam Allen. Lioness is a 2008 documentary film directed by Meg McLagan and Daria Sommers. The Who & Special Guests: Live at the Royal Albert Hall is a concert film of The Who's concert on 27 November 2000 at the Royal Albert Hall in London to benefit the Teenage Cancer Trust. A number of special guests joined the band on stage to perform the band's hits. The concert was also released on CD as Live at the Royal Albert Hall. Nisshin Geppo - Großes Sportland Japan is a documentary film directed by Gert Abelbeck. Atenco, a Crime of State is a 2007 documentary written and directed by Klamve Colectivo. Description of a Struggle is a 1960 documentary film directed by Chris Marker. Our Sam is a 2003 documentary musical film directed by Bruce Goodison. Estela is a documentary film written and directed by Bruno Varela. 20 Seconds of Joy is a 2007 documentary film written by Jens Hoffmann and Matthias Thönnissen, and directed by Jens Hoffmann. Computers Serve is a 1968 short, documentary film written by Risto Jarva, Pertti Jotuni and Lasse Naukkarinen directed by Risto Jarva. Tarachime is a 2006 short documentary film directed by Naomi Kawase. Lockerbie Revisited is a Dutch 50-minute documentary from the VPRO television documentary series Backlight which was broadcast in the Netherlands on the eve of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi's second appeal against conviction that started at the High Court of Justiciary in Edinburgh on 28 April 2009. The film's director, Gideon Levy, narrates in Dutch and conducts interviews in English with retired FBI officer Richard Marquise, Detective Chief Superintendent Stuart Henderson of the Scottish police, ex-FBI laboratory official Thomas Thurman, UN Observer at the Lockerbie trial Hans Köchler, author and journalist Ian Ferguson, former CIA agent Robert Baer, ex-FBI laboratory scientist Fred Whitehurst and former Lord Advocate Lord Fraser of Carmyllie. In October 2009, Backlight – Lockerbie Revisited was awarded the Prix Europa as the Best Television Current Affairs Programme of the Year 2009. The prize was donated by the Directorate of Communication of the Council of Europe. The documentary has been nominated for a Rockie award in the 'Investigative & Current Affairs' category at the 2010 Banff World Television Festival. Two Dollars and a Dream is a bigraphical documentary film directed by Stanley Nelson Jr. Koundi and the National Thursday is a documentary film written and directed by Ariane Astrid Atodji. The Power of Love (Celine Dion Fans in Kenya) is a 2011 documentary film directed by Joyce Wong. Saving Dolma is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Kesang Tseten. A Space for Music is a documentary film directed by Sophia Kruz. I Know That Voice is a documentary about voice acting. It premiered on November 6, 2013, at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre. It is narrated by John DiMaggio, the voice of Bender on Futurama, and stars DiMaggio and many other voice actors, including Billy West, Tara Strong, Tom Kenny, Rachael MacFarlane and Mark Hamill. Hitman Hart: Wrestling with Shadows is a 1998 documentary film, written by Paul Jay, which follows World Wrestling Federation superstar Bret Hart during his last year in the WWF, from his WWF Championship victory at SummerSlam to his final match with the company and the infamous Montreal Screwjob at Survivor Series on November 9, 1997. Universiada, México 1979 is a 1979 short documentary film written and directed by Carlos Ortiz Tejeda. The Old School of Capitalism is a 2009 feature film directed by Serbian director Želimir Žilnik. Letter to Anita is a 2014 historical fiction documentary film written by Andrea Meyerson and directed by Andrea Meyerson. FLYING BODIES a Hiroyuki Nakano Nonfiction Film is a documentary film directed by Hiroyuki Nakano. Dont Touch My Holocaust is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Asher Tlalim. On The Spot - Israel is a 2009 documentary film directed by Eszter Cseke and Andras S. Takacs The Heart of the Game is a 2005 sports documentary film about the Roosevelt Roughriders girls basketball team. The movie is centered on their star player Darnellia Russell and the Roughriders new coach Bill Resler. Eskimo Artist: Kenojuak is a 1964 Canadian short documentary film about Inuit artist Kenojuak Ashevak, directed by John Feeney. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Dream Is Life Itself is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Stefan Szlachtycz. Tough Ain't Enough: Conversations with Albert S. Ruddy is a documentary biographical film directed by Gregory J. Bradley and Lee Anthony Smith. Behind the Orange Curtain is a 2012 documentary film directed by Brent Huff. Last Stand of the 300 is a TV documentary/reenactment which premièred on The History Channel in 2007. It was directed by David Padrusch known for directing projects such as Journey to 10,000 BC and Aftershock: Beyond the Civil War for the History Channel. The Pixel Painter is a 2013 short, biographical, documentary film written by Josh Bogdan and directed by Josh Bogdan and Ryan Lasko. Victoire Terminus is a 2008 film directed by Renaud Barret and Florent De La Tullaye. Million Calorie March: The Movie is a 2007 American documentary film directed by, co-produced by and starring Gary Michael Marino, an author, speaker and anti-obesity activist. The film follows Marino as he embarks on a 1,200-mile fundraiser and awareness walk, the Million Calorie March, from Jacksonville, Florida to Boston, Massachusetts. The walk took 100 days and was designed to raise money and awareness for the causes of childhood obesity and healthy lifestyles. Insideout is a 2010 documentary short drama film directed by Tonje Alice Madsen. Innisfree is a 1990 Spanish documentary film directed by José Luis Guerín. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival. The film documents the filming of the John Ford film The Quiet Man. Craigslist Joe is a 2012 documentary film that follows Joseph Garner for a month of travel across the United States, solely supporting himself via contacting people on the website Craigslist. He spent the month without using any form of currency and without contacting people he already knew, relying on the "kindness and generosity" of Craigslist users. I Am Alive: Surviving the Andes Plane Crash is a 2010 television documentary recounting the tragedy of Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571 from the perspective of survivor Nando Parrado. Directed by Brad Osborne, this 2-hour special features reenactments of the October 13, 1972 crash and the 72-day struggle for survival that followed, including details of the 37-mile trek out of the mountains by Parrado and fellow survivor Roberto Canessa. Appearing in the film are Parrado, Canessa, Eduardo Strauch and several other survivors, original search teams, historians, expert pilots, high-altitude medical experts, and others including Piers Paul Read, renowned mountaineer Ed Viesturs, and Andes Survivors expert/alpinist Ricardo Peña. I Am Alive was produced by AMS Pictures and premiered on the History Channel on October 20, 2010. It was released for DVD on February 22, 2011. Sofia's Last Ambulance is a feature-length observational documentary film by Bulgarian director Ilian Metev. The film premiered at the 51st Semaine de la Critique at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the inaugural France 4 Visionary Award. It was the second documentary ever to compete in the section's 51 year history. 35 Up is a 1991 documentary biography film directed by Michael Apted. Knud W. Jensen - Louisianas grundlægger is a 1991 Danish TV documentary movie written and directed by Dan Tschernia. Goodbye Gauley Mountain: An Ecosexual Love Story is a 2013 romantic documentary film directed by Beth Stephens. Madonna: The Confessions Tour is a 2006 TV film directed by Jonas Åkerlund. Aviv is a 2003 documentary about the Israeli singer/songwriter Aviv Geffen. The film focuses on the life story of the Israeli singer/songwriter Aviv Geffen, who developed from an awkward little boy who was neglected by parents that “would rather buy hash than toys” into a nationally celebrated musician. The film combines old home videos, footage from on stage performances and private interviews in order to track Aviv Geffen's musical success and explain his complex personality. Water on the Road is a film released on DVD and Blu-ray by American singer and Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder. It documents Vedder's 2008 solo tour, during which he performed Pearl Jam songs, numerous covers, and solo works including songs from the Into the Wild Soundtrack. The film features mostly performances from two shows Vedder performed on August 16 and 17, 2008, at Warner Theatre in Washington, D.C. It was released on May 31, 2011. The Dream Is Now is a short documentary film directed by Davis Guggenheim. Elegy About a Drawdown is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Frank Müller. Nazis: The Occult Conspiracy is an American television documentary film about Nazi occultism. It first aired in 1998 on the Discovery Channel. The documentary was directed by Tracy Atkinson and Joan Baran, narrated by Malcolm McDowell. The Journey From Petersburg To Moscow is a 1991 film directed by Viola Stephan. Per Questi Stretti Morire (Cartografia Di Una Passione) is a 2010 documentary film directed by Isabella Sandri and Giuseppe Gaudino. Days of Waiting is a documentary short film by Steven Okazaki, about Estelle Ishigo, a Caucasian artist who went voluntarily to an internment camp for Japanese Americans during World War II. The film was inspired by Ishigo's book, "Lone Heart Mountain", and won an Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject and a Peabody Award. Unspeak is a 2013 documentary film written by Steven Poole and directed by Tommy Pallotta, Rob Schröder, Menno Otten, Benoit Detalle & Marija Jaćimović, Geert van de Wetering, Jennifer Abbott. Glauber O Filme, Labirinto Do Brasil is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Silvio Tendler. Man on Wire is a 2008 British documentary film directed by James Marsh. The film chronicles Philippe Petit's 1974 high-wire walk between the Twin Towers of New York's World Trade Center. It is based on Philippe Petit's book, To Reach the Clouds, recently released in paperback with the new title Man on Wire. The title of the movie is taken from the police report that led to the arrest of Petit, whose performance had lasted for almost one hour. The film is crafted like a heist film, presenting rare footage of the preparations for the event and still photographs of the walk, alongside re-enactments and present-day interviews with the participants. Man on Wire competed in the World Cinema Documentary Competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the Grand Jury Prize: World Cinema Documentary and the World Cinema Audience Award: Documentary. In February 2009, the film won the BAFTA for Outstanding British Film, the Independent Spirit Awards, and the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Adjust Your Color: The Truth of Petey Greene is a 2008 history biographical documentary film written and directed by Loren Mendell. "Hjemløs" paints a portrait of three human destinies. Kenny Emil, Nuka and Norto, were all born and raised in Greenland, and all now living on the streets of Copenhagen. For them , each day consists of conflict, both with each other and with a social welfare system that is often more alienating than supportive. Director Ditte Haarløv Johnsen chose to live on the streets in order to better portray the lives of Kenny Emil, Nuka and Norto. Crumb is a 1994 documentary film about the noted underground cartoonist Robert Crumb and his family. Directed by Terry Zwigoff and produced by Lynn O'Donnell, it won widespread acclaim. It was released in the USA on April 28, 1995, having been screened at film festivals the previous year. Jeffery M. Anderson placed the film on his list of the ten greatest films of all time, labeling it "the greatest documentary ever made." From the filmmaker behind MURPH: THE PROTECTOR, this stirring tale of bravery and tribute spotlights Chief Petty Officer Lance Vaccaro, a highly decorated United States Navy SEAL who gave his life for his country in 2008. To honor his sacrifice, four Navy SEAL bikers launched the Lance Vaccaro Memorial Ride. Traveling from Virginia Beach to Alaska and back on motorcycles, they covered 12,000 miles in 31 days. RIDE FOR LANCE captures the excitement of the open road as well as the emotion of four riders touching thousands of lives along the way, including active duty troops, veterans, and the families of deployed and fallen troops who also share their stories of pride and heartbreak. RIDE FOR LANCE is an inspiring story about friends, family, and a brother warrior who will never be forgotten. Meerkat Manor: The Story Begins is a 2008 television film created by Discovery Films and Oxford Scientific Films as a prequel to the Animal Planet series Meerkat Manor. A scripted documentary narrated by Whoopi Goldberg, the film details the life of a meerkat named Flower from birth to her becoming the leader of a meerkat group called the Whiskers. The film is based on the research notes of the Kalahari Meerkat Project and primarily uses wild meerkat "actors" to represent those in the story. Shot over two years at the Kuruman River Reserve in Northern Cape, South Africa, the film employed a much larger crew than the series. Some scenes were shot at a wildlife park in the United Kingdom, while others were created using camera tricks and trained film animals. The 75-minute film premiered at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival before its television premiere on Animal Planet on May 25, 2008. While it was praised for its cinematography, for maintaining the depth of coverage of the television series, and for its accessibility to newcomers to the series, it was criticized for not offering anything new to fans. Stream of Love is a 2013 documentary film written by Thomas Ernst and Ágnes Sós and directed by Ágnes Sós. Level Five is a 1997 French documentary film directed by Chris Marker and starring Catherine Belkhodja. Place des Cordeliers à Lyon is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Louis Lumière. The film formed part of the first commercial presentation of the Lumière Cinématographe on 28 December 1895 at the Salon Indien, Grand Café, 14 Boulevard des Capuchins, Paris. Journey to the Safest Place on Earth is a Documentary film directed by Edgar Hagen. Come un uomo sulla terra is an Italian 2008 documentary film. Winter's Harvest / Raccolto D'Inverno is a 1980 documentary film directed by Brian McKenzie. Kibbutz is a 2005 Israeli documentary directed by Racheli Schwartz about Kibbutz Hulata, where she lived for 30 years. Schwartz follows various members, including her own family, over the course of five years, tracing the stages of grieving and disillusionment that follow the kibbutz's economic collapse and disintegration as the community reduces its communal commitment to its members. Three older women from the founding generation become symbols of the kibbutz’s lost ideals and abandoned history, as they die off, one by one. For the director, the narrative is a very personal story and admits early on that “making the movie helped me to decide to stay.” The maker of the Forevertron, 59-year old Tom Every, was himself reborn in the early 1980s. After nearly three decades of work as an industrial wrecker, Every began to question his role in the wholesale destruction of well-designed buildings. In 1983, he gave his demolition business to a son, renamed himself Dr. Evermor, and began to build what he called the Forevertron. His new identity and mission, which he admits was a 'total figment' adopted by 'a man under great duress,". From that day on he dedicated his life to constructing an extraordinary spacecraft that would ultimately deliver him from the 'phoniness of this world' to the truth and unity of the next.The present-day Forevertron is a monumental sculpture weighing roughly 300 tons and standing 120 feet wide, 60 feet deep and 50 feet high. It consists almost entirely of metals -- iron, brass and stainless steel are the most evident -- and it is both welded and bolted together to maximize stability. The overall arrangement is symmetrical with the principal central section anchored by a broad bank of generators, thrusters and other electromagnetic power sources. The whole structure is capped by a copper-strapped glass ball meant to serve as Dr. Evermor's space capsule. Yes, you read that correctly. The ultimate use of the structure is to send Dr. Evermore into space when he dies.For over 30 years, Jim Bishop has been building a castle on a mountainside in central Colorado. 'Did it all myself, don't want any help,' he says mechanically as he unloads a pile of rocks that he's hoisted to the 70-foot level on one of the castle towers. Every year since 1969, Bishop has single-handedly gathered and set over 1000 tons of rock to create this stone and iron fortress in the middle of nowhere. Bishop calls it 'a monument to hardworking people' and 'America's biggest, one-man, physical project.' 'I always wanted a castle. Every man wants a castle,' Bishop continues, his voice a broken record, answering the same questions he's obviously been asked thousands of times before.Jim has also been arrested because of controversy over the castle and has become a self-made militia man to meet the fight and has taught himself law. Happily, those angry years are in the past. Both Uncle Sam and the Colorado Chamber now recognize that Bishop's dementia concretia is marketable, and that he's transformed some heavy, unwanted rocks into pure tourism gold.The castle is a popular spot. 'I've been here three times,' says one visitor. 'I'm taking my kids to see what one man can do,'Jim answers simply 'I want to live as long as I can and keep building that castle bigger and bigger and bigger.' Jeremy Hardy vs. the Israeli Army is a 2003 feature documentary directed by Leila Sansour and starring Jeremy Hardy. It follows the International Solidarity Movement and their activities in Palestine. This documentary follows singer-songwriter Brian Vander Ark, front man for the platinum-selling '90s band 'The Verve Pipe' as he embarks on his annual ambitious, intimate solo tour of the US. The filmmakers follow Brian as he travels throughout his home state of Michigan, playing backyard concerts for his fans. We discover that the former rock-star has created a way to connect with the people who love his music most by checking his ego at the door and becoming an artist who makes a living on his own terms. "In celebration of the greatest athletic achievement by a man on a psychedelic journey, here's the animated tale of Dock Ellis' s legendary LSD no-hitter." Quoting the description from the 201 Sundance Film Festival site. Sogni infranti is a 1995 documentary film written by Marco Bellocchio and Daniela Ceselli directed by Marco Bellocchio. Meanwhile in Mamelodi is a 2012 documentary film directed by Benjamin Kahlmeyer. Satan Since 2003 is a 2010 short film written and directed by Carlos Puga. Can vision succeed where eyesight fails? Can a blind person make meaningful photographs? How can the creator appreciate his own work? This film explores the artistry and innovation of Pete Eckert, Bruce Hall, and Henry Butler, blind photographers whose luminous work can help us see the world through their eyes. Gingers is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Antonio Da Silva. Pandore is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Virgil Vernier. 5000 Years of Magnificent Wonders: Ancient Rome attempts to explain how the Romans utilized and created numerous disciplines in order to create some of their most famous structures. The program employs special effects in an attempt to show how those buildings looked at the time of their completion. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi The Next Life is a 2011 documentary family film directed by Jian Fan. Contact: Talking to the Dead is a 2002 tv film directed by Pete DeLasho. Follow Me... The Six Day War is the 1968 documentary, war film written by Haim Hefer and directed by Yigal Efrati and Alfred Steinhardt. Monterey Pop is a 1968 concert film by D. A. Pennebaker that documents the Monterey Pop Festival of 1967. Among Pennebaker's several camera operators were fellow documentarians Richard Leacock and Albert Maysles. The painter Brice Marden has an "assistant camera" credit, and Bob Neuwirth, who figured prominently in Pennebaker's Bob Dylan documentary Dont Look Back, acted as stage manager. Titles for the film were by the illustrator Tomi Ungerer. Featured performers include Big Brother and the Holding Company with Janis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, Hugh Masekela, Otis Redding, Ravi Shankar, The Mamas & the Papas, The Who and the Jimi Hendrix Experience, whose namesake set his guitar on fire, broke it on the stage, then threw the neck of his guitar in the crowd at the end of "Wild Thing". Directed by Tweedie is a 2014 documentary short comedy film directed by Duncan Cowles. Gente De Papel is a 2013 biographical, drama and documentary film written and directed by Andrés Felipe Vásquez. Seljim is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Edin Alija. The Anderson Platoon is a documentary feature by Pierre Schoendoerffer about the Vietnam War, named after the leader of the platoon - Lieutenant Joseph B. Anderson - with which Schoendeorffer was embedded. Two decades later, a sequel was released as Reminiscence. Orders is a 1974 Quebec historical drama film about the incarceration of innocent civilians during the 1970 October Crisis and the War Measures Act enacted by the Canadian government of Pierre Trudeau. It is the second film by director Michel Brault. It features entertainer and Senator Jean Lapointe. The film tells the story of five of those incarcerated civilians. It is scripted but is inspired by a number of interviews with actual prisoners made during the events and its style is heavily inspired by the Quebec school of Cinéma vérité. It is a docufiction. It won a Cannes Film Festival Award in 1975 and four Canadian Film Awards the same year. It was also selected as the Canadian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 48th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. Toer is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Barbara Makkinga. The Strawberry Tree is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Simone Rapisarda Casanova. Just Like You is a 2012 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Alex Herz. They Drew Fire is a 2000 film directed by Brian Lanker. Fobbit is a 2010 documentary film directed by Steigeisen. Alone, Georgia is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Otar Iosseliani. VH1 News Presents: Charlie Sheen - Winning... or Losing It? is a 2011 documentary film starring Jeff Ballard, Drew Pinsky and Jeff Rossen. Hare To Ke - Das Besondere und der Alltag is a 1988 documentary film directed by Regina Ulwer. A Big Hand for Everyone is a 1971 animated documentary film directed by Michael Pearce. El pueblo mexicano que camina is a 1996 documentary film Juan Francisco Urrusti. Girls Can Do Anything is a 2012 short documentary and family film directed by Deanna Garcia and Cecilia Sit. Harlan – In the Shadow of Jew Süss is a 2008 documentary film by German director Felix Moeller about one of the most notorious Nazi German filmmakers, Veit Harlan and his family. It focuses on the "wildly varying attitudes of Harlan's children and grandchildren", and how they struggle even today with the legacy of their ancestor's work. The documentary also explores Veit Harlan's motivations for making Jew Süss, a film that The New York Times has called "perhaps the most notorious anti-Semitic movie ever made". Veit Harlan was the only artist from the Nazi era to be charged with war crimes. The film uses "never-before-seen archival footage, unearthed film excerpts, rare home movies and new interviews". It is distributed in the U.S. by Zeitgeist Films in 2010. Solidarität in Korea: Dokumentation über... is a 1996 film. Woodstock is a 1970 American documentary of the watershed counterculture Woodstock Festival that took place in August 1969 at Bethel in New York. Entertainment Weekly called this film the benchmark of concert movies and one of the most entertaining documentaries ever made. The film was directed by Michael Wadleigh and was edited by Martin Scorsese and Thelma Schoonmaker; Schoonmaker was nominated for an Academy Award for Film Editing. Woodstock was a massive commercial and critical success. It received the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, as well as a nomination for Best Sound. The film was also screened at the 1970 Cannes Film Festival, but wasn't entered into the main competition. The Official Director's Cut, spanning 225 minutes, was released in 1994. Both cuts take liberties with the timeline of the festival. However, the opening and closing acts are the same in the film as in real life, i.e., Richie Havens opens the show and Jimi Hendrix closes it. Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock was also released separately on DVD and Blu-ray. Dancing with Time is a film by Trevor Peters about the autobiography Dance Theater Zeit – tanzen seit 1927 by Heike Hennig. Classic exploitation documentary on hunting sea monsters. The Missing Piece: The Truth About Vincenzo Peruggia and the Unthinkable Theft of the Mona Lisa is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Joe Medeiros. Miss Nikki and the Tiger Girls is a 2012 film directed by Juliet Lamont. A Lion in the House is a 2006 documentary directed by Steven Bognar and Julia Reichert "There was a time when Spain fell in love with Ava Gardner. The thing was mutual: she went to the country for the first time in 1950 to shoot Pandora with James Mason, and returned a few years later knowing Madrid would provide some relief to her sadness; and there, she gave rise to a legend starred by bulls, bull-fighters, several lovers and lots of alcohol. Based on Marcos Ordóñez's book Beberse la vida: Ava Gardner en España and sustained by a huge archive and revealing testimonies, All the Night Long tracks down the brunette femme fatale through Spain and reconstructs a puzzle that's made of fragments from both the myth and the real and vulnerable woman; and makes that young woman who got there in the height of Franco's government dialog with the older actress –maybe a whole different person by then– who would make one of her last films in that same country 35 years later. The film finds all those women that flow together into a single one, the one who eventually got tired of the Hollywood life and found rest and freedom in the oppressed but vital Spain of mid 20th century." Quoting the description from the 2010 Mar del Plata Film Festival site. Set against the panoramic history of France, and hosted by Charles Boyer, the priceless treasures and incomparable art is filmed for the first time ever and shared through the eyes of award winning filmmaker Lucy Jarvis. The Climb to Katahdin is a 2013 documentary and adventure film directed by Coltin Calloway. No Room for Rockstars is a 2012 documentary music film directed by Parris Patton. Presented by Henry Lincoln, Co-Author of Holy Blood, Holy Grail - the original source of The Da Vinci Code's fascinating storyline. Discover the wealth of fascinating detail hidden in the isolated hilltop village of Rennes-le-Chateau and the "treasures" of the surrounding countryside, in the company of the man that started it all, Henry Lincoln. In the Nuclear Shadow: What Can the Children Tell Us? is a 1983 American short documentary film directed by Eric Thiermann. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The film includes interviews with youths discussing the nuclear threat, a first-hand account of the atomic destruction of Hiroshima, and excerpts of speeches by psychiatrists John E. Mack and Robert Jay Lifton. Dr. Jack Kessler, a prominent neurologist, shifts his diabetes research to stem cell research when his daughter is paralyzed from the waist down. The program brings the stem cell debate to the forefront and examines the constantly evolving interplay between the promise of new discoveries, the controversy of modern science and the courage of people living with devastating disease and injury. Music City USA is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Chris McDaniel. Dances Sacred and Profane is a 1984 documentary film written by Mark Jury and Charles Gatewood and directed by Mark and Dan Jury. Mexican Ritual is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Eugenio Polgovsky. Spoiled is a 2011 documentary film about energy myths, environmental issues with energy, the problems with alternative energy, and the global warming controversy associated with energy. Spoiled also discusses wind energy, solar energy, fossil fuels, green energy, alternative energy, and sustainable energy as a part of its renewable energy documentary scope. My Stuff is a 2013 documentary film directed by Petri Luukkainen. "In his most recent work, Christian Frei turns to an age-old dream of man: to leave our planet as a "normal person“ and travel into outer space. For 20 million dollars, the American Anousheh Ansari was able to fulfil this childhood dream. This documentary follows her journey into space and shows everyday life as it is on an international space station. This terrific beauty is set in contrast to the crazy trips taken by Kazakh rocket debris collectors in their hunt for the coveted carrot-shaped rocket stages, which literally fall out of the sky and are collected by men with trucks the size of dinosaurs. With breathtaking images, Space Tourists takes its audience into a fascinating world full of surprises and includes encounters with people we would never expect to meet and places stranger and less known than outer space." Quoting the synopsis on the Zurich Film Festival site. Presented without subtitles, Preservation of the Sign Language is a two-minute film featuring George Veditz, onetime president of the National Association of the Deaf of the United States, demonstrating in sign language the importance of defending the right of deaf people to sign as opposed to verbalizing their communication. Deafened by scarlet fever at the age of eight, Veditz was one of the first to make motion-picture recordings of American Sign Language. Taking care to sign precisely and in large gestures for the cameras, Veditz chose fiery biblical passages to give his speech emotional impact. In some of his films, Veditz used finger spelling so his gestures could be translated directly into English in venues where interpreters were present. On behalf of the NAD, Veditz made this film specifically to record sign language for posterity at a time when oralists were gaining momentum in the education of the hearing-impaired. The film conveys one of the ways that deaf Americans debated the issues of their language and public understanding during the era of World War I. In 2010, the film was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress. Police State 2000 is a 1999 Documentary film written and directed by Alex Jones. Jaye Lady Jaye is a 2008 film directed by Marie Losier. Place de la République is a 1974 documentary film directed by Louis Malle. Maria Rita is a 2003 documentary music film directed by Marcus Baldini and Homero Olivetto. Fed Up is a 2014 American documentary film directed, written and produced by Stephanie Soechtig. The film focuses on the causes of obesity in the US, presenting evidence showing that the large quantities of sugar in processed foods are an overlooked root of the problem, and points to the monied lobbying power of "Big Sugar" in blocking attempts to enact effective policies to address the issue. The Story of Chaim Rumkowski and the Jews of Łódź is a 1982 documentary that uses archival film footage and photographs to narrate the story of one of the Holocaust's most controversial figures. Chaim Rumkowski was a Jew that was put in charge of the Łódź ghetto during World War II. Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by André Heller and Othmar Schmiderer. Thank You Tanzania is a documentary film directed by Sarina Condello. Misunderstood Minds is a 2002 documentary film directed by Michael Kirk. "Cruise portrays two friends going on a lesbian cruise, mining the lesbian microcosm to show our current pressure to label the world around us." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Animals Are Beautiful People is a 1974 nature documentary about the wildlife in Southern Africa. It was filmed in the Namib Desert, the Kalahari Desert and the Okavango River and Okavango Delta. It was produced for cinema and has a length of slightly more than 90 minutes. Alligator Kingdom 3D is 2011 documentary and short film directed by Michael Watchulonis. Louis Theroux: Gambling in Las Vegas is a TV documentary written and presented by Louis Theroux. He heads to Las Vegas, to reveal the world behind the myths of casino culture. Among the people he meets are two of the casino's 'high-rollers' and an employee who looks after them as well as a retired doctor who says she has gambled away $4million in seven years. The programme was first broadcast on 4 February 2007 on BBC Two. The Other Dream Team is a documentary film directed by Marius A. Markevičius. It covers the inspirational story of the 1992 Lithuania national basketball team and their journey to the bronze medal at the Summer Olympics in Barcelona. The film not only looks at the Lithuanian team but also at the broader historical events. The fall of the Soviet Union allowed Lithuania to reestablish its independence and enter the Olympics as an independent country. After 50 years of Soviet oppression, the Lithuanian basketball team was a symbol of hope and liberation. The film includes interviews with many famous basketball figures such as Arvydas Sabonis, David Stern, Jim Lampley, Bill Walton, and Šarūnas Marčiulionis. The title is an allusion to the Dream Team, the first American Olympic basketball team to feature active NBA players. De minder gelukkige terugkeer van Joszef Katus naar het land van Rembrandt is a 1966 film from the Netherlands, directed by Wim Verstappen. Taşkafa, Stories of the Street is a 2013 documentary written by Gülen Hurley and Andrea Luka Zimmerman and directed by Andrea Luka Zimmerman. Triste Trópico is a documentary film directed by Arthur Omar. Los Anjos is a 2013 film written and directed by Alice Riva, Hakim Mastour and Colia Vranici. The Work of Director Jonathan Glazer is a 2005 short documentary film directed by Jonathan Glazer and Nick Cave. Linsanity is a documentary film about the rise of Asian-American basketball player Jeremy Lin. The film was directed by Evan Jackson Leong. The film traces Lin's life from his childhood in Palo Alto, California to his rise to prominence in 2012 with the New York Knicks in the National Basketball Association. It shows him overcoming discouragements and racism and achieving success through his faith and desire. The New York Times wrote that it also offered a rare view of Christianity among Asian Americans. Leong had filmed Lin since he was a star college basketball player at Harvard University and during his early struggles in the NBA. The film is narrated by actor Daniel Dae Kim. Linsanity premiered to a sold-out screening at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2013. The Los Angeles Times wrote that it received a "rousing response, easily making it one of the most crowd-pleasing documentaries to play the festival this year." Linsanity was the opening night film for the CAAMFest film festival in San Francisico, where it opened to a sellout on March 14. It made its Asian premiere on March 30 in a sold-out screening at the Hong Kong International Film Festival. Recessionize! For Fun and Profit! is a documentary film written and directed by Jamie Kastner. Les Damnés de la mer is a 2008 documentary film. With My Own Two Wheels is a 2010 film by brothers Jacob & Isaac Seigel-Boettner about the transformational power of bicycles. It was screened at the Mountainfilm Festival in Telluride, Colorado. Bhagirathi Ki Pukaar is a 1991 film directed by Anwar Jamal. Guys And Dolls is a 2007 romance documentary film directed by Nick Holt. Stranded: I've Come from a Plane that Crashed on the Mountains is a 2007 documentary film which tells the story of a rugby team from Uruguay who boarded Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571. The film features interviews with the survivors who recount their struggle to survive after the plane crashed in the Andes Mountains and were forced to consume the flesh of the deceased. Stranded was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize for Documentary at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival, and won the Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary at the 2008 Directors Guild of America Awards. It had its theatrical premiere on October 22 in New York. Polvere - Il grande processo dell'amianto is a 2011 documenatry film written and directed by Niccolò Bruna and Andrea Prandstraller. One Bright Shining Moment: The Forgotten Summer of George McGovern is a documentary film directed by Stephen Vittoria. All This Mayhem is a 2014 documentary film directed by Eddie Martin. ""In an age when the talented were both revolutionary and eternal, Wilson Simonal shone like no other and innovated like few. With his charisma, kindness, swing, charm, sex appeal and a lot of talent, he was the most successful star in Brazil and even made fans abroad. All of a sudden it was all over. Gossip, accusations, mysteries, patrols and pursuits; whatever happened to Wilson Simonal? Simonal – No One Knows How Tough It Was, portrays the impressive trajectory of a former army private that reigned sovereign in pop culture to end up ostracized for a crime of which he swore innocence." Quoting the description from the Rio Film Festival The Ordinary Radicals is the 2008 documentary film directed by Philadelphia filmmaker Jamie Moffett. The Last White Knight is a documentary biography history film directed by Paul Saltzman. You Can't Live Like That is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Stanislav Govorukhin. Reisen ins Landesinnere is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Matthias von Gunten. Searching For Saris is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jinan Coulter. The Last Fix: An Addict's Passage From Hell to Hope is a documentary film directed by Jacqui Lofaro and Victor Telch. Following the Dead spotlights the life of legendary serial killer, H.H. Holmes by tracing his footsteps and his eerie past. As Dan T. Hall and his crew continue to communicate with the other side, view their actual footage from Hell's Gate, Black Moon Manor and Holmes' historic cottage. The Story So Far is a documentary film featuring the rock band, New Found Glory. It's the biggest intelligence breach in U.S. history-the leaking of more than half-a-million classified documents on the Wikileaks website in the spring of 2010. Behind it all, stand two very different men: Julian Assange, the Internet activist and hacker who published the documents, and an Army intelligence analyst named Bradley E. Manning, who's currently charged with handing them over. Private Manning allegedly leaked the secret cables -- along with a controversial video -- in the hope of inciting "worldwide discussion, debates and reforms." Assange's stated mission has been to force the U.S. and other governments into maximum transparency through his whistle-blowing website. Through in-depth interviews with Manning's father, Assange, and others close to the case, veteran FRONTLINE correspondent Martin Smith tells the full story behind the leaks. He also reports on the U.S. government's struggle to protect national security information in a post 9/11 world. Egg Lady is a 2000 short documentary film directed by Una Celma. Train Stops for Five Minutes is a documentary film written and directed by Janina Lapinskaite. One Nine Nine Four is a documentary film written and directed by Jai Al-Attas, "exploring the birth, growth and eventual tipping point of punk rock during the 90s" and produced by the independent Australian company Robot Academy Films. The bulk of the film's content consists of band interviews and archive footage. The film was screened once at the Calgary International Film Festival on September, 29th. The film is narrated by skateboarder Tony Hawk and features interviews and footage of various bands and figures in the punk scene including Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day, Dexter Holland from The Offspring, Greg Graffin and Brett Gurewitz from Bad Religion, Tim Armstrong, Matt Freeman and Lars Fredriksen from Rancid, and Fat Mike from NOFX. Mark Hoppus and Tom DeLonge from Blink-182 also appear in the film. Music clearances fees have prevented the producer from legally releasing the film; it has only been screened twice, once at the Calgary International Film Festival, and once at a "fan-only" screening at The Chauvel Cinema in Sydney, Australia. The filmmakers have turned to fund raising in order to release it publicly. Fires of Kuwait is a 1992 American documentary film directed by David Douglas. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It solely played in OMNIMAX theatres. The film was the winner of the 2005 Hall of Fame Award from Giant Screen Cinema Association. The Cat Would Rather Be a Bird…is a 2007 documentary film directed by Melanie Jilg. I Walked Through Fire, You Were with Me is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Audrius Stonys. The Last Supper is a video/DVD by heavy metal band Black Sabbath in their original line-up. It features the live shows they put on stage on their US tour in 1999. This video has received negative criticism by fans for having interview segments interrupt the live footage. These segments were conducted by Henry Rollins, of Black Flag and the Rollins Band. Herbert Von Karajan 1908-1989: A Portrait is a 1999 music biography documentary film directed by Gernot Friedel. Midnight Ramble is a 1994 documentary about the early history of Black American movies from the period between 1910 and 1950. Known as "race movies", these films, traditionally independent of Hollywood, were made primarily by, for and about the Black Community. This documentary is a tribute to a film genre that lasted for more than forty years, produced over 500 movies, and created a foundation for contemporary films from directors such as Spike Lee and Tyler Perry. James Avery narrates this exploration of the early black film industry. There is a mistaken assumption that 'race films' began largely in reaction to D. W. Griffith's 1915 The Birth of a Nation. Nothing could be further from the truth. Race movies actually began around 1910 in Chicago in response to the Black Community longing to see themselves reflected on the silver screen via this new medium of film. Wanting to see themselves through their own eyes, on their own terms thus counteracting the Hollywood stereotypes within the American media. La quimera del oro negro is a 1980 short documentary film directed by Pedro Reygadas. "We admire some documentaries for their artistry and others for their urgency. Rarely do we see a film that combines both of these qualities as impressively as this debut by directors Carter Gunn and Ross McDonnell. Their unlikely topic is the world of beekeepers during the recent (and ongoing) crisis known as colony collapse disorder. Beautifully photographed by McDonnell and skilfully edited by Gunn, Colony follows several American beekeepers during 2008 and 2009 as the country's economy spiralled downward. Among them is David Hackenberg, who first identified colony collapse disorder when he mysteriously lost eighty million bees from his Florida hives. Many keepers blamed insecticides for killing more than one quarter of the bees in the United States, but no one had any evidence. We see the keepers search for solutions, testify before politicians and confront pesticide manufacturers. The mystery is like something out of science fiction and has dark implications for the future. Because our agriculture depends on pollination, when bees are in trouble, so is society. The expression “busy as a bee” gains deeper meaning after hearing the quirky entrepreneur David Mendes describe his migratory pattern. Packing thousands of hives onto a tractor-trailer, he travels across the country, renting out his bees to farmers for weeks at a time, following crop cycles from Maine to Florida to California. At the heart of this film is the Seppi family, newcomers to the beekeeping world who are guided by their deep Christian faith. Based in California, the Seppis contract their bees to almond growers, who require over 1.3 million hives for the world's biggest pollination. As the Seppis face the collapse of their colony and the economy, tensions course through the family. Gunn and McDonnell carefully compose these scenes, attaining an intimacy without being intrusive. The filmmakers are equally capable at filming on the microcosmic scale, drawing us into the world of bees so that we root for their survival as much as our own." Quoting Thom Powers on the 2009 TIFF site Anatomy Of Anatomy is a 2014 documentary film Written by Joan Hansen and Directed by David C Jones. Cuban Memories: A Day With Fidel is a 1987 documentary film directed by Gianni Minà. Epic of Everest is a 1924 documentary film directed by J.B.L. Noel. Let’s Dance is a documentary film directed by Jo Se-young. Government officials and scientific experts reveal facts about UFOs, alien technology, and the cover-up of evidence of alien presence on Planet Earth. Stars Dr. Steven Greer, Graham Bethune. Wrangler: Anatomy of an Icon is a 2008 feature documentary film about the life of Jack Wrangler, produced and directed by Jeffrey Schwarz of Automat Pictures. It had its premiere at the 2008 New York Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, & Transgender Film Festival and is distributed by TLA Releasing. The documentary chronicles the life of Jack Wrangler, the professional name of John Robert Stillman in his role as a gay porn star who rapidly became one of the first performers in gay porn to achieve star status and a cult following. The documentary also features his transitioning to roles such as straight porn star, his romantic relationship with and later marriage to singer Margaret Whiting, his activism in supporting and promoting AIDS charities and his later career as a theatrical producer and director. The documentary won a GayVNAward in 2009 for Best Alternative Release. Wrangler died on April 7, 2009 at the age of 62 due to emphysema. The Eruption of Mount St. Helens! is a 1980 short documentary film directed by George Casey. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Free at Last is a 1968 documentary film directed by Gregory Shuker, James Desmond and Nicholas Proferes. Theatre 1 is a 2012 biographical documentary film directed by Kazuhiro Soda. The Amazon rainforest in Brazil is the subject of this splendid documentary. We see first contact with an isolated tribe, areas of the forest never filmed before, find out about illegal trafficking of species and discover the immeasurable value of Brazil's natural spaces. Solipsist Part 1 is a short film directed by Andrew Huang. Michael Laudrup: A Football Player is a 1993 documentary film written and directed by Jørgen Leth. Speed Fever is a 1978 documentary film written by Mario Morra, Oscar Orefici and directed by Morra, Oscar Orefici and Ottavio Fabbri. Atomic Ed and the Black Hole is a documentary released in 2001 by filmmaker, Ellen Spiro. The documentary was made for HBO's Cinemax Reel Life Series. Sheila Nevins served as Executive Producer and Lisa Heller served as Supervising Producer. Karen Bernstein served as Producer. Laurie Anderson provided her song, Big Science, for the soundtrack. Ed Grothus is a machinist-turned-atomic junk collector who more than 30 years ago quit his job of making atomic bombs and began collecting non-radioactive high-tech nuclear waste discarded from the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Atomic Ed is the proprietor of the “The Black Hole”, a second-hand shop and, next door, curator of the unofficial museum of the nuclear age. His collection reveals and preserves the history of government waste that was literally thrown in a trash heap. Au rythme de mon coeur is a 1983 documentary film directed by Jean Pierre Lefebvre. Donka: X-Ray of an African Hospital is a 2001 documentary film directed by Thierry Michel. The Last Impresario is a 2013 documentary film about prolific British theatre impresario and film producer Michael White. The film is directed by Gracie Otto, and made its world premiere at the BFI London Film Festival in October 2013, where it was positively received by critics. The film features interviews with Michael White and many of his close friends and colleagues, including John Cleese, Naomi Watts, Kate Moss, Rachel Ward, Yoko Ono, Barry Humphries, Wallace Shawn, Andre Gregory, John Waters, Jim Sharman, Nell Campbell, Lorne Michaels, Jeremy Thomas, Jean-Jacques Lebel, Brian Thomson, Anna Wintour, Lyndall Hobbs, and many more. What We Leave In Our Wake is a documentary film directed by Pat Collins. This film conveys how the most wanted man on the planet Bin Laden managed to slip through the US Military nets and how his allies are still operating openly across Pakistan. The Sisters of Charity is a 2009 documentary short film. Warrah is a 1979 film directed by Corinne Cantrill and Arthur Cantrill. Scarlet Droppings is a 1991 short documentary film directed by George Kuchar. Our Home We Can Not Walk To is a 2013 documentary war film written and directed by Darin Al Baw. Longhaul is a documentary about a corruption that spreads across America, from one coast to another, and it is a corruption that you, the Reader of this statement, are apart of. In this documentary Joe Brown, a truck driver, exposes how every OTR(Over The Road) driver is forced to break the law every single day in order to make a living. And, these laws are not small laws, they are serious laws. "If only more reality programming were like this creative documentary: personal, raw, nuanced and thought-provoking. Filmmaker Ibtisam Mara’ana (Lady Kul El-Arab, SFJFF 2009) leaves her childhood home in Fureidis, an Arab village near Haifa, to make a life for herself in Tel Aviv—and make a movie about her journey. Early in the film, we meet Ibtisam’s neighbor Jonathan, a Jew from Montreal who has recently emigrated to Israel and soon becomes her boyfriend. The portrait of their charming cross-cultural relationship soon gets complicated, unfolding against the backdrop of the 2009 Gaza violence: glimpses of Ibtisam and Jonathan’s Facebook photo albums or scenes of them making dinner together give way to footage of the couple’s anti-war activity, their reluctance to reveal their relationship to inquisitive parents, and an extraordinary return visit with Jonathan’s Canadian grandfather to the kibbutz he helped found, where a heated political argument erupts. What emerges is a melancholy reminder that love can’t always conquer all." Quoting Hagar Scher from the 2011 San Francisco Jewish Film Festival site. Jump London is a documentary first broadcast by Channel 4 about parkour and free running in September 2003, directed by Mike Christie and produced by Optomen Television. It later spawned a sequel, Jump Britain that first aired in January 2005. Both feature documentaries were directed by Mike Christie. Jump London followed three French traceurs, Sébastien Foucan, Jérôme Ben Aoues, and Johann Vigroux, as they run around many of London's most famous landmarks, including Royal Albert Hall, Shakespeare's Globe Theater, HMS Belfast, and many others. Lacan Palestine is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mike Hoolboom. WAR ZONE is about sex, power, and what happens when men - either knowingly or unknowingly - threaten a woman’s right to walk undisturbed on the streets.  What exactly do catcalls, leers, or a whole litany of other behaviors mean to a woman?  And why do men engage in these behaviors? Shot all over the United States, Maggie Hadleigh-West turns her camera on men in the same way that they turn their aggression on her. WAR ZONE is 76 minutes of explosive footage as the filmmaker places herself in very real danger by daring to ask the men on the streets why they are treating a complete stranger in a sexual way.  In the process, she has been hit, yelled at, apologized to and engaged in mesmerizing conversations with the men that have harassed her.  Through these conversations, Hadleigh-West reveals the anger, fear and frustration as well as the affection, admiration and humor that characterizes relationships between men and women.This movie is guaranteed to get men and women talking about their often very different experiences in public! Don't Throw Stones is a 2014 documentary music film written and directed by Mike Brook. One of the hardest rocking bands in musical history, Led Zeppelin crafted epic songs of grace and fury influenced by the American blues tradition. This insightful documentary chronicles the band's history--from their 1968 formation to their reign as 1970s hard-rock giants--through rare photographs, archival footage, and interviews with both the band members and those who worked with them, including tour manager Richard Cole, record engineer Andy Johns, groupies Lori Mattix and Pamela Des Barres, and members of the Yardbirds, Vanilla Fudge, Bad Company, The Ramones, and Foreigner. Chasing a Rainbow: The Life of Josephine Baker is a 1986 television film directed by Christopher Ralling that was nominated in 1987 for the British Academy Television Huw Wheldon Award for the Best Arts Programme. Live in Boston is a concert film of a concert performed by The Who on September 27, 2002 in Boston, Massachusetts. This concert was the second to the last concert of The Who's first tour without bass player John Entwistle, who died just prior to the beginning of the tour, being replaced by Pino Palladino, who made his debut with The Who on this tour, remaining with the band to this day. Simon Townshend also became a regular member of The Who's touring band on this tour. An audio only CD release of this concert was also released as a part of Encore Series 2002. Bonus features on the DVD include interviews with Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend, along with a gallery including artwork by John Entwistle. FC Rwanda is a 2013 documentary film directed by Joris Postema. Ricky On Leacock is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jane Weiner. More Than a Friend is a 2010 short documentary film written by Iman Mitra and directed by Debalina Majumder. "Filmmaker Spencer Windes' debut documentary film tells the story of how he evolved from a Mormon missionary into a comfortably gay man by playing violent contact sports.On the rugby pitch, hockey rink and rodeo circuit, Windes encounters the subculture of queer athletes busting stereotypes - including their own. Bruised and bloodied, Windes emerges from the scrum having rediscovered a trait common to all men, gay or straight: the need to play."Windes' well-meaning and sweet film is part personal narrative and part exploration of brutal gay mens' sports like rugby...Windes' sincerity and the films' empowering portrayal of gay men make it worthwhile." = Washington Blade The River is a 1938 short documentary film which shows the importance of the Mississippi River to the United States, and how farming and timber practices had caused topsoil to be swept down the river and into the Gulf of Mexico, leading to catastrophic floods and impoverishing farmers. It ends by briefly describing how the Tennessee Valley Authority project was beginning to reverse these problems. It was written and directed by Pare Lorentz and, like Lorentz's earlier documentary The Plow That Broke the Plains, was also selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant", going into the registry in 1990. The film won the "best documentary" category at the 1938 Venice International Film Festival. Both films have notable scores by Virgil Thomson that are still heard as concert suites. The film was narrated by the American baritone Thomas Hardie Chalmers. The two films were sponsored by the U.S. government and specifically the Resettlement Administration to raise awareness about the New Deal. Confrontation at Concordia is a documentary film by Martin Himel which documents the September 2002 protest at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada. The film chronicles how pro-Palestinian student activists staged a direct action aimed to cancel the former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's address on campus. The talk by the prime minister had been organized by Hillel, a Jewish student organization. The documentary portrays the events that took place in a negative light, and reportedly contributed to the ensuing media debate over them. The Concordia Student Union responded by taking legal action against its producer. The film is an overview of the famous performances of the great ballet dancers of the 20th century, who brought fame to the Bolshoi theatre. The film tells the stories and feature the legendary performances of their greatest dances. Ann Pavlova in the dance "The Dying Swan", Sulamifj Messerer and Asaf Messerer in the dances specially staged for them, Marina Semenova in "Swan Lake", Olga Lepeshinskaya and Peter Gusev, Galina Ulanova in "Romeo and Juliet" and Zhizelj, Vachtang Chabukiani and Natalia Dudinskaya in "Bayadere", "Otello", and "Laurencia". Maja Plicetskaya in "Laurencia", "Don Quixote", and "Karmen". Ekaterina Maksimova and Vladimir Vasiljev in "Spartak" as well as the performances staged specially for Igor Beljsky, Nina Ananishvili and Alex Fadeichev, Nadezhda Gracheva in “Bayadere” the pride and legends of Russian ballet. A Fuller Life is a 2013 history documentary film written and directed by Samantha Fuller. Skinheads USA: Soldiers of the Race War is a 1993 HBO documentary film about a group of white power skinheads involved in the neo-Nazi movement in the Southern state of Alabama. The film featured the white supremacist Bill Riccio, the then leader of the Aryan Youth Front; and author and civil rights activist Mark Lane. Other Klan organizations were also featured. It was directed by Shari Cookson and produced by Dave Bell. Cinematography was done by Wayne De LaRoche. A South American Journal is a documentary film featuring Brian Moser. Yandé Codou, la griotte de Senghor is a 2008 documentary film. Ride a Wave: Live and Love It Up is a 2012 sports biographical family documentary film directed by Scott Girardin and Major Skinner. A Spy in the House that Ruth Built is a 1990 short documentary film written and directed by Vanalyne Green. Pad Yatra: A Green Odyssey is a 2012 documentary adventure film written and directed by Wendy J.N. Lee. Ke Kulana He Mahu: Remembering a Sense of Place is a 2001 documentary film directed by Kathryn Xian and Brent Anbe. La vita non perde valore is a 2012 documentary film about the reintegration into society of former child soldiers in Sierra Leone. It was written and directed by Wilma Massucco, a filmmaker and freelance journalist who was awarded of an Italian National Award on Human Rights, i.e. 2014 Maria Rita Saulle Award. The film focuses on the work of Father Giuseppe Berton, an Italian Missionary who lived in Sierra Leone for over forty years. Berton founded the "Family Homes Movement" to provide parental care and education to child victims of the country's civil war, during which thousands of children were recruited and used as soldiers by all sides. Children were often forcibly recruited, given drugs and used to commit atrocities. Girls were also recruited as soldiers and often subjected to sexual exploitation. Many of the children were survivors of village attacks, while others were found abandoned. They were used for patrol purposes, attacking villages, and guarding workers in the diamond fields. FHM has rehabilitated more than 3000 child soldiers back into society. Citizen Autistic is a documentary film directed by William Davenport. El blues de Paganini is a 2003 short documentary film directed by Yordi Capo and David Villalbazo. Abel Gance, une mémoire de l'avenir is a 1980 short, documentary film directed by Thierry Filliard and Laurent Drancourt. Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport is a 2000 documentary film that tells the story of the kindertransport, a rescue operation which saved the lives of over 10,000 Jewish children from Nazi Germany by transporting them via train to England, where they were adopted by British families. It was directed by Mark Jonathan Harris and narrated by Judi Dench. Sing Your Song is a documentary about the untold story of Harry Belafonte. The film recounts the life and legacy of Belafonte, not only as a great entertainer, but as an important activist in the Civil Rights movement. This inspirational biographical film begins with Belafonte's birth into poverty in Harlem in 1927, and childhood years in Jamaica, sent there by his immigrant mother. Director, Susanne Rostock takes the viewer through his discovery of theater and training as an actor, as a young man and on to his career and success as a singer. The film shows, not only his remarkable success as a singer and actor, but his true passion for social change. The film outlines some highlights of his entertainment career, but is more focused on how he helped change the world in other ways: marching with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in the civil-rights era; working against apartheid in South Africa; fighting hunger through his instrumental work with USA for Africa; and, most recently, working to combat gang violence through programs with inner-city youth.* In an interview about the film, Belafonte discussed his activism from Civil Rights to poverty in Africa. Famadihana (Second Burial): Surviving Guilt and Grief is a 2014 short mystery family documentary film written and directed by Jacques Randrianary. Border Diaries is a 2013 short drama documentary film written and directed by Irene Gutiérrez Torres. Katharina Bullin - Und ich dachte ich wär die Größte is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Marcus Welsch. Cavalcata di mezzo secolo is a 1952 Italian film. A whimsical odyssey across rural England as author and broadcaster Nigel Farrell decides to escape the frustrations of the city and sets off in search of the perfect village. The task isn't as easy as he'd imagined but, 2,000 miles after setting off from London, and just as he's beginning to think there's no such village, Nigel stumbles upon the most peaceful village in a place he least expected. The Revolution on the Ural is a 1999 short documentary film directed by Andrej Ančugov. Liebe Dein Symptom wie Dich selbst! is a German documentary film about the Slovenian philosopher and psychoanalyst Slavoj Žižek. Eternal Theater is a Christian documentary film directed by Daniel Knudsen. It was released to DVD on April 2, 2010. The film, an overview of the events of the Bible, was produced by Crystal Creek Media. The film is partially computer-animated and it was formerly titled Ultimatum. Hi Hater: The Documentary is a 2012 documentary comedy film written and directed by Milton Dewar. Radical Evil is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Stefan Ruzowitzky. The Road We've Traveled is a 2012 documentary film about the events of Barack Obama's presidency. Directed by Davis Guggenheim, the documentary was produced by Obama's re-election campaign and was narrated by Tom Hanks. Race to Execution is a documentary film directed by Rachel Lyon. Stop-Over is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kaveh Bakhtiari. An Incomplete History of the Travelogue, 1925 is a 2012 historical documentary short film written and directed by Sasha Waters Freyer. Ghost Bird: The Life and Art of Judith Deim is a 2000 documentary biographical film directed by Irena Salina. Crop is a 2013 documentary film directed by Johanna Domke & Marouan Omara. Between heaven and earth, life and love hang on a thread of trust 'Fall Into Half-Angel' is a short documentary exploring the unique relationship between two trapeze artists and the physical and emotional trust that flows between them. Legend of a Warrior is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Corey Lee. Code Black is a 2013 documentary and drama film directed by Ryan McGarry. Bury the Hatchet is a documentary film directed by Aaron Walker. The film is a portrait of the Mardi Gras Indians of New Orleans. American Movie is a 1999 documentary directed by Chris Smith. The film chronicles the real 1996-1997 making of Coven, an independent horror film directed by an independent filmmaker named Mark Borchardt. Produced for the purpose of raising capital for another film that Borchardt intends to make, the epic Northwestern, Coven suffers from numerous setbacks, including poor financing, a lack of planning, Borchardt's burgeoning alcoholism, and the ineptitude of the friends and family Borchardt hires to staff the production team. The documentary follows Borchardt's filmmaking process from script to screen, and is interspersed with footage from both developing projects. American Movie was produced by Sarah Price, edited by Jun Diaz and Barry Poltermann and directed by Chris Smith. Filming for American Movie began in September 1995 and concluded in August 1997. The film was a critical success upon its debut and went on to win the Grand Jury prize for Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival, and has since gone on to become a cult film. Smokin' Fish is a 2011 documentary biography history film written and directed by Luke Griswold-Tergis. Sugartown: The Day After is a 2009 documentary written and directed by Kimon Tsakiris. Approved for Adoption is a 2012 French-Belgian animated film based on a comic by Jung and directed by Laurent Boileau and Jung. It was released on 6 June in France. It received a Magritte Award nomination for Best Editing. This 2008 feature-length documentary directed by Ian Ayres, is about Tony Curtis and his wife and their efforts to rescue horses from slaughterhouses. A camera crew follows Jill and Tony Curtis as they take in horses that would have been inhumanely killed and sent overseas as food for humans. The DVD of the documentary includes bonus features including Tony Curtis an artist, how Tony met Jill and their love of horses. Divine Body is a 1996 documentary film directed by Dominique Loreau. Dead Blue: Surviving Depression is a 1998 documentary directed by Eames Yeates. Breadmakers is a short 2007 documentary film, directed by Yasmin Fedda and produced by Jim Hickey and Robin Mitchell. This is a film about a unique Edinburgh bakery, where a community of workers with learning disabilities make a variety of organic breads for daily delivery to shops and cafes in the city. The Garvald Bakery is part of a centre inspired by the ideas of Rudolf Steiner where the workers realise their potential for self-discovery and creativity in a social environment. Yasmin said that she was surprised about the response that the film received. Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic is a documentary film about the life of comedian Richard Pryor directed by Marina Zenovich. It aired in the United Kingdom on BBC Four, as part of their Storyville strand of documentaries. Suitable is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Katrine Philp. Children in Need Rocks the Royal Albert Hall was a charity music concert held at the Royal Albert Hall in London, England on 12 November 2009. The concert was organised by Take That singer-songwriter Gary Barlow as one of a series of events to raise money for Children in Need 2009. The huge success of the concert inspired Barlow to organise Children in Need Rocks Manchester at the Manchester Arena, Manchester in 2011. Ethnic Notions is a 1987 documentary film directed by Marlon Riggs. It examines anti-Black stereotypes that permeated popular culture from the ante-bellum period until the advent of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. Remember Me This Way is a title of a 1974 motion picture documentary about the British glam rock star Gary Glitter. Filmed the previous year, the documentary follows Glitter through a routine of press conferences, radio interviews, photo shoots, concert rehearsals, and so forth. It also includes Glitter's audition to star in an unproduced feature film. The picture also documents the people working behind the scenes of Glitter's career. It shows them pressing copies of his records, and attending meetings where Bell Records staff discuss Glitter's record sales and arrangements for his concerts. The movie follows Glitter and his entourage through to a sell-out concert at the Rainbow Theatre in London, and features songs from the show at the end, including a show-stopping rendition of his chart-topping hit single "I Love You Love Me Love". This motion picture was a box office success at the time, and was later issued on VHS in the 1980s. A DVD release followed in 2005. The soundtrack album made #5 in 1974. Marina's House is a 2012 documentary film directed by Dali Rust. Our Burmese Days is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Lindsey Merrison. The undead come out to play in this spine-tingling documentary about the history of vampire movies that originally aired as a Starz Inside special. Highlights include clips from genre classics such as Dracula, Interview with the Vampire, The Lost Boys and Blade, plus commentary from actors Corey Haim and Cheech Marin, directors John Carpenter, John Landis and Joel Schumacher and film critic Leonard Maltin. Erik(A) is a 2005 documentary film written by Hanne Lassl and directed by Kurt Mayer. The Official Art Form is a 1997 documentary film directed by Hridaynath Gharekhan and Suhasini Mulay. Mysteries of Deep Space is a 1997 documentary film written by Jonathan Grupper and directed by Thomas Lucas. "A compilation of exterior images from the last residential addresses of a group of New York City artists who died of AIDS." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Red Maria is a 2012 documentary film directed by Kyung-soon Lee. Honk is a 2007 short drama film written by Barry Hecker and Marc Joseph Hudson and directed by Barry Hecker. La clase is a 2008 short, documentary and family film, directed by Beatriz Sanchís. The Bolero is a 1973 American short documentary film directed by Allan Miller and William Fertik. It won an Academy Award at the 46th Academy Awards in 1974 for Best Short Subject. Unorthodox is a 2013 documentary drama written by Shira Katz and Anna Wexler; directed by Nadja Oertelt and Anna Wexler. Discovery of the Soul is a 1993 film directed by Jutta Ohlenberg. Immokalee, My Home is a 2009 documentary short film directed by Kevin T. Allen,Jen Heuson. The work of the provacative photographer for Life magazine. Echotone is 2010 musical documentary film directed by Nathan Christ. "Shot in Kuala Lumpur’s red light district, this documentary explores what it’s like to be a transsexual in Malaysia today and the reasons why many of them turn to sex work." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Stars and Their Guitars: A History of the Electric Guitar is a documentary film by filmmaker Kent Hagen. It spotlights the development and history of the classic electric guitar as well as the players that made them famous. Spanning a multitude of genres including rock, blues, rockabilly, country, hard rock, punk and more, this 2008 documentary provides an in-depth look at the six-string's immeasurable impact on society and culture. Les Paul, B.B. King, Duane Eddy, Scotty Moore, Billy Gibbons, Slash, George Thorogood, Joe Satriani, and Elliot Easton are just a few of the guitar legends interviewed. Winner for best documentary at the 2008 Route 66 Film Festival. Skategirls is a 2010 short war drama documentary film directed by Iara Lee. Fastest is a documentary film about the Road Racing World Championship, MotoGP. Filmed between 2010 and 2011 by director Mark Neale, it is narrated by Ewan McGregor and produced by Neale and award-winning producer Paul Taublieb, from Media X International, Inc.. Fastest was preceded by The Doctor, The Tornado and The Kentucky Kid and will be succeeded by Charge, currently awaiting release. The First Sea is a 2013 documentary written and directed by Clara Trischler. Hasta siempre Carlos Gardel is a 1973 Argentine film. Playboy Video Playmate Calendar 1989 is a 1988 documentary film directed by Andrew Blake, Arnold Milo, Skott Snider, David Kellogg, Stephen C. Confer and Mark Woods. The Love Life of the Octopus is a 1967 documentary short film directed by Geneviève Hamon and Jean Painlevé We follow 94 year old 82nd Airborne veteran James "Maggie" Megellas from Wisconsin to Europe where he fought in some of the most savage battles of World War II. "Maggie" is the most decorated officer in the history of the famed 82nd Airborne Division. Nelson Freire is a 2003 documentary written by Felipe Lacerda, João Moreira Salles and Flávio Pinheiro and directed by João Moreira Salles. Moving Midway is a 2007 documentary film directed by Godfrey Cheshire. Encounter in the Third Dimension is a 3-D film directed by Ben Stassen and Sean McLeod Phillips. It was released in the US on March 31, 1999. It has been shown in 3-D theaters and released on DVD with 3-D glasses, in both 2-D and 3-D format. The Story of Mikko Niskanen is a documentary film written and directed by Peter von Bagh. Marcel, King of Tervuren is a 2012 short animated documentary film written by Ann Berckmoes and directed by Tom Schroeder. Camera/Woman is a 2012 biographical documentary family drama film directed by Karima Zoubir. Beautiful Noise is a 2014 American music documentary film, written and directed by Eric Green. The film documents three rock bands—Cocteau Twins, The Jesus and Mary Chain and My Bloody Valentine—and their influence on subsequent alternative rock bands and subgenres. Beautiful Noise features extracts from over 50 interviews with bands and artists, as well as archival footage and music videos. Green commenced production on Beautiful Noise in early 2005 with producer and editor Sarah Ogletree; production was largely completed by 2008 although the project stagnated due to various financial and legal issues. In response, Green began a successful crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter in hopes of securing final financial investment for the film's release. The campaign was supported by several of the bands featured in Beautiful Noise through social media. Beautiful Noise was announced for release in May 2014 and premiered at the Seattle International Film Festival in Seattle, Washington on May 31, 2014. Krzysztof Komeda was a jazz pianist and film composer. With compositions like the lullaby for Rosemary's Baby from Roman Polanski, Komeda succeeded in writing his own chapter in the history of soundtracks. This documentary follows the life story of the composer by the means of his melodic sounds. It is a reflection on his soundtracks, which changed the common film scores forever. It is a contemporary document about the attitude to life in a time of social, political and cultural change after war, about work and exodus of Polish artists in the 50s and 60s. A story about how film music is created and how it affects people. Directors who worked with Komeda and who are also friends talk about him: Roman Polanski, Jerzy Skolimowski, Henning Carlsen and Andrzej Wajda. His wife, Zofia Komeda, and his sister, Irena Orlowska, remember him. Written by Benedikt Pictures Phoenix Bird is a 1983 Danish film directed by Jon Bang Carlsen. Tom is a 2002 Canadian documentary film directed by Mike Hoolboom. The Love Song of R. Buckminster Fuller is a documentary film directed by Sam Green. Los Angeles Now is a 60 minute documentary by producer/director Phillip Rodriguez. It first aired in November 2004 on PBS’s Independent Lens series. The documentary investigates the city of Los Angeles as it comes of age and wrestles with its history and its future. The film includes conversations with a broad range of Los Angeles figures, from actress Salma Hayek and businessman/philanthropist Eli Broad to author and essayist Richard Rodriguez and Cardinal Roger Mahony. A Better Life Is Elsewhere is a 2012 documentary, biographical film directed by Rolando Colla. Children of Jerusalem is a 1994 film, that is a selection from a now-seven part documentary series that shows the holy city of Jerusalem from the distinctive perception of the municipality’s children, who hail from various cultural, economic, social and religious backgrounds. Lavender Hill: A Love Story is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Austin Bunn. Rougarouing is a 2013 drama music mystery documentary film directed by Michael Palmieri and Donal Mosher. Beca de Gilas (Rebeca’s Story) is a 1998 documentary short film directed by Pepe Urquijo. Jaba is a 2006 documentary short film written and directed by Andreas Bolm. A Poet on the Lower East Side is a 1997 documentary film directed by Gyula Gazdag. Afrikanskaja ochota is a 1988 documentary film written by Andrey Petrov and directed by Igor Alimpiev. About Baghdad is a documentary film shot in Baghdad, Iraq in 2003. It is the first documentary film to have been made in Iraq following the fall of the Baath regime. The film features the artist Sinan Antoon as he returns to his native Baghdad. It privileges the voices of native Iraqis from all walks of life, as they present their views on life during the regime of Saddam Hussein as well as the United States's bombing, invasion, and occupation. The film was directed by a collective including Sinan Antoon, Bassam Haddad, Maya Mikdashi, Suzy Salamy, and Adam Shapiro. It was produced by InCounter Productions. Playboy: Strip, Sexy Showgirls & Dirty Dancers is a 1995 documentary film directed by Scott Allen. Love Translated is a Canadian documentary film directed and edited by Julia Ivanova which premiered at the 46th annual Chicago International Film Festival. Fading is a 2010 documentary/ experimental film directed by Olivier Zabat. Tell Them Who You Are is a 2004 documentary written by Mark Wexler and Robert DeMaio, and directed by Mark Wexler. Maafa 21: Black Genocide in 21st Century America is an anti-abortion documentary film made in 2009 by pro-life activist Mark Crutcher to turn African Americans against Planned Parenthood. The film, which has been enthusiastically received by anti-abortion activists, argues that the modern-day prevalence of abortion among African Americans is rooted in an attempted genocide or maafa of black people. Considered propaganda by journalist Michelle Goldberg and historian Esther Katz, the film fits into a pro-life advertising campaign aimed at African Americans, to argue against abortion and birth control. The film repeats elements of an American conspiracy theory called black genocide, using many of the same arguments as black separatists such as the Black Panther Party in the early 1970s. It misuses statistics to induce in the viewer a fear of birth control and abortion. Made in Sheffield is a documentary film on the history of the music scene in the city of Sheffield, England from 1975 until 1983. The film was directed and produced by Eve Wood in 2001. It features bands such as The Human League, Cabaret Voltaire, Clock DVA, Pulp, ABC, and Heaven 17. The Arrival of the Train is a 1995 documentary short film directed by Andrej Sheleznjakov. Mud and Guts is a 2013 documentary film directed by Justin Greiman. This is New Zealand is a documentary film showcasing New Zealand scenery that was produced by the New Zealand National Film Unit for screening at the World Expo in Osaka in 1970. The film combined scenic images including aerial cinematography with rousing classical music such as Sibelius' Karelia Suite. Using then ground-breaking technology, the film required three separate but synchronised 35mm film projectors which projected their images onto an extra-wide screen. In 2004/2005 Archives New Zealand commissioned a restoration at post production facility, Park Road Post. Hugh Macdonald, the original director, was involved in the restoration and Kit Rollings, the original sound mixer assisted with the updated soundtrack. The remastered film was released for sale on DVD in 2014. I Am Comic is a 2010 documentary about the stand-up comedy world directed by Jordan Brady. Mom, Dad, I'm Muslim is a 2013 documentary, drama and family film written and directed by Anat Tel Mendelovich. Rendezvous in Space is a 1964 documentary film about the future of space exploration, directed by Frank Capra. It is notable for being the final film that Frank Capra directed. The film was funded by Martin Marietta and was shown at the Hall of Science Pavilion of the 1964-1965 New York World's Fair. Animated sections illustrate the invention of gunpowder, a space shuttle resupplying a space station, and the problems to be overcome living for long periods in space. Golden Days is a 2007 film directed by Chris Suchorsky. Hugo Koblet - Pédaleur de charme is a 2010 film directed by Daniel von Aarburg. "Hugo Koblet was the unexpected foreign winner of the Giro d’Italia in 1950, prompting the man from Zurich to world fame. He had women at his feet, the world of cycling admired his elegant style and journalists rubbed their hands about his escapades. After winning the Tour de France, his ascent came to an abrupt halt, ruined by doping abuse. Still, Koblet enjoyed a few more victories at several six-day races and climbed the social ladder through his marriage to model Sonja Bühl. But when the generous womanizer was faced with financial ruin and divorce, he drove his car into a tree. To this day, it has not been established whether it was suicide or an accident." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Locarno International Film Festival site. Herbert's Hippopotamus - Marcuse and Revolution in Paradise is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Paul Alexander Juutilainen. Chile in Transition is a 1990 documentary film directed by Gaston Ancelovici and Frank Diamand. In one of the few times in its 5,000-year history, the oldest, most populous nation on earth has opened its doors to the rest of the world. Coupling insightful storytelling with spectacular and groundbreaking photographic techniques, Discovery Atlas: China Revealed brings to life the fascinating and complex contemporary life of this extraordinary country. This is their country, through their eyes. Patriot Act: A Jeffrey Ross Home Movie is a 2005 documentary film that was written and directed by comedian Jeff Ross. The filmed performances were inspired by the life of United Service Organizations’ Bob Hope. It premiered at the Montréal Just For Laughs Festival on 21 July 2005, and has since been shown on Showtime. It features fellow comedians/comic actors Drew Carey, Blake Clark, Rocky LaPorte and Kathy Kinney. Beautiful Darling: The Life and Times of Candy Darling, Andy Warhol Superstar is a 2010 feature-length documentary film about Candy Darling, the transgender pioneer, actress and Andy Warhol Superstar. The film was written and directed by James Rasin and features Chloë Sevigny as "the voice of Candy Darling", reading from Candy's private diaries and letters. Patton Oswalt voices Andy Warhol and Truman Capote. Texas: The Big Picture is a short documentary film directed by Scott Swofford. Three-part documentary, celebrated film historians Kevin Brownlow and David Gill tell the proud, sad story of D.W. Griffith. The Fade is a 2012 documentary, comedy and drama film directed by Andy Mundy-Castle. Oxygen for the Ears: Living Jazz is a 2012 documentary, music, historical fiction film directed by Stefan Immler. Ray Harryhausen: The Early Years Collection is a 2005 documentary film directed by Ray Harryhausen. Armadillo is a 2010 documentary film directed by Janus Metz Pedersen. "Armadillo took audiences by surprise at this year’s Cannes Film Festival when it became the first documentary to screen in the Critic’s Week competition, then took the top prize in that section. The film follows Danish soldiers fighting the Taliban in the Helmand province of southern Afghanistan. We’ve grown accustomed in the last decade to depictions of improvised explosive devices, missile strikes and other remote control warfare. But in Armadillo (named for the platoon’s base camp) we’re plunged into close combat that evokes wars of past eras, particularly Vietnam. Director Janus Metz maintains a sophisticated visual flair that’s rarely achieved in such extreme conditions, while building the film around distinct characters within the platoon, such as the boyish Mads – whose middle class family expected him to keep peace in Kosovo, not fight in Afghanistan – and the more battle-hardened platoon leader, Rasmus. Through their six-month tour of duty we witness how war transforms different personalities. Metz draws closer and closer to these soldiers, with an intimacy equal to a work of fiction. That blurring of lines forces the question: what does the viewer seek in a war film? Political insight or human drama? Condemnation of brutality or celebration of valour? Armadillo prompts these questions while leaving it to the audience to determine their own answers. Armadillo has already stirred political debate in Denmark over the rules of engagement and raised calls for a military investigation. The film raises discussion on many levels: how recruits are conditioned to become warriors; how the international force conducts itself in Afghanistan; how an insurgency defies technical superiority; and how soldiers grow addicted to the adrenaline of war. For such a small country, Denmark has turned into something of a documentary powerhouse, with works such as Ghosts of Cité Soleil, Burma VJ and now Armadillo. Trend-watchers are bound to compare Armadillo to this year’s Sundance award-winner Restrepo, which focuses on American troops in Afghanistan. But Armadillo moves the consideration of this conflict in a more controversial direction. The ripples of debate that started in Cannes are about to hit North American shores." Quoting Thom Powers from the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival site. The Prisoner or: How I Planned to Kill Tony Blair is a 2006 documentary film by American documentary filmmaker Michael Tucker. The film depicts Yunis Khatayer Abbas, an Iraqi journalist who was detained by US troops in 2003 and later imprisoned at Abu Ghraib prison for nine months. Although innocent, he was accused by American military officials of plotting to assassinate then British prime minister Tony Blair along with his two brothers. Igrushki is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Lina Lužytė. Upstream Battle is a 2008 documentary directed by Ben Kempas. Spend It All is a 1971 short documentary film directed by Les Blank and Skip Gerson. Quantum Hoops is a 2007 documentary film directed by Rick Greenwald, that follows the California Institute of Technology's basketball team—the Caltech Beavers—in their attempts to end a 21-year losing streak during the final week of the 2006 basketball season. The documentary premiered on January 26, 2007 at the 2007 Santa Barbara International Film Festival, where it won a Top 10 Audience Choice Award. It first screened in theatres on November 2, 2007 in Pasadena, California, and featured at the 30th Denver Film Festival on November 8. To Hurt and to Heal is a 1987 documentary film directed by Laura Sky. I'm Rick James is a 2007 documentary film by Perry Santos from Shoreline Entertainment. Nine To Ninety is a 2012 short, family, biographical, documentary film directed by Alicia Dwyer. Yasuni is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Nicolas Entel. A Century in Stone is a 2004 documentary film depicting the rise of Eston's iron and steel industry. It is 118 minutes long project was funded by the first £75,000 fellowship award from NESTA to be awarded in the north-east. Launched in 2004, "A Century in Stone" attracted over four-thousand people to clubs and halls across Teesside before becoming the first local film to be shown at a Teesside multiplex. In its first week, it outsold Hollywood competition to become the Xmas 2004 VHS/DVD bestseller in Teesside. The film toured Australia in 2005, screening in various towns, and beneath the Sydney Harbour Bridge, which had been made in Teesside. Seduced and Abandoned is a 2013 documentary film directed by James Toback. The film details the journey of Toback and actor Alec Baldwin, as they try to sell a film concept at the Cannes Film Festival in 2012. Taking part in several pitch sessions with producers as well as interviews with directors and actors, the duo explore the film production aspect of film financing. The film premiered at the festival a year later on May 20, 2013. Túmin. Solidarity Economy is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Elizondo Moreno and Melissa. Miss Inc. is a 2013 documentary film written by Mauricio Segura and directed by Orlando Arriagada. Versions 2012 is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Oliver Laric. Arrival of a Train at Vincennes Station was an 1896 French silent actuality film directed by Georges Méliès. It was released by Méliès's company Star Film and is numbered 7 in its catalogues. The story of the relationship between Sigmund Freud and his American nephew, Edward Bernays. Bernays invented the public relations profession in the 1920s and was the first person to take Freud's ideas to manipulate the masses. He showed American corporations how they could make people want things they didn't need by systematically linking mass-produced goods to their unconscious desires. Bernays was one of the main architects of the modern techniques of mass-consumer persuasion, using every trick in the book, from celebrity endorsement and outrageous PR stunts, to eroticising the motorcar. His most notorious coup was breaking the taboo on women smoking by persuading them that cigarettes were a symbol of independence and freedom. But Bernays was convinced that this was more than just a way of selling consumer goods. It was a new political idea of how to control the masses. By satisfying the inner irrational desires that his uncle had identified, people could be made happy and thus docile. It was the start of the all-consuming self which has come to dominate today's world. Tulip Time: The Rise and Fall of the Trio Lescano is a documentary film about the Italian close harmony group Trio Lescano, their rise, downfall, and eventual arrest by Italian fascists. After a farewell radio broadcast on September 1, 1945, the trio moved to South America to resume their career. The film had its U.S. premiere at the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival on July 30, 2008. The film was produced by the Netherlands film production company Memphis Film. Tales From Leper Valley is a 2002 German film directed by Andrei Schwartz. Petit Pierre is a 1980 documentary, short film directed by Emmanuel Clot. L'Afrique en morceaux is a 2000 documentary film directed by Jihan El-Tahri. The Klezmatics: On Holy Ground is a documentary film directed by Erik Anjou. Fight Like Soldiers Die Like Children is a 2012 documentary film directed by Patrick Reed. The Universal Language is a 2011 short documentary film on the Esperanto language and the movement around it. Using much archive footage from the language's early days the time as well as interviews with Esperantists today, the film constructs a linear narrative of Esperanto's history and goals. The film, directed by Sam Green won the 2012 Ashland Independent Film Festival award for Juried Best Short Documentary. "Águas de Março" enfoca a relação de Tom Jobim com a ecologia, narrado por Chico Buarque. Os sentimentos que envolviam esta forte relação de Tom com a fauna e aflora brasileiras, especialmente a Mata Atlântica, estão neste DVD, ao som de números musicais históricos, gravados em diferentes fases da vida do Maestro Soberano. Mas é com Elis Regina que Tom Jobim divide a interpretação daquela que se tornaria uma de suas obras-primas, "Águas de Março". Registrado em 1974 em Los Angeles, durante as gravações do LP "Elis e Tom", apresenta os dois cantando de forma descontraída e animada. A música, definida por Chico, como "o samba mais bonito do mundo", levaria a paixão de tom pela natureza a uma popularidade nunca antes alcançada. Birdmen Of Kilimanjaro is a 1981 documentary film written and directed by Richard Dennison. Ideal family is a 2013 documentary film directed Erion Kovaci. Mission Of Mermaids is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Susan Cohn Rockefeller. Strike Zion! is a 1967 war documentary film directed by Bill Cunningham. 10 Days Out: Blues from the Backroads is a CD/DVD and is the fifth release from American blues band Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band. The documentary film was directed by Noble Jones and produced by Phillipa Davis. It was Executive Produced by Kelly Norris Sarno, Devin Sarno, Ken Shepherd and Kristin Forbes. The CD was produced by Jerry Harrison. Tour still photography, CD, DVD and LP photos by Amanda Gresham. [www.amandagresham.com] 10 Days Out was nominated for two Grammys, Grammy Award for Best Long Form Music Video and Grammy Award For Best Traditional Blues Album at the 50th Grammy Awards and won the 2008 Blues Music Award for Best DVD and the 2008 Keeping the Blues Alive Award under the category of Film, Television or Video. The documentary portion of the album featured a 10-day venture of Shepherd meeting blues pioneers with the intent of spotlighting veterans of the music genre. Artists include the Music Maker Relief Foundation's Etta Baker, Cootie Stark, and Neal Pattman, as well as B.B. King, Henry Townsend, Hubert Sumlin, Lazy Lester, Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown, David "Honeyboy" Edwards, Pinetop Perkins, and several others. High Plains Doctor: Healing on the Tibetan Plateau is a 2012 documentary film by Michael Dayan, who produced, directed, and shot the film. Premiering on the CBC in Canada, it focuses on documenting the life journey of Isaac Sobol, who recounts his professional experiences and personal insights as Chief Medical Officer of Nunavut and professor of Aboriginal People's Health. High Plains Doctor was shot in the village of Yushu, which was leveled in an earthquake shortly after filming. The film is the only known moving picture documentation of the town before its destruction, providing a rare document into a way of life that is disappearing. The film documents Sobol’s tenth and final medical mission to Yushu. Havanna mi amor is a 2000 documentary film directed by Uli Gaulke. Mother of Rock: The Life and Times of Lillian Roxon is 2010 music documentary film written and directed by Paul Clarke. Wooden People is a 2012 documentary short film written and directed by Victor Asliuk. The Old, The Young & The Sea is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mario Hainzl and Andreas Jaritz. Next: A Primer on Urban Painting is a 2005 documentary film from Canadian filmmaker Pablo Aravena, exploring graffiti around the world. Sequences were shot in the USA, Canada, France, Holland, Germany, England, Spain, Japan and Brazil. Winter Garden is a documentary film directed by Lee Ji-hyeon. The Rule is a documentary historical fiction film directed by Marylou Tibaldo-Bongiorno. Finding Fela is a 2014 documentary film directed by Alex Gibney, portraying and analysing the life of pioneering musician Fela Kuti. The film had its world premiere at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. The Empowerment Project: Ordinary Women Doing Extraordinary Things is a documentary film directed by Sarah Moshman. ART COPY is a powerful new film about advertising and inspiration. Directed by Doug Pray (SURFWISE, SCRATCH, HYPE!), it reveals the work and wisdom of some of the most influential advertising creatives of our time -- people who've profoundly impacted our culture, yet are virtually unknown outside their industry. Exploding forth from advertising's "creative revolution" of the 1960s, these artists and writers all brought a surprisingly rebellious spirit to their work in a business more often associated with mediocrity or manipulation: George Lois, Mary Wells, Dan Wieden, Lee Clow, Hal Riney and others featured in ART COPY were responsible for "Just Do It," "I Love NY," "Where's the Beef?," "Got Milk," "Think Different," and brilliant campaigns for everything from cars to presidents. They managed to grab the attention of millions and truly move them. Visually interwoven with their stories, TV satellites are launched, billboards are erected, and the social and cultural impact of their ads are brought to light in this dynamic exploration of art, commerce, and human emotion. In this revealing follow-up to the 2001 HBO presentation Naked States: America Undercover, the fearless cameras of "America Undercover" follow flesh photographer Spencer Tunick as he attempts to achieve his ambitious goal of photographing naked people on all seven continents. By photographing nude people both individually and in large groups across the globe, the controversial Tunick explores the role that nudity plays in various cultures and encourages discussion in the ongoing debate about nudity in legitimate art. With just one year to achieve his ambitious goal and nine countries to visit, Tunick offers a compelling look at a variety of cultures and the key role that the human form has played in art throughout the ages Sábado de mierda is a 1988 Mexican film by Gregorio Rocha and his then-partner Sarah Minter, shot between 1985-1987. The film is one of four independent films of the 1985-1991 period focusing on the lives of punk gangs in the Ciudad Nezahualcóyotl suburb of Mexico City. The specific gang was a group known as Mierdas Punks, who were also featured in the documentaries Nadie es inocente, and La neta no hay futuro by Andrea Gentile. The film is classified as a semi-documentary. Prague in October is a 1945 documentary film Frantisek Sádek. Regret is a 2013 documentary film written by Christopher Richardson and Des Ryan and directed by Christopher Richardson. Vorga - A Path of Two Banks is a 2006 documentary film directed by Zdeněk N. Bričkovský and co-written with Taťána Černá. Foundry is a 2014 documentary biography short film written and directed by Oliver Cheetham. Animals in Love is a 2007 documentary film directed by Laurent Charbonnier. Le Congo, quel cinéma! is a 2005 documentary film directed by Guy Bomanyama-Zandu. Gilberto Gil: Kaya N'Gan Daya 2002 is a documentary film directed by Lula Buarque de Hollanda. Sirius is a 2013 documentary directed by Amardeep Kaleka, based upon ufologist Steven M. Greer's book Hidden Truth, Forbidden Knowledge. Partially funded by a successful Kickstarter campaign, the movie is narrated by Thomas Jane and follows Greer's efforts to reveal what he claims is information about top secret energy projects and propulsion techniques. Sirius features interviews from former officials from the government and military as well as images and a DNA analysis of the six-inch human skeleton known as Ata that was found in the Atacama desert in northern Chile in 2003. The film premiered on April 22, 2013 in Los Angeles, California as well as online. Painful Painting is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Catherine Van Campen. "Throughout their lives, Yoav and Lior have looked in the mirror only to see a stranger staring back at them. Both born female, they have always known their true identities to be male. In this very personal and thought-provoking, real-life story, one couple struggles to become what they were meant to be in a world that doesn’t understand them. Yoav, who has been living as a man for several years, is now fighting to be recognized as one by law. Lior has just begun the transition process and with each physical step feels more and more at peace: Having his long hair cut short, hearing his voice lowering and seeing the stubble growing on his face is like coming home. Yet explaining this to his mother borders on the impossible. She raised a daughter for 22 years and doesn’t know what to do with a son. Lior’s friends are more confused than unsupportive, but, as he tells them, “It is not a matter of happiness but a matter of life and death.” Together, Yoav and Lior face each obstacle with humor, love and their absolute certainty of who they truly are—inside and out. Coming out as trans is sometimes the easy part. In The Perfect Man, family and friends accept Liam, but the medical profession has its doubts. We follow Liam as he begins testosterone and readies for surgery, only to have both taken away after he suffers a psychotic break." Quoting KRISTINE KOLTON from the 2008 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site Enemy Lines is a 2014 documentary film featuring the American deathcore band Emmure. The title is a play off of the title to the band's 6th album, Eternal Enemies, also slated to be released April 15, 2014. Shadows and Illuminations is a 2010 documentary film that is part of the "Afflictions: Culture and Mental Illness in Indonesia" ethnographic film series based on material drawn from 12 years of person-centered research by anthropologist Robert Lemelson. The film series was directed by Robert Lemelson and produced by Robert Lemelson and Alessandra Pasquino. Glass, Concrete, and Stone is a 2007 film directed by Doug Nicholas. What happens if you fall sick and are one of 47 million people in America without health insurance? Critical Condition by Roger Weisberg (Waging a Living, POV 2006) puts a human face on the nation's growing health care crisis by capturing the harrowing struggles of four critically ill Americans who discover that being uninsured can cost them their jobs, health, home, savings, even their lives. Filmed in vérité style, Critical Condition offers a moving and invaluable expose at a time when the nation is debating how to extend health insurance to all Americans. A production of Public Policy Productions in association with Thirteen/WNET New York and American Documentary | POV His name is synonymous with great literature. Author of timeless masterpieces like "Romeo and Juliet," "Othello," and "Hamlet," William Shakespeare is widely considered to be the greatest writer who ever lived--or was he? FRONTLINE producer Michael Rubbo explores anew the centuries-old controversy over whether the literary masterpieces long attributed to Shakespeare were actually written by his contemporary, Christopher Marlowe. Born in the same year as Shakespeare, Marlowe was at the height of his literary career in 1593 when he was supposedly killed in an argument over a tavern bill. Marlowe's death, however, has been clouded in mystery, with some "Marlovians" insisting the playwright lived to write another day--but under the name of Shakespeare. FRONTLINE takes viewers inside this 16th century detective story in an attempt to unravel what some are calling the "biggest cover-up in literary history." Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy is a 2010 American four-hour direct-to-disc documentary film that chronicles the entire Nightmare on Elm Street franchise and the rise of New Line Cinema. Written by Thommy Hutson, produced by Daniel Farrands and Thommy Hutson, and co-directed by Daniel Farrands and Andrew Kasch. Heather Langenkamp, who portrayed Nancy Thompson in three of the Nightmare films, served as the project's executive producer and narrator. Hoe ik mijn moeder vermoordde is a 1996 documentary tv movie written by Theodor Holman and directed by Theo van Gogh. The First Farewell to Paradise is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Arūnas Matelis. Velo Mystery is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Jörn Staeger. Broken Song is a 2013 musical documentary film directed by Claire Dix. Without the King is a 2007 documentary film by Michael Skolnik, an American filmmaker. It follows problems of Swaziland, a landlocked country in southern Africa. The film features Mswati III, the king of Swaziland, and his heiress and self claimed rapper Princess Sikhanyiso. It shows the angry populace and the country's problems such as a high HIV prevalence, comparing it with the daily life of Mswati III, Africa's last absolute monarch. Princess Sikhanyiso is critical of the film. The Civil War is a documentary film created by Ken Burns about the American Civil War. It was first broadcast on PBS on five consecutive nights from September 23 to 27, 1990. Approximately 40 million viewers watched it during its initial broadcast, making it the most-watched program ever to air on PBS. It was subsequently awarded more than 40 major television and film honors. The film was remastered on the twelfth anniversary of its release, and a book following the movie has also been released. The nation was captivated by the film, which drew praise from President George H. W. Bush. The Violin Knight is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Pavel Marek. Tisch No. 6 is a 1998 film directed by Carola-Noelle Hauck. Sibi, l’âme du violon is a 2010 documentary film. Celebrity Habla 2 is a 2010 film documentary directed by Alberto Ferreras. Hollywood Rocks the Movies: The 1970s is a TV documentary directed by Patty Ivins Specht. "From 1967 to 1975, fueled by curiosity and naïveté, Swedish journalists traversed the Atlantic Ocean to film the black power movement in America. The Black Power Mixtape 1967–1975 mobilizes a treasure trove of 16mm material, which languished in a basement for 30 years, into an irresistible mosaic of images, music, and narration to chronicle the movement’s evolution. Mesmerizing footage of Stokely Carmichael, Bobby Seale, Huey P. Newton, Angela Davis, and Eldridge Cleaver, as well as Black Panther activities, are peppered with B-roll footage of black America. These scenes take on a fresh, global angle through the outsider perspective of the Swedish lens. Meanwhile, penetrating commentaries from artists and activists influenced by the struggle—like Harry Belafonte, Sonia Sanchez, Talib Kweli, Erykah Badu, and Professor Robin D. G. Kelley—riff on the range of radical ideas and strategies for liberation. Their insights and the vibrancy of the unearthed footage render the black power movement startlingly immediate and profoundly relevant." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Seward Harbor Flipbook Vol. 1 is a 2013 short documentary family film written and directed by Kristopher Peck. Forever Not Alone is a 2013 documentary, drama, romance film directed by Monja Art and Caroline Bobek. This large format film explores the last great wilderness on earth. It takes you to the coldest, driest, windiest continent, Antarctica. The film explores life in Antarctica, both for the animals that live there and the scientists that work there. The New Ten Commandments is a feature-length documentary film which premiered at the Edinburgh International Film Festival in 2008. The film was produced by Nick Higgins from Lansdowne Productions and Noémie Mendelle from the Scottish Documentary Institute and has 10 film-chapter directors for each of the 10 chapters of the film - Kenny Glenaan, Douglas Gordon, Nick Higgins, Irvine Welsh, Mark Cousins, Sana Bilgrami, Alice Nelson, Tilda Swinton, Doug Aubrey, David Graham Scott and Anna Jones. The film's unifying theme is human rights in Scotland with each chapter illustrating one of the "New Ten Commandments" - 10 articles chosen from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. On Feb. 28th, 2009 near the tiny village of Santa Rosa, the OCP pipeline breaks in Ecuadorian Amazon Rainforest. An estimated 14,000 barrels of crude spill into the Napo and Coca Rivers, both of which are tributaries of the Amazon River.The struggle for survival and access to potable water is presented within the framework of new environmental laws passed in Ecuador, part of a revolutionary concept that created the world's first legal precedent for a Bill of Rights of Mother Nature. The film explores the specific case of the Santa Rosa spill, the legacy of contamination left by the Petroleum Industry, and profiles the people attempting to preserve one of the planet's most important biodiversity hotspots.The film also looks at another controversial issue along Ecuador's northern border; the untold story of refugees displaced by the Colombian conflict, and the relationship between contamination and coca eradication programs that have been implemented near the border as part of Plan Colombia. Looking for Richard is a 1996 documentary film directed by Al Pacino in his directoral debut. It is both a performance of selected scenes of William Shakespeare's Richard III and a broader examination of Shakespeare's continuing role and relevance in popular culture. The film was featured at the Sundance Film Festival in January 1996 and it was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1996 Cannes Film Festival. Jeg er heks is a 2012 short, documentary film written and directed by Siri Emilie Meldgård Frederiksen, Søren Pedersen. American Passages is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Ruth Beckermann. Planeta Siqueiros is a 1995 short documentary film written by Itala Schmeltz and directed by José Ramón Mikelajáuregui. The Somme is a 1927 British documentary film directed by M.A. Wetherell. It re-examined the 1916 Battle of the Somme during the First World War. O Friend, This Waiting! is a 2012 Indian, bilingual documentary film in Telugu and English written and directed by Sandhya Kumar, based on the poetry of 17th century Telugu composer Kshetrayya. For its wholly unconventional investigation of the Devadasi tradition in Andhra, combining an appreciation of this delicate and sensuous art form with a genuine sociological exploration, the non feature film has received the National Film Award for Best Arts/Cultural Film at the 61st National Film Awards. The film has received special mention at the Erasing Borders Festival of Classical Dance, Indo-American Arts Council, New York, 2013. Wo Ai Ni Mommy is a 2010 American television documentary film directed by Stephanie Wang-Breal, and distributed by P.O.V.. The documentary follows the story of a then 8-year-old Chinese girl, Fang Sui Yong, who was adopted by a Jewish Long Island family. The film had its world premiere at the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival in 2010. Given a new name of "Faith" by her new adopter mother, Donna Sadowsky, the film documents Faith's life just before her adoption in China, and follows her journey to America for a period of 18 months. Faith lived with her new adopted father, Jeff, as well as the Sadowsky's two biological sons and another Chinese adoptee. "Wo Ai Ni Mommy" inspired Stephanie Wang-Breal's second feature documentary, "Tough Love," a story about two families affected by the United States child welfare system. "Tough Love" is currently showing in festivals worldwide. Life,Love & Celluloid - A Journey And A Film Retrospective is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Juliane Lorenz. Invisible City is a 2009 documentary film by Hubert Davis about young Black Canadian men at risk in Toronto's Regent Park district. Davis spent three years filming two boys in their final years of high school. The primary subjects of the film are "Kendell" and "Mikey," students at Nelson Mandela Park Public School. Invisible City follows their struggles with academic and behavioral issues, and their sense of futility. Invisible City is produced by Industry Pictures/Shine Films in co-production with the National Film Board of Canada. Experience India is a documentary film. We Are the Lambeth Boys is a 1958 documentary film directed by Karel Reisz. A Trial in Prague is a critically acclaimed documentary film about a 1952 show trial in Communist Czechoslovakia - color - 83min. The Secret History of Hacking is a 2001 documentary film that focuses on phreaking, computer hacking and social engineering occurring from the 1970s through to the 1990s. Archive footage concerning the subject matter and graphical imagery specifically created for the film are voiced over with narrative audio commentary, intermixed with commentary from people who in one way or another have been closely involved in these matters. The film starts by reviewing the concept and the early days of phreaking, featuring anecdotes of phreaking experiences recounted by John Draper and Denny Teresi. By way of commentary from Steve Wozniak, the film progresses from phreaking to computer hobbyist hacking on to computer security hacking, noting differences between the latter 2 forms of hacking in the process. The featured computer security hacking and social engineering stories and anecdotes predominately concern experiences involving Kevin Mitnick. The film also deals with how society's fear of hacking has increased over time due to media attention of hacking combined with society's further increase in adoption of and subsequent reliance on computing and communication networks. Do You Sleep in the Nude? is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Marshall Fine. Well-Paid Stroll 2007 is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Olga Špátová. Documentarist is a 2003 documentary film written by Valeri Gasparyan, Harutyun Khachatryan and Mikayel Stamboltsyan and directed by Harutyun Khachatryan. Andrew and Jeremy Get Married is a 2004 British documentary film written and directed by Don Boyd for the BBC. It tells the story of two Englishmen, Andrew Thomas and Jeremy Trafford, as they plan for their commitment ceremony. Originally commissioned for the BBC Storyville series, the film premiered at the 2004 Toronto International Film Festival. Finding Hillywood is a 2013 documentary film written by Christina Ruddy and directed by Christopher Towey and Leah Warshawski. Super Fish - An Endless Adventure is a documentary film directed by Song Woong-dal, Lee ji-woon and Lee Ki-yeon. Lou Reed: Rock & Roll Heart is a 1998 documentary film directed by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders. The Great Fallacy is a 2013 historical documentary film directed by Paco Vazquez. Rock is a 1988 film directed by Alexej Utschitelj. The Story of Uncle Willy from Golzow is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Barbara Junge and Winfried Junge. Olympia 52 is a 1952 French documentary film about the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland. Olympia 52 was produced by Peuple et Culture, a nonprofit organization, and it was the first feature-length work directed by the French filmmaker Chris Marker, who also co-wrote the narrative and served as one of the production’s four cinematographers. Whore II is a docudrama about prostitution. Despite its title, the film is unconnected with Ken Russell's Whore, which was based on a stage play about the politics of exploitation. Whore II was written and directed by Amos Kollek. Tobacco Girl is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Biljana Garvanlieva. The Woman with the Five Elephants is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Vadim Jendreyko. "Although witness to unspeakable horrors, eighty-five-year-old Svetlana Geier has dedicated her life to language. Considered the greatest translator of Russian literature into German, Svetlana has just concluded her magnum opus, completing new translations of Dostoyevsky’s five great novels—known as the five elephants. As a precocious teenager living in Ukraine with an unusual facility for languages, Svetlana was brought to the attention of her country's Nazi occupiers during World War II, and found uneasy refuge translating for them. She fled in 1943 and has never since returned … until now. The film interweaves the story of Svetlana’s early life with her literary work, and follows her on her first trip back to her homeland after nearly six decades away, all the while revealing how a love of language outshines all else." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Silverdocs site. Ballroom Dancing is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Lívia Gyarmathy. Greatest Christmas TV Ads is a 2010 documentary film directed by Sohail Shah. Mandu is a 1957 documentary film directed by Neil Gokhale. Of Two Minds is a documentary biography drama film directed by Douglas Blush and Lisa J. Klein. Christo in Paris is a 1990 documentary directed by Deborah Dickson, Susan Frömke, Albert Maysles and David Maysles. Bears and Man is a 1978 Canadian educational film by Bill Schmalz. It was produced by the National Film Board of Canada and Parks Canada. The film documents human-bear interactions in Canada's National Parks. It was narrated by Chief Dan George and Patricia Best, and was co-written and edited by Adbusters founder Kalle Lasn. The James Bond Story is a 1999 documentary TV film directed by Chris Hunt. "Elma, Roosa, Terttu and Kaisu were among the hundreds of Finnish girls who left Lapland with the retreating German troops and set out on a journey towards Germany in the fall of 1944. What was their unusual journey like? How were the ”German soldiers’ sweethearts” received when they returned home? It is only now that the women are able to speak about their forbidden love, their journey and the bitter homecoming that followed. Remembering and reconciling can be difficult. These women and the son of a German soldier struggle with both themselves and others to find the truth about their pasts and meanwhile they are forced to ask themselves if denying it will rob them of their entire lives." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Locarno International Film Festival site. On His Own Two Feet is a 2012 documentary, short and biographical film directed by Natasha Shaginian-Needham and Vasiliy Arkanov. Old Town Orange is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Youth CineMedia. Sound Of Torture is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Keren Shayo. A wealthy wife and a failing businessman on a quest for answers, a journey in different ways, to a path to higher consciousness. Their hunger for understanding and spiritual being leads them to a phenomenon that has existed since the beginning of man. It is self evident that all men are created equal, yet some perform extraordinary achievements and others live a life of emptiness never reaching their full potential. There is a force that everyone is entitled to, that can bring the fulfillment his or her lives desire. That evolutionary force is Kundalini. Beyond science, beyond religion; Kundalini is the SOURCE of the FORCE. This untapped powerful resource available for centuries within every human body is still unexplained, mysterious and kept secret till today. Life's A Hide Out is a 2014 short, road movie, documentary film written and directed by Jan Willem van Dam. Outtakes From The Life Of A Happy Man is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jonas Mekas. Tug of Love is an Australian TV movie. The Battle of the Bozos is a 2009 documentary film directed by Bradley Glenn. The Bands is a 1993 film directed by Egon Humer. The Bronzer is a 2012 documentary, short, biographical film directed by Peyton Wilson. Tumor, It's in the System is a documentary directed by Cindy Pruitt. Louisiana Story is a 78-minute black-and-white American film. Although the events and characters depicted are fictional, it is often misidentified as a documentary film, when in fact, it is a docufiction. The script was written by Frances H. Flaherty and Robert J. Flaherty, directed by Robert J. Flaherty, and was commissioned by the Standard Oil Company. I Believe in Miracles is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Irish Braschi. Salma is a 2013 drama, biographical, and family documentary film written by Oliver Huddleston and directed by Kim Longinotto. Harland Williams: What a Treat is a 2005 documentary film written by Harland Williams and directed by Michael A. Bloom. Ghost Ox is a 2012 short animated documentary film written and directed by Rogerio Nunes and co-directed by José Silveira. Heart-Quake is a 2010 drama documentary film directed by Mark Olexa. Into Noise is a 2013 short documentary biographical film written and directed by Janna Kyllästinen. Ditëlindja is a 2011 documentary film directed by Violana Murataj. Almost Myself is a 2006 documentary film directed by Tom Murray. The 81st Blow is a 1974 Israeli documentary film directed by Haim Gouri. The film covers the oppression of Jews under the Nazis and features rare historical footage of concentration camps. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Documentary Feature. The title is derived from a comment by a witness at Adolf Eichmann's trial. According to his testimony, he was whipped 80 times by the Nazis, but was not believed by Israelis after the war; this final doubt of his own people was the "81st blow". The 81st Blow is the first film in the Israeli Holocaust Trilogy by Bergman, Ehrlich and Gouri. It was followed by The Last Sea and Flames in the Ashes. Mile... Mile & a Half is a documentary film directed by Jason M. Fitzpatrick and Ric Serena. Cave of Forgotten Dreams is a 2010 3D documentary film by Werner Herzog about the Chauvet Cave in southern France that contains the oldest human-painted images yet discovered. Some of them were crafted as much as 32,000 years ago. The film premiered at the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival and consists of images from inside the cave as well as of interviews with various scientists and historians. The film also includes footage of the nearby Pont d'Arc natural bridge. Hold on Tight is a 2011 short, family, romance and documentary film written and directed by Anna Rodgers. My Long Distance Friend is a 2011 documentary film written by Carina Molier and Maria Mok and directed by Carina Molier. Falcão – Meninos do Tráfico is a Brazilian documentary produced by rapper MV Bill, his agent Celso Athayde and the Central Única das Favelas audiovisual center. The documentary presents the life of young favela dwellers who work with drug trafficking. The independent production gained special attention after it was transmitted by Rede Globo, the largest television network in the country, in its popular weekly TV show Fantástico. The documentary was recorded between 1998 and 2006, when the producers visited various poor communities in Brazil, recording a total of 90 hours of video. The name of the documentary comes from the term "falcão" used in the slums to refer to the lookouts who keep watch over the community and inform when the police or a rival group approaches. During the recordings the two producers had to face the hostile environment where the boys lived. 'Linkin Park: Conspiracy Theory' goes behind the scenes and reveals the truth about the biggest Nu Metal band around, where they came from, how they were discovered and what has made them so successful. The Enemy Strikes! is a short propaganda film made in 1945 about the Battle of the Bulge. Its main emphasis is that, despite recent Allied victories, the Axis could still launch a counter-attack and that this was no time to get complacent. Opening with shots of the liberation of Paris, the narrator informs the audience that this was America's honeymoon; that at the time people were concerned that the war was about to end and the difficulties of transforming back to civilian life. Particularly noted was the concern that the US had built too many tanks and artillery, and they would be sitting around, useless. All this changes in December. The Nazis launch a massive counter-offensive in Luxembourg and Belgium, driving the Allied armies back. The Malmedy massacre and the killing of Belgian civilians is given much attention. Finally, the Americans are able to launch an air strike against the Germans and repulse the attack, but the Nazis are still fighting and trying to kill Americans. The message of complacency is transferred to other theatres, such as the Russian, Pacific and later invasion of Germany, reminding the audience that despite recent victories, the Axis could still strike. Let Us Begin is a 2013 Documentary, Short, Biography, Drama, Family film directed by Brandon Bray, W. Brandon Bray. The Jewess And The Captain is a 1994 documentary, directed by Ulf von Mechow about a Holocaust love affair between Ilse Stein, an eighteen-year-old Jewish girl, and Willi Schultz, the Nazi captain in charge of the Minsk ghetto. After the Holocaust, Ilse Stein became a minor celebrity and the subject of two romance novels. The film conducts interviews with Ilse just before her death, reveals shocking archival photographs of her and Schultz, and raids the KGB's secret documents to piece together the facts of their romance and uncover a real-life love story with a bizarre twist. Invisible War, Depleted Uranium and the Politics of Radiation is a 2000 documentary film directed by Martin Meissonnier. Naked in the 21st Century is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Tony T.L Young. Sons of Cuba is a 2009 documentary film set in the Havana Boxing Academy, a school at the heart of Cuba's Olympic success in the ring. It follows the stories of three young hopefuls through eight months of training and schooling as they prepare for Cuba's National Boxing Championship for Under-12's. Sons of Cuba was directed by Andrew Lang and is distributed by Cinetic Rights Management for the US and Canada and Ro*co Films for the rest of the world. Acclaimed natural health and nutrition expert Gary Null Ph.D. examines the factors in our diet lifestyle and environment that adversely affect our immune system and what actions we can take in order to reclaim our health and vitality. Much of what society accepts as inevitable markers of aging are actually manifestations of a preventable disease process. In Supercharge Your Immune System Gary leads the viewer on a detailed program aimed to cleanse detoxify and rebuild our natural defenses against the causes of chronic and debilitating illnesses. This program also provides remarkable computer-generated images that illustrate and explain the body's complex and dynamic immune function. What Now? Remind Me is a 2013 Portuguese documentary film directed by Joaquim Pinto. It has been selected as the Portuguese entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards. The film is a first-person documentary about Pinto's life with HIV, documenting both his family life with his husband Nuno Leonel and his experiences in clinical trials for various experimental antiretroviral drugs. From Toledo to Jerusalem is a 1989 documentary film written by Yehoram Gaon and directed by Shmuel Imberman. The Silent Scream is a 1984 anti-abortion educational film directed by Jack Duane Dabner and narrated by Bernard Nathanson, an obstetrician, NARAL Pro-Choice America founder, and abortion provider turned pro-life activist, and produced in partnership with the National Right to Life Committee. The film depicts the abortion process via ultrasound and shows an abortion taking place in the uterus. During the abortion process, the fetus is described as appearing to make outcries of pain and discomfort. The video has been a popular tool used by the pro-life campaign in arguing against abortion, although it has been criticized as misleading by members of the medical community. Stephen Fry in America is a six-part BBC television series in which Stephen Fry travels across the United States, a country in which he was almost born. Just before Fry was born, his father was offered a job at Princeton University, in New Jersey, but chose to turn it down in favour of Hampstead. In the six-part series he travels, mostly in a London cab, through all 50 of the U.S. states. The episodes are regularly repeated in the UK on Dave, lasting an hour and twenty minutes due to advertising breaks. It was aired in the United States on HDNet. In Australia, the program screened on ABC1 each Sunday at 7:30pm from 9 August 2009. The ratings were so successful that the broadcaster decided to finally air Fry's other BBC programme, QI the next month. The series was filmed in two segments, the first in October-November 2007, and the second in February-April 2008. Special guests featured on the show include Sting, Jimmy Wales, Morgan Freeman, Buddy Guy, and Ted Turner. World Circus is a documentary, family and historical film directed by Angela Snow. From the award-winning director of Comic Book Confidential and Grass comes TALES OF THE RAT FINK, Ron Mann's wildly inventive bio about Renaissance man Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, who engineered a shift in mid-20th century culture with his customized cars, "monster" T-shirts and America's alternative rodent, Rat Fink.Ed Roth was a giant as an artist as well as a behemoth as a man. He and his fellow Kar Kustomizers worked in the only uniquely American art medium, the automobile. He never thought of his creations simply as shells of molded sheet metal or fiberglass. He always wanted you to see the engine, too, because the Only American Art Form is not an object. It's a kineticism. Its materials are speed, momentum, excitement, and freedom, which is to say, the American Zeitgeist, except that we don't say Zeitgeist. We say, the spirit of the American age. William Shatner's Gonzo Ballet is a feature-length documentary film about a ballet by Margo Sappington called "Common People", which was set to the music of William Shatner and Ben Folds from their album Has Been. Common People was one of the Has Been tracks, and was a cover of a Pulp song from their 1995 Different Class album. The film explores the genesis of this unique artistic collaboration by fusing the music, poetry, and dance of "Common People" with interviews by William Shatner, Ben Folds, Margo Sappington, and Henry Rollins. Shatner plays a prominent role in the film and also acted as Executive Producer. The film was made by Special Entertainment and Big Screen Entertainment Group in association with Shatner's Melis Productions. The documentary had a very well received World Premiere at the Nashville Film Festival in April 2009, where it won the President's Impact Award. William Shatner attended and, to the delight of the audience, provided additional insights into his recording of "Has Been" and the ballet. Ben Folds and Margo Sappington were also in attendance. The Golden Temple is a 2012 documentary film written by Enrico Masi and Stefano Migliore and directed by Enrico Masi. The Day The World Turned Dayglo is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Tim Cutler. The Gifts is a 1970 American short documentary film about water pollution in the United States, produced by Robert McBride for the Environmental Protection Administration. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. About the Advent of the Printing Press is one of the films pertaining to the series "Biographies of Objects" directed by Peter and Zsóka Nestler. Woodstock Revisited is a film by David McDonald that tells the story of how the countercultural movement associated most closely with The Woodstock Festival came into being. Ironically enough, while The Woodstock Festival did not end up happening in the town for which it was named, Woodstock, NY, it would never have transpired had it not been for a series of historical events in Woodstock that led directly to the rise of the American counterculture. Some of these are already well-known, like Bob Dylan moving to the town in 1964, The Band following Dylan to town, or a series of concerts on a field outside of Woodstock in 1966, 1967, and 1968 called The Woodstock Soundouts that featured many of the same artists later to be involved with the larger-scale Woodstock Festival. In the years prior to The Woodstock Festival, musicians such as Jimi Hendrix, The Mothers of Invention, and Van Morrison all walked the town’s streets as residents. Dead Meat Walking: A Zombie Walk Documentary is a 2012 documentary film directed by Omar J. Pineda. Close But No Cigar: Bob Zany is a 2010 documentary biography comedy film directed by Jay Kanzler. Melek Leaves is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Jeanine Meerapfel. The Velvet Underground and Nico: A Symphony of Sound is an American film by Andy Warhol and Paul Morrissey. The film was made at The Factory. It is 67 minutes long and was filmed in 16mm black and white. The film depicts a rehearsal of The Velvet Underground and Nico, and is essentially one long loose improvisation. Near the end of the film, the rehearsal is disrupted by the arrival of the New York police, supposedly in response to a noise complaint. The film was intended to be shown at live Velvet Underground shows during setup and tuning. Watch Horror Films, Keep America Strong! is a 2008 documentary about the popular television series Creature Features televised out of Oakland, California 1971 to 1984. Produced by independent filmmakers Tom Wyrsch and Robert Napton, the film features interviews with Creature Feature hosts Bob Wilkins and John Stanley, classic clips, as well as interviews with other key figures close to the show. The film premiered in May, 2008 at the Grand Lake Theater in Oakland, California. La gran desilusion is a 2013 short documentary and drama film written and directed by Pedro González Kuhn. Machete Maidens Unleashed! is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Mark Hartley. "f there was ever such a thing as exploitation cinema nirvana, it probably came to realization during the 70s and early 80s in the Philippines. Documentarian Mark Hartley, already having documented the lesser respected genre offerings of his native Australia with Not Quite Hollywood, trains his eye to the northto a place where not only labor, but expertise, materials and even government assistance (thanks to dictator Ferdinand Marcos) came cheap and helped craft not only some of the most notorious examples of American cinema at the time (Mad Doctor of Blood Island, for example), but also the most lauded (Coppola's Apocalypse Now is also a product of this system). Along the way, we are treated to wildly entertaining stories from the Wild Wild East of gunfights breaking out in hotel lobbies, large rats carrying off a quarry of kitten, and street curfews forcing casts and crews to party till the wee hours. The best part is, we get to hear these stories firsthand from the likes of Roger Corman, Jack Hill, John Landis, Sid Haig, Pam Grier, Eddie Romero and Joe Dante among many others. If there's a major player from the Filipino exploitation era still alive, chances are that Hartley has interviewed 'em here. As entertaining as any of the films it profiles, Machete Maidens Unleashed! looks back with fondess and incredulity at the insanity that unfolded in south east Asia once upon a time." Quoting Kevin Monahan from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. Splendid but Sad Days is a 2013 documentary film written by Chang-hyun Lee and directed by Hong-Ki Lee. Part of the World That Belongs to You is a 1999 short documentary film directed by Karin Wegsjö. An evocative journey into the passion of fly fishing, Trout Grass playfully tracks the transformation of raw bamboo from vibrant Asian grass to super-conductive fly fishing rod. From the verdant Chinese hills where the bamboo is harvested, to a rustic Montana workshop where a rod is woven into existence, and finally to a resplendent mountain stream, Trout Grass reminds us that fly fishing can connect anglers with much more than the fish they pursue. Street Fight is a 2005 documentary film by Marshall Curry, chronicling Cory Booker's 2002 campaign against Sharpe James for Mayor of Newark, New Jersey. Other credits include Rory Kennedy, Liz Garbus, Mary Manhardt, Marisa Karplus, and Adam Etline. Street Fight screened at the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival and was later aired on the PBS series P.O.V. on July 5, 2005, and CBC Newsworld in Canada on May 7, 2006. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Team Everest: A Himalayan Journey is a 2007 film directed by Andrew Cockrum. Comic Book Pajama Party: Women Who Love Comic Books! is a 2004 superhero action/adventure documentary film directed by Martin King and Mike Yates. American Vagabond is a 2013 Finnish documentary film directed by Susanna Helke. Ah Hu's Retreat is a 2001 short documentary film directed by John Janson-Moore. Misha And So On is a 2013 documentary film directed by Cherry Duyns. A Hard Name is a 2009 documentary film by Alan Zweig that explores the lives of ex-convicts. In the film, Zweig interviews seven ex-convicts about their times in prison and their lives on the outside. The men talk about insights they have gained about their lives, including how childhood abuse led to a life of crime. Film subjects include one man who stabbed fellow inmate Clifford Olson 21 times, before Olson committed his serial killings. Another of the film's subjects was abused as a child while a resident at the Mount Cashel Orphanage in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. A Hard Name ends with archival television footage of him performing, playing the guitar and singing for other young residents of the home. Zweig admitted to be intimidated about doing these interviews: "[...] Intimidated, I guess. Less by their danger and more by a male competitive thing, in a way…they’re going to see through me. They’re going to see that if I went to jail, I’d be an easy mark. I’m not as tough as them. I haven’t survived what they’ve survived and they’re just going to dismiss me as a weak citizen.” Als die Silhouetten laufen lernten: Lotte Reinigers Trickfilmkunst is a 2012 documentary film directed by Rada Bieberstein,Susanne Marschall and Kurt Schneider. Graffiti is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Martiza Carillo, Mia Favela and Destiny Orozco. When Ali Came to Ireland is a 2012 Irish documentary film directed by Ross Whitaker. It tells the story of how Killorglin-born circus strongman and publican, Michael "Butty" Sugrue, put up £300,000 and persuaded Muhammad Ali to make his first visit to Ireland to fight against Alvin Lewis in Croke Park on 19 July 1972. Ali went to Ireland with an entourage on 11 July 1972 to spend time training for the fight. While there, he was interviewed for RTÉ Television by Cathal O'Shannon and was taught the rudiments of hurling by Eddie Keher. Ali won the Lewis fight with a technical knockout in the 11th round, and Sugrue lost a lot of money bankrolling it. The documentary was first broadcast on RTÉ One on 1 January 2013. Ali returned to Ireland twice in later years. He took part in the opening ceremony of the Special Olympics in Dublin in 2003, and he visited the birthplace of his great grandfather, Abe Grady, in Ennis in 2009, where he was made an Honorary Freeman of the town. The Brass Ring is the name of a carousel project in Albany, Oregon where a group of skilled volunteers come together with passion and excitement to build a traditional carousel for their community.Albany's Brass Ring carousel studio is a non-profit, volunteer organization dedicated to building a traditional Victorian carousel in Albany's downtown historical district.  All of the carvers, painters, and the engineers who are restoring the mechanism are all volunteers. There are about 250 total volunteers working on this project.The carousel project began in 2002 and is estimated to take over 10 years to complete.  There will be a menagerie of animals, totaling more than 54 animals, all hand carved and hand painted in the traditional style of Dentzel and Muller.  The animals and carousel decorative pieces are being carved from basswood with hand tools.  The painting is done by the method of stippling. This slow and time-consuming technique results in the effect where not a single brush stroke will be seen on the animal.  Once the animal is painted it must sit for about 6 months to allow the paint to cure before the automotive clear coat is applied.The sponsors select an animal and works with the graphic artist to design there animal.  Together they decide all the adornments and trappings that will go on the animal.  Every animal is unique and has a story to tell.  Between the design, the carving, and the painting it takes about a year and a half to two years to complete each animal.The carousel mechanism is a 1909 Dentzel machine, possibly the last made by Gustave Dentzel.  The National Carousel Association and the William Dentzel family of Santa Barbara, California donated the mechanism to The Brass Ring in Albany, Oregon with the dream of seeing it restored to its glory.  The carousel mechanism was installed in New Jersey in 1909 and operated until 1953 when it was then stored in a barn.  Around 1988, it was moved to Santa Barbara, California to the Dentzel family property and then donated to the National Carousel Association.  When the family discovered Albany was busy carving animals for a new carousel in the Dentzel style, they contacted the NCA and the mechanism was donated to The Brass Ring.The Brass Ring is a unique and inspiring project that will bring out the kid in everyone. Memories of Berlin: The Twilight of Weimar Culture is a documentary film produced and directed by Gary Conklin, and released in 1976. The film tells the cultural story of Berlin during the Weimar Republic through interviews with a number of persons who were involved in literature, film, art, and music during the period. It includes interviews with Christopher Isherwood, Louise Brooks, Lotte Eisner, Elisabeth Bergner, Francis Lederer, Carl Zuckmayer, Gregor Piatigorsky, Claudio Arrau, Rudolf Kolisch, Mischa Spoliansky, Herbert Bayer, Mrs. Walter Gropius, and Arthur Koestler. This film looks at Muse's entire career, and by using rare performance and interview footage of the band, seldom seen photos, news reports, scene shoots, and a range of other features, creates the finest documentary to date on this extraordinary band, the music they make and the lives they lead. Resonance Of Mother’s Melody is a 2013 documentary film written by Dr. Suresh Kr. Nath, Bitul Das and Dip Bhuyan and directed by Dip Bhuyan. Sound-shadows is a 2008 short animation family documentary film written by Julie Engås. Afrikaaps is a South African 2010 documentary film. Suzanne Farrell: Elusive Muse is a 1996 documentary film directed by Anne Belle about the ballerina Suzanne Farrell. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Carol Burnett Show: A Reunion is a 1993 comedy directed by Dave Powers. Hollywood Singing and Dancing: The 1980s, 1990s and 2000s is a documentary musical film written by Brian Cooper,Denise Hamilton, Eric Hornberger, Tasha Lowe-Newsome and Mark McLaughlin. The Last Days is a documentary, directed by James Moll and produced by June Beallor and Kenneth Lipper in 1998. Steven Spielberg was one of the executive producers, in his role as founder of the Shoah Foundation. The film tells the stories of five Hungarian Jews during the Shoah. It focuses on the horrors of life in the Nazi concentration camps, but also stresses the optimism and desire to survive of the survivors. The film won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Shoah survivors Bill Basch, Irene Zisblatt, Rene Firestone, Alice Lok Cahana, Tom Lantos, Dario Gabbai, and Randolph Braham are featured in the film. Political Bodies is a biographical drama documetary film directed by Christopher Englese. Innocent Bystander is a 2014 documentary short film directed by YCM. The Haunting Truth About Haven is a 2012 short documentary / comedy film written and directed by Kevin A. Fraser. Angel Azul is a 2013 documentary drama directed by Marcy Cravat. Trobriand Cricket: An Ingenious Response to Colonialism is an anthropological documentary about the people of the Trobriand Islands and their unique innovations to the game of cricket. In an interview published in the Spring 1978 issue of Film Quarterly, Jean Rouch, arguably the most famous and most respected ethnographic filmmaker, is quoted as saying about Trobriand Cricket: “It's a wonderful film, perhaps one of the greatest anthropological films of recent time.” One of the features of older, classic ethnographies like Argonauts of the Western Pacific that piques a reader's curiosity is how the subjects of these monographs live today. This documentary offers a glimpse of Trobriand life which is not so traditional, a life that has been lived through global history after Malinowski had left. The filmmakers found a convenient subject to show this in a short film. Cricket was introduced to Trobriand by a British missionary, Reverend Gilmour, in the early 20th century, to replace violent tribal warfare with gentlemanly sportsmanship. Mr. Conservative: Goldwater on Goldwater is a political historical documentary film directed by Julie Anderson. Obesity is fast becoming the single greatest killer of Americans, causing some experts to claim that we are on the cusp of an evolutionary disaster.Former Surgeon General Richard Carmona says, "obesity is a terror within; it's destroying our society from within and unless we do something about it, the magnitude of the dilemma will dwarf 9/11 or any other terrorist event that you can point out."Obesity rates in the United States are climbing at an unprecedented rate across all ages and ethnic groups and leading to the first generation of children whose life expectancy is shorter than that of their parents.KILLER AT LARGE uncovers this epidemic, examining the causes and suggesting way to reverse this deadly trend. The Chilean Elvis is a 2014 written and directed by Marcelo Kiwi Beiger. The Impossible Itself is a 2010 documentary film produced and directed by Jacob Adams to cover the 1957 San Francisco Actor's Workshop production of the Samuel Beckett stage play Waiting For Godot that was taken to San Quentin Prison and performed before its inmates, with an examination of an earlier incarnation of Godot as performed by inmates at the Luttringhausen Prison in Germany in 1953. Korona is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Lena Ditte Nissen. Everything That Rises Must Converge is a 2014 documentary/fiction film written and directed by Omer Fast. Stories Of Trust: Calling For Climate Recovery – Trust Iowa is a 2012 documentary film directed by Kelly Matheson and Deia Schlosberg. Ruckus At The Circus is a 2013 Documentary film directed by Roberto Berliner and Pedro Bronz. Trading Women is a 2003 documentary film by anthropologist David A. Feingold, produced by Dean W. Slotar and narrated by Angelina Jolie. It covers human trafficking of girls from hill tribes in Burma, Laos, Thailand and China into the sex industry of Thailand. The film states that the largest group of persons trafficked into the Thai sex industry come from Burma, and that these persons do not normally end up in establishments serving Western customers. Rejecting simplistic and moralistic solutions, the film cites as root causes of the trafficking problem the economic and political situation in Burma, the destruction of the traditional economy in Thai hill tribe regions resulting from development and opium suppression programs, corruption among police and border guards, and the inability of many Thai hill tribe people to obtain proper identification papers and participate in society. 3020 Laguna St. In Exitum is a 2013 documentary/short/drama film directed by Joe Picard and Ashley Rodholm. The Invisible Line is a 2011 documentary film directed by Lisa Diez Gracia. Bente's Voice is a 2012 film written and directed by Marijn Frank. Glena is an American documentary film directed by Emmy-winning filmmaker Allan Luebke. The film tells the story of Glena Avila, a single mother fighting to become a professional mixed martial artist. Enemy Image is a 2005 documentary film by Mark Daniels about the portrayal of warfare in television news. The film focuses initially on the Vietnam War as the first war ever televised "live". During this war the American government allowed reporters onto the battlefield with little supervision or control. The documentary follows the way The Pentagon learned from this experience to control access by journalists to battle areas in subsequent wars, through the Invasion of Grenada to the first Gulf War, where news packages were provided by the military, to the embedded journalism of the Iraq War. The theme of the film is the progressive tightening of control by the US military on the contact journalists have with soldiers and civilians in the war zone, in order that "never again will television raise the moral and political questions that face a people at war." The film was aired on Canadian television in 2005. Mera ur kärlekens språk is a 1970 Swedish sex educational film directed by Torgny Wickman. It is a sequel to the 1969 film Language of Love and had a sequel in 1971, Kärlekens XYZ. In 1973 the three films were edited together into a new film, Det bästa ur Kärlekens språk-filmerna. The film dealt more with alternative sexuality and life styles and the disabled but was equally successful financially as Language of Love. Saving Lieb House is a 2009 short documentary film written by Nora McDevitt and directed by John Halpern and James Venturi. The War on Kids is a 2009 documentary film about the American school system. The film takes a look at public school education in America and concludes that schools are not only failing to educate, but are increasingly authoritarian institutions more akin to prisons that are eroding the foundations of American democracy. Students are robbed of basic freedoms primarily due to irrational fears; they are searched, arbitrarily punished and force-fed dangerous pharmaceutical drugs. The educational mission of the public school system has been reduced from one of learning and preparation for adult citizenship to one of control and containment. Hitting It Hard is a 2002 documentary drama short film. Mission to Lars is a 2012 documentary, adventure and biographical film directed by James Moore and William Spicer. Your Life, Your Money is a TV movie directed by Tom Simon. Age 7 in America is a 1991 documentary film produced by Michael Apted, co-produced by Vicky Bippart, directed by Phil Joanou, and narrated by Meryl Streep. It details the lives of 7-year-old Americans from across the continental United States, of varying social classes and ethnicities. Patterned after the Up series of the United Kingdom, Age 7 in America has been succeeded by the films 14 Up in America, also directed by Joanou and produced by Vicky Bippart, and 21 Up in America, directed by Christopher Dillon Quinn and produced by Vicky Bippart. Gates Without Walls is a 1962 film recognized by Honourable Mention for Best Documentary in the 5th Australian Film Institute Awards. The Island President is a 2011 documentary film about the efforts of then-President of the Maldives Mohamed Nasheed to tackle rising sea levels resulting from climate change. Produced by Actual Films, an Oscar- and Emmy-winning American documentary film company based in San Francisco, and directed by Jon Shenk, the film premiered at the Telluride Film Festival. The film was funded by groups including the Ford Foundation, the American Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Atlantic Philanthropies and the Sundance Institute. At the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival, The Island President won the Cadillac People's Choice Documentary Award. US rights to The Island President were acquired by Samuel Goldwyn Films. The film opened in New York City on March 28, 2012, followed by releases in other US cities, like Los Angeles and San Francisco. Bette Midler: Ol' Red Hair Is Back is a 1977 musical comedy TV documentary directed by Dwight Hemion and written by Jerry Blatt, Tom Eyen, Buz Kohan, Pat McCormick, Bette Midler, Bruce Vilanch and Rod Warren. A Doomed Generation is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Nasredine Ben Maati. Rock Bottom: Gay Men and Meth is a 2006 documentary film directed by Jay Corcoran. L'incertitude des choses is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Yves Montmayeur. Guitarra is a 1973 Argentine film. Haiti: Killing The Dream is a 1992 documentary film directed by Rudi Stern, Babeth, Katharine Kean. Mosori Monika is a 1970 documentary film directed by Chick Strand. Beyond the Game is a 2008 Dutch documentary film about the world of professional video gaming, most notably as related to the game Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne featuring world champion players Chinese Xiaofeng Li, Dutch Manuel Schenkhuizen and Swede Fredrik Johansson prominently. It is directed by award winning Dutch documentary filmmaker Jos de Putter. Filming took place in China, France, The Netherlands, USA and Sweden. Languages spoken in the documentary include Dutch, English, French, Spanish, Swedish, Standard Chinese and Korean. Beyond the Game is the motto of the World Cyber Games, considered the olympics of gaming, which is central to the documentary as the main characters compete to defend or regain the event's championship title at the global finals of the 2007 World Cyber Games in Seattle, Washington. It has premiered at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam in Pathé de Munt, and had the cinema premiere in Pathé Tuschinski, and has now been released in cinemas throughout The Netherlands. Ready Or Not is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Judith Plamondon. Letter Tape is a 2011 documentary, animation, short film directed by Rowena Crowe. Elvis In Concert is a posthumous 1977 TV special starring Elvis Presley. It was Elvis' third and final TV special, following Elvis and Aloha From Hawaii. It was filmed during Presley's final tour in the cities of Omaha, Nebraska, on June 19, 1977, and Rapid City, South Dakota, on June 21, 1977. It was shown on CBS on October 3, 1977, two months after Presley died. It is one of the few videos of Elvis which remain unlikely to ever be released for home viewing and is only available in bootleg form. On June 1, 1977, it was announced that Elvis Presley had signed a deal with CBS for a new television special. It was agreed that CBS would videotape concerts during the summer of 1977. The final special was culled from footage from two performances on June 19, 1977, in Omaha, and June 21, 1977, in Rapid City, although much of the footage from Omaha was considered unusable due to sound and performance problems. This concert has been heavily edited and bootlegs have appeared on auction web sites over the years. The show was shot on NTSC videotape although many film conversions have appeared over the years. The Upsetter or The Upsetter: The Life and Music of Lee Scratch Perry is a documentary film about the Grammy Award-winning Jamaican music icon Lee "Scratch" Perry. The film is narrated by Academy Award winner Benicio Del Toro and directed by American Filmmakers Ethan Higbee and Adam Bhala Lough. The film premiered at the SXSW Film Festival in March 2008 and had its theatrical release in March 2011, going on to screen at more than 80 theatres world wide. Earth 2100 is a television program that was presented by the American Broadcasting Company network on June 2, 2009 and was aired on the History channel in January 2010 and was shown through 2010. Hosted by ABC journalist Bob Woodruff, the two-hour special explored what "a worst-case" future might look like if humans do not take action on current or impending problems that could threaten civilization. The problems addressed in the program include current climate change, overpopulation, and misuse of energy resources. The events parallel the life of a fictitious storyteller, "Lucy", as she describes how the events affect her life. The program included predictions of a dystopian Earth in the years 2015, 2030, 2050, 2085, and 2100 by scientists, historians, social anthropologists, and economists, including Jared Diamond, Thomas Homer-Dixon, Peter Gleick, James Howard Kunstler, Heidi Cullen, Alex Steffen and Joseph Tainter. It ended with a quote from writer Alex Steffen, saying "Kids born today will see us navigate past the first greatest test of humanity, which is: can we actually be smart enough to live on a planet without destroying it?" Tired Eyes is a documentary film, directed by Joe McStravick. The film explores the dream patterns and experiences of people who are blind or partially sighted. The Memories of Angels is a 2008 collage film by Luc Bourdon, created entirely from stock footage from over 120 National Film Board of Canada films, as an homage to the city of Montreal in the 1950s and 1960s. Bourdon incorporates material from films by such well-known directors as Michel Brault, Claude Jutra, Gilles Groulx, Denys Arcand and Arthur Lipsett. The idea for the film originated 15 years earlier, during a conversation between Bourdon and NFB producer Colette Loumèd about making a documentary film entirely from other movies. Poring over the vintage footage, Bourdon chose his hometown of Montreal — also the headquarters of the NFB — to be the central character of the film, since no other actor would appear throughout the film. The film received the award for best Quebec film at the Festival du Nouveau Cinema. It was also chosen as one of the top ten Canadian films of the year by the Toronto International Film Festival. Sleepless in New York is a 2014 documentary film by director and producer Christian Frei about heartbreak and how to overcome it. Red Trousers: The Life of the Hong Kong Stuntmen is a documentary film directed by Robin Shou. Jewels of the Jungle takes audiences on a worldwide journey of scientific exploration, trekking throughout the forests of Australia, Bolivia and Peru, and into laboratories throughout the United States, presenting viewers with a first glimpse of what may become humanity's next generation of wonder drugs.In recent years drug-resistant bacteria have rendered many of society's 'wonder-drugs' impotent. And numerous diseases, including malaria and AIDS remain uncured. For Montana State University Professor Dr. Gary Strobel, the solution lays not in laboratories but in nature. Jewels of the Jungle follows Dr. Strobel as he travels throughout the world's most remote and beautiful forests in search of new natural medicinal compounds, relying not only on Western science but also on the traditional knowledge of aboriginal peoples.And while humanity has relied on natural medicines for centuries, Strobel has found a new, revolutionary source of drugs: microscopic life forms that live inside of plants. Called endophytes, these organisms often produce powerful chemical compounds that protect their host plants from infections and diseases. It's now become apparent that these compounds can play the same role in people. It's also apparent that endophytes may lead to a pharmaceutical revolution, allowing for the creation of an array of more powerful, cheaper drugs that fight cancer, malaria and numerous other infections and diseases. Chuck Jones: Memories of Childhood is a 2009 documentary short animated film directed by Peggy Stern. The Fortune in the Throat is a 2012 short film written and directed by Christina Muller. Planet Water is a 1978 documentary, short film directed by Derek Williams. Blessed Be This Place is a 2013 short drama documentary film written and directed by Carl Olsson. Tontine Massacre is a 2010 documentary horror thriller film written and directed by Ezna Sands. Tiempos de guerra (1940-1944) is a 1992 short documentary film written by Reyes Bercini and Ricardo Pérez Monfort and directed by Óscar Menéndez. I Stand Corrected is a 2012 documentary, biography and music film directed by Andrea Meyerson. That's Black Entertainment is a 1989 documentary film starring African-American performers and featuring clips from black films from 1929-1957. Wine from Here: Natural Wine in California is a 2011 documentary film directed by Martin Carel. Post No Bills is a documentary film on satirical political poster artist Robbie Conal directed by Clay Walker. This documentary was filmed in Los Angeles, New York City and San Francisco from 1990 to 1992. At the center of the film is a poster that featured LAPD Chief Daryl Gates superimposed on a NRA shooting target with the text "Casual Drug Users Ought To Be Taken Out and Beaten." The controversial posters were glued around the city of Los Angeles in March 1991. Post No Bills documents these postering exploits and contains an interview with Daryl Gates discussing the poster. Post No Bills was first publicly exhibited in October 1992 at the Cork Film Festival. Several days later the Chicago International Film Festival awarded Post No Bills the Silver Hugo for feature length documentary. Post No Bills was the first completed broadcast hour ITVS project and was broadcast on PBS from 1993 to 1996. The movie's title comes from lettering found on many construction walls and other city surfaces, indicating that advertisements or handbills are not to be placed on the surface. A Brief History of Time is a 1991 American documentary film about the physicist Stephen Hawking, directed by Errol Morris. The title derives from Hawking's bestselling book A Brief History of Time, but whereas the book is an explanation of cosmology, the film is a biography of Hawking's life, featuring interviews with family members, colleagues, and even his childhood nanny. The music is by Morris' collaborator, Philip Glass. The film project originated with executive producer Gordon Freedman who brought the project to Anglia Television as a co-producer. After acquiring the property, Freedman met with director Steven Spielberg for advice on how to make the project into an important documentary film. Spielberg suggested Errol Morris as director. Freedman's production company partnered with Anglia Television and Tokyo Broadcasting. David Hickman, of Anglia, become the film's producer. Black Deal is a documentary film directed by Lee Hoon-Kyu. Silesia is a 1994 documentary film directed by Viola Stephan. Strings from My City is a 1996 documentary short film written and directed by Mayra Vilasis. Greg is a 1976 short documentary film directed by Phillip Noyce. Focus on Infinity is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Joerg Burger. Losev is a 1989 film directed by Victor Kossakovsky. Presenting evidence for the presence of Satan and his offspring on Earth. Let The Wind Carry Me is a 2009 documentary film directed by Hsiu-Chiung Chiang and Pung-Leung Kwan. "What can be retained with photography? Where the cinema is leading us to? Is there meaning to life after all? He is always on the road. Running at twenty four frames per second, that's the pace of Mark Lee. Instead of wings, he travels with his eyes and his heart, chasing the fleeting lights and colors, transforming them into visions of film directors, or voices within every audience. We followed the flickering of his footprints, gathering the fragments lost between frames, discovering the passion he gave to the Taiwanese cinema. Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Tokyo International Film Festival site Ikkatsu: The Secrets of Augustine is a 2014 documentary film directed by Steve Weileman and Ken Campbell. This special explores the weird and wonderful world of Britney Spears. Britney becomes more fascinating each time she reappears on the music scene. She is the undisputed Pop Princess of the decade. Douglas Kirkland On Photography: A Life In Pictures is a 2013 Documentary, Short, Biography film written and directed by Scott Erickson Je suis Femen is a 2014 documentary film directed by Alain Margot. The Return to Homs is a 2013 Syrian-German documentary film written and directed by Talal Derki. It is produced by Orwa Nyrabia and Hans Robert Eisenhauer while Diana El Jeiroudi served as the associate producer. The film premiered in-competition at the 2013 International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam on November 20, 2013, as the opening film of the festival. The film also premiered in-competition in the World Cinema Documentary Competition at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. It won the Grand Jury Prize award at the festival. After its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, Journeyman Pictures acquired the worldwide distribution rights of the film. The film's TV rights has been previously sold to ARTE for France and Germany, NHK for Japan, RTS for Switzerland, SVT for Sweden, and Radio Canada. It also served as the closing film at 2014 Human Rights Film Festival on March 28, 2014. Feast on Scraps is a 2002 music documentary directed by and featuring Alanis Morisette. 30 Frames a Second: The WTO in Seattle 2000 is a documentary film shot during the WTO Ministerial Conference of 1999 protest activity and contains interviews with many of the protest leaders. It was directed by journalist Rustin Thompson and released in 2000. Dear Valued Guests is a 2013 biographical, musical and historical documentary film directed by Jarred Alterman and Paul Sturtz. Sight is a 2012 short documentary drama film written and directed by Thirza Cuthand. Amanda F***Ing Palmer On The Rocks is a 2014 Short Documentary/ Music/ Biography film written and directed by Ondi Timoner. The Towers is a 1957 short documentary film directed by William Hale. The Kremlin is a 1963 TV movie directed by Peter Jarvis. Japan in a Day is a 2012 documentary film directed by Philip Martin and Gaku Narita Presencia ausente is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Braulio Almanza. Still on the Road is a 2010 documentary film directed by Sara Wolkowitz. Michael Landon: Memories with Laughter and Love is a 1991 documentary and biographic film written by Dan Gordon and directed by Michael Landon Jr. The Comedy Garage is a documentary by director Logan Leistikow, released in 2011, depicting a day in the life of five rising star comedians who produce a stand up comedy show performed on a self-made stage in their garage in Burbank, California. Shot cinéma vérité style, the film highlights the unique personalities and techniques of comics Cornell Reid, Matthew Sullivan, Sean Green, Paul Danke, and Casey Feigh. The Comedy Garage had been a staple of the Los Angeles comedy scene before filming began. Leistikow met the comedians while working at Tom Green Live. Once he was invited to a comedy garage show, he got inspired and soon began production on the documentary. Poster Boys or the Art of Mobile Recording is a 2013 documentary film directed by Patrick Burke. Images of the Orient: Vandal Tourism is a documentary film directed by Yervant Gianikian and Angela Ricci Lucchi. I Am a Promise: The Children of Stanton Elementary School is a 1993 documentary film about the pupils at Stanton Elementary School, an inner city school in Philadelphia. The film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for producers Alan and Susan Raymond. The husband and wife documentarians were also the cinematographer and editor as well as director and narrator for the film. Gotteszell is a 2000 film directed by Helga Reidemeister. Planeat is a 2010 British documentary film by Or Shlomi and Shelley Lee Davies. The film discusses the possible nutritional and environmental benefits of adopting a whole foods, plant-based diet based on the research of T. Colin Campbell, Caldwell Esselstyn and Gidon Eshel. The film also features the views of Peter Singer. According to Shelley Lee Davies, the film purposely does not cover any purported animal welfare arguments for adopting a plant-based diet, but concentrates on the health and environmental reasons instead. Planeat premiered at the 2010 Newport Beach Film Festival. It released theatrically in the United States in April 2011 and the United Kingdom in May 2011. The film was privately screened by the film's directors and Willie Bain MP at Somerset House in March 2011 and in the House of Commons in May 2011. Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take 2 1/2 is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by William Greaves. Coney Island (Last Summer) is a 2010 documentary written and directed by Marion Naccache. My Name Is Faith is a 2012 documentary and biographical film directed by Jason Banker,Tiffany Sudela Junker and Jorge Torres - Torres. Sólo pase la persona que se va a retratar is a 2009 documentary short film written and directed by Roque Azcuaga. Fire Academy is a 2011 documentary,short,drama and action film written by Ian Daly and directed by Kyle Power. Black Africa White Marble is a 2012 documentary film written by Idanna Pucci and directed by Clemente Bococchi. The Journey Inside is a 1994 documentary film directed by Barnaby Jackson. The Original Kings of Comedy is a 2000 stand-up comedy film, directed by Spike Lee, and featuring the comedy routines of Steve Harvey, D.L. Hughley, Cedric the Entertainer, and Bernie Mac. Filmed in front of an audience at the Charlotte Coliseum in Charlotte, North Carolina, the comedians give the audience their views about African-American culture, race relations, religion and family. The film was produced by MTV Films and Latham Entertainment, and distributed by Paramount Pictures. The film was shot over the last two nights of the Kings of Comedy tour with Harvey, Hughley, Cedric, and Mac. Its on-stage routines are intercut with brief sections of video footage showing the comedians backstage, promoting the show on the radio, at the hotel, and during a basketball game. The film spawned into multiple spin-offs and films similar to this one. Beginning with the End is a 2014 documentary family-drama film written and directed by David B. Marshall. Kaddish is a 1984 Documentary film written and directed by Steve Brand. Kage no Hikari is a French/Japanese documentary directed by Vincent Guilbert, about the Japanese AV actress Maki Tomoda. It was screened at the Neofest on July 28, 2007 in Tokyo, Japan. The interviewer for the film is Tohjiro, who often directed Tomoda in her videos for the Dogma studio. Also appearing in the film is the famous kinbakushi artist Akira Naka. Music was provided by Tamaru and Installing. The film was released on DVD-R February 20, 2010 by Taco Che in Tokyo. JOURNEY INTO DYSLEXIA presents profiles of dyslexic students and adults who share their experiences of struggling in school and then succeeding in life. Academy-Award winning filmmakers Alan and Susan Raymond examine the complexities of this differently structured brain and debunk the myths and misperceptions about dyslexia. Standing at the Touchlines is a 2010 documentary film directed by Ashley Morrison. Untold Desires is a 1994 Documentary TV Movie directed by Sarah Barton. The Key West Picture Show is a 1977 sports, comedy, documentary film directed by Mark Henriksen and Anna Benson. Mussolini: The Last 600 Days is a 1991 film directed by Nicola Caracciolo. Baghdad is a 2007 International Emmy Award for Current Affairs winning program. In Search of Our Fathers is a 1992 documentary film directed by Marco Williams. "Two men discuss their experiences of having transitioned from male to female and later back to male again. Two men in their 60s meet and discuss their experiences of having transitioned from male to female and later back to male again. Honest and candid, Orlando and Mikael show personal photographs, archive footage and converse, asking much more probing questions of each other than an interviewer might. It would be much too simplistic to say that the two participants feel their gender reassignment was a mistake, more that their lives have taken different paths than they originally anticipated and the real problem is society's rigid gender boundaries. JB" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. Needle Exchange is a 2010 short film directed by Colm Quinn. Puujee is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Kazuya Yamada. Shrove Sunday is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Dina Barinova. Baraka is a 1992 non-narrative documentary film directed by Ron Fricke. The film is often compared to Koyaanisqatsi, the first of the Qatsi films by Godfrey Reggio for which Fricke was cinematographer. Baraka was the first film in over twenty years to be photographed in the 70mm Todd-AO format, and the first film ever to be restored and scanned at 8K resolution. The Golden Greek: The Harry Agganis Story is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jim Jemanok and Yale Strom. Galoot is a 2003 Israeli documentary that explores the Israeli–Palestinian conflict from the perspective of Palestinian refugees and new immigrants to Israel. It includes scenes in London, Israel, Morocco and Poland. The film stars Dr Tim Hunt, 2001 Nobel Prize in Medicine. Voyage in Time is a 63-minute feature documentary that documents the travels in Italy of the director Andrei Tarkovsky with the script writer Tonino Guerra in preparation for the making of his film Nostalghia. In addition to the preparation of Nostalghia, their conversations cover a wide range of matters, filmmaking or not. Notably, Tarkovsky reveals his filmmaking philosophy and his admiration of films by, among others, Robert Bresson, Jean Vigo, Michelangelo Antonioni, Federico Fellini, Ingmar Bergman. The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival. The Elegy from Russia is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Aleksandr Sokurov. My Four Children is a 2002 documentary about an Israeli mother who takes in four foster children with Down syndrome after two of her own children were killed. It's About You is a 2012 music documentary film directed by father and son duo Ian & Kurt Markus. The films focus regards John Mellencamps 2009 tour with Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson and the recording of his new album in the month and a half of the tour. The film was shot entirely in the Super 8 format. Whitey: United States of America v. James J. Bulger is a 2014 American biographical documentary film produced and directed by Joe Berlinger. The film is produced by CNN Films and Radical Media. The film had its world premiere at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. A toy train in space is a 2013 short family documentary film written and directed by Ron Fugelseth. Rewind is the second rockumentary by Welsh rock band Stereophonics. Released in 2007, it is the band's sixth DVD release. It contains over three hours of live and documentary footage spanning their entire career; from pre-Stereophonics years to their signing to V2 Records in 1996 to 2006. A booklet was also included with the DVD, featuring several previously unseen photographs of the band, from Kelly Jones' own personal photo album. Alive: 20 Years Later is a 1993 documentary film produced, directed and written by Jill Fullerton-Smith and narrated by Martin Sheen. El Yaque, Pueblo De Campeones is a 2012 documentary, action and drama film written by Javier Chuecos and Horacio Collao, and directed by Javier Chuecos. Fred Ott's Sneeze is an 1894 American, short, black-and-white, silent documentary film shot by William K.L. Dickson and starring Fred Ott. It was the first motion picture to be copyrighted in the United States. In the five-second film one of Thomas Edison's assistants, Fred Ott, takes a pinch of snuff and sneezes. According to the Library of Congress, "It was filmed for publicity purposes as a series of still photographs to accompany an article in Harper's Weekly". Letter From Ion Marin To The Newspaper is a 1949 short film directed by Victor Ilin. The Beautiful Language is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mounir Fatmi Return To The Border is a 2005 documentary film directed by Zhao Liang about his return to his hometown in China that borders the Yalu river and North Korea. The short film presents deep insight into both the Chinese and North Korean societies and changes that have taken place over the last several decades. First person interviews add depth to the local perceptions of life on both sides of the border. Footage of life along the North Korean border and the mistrust of foreigners by the North Korean people is vividly displayed. An Dubh ina Gheal is a 2013 documentary film directed by Paula Kehoe. Once in a Lullaby: The PS22 Chorus Story is a 2012 Documentary | Adventure | Family | Music film directed by Jonathan Kalafer. Bob Wills: Still Swingin' is a 1994 documentary film directed by Christopher Lewis. What is a Mullet? Simply a haircut short in front and long in the back. People love to talk about the Mullet, but who is talking to the people with the Mullet cut? We are. In asking people to talk about their Mullets we are asking them to talk about themselves and the people in this film are nothing short of amazing. If you are going to be influenced by one Mullet experience this year, make it AMERICAN MULLET. What you learn might just surprise you. Searching for Elliott Smith is a 2009 documentary, biography, crime and news film directed by Gil Reyes. Dr. Hank Krastman demonstrates compelling evidence for an entrance to the Hollow Earth and how UFO's relate to the center of this planet. The Hopi Indians have legends telling how and where to enter the Hollow Earth! You have to see this to believe it! The Perilous Fight is a 2004 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Research nominated tv program aired on 12 February 2003 in the US. To See If I'm Smiling is a 2007 film directed by Tamar Yarom. A personal documentary about the filmmaker's relationship to his well known father, a leader in the South African liberation movement. For fixed-gear cyclists, Los Angeles is a city that has it all. From the neon glow of Hollywood to the sun-drenched boardwalk of Venice Beach, fixed-gear has evolved into a vibrant street culture that is uniquely L.A. From director David Rowe (Fast Friday) comes a new documentary feature that explores a side of L.A. few outsiders have seen. From races through rush-hour traffic to midnight loft parties, To Live & Ride in L.A. is a fast paced-trip through the busy streets and back-alleys of one of the world's largest cities. To Live & Ride in L.A. features talented local riders tearing up the streets with first-time visitor Keo Curry (Fast Friday, Macaframa) - one of the living legends of the sport. Bike to hidden spots off the map, race a midnight alley-cat, keep pace with the riders from Wolfpack, and hang with the local crews, graffiti artists and other L.A. personalities burning up the fixed-gear scene. Neil Diamond: I'm Glad You're Here with Me Tonight is a musical documentary directed by Art Fisher. The Other Side of the Lens is a 2008 documentary film directed by Reed Cowan. Warriors... In Their Own Words is a 2008 documentary film. Life with Jester is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Helena Trestíková. God Sleeps in Rwanda is a 2005 documentary short subject about five women affected by the Rwandan genocide. On January 31, 2006 it was nominated for the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. It lost to A Note of Triumph: The Golden Age of Norman Corwin. Taming the Bull: The John Bramlett Story is a documentary film directed by Trey Reynolds. The 4th Annual CNN Heroes: An All-Star Tribute is a 2010 documentary film directed by Joel Gallen. The Flying Doctors of East Africa is a 1969 documentary film by Werner Herzog about the "flying doctors" service of the African Medical and Research Foundation in Tanzania, Kenya, and Nairobi. The film is a fairly conventional documentary made during the filming of Herzog's more stylized films Fata Morgana and Even Dwarfs Started Small. Herzog was asked to make this film by some friends of the doctors themselves. The film consists mostly of factual accounts of the doctors' service, mostly avoiding the surrealism and stylizations that characterize the typical Herzog film. Herzog has said, "I do not even call it a film, it is much more a Bericht, a report." About Sarah is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Elisa Miller. Chile, Obstinate Memory is a 1998 documentary film directed by Patricio Guzmán. "El ambulante is a film about the magic of cinema, a documentary about a globe-trotter that sells illusions, about a nomadic filmmaker that lightens the everyday life of many people who live far away from the big lights. 'El ambulante' is a story about the culture of people in the deep Argentina." Quoting the description from the IDFA site Filmed in glorious high definition over five years and in ten locations, 80 WAVES is a collection of huge waves and big name riders from across the globe. Amongst the culture, wildlife and beautiful scenery of exotic surf spots like Fiji, Hawaii, and Bali, we see surfers and foil-boarders, tow-in surfing and body-boarding on such iconic waves as Hawaii's 'Jaws' and Indonesia's 'G-Land', all set to an eclectic collection of world music. Who Are We? Germans In Siberia 1990 is a 1990 film directed by Leonija Wuss-Mundeciema. JLG/JLG – Self-Portrait in December is a 1995 French documentary film directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Sibylle is a 1979 short, documentary film directed by Robert Cappa. Tango Negro, The African Roots of Tango is a documentary film written and directed by Dom Pedro. Actor Alan Cumming explores the truths behind the fiction. He meets many of those closely involved with the original Cabaret, including Liza Minnelli, and talks to cabaret artists, among them acclaimed performer Ute Lemper. Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst is a 2004 PBS documentary film about the 1974 kidnapping of Patty Hearst by the Symbionese Liberation Army left-wing revolutionary group. It was directed by Robert Stone, and features interviews with Timothy Findley and SLA members Russ Little and Michael Bortin. Liberators Take Liberties is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Helke Sander. An American documentary filmmaker crosses the lines of Nigeria's oil conflict in order to bear witness to the lives of the militants engaged in the struggle, and the civilians caught in the crossfire. Microcosmos is a 1996 documentary film by Claude Nuridsany and Marie Pérennou and produced by Jacques Perrin. Set to the music of Bruno Coulais, this film is primarily a record of detailed interactions between insects and other small invertebrates. The film was screened out of competition at the 1996 Cannes Film Festival. Scenes from the film were used in the music video for the single "You Don't Love Me" from The Philosopher Kings' album Famous, Rich and Beautiful. House of the Tiger King is a deconstructionist documentary, released in 2004. A British travel writer-explorer, Tahir Shah, and documentary filmmakers David and Leon Flamholc, join forces to go on an expedition in Peru searching for Paititi, the Inca lost city of gold. Things do not as planned, and on their first attempt they are forced to give up due to two main setbacks: terrible conditions and troubles with their guide, an American survivalist Vietnam-war veteran named Richard Fowler. On their second attempt, Flamholc and Shah find various locals to help them, including Eduardo Huamani Padilla. Tensions begin to arise between the two, in part over the difficulties in transporting the amount of camera equipment carried by the film crew, and ultimately Shah leaves the Flamholcs stranded as he continues his journey on his own. The director explains in the voiceover that he will use the best footage to put together a story once he returns home, but that “Whatever it will look like, it will never show what actually happened.” Crocodile in the Yangtze is a 2012 biographical documentary film directed by Porter Erisman. Tributes - Pulse is a 2011 musical documentary film written and directed by Bill Morrison. Nar Tanes? is a 2013 documentary film directed by Zlem Ulubay. Us Now is a documentary film project "about the power of mass collaboration, the government and the Internet" The New York Times describes it as a film which "paints a future in which every citizen is connected to the state as easily as to Facebook, choosing policies, questioning politicians, collaborating with neighbours." The documentary weaves together the perceptions of leading thinkers on the power of the web, with the overriding suggestion that people gain a sense of satisfaction from active participation rather than symbolic representation in decision-making processes. The project claims the founding principles of mass collaborative projects, including transparency, self-selection and open-participation are nearing mainstream social and political lives. Us Now describes this transition and confronts politicians George Osborne and Ed Miliband with the possibilities for collaborative government as described by Don Tapscott and Clay Shirky amongst others. Laughology is a 2009 documentary film about the contagiousness of human laughter by Canadian filmmaker and Laughologist Albert Nerenberg. It is the first feature length documentary about laughter. The documentary makes the case that laughter is the original peace signal and the human ability to share and transmit laughter may have been key to the rise of human civilization. The film chronicles unusual laughter phenomenon such as Holy Laughter, Laughter Parties and the Tanzanian Laughter Epidemic. The film is produced by Elevator Films which operates out of Lac Brome, Quebec, and Cache Film and Television. The film made its world premiere at HotDocs Film Festival in Toronto. Joshua City is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Kevin T. Allen. Media Matters is a 2013 short documentary news film written and directed by Sam Meyer and Austin Schmidt. Bittersweet Joke is a 2012 documentary film directed by Yeonah Paik. The Other Final is a 2003 documentary film, directed by Johan Kramer of Dutch communications agency Kessels Kramer, about a football match between Bhutan and Montserrat, the then-lowest ranked teams in the FIFA World Rankings. The game was played in the Changlimithang Stadium, Thimphu, Bhutan. Bhutan won the game 4–0, their first ever victory and the first time they had kept a clean sheet. The friendly match, officially sanctioned by FIFA, saw Bhutan rise out of the bottom two of the world rankings and kept Montserrat in last place. The referee was Englishman Steve Bennett. Il Grido D'Angoscia Dell'Uccello Predatore (20 Tagli D'Aprile) is a 2001 short comedy documentary written and directed by Nanni Moretti. Scena Del Crimine is a 2010 Dutch film written and directed by Walter Stokman. Front Line is a 1981 Australian documentary film directed by David Bradbury. It follows the career of Tasmanian-born combat cameraman Neil Davis, particularly his time in South Vietnam and Cambodia in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Tanjuska and the 7 Devils is a 1993 documentary film by Finnish director Pirjo Honkasalo about a ten-year old Belarussian girl who is believed to have been possessed by the devil. It is the second part of Honkasalo's "Trilogy of the Sacred and the Satanic", preceded by Mysterion and followed by Atman. The film won several international awards, including the International Jury Award at the Bombay International Film Festival. Road To Austin is a 2014 documentary film written by Gary Fortin, Bill Narum and Marshall Riggan and directed by Gary Fortin. The Children Of The Commune is a 2009 documentary family film written and directed by Juliane Grossheim. Lighting Strikes Twice: The Real-life Sequel To Moby Dick is a 2013 short adventure historical mystery documentary film directed by Stephani Gordon. Holbrook/Twain: An American Odyssey is a 2014 documentary film directed by Scott Teems. This feature-length documentary explores how massive, international efforts to alleviate poverty in Africa may be undermining the very communities they aim to benefit. It concentrates on telling the stories of two ordinary Kenyans: farmer Jackson Omondi, and midwife Silva Adhiambo. Something About Beckham is a 2003 documentary film. This documentary blends personal accounts of what happened before, during and after WWII. One testimony tells of a sister sending tear-stained letters from the prison camp, while another survivor tells the story of how his father traded portions of the family's food that was being saved for the liberation march, a few slices of bread, for a Jewish prayer book in order to perform a Passover sedar and for Sabbath. Woven together with survivor testimonies, archival footage, original music, source music and survivors' personal photographs and artifacts, the documentary will show the richness of life before the war, the rise and fall of Nazi power, the liberation of the camps and life now, 50 years later, all as seen through the eyes of those who survived. Los encontraremos is a 1983 documentary short film directed by Salvador Díaz. El informe Toledo is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Albino Alvarez. Undressing Israel: Gay Men in the Promised Land is a 46-minute documentary written by American adult-film entrepreneur, columnist, gay activist and gay pornographic film director Michael Lucas, and co-directed by Lucas and Israeli director Yariv Mozer. In his debut as a documentary filmmaker, Michael Lucas portrays in this film released in 2012 Israel's thriving GLBT community through footage of Tel Aviv's vibrant nightlife, a same-sex wedding, and candid interviews with a diverse range of local Israeli gays and lesbians, including a gay MP, an openly gay Army trainer, a drag queen, a transvestite, a young Arab-Israeli journalist, and same-sex parents raising their children and a number of artists and activists. The Home Economics Story is a 1951 short documentary film. Composer Meets Quartet is a 1987 documentary film written and directed by Jørgen Leth. The Sea Around Us is a 1953 American documentary film directed by Irwin Allen and released by RKO. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It was based on the Rachel Carson book of the same name. The Glass Ceiling is a 2004 documentary film directed by Yamina Benguigui. Dudley Clendinen: A Good Short Life is a documentary film directed by Stewart Lippe. The Wild Hearts is a film directed by Michael Noer. A Skin Too Few: The Days of Nick Drake is a 2002 documentary film directed by Jeroen Berkvens. Return to the Dreaming is a 1968 documentary film directed by Cecil Holmes. Rodin, the Gates of Hell is a 1982 documentary film. Am Fuß der Rocky Mountains is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Ramon Kramer. 1 a Minute is a docu-drama film written and directed by Indian American actress Namrata Singh Gujral, and is based around her own life and the lives of other women who suffered from cancer. Facing Fear is a 2013 documentary film by Jason Cohen. Worlds collide when a former neo-Nazi skinhead and the gay victim of his hate crime attack meet by chance 25 years after the incident that dramatically shaped both of their lives. Together, they embark on a journey of forgiveness that challenges both to grapple with their beliefs and fears, eventually leading to an improbable collaboration...and friendship. Facing Fear was a nominee for the 86th Academy Awards in the Best Documentary Short Subject category. Tango Ya Ba Wendo is a 1992 documentary film. Connected By Coffee is a documentary adventure film directed by Aaron Dennis. Oprah Winfrey's Legends Ball was a three-day celebration held by Oprah Winfrey honoring twenty-five African American women in art, entertainment, and civil rights. The celebration included a luncheon, white-tie ball, and gospel brunch. On May 22, 2006, a year after the celebration, a one-hour program about the weekend aired on ABC. It included celebrity interviews and behind-the-scenes moments. The 25 women included Maya Angelou, Shirley Caesar, Diahann Carroll, Elizabeth Catlett, Ruby Dee, Katherine Dunham, Roberta Flack, Aretha Franklin, Nikki Giovanni, Dorothy Height, Lena Horne, Coretta Scott King, Gladys Knight, Patti LaBelle, Toni Morrison, Rosa Parks, Leontyne Price, Della Reese, Diana Ross, Naomi Sims, Tina Turner, Cicely Tyson, Alice Walker, Dionne Warwick, and Nancy Wilson. Simple as That is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kari Branch, Ashley McCue and Russell Walker. Plank is a 2009 short documentary film written by Billy Pols and Liedewij Theisens, directed by Billy Pols. War without Images is a 2002 documentary film written by Mohammed Soudani and Michael von Graffenried and directed by Mohammed Soudani. Peuple en marche is a 1963 documentary film. Jari Mari: Of Cloth and Other Stories is a documentary film directed by Surabhi Sharma. The firemen of the Bronx are the most active in the world. The 65 fire stations situated in the Bronx receive fire calls about 160,000 times a year, that is to say 200 times a day. Some are false alarms, but many are very dangerous situations.The fires are caused by different reasons, but most of the fires are cases of arson. A special fire brigade including sheriffs has been created to combat this. We follow police inspector Haynes who investigates the motives for the fires which caused the death of 9 firemen who died this year in arson blazes. This film spends 14 harrowing days with the firemen of the Bronx as they fight fires and perform a last-minute rescue of a baby who fainted in the smoke. Jet Carrier is a 1954 American short documentary film produced by Otto Lang. It was nominated for two Academy Awards, one for Best Documentary Short and the other for Best Two-Reel Short. It was filmed aboard the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown. Workers ワーカーズ is a documentary film directed by Yasuyuki Mori. Law of the Jungle is a 2011 documentary film written by Michael Christoffersen and directed by Michael Christoffersen and Hans la Cour. A Self-Made Man is a 2013 documentary and bioagraphical film directed by Lori Petchers. In this heartfelt and patriotic documentary, we follow twelve veterans on their motorcycles as they make a very special journey from Sacramento, CA to Washington D.C. Through wrong turns, terrible weather and horrific accidents, the bikers ride on, each with their own reasons for heading to the nation's capital for Rolling Thunder the annual bike fest that sees one million bikers descend upon the capital for the cause of POWs and MIAs. The solitude of the open road and the unbreakable bond between those that have served, help to fuel all of these wonderful characters as they cruise the ROAD TO THUNDER - It's not the destination, it's their journey. Requiem for the Missing is a 2000 documentary film directed by Joshua Dorsey. Troupers is a 1985 documentary film directed by Glenn Silber and Claudia Vianello. Two Towns of Jasper is a provocative documentary focused on the 1998 hate-crime murder of James Byrd, Jr. It won a Peabody award in 2003. Los Angeles is a 2005 short documentary film directed by Sarah Morris. Cerro Torre - A Snowball's Chance In Hell is a 2013 documentary film directed by Thomas Dirnhofer One Frontier, All Frontiers is a 2010 documentary film directed by David Pablos. Sharks In My Viewfinder is a 2012 film written by Attila David Molnar and directed by Zsolt Sasdi and Attila David Molnar. Meet the GlamCocks is a 2013 documentary film directed by Vincent Rommelaere. The Salt of the Earth is a 2014 French-Brazilian documentary film directed by Wim Wenders and Juliano Ribeiro Salgado. It was selected to compete in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival where it won the Special Prize. The film portrays the works of the Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado. Uwe is a 2006 documentary short film written and directed by Elio Quiroga. Attenborough: 60 Years In The Wild, Our Fragile Planet is a 2012 documentary film directed by Susie Painter. Evixion is a 1986 Canadian docudrama film produced and directed by Bashar Shbib. The film is about the tenants of a dilapidated apartment building in Montreal who receive an eviction notice and have to deal with the possibility of being homeless. The cast includes Roland Smith, Claire Nadon, Kennon Raines, Pierre Curzi, Piotr Lysak and Jean-Claude Gingras. It was criticized for its lack of a proper plot or purpose. It was first released on 26 August 1968 at the World Film Festival in Montreal. Return to the Tepuis is a 2013 documentary adventure short film written and directed by Jenny Nichols and Joe Riis. The Beautician is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Sergio Oksman. A Short Film About Guns is a 2012 short history news war documentary film. The Lion's Mouth Opens is a 2014 short documentary biography drama family film directed by Lucy Walker. Paal is a 2012 short, documentary, drama film written and directed by Victor Vargas and Christoph Müller. Cereal Killers is a documentary film directed by Yolanda Barker. Krasna Malanka is a documentary film directed by Dmytro Sukholytkyy-Sobchuk. Hardwood is a 2005 short documentary film about Canadian director Hubert Davis' relationship to his father, former Harlem Globetrotters member Mel Davis. Through interviews with his mother, his father's wife, his half-brother, and Mel Davis himself, Hubert Davis explores why Mel made the decisions that he did, and how that has affected his life. Hardwood was met with high critical acclaim and received an Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject nomination. It also aired on PBS as part of its Point of View series in 2005. The Exceptional Jivatma Valettas is a 2007 documentary film by Canadian filmmaker Will Inrig. The film received post-production and technical support from the National Film Board of Canada and was released at the Canadian Film Institute. The film is a cinéma vérité look at the eccentric Valettas family during their teenage son’s soccer championship in Ottawa. Snow City is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Pin Pin Tan. The Long Way Home is a 1997 documentary film directed by Mark Jonathan Harris. It depicts the plight of Jewish refugees after World War II that contributed to the creation of the State of Israel. The film's emphasis is on the pitiful conditions for Jewish refugees in Europe after the war, as antisemitism was still rife and poverty was common. It also shows how emigration to the British Mandate of Palestine became a goal for many, but that British immigration rules often resulted in them being detained in camps in Cyprus. The eventual formation of the State of Israel is then shown, with emphasis on the debates in the White House between Palestinian Jews, President Harry S. Truman, and the United Nations. The Long Way Home is narrated by Morgan Freeman and features the voices of Edward Asner, Sean Astin, Martin Landau, Miriam Margolyes, David Paymer, Nina Siemaszko, Helen Slater, and Michael York. The film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1998. The Seeing Eye is a 1951 American short documentary film produced by Gordon Hollingshead in Technicolor about The Seeing Eye, a guide dog training school in Morristown, New Jersey. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Among previous film short documentaries on the same subject are two other titles sporting the same title: Also for Warner Brothers, but produced by Jerome Hillman as part of the "Broadway Brevity" series, running 19 minutes and released April 5, 1941. Produced by Educational Film Exchanges, Inc., supervised by Clinton Wunder, running 10 minutes and released January 17, 1936 as part of the "Treasure Chest" series. Re-Emerging: The Jews of Nigeria is a 2012 documentary, historical fiction film directed by Jeff L. Lieberman. Varietease is a 1954 American burlesque documentary film and the first such directed by Irving Klaw. According to its plot, the iconic pin-up model Bettie Page performs a burlesque show alongside Lili St. Cyr, Chris La Chris, Vicki Lynn, Bobby Shields, and others. Cat Ladies is a 2009 documentary film directed by Christine Callan-Jones. Vernichtung durch Arbeit is a 1984 documentary film directed by Lea Rosh. Nona Beamer: A Legacy of Aloha is a documentary biographical historical fiction music film directed by Linda Kane. Ten no shizuku is a documentary film directed by Atsunori Kawamura. Memories of a Mexican is a 1950 Mexican documentary film directed by Salvador Toscano and Carmen Toscano. It was entered into the 1954 Cannes Film Festival. Uprising: Hip Hop & The LA Riots is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mark Ford. School in the Mailbox is a 1947 Australian short documentary film directed by Stanley Hawes. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. My Way to Olympia is a 2013 feature documentary produced and directed by Niko von Glasow, which follows disabled athletes preparing to compete at the London 2012 Paralympics. The film focuses on Matt Stutzman, an armless American archer; Norwegian table tennis player Aida Dahlen; the Rwandan sitting volleyball team; one-legged German swimmer Christiane Reppe and the tetraplegic Greek boccia player Greg Polychronidis. The film was produced by Palladio Film. In the 1960s, a radical group of psychotherapists challenged the influence of Freudian ideas in America. They were inspired by the ideas of Wilhelm Reich, a pupil of Freud's, who had turned against him and was hated by the Freud family. He believed that the inner self did not need to be repressed and controlled. It should be encouraged to express itself. Out of this came a political movement that sought to create new beings free of the psychological conformity that had been implanted in people's minds by business and politics. This programme shows how this rapidly developed in America through self-help movements like Werber Erhard's Erhard Seminar Training - into the irresistible rise of the expressive self: the Me Generation. But the American corporations soon realised that this new self was not a threat but their greatest opportunity. It was in their interest to encourage people to feel they were unique individuals and then sell them ways to express that individuality. To do this they turned to techniques developed by Freudian psychoanalysts to read the inner desires of the new self. Republic Steel Strike Riot Newsreel Footage is a 1937 documentary film which tells the story of a strike at Republic Steel on Memorial Day, May 26, 1937, which escalated into a massacre in which 10 workers were killed, documented by this film. The newsreel was produced by Paramount Pictures for their Paramount News series. In 1997, the film was deemed "culturally significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. My Blood My Compromise is a documentary film on Kosovo by Albanian-American director, Nuhi de Stani. Between Dreams and History: The Making of Shimon Attie’s Public Art Projects is a 2013 Documentary film directed by Judy Irving and Chris Beaver Though I Am Gone is a Chinese documentary film by Hu Jie about Bian Zhongyun, a school's vice principal "who was beaten to death by students in August 1966 during the China's Cultural Revolution." The film includes commentary and photographs taken by the deceased woman's husband, 85-year-old Wang Qingyao. The film is banned in China, where the Communist Party reacted with sensitivity in part because "many of the former members of the Red Guard who attended Bian's middle school were members of the families of high-ranking officials who are still revered today." El viaje del cometa is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Ivonne Fuentes. Jane's Journey is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Lorenz Knauer. Quest For Energy is the 2012 adventure documentary film written and directed by Vinit Parmar. The Exiles is a film by Kent MacKenzie chronicling a day in the life of a group of twenty-something Native Americans who left reservation life in the 1950s to live in the district of Bunker Hill, Los Angeles, California. Bunker Hill was then a blighted residential locality of decayed Victorian mansions, sometimes featured in the writings of Raymond Chandler, John Fante and Charles Bukowski. The structure of the film is that of a narrative feature, the script pieced together from interviews with the documentary subjects. The film features Yvonne Williams, Homer Nish, and Tommy Reynolds. Filming was done in 1958. The film features rock and roll music composed for the film and performed by The Revels. The cast of American Indian actors are notable for their lack of self-consciousness as they drink and socialize during a night out on the town ending in a 49 party of drumming and dancing on "Hill X" overlooking downtown LA. The Exiles did not find a distributor to release it theatrically in 1961, and so over the years it fell into obscurity, known to cinephiles but remaining largely unseen by the public. "A poignant exploration of the filmmaker's changing relationship with his mother as he transitions." Quoting the description from the 2011 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival site. The One Man Village is a 2009 documentary film directed by Simon El Habre. A Small Fragment Of Germany is a 1991 documentary film directed by Joachim Tschimer. Jesus Was a Commie is a 2011 short drama documentary film written by Matthew Modine, and directed by Matthew Modine and Terence Ziegler. Abduction: The Megumi Yokota Story is an American documentary about Megumi Yokota, a Japanese student who was abducted by a North Korean agent in 1977. The film made its world premiere at the 2006 Slamdance Film Festival and has won numerous awards. It was made by Canadian journalists Chris Sheridan and Patty Kim made and released in 37 theaters in Tokyo and 17 other prefectures, including Hokkaido, Kanagawa, Osaka, Hiroshima and Fukuoka. It was also released in theaters in the United States, opening on August 18, 2006, at the Hollywood Arc Light Cinema in Los Angeles. Among its honors, this film was named best documentary at the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival, the Austin Film Festival, the Asian Film Festival of Dallas and won the audience award at the Omaha and Slamdance Film Festivals in 2006. The film has been shown at some of the largest festivals all over the world including the Sydney Film Festival in Australia, the International Documentary Festival of Amsterdam in The Netherlands and the Hot Docs Film Festival in Canada. Broadly considered a brand that inspires fervour and defines cool consumerism, Apple has become one of the biggest corporations in the world, fuelled by game-changing products that tap into modern desires. Its leader, Steve Jobs, was a long-haired college dropout with infinite ambition, and an inspirational perfectionist with a bully's temper. A man of contradictions, he fused a Californian counterculture attitude and a mastery of the art of hype with explosive advances in computer technology. Insiders including Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, the chairman who ousted Jobs from the company he founded, and Jobs' chief of software, tell extraordinary stories of the rise, fall and rise again of Apple with Steve Jobs at its helm. With Stephen Fry, world wide web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee and branding guru Rita Clifton, Evan Davis decodes the formula that took Apple from suburban garage to global supremacy. MAAT is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Romas Lileikis. Side by Side is a 2012 American documentary film directed by Christopher Kenneally. It was produced by Justin Szlasa and Keanu Reeves. It premiered at the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival and it was shown at the Tribeca Film Festival. Louis Theroux: America's Most Dangerous Pets is a British television documentary film presented by and featuring Louis Theroux. It was first broadcast on 30 October 2011. The programme follows Theroux as he travels to the United States to meet people who own animals normally found in Africa and Asia, including big cats and dangerous primates. In the programme, Theroux visits GW Exotic Animal Foundation in Oklahoma. Angola was the last scenario of the cold war. After thirty years of terrible civil war, its people is working hard to forget these decades. The effort of many experts to deactivate thousands of mines spread all over the country is an example of human strength. This is a positive picture that presents the current Angola, its extraordinary landscapes, rich cultures and artistic expressions. Mara Mattuschka_different Faces Of An Anti-diva is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Elisabeth M. Klocker. Barre's Silence is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Morvarid Peyda and Mehrdad Ahmadpour. Screen snapshots: Hollywood goes to bat is a 1950 short documentary film directed by Ralph Staub. Gangland Wire is a 2013 documentary crime film written and directed by Gary Jenkins. Mr. Schneider goes to Washington is a 2007 American toungue-in-cheek documentary film by Jonathan Neil Schneider that takes a look at campaign financing in Washington. The film debuted at the New Orleans Film Festival in 2007, and was released on DVD in 2008. From No. 37 is an Iranian documentary about the 20th century Persian author Sadegh Hedayat. It was directed by Sam Kalantari and Mohsen Shahrnazdar. From No. 37 lasts for 90 minutes and was filmed in France, Iran, Norway and the United Kingdom. From No. 37 explores the private life and works of Hedayat. The film includes interviews with Iranian authors, intellectuals and academics including Homa Katouzian, Nasser Pakdaman, Anvar Khamei, Ehsan Naraghi, and some of Hedayat's relatives. The film's dialogue is in Persian with English subtitles. It premiered at the Persian Artists Forum in Tehran and the British Academy in London. From No. 37 has aired on BBC Persian Television. Lilith on Top is a 2001 music documentary film written and directed by Lynne Stopkewich. Amazing Journey: The Story of The Who is a 2007 documentary by Murray Lerner and Paul Crowder about English rock and roll band The Who. The film features new interviews with band members Roger Daltrey, John Entwistle, Kenney Jones, and Pete Townshend, as well as Sting, The Edge, Noel Gallagher, Eddie Vedder, Steve Jones and others, as well as rare photos of the four members of the band, and archival live footage of performances dating back to 1964. A soundtrack accompanying the film also serves as a greatest-hits compilation for the band. The two-DVD set includes footage not in earlier documentaries, including film from the 1970 Leeds University appearance, never-seen-before footage of a show in Copenhagen that shows Daltrey leaving the stage because the performance of the other members of The Who broke down into chaotic noise due to amphetamines – which resulted in a fight between Daltrey and Moon backstage and Daltrey being kicked out of the band temporarily – and a 1964 performance at the Railway Hotel when they were The High Numbers. The film was nominated for a 2009 Grammy Award. Scream: The Inside Story is a 2011 documentary film directed by Daniel Farrands. She has starred in hit TV shows such as Barney and Friends, Camp Rock, Sonny With a Chance, and The X Factor and topped the Billboard charts. However her success has had its fair share of controversy. In this intimate documentary, we chronicle the trials and triumphs of Demi Lovato. Lost World is a 2008 film written and directed by Gyula Nemes. Super Live in Japan is a DVD by Queen + Paul Rodgers, capturing the performances in Saitama Super Arena in Japan on 27 October 2005 from their world tour, featuring songs from both Queen and Rodgers' catalogues. 15 of these songs will become available on DVD to the rest of the world as a Bonus DVD for the new Queen + Paul Rodgers studio album The Cosmos Rocks. The songs are marked as such: *. Fire and Water was released on the digital single for C-lebrity, and Fire and Water and The Show Must Go On will be available to download on the C-lebrity iTunes exclusive single. Surfing Soweto follows three of the most notorious train surfers in Johannesburg and features dramatic footage of the trio as they perform death-defying stunts on the roofs of trains, ducking bridges and 3000 volt electric cables whilst travelling at high speeds. But it also goes deeper. It follows the young men’s struggle through poverty, drug addiction, the death of loved ones and prison as their lives fall apart and chronicles their struggle to piece those lives back together again. Remembering Anne Frank is a 1998 short documentary film directed by Wouter van der Sluis. The Canary Effect is a 2006 documentary that looks into the effects of that the United States and its policies have on the Indigenous peoples who are residents. It premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and won the Stanley Kubrick Award at the 2006 Traverse City Film Festival. The movie was directed by Robin Davey and Yellow Thunder Woman, who are both members of LA Based alternative pop group The Bastard Fairies. The documentary was released on DVD in 2008. A City Called Copenhagen is a 1960 Danish short documentary film directed by Jørgen Roos. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Bare Belle - En serie morder fra Selbu is a 2006 documentary action drama horror film directed by Anne Berit Vestby. Hokusai: An Animated Sketchbook is a 1978 short documentary film written and directed by Tony White. Berg Fidel - A School for All is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Hella Wenders. "Hitchcock, doppelgangers, the Cold War and American TV: a complex, conceptual and very enjoyable brew from artist/film-maker Johan Grimonprez. An ingenious hybrid, Double Take is part mock-documentary, part conceptual provocation, and altogether a thought-provoking, hugely entertaining piece that does for Alfred Hitchcock what Orson Welles did for himself in his myth-making F for Fake. Using a zippy assemblage of TV and newsreel material, artist/filmmaker Johan Grimonprez muses on Hitchcock's persona and humour, reading his films of the late 50s and early 60s against the climate of Bomb-era political anxiety. The film especially mulls on Hitchcock's preoccupation with doubles, a theme that recurs not just in his films but in the portly auteur's jokey intros to the vintage TV series Alfred Hitchcock Presents; the theme is further expanded on in an apocryphal story about the maestro meeting his own future self. Interwoven with all this is a mass of newsreel material, dealing largely with US-USSR Cold War relations, and focusing on America's relationship with that other famous Hitchcock look-alike Nikita Krushchev. Grimonprez leaves viewers to draw their own conclusions about identity, filmmaking, power and paranoia, but the film's love of Hitchcock - artist, public face, TV clown - is unmistakeable and very infectious." Quoting Jonathan Romney Out of the Darkness: The Reality of SM is a 2001 documentary pornographic film directed by Hardy Haberman. Pizza In Auschwitz is a 2008 film directed by Moshe Zimmerman. Jamaica Reef Rescue is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Alison Barrat. The Greatest Pharaohs is a 1997 American educational documentary film about Ancient Egypt distributed by A&E and narrated by Frank Langella with commentary by experts in the field. It is 200 minutes long and split into four parts, with each part explaining the lives of four Egyptian pharaohs. L'Amour Fou is a 2010 documentary film directed by Pierre Thoretton. "Yves Saint Laurent built one of fashion's most celebrated empires. This moving documentary chronicles his rise, his lifelong partnership with Pierre Bergé and their decision to auction off a lifetime of precious art and objects." Quoting the description from the 2010 TIFF site. Dave Chappelle's Block Party, also known as Block Party, is a 2005 documentary film hosted and written by comedian Dave Chappelle, and directed by Michel Gondry. Its format is inspired by the documentary Wattstax. The film and its soundtrack are dedicated to the memory of music producer J Dilla who died from lupus one month before the film's release. The film was officially released at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival. The film grossed $12.1 million in the box office and debuted at #6 in its opening weekend, grossing $6 million in 1,200 theaters. Garnet'S Gold is an adventure documentary film directed by Ed Perkins. On the 50th anniversary of the first supersonic flight, Chuck Yeager relives his gutsy assault on the sound barrier and tells how it was done. Other top test pilots of the day—those who survived—describe the dangers, mysteries, and thrill of trying to fly faster than sound at the dawn of the jet age. Nero's Golden House is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Phil Grabsky. Tall Girls is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Edda Baumann-von Broen. Der Fall Kampusch is a 2007 documentary film written by Christoph Feurstein, Burgit Bock and Robert Altenburger and directed by Robert Altenburger, Burgit Bock and Christoph Feurstein. Who Killed Vincent Chin? is a 1987 American documentary film directed by Christine Choy and Renee Tajima-Peña about the death of Vincent Chin. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Narita: Heta Village is a 1973 documentary film directed by Shinsuke Ogawa. Wild!Life Adventures: Wildlife Vet is a 1998 Made-for-TV documentary film directed by Larry Engel. It composed by Marc Engel and story editor was Whitney Wood. It stars Alicia Silverstone and veterinarian Dave Jessup. In this 60-minute longer documentary, Mrs. Silverstone joins Jessup as he treats animal ailments in Zimbabwe and also in California. Skateistan: Four Wheels and a Board in Kabul is a 2011 documentary film written by Nadia Hennrich and directed by Kai Sehr. Nadia's Friends is a documentary which follows filmmaker Chanoch Zeevi as he travels through Israel exploring how Zionism has evolved since he was a child. Zeevi attended elementary school in the religious Zionist village of Kfar Haroeh, where his classmates represented a cross-section of Israeli society. They included Jews of every background: Ashkenazi, Sephardi, religious, secular, and even one Arab girl —Nadia, for whom the film is named. Now, more than twenty-five years after graduating from elementary school, Zeevi has organized a class reunion that brings together men and women whose lives have diverged from the original journey begun in Kfar Haroeh. Library of Congress is a 1945 American short documentary film about the Library of Congress, directed by Alexander Hammid, and produced by the Office of War Information. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. What’s going on with the economy? Foreclosures are everywhere, unemployment is skyrocketing – and this is only the beginning. What can government do? The sad answer is – under the current monetary system – nothing. It’s not going to get better until the root of the problem is understood and addressed. There isn’t enough stimulus money in the entire world to get us out of this hole. The Lost Tomb of Jesus is a documentary co-produced and first broadcast on the Discovery Channel and Vision TV in Canada on March 4, 2007, covering the discovery of the Talpiot Tomb. It was directed by Canadian documentary and film maker Simcha Jacobovici and produced by Felix Golubev and Ric Esther Bienstock, while James Cameron served as executive producer. The film was released in conjunction with a book about the same subject, The Jesus Family Tomb, issued in late February 2007 and co-authored by Jacobovici and Charles R. Pellegrino. The documentary and book's claims are the subject of controversy within the archaeological and theological fields, as well as among linguistic and biblical scholars. Yannis Moralis is a 2006 documentary biography film written and directed by Stelios Haralambopoulos. Videocracy is a 2009 documentary film directed by Swedish-Italian Erik Gandini about Italian television and its impact on Italian culture and politics, and about Silvio Berlusconi's powerful position on all of these. Gandini coined the phrase "The Evilness of Banality" to describe the cultural phenomenon of Berlusconismo, thus making a word play on Hanna Arendt's "Banality of Evil". Soon after its theatrical premiere in Sweden, the film was shown at the 66th Venice International Film Festival where it gained massive attention. The trailer for the film has been banned by most Italian television broadcasters. Videocracy uses the theme song for Silvio Berlusconi's presidential campaign, and now party theme, Meno male che Silvio c'è!. When first hearing it the film's director Erik Gandini thought it was satire. Videocracy has won awards at the Toronto International Film Festival, Sheffield Doc/Fest, the Golden Graal awards, and the Tempo Documentary Award of 2010. Videocracy was widely distributed internationally, seeing theatrical release in the USA, UK, Holland, France, Poland, and Sweden among other countries. Hard Rock Treasures is a documentary film about Don "The Indiana Jones of Rock 'n' Roll" Bernstein from Hard Rock Cafe, when he visits musicians to try to get memorabilia from them. Some of the memorabilia he gets includes Freddie Mercury's stage pants, the Gibson guitar Tony Iommi used on the first four Black Sabbath albums, the car James Hetfield drives in the video for Metallica's song "I Disappear", Slipknot's stage masks, the bass guitar Michael Anthony used on the recording of Van Halen's 1984 album and a drum Ian Paice used on the recording for Deep Purple's Perfect Strangers album. The scenes with Dimebag Darrell at his home was shot just months before he was murdered on stage, playing with Damageplan. Coral Reef Adventure is a 70mm American documentary film released in 2003 to IMAX theaters. It is narrated by actor Liam Neeson, and directed by Greg MacGillivray. Embarking on a 10-month expedition through the islands of the South Pacific, husband and wife underwater photography-duo Michele and Howard Hall explore the declining reefs and failing health of the world's oceans. From Australia's Great Barrier Reef, to a friend's coral reef-sustained village in Fiji, the diving expeditions show a range of coral reefs, from flourishing ones filled with unusual and exotic inhabitants, to vast stretches of bleached coral decline which prompted the Hall's activism. Along their journey, scientists working to understand and save the reefs meet with the Hall's. Jean-Michel Cousteau, son of the famed oceanographer Jacques Cousteau, also makes an appearance, as do well-known dive guide and singer Rusi Vulakoro, brother of Vude singer Laisa Vulakoro, who guides the Halls in their dive adventure. This documentary film is the third oceanic, ecologically-themed IMAX production from director MacGillivray, after The Living Sea and Dolphins. Crosby Stills & Nash contribute to the film's soundtrack. "Since the de-colonization of Africa, the Tuaregs, a nomadic people of the Sahara Desert, have seen their communities ravaged and are now scattered among several countries and across artificial borders. Some have decided to take up arms and fight the oppression from the central governments among them Moussa Ag Keina, leader of the music group Toumast. But Moussa, after witnessing bloodshed and non-respected peace agreements, eventually chose to fight with a new weapon, music, as a means to express his people's misery a people who have managed to develop a thoroughly contemporary culture that includes electric guitars. We follow Moussa, as this documentary takes us on a journey through the central Sahara, from the fighters in the Aïr Mountain in Niger, to the Malian city of Kidal where we find the female music group, Tilwat. Women are equal to men in the Tuareg society, and as a member of Toumast asserts, Tuareg music cannot be done without women. This is a documentary not to be missed both to revel in the beauty of the Tuareg music, and to appreciate life in the Saharan region." Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. The Rock and Roll Film is a 1967 documentary film directed by Thom Andersen and Malcom Brodwick. "Green isn’t playing nicely with the rest of the rainbow in The Other Parade, which follows Irish immigrant and gay rights activist Brendan Fay as he fights for inclusion in New York City’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade." -Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Freeheld is a 2007 documentary film directed by Cynthia Wade, and produced by Wade, Matthew Syrett and Vanessa Roth. It chronicles the story of Laurel Hester in her fight against the Ocean County, New Jersey Board of Chosen Freeholders to give her earned pension benefits to her partner, Stacie. On February 24, 2008, it won the Academy Award for Best Short Documentary. The documentary also won a Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival in 2007. Freeheld has played in over 50 festivals Worldwide and has earned 14 festival awards. The film had its US broadcast premiere in June 2008 on Cinemax. A film based on the documentary, starring Ellen Page, is currently in development. Three Stones For Jean Genet is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Frieder Schlaich. Chicken Hawk: Men Who Love Boys is a 1994 award winning documentary produced, written and directed by Adi Sideman. The film profiles members of the pedophile/pederasty organization North American Man/Boy Love Association who discuss sexual relationships between men and boys below the age of consent. The film is an expose on the group's controversial beliefs and their clandestine lifestyle. Sideman's evenhanded approach provides the audience with an insight into the group members' psyche. The film has drawn attention for its unique approach: letting its subjects, the NAMBLA Members, incriminate themselves in a public forum. Since its release, the film has been screened for the FBI, university criminology departments and other law enforcement agencies. The term, "chickenhawk," is often used in slang to refer to an older man who chases after younger men. A tour-de-force of investigative reporting, FLIGHT 800 presents the stunning saga of a crash, a cover-up and a 15-year quest for the truth. "A long legal battle was fought over the “right of commons” at Kotsunagi, a mountain village in Iwate prefecture. Based on unreleased footage of the case fifty years ago, the documentary poses the question, who owns nature, by examining the current situation and interviewing those involved." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Tokyo International Film Festival site Picasso & Braque Go to the Movies is a 2008 documentary film directed by Arne Glimcher. Te Whakarauora Tangata is a 2011 documentary film directed by Merata Mita. The Railroad All-Stars is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Chema Rodríguez. The Longest Game is a 2013 documentary, comedy, family, sports film written by Camille Thoman and Christopher Beha and directed by Camille Thoman. Buy Bye Beauty is a 2001 documentary film by Swedish director and performance artist Pål Hollender. The film is about the way Latvian sex industry and its being fueled by businessmen and sex tourists from Sweden visiting Riga. The film was shot in Riga in July 2000. The narration of the film is in English, with interviews conducted in Russian and Latvian. Lily: A Longitudinal View of Life With Down Syndrome ia a three-part documentary that follows Lily, an individual with Down syndrome. The series shows her life over a period of 30 years, during which Lily attends elementary school, graduates from high school, and eventually lives independently. Behind the Blue Veil is a documentary and historical film directed by Robyn Symon. Soundtrack for a Revolution is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Bill Guttentag and Dan Sturman. This documentary traces the story of the Civil Rights Movement and the struggles fought by young African-American activists with an emphasis on the power of music. Soundtrack for a Revolution had its international premiere at the Cannes Film Festival and its North American premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival. Soundtrack for a Revolution was selected by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as part of the Oscar shortlist for the Documentary Feature category of the 82nd Academy Awards. The film has screened at numerous festivals including Cannes, Tribeca, IDFA and Sheffield Doc/Fest. The Saved is a Dutch documentary released in 1998, it was directed by Paul Cohen and Oeke Hoogendijk. Genghis Blues is a documentary film directed by Roko Belic. It centers on the journey of blind American singer Paul Pena to the isolated Russian state of Tuva due to his interest in Tuvan throat singing. It won the 1999 Sundance Film Festival Audience Award for a Documentary. It was also nominated for an Academy Award in 2000 in the Best Documentary Feature category. Meglio di ieri is a 1952 Italian documentary film. John Brown's Body at San Quentin Prison is a 2013 documentary film written by Charlie Pearson and directed by Joseph De Francesco. When We Were Boys is a documentary film. A Place Of Rage is a 1991 documentary film directed by Pratibha Parmar. Dona Romana And The Earth's Great Axis is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Paulo Rezende. Spiel der Spiralen is a 1952 short documentary film directed by Alfred Ehrhardt. The Memphis Belle: A Story of a Flying Fortress is a 1944 documentary film which ostensibly provides an account of the final mission of the crew of the Memphis Belle, a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. In May 1943 it became the first U.S. Army Air Forces heavy bomber to complete 25 missions over Europe and return to the United States. The dramatic 16 mm color film of actual battles was made by cinematographer First Lieutenant Harold J. Tannenbaum. The film was directed by Major William Wyler, narrated by Eugene Kern, and had scenes at its Bassingbourn base photographed by Hollywood cinematographer Captain William H. Clothier. It was made under the auspices of the First Motion Picture Unit, a branch of the United States Army Air Forces. The film actually depicted the next to last mission of the crew on May 15, 1943, and was made as a morale-building inspiration for the Home Front by showing the everyday courage of the men who manned these bombers. The Rejected is a made-for-television documentary film about homosexuality, produced for KQED in San Francisco by John W. Reavis. The Rejected was the first documentary program on homosexuality broadcast on American television. It initially ran on KQED on September 11, 1961, and was later syndicated to National Educational Television stations across the country. The Rejected received positive critical reviews upon airing. Whores’ Glory is a 2011 documentary by Michael Glawogger. It shows the life of prostitutes from three different cultures: Thailand, Bangladesh and Mexico. "Sarah Khoshjamal, a 20-year-old Taekwondo superstar, is the first female professional athlete from Iran to qualify for the Olympics. This skillful vérité portrait follows the unassuming Khoshjamal in the nine months leading up to the 2008 Beijing games. Living in an Islamic country, she is required to wear a hijab at all times and, unlike her fellow competitors around the world, cannot train with men; however, the power in her fighting resoundingly breaks down stereotypical barriers. Khoshjamal’s experience as a world-class athlete may be familiar, but captured here is the importance of the coach-athlete relationship. The bond she shares with her feisty and much-admired female coach is revealed through everyday moments as both struggle through inequality to make their mark—in sport and society. Though it’s still the male athletes who are ultimately celebrated in her country, Khoshjamal’s accomplishments and lasting influence on scores of girls in Iran are undeniable." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Untouched and Pure is a 1970 documentary film directed by Christopher Cordeaux, Martin Duckworth and Mort Ransen. Despite the Gods is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Penny Vozniak. Psychiatric Nursing is a 1958 American documentary film directed by Lee R. Bobker. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Dream Never Dies is a 1980 documentary film directed by William Johnston. This is the world according to Russell Brand. Expect a ménage-a-trois of sexy, dark, and hilarious jokes from Britain’s most notorious and talented comedian. In ‘The World according to Russell Brand’ we’re taken on an irreverent tour of Russell’s scandalous life delving into childhood memories, travelling experiences and thoughts on sex, lies and being famous. This is the very best of Russell Brand taken from Russell Brand Live, Doing Life-Live and Ponderland. The Moneen DVD: It All Started with a Red Stripe is the first official DVD released by Moneen, an Indie rock band based in Brampton, Ontario, Canada. It was released in Canada and the United States on May 13, 2008. The DVD has four different sections: a documentary, a live performance, tour diaries and music videos. My Dreams is a 1975 documentary bollywood film directed by Ismat Chughtai. Beats of Freedom is a 2010 documentary film directed by Wojciech Słota and Leszek Gnoiński. "In the times when life in Poland was controlled by the communist regime, rock music became an extremely powerful phenomenon. The Iron Curtain could not stop rock music, thanks to which young people could find their space of freedom. From the very beginning, Polish rock stood in opposition to the reality it met with. The songs broke stereotypes and formed bonds among people." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. You Must Remember This: The Warner Bros. Story is a 2008 documentary, biography, history, music and romance film written and directed by Richard Schickel. It is also an episode of the series American Masters. Scrapper is a 2011 American documentary feature film directed by Stephan Wassmann and co-directed by Olivier Hermitant. It documents the lives of persons who salvage scrap metal from a live-fire military testing range in Southern California. Scrapper won Best Documentary at the Seattle True Independent Film Festival and the Spirit Award at the Brooklyn Film Festival in June 2011. This feature documentary had its world premiere at the 2011 Slamdance Film Festival. It was also an official nominee at the Durango Film Festival and won a Royal Reel Award at the Canada International Film Festival Scrapper is an official nominee at the 2011 San Francisco DocFest and the 25th Annual Leeds Film Festival in the UK. Club Native is a 2008 documentary film by Tracey Deer, exploring Mohawk identity, community and tribal blood quantum laws. The film looks at how women in Deer's home community of Kahnawake risk losing their right to live on the reserve, after marrying non-natives. The film received the Canada Award from the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television for best Canadian multi-cultural program and a Gemini Award for best documentary writing. Club Native also received the award for Best Documentary at the Dreamspeakers Festival in Edmonton, the award for Best Canadian Film at the First Peoples' Festival and the Colin Low Award for Best Canadian Documentary at the DOXA Documentary Film Festival. The film was co-produced by Rezolution Pictures and the National Film Board of Canada. Jaws: The Inside Story is a 2010 TV documentary film. Brooklyn Farmer is a 2013 documentary film directed by Michael Tyburski. "In Cannes, from the top of the stairs of the Palais du Festival, Gilles Jacob has seen the film world come to him for more than 30 years. To the impassioned spectator of the whole world’s cinema. Gilles Jacob owes his position as the president of the world’s greatest film festival above all to his love of the cinema, which he has always cultivated just as one cultivates one’s garden. The hazards of life have also added another string to his bow: the management skills which have enabled him to determine the trajectory – in the extremely fragile balance between cinema as an art and as an industry - of a Festival which brings together the greatest directors of the 7th Art, alongside the largest film market in the world. His story will be reconstituted through a stroll taken by Gilles Jacob along the Croisette in Cannes before the 2009 festival. Punctuated by film clips, we will find the key scenes of his life, his meetings with stars (such as Sharon Stone, Clint Eastwood) and film directors of yesterday (Fellini, Truffaut) and today (Tarentino, Almodovar, Jane Campion, Lars Von Trier). We will relive his most moving moments (for example when the 29 directors awarded the Palme d’Or gathered together for the fiftieth anniversary of the Festival). For Gilles Jacob is also a visionary, and believes in the future of the 7th Art. He continues to prove it today, in each moment of his life." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Cannes Film Festival site. With You is a 2013 documentary film directed by Scott Gracheff. Capone 'N' Noriega: What Up 2 Da Hood is a 2005 documentary film. Image Problem is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Simon Baumann and Andreas Pfiffner. Crisalida is a 2012 short drama documentary biographical film directed by Alejandro Enmanuel Alonso Estrella, Rosanna Mendez Gonzalez, Laura Costa Cantal, and Esther de Rothschild. World Assembly of Youth is a documentary film created in 1952 for the US State Department. It is believed to be lost but evidence for it was discovered on an early resume sent by Stanley Kubrick to veteran New York film critic Theodore Huff in February 1953. In the resume and covering letter, Kubrick lists working on this film alongside his other documentaries, The Seafarers, Day of the Fight, and Flying Padre. The résumé was uncovered by John Baxter, while doing research for his own book, Stanley Kubrick: A Biography. Baxter's research found that the film was sponsored by the United States Department of State and was one of a series of films intended to mobilize college-aged youngsters to carry out socially worthy projects. This initiative ultimately led to the formation of the Peace Corps. Kubrick's actual role in the film is uncertain. Following the publication of Baxter's book, some readers misinterpreted the story as to believe there was an undiscovered film directed by Stanley Kubrick; this can be seen in the myriad of internet pages that credit Kubrick as director of World Assembly of Youth. "One of the biggest poets in Russian history, Anna Akhmatova (1889-1966) received early recognition from the literary world as well as the worship of men and the friendship and admiration of a brilliant generation of intellectuals. The conflicts of her time would later destroy everything she had: her first husband was executed by the Soviet regime; her last one died of exhaustion in a gulag; her son was arrested and deported to Siberia. Apart from loneliness, a topic that can be seen early in her work, she also addressed terror, deprivation (she also endured the siege of Leningrad), and her own “civilian death”, promoted by Stalinism. However, as Landauer goes through an abundant archive of old and current footage with the guide of poet Anatoly Litman, she doesn’t build a bitter or painful biopic of such a hard life: recreating the story in the form of a Greek tragedy (with muses, sorcerers and choirs), A Film… finds in the luminous poetry of its heroine enough motives to sing a passionate and victorious ending." Quoting the description form the 2010 Mar del Plata Film Festival site. Words of Witness is a 2012 feature length documentary film produced and directed by Mai Iskander. follows 22-year-old journalist Heba Afify as she navigates Egypt's revolution and the rigid boundaries of her concerned mother to examine the struggles, hopes and fears of a people on the brink of democracy. Baja California: Paralelo 28 is a 1973 short documentary film written by Ricardo Garibay and directed by Carlos Velo. A Kind of Childhood is a 2002 Bangladeshi drama film directed by Tareque Masud and Catherine Masud. The film was awarded the Jury Prize at International Video Festival of India in 2003. "Hossein and Shaima, who have known and loved each other since childhood, were separated as teenagers by war in Afghanistan. Today, reunited in Kabul, they remain deeply in love, but their relationship is socially and religiously prohibited. Hossein, young and jobless in the late nineties, was paid to fight with the Taliban and a war injury left his legs paralyzed. He is now handicapped, and unable to work. Shaima was sold in marriage to a man forty years her senior, by whom she had a child, but, since the dowry remained unpaid, her father brought her back home to live. The film also discusses the prospects of marriage for Shaima's sisters within a culture in which daughters are virtually bought and sold, a tradition in which they are unable to pursue their own romantic desires but must submit to a marriage arranged by their father. War and Love in Kabul thus reveals the broader context of family life in a deeply traditional society, one in which the chances of personal happiness are very small." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Sol LeWitt is a biographical documentary film directed by Chris Teerink. Otto John - eine deutsche Geschichte is a 1995 documentary film directed by Erwin Leiser. "His Big White Self" (2006) The aftermath of "The Leader..." was deadly serious for all concerned. The final days of Apartheid led to the nominal defeat of the white right as the ANC came to power. More crucially, Eugene Terre'blanche,facing certain incarceration and national ridicule, had no doubt bid his followers to implement the numerous death and bomb threats that Broomfield was subjected to in the months that followed the film's release in 1991. Never thinking in his worst nightmares that 14 years later he would feel compelled to track down 'His Big White Self'...of course, Broomfield did just that.This new and not to be missed film further explores Terre'blanche's absurd yet insidious character, exposing his regime's stark and sobering impact that lingers to this day. Broomfield revisits the familiar and haunted faces of those brought down and broken by democracy's rise in South Africa, finally confronting the newly released and unrepentant Terre'blanche in a manner not only tense but also hilarious and unforgettable. The Illness and the Odyssey is a 2013 historical documentary, mystery film written by Jen Bradwell, Berry Minnott and directed by Berry Minnott. Schindler's Houses is a 2007 documentary directed by Heinz Emigholz. The Heart of Steel is a documentary directed by Angelo J. Guglielmo, Jr. and had its World Premiere at The Tribeca Film Festival in May, 2006. Personally selected by festival co-founder, Jane Rosenthal, this historical film chronicles a group of ordinary citizens who volunteered in the search and rescue and cleanup efforts after the collapse of the World Trade Center following the September 11 attacks. "A “subjective”, experimental documentary that consists of a long interview between Escartín and an ex-Israeli elite soldier, in an intimate tone which strongly contrasts with the narration." Quoting the description from the 2010 Mar del Plata Film Festival site. The Poem of Hayachine Valley is a 1982 documentary film written and directed by Sumiko Haneda. Cerca del Olvido is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Luis Mariano Bouchot. This Is My Land is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Ben Rivers. Alaska Wilderness Lake is a 1971 documentary film produced by Alan Landsburg. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Bethlehem: The Christmas City is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Sammy Jackson. A thorough, documented, criminal indictment of George Herbert Walker Bush, establishing beyond a reasonable doubt his guilt as a supervisor in the conspiracy to assassinate John F. Kennedy. You must see it to believe that former president George Herbert Walker Bush was connected to the assassination of JFK. Once you see this documentary though there should be no doubt in your mind that it's true. The evidence is overwhelming and as the author of this documentary, John Hankey says, "If we could present this evidence to a jury in Texas, he would pay with his life". Did you know that Daddy Prescott Bush was Hitler's chief banker in the U.S. before 1942? Did you know that George H.W. Bush was in the CIA and in Dallas when Kennedy was killed? This video explores the many connections between George Bush and the Kennedy Assassination and makes a very convincing argument that he was the operational leader of the most important coup in American history. Dumbstruck is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mark Goffman. Eisenzeit is a 1991 film directed by Thomas Heise. Torturing Democracy is a 2008 documentary film produced by Washington Media Associates and narrated by Peter Coyote. The film details the use of "enhanced interrogation techniques," including waterboarding, by the Bush administration in the "War on Terror". The documentary includes interviews from U.S. State Department and military personnel, including former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage. Led Zeppelin - Inside Led Zeppelin is a 2005 documentary film directed by David Merrell and Mike Murray. Empire of Dreams: The Story of the Star Wars Trilogy is a 2004 documentary film directed by Kevin Burns and narrated by Robert Clotworthy. It documents the making of the original Star Wars trilogy: Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi and their impact on popular culture. The two and a half hour long documentary was made for the bonus disc of the DVD boxset of the Star Wars Trilogy, released on September 21, 2004. A shortened version of the documentary premiered on the A&E Network later that fall. The TV version ran at around ninety minutes, cutting out nearly an hour of content. Instrument is a documentary film directed by Jem Cohen about the band Fugazi. Cohen's relationship with band member Ian MacKaye extends back to the 1970s when the two met in high school in Washington, D.C.. The film takes its title from the Fugazi song of the same name, from their 1993 album, In on the Kill Taker. Editing of the film was done by both Cohen and the members of the band over the course of five years. It was shot from 1987 through 1998 on super 8, 16mm and video and is composed mainly of footage of concerts, interviews with the band members, practices, tours and time spent in the studio recording their 1995 album, Red Medicine. The film also includes portraits of fans as well as interviews with them at various Fugazi shows around the United States throughout the years. The Instrument Soundtrack by Fugazi was released in conjunction with the film. It consisted primarily of instrumental and unreleased songs. When asked what the goal was in making Instrument, Cohen responded: I did feel that there were a lot of people that either didn't have access to the band or had something of a misconception of what they were like. 3 Magic Words is a 2010 documentary film about spirituality. The film was written, directed and produced by Michael Perlin and co-produced by Maura Hoffman. The film was produced over four years. The lead is played by Gabriella Ethereal and the film is narrated by Cameron Smith. The film premiered in the U.S. at the Harmony Gold Theater in Hollywood and had its European premiere in London on December 21, 2012 at the Odeon West End in Leicester Square. Late at Night : Voices of Ordinary Madness is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Xiaolu Guo. Before They Were Dubz is a Straight-to-DVD documentary film, directed by Jessica Grace Mellor, that charts the history of British hip-hop group N-Dubz, from their early days when they were as young as twelve, to the point of their major label signing in 2007 by All Around the World Records. The film features footage recorded during the early years of the band, pieced together with interviews from friends and colleagues of the group, including Wretch 32, J2K and Angel. Talmage Farlow is a 1981 documentary film directed by Lorenzo DeStefano. MURPH: The Protector is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Scott Mactavish. Dominoes and Checkers Competition is 2009 short documentary film written by Alexander Gornovsky and Evgeny Nikishov and directed by Alexander Gornovsky. I Have Always Been A Dreamer is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sabine Gruffat. Self(less) Portrait is a 2013 documentary film directed by Danic Champoux. This DVD features in-depth interviews revealing the many aspects that made the Eagles one of America's most loved bands. Forming in Los Angeles in the early 1970s, the Eagles have five number-one singles and four number-one albums, and are among the most successful recording artists of the 1970s. Two of their albums, "Eagles: Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975" and "Hotel California", ranked among the ten best-selling albums. They are also the best-selling American group ever, with "Eagles: Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975" being the best-selling album in the U.S. to date. This program is essential for fans and collectors alike! Portrait of Wally is a 2012 documentary film written by Andrew Shea and David D'Arcy and directed by Andrew Shea. Ordinary Sentence is a 1981 film directed by Heinz Emigholz. Ed Hardy 'Tattoo the World' is a 2010 documentary. Zoo Revolution is a 2013 film directed by Geoff D’Eon. Jerome Jerome is the 2011 documentary film written and directed by Peter Lataster and Petra Lataster-Czisch. I Remember Me is a biographical documentary about chronic fatigue syndrome, filmed in the United States by Kim A. Snyder. The film attempts to show just how devastating the illness can be to persons afflicted with the illness. Snyder's travels are chronicled for four years as she tries to find answers about the mysterious illness she was diagnosed with. The motivation for Snyder was her fluctuating partial improvements followed by relapses of debilitating symptoms she experienced. Snyder was given many contradictory diagnoses for her symptoms along with various drugs that were of no help to her. The movie explains that there are medical experts that refuse to believe the illness exists, and among those that do, no one knows what causes it, how a person acquires it, or how it may be cured. Snyder's movie researches the history of the disease which takes her to Florida where a cluster outbreak occurred in 1956, and to Lake Tahoe Nevada where many people became ill in the mid-1980s. The Florida victims were women who were "described in a medical journal as having hysterical paralysis." She interviewed several of the women who became ill and later recovered. The Girl from the South is a 2012 documentary drama film written by José Luis García and Jorge Goldenberg and directed by José Luis García. Yeats Country is a 1965 Irish short documentary film directed by Patrick Carey. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. White Epilepsy is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Philippe Grandrieux. Siblings - For Better or Worse is a 2011 short documentary film written by Laila Hodell, Nikolaj Hodell and Aage Rais-Nordentoft and directed by Max Kestner, Mikala Krogh, Laila Hodell and Aage Rais-Nordentoft. Hafu: The Mixed-Race Experience in Japan is a documentary film directed by Megumi Nishikura and Lara Perez Takagi. Iranian Ninja is a 2013 short film directed by Marjan Riahi. Salesman is a 1969 direct cinema documentary film directed by brothers Albert and David Maysles, and Charlotte Zwerin. Cirque du Soleil: Varekai is a 2003 film directed by Dominic Champagne and Nick Morris. The Universe of Mojica Marins is a 1978 Brazilian short documentary film by Ivan Cardoso. The film features Brazilian filmmaker, director, screenwriter, film and television actor and media personality José Mojica Marins. The film follows Marins in public appearances and includes commentary by Marins, as well as his mother and film associates and includes scenes from his films. Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo was an international documentary about the deaths of Admira Ismić and Boško Brkić. The couple were natives of Bosnia and Herzegovina living in the city of Sarajevo. She was a Bosniak, and he a Bosnian Serb. They were killed by snipers on 19 May 1993, while trying to cross the Vrbanja bridge to the Serb-occupied territory of Grbavica. Photographs of their dead bodies were used by numerous media outlets, and a now legendary Reuters dispatch about them was filed by Kurt Schork. The documentary was co-produced by PBS's Frontline, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the National Film Board of Canada and WDR Germany. It was directed by John Zaritsky. The People and the Olive is a 2012 documentary film directed by Aaron Dennis. Golden Lemons is a 2003 film directed by Jörg Siepmann. Anas: An Indian Film is a documentary film written by Lorenzo Livingstone,Inés Tornadeira and Ali Be,and directed by Enric Miró. Casting a Glance is a 2007 documentary film directed by James Benning. We Come as Friends is a 2014 Austrian-French documentary film written, directed and produced by Hubert Sauper. The film premiered in-competition at the 64th Berlin International Film Festival on February 8, 2014. It won the Peace Film Award at the festival. The film also premiered in-competition in the World Cinema Documentary Competition at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. It won the Special Jury Award for Cinematic Bravery at the festival. The film later premiered at 43rd New Directors/New Films on March 20, 2014. The film will also premiered at 57th San Francisco International Film Festival on April 25, 2014 in competition for Golden Gate Documentary Feature. Village at the End of the World is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sarah Gavron and David Katznelson. Projekt Arthur- Die Gewaltfrage 1968 is a 1987 documentary film. Sublime: Stories, Tales, Lies, Exaggeration is a 1998 music documentary film directed by Josh Fischel "This film is a meditation on the immigrant experience through the life and poetry of Doroteo Garcia, a Mexican immigrant, father, janitor, union activist, and poet. Like countless Mexican immigrants, Doroteo came to the United States to make a better life for his family, leaving behind his sons in the process. What was meant to be a short separation turned into more than a decade. To deal with his loneliness, Doroteo turned to poetry to express himself. To deal with the invisibility of immigrant workers, he became a union activist." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Giant Creepy Crawlies is a 2001 one hour nature documentary presented by Nigel Marven. It looks at the world's largest invertebrates, which include giant squid and sparrow-sized crickets called weta. A highlight was Nigel with a dog-sized crab. Coach Zoran and His African Tigers is a 2014 documentary film directed by Sam Benstead. Fellow Citizen is a 1983 Iranian documentary film directed by Abbas Kiarostami. Virunga is a 2014 documentary war film written and directed by Orlando von Einsiedel. Children of War is a feature-length documentary film directed by Bryan Single and released in 2010. Filmed in northern Uganda over a period of three years, the story follows the journey of a group of former child soldiers as they undergo a process of trauma therapy and emotional healing while in a rehabilitation center. Having been abducted from their homes and schools by the Lord’s Resistance Army—a quasi-religious militia led by international war criminal and self-proclaimed prophet Joseph Kony—the children struggle to confront years of brutal abuse, forced combat and religious indoctrination with the help of a heroic team of trauma counselors. As these fearless allies guide the children forward into new lives, Children Of War illuminates a powerful and cathartic story of forgiveness and hope in the aftermath of war. Lonely Swallows: Living as the Children of Immigrant Workers is a documentary film directed by Mayu Nakamura and Kimihiro Tsumura. A documentary of Arnold Schwarzenegger's gubernatorial campaign in California. Llyn Foulkes: One Man Band is a 2013 documentary and biography film directed by Tamar Halpern and Chris Quilty. Legacy of the Hollywood Blacklist is a 1987 film directed by Judy Chaikin. Sunny Side of Life is a documentary film from 1985 about the musical Carter Family focusing on the children of A.P and Sara who still live in the mountains and are trying to keep the legacy of their ancestors alive, at the Carter Fold near Maces Spring, Virginia. It includes interviews with the clan including a small snippet with June Carter Cash. The title is based upon the early Carter Family hit recording, Keep On the Sunny Side. Corner Plot is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Ian Cook and Andre Dahlman. Sullivan's Banks is a 2000 documentary short film written and directed by Heinz Emigholz. Anna: From Six Till Eighteen is a 1994 documentary film written by Sergei Miroshnichenko, Nikita Mikhalkov and directed by Nikita Mikhalkov. Snows Of The Nile is a 2013 adventure documentary film written and directed by Nathan Dappen and Neil Losin. Photos of Angie is a 2011 drama documentary film directed by Alan Domínguez. Cyber Seniors is a 2014 documentary film directed by Saffron Cassaday about reluctant seniors who with the help of teenage mentors discover the wonders of the world-wide-web. The Carnival is a documentary film directed by Daniel Romero and Sean Ford. Dialogue in the Mountains is a 1999 film directed by Mattias Caduff. The Silkies of Madagascar is a 2013 short historical documentary film written and directed by David Evans. Pulling Teeth is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Steve Abruzzese and Jennifer Suwak. Acquainted With the Night is a 2010 documentary written and directed by Michael McNamara. "In the hours between dusk and dawn: 20 million hungry bats, 700,000 watts of light beaming into space, 80,000 flaming rockets, 60,000 drunken club kids, 9,000 cemetery candles, 1000 miles of dark road, 600 desk lamps, 500 red umbrellas… City dwellers are only able to fully appreciate the magic of the night skies during blackouts. Inspired by one—and by Christopher Dewdney’s book— filmmaker Michael MacNamara travelled around the world exploring stories of nighttime phenomena, customs and rituals from sunset to sunrise. The result is enchanting. From millions of bats filling the dusk skies of Austin Texas to a solitary conservationist measuring light pollution on a hilltop in Utah; from a team of warriors engaged in a midnight Easter “rocket war” in Greece to bicycle cops keeping the peace at closing time in Toronto’s Clubland; Acquainted With The Night is comprised of twelve chapters which correspond to the twelve hours of an "ideal" night, starting at 6PM and ending at 6AM. Each chapter serves as a point of departure for the stories of how the world changes when the sun sets, revealing the dark truths, beauty and the dangerous consequences of a world that never sleeps." Quoting the description from the 2011 Palm Springs International Film Festival site. The New Juarez is a documentary film directed by Charlie Minn. You Don't Need Feet to Dance is a 2013 documentary film directed by Alan Govenar. Home Movie Factory is film directed by Michel Gondry. Imagining Emanuel is a documentary film written and directed by Thomas A. Ostbye. The Sound of Waves is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ryusuke Hamaguchi and Kou Sakai. Viel Passiert - Der Bap-Film is a 2002 German musical documentary film written and directed by Wim Wenders. The Wild, Wild World of Jayne Mansfield is a 1968 X-Rated documentary film based on the life of the late 1950s sex-bomb Jayne Mansfield. Only Yesterday: The Carpenters Story is a Carpenters documentary that aired on BBC One on April 9, 2007. It features interviews by Richard Carpenter, Jerry Moss, and others. It was directed by Samantha Peters, and had rare footage of "For All We Know" on The Andy Williams Show; "Dancing in the Street" on Your All American College Show; "Love Is Surrender" on the London Bridge Special featuring Tom Jones. It was produced in 16:9 widescreen. Bauern erfüllen den Plan is an East German film. It was released in 1952. I Live in Behrampada is a documentary film directed by Madhushree Dutta. "Especially relevant considering the current debate surrounding “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” OUT of ANNAPOLIS is a riveting look at the lives of some of the U.S. Naval Academy’s lesbian and gay alumni. The documentary tells the stories of eleven former sailors and Marines who attended Annapolis in the 70s, 80s and 90s. Through candid interviews, these former midshipmen discuss the reasons why they entered the Naval Academy (most wanted to serve their country and get an Ivy League-quality education) and the struggles they faced both while students and once they entered the fleet. Some of these former officers entered the Academy knowing they were gay, while others didn’t discover that aspect of themselves until much later. A few had same-sex relationship while at the Academy, many waited until they were in the fleet to have their first same-sex sexual encounter. While some of these former midshipmen had careers spanning only a short while, some served for many years both before “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” when gay witch-hunts were common, and after passage of the landmark legislation. Director and subject Commander Steve Clark Hall, USN (Ret.), hits all the right notes for a powerful documentary, including sweepingly beautiful shots of the Annapolis campus and entertaining archival photos of all the subjects. What emerges is a remarkably intimate, incredibly positive portrait of the group’s experiences. Perhaps most fascinating for civilians is the final question: if you had a second chance, would you go to Annapolis again?" Quoting Kate Carroll from the Framline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival Site. Night Stop is a 2002 film directed by Licinio Azevedo. Rialto Twirlers is a 2010 short action documentary film directed by Anne Maree Barry. After Farewell, Cambodia is a 2012 documentary film directed by Iv Charbonneau-Ching and Jeremy Knittel. Field Diary is a 1982 documentary film directed by Amos Gitai. Turn Off the Lights is a 2012 documentary written by Ivana Mladenovic and Bianca Oana and directed by Ivana Mladenovic. Duch, Master of the Forges of Hell is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Rithy Panh. Mountain Talk is a 2004 documentary film directed by Neal Hutcheson. First Orbit is a feature-length, experimental documentary film about Vostok 1, the first manned space flight around the Earth. By matching the orbit of the International Space Station to that of Vostok 1 as closely as possible, in terms of ground path and time of day, documentary filmmaker Christopher Riley and European Space Agency astronaut Paolo Nespoli were able to film the view that Yuri Gagarin saw on his pioneering orbital space flight. This new footage was cut together with the original Vostok 1 mission audio recordings sourced from the Russian State Archive of Scientific and Technical Documentation. The film features the music of composer Philip Sheppard. Swamp is a 1969 documentary film directed by Nancy Holt and Robert Smithson. Super Star Celine Dion and music legend Frankie Vali and others are featured in this look at the driving passion of all artists to reach their performance peak and rise to the top of their stardom. Celine Dion discusses how her intense passion for performing fueled her incredible personal rise from a unknown French Canadian schoolgirl to World singing sensation. Irma is a 2010 short documantary film directed by Charles Fairbanks. The Who's Who of the Machiya is a 2013 documentary film directed by Yuki Ito. H. H. Holmes: America's First Serial Killer is a 2004 biographical documentary film directed by John Borowski. The film relates the true life story of American serial killer H. H. Holmes. Produced over a four-year period, the film highlights locations such as Holmes' childhood home in Gilmanton, New Hampshire, and the courtroom in Philadelphia where the "trial of the century" was held. The film focuses on Dr. Holmes' entire life. It consists of reenactments, expert interviews, and period photography. The film is narrated by Tony Jay. The Mystery Of Flying Kicks is a 2010 short film directed by Matthew Bate. Dragooned is a 2012 mystery war documentary film, directed by Sandy Amerio. The Hip Hop Project is a 2006 documentary music film and directed by Matt Ruskin. China's Century of Humiliation is a documentary film created by Mitch Anderson. Released in 2011, the documentary explores the tumultuous interaction between China and the European powers throughout the 19th century. "Rising above an entertaining mosaic of the lives of several inhabitants of the “uprooted” village of Dolní Poustevna on the Šluknov promontory – the Vietnamese girl Denisa, a group of retarded inmates from the local welfare institute or the German brothel-hunting tourist Volker – is the all-pervading shadow of the resettlement forced upon the German population after the war." Quoting the description from the 2007 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival site. Paul Robeson - Speak of Me As I Am is a 1998 documentary video directed by Rachel Hermans. It is a co-production of BBC Wales/New Jersey Public Television series, about the life of singer, actor and activist, Paul Robeson. It features rare extensive archival footage of Robeson in the former Soviet Union, including footage of Robeson at Yalta with Nikita Khrushchev and many of Robeson's homes and landmarks as they look today. There are also interviews with Robeson's two main biographers, Lloyd Brown and Martin Duberman. As of 2009, Paul Robeson - Speak of Me As I Am is the most extensive documentary on Paul Robeson that the BBC has ever been involved with. "Anybody who watched Valva's debut, Transvestites Also Cry (LLGFF 2009) could not forget the quietly graceful former boxer from Ecuador known as Mujeron, working as a prostitute in Paris in order to send money to his family. In this follow-up, Angel (his real name) travels home for the first time to see what his work has achieved. Ecuador can be a violently homophobic society yet many people depend on a migrant family member working in the sex industry abroad. Angel explores this phenomenon that some have called 'family pimping' through the touching story of Angel and his solitary fight for acceptance." Quoting Jason Barker from the 2011 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival site. Rachel's Daughters: Searching for the Causes of Breast Cancer is a 1997 documentary film directed by Allie Light and Irving Saraf. The Trick Brain is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Ed Atkins. Ride with Larry is a documentary film directed by Andrew Rubin and Ricardo Villarreal. Narrated by Sean Penn and based on the work of media critic and best- selling author Norman Solomon, who traveled with Penn to Baghdad just before the war to call attention to the dangers of a U.S. invasion, WAR MADE EASY reaches into the Orwellian memory hole to expose 50 years of government spin and media collusion that has dragged our country into one war after another from Vietnam to Iraq. With remarkable archival footage of official distortion and exaggeration from LBJ to George W. Bush, the documentary exposes how presidential administrations of both parties have relied on a combination of deception and media complicity to sell one war after another to the American people.Giving special attention to parallels between Vietnam and Iraq, WAR MADE EASY sets government spin and media collusion from the present alongside virtually identical patterns from the past, guided by Solomon s meticulous research and tough-minded analysis. Rare footage of political leaders and journalists from the past includes Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon, Defense Secretary Robert McNamara and news correspondents Walter Cronkite and Morley Safer. According to Solomon, whose work has been praised by The Los Angeles Times as brutally persuasive, the positive attention the film has received may indicate a new willingness to counter years of pro-war media spin and government deception. These deep patterns of ongoing perception management must be demystified and decoded if we're going to move beyond the horrors of perpetual war, he said. The way War Made Easy is being embraced could be an important step in that direction.An Official Selection of 2007 s International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam and the 2007 Montreal and Vancouver International Film Festivals, WAR MADE EASY, directed by Loretta Alper and Jeremy Earp, is an invaluable introduction to war propaganda and public relations that transcends partisan politics, and raises serious questions about the role of journalism and political communication in our society. Snow Guardians is a 2013 documentary, short, adventure, drama film written by Karl E. Swingle and directed by Carson Garner. The Kempler video is a film made by Roni Kempler while standing initially at the crime scene at the northeast side of the Tel Aviv City Hall and later on the roof of the "Gan Ha'ir"-mall overlooking the crime scene before and during the assassination of Prime Minister of Israel Yitzhak Rabin on November 4, 1995. Narmada is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Grégory Cohen and Manon Ott. The One Dollar Diary is a 2001 documentary film narrated by Wim Wenders and directed by Dominick DeJoseph. Bird by Bird with Annie: A Film Portrait of Writer Anne Lamott is a film directed by Freida Lee Mock. Don't Mess with Bill is a 1980 American short documentary film about Canadian martial arts pioneer Bill Underwood, produced by Pen Densham. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Mont Age is a 2011 documentary film directed by Zoot Derks. Monte Carlo: C'est La Rose is a 1968 documentary film written by John Aylesworth and Frank Peppiatt, directed by Michael Pfleghar. Das Weiterleben Der Ruth Klüger is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Renata Schmidtkunz. Edwin Parker is a 2011 documentary film directed by Tacita Dean. Farewell To The Frogs is a 2011 German documentary film written and directed by Ulrike Schamoni. Beijing 2003 is a documentary film directed by Ai Weiwei The Weird World of Blowfly is a 2010 documentary film about rapper and hip hop musician Clarence Reid, a/k/a Blowfly, directed by Jonathan Furmanski. In addition to Reid, the film features collaborators Tom Bowker and Otto von Schirach along with perspectives from Chuck D, Ice-T, and Die Ärzte. You die as you lived is a 2009 documentary film. Harvard Beats Yale 29-29 is a 2008 documentary film by Kevin Rafferty, covering the 1968 meeting between the football teams of Yale and Harvard in their storied rivalry. The game has been called "the most famous football game in Ivy League history". Mary & Myself is a 2013 animated documentary film written and directed by Sam Decoste. Playground is 2009 documentary directed by Libby Spears. The film focuses on the child sex trade in the United States. Playground challenges the notion that the sexual exploitation of children is limited to back-alley brothels in developing countries and traces the epidemic of exploitation to its disparate, and decidedly American, roots — among them the way children are educated about sex, and the problem of raising awareness about a crime that inherently cannot be shown. The film includes interviews with Ernie Allen, President of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and Judge Sanford "Sammy" Jones, Former Chief Judge of the Fulton County Juvenile Court and unfolds as a search for Michelle, an everyday American girl who was lost to the underbelly of sexual exploitation as a child and has yet to resurface a decade later. Playground features original artwork by Japanese pop artist, Yoshitomo Nara, and animation by Heather Bursch. Vincent Who? is a documentary film that was released in 2009. It details the 1982 murder of Vincent Chin that occurred in Detroit, Michigan. Chin was a 27-year-old Chinese-American who was beaten to death with a baseball bat by two Detroit autoworkers, who had mistakenly thought that he was Japanese and, in their minds, was responsible for the loss of jobs in the U.S. auto industry. As part of making the film, producer Curtis Chin asked approximately 80 young Asian Americans if they had ever heard of Vincent Chin — they hadn't. The film begins by explaining that Chin's killers, Ronald Ebens and Michael Nitz, were originally charged with second-degree murder but were allowed to plead guilty to a lesser charge of manslaughter. Judge Charles Kaufman, who sentenced them to three years' probation and a $3,000 fine, explained his leniency by saying, "These weren't the kind of men you send to jail." The National Association for Multicultural Education gave Vincent Who? its 2009 Multicultural Media Award. "Le Premier Du Nom" is a 2000 documentary written by Nicolas Morel and directed by Sabine Franel. Living Downstream is a 2010 feature-length true documentary based on the book by ecologist and cancer survivor Sandra Steingraber, Ph.D. The film was produced by The People's Picture Company. In the Wake of the Flood is a 2010 documentary film produced in Canada by director Ron Mann and featuring author Margaret Atwood. The film follows Atwood on her unusual book tour for her novel The Year of the Flood. The film premiered in Canada in October 2010, and will have its U.S. West Coast premiere at the San Francisco Green Film Festival in March 2011. Urban Clan is a 1999 music documentary film directed by Michelle Mahrer. Johnny Carson: King of Late Night is a documentary film by two-time Emmy®-winning filmmaker Peter Jones about the life of American television talk show host Johnny Carson. It is narrated by Kevin Spacey, and aired on PBS on May 14, 2012, as part of their American Masters series. Johnny Carson: King of Late Night is a co-production of Peter Jones Productions, Inc. and THIRTEEN’S American Masters for WNET. The film received two Emmy Award nominations for Outstanding Writing Nonfiction Programming and Outstanding Picture Editing Nonfiction Programming. It was also nominated by the Writers Guild of America in the Television Documentary category. Heartbeat in the Brain is a 1970 documentary film produced and directed by Amanda Feilding, an advocate of trepanation. In the film, Feilding, a 27-year-old student at the time, drills a hole in her forehead with a dentist's drill. In the documentary, surgical scenes alternate with motion studies of Feilding's pet pigeon Birdie. In 1978, Feilding screened the movie at the Suydam Gallery in New York. More than one audience member fainted during the climax. The 1998 documentary A Hole in the Head contains footage from Heartbeat in the Brain. The documentary, long believed to be lost, was publicly screened at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London on 28 April 2011. The Last Days of Winter is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mehrdad Oskouei. 1960 is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Gabriele Salvatores and co-written with Michele Astori and Massimo Fiocchi. Closure is a 2012 documentary, adventure, drama and biographical film directed by Bryan Tucker. Working alone in Iraq over eight months, filmmaker Laura Poitras (Flag Wars, POV) creates an extraordinarily intimate portrait of Iraqis living under U.S. occupation. Her principal focus is Dr. Riyadh, an Iraqi medical doctor, father of six and Sunni political candidate. An outspoken critic of the occupation, he is equally passionate about the need to establish democracy in Iraq, arguing that Sunni participation in the January 2005 elections is essential. Yet all around him, Dr. Riyadh sees only chaos, as his waiting room fills each day with patients suffering the physical and mental effects of ever-increasing violence. My Country, My Country is a powerful mosaic of daily life in Iraq. A co-production with the Independent Television Service (ITVS), produced in association with P.O.V./American Documentary. Tamale Road: A Memoir from El Salvador is a 2012 drama history film directed by Raquel McPeek Rodriguez and Marcos Villatoro. Raga is a 1971 documentary film about the life and music of Indian sitarist Ravi Shankar, produced and directed by Howard Worth. It includes scenes featuring Western musicians Yehudi Menuhin and George Harrison, as well as footage of Shankar returning to Maihar in central India, where as a young man he trained under the mentorship of Allauddin Khan. The film also features a portion of Shankar and tabla player Alla Rakha's acclaimed performance at the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival. The majority of the documentary was shot in the late 1960s, during a period when Shankar's growing popularity saw Indian classical music embraced by rock and pop musicians and their audiences. Financial problems then delayed production until Harrison provided assistance through the Beatles' company Apple Films. In addition to actively promoting Raga, Harrison produced the soundtrack album – a project that led directly to he and Shankar staging the Concert for Bangladesh in August 1971. The film's working title was alternately East Meets West and Messenger Out of the East. Well-Founded Fear is a 2000 documentary film from directors Shari Robertson and Michael Camerini. The film takes its title from the formal definition of a refugee under the UN Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, as a person who deserves protection, "owing to a well-founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion.” The film analyzes the US asylum process by following several asylum applicants and asylum officers through actual INS interviews. Kings Park: Stories from an American Mental Institution is a documentary film directed by Lucy Winer. Every Sunday Morning is a documentary film that received the 1965 award for the AACTA Award for Best Documentary, Honourable Mention. Behind the Swings is a documentary directed by the YMCA Youth. Curriculum vitae is a 1975 polish film written and directed by Krzysztof Kieślowski. Jews and Buddhism: Belief Amended, Faith Revealed is a documentary narrated by Sharon Stone that compiles interviews and archival footage of prominent Jewish, Buddhist, and Jewish-Buddhist personalities—including the Dalai Lama, David Ben-Gurion, Allen Ginsberg, Rabbi Allen Lew, Sylvia Boorstein, and many others—to explore the new phenomenon of American Jews who have expanded their faith by drawing from Buddhist traditions. Alpi is a 2011 documentary film directed by Armin Linke. Milius is a 2013 documentary film directed by Joey Figueroa and Zak Knutson. Los tres secretos de Fátima is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Magali Escobar Ramírez. Tableau Noir is a 2013 documentary film directed by Yves Yersin. Sex no mukôgawa: AV danyû to iu ikikata is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Yûjirô Enoki and Hidekazu Takahara. Johnny Winter: Down & Dirty is a 2014 documentary film directed by Greg Olliver. Norah Jones and the Handsome Band: Live in 2004 is a music documentary film directed by Hamish Hamilton. Denok & Gareng is a 2012 documentary drama film wrote and directed by Dwi Sujanti Nugraheni. Magic Camp is a family documentary film directed by Judd Ehrlich. In Search of Excellence is a 1997 short documentary film directed by Raghu Krishna. Enigmatico is a 1995 short documentary film. Tats Cru: The Mural Kings is a documentary film directed by Mark Kotlinski. Victory at Sea is a 1954 war documentary film written by Richard Hanser and Henry Salomon and directed by Isaac Kleinerman. Sayama: Mienai tejô wo hazusu made is a documentary film directed by Sung Woong Kim. Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God is a 2012 documentary film directed by Alex Gibney. The film details the first known protest against clerical sex abuse in the United States by four deaf men. It features the voices of actors Jamey Sheridan, Chris Cooper, Ethan Hawke, and John Slattery, who provide the vocal translation of the deaf interviewees. The title is derived from the Latin phrase "mea maxima culpa". It is taken from the Confiteor that is part of the Roman Catholic Mass. It translates into English as "My most grievous fault". The Haverstraw Tunnel is an early black and white silent film released in 1897 by the American Mutoscope Company. It is considered to be the first example of a phantom ride and features a train travelling along the West Shore Railroad in Rockland County, New York and then through the eponymous tunnel. Ear of the Heart: The Music of Galt MacDermot is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jeff Lunger. Lost Innocents of Kashmir is a 2011 documentary short historical fiction war film written and directed by David Blackall. La valise is a 1990 documentary, short film directed by François Amado. After The Mine is a short documentary film directed by Diendo Hamadi and Dinta Wa Lusula. Henri Plaat is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jérôme Schlomoff. A Discussion About 'Things We Lost in the Fire' is a 2008 documentary written by Allan Loeb and directed by Susanne Bier. This powerful documentary looks at the Democratic Republic of Congo, and describes six hidden faces of Africa, far from the capitals devastated by globalization and populated by million people. The Democratic Republic of Congo, in the heart of black Africa is a huge territory, exploited for its great natural wealth. Just four years ago democratic elections were held at National level. In the northeast, an area of pressure from neighboring Rwanda and Uganda, you are in no man's land where humanitarian crises and genocides are cycles, where black African world lives in poverty, but continues to resist organizing between tradition and development failure. Not Anymore: A Story of Revolution is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Matthew VanDyke. Beef III is the third installment of the Beef series. It is a documentary about Hip hop rivalries and beefs. It was released on DVD on November 15, 2005. It was directed and produced by Peter Spirer and lasts approximately 85 minutes. It was narrated by DJ Kay Slay and scored by Nu Jerzey Devil. The next film in the series is called Beef IV. Cuisine As An Agent Of Social Change is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jesús M. Santos. Light's Diamond Jubilee is a two-hour TV special aired on October 24, 1954 on all four U.S. television networks of the time, DuMont, CBS, NBC, and ABC. The special won a Primetime Emmy Award for Victor Young for Best Music for a Variety or Dramatic series. The special was produced by David O. Selznick, had seven directors, and featured major stars of the day. The special was sponsored by General Electric in honor of the 75th anniversary of the invention of the incandescent light bulb by Thomas Edison. In 1929, a previous celebration of "light's golden jubilee" was produced by General Electric and created by PR pioneer Edward Bernays. Robert Benchley's appearance was a segment from his MGM short film How to Raise a Baby. The Jim Lindsey Story is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Clint Fullen. Los Niños del Nepal is a 2002 documentary short film written and directed by Javier Berrocal and Juan Soler. An African-American in Russia is a 1999 documentary film directed by Jamal Hodge. Ted Leo & the Pharmacists: Dirty Old Town is a 2003 concert film by director Justin Mitchell documenting a day in the life of Ted Leo and the Pharmacists on Coney Island. The bulk of the footage is of the band's energetic performance at the Siren Music Festival, interspersed with interviews, boardwalk montages, and a cameo by comedian David Cross. This film is named after the old Ewan MacColl song "Dirty Old Town"; Leo performs a live cover of this song at the beginning of the movie. Arturo is a 2013 short documentary written and directed by Pilar Alvarez. Lea Salonga: The Broadway Concert is a 2002 musical documentary film. The Business of Being Born is a 2008 documentary film that explores the contemporary experience of childbirth in the United States. Produced by Ricki Lake, it compares various childbirth methods, including midwives, natural births, epidurals, and Cesarean sections. The film criticizes the American health care system with its emphasis on medicines and costly interventions and its view of childbirth as a medical emergency rather than a natural occurrence. The film documents actual home births and water births. They follow a midwife, Cara, in New York as she takes care of and attends several births. They then give the audience several statistics about our current birthing techniques and challenges today's doctors. Many experts are interviewed and they cite a multitude of reasons for these, such as the overuse of medical procedures in the interest of saving time. Femmes aux yeux ouverts is a Togolese documentary film directed by Anne-Laure Folly. It covers the lives of contemporary African women in Burkina Faso, Mali, Senegal and Benin. Lloyd Kaufman and the Troma Team struggle against incompetence, conflict and "the man" in order to complete their latest piece of art, Terror Firmer. The documentarians hold nothing back in the fight for truly independent cinema. German Concentration Camps Factual Survey is a 2014 documentary written by Richard Crossman and Colin Wills and directed by Sidney Bernstein and Alfred Hitchcock. Joe Frazier: When the Smoke Clears is a 2010 historical biography documentary written and directed by Mike Todd. My Mother Was Murdered by a Suicide Bomber is a TV documentary about the killing of Perla Hermele in Park Hotel in Netanya, Israel in March 2002 as part of the Passover massacre. The documentary was made by her son, Jewish journalist Bernt Hermele and has been shown on Swedish national broadcaster TV4. The film has also been invited to several film festivals. After the Miracle is a documentary film directed by Gilbert J. Brealey. Capone's Whiskey: The Story of Templeton Rye is a documentary film directed by Kristian Day. Carabanchel, un barrio de cine is a 2007 short documentary film written by Rafael Nieto and directed by Juan Carlos Zambrana. The Devil's Haircut is a 2014 LGBT film directed by Marco Gatti. Who Killed Nancy? is a British documentary film directed by Alan Parker. The movie was produced by Ben Timlett and Christine Alderson. It had its US theatrical opening at the Cinema Village in New York City on July 30, 2010. The film examines the possibility that it was not Sid Vicious who was responsible for the death of Nancy Spungen. "The Bicycle is an intimate look at AIDS through one man's eyes. It is the sobering yet inspirational story of how local communities can join up with global medical experts to battle the world's deadliest pandemic—and win. Pax Chingawale pedals his bicycle over twenty kilometers a day, visiting his neighbors from house to house. His travels take him to twenty villages in Zomba District, southern Malawi, Africa. The film chronicles Pax's journeys as he battles AIDS at the grassroots. Pax works with traditional healers who are influential at the local level yet often contribute unwittingly to the spread of the disease. He bikes around in search of the abandoned and the ill while monitoring the progress of those whose lives are being saved by ARVs (Anti Retro-Virals), a life-extending drug treatment. Pax is not a doctor or nurse. He's a retired government auditor who volunteers with Canada's Dignitas. Dignitas is headed by Dr. James Orbinski, who accepted the Nobel Peace Prize for Médecins Sans Frontières in 1999." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Fraud is a 2011 documentary short film. A Ripple of Hope is a 2008 documentary film directed by Donald Boggs. When Australia stopped the refugee boats in 2001, most Australians applauded. Ten years later, the people who were there tell us what we didn't then know. In late winter 2001, the crew of the Norwegian tanker the Tampa pulled more than 400 refugees out of a fishing boat that was sinking off the north-west coast of Australia. The refugees demanded to be taken to Christmas Island. As the captain complied, the Australian authorities radioed. They threatened to seize his ship and throw him in prison if he entered Australian waters. The order had come from the very top. Reformation is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jeanette Groenendaal. Art and Craft is a 2014 documentary film directed by Sam Cullman, Jennifer Grausman and Mark Becker. Inori is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Pedro González-Rubio. El Color Que Cayó Del Cielo is a 2014 documentary film written by Sergio Wolf and Jorge Goldenberg and directed by Sergio Wolf. Hello Actors Studio is a 1987 film directed by Annie Tresgot. American Federale is a 2013 documentary film about the only American ever to serve as a Mexican Federale. Lobo transforms from cop to deliver humanitarian aid to hospitals in the dangerous border towns of Mexico. Lobo is the Federale that killed drug lord Pablo Acosta. It is the directorial debut of Michael Douglas Carlin. The film is available on iTunes, Google Play, and Amazon. The official trailer received over one million views. Lunch with Yoshi is a 2012 short family documentary film written and directed by Chaitanya Gopinath. Tony Curtis, Driven to Stardom is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Ian Ayres. Meeting Ancestors is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Vincent Carelli and Dominique Gallois. Big Easy Express is a 2012 musical documentary film directed by Emmett Malloy. Mysteries of the Unseen World is a short documentary film directed by Louis Schwartzberg. Le Trou Du Diable is 1989 documentary film directed by Richard Lavoie. The Hip-Hop Fellow is a documentary biographical music film directed by Kenneth Price. Caspar David Friedrich is a 1986 drama film written by Hans A. Neunzig and Peter Schamoni and directed by Peter Schamoni. Skiing Everest is an American adventure documentary directed by Les Guthman and Mike Marolt; written by Les Guthman, and featuring high-altitude skiers Mike Marolt, Steve Marolt, John Callaghan, Jim Gile, Hans Kammerlander, Chris Davenport, Laura Bakos, Mark Newcomb. The film also features Fredrik Ericsson, who died skiing on K2 in 2010. Filmed by Mike Marolt over ten years, Skiing Everest tells the story of a group of close friends, led by Marolt and his twin brother Steve, who grew up in Aspen, Colorado, and went on to become the first skiers from the Western Hemisphere to ski from above 8,000 meters when they skied from the summit of Shisha Pangma in Tibet in 2000, and then challenged the highest slopes in the world on Mt. Everest and Cho Oyu. The film follows the Marolts and their childhood friends Jim Gile, and John Callahan, who was an Olympic cross-country skier, on skiing expeditions into the Death zone above 26,000 ft., without using bottled oxygen. At the top of the world, they lock into their skis and challenge the most dangerous slopes in the world. Everything Is Incredible is a 2011 short documentary and biographical film directed by Tyler Bastian, Trevor Hill and Tim Skousen. Jijivisha is a documentary on the river Yamuna made in 2005 by Swechha with contributions from Kuber Sharma, Ishita Moitra, Shirley Abraham, Charulatha Menon and Amit Madheshia. The film traces the journey of the river from Yamunotri to Allahbad through cities such as Delhi and Agra. "YELLOW SHEEP RIVER is a film about the beauty in everyday life told through a poetry of images. Award-winning director LIU Soung's film is an exploration of life in traditional Chinese agricultural society. He sets aside social problems, such as poverty, and focuses purely on the imagery that is present in simple acts. The entire film is without dialogue. Everyday life is revealed through the director's omnipresent lens. At the same time, we are fully immersed in the land, the changing of the four seasons and the most basic conditions of human life. Through clever editing and simple rhythms reveal the joyous and fulfilling peace that is found in daily activities. If you have forgotten what it means to be alive, YELLOW SHEEP RIVER will remind you." Quoting the film's Official Site The Tramp And The Dictator is a 2001 documentary film directed by Kevin Brownlow and Michael Kloft; with writing credits by Christopher Bird and Kevin Brownlow. Let's Spend the Night Together is a live concert film, documenting The Rolling Stones' 1981 North American Tour. It was directed by Hal Ashby, and released to cinemas in 1983, then subsequently released on VHS and CED Videodisc. It was released in New Zealand & Australia with the alternative title Time Is On Our Side on VHS and is currently available on DVD in Japan, Australia and New Zealand. It was filmed at the Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey and at the Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona. The film was released as Rocks Off in Germany in 1982 with slightly different footage and the additional song "When the Whip Comes Down" from Sun Devil Stadium. See also the live album "Still Life", released in 1982, from the same tour. Lions Gate Entertainment released the film on DVD in the United States on November 2, 2010. Senkaku Rock is a documentary film directed by Hideto Sonoda. U2 3D is a 2007 American-produced 3D concert film featuring rock band U2 performing during the Vertigo Tour in 2006. The film contains performances of 14 songs, including tracks from How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb, the album supported by the tour. The concert footage includes political and social statements made during the shows. It is the band's second feature film, following their 1988 rockumentary Rattle and Hum. Among several cinematic firsts, U2 3D was the first live-action digital 3D film. The project was created to experiment with a new type of 3D film technology pioneered by producer Steve Schklair. After considering shooting American football games in 3D, Schklair's company 3ality Digital decided to create a concert film with U2. The band were hesitant to participate, but agreed to the project mainly as a technological experiment rather than a profit-making venture. Although set in Buenos Aires, U2 3D was shot at seven concerts across Latin America, and two in Australia. The film's complex setup involved shooting with up to 18 3D cameras simultaneously and capturing the footage digitally. Train De Plaisir is a 1930 short documentary film directed by Henri Storck. Everyone Is Older Than I Am is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Martin Widerberg. The Adventures of Street Dogg: Vol. 1 is a 2005 documentary film written by Larry Gordon Czech Dream is a 2004 documentary film directed by two Czech film directors, Vít Klusák and Filip Remunda. It recorded a large-scale hoax perpetrated by Klusák and Remunda on the Czech public, culminating in the opening event of a fake hypermarket in the Letňany neighborhood of Prague. The film was their graduation project for film school. Chantal Akerman, From Here is a 2010 documentary film directed and written by Gustavo Beck and Leonardo Luiz.Ferreira. Dear Governor Cuomo is 2012 documentary music film written and directed by Jon Bowermaster. Art Is A Verb is a 2013 documentary, short, biography, music film written and directed by Sky Sabin. Exile in Büyükada is a 2000 film directed by Turan Yavuz. For The Love Of Music: The Story Of Nashville is a 2013 documentary film directed by Zach Merck. The Train to Moscow: A Journey to Utopia is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Federico Ferrone and Michele Manzolini. The environment is deteriorating. Air, earth and oceans are suffering an accelerated process of degradation. The increasing globalization shows us once again the big difference between first and third world. Breaking the Spell is a 1999 anarchist documentary, directed by Tim Lewis, Tim Ream, and Sir Chuck A. Rock. Using amateur camera footage recorded by protesters at the scene of the 1999 WTO riots, it documents the riot from the perspective of the anarchists, their opinions of fellow protesters, local politicians, and includes footage which aired nationally on 60 Minutes. The film is currently distributed by CrimethInc. on the CrimethInc. Guerilla Film Series, Volume One DVD. The Unnamed Zone is a 2006 Spanish documentary film by director Carlos Rodríguez about the lives of three young Ukrainian children directly affected by the 1986 Chernobyl disaster. Air Guitar Nation is a feature-length 2006 documentary about the first US Air Guitar Championships, following the top contestants, David "C-Diddy" Jung and Dan "Björn Türoque" Crane, to the 2003 World Championship in Oulu, Finland. The film premiered in 2006 as part of the AFI/Discovery Channel Documentary Film Festival and was then played at the 2007 Adelaide International Film Festival. Vicky - The Gay Gene Comes to Melbourne is a 2014 documentary film directed by Sasha Hadden. Legendary Champions is a 1968 documentary film written and directed by Harry Chapin featuring old boxers in action. There are many scenes that show the boxers outside the ring, including some that are the only ones of their kind. Several early boxers, John L. Sullivan for example, are shown in the only film ever taken of them. The film of the Dempsey-Willard fight is very violent. The documentary includes as history of Jack Johnson out of the ring. The narrator incorrectly states that Jack Johnson is seen picking a defeated boxer's teeth out of one of his gloves. The attire worn by some of the early boxers is more revealing than what modern-day boxers use, and to the other extreme, tights were even worn by some boxers. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Making of 's. Darko' is a documentary short film directed by Joshua Kopple. "This isn't Hollywood, and it isn't Bollywood: this is Taliwood. Australian filmmaker and visual artist George Gittoes spent two years in the Taliban-occupied north of Pakistan. The surreal war situation there doesn't stop local filmmakers from making lowbrow movies with large doses of half-naked women, action heroes, and pulp fiction. "We want to see the local breasts," one Peshawar video store owner declares, in reference to the need for local film production. The prevailing Taliban moralists are less appreciative of this, expressing their discontent by burning video stores to the ground. Gittoes gets to know the actors and actresses who play roles that put their lives in danger. Summing up the mentality of the fundamentalists, one actor remarks that "Making bombs is good, making movies is against Islam." When Gittoes hears that the production of a TV movie only costs $4,000, he decides to make two of them. This leads to a film shoot full of hilarious gunfights, fake blood, and scenes with dwarves and action heroes. At the same time, he discovers that the Taliban is also disseminating a form of entertainment that people are just as greedy for: recordings of real beheadings and executions, not to mention propaganda films about Al-Qaida training camps. In the end, the largest film industry turns out to be the war on terror." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. Inuit High Kick is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Alethea Arnaquq-Baril. What Is the Electric Car? is a 2010 documentary film that explains the benefits of electric cars. One reviewer stated that the movie "teeters on the brink of tedious but repeatedly saves itself with moments of cleverness or insight." The film features several actors, scientists, engineers and activists, all of whom contribute their thoughts and explanations regarding electric cars and electric vehicle technology. The film premiered on December 14, 2010 at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood, California. The Amish: A People of Preservation is a 2000 documentary film written by John L. Ruth Kate Bush: Under Review is a 2006 documentary film. Truck Stop is a 1996 documentary film written by Michael Muschner and Edoardo Sanguineti directed by Michael Muschner. The Flag Bearer is a 2010 documentary film directed by Philip Vogt. Natpwe, the feast of the spirits is a 2012 documentary directed by Tiane Doan na Champassak and Jean Dubrel. Up to our Necks is an unauthorized documentary film on the American metal band Slipknot. This unrated biography shows never-before-seen interviews with the band members, but does not have live footage nor music by the band. A man (Bonner Paddock) born with cerebral palsy attempts to conquer Mt. Kilimanjaro in the name of charity and inspiration. Lejanía is a 2013 documentary crime fiction film written and directed by Pablo Tamez Sierra. Doin' It in the Park: Pick-Up Basketball, NYC is a 2012 historical sport documentary film directed by Kevin Couliau and Bobbito Garcia. Orchids, My Intersex Adventure is an auto-biographical 2010 documentary about one woman's struggle to understand her own intersex condition while interviewing other intersex people. Director Phoebe Hart used digital cameras and a small crew while on a road trip of self-discovery through various areas of Australia, recording some personal stories disclosed to her by the other intersex individuals. This documentary took six years for the principal documenters to film, using a variety of cameras including semi-professional digital cameras, domestic VHS camcorders, and Super 8. Rowan Atkinson Live! is a 1992 comedy documentary film written by Rowan Atkinson, Richard Curtis and Ben Elton and directed by Thomas Schlamme. Whispers of Angels: A Story of the Underground Railroad is a 2002 TV documentary written by Daniel R. Collins, Sharon Kelly Baker and directed by Sharon Kelly Baker. Oxi is a 2014 Documentary film written and directed by Ken McMullen. Get Action!! is a documentary film directed by Jun'ya Kondô. Mother Nature's Child is a 2010 documentary film directed by Camilla Rockwell. The Mystery of Charles Dickens is a 2000 TV movie directed by Patrick Garland. Heckler is a 2007 documentary film about hecklers. The film begins with an examination of the means, methods, and motives of hecklers and their effect on live performances, particularly stand up comedy. A common observation by professional comics is that hecklers can be categorized in two groups: those who want to participate and sincerely believe they're helping the comedian, and those who intend to disrupt the comedian. Several male comedians suggest that female hecklers are often motivated by a desire to flirt with the performer. Subsequently, the film segues into a longer examination of film and music critics, including their effect on performers. The documentary suggests that most critics are motivated by frustrated artistic ambitions, and are no better than hecklers given that internet criticism has emboldened critics to engage in vicious personal attacks rather than critiques of artists' work. The film is hosted by actor/comedian Jamie Kennedy, who was inspired to create the movie after feeling wounded by the overwhelmingly negative reviews for his movie Son of the Mask, some of which attacked Kennedy personally rather than reviewing the film. MANAKAMANA is a 2013 documentary film directed by Stephanie Spray and Pacho Velez. Behind Hazel Eyes is a video release of American singer Kelly Clarkson. Unlike Miss Independent, her previous video release, Behind Hazel Eyes does not include music videos from Clarkson's singles. It was originally released on March 29, 2005. The collection features a documentary of Clarkson's biography and music career. It features a tour of hometown Burleson, Texas, which her high school elementary school where she first got on stage with a performance of Prince "When Doves Cry. Miss Glenn, the teacher who first discovered Clarkson singing also made an appearance. Clarkson also featured her previous jobs prior to auditioning to American Idol. The video also featured scenes of Clarkson attending the premiere of the 2004 film The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement in Disneyland, a behind the scenes footage of the creation of her second album, Breakaway, and a short live performance of "Beautiful Disaster" from her album Thankful. The DVD includes behind-the-scenes footage from Kelly Clarkson's single, "Breakaway", which includes scenes from Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement as a promotional single. The Living Room of the Nation is a 2009 documentary film directed by Jukka Kärkkäinen and co-written with Sini Liimatainen. Folsom Forever is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Mickael Skiff. Memoirs & Dreams is a 1993 documentary film directed by Lynn-Maree Milburn. At the Edge of Conquest: The Journey of Chief Wai-Wai is a 1992 American short documentary film directed by Geoffrey O'Connor. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short at the 65th Academy Awards. Streetwise is a 1984 documentary film by director Martin Bell. It followed in the wake of a July 1983 Life magazine article, "Streets of the Lost", by writer Cheryl McCall and photographer Mary Ellen Mark, Bell's wife. According to Mark's accompanying 1988 book, eponymously titled Streetwise, McCall and Mark traveled to Seattle specifically to reveal that even in a town that billed itself as America's most livable city, there still existed rampant homelessness and desperation. After making connections with several homeless children during the writing of the article, Mark convinced Bell that the children were worthy of his making a documentary based on their lives. McCall and Mark were also instrumental in making the film. Streetwise follows the lives of several homeless teenagers, although it focuses most on 14-year-old Erin Blackwell, a child prostitute who goes by the name of Tiny. Much of the time, Tiny stays at the home of her alcoholic mother, Pat, who seems unfazed by her daughter's prostitution, calling it a "phase". Saint & Whore is a 2012 short film directed by Anne Zohra Berrached. Nebenwirkung Glück is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Julia Csabai and Alida Szabó. O Canada! is a Circle-Vision 360° movie. It is an attraction at the Canada Pavilion at the Epcot World Showcase at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida. Its name derives from Canada's national anthem. It showcases many images of Canada's cities and sights, including Quebec, Ontario, the RCMP Musical Ride, the Calgary Stampede, Vancouver and Vancouver Harbour, the Ottawa River, and more. The movie was filmed mostly during 1981 and has been in continuous exhibition since that time, with an updated version released in 2007. Where No Journeys End is a 1990 documentary film directed by Victor Bannerjee. 100 Films and a Funeral is both a memoir by Michael Kuhn and a 2007 documentary film adaptation by filmmaker Michael McNamara about the rise and fall of PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, the company that produced Four Weddings and a Funeral, The Usual Suspects, and Trainspotting. Kuhn headed PFE from 1991 till 1999, when Philips sold it to the Seagram conglomerate. The selling of PFE also ended the prominent role of the company in the British film industry revival of the 1990s. The Language of Love is a 2012 short biographical documentary history film directed by Marie Clements. Stolen Education is a 2013 documentary film directed and co-written by Rudy Luna with Enrique Alemán Jr. Jehovah's Witnesses Stand Firm Against Nazi Assault is a 1996 documentary film. Flash of a Dream is a 2002 documentary directed by Robert Fox. Mediastan is a 2013 documentary film about the 2010 United States diplomatic cables leak, directed by Johannes Wahlström and produced by Julian Assange, Rebecca O'Brien and Lauren Dark. In the new documentary SILENCING THE SONG: AN AFGHAN FALLEN STAR, “Afghan Star” director Havana Marking revisits Setara as she deals with ever-present threats to her safety and starts a new life as a wife and mother-to-be, while continuing to nurture dreams of becoming a pop-music idol. Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American Healthcare is a 2012 feature length documentary directed by Matthew Heineman and Susan Froemke and released by Roadside Attractions. Escape Fire premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, opened in select theaters on October 5, 2012, and was simultaneously released on iTunes and Video-on-Demand. The film was released on DVD in February 2013 and premiered on CNN on March 10, 2013. G-Dog is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Freida Lee Mock. Airmania is a 1999 documentary film directed by Marc Paschke. Greetings from the Colony is a 2011 documentary film directed by Nathalie Borgers. El-Banate Dol is an Egyptian 2006 documentary film. This Is Stompin' Tom is a 1972 Canadian film directed by Edwin W. Moody. It is a documentary of in the area of Ontario Canada, misspelt in the film "This Is Stomping Tom" which is also known as "This is Stompin' Tom" Youth in Crisis is a 1943 American short documentary film produced by Louis De Rochemont as part of The March of Time series. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Gloria Estefan: Que Siga la Tradicion is a 2000 video documentary directed by Gloria Estefan. The John Glenn Story is a 1962 American short documentary film directed by Michael R. Lawrence about the astronaut John Glenn. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Lost Son of Havana is a 2009 film directed by Jonathan Hock. This story of how a treasure trove of banned Soviet art worth millions of dollars was stashed in a far-off desert of Uzbekistan develops into a larger exploration of how art survives in times of oppression. Jose Torres is a documentary film directed by Hiroshi Teshigahara. Tapologo is a 2007 documentary film. Emelka-Palast is a 1986 short documentary film written and directed by Hans Sachs and Hedda Rinneberg. Soul Catcher is a short documentary film written and directed by P.V. Lehtinen. Patrick Dewaere is a 1992 French documentary film directed by Marc Esposito, about the actor of the same name. It was screened out of competition at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival. The Shadow of Heaven is a 2008 Lithuanian documentary film written and directed by Romas Lileikis. Flight to Flinders is a 1967 documentary film directed by Peter Young. Fuelled by wonderfully strange stories, this catalogue of television series, made-for-television documentaries, and independently produced films focus on the paranormal - from ghosts, witchcraft and re-incarnation to UFOs, aliens and conspiracy theories. Toscanini in His Own Words is a 2009 biography TV movie written by Harvey Sachs and Larry Weinstein, and directed by Larry Weinstein. On December 2, 1993 Pablo Escobar, a Columbian drug lord, and his assistant, were captured and killed at Escobar's home. Split: Portrait of a Drag Queen is a 1992 documentary film directed by Ellen Fisher Turk and Andrew Weeks. Lord Don't Slow Me Down is a rockumentary film, looking back on British rock band Oasis' Don't Believe the Truth world tour which took place from May 2005 to March 2006. The film is directed by Baillie Walsh. It went platinum in the UK. Dealers in Death is a 1984 documentary written by Ray Atherton and directed by John McNaughton. A League of Ordinary Gentlemen is a documentary film about ten-pin bowling that was released on DVD on March 21, 2006. It was written and directed by Christopher Browne and stars PBA Tour players Pete Weber, Walter Ray Williams Jr., Chris Barnes, and Wayne Webb. The documentary is unique in its genre. It was first televised nationally on the PBS series Independent Lens on April 25, 2006. Boom! Hollywood's Greatest Disaster Movies is a 2000 documentary film written by Jerry Decker and directed by Shelley Lions. The Secret World Of Foley is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Daniel Jewel. Time Is Running Out is a 1970 West German short documentary film directed by Robert Ménégoz. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. "Since she was a small child, Anna Halprin has danced. Now at 89, she still possesses the grace and romanticism of her youth. This illuminating documentary, a lovingly rendered portrait of the Marin-based avant-garde dance pioneer, traces her groundbreaking career as a dancer and choreographer as well as her devoted marriage to famed landscape architect Lawrence Halprin. In an intimate encounter with the artist, we meet her rehearsing on her verdant backyard deck and performing at New York's Joyce Theater, teaching movement to seniors and dancing with Merce Cunningham, battling cancer and combating racism through movement in the wake of the Watts riots. Halprin has spent her life spreading a gospel of healing and wholeness through self-expression—an extraordinary story that unfolds, with the help of fascinating interviews and archival performance footage, as a moving and beautiful tribute to one of Northern California's most beloved and inspirational artists. North American Premiere." Quoting Nora Isaacs What We Saw: Gaza, the Children of Samuni Family is a 2011 documentary film directed by Mizue Hurui. Manda Bala (Send a Bullet) is a U.S. documentary film directed by Jason Kohn about corruption and kidnapping in Brazil. Kohn has said "I really thought of Manda Bala as a non-fiction RoboCop depicting a very real, broken, and violent society." It premiered January 20, 2007 at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival where it won the Grand Jury Prize for Documentary and the Excellence in Cinematography award. It had a limited release in North America beginning on August 17, 2007. On March 18, 2008, Manda Bala won the award for Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking at the inaugural Cinema Eye Honors. Analogue Kingdom is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Esther Johnson. The Story Of An Egg is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Douglas Gayeton. A City Decides is a 1956 American short documentary film directed by Charles Guggenheim about the racial integration of St. Louis Public Schools. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Arin Paul is creating a documentary on Nripen Ganguly. Kuxa kanema, capítulos 1, 63, 262 is a documentary film. Planet Galata - A Bridge in Istanbul is a 2010 short documentary film written by Florian Thalhofer and directed by Berke Bas and Florian Thalhofer. A Girl Like Her is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ann Fessler. The Old Thieves: The Legends from Artegio is a 2007 film directed and written by Everardo González. The Darkness of Day is a short documentary film directed by Jay Rosenblatt and co-written with Jeff Greenwald. Synesthesia is a short documentary music film directed by Alec Trupiano. Elio Petri: Notes on a Filmmaker is a 2005 documentary written and directed by Federico Bacci,Nicola Guarneri and Stefano Leone. Rare16mm home movies from the 1920s through the 1950s, that weaves into a composite lifetime, passing through the celebrations and struggles from childhood to adulthood, from innocence to experience. Beer Hunter: The Movie is a 2013 documentary, biographical, and historical film directed by Alison Hodgson Richards and John Richards. "A Norwegian queer filmmaker whose life looks all sorted out, suddenly comes in touch with reality when he sets upon interviewing a Muslim gay man seeking asylum. From religious intolerance to homophobia, he realizes what it means not to have the freedom to love whoever you want to love." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Healing a Soldier's Heart is a biographical war documentary directed by Stephen Olsson. Miriam Is Not Amused is a 1997 documentary film directed by Kim Roberts. Watch Out, Animals! is a 1969 short documentary film written by Mery Yuzbashyan and directed by Nerses Hovhannisyan. Off the Rez is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jonathan Hock. Beefcake is a docu-drama homage to the muscle magazines of the 1940s, '50s, and '60s—in particular, Physique Pictorial magazine, published quarterly by Bob Mizer of the Athletic Model Guild. It was inspired by a picture book by F. Valentine Hooven III and was directed by Thom Fitzgerald. The film stars Daniel MacIvor, Carroll Godsman, Jack Griffin Mazieka, Jonathan Torrens, and Joshua Peace in pastiche recreations of life at the Athletic Model Guild, mixed with interviews with models and photographers whose work actually appeared in the early magazines, including Jack LaLanne and Joe Dallesandro. The film was shot in Nova Scotia. Beefcake premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 1999 and was released by Strand Releasing in the USA; it was nominated for three Genie Awards. Vlad the Impaler: The True Story of Dracula is a 2002 documentary film directed by George Angelescu. The Mountain Runners is a 2012 documentary film directed by Todd Warger and Brian Young. Michael Jackson was the King of Pop. Michael shaped modern music for a generation. Stars Michael Jackson, La Toya Jackson, Janet Jackson, Diana Ross, Elizabeth Taylor, Quincy Jones. Kikoe is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Chikara Iwai. The 38th Parallel North is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Emilija Škarnulytė. Wizards of Waverly Place: Wiz Pix is a 2009 short documentary film starring Jake T. Austin. The Magic Machines is a 1969 American short documentary film directed by Bob Curtis. It won an Academy Award in 1970 for Best Short Subject and was nominated for Best Documentary Short. Eu 013, The Last Frontier is a 2013 documentary film written by Alessio Genovese and Raffaella Cosentino directed by Alessio Genovese. L’homosexualité et le sport de haut niveau font-ils bon ménage ? Le journaliste Michel Royer a enquêté, non sans peine, sur cette omerta qui règne depuis toujours dans le milieu du sport. Under Fire: Journalists in Combat is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Martyn Burke. The Duty Men is a TV program. Netherlands released, PAL/NTSC/Region 0 DVD: LANGUAGES: Dutch ( Dolby Digital Stereo ), English ( Dolby Digital Stereo ), German ( Dolby Digital Stereo ), Dutch ( Subtitles ), English ( Subtitles ), French ( Subtitles ), German ( Subtitles ), Italian ( Subtitles ), Spanish ( Subtitles ), WIDESCREEN (2.35:1), SPECIAL FEATURES: Black & White, Interactive Menu, Scene Access, SYNOPSIS: In honour of the 50th anniversary of the Anne Frank House. After returning from Auschwitz, Otto Frank, the only survivor of the family, is confronted with Anne's diary. He renews ties with his daughter by reading it. The film tells the story of what he went through, how the loss of his family scarred his life, how he dealt with the dilemmas that the publication of the diary brought upon him and how he made a memorial of his daughters legacy and became the father-figure for thousands of young readers worldwide. ...Otto Frank, father of Anne ( OTTO Frank, father of ANNE ) Le chant du millénaire is a 2002 film directed by Mohamed Zran. The Emperor's Naked Army Marches On is an award-winning 1987 documentary by director Kazuo Hara. The documentary centers on 62-year-old veteran of Japan's Second World War campaign in New Guinea, Kenzo Okuzaki, and follows him around as he searches out those responsible for the unexplained deaths of two soldiers in his old unit. Renowned documentary filmmaker Errol Morris listed The Emperor's Naked Army Marches On as one of his Top 5 Favorite Films for Rotten Tomatoes. This classic propaganda film made during the Second World War was designed to strengthen ties between Canada and Great Britain and to ensure popular support for the war effort. The film focuses on the Battle of Britain. After the first German air strikes on British towns, England mobilizes. Churchill seeks aid from the countries of the Dominion, including Canada. We are witness to epic battles between the Royal Air Force and the Luftwaffe, and watch the Navy in its fight against the raiders of sea and sky and the coastal defense. While Allied ships are targets of German submarines, Canada plays a crucial role in securing a safe path for supplies to reach the besieged island. Churchill's Island was the first Canadian film to win an Oscar, which was also the first Oscar awarded to a documentary. This profile of Jackie Cochran is a story of a woman who set more aviation records than anyone before or after her, male or female, and going on to become the first woman to fly faster than the speed of sound in the process, then going on to be the first woman to fly twice the speed of sound. The Pervert's Guide to Ideology is a 2012 British documentary film directed by Sophie Fiennes and written and presented by Slovene philosopher and psychoanalyst Slavoj Žižek. It is a sequel to Fiennes's 2006 documentary The Pervert's Guide to Cinema. Though the film follows the frameworks of its predecessor, this time the emphasis is on ideology itself. Through psychoanalysis Žižek explores "the mechanisms that shape what we believe and how we behave". Among the films that are explored are Full Metal Jacket, Taxi Driver etc. The film was released in the United States by Zeitgeist Films in November 2013. Postcard To Brooke is a film based artwork by British artist and writer Oliver Guy-Watkins that began in April 2008 Rockin' the Blues is a 1956 documentary film directed by Arthur Rosenblum. Tokyo Noise is a 2002 documentary film directed by Erik Pauser, Kristian Petri, Jan Röed and Johan Söderberg. Ouvrières du monde is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Marie-France Collard. Troublesome Creek: A Midwestern is a 1995 documentary by filmmakers Jeanne Jordan and Steven Ascher. The film explores the family farm crisis through the story of Jordan's own family, as they take extraordinary measures to save their Iowa farm. The film received the Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award for best documentary at the Sundance Film Festival, and was nominated for an Academy Award for best documentary feature, among many other awards. The White Eagle is a 1942 short, documentary film written by Val Gielgud and directed by Eugeniusz Cekalski. Jeremy Jones' Further is a 2014 documentary action adventure film produced by Steve Jones and Todd Jones. William Yang: Friends of Dorothy is a 2014 documentary film written by William Yang and directed by Martin Fox. The War Room is a 1993 American documentary film about Bill Clinton's campaign for President of the United States during the 1992 presidential election. Timeless India is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Zafar Hai. "A smart and surprising documentary about figure skating’s most controversial competitor, the fabulous Johnny Weir. Trophy-winning sportsman, media antagonist and fashion model, Johnny Weir has become many things since emerging as figure skating's most controversial competitor. Tracing his journey from young sporting prodigy to international icon and three-time US Figure Skating National Champion, Pop Star On Ice offers an intimate look at Weir on both a professional and personal level. As an athlete, he can be a frustrating character, undeniably talented but with a tendency to let his rebellious nature get in the way of his success. As a pop icon he is never less than compelling. Although he refuses to engage in conversations about his sexuality, his flamboyant nature (and penchant for furs) fuels a mischievous reputation, making him a star as vibrant as the glittering outfits he performs in. MB" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival site. The Work of Machines is a 2010 documentary film directed by Maciej Madracki, Gilles Lepore and Michal Madracki. Off the Beaten Track is a 2013 documentary film directed by João Pedro Moreira. Absolutely Safe is a 2007 documentary film directed by Carol Ciancutti-Leyva. Theodore is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Laila Pakalnina. Venice: Themes And Variations is a 1957 short documentary film written and directed by James Ivory. Expedition to the End of the World is a 2012 fantasy, comedy, adventure documentary film written by Daniel Dencik, Michael Haslund-Christensen and Janus Metz Pedersen, and directed by Daniel Dencik. Sbirri is a 2009 dramatic documentary, directed by Roberto Burchielli. It was released in Italy on April 10, 2009, Wirtualna wojna is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jacek Bławut. The Metal Stork is a historical drama war documentary film directed by Joan López. Blacks and Jews is a 1997 documentary film that examines the relationships and conflicts between Black and Jewish activists, from the 1991 Crown Heights Riot to Steven Spielberg's controversial visit to the predominantly Black Castlemont High School. The film focused on incidents such as the 1960s blockbusting of the then-largely Jewish Lawndale neighborhood on the west side of Chicago and a rabbi's efforts to maintain stability in the community and of a Hasidic father and son who were protected by a Black journalist during the 1991 riots in Brooklyn that took place in the wake of the death of Gavin Cato by a Hasidic driver. Blacks and Jews was directed by Deborah Kaufman and Alan Snitow. The 90-minute film was aired as part of PBS's Point of View series. The film was shown as part of the 1997 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. When The Mountains Tremble is a 1983 documentary film produced by Skylight Pictures about the war between the Guatemalan Military and the Mayan Indigenous population of Guatemala. Footage from this film is being used as forensic evidence in the Guatemalan court for crimes against humanity, in the genocide case against Efraín Ríos Montt. The film centers on the experiences of Nobel Prize winner Rigoberta Menchú, a Quiché indigenous woman who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1992, nine years after the film came out. When The Mountains Tremble won the Special Jury Award at the Sundance Film Festival, the Blue Ribbon Award at the American Film Festival, and the Grand Coral Award/Best North American Documentary at the Havana Film Festival. The 2012 film Granito: How to Nail a Dictator, is Pamela Yates's follow-up on When the Mountains Tremble. We Refuse to Die is a 1942 short, documentary film written by Maxwell Shane and directed by William H. Pine. The Shape of Water is a 2006 documentary film written by Monique Zavistovski, Matthew Harnack, Ryan Pettey and Kum-Kum Bhavnani and directed by Kum-Kum Bhavnani. Greetings From Out Here is a 1993 road trip documentary film which captures the people, places and politics of gay America in the Deep South. It was the first Independent Television Service program to be broadcast nationally. It received an invitation to the Sundance Film Festival and was acquired for international broadcasts by the BBC, Channel Four, and the Canadian Broadcasting Company. 1974 is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Katelijne Schrama. In the documentary film The Importance of Being Icelandic, the filmmaker Jon Gustafsson traces the steps of three Icelandic Canadians on a different quest of discovering their Icelandic heritage by going to Iceland. In addition to their time in Iceland, he returns with them to Canada and captures their reactions of the Islendingadagurinn celebrated each year at Gimli. The contrasts in perspective between his viewpoint on Canadian culture and that of three Icelandic-Canadians on a quest for their ancestral heritage is at the centre of the documentary. X Magazine Benefit is a 1978/2009 short documentary film directed by Coleen Fitzgibbon and Alan W. Moore. Lace Bite is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Sharron Bates and Carmen Klotz. Discover the hidden meaning inside some of the greatest artwork in history! Learn the secrets to the strange riddles and clues within the great masterpieces of Leonardo da Vinci. Revealed for the first time ever the controversial link between Jesus Christ, Mary Magdalene and da Vinci. Explore the secret society that included da Vinci, Isaac Newton, Botticelli, and Victor Hugo and what they did within the society. Unlocking da Vinci's Code reveals the greatest mysteries of our time and the greatest secrets of our past. Rain in my Heart is a 2006 documentary film directed by Paul Watson. Memory (work in progress) is a 2011 documentary film directed by Yves Montand Niyongabo and Iris Olsson. Miss Universe 1929 is a 2006 biographical documentray film directed and written by Péter Forgács. The Search for Robert Johnson is a 1991 UK television documentary film about the Delta blues musician Robert Johnson, hosted by John Hammond, and produced and directed by Chris Hunt. In it, Hammond travels through the American Deep South to pursue topics such as Johnson's birth date, place and parents, his early musical development, performances and travels, romances, his mythic "pact with the devil," his untimely murder in his late twenties, the discovery of possible offspring, and the uncertainty over where Johnson is buried. Throughout, Johnson's music is both foreground and background, from recordings of Johnson and as performed on camera by Hammond, David Honeyboy Edwards, and Johnny Shines. From Harlem To Haiti: With Love! is a 2010 short documentary biography film directed by Shamier Settle. Small Voices: The Stories of Cambodia's Children is a 2008 documentary film that follows several street and dumpster children in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on their journey to receive an education. The film was written, directed, and produced by Heather Connell. The documentary was awarded the 2009 Gold Medal Award at the New York International Film and Video Awards and 2nd place Best Documentary at the Rhode Island International Film Festival in 2008. Honeybee Mine is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Saskia Laufer. Revealing extraordinary NASA videotape and the history of UFO sightings by astronauts. The Lights of Flushing is a 2013 documentary film directed by Anna Snowball. Yes: Live in Philadelphia is the video release of a concert by the progressive rock group Yes recorded live at the Philadelphia Spectrum on June 21, 1979. The concert is performed "in the round" with a rotating stage in the centre of the venue. The concert was part of the summer leg of their 1978-1979 tour to support the album Tormato. It would be the last Yes tour to feature founding vocalist Jon Anderson until the band's 1983 reformation, and the final tour to feature keyboardist Rick Wakeman until the 1991 Union tour. The visual and sound quality are poor compared to modern video releases, but this represents one of the few visual recordings of the band from this period. A Tickle In The Heart is a 1996 documentary film written by Stefan Schwietert and Thomas Kufus directed by Stefan Schwietert. America's Top Dog is a 2004 film directed by Tony McCuin. Beef is a 2003 film that documents the history of hip-hop feuds. The film's producers were Peter Spirer, Casey Suchan and Denis Henry Hennelly and the executive producer was Quincy Jones III. It was written by Peter Alton and Peter Spirer, and was narrated by actor Ving Rhames. This film takes a chronological look at battles dating back to rap music's infancy in the early 1980s. The notable rivalries discussed include KRS-One vs. MC Shan, Kool Moe Dee vs. Busy Bee, 50 Cent vs. Murder Inc., Tru Life vs. Mobb Deep, Common vs. Ice Cube & Westside Connection, the break-up of legendary group N.W.A, which includes Ice Cube's abrupt departure, and the later animosty between Dr. Dre and Eazy-E, the highly publicized Jay-Z vs. Nas rivalry and the most infamous feud of them all, 2Pac vs. The Notorious B.I.G.. It was partly born out of producer Jones's belief that "Beefs are killing hip-hop". Many prominent hip-hop personalities such as Russell Simmons, Snoop Dogg, Kool Moe Dee, Jay-Z, KRS-One, Mack 10, DMX, and Ice-T also participate in the film through interviews. Beef also features newly released performances by many musical artists. Monsenor: The Last Journey of Oscar Romero is a 2011 documentary biographical historical drama film directed by Ana Carrigan and Juliet Weber. El Maestro Saharaui is a documentary film directed by Nicolás Muñoz. Papá Iván is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by María Inés Roqué. Green Lady is a 2011 short drama animation documentary film directed by Jordan Baseman. Rocky Road to Dublin is a 1967 documentary film by Irish-born journalist Peter Lennon and French cinematographer Raoul Coutard, examining the contemporary state of the Republic of Ireland, posing the question, "what do you do with your revolution once you've got it?" It argues that Ireland was dominated by cultural isolationism, Gaelic and clerical traditionalism at the time of its making. Japan: Dr. Merry's Nomad Travel is a 2005 travel documentary film. Forsaken is 2010 documentary short film directed by James Sansing. Mr. Hoover and I is a 1989 documentary and biographical film written and directed by Emile de Antonio. Sex: Made in Germany is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Sonia Kennebeck and Tina Soliman. Life With a Rubbish Heap is a 1982 film directed by Rosemarie Blank. Video Games: The Movie is a documentary by Jeremy Snead about video games. After Indiegogo and Kickstarter crowdfunding campaigns in 2012 and 2013 respectively, the film was released in 2014. Snead said "about 45-hours of footage" was shot for the film, and intends to use that in future products, saying he plans "a follow up in some form or another because the reception of the film has been good and I think it’s something that deserves more treatment in film and television." Cher: Live in Concert from Las Vegas is a 1999 concert film directed by David Mallet. Dinosaurs: The Myth and the Reality is a 1995 documentary film written by Bob Carruthers and directed by Graham Holloway. The Last Tightrope Dancer in Armenia is a documentary that tells the story of Zhora, 78 years-old, and Knyaz, 77 years-old, who were once the most celebrated tightrope dancers in Armenia. Justin Bieber: Rise to Fame is a 2011 documentary film directed by Maureen Goldthorpe. Chronique d'un été is a documentary film made during the summer of 1960 by sociologist Edgar Morin and anthropologist and filmmaker Jean Rouch, with the technical and aesthetic collaboration of Québécois director-cameraman Michel Brault. The film begins with a discussion between Rouch and Morin on whether or not it is possible to act sincerely in front of a camera. A cast of real-life individuals are then introduced and are led by the filmmakers to discuss topics on the themes of French society and happiness in the working class. At the end of the movie, the filmmakers show their subjects the compiled footage and have the subjects discuss the level of reality that they thought the movie obtained. This feature was filmed in Paris and Saint-Tropez, France. Synchronized sound was used by Rouch using a 16 mm camera connected through pilottone with a prototype of Nagra III, a transistorized tape recorder with electronic speed control, developed by Stefan Kudelski. Chronicle of a Summer is a landmark in direct cinema history. It is also widely regarded as an experimental and structurally innovative film and an example of cinéma vérité. 65_RedRoses is a 2009 documentary film about Eva Markvoort, a young woman from New Westminster, British Columbia, who suffered from cystic fibrosis. The film follows Markvoort as she lives her life undaunted by her disease, waiting for a lung transplant while blogging about her experiences. Straight from the Heart is a 1994 American short documentary film directed by Dee Mosbacher and co-directed by Frances Reid. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The documentary explored relationships between straight parents and their gay children. The film includes emotional interviews with a straight couple that didn't approve of homosexuality and disowned their gay child, who died of AIDS shortly after. Maria's Way is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Anne Milne. Loss Is to Be Expected is a 1992 documentary film written by Michael Glawogger and Ulrich Seidl and directed by Ulrich Seidl. Oso Blanco is a documentary film directed by Christian Suau. The Shame of a City is a 2006 feature-length documentary, which premiered at the Philadelphia Film Festival,. Filmmaker Tigre Hill chronicles the 2003 Philadelphia mayoral race between Democrat incumbent mayor John Street and Republican challenger Sam Katz. Early polls showed Katz with a small lead in this predominantly Democratic city but twenty-seven days before the election, an FBI bug was found in the mayor’s office. The discovery at first seemed like a death knell to the Street campaign and a near certain victory for Katz. Yet this prediction was proven wrong when Street and his supporters successfully polarized the campaign by leveling accusations of instituational racial prejudice and playing on historical skepticism of the Republican-controlled federal government. As a result, Street won re-election by a sixteen-point margin. With exclusive inside access to the Katz campaign, “The Shame of a City” traverses the bizarre final month to Election Day with the losing candidate as he tries in vain to salvage his campaign while his victor succeeds in manipulating voter sentiment in order to thwart it. Bach in Auschwitz is a 1999 documentary film written by Michel Daeron and Kevin Smith and directed by Michel Daeron. Save KLSD is a 2012 documentary film about the history and effects of media consolidation on democracy in the United States. Over the course of four and a half years, the producers attended media reform conferences, conducted research, and filmed interviews and presentations by leading media reform experts and commentators, including: Bill Moyers, Robert Reich, Van Jones, Phil Donahue, Ed Schultz, David Shuster, Cenk Uygur, Amy Goodman, Thom Hartmann, Stacy Taylor, John Nichols, Richard Wolffe, Randi Rhodes, Congressman Bob Filner, Jon Adelstein, Robert McChesney, Bob Edgar, Mike Aguirre, Marjorie Cohn, Michael Krasny, J.W. August, Andrew Donohue, Marti Emerald, and author Eric Klinenberg. The film is narrated by Bree Walker and Jon Elliott. It is produced by Jennifer Douglas and Jon Monday, and directed by Jon Monday for distribution by mondayMEDIA.It was released on DVD in April 2012. The film had its broadcast premiere on Link TV on Saturday, September 8 at 2:30pm PST. Doctor Kong is a 2011 short comedy film directed by Alexis Neophytides. Come On Down And Pick Me Up is a 2012 short drama documentary film directed by Jonathan Bougher and Nicholas Corrao. Zendegi dar meh is an award winning short documentary film directed by Bahman Ghobadi. Birds Do It, Bees Do It is a 1974 American documentary film covering sexuality in the animal kingdom. It was directed by Nicolas Noxon and Irwin Rosten, and co-produced by David L. Wolper. Thanks to its copulation scenes, the film was marketed with the tagline "So real it will never be shown on TV". The same scenes initially earned it an R rating from the Motion Picture Association of America; after a brief discussion between Wolper and then-MPAA chairman Richard Heffner, a few changes were made to ensure the eventual PG rating. Birds Do It, Bees Do It received a nomination for Best Documentary at the Golden Globes. Gerald Fried's music earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score. The film was screened at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival, but did not enter the main competition. In My Father's House are Many Mansions is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Hajo Schomerus. COMMITTING POETRY is a poetic glance at events that defined the struggle of a nation at war abroad, and with its people. When the bombs began to fall on Iraq, Humanities Teacher and Youth Poetry Coach, Bill Nevins, was suspended and later, fired, from his teaching job after standing up for student freedom of expression. His outspoken Rio Rancho High School Poetry Slam Team was forcibly disbanded and silenced. Nevins was the last of seven New Mexico educators removed by fearful administrators seeking to quell the questions, thoughts, debates, and artwork of students.Committing Poetry in Times of War, based on a story developed by stavros and Eric Sirotkin, documents many dynamic slam poetry and musical performances with select performances from Albuquerque, Santa Fe, and New York City Poetic Justice concerts. On screen performances by Adan Baca, Socorro Romo, Demetria Martinez, Tony Santiago, Erin Ambrose, Jazz, The Ruffians, Carlos Contreras, Priscilla Baca y Candelaria, Manuel Gonzales, Danny Solis, Kenn Rodriguez, and student members of the disbanded Rio Rancho Ram Slam Poetry Team, offer an inspiring account of how America's artistic community responded to threats to our civil liberties. Produced by UBUNTUWORKS, LLC, it is the first cinematic venture from DOGONE PICTURES, written, directed, and edited by digital filmmaker, stavros. Miley: The Movement is a 2013 documentary television film of American entertainer Miley Cyrus, following her return to the music industry in the lead-up to her fourth studio album Bangerz. It premiered on October 2, 2013, on MTV, shortly before the release of her record, for which the documentary served as a promotional tool. The documentary depicts Cyrus finalizing details regarding its launch, making public appearances for additional promotion, and rehearsing for her controversial performance at the 2013 MTV Video Music Awards. Miley: The Movement received generally mixed reviews from mainstream critics, who appreciated Cyrus' seemingly genuine commentary, but were disappointed by its failure to fully discuss her recent controversies and public criticisms. According to Nielsen ratings, it was watched by approximately 1.6 million viewers in the United States. An extended version of the documentary was broadcast by MTV on October 6, 2013. Torero is a 1956 Mexican documentary film directed by Carlos Velo about Mexican bullfighter Luis Procuna. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film was also selected as the Mexican entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 30th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. Land of Look Behind is a 1982 documentary film about Jamaica. It was filmed in May and June of 1981 by Alan Greenberg, and was the director's first film. The film's cinematographer was Jörg Schmidt-Reitwein, an associate of Werner Herzog. The musical score is by K. Leimer. The film begins with footage of Jamaica's wild interior region called the Cockpit Country. It also features footage of the funeral of reggae musician Bob Marley. A number of Rastafarians are interviewed, and performers Gregory Isaacs and Mutabaruka are also featured. In addition, Father Amde Hamilton of The Watts Prophets performs a spoken word piece during Marley's funeral service. Land of Look Behind won the Chicago International Film Festival's Gold Hugo Award. Werner Herzog has said in the film's DVD commentary that "This film achieves things never seen before in the history of cinema." The American director Jim Jarmusch writes in the DVD liner notes that Land of Look Behind is "striking...beautiful...near-perfect." In 2007 the film was released on DVD, with interviews of and commentary by Greenberg and Herzog. Bringing Down A Dictator is a 56-minute documentary film by Steve York about the nonviolent defeat of Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic. It focuses on the contributions of the student-led Otpor! movement. The film originally aired on national PBS in March 2002. It was narrated by Martin Sheen and won the George Foster Peabody Award. Other awards include: ABCNews VideoSource Award --- The International Documentary Association Silver Chris Award --- Columbus International Film and Video Festival Bronze Plaque: Scriptwriting --- Columbus International Film and Video Festival Silver Plaque --- The Chicago International Television Festival Gold Remi --- Worldfest Houston International Film Festival Best Documentary --- Sedona International Film Festival Bringing Down A Dictator was broadcast several times in the former Republic of Georgia in the fall of 2003 and was credited with helping the citizens there organize their nonviolent protest against the electoral fraud linked to Eduard Shevardnadze, in what was called the Rose Revolution. Toxic Legacy is a Canadian documentary film that was produced by Susan Teskey for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. It was broadcast on the CBC and Discovery Times in September 2006. The film deals with the toxic legacy of the Ground Zero dust following the September 11, 2001 attacks upon the World Trade Center. It addresses the U.S. government's minimization of local health risks in the vicinity of Ground Zero site of the World Trade Center. It also addressed the praise of the first responders and the deleterious health effects thousands of these workers have experienced since their cleanup of the World Trade Center site. Not Quite Hollywood: The Wild, Untold Story of Ozploitation! is a 2008 Australian documentary film about the Australian New Wave of 1970s and '80s low-budget cinema. The film was written and directed by Mark Hartley, who interviewed over eighty Australian, American and British actors, directors, screenwriters and producers, including Quentin Tarantino, Brian Trenchard-Smith, Jamie Lee Curtis, Dennis Hopper, George Lazenby, George Miller, Barry Humphries, Stacy Keach and John Seale. Hartley spent several years writing a detailed research document, which served to some degree as a script for the film, about the New Wave era of Australian cinema. It focused on the commonly overlooked "Ozploitation" films—mainly filled with sex, horror and violence—which critics and film historians considered vulgar and offensive, often excluded from Australia's "official film history". Hartley approached Quentin Tarantino, a longtime "Ozploitation" fan who had dedicated his 2003 film Kill Bill to the exploitation genre, and Tarantino agreed to help get the project off the ground. Sound an Alarm is a 1962 documentary about the role of the Royal Observer Corps during the event of a nuclear attack on the United Kingdom. It was also made in 1971. An audience favorite at film festivals worldwide, GYPSY CARAVAN is a dazzling display of the musical world of the Roma, juxtaposed to the real world they live in. Five bands from four countries unite for the World Music Institute's Gypsy Caravan 6-week concert tour across North America with the musicians astounding every audience they meet. Their musical styles range from flamenco to brass band, from Romanian violin and Indian folk to Raga and jazz. And with fire in their bellies and soul in their voices, they present an explosion of song and dance that celebrates the best of Gypsy music and the diversity of the Romani people.Shot by cinema verité icon Albert Maysles, the film takes place during the USA tour as well as on location in Macedonia, Romania, India, and Spain. The tales of these characters unfold and are woven between their performances, reflecting the imagery and emotion of the music. Waiting for August is a 2014 documentary film directed by Teodora Mihai. Teenager Hamlet 2006 is a 2010 dramatic, comedy, documentary film directed by Margaux Williamson. Lives Worth Living is a 2011 documentary film directed by Eric Neudel and produced by Alison Gilkey, and broadcast by PBS through ITVS, as part of the Independent Lens series. The film is the first television chronicle of the history of the American disability rights movement from the post-World War II era until the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990. Crazy is a 1999 documentary film by Heddy Honigmann on the traumatic effects of war on the soldiers of United Nations peacekeeping missions. The documentary shows Dutch soldiers that have served in UN missions in the former Yugoslavia, Kosovo, Lebanon, Cambodia, and Rwanda. The heroic duties contrast with the local horrors. The music, the favorite songs of the soldiers, serves the eight men and one woman interviewed as a key to unlock the chest of vivid memories: frequent trips through "Bomb Alley"; food convoys; the fall of Sarajevo; and camp life. One of the soldiers is marines commander Patrick Cammaert, who since has served in further very important UN missions. He chose the song "Crazy" to accompany the bloodbath of the attack on the Sarajevo market. The film is regarded as an accusation against the Dutch Defense organization on the care for its soldiers. However, a 1997 study conducted by the Free University of Amsterdam on 3500 military personnel that served in UN missions since 1975 showed that one out of five soldiers had not fully come to terms with their experiences. This Tiny World is a 1972 Dutch short documentary film about antique mechanical toys, produced by Charles Huguenot van der Linden. It won an Academy Award in 1973 for Documentary Short Subject. Collision is an American documentary film released on October 27, 2009 featuring a debate between prominent antitheist Christopher Hitchens and Douglas Wilson, a Presbyterian pastor of Christ Church, a Calvinist Christian church located in Moscow, Idaho. Described by Hitchens as a "buddy-and-road" movie, it provides an overview of several days' worth of debates following the release of their book Is Christianity Good for the World? The book was generated by correspondence published in Christianity Today. Frederick Douglass: When the Lion Wrote History is a 1994 documentary film directed by Orlando Bagwell. Dress To Kill is the title of a performance by Eddie Izzard, and is a continuation of the British comedian's surrealist, ideas-based comedy. The VHS was recorded during a performance in San Francisco, California, United States. However, the tour was a global one. During this tour Izzard also wrote the book Dress to Kill with David Quantick, which was published by Virgin Books in hardback in 1998 and in paperback in 2000. Izzard's humour includes observations on the American concept of history, beginning with his throwaway line "I grew up in Europe, where the history comes from" and continuing through diversions about the belief that all Europeans live in castles and the attitude of Americans toward historical landmarks. Additionally, Izzard takes time to explain his background as an executive transvestite and how it affected his desire to join the military. This is explained through a proposal for the Army's "first battalion transvestite brigade...with fantastic makeup and a fantastic gun." The centerpiece of the performance is a retelling of British history from Stonehenge through to the Reformation. Uncle Frank is a 2002 documentary film directed by Matthew Ginsburg. Endurance is a docudrama about the famous distance runner Haile Gebrselassie with Gebrselassie playing the role of himself. It was written and directed by Leslie Woodhead and Bud Greenspan, and produced and released by Walt Disney Pictures. The movie features Gebrselassie's upbringing in Ethiopia and his subsequent triumph in the 10,000 meter track event in the Atlanta Olympic Games of 1996. The movie was release on DVD on January 31, 2012. Five Star Existence is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Sonja Lindén. The Man Who Plants Trees is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Michal Gálik. While Israel repeatedly demonstrates its commitment to peace, anti-Israel activity continues to rise in the media, on campuses, in the churches and in the international community. Israel's detractors-some with international prominence-blame Israel for the conflict. They deny the fact that Israel has made painful concessions in working toward a two-state solution, which include the 2005 withdrawal from Gaza initiated by former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, and that Israel has expressed readiness to take additional painful measures. They ignore the rise in Gaza of Hamas, which rejects peaceful coexistence. They turn a blind eye to the grave challenges inherent in the Palestinian Authority's unstable governance of the West Bank under Mahmoud Abbas. They rarely acknowledge the ongoing terrorist attacks against Israeli children and other civilians, and they equate that terrorism with Israel's attempts to protect its citizens. For Israel's detractors, there is only one focus for fault: Israel. Clearly, as Harvard Law School Professor Alan Dershowitz states in his seminal work The Case for Israel, "the time has come for a proactive defense of Israel to be offered in the court of public opinion." We produced this documentary to present a vigorous case for Israel-for its basic right to exist, to protect its citizens from terrorism, and to defend its borders from hostile enemies-in a highly accessible multimedia format. Alan Dershowitz has achieved international distinction as one of Israel's most prominent and articulate advocates. He plays a central role in this documentary as adviser and on-camera presence and argues forcefully that real peace in the Middle East can only occur when the Palestinians, Arabs and their allies value the creation of a Palestinian homeland more than they oppose the presence of a Jewish state. Through incisive conversations with key judicial, political and academic leaders, Dershowitz refutes deeply entrenched misperceptions about Israel's history, Jewish claims to a homeland, individual rights under Israel's democratic system of government, the security fence, and military conduct in the face of terrorist attacks. He closes with a formidable warning that the greatest threat to Israel is also the greatest threat to international peace and security: Iran's aggressive nuclear ambitions, driven by a zealous anti-Zionist, anti-democratic mission that is championed by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Unchecked, a nuclear-armed Iran or its terrorist surrogate would imperil targets far beyond Tel Aviv. This project is truly a team effort. We are indebted to Alan Dershowitz for his intellectual vitality and vigorous engagement with the wide-range of leaders who support Israel's fundamental democratic values. We also want to extend great appreciation to the Adelson Family Foundation for its vision and willingness to step up to the plate at the earliest stages of this project. CAMERA has served as a tremendous partner in so many ways, including financial support, logistical arrangements, and serving as a constant and constructive sounding board at all phases. Making this film was the beginning step. We invite you to join us in going forward to make the case for Israel in the court of public opinion. Kathak is a 1970 documentary short film directed by S. Sukhdev I Am Not a Rockstar is a 2012 Documentary, Drama, Family and Music film written and directed by Bobbi Jo Krals. O, Sport, You - the Peace! was a 1981 documentary film directed by Yuri Ozerov. It showed the opening and closing ceremonies of the 1980 Summer Olympics held in Moscow. The director was awarded the State Prize of the USSR in 1982. The film was selected as the Soviet entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 54th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. Tai ti chan is a 1990 documentary, short film directed by Chi Yan Wong. Christmas With Don Cherry is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Wade Vroom. Overpass Light Brigade is an activist collaborative public art project initiated by American artists Lane Hall and Lisa Moline, based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The artwork is an episodic performance originally created as part of the 2011 Wisconsin protests to raise awareness about the campaign to recall Governor Scott Walker. Power of the Past with Bill Moyers: Florence is a 1990 documentary film directed by David Grubin. The Island of Shadows is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kim Jeonggeun. Stripped Live in the U.K. is the second concert DVD by Christina Aguilera, and documents the premiere UK performances of her Stripped World Tour. The DVD does not include "Make Over" which was situated after "Can't Hold Us Down". An extended version of "What a Girl Wants" can be seen on television broadcast of the concert. The DVD premiered on WB Network at 9 PM on November 30, 2003. The Great American Wheat Harvest is a documentary film directed by Conrad Weaver. Mapang-akit is a 2011 short documentary film directed by John Torres. Sergei Eisenstein. Mexican Fantasy is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Oleg Kovalov. Mark Twain is a documentary film on the life of Mark Twain, also known as Samuel Clemens, produced by Ken Burns in 2001 which aired on Public Broadcasting System on January 14 and 15, 2002. Burns attempted to capture both the public and private persona of Mark Twain from his birth to his death. Significant artistic license was taken resulting in many historical inaccuracies and misrepresentations. The film was narrated by Keith David and the voice of Mark Twain was provided by Kevin Conway. Bloodline is a 2008 documentary film by Bruce Burgess, a filmmaker with an interest in paranormal claims, focused on the "Jesus bloodline" hypothesis and other elements of the book The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail. The 2008 documentary was originally released in cinemas on 9 May. "Ben Hammott" relating to his discoveries made in the vicinity of Rennes-le-Château since 1999; Burgess claims Ben Hammott would have found the treasure of Bérenger Saunière: a mummified corpse, which he believed were Mary Magdalene. In the film, Burgess interviews several people with alleged connections to the Priory of Sion, including a Gino Sandri and Nicolas Haywood. A book by one of the documentary's researchers, Rob Howells, entitled Inside the Priory of Sion: Revelations from the World's Most Secret Society - Guardians of the Bloodline of Jesus presented the version of the Priory of Sion as given in the 2008 documentary, which contained several erroneous assertions, such as the claim that Plantard believed in the Jesus bloodline hypothesis. Vagabonding Images is a 1998 documentary film directed by Simone Fürbringer and Nicolas Humbert. The Virgin, the Copts and Me is a 2011 comedy film written by Namir Abdel Messeeh, Nathalie Najem, Anne Paschetta and directed by Namir Abdel Messeeh. I am What I am is a 2011 musical documentary film written and directed by Gabriele Schärer. Printed Matter is a 2011 short film written and directed by Sirah Foighel Brutmann and Eitan Efrat. Nachtschicht is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Timo Großpietsch. Freeload is a 2014 documentary adventure film directed by Daniel Skaggs. Children of the Street is a 2004 documentary film directed by Eva Aridjis. Soul Food Stories is a 2013 documentary, comedy, drama and family film written and directed by Tonislav Hristov. We Are the Giant is a 2014 American documentary film produced and directed by Greg Barker. The film had its world premiere at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. The film is scheduled for a limited theatrical run from October 30, 2014 in UK. A special screening and panel Q&A will also take place at London's BFI cinema on the October 30, 2014. A Road to Mecca - The Journey of Muhammad Asad, also known as A Road to Mecca, is a 2008 documentary by Austrian filmmaker Georg Misch. The documentary traces the path of Muslim scholar and political theorist Muhammad Asad, which led to his conversion to Islam. I Am Somebody is a 1970 short documentary film directed by Madeline Anderson. The Derby is an 1895 British short black-and-white silent documentary film, produced and directed by Birt Acres for exhibition on Robert W. Paul's Kinetoscopes, featuring the end of the May 29 1895 Epsom Derby viewed from a raised position close to the finishing line with the main stand in the distance. A photograph of Acres filming the movie has survived, which shows that the camera used in the production was relatively portable despite what might have been expected from the equipment of the time. The film was long considered lost but footage discovered in the Ray Henville collection in 1995 has been identified by the BFI as being from this film. That Guy... Who Was in That Thing is a 2012 documentary film by Ian Roumain and Michael Schwartz that features sixteen male character actors discussing their careers as working actors below the film star level but who are often recognized as being "that guy" who was in "that thing". Two talent agents also comment on the challenges faced by such actors. The film was produced by Roumain, Schwartz and Brian Volk-Weiss for New Wave Entertainment. Doug Shanaberger described it as a "wonderful new documentary", saying: "If you’re wondering who they are, that’s half the point. But you’ll recognize them, and that’s the other half." The movie's official Facebook page has announced that a sequel is in the works, to be titled That Guy...Who Was In That Thing 2: That Gal. The second film will focus on similarly lesser-known but familiar female character actors, including Catherine Hicks, Alicia Coppola and Roxanne Hart. "Surf life" is Scott Lew's response to being diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease) at the age of 33. Living With Lew spans three years of Scott's indomitable spirit, relentless lust for life, dogged pursuit of a dream, and his wild, subversive sense of humor in the face of the seemingly unfaceable. Umiaq Skin Boat is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Jobie Weetaluktuk. Thomas Jefferson is a two-part portrait of one of the most fascinating and complicated figures ever to walk across America’s public stage – the enigmatic and brilliant third president. Thomas Jefferson embodies within his own life the most profound contradictions of American history: as the author of the Declaration of Independence, he gave voice to the fervent desire for freedom, but he also owned more than 150 human beings and never saw fit to free them. Jefferson also made himself into a true renaissance man – a scholar, a philosopher, a diplomat, an aesthete, and an architect. As a young man, he was transformed by the fire of the Enlightenment into America’s most articulate voice for human liberty. Torn between his desire for a serene family life at Monticello and his passion for politics, Jefferson endured ceaseless, heartrending personal loss. As President, he helped create the first American political party, and with the Louisiana Purchase, more than doubled the size of the new nation. Jefferson’s last years were spent founding the University of Virginia and reestablishing his friendship, after decades of estrangement, from his onetime rival John Adams. His influence on and vision for our country reverberates to this day. Sex: The Annabel Chong Story is a 1999 documentary film directed, filmed, and produced by Vancouver, B.C., Canada-based producer's Gough Lewis, Kelly Morris and Peter Carr and edited by co-creator Kelly Morris. The film profiles porn star Annabel Chong, a gender studies student at the University of Southern California, who was also an adult actress who was famous for setting a world gang bang record in January 1995. A video of this event was released under the title The World's Biggest Gang Bang. Dark Side of the Lens is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mickey Smith. The Order of Myths is a 2008 documentary film directed by Margaret Brown. It focuses on the Mardi Gras celebrations in Mobile, Alabama, the oldest in the United States. It reveals the separate mystic societies established and maintained by black and white groups, and acknowledges the complex racial history of a city with a slaveholding past. While showing the mystic societies' ties to economic, class and racial stratification, the film also showed the beginnings of interaction between the black and white courts. It also tells some of the history of Africatown, a community formed north of Mobile in 1860 by Africans from Ghana, transported illegally as slaves to Mobile decades after the end of the slave trade. The film competed in the Documentary Competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. It had a limited release in New York on July 25, 2008, and ran on Independent Lens, a PBS series featuring independent films, in 2009. It was distributed by The Cinema Guild. Without Pity: A Film About Abilities is an HBO film narrated by Christopher Reeve. This documentary celebrates the efforts of the disabled to live full, productive lives. The viewers meet a cross section of Americans in the film. A young woman with cerebral palsy who cares for her baby, while a man with cerebral palsy lives successfully on his own after 40 years in a Colorado institution. The film takes a trip to school with a remarkable 6-year-old boy without arms or legs, visits the workplace of a blind computer expert, and meets a professor with polio who teaches the history of discrimination against people with disabilities. A young man recently made paraplegic discusses his daily battle with depression and his determination and motivation to overcome it and get on with his life. This movie applauds the resilience and potential of people with disabilities and their need to be determined to be self-sufficient. Al-Andalus: The Art of Islamic Spain is a 1992 documentary film written by Jerrilyn Dodds,Pablo Romero and Agustí Villaronga and directed by Agustí Villaronga. On the Shoulders of Giants: The Story of the Greatest Team You Never Heard Of is a 2011 historical sports documentary film directed by Deborah Morales, written by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Anna Waterhouse. This film tells the story of the All-Black professional basketball team the New York Renaissance or Harlem Rens. The Power of Good: Nicholas Winton is a 2002 documentary about Nicholas Winton, the man who organized the Kindertransport rescue mission of 669 children from German-occupied Czechoslovakia on the eve of the Second World War. Director Matej Mináč decided to make the documentary after meeting Winton while developing the film treatment for All My Loved Ones. Florida: Window to a Hidden World is a 1991 documentary film directed by Wes Skiles. Anatomie des Weggehens is a 2012 documentary written and directed by Oliver Tataru. Hitting The Waves is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Omelga Mthiyane. Jared Lyell is a 2013 documentary film directed by Rob Norton. Power Trip is a documentary film by director Paul Devlin that describes the electricity crisis in the country of Georgia shortly after the fall of the Soviet Union. It looks at the chaos and riots that occurred in Tbilisi, Georgia, shortly after the AES Corporation, an American global power company, purchased Telasi, Tbilisi's privatized electricity distribution company. The film exposes corruption in the highest levels of government as well as the plight of the Georgian people as they struggle for power. Do It Again is a 2010 documentary film directed by Robert Patton-Spruill and produced by Boston Globe reporter Geoff Edgers. The film follows Edgers on his quest to reunite British rock band The Kinks. Along the way he interviews several musicians and celebrities, discussing with them the band's music and influence, as well as their sentiments towards a potential Kinks reunion. Shooting for Do It Again began in the spring of 2008, and it made its debut at the Rotterdam International Film Festival in January 2010. Do It Again showed at several film festivals around the world throughout 2010, and was picked up for broadcast on public television in late 2011. Tales of Masked Men is a 2012 Documentary film written by Carlos Ávila and directed by Carlos Ávila. Le Grand Akshan is a 2003 documentary film by Ron Goldman about a doomed ship's failed voyage to Mandatory Palestine that happens to uncover shocking family secrets. A Very Gaga Thanksgiving is a Thanksgiving television special that originally aired on November 24, 2011, in the United States on ABC. Conceived and directed by Lady Gaga, it discusses her personal life and the inspiration behind her music. Development for A Very Gaga Thanksgiving immediately surfaced in November 2011, when it was announced that Gaga would host a television special on Thanksgiving. It features guest appearances from Katie Couric, Art Smith, and Tony Bennett. Gaga performed stripped down, acoustic versions of four songs from her second studio album, Born This Way, along with two Christmas songs and a duet with Bennett. The special received critical acclaim and gave ABC its best ratings in four years for its respective time slot on Thanksgiving Day. White Diamond: A Personal Portrait of Kylie Minogue is a 2007 documentary film directed and produced by William Baker and chronicling the life of Australian singer Kylie Minogue during her concert tour Showgirl: The Homecoming Tour. It was filmed between August 2006 and March 2007 in both Australia and the United Kingdom. Intended as an account of Minogue's return to the stage following her recovery from cancer, the film features on-stage and back-stage footage and interviews with several of Minogue's tour crew, including the director, William Baker. Kylie's sister Dannii and U2 lead singer Bono are also featured. The film had a one-night premiere in each country, starting in the United Kingdom on 16 October 2007 and ending on 16 November 2007 in New Zealand. It received mostly negative reviews. It was later released on DVD in two editions: the European/United Kingdom edition and the Australian/New Zealand edition. These were later followed by a two-disc edition; the second disc contained a concert that was filmed during Kylie's Showgirl: The Homecoming Tour in Melbourne, Australia. The title White Diamond was taken from one of Kylie's songs. Du bist min (Ein deutsches Tagebuch) is an East German film. It was released in 1969. Degania: The First Kibbutz Fights Its Last Battle is a 2008 Israeli documentary directed by Yitzhak Rubin that premiered at the Haifa International Film Festival. The film's subject is the bitter dispute over the transition of the first kibbutz, Degania—established in 1910 by a dozen young idealists on the banks of the Jordan River—from a model based on socialism, egalitarianism and mutual responsibility to one of free market capitalism and differential salaries. It follows the emotional and heated debates leading up to the fateful day in March 2007 when kibbutzniks voted on the proposal to privatize their community. Men Against the Arctic is a 1955 American short documentary film directed by Winston Hibler. It won an Academy Award in 1956 for Documentary Short Subject. It was also entered into the 6th Berlin International Film Festival. Porch Glider is a 1970 short documentary film directed by James Herbert. Unmasked Judeophobia is a documentary and historical film directed by Gloria Z. Greenfield. Delamu is an award winning 2004 documentary film directed by the acclaimed Fifth Generation Chinese filmmaker, Tian Zhuangzhuang. Delamu documents the people living in the Nujiang River Valley, along the Tea Horse Road, an ancient trade route between China's Yunnan province and Tibet. The film was jointly produced by companies in the People's Republic of China, and Japan. It had its American premier at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival. The title, "Delamu" refers to the Tibetan word for "peaceful angel", and the name of one of the mules owned by a villager in the film. Awaking Arthur offers a very different approach to the well-known King Arthur story. Featuring vivid recreations, this documentary traces the origins of the Arthurian Legends seperates the fact from the legend. and was filmed on location in France, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and England. Shakespeare and Victor Hugo's Intimacies is a 2008 documentary written and directed by Yulene Olaizola. ""Oh my God! It’s a hermaphrodite!” screams the nurse, moments after Mani Bruce Mitchell is born into the hands of a doctor in a small New Zealand hospital in 1953. Fifty years later, the short documentary BLACK AND WHITE interweaves the stories of intersex activist Mani Bruce Mitchell and acclaimed photographer Rebecca Swan, exploring their powerful creative collaboration. Intimate present-day interviews and actuality are interspersed with archival slides, photographs, and playful fragments of Super-8 stop-motion animation, concluding with actuality footage framed by the epic grandeur of Wellington’s rugged southern coast. Focusing first on Mani’s extraordinary childhood, and then on the story of Mani and Rebecca’s photographic collaboration, this documentary poses a challenge to notions of masculinity and femininity as rigid categories. As in Swan’s still images, Mani defies the categories of male and female and boldly proclaims her own intersex identity. Mani stares back at the camera, no longer the powerless “freak” of the hospital lecture theatre photographs and displays of her childhood, but challenging the viewer to see her for who s/he is – simply different." Quoting the description from the Official Site. Regnbågens Sång is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Nasrin Pakkho. Peter Murray is a 1981 film directed by David Hancock and Herbert di Gioia. Léon la lune is a 1956 French short documentary film directed by Alain Jessua. The film won the Prix Jean Vigo in 1957. The film documents an old drifter in Paris in the poetic realist style. Jessua was inspired by Jean-Paul Clébert's book "Paris Insolite" and decided to make a film about a clochard or tramp. The poet and novelist Robert Giraud, an expert on the Parisian underworld, introduced Jessua to Léon la Lune, a vagrant whose real name was Leon Boudeville and suggested they follow him from day to night. After completing the film Giraud showed it to the poet and screenwriter Jacques Prévert who wrote an introduction and asked Henri Crolla to contribute some music to the film. Léon la lune also appeared in the series Clochards by Robert Doisneau, the pioneer of humanist photojournalism. Boogeymen: The Killer Compilation is a horror compilation video released in 2001 by FlixMix. Marketed as "The Killer Compilation," the film consists of seventeen scenes from notable, revolutionary horror titles, along with short screens describing the apropos villain. Jeni and David are model scouts for IMG Models Paris. Each year they take the Trans-Siberian Railway across Russia searching for the next generation of supermodels. As they travel across the country they stop at the remote cities en route... Omsk, Novosibirsk, Nizny Novgorod... ending in St. Petersburg. At each city they hold castings where hundreds of hopeful local girls line up - desperate to be selected.We follow Jeni and David discovering what makes this trip so essential. Why do they believe they'll find the best contenders for the next supermodel here in remote Russia? Why do some faces make the grade and others not? And once chosen, how do their lives change? For the answer to that question we'll visit the homes of those hoping to be chosen, and talk to the families of those already a 'name' on the fashion circuit. And we'll see a group of girls make the transformation - from deepest Siberia to the cover of major fashion magazines Sun Dogs is a 2006 documentary directed by Andrea Stewart, distributed by Palm Pictures. Facing Climate Change: Oyster Farmers is 2012 short documentary film directed by Benjamin Drummond and Sara Joy Steele. Tro Lai Ngu Thuy is a 1997 documentary film directed by Le Manh Thich and Do Khanh Toan. Risky Business: A Look Inside America's Adult Film Industry is a 2013 documentary film written by Mary Burns and Adelin Gasana and directed by David Mech. Love Bomb: A Journey From Fear to Love is a 2011 documentary film directed by Rhea Zimmerman Komarek. Faces of Death is a 1978 mondo film which guides viewers through explicit scenes depicting a variety of ways to die and violent acts. Corman's World: Exploits of a Hollywood Rebel is a 2011 documentary film written by Alex Stapleton and Gregory Locklear and directed by Alex Stapleton. Mondovino is a 2004 documentary film on the impact of globalization on the world's different wine regions written and directed by American film maker Jonathan Nossiter. It was nominated for the Palme d'Or at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival and a César Award. The film explores the impact of globalization on the various wine-producing regions, and the influence of critics like Robert Parker and consultants like Michel Rolland in defining an international style. It pits the ambitions of large, multinational wine producers, in particular Robert Mondavi, against the small, single estate wineries who have traditionally boasted wines with individual character driven by their terroir. Mondovino was originally intended to be a two-month affair as a break between feature projects upon the completion of Nossiter's film Signs & Wonders. The film gave Nossiter a chance to utilize his knowledge as a trained sommelier from his time working at Balthazar in New York as well as an opportunity to visit some of the great wine regions of the world. The King's Body is a 2012 short film written and directed by João Pedro Rodrigues. "A 12 minute art film based on the book American Homes by Lester Walker. The visuals are an animated series of black and white drawings of homes from the book. The director, Bernard Friedman, has compiled amazing interview sound clips from many renowned architects and home builders." Quoting the description from the 2010 Architect Africa Film Festival site. Shouting Fire: Stories from the Edge of Free Speech is a 2009 documentary film about freedom of speech and the First Amendment in the United States, directed by Liz Garbus. The documentary prominently features First Amendment attorney, Martin Garbus, who talks about the past and present state of free speech in the United States, and the case of Ward Churchill. A tenured professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado, Churchill was fired after publishing a controversial article about the 9/11 attacks and being investigated for academic misconduct related to other issues. The film also explores the cases of Debbie Almontaser, Chase Harper, and protesters at the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City. Those interviewed include historians, legal scholars and attoreys, such as Floyd Abrams, David Horowitz, Eric Foner, Donna Lieberman, Daniel Pipes, Richard Posner, Kenneth Starr and Josh Wolf. Beijing: The Third Ring is a documentary film directed by Ai Weiwei. Meeting People Is Easy, first released on 30 November 1998, is a rockumentary by Grant Gee following British alternative rock band Radiohead on their exhaustive world tour following the success of their 1997 album OK Computer. The film was nominated for a Grammy Award in the "Best Long Form Music Video" category in 2000. Yellow Limbo is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Uriel Orlow. The North Wind is a 2010 documentary film directed by Kusuma Widjaja Putu. Journey of a Red Fridge is a 2007 documentary film about 17-year-old porter Hari Rai working in the Himalayan Mountains of Nepal. It was directed by Lucian and Natasa Muntean, a Serbian independent documentary production duo specializing in telling the stories of working children. Journey of a Red Fridge was produced in association with The Global Fund for Children. UNSTRUNG chronicles a year in the lives of seven teenage boys, striving to succeed in the competitive world of Junior Tennis. We witness first-hand the performance under pressure that can separate contenders from champions.The movie is a candid exploration of intense training, huge sacrifices, financial struggles, and lifelong dreams. We watch the joy of winning and the harsh reality of losing.Featuring thoughtful and insightful commentary from Andre Agassi, Pete Sampras, Jim Courier, John McEnroe, Andy Roddick, and the legendary tennis coach, Nick Bollettieri, this is a true story that is both inspiring and touching. It's a film about the challenges and choices we all face in our lives and about where those journeys lead us. Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives is a 1977 documentary film featuring interviews with 26 gay men and women. It was directed by six people collectively known as the Mariposa Film Group. Peter Adair conceived and produced the film, and was one of the directors. The film premiered in November 1977 at the Castro Theater in San Francisco, and was released in 1978. The interviews from the film were transcribed into a book of the same title, which was published in October 1978. The ‘big question’ have marked our cultures, have influenced the religious beliefs and rise civilizations to make human race become the dominant spices of the planet. Animal Sapiens will bring us closer to the cultural successes of mankind to show us that these strategies are also used by other inhabitants of our planet. Yogen is a 1982 film directed by Susumu Hani. Portræt af Tom Petty is a 1991 documentary film written by Jørgen de Mylius. Homage to Rome is a 2009 short film written and directed by Franco Zeffirelli. Underground Messengers is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Andreas Hoessli. On The Coast is a 2010 documentary short fantasy film directed and written by Merve Kayan and Zeynep Dadak. Resan is a 14 ½ hour film by Peter Watkins, made between the years 1983 and 1985 on several continents, and structured around the theme of nuclear weapons, military spending and poverty. Ordinary people are asked about their awareness of these issues. It was screened at the Toronto Film Festival in 1987, but has rarely been seen since. It was screened at the Mexico City International Festival of Contemporary Cinema in February 2007 as part of a retrospective on Peter Watkins. Between April 25 and May 1, 2007, all 19 parts of the film were screened at the Austrian Filmmuseum in Vienna, Austria as part of a retrospective on Peter Watkins. One Thousand Pictures: RFK’s Last Journey is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Jennifer Stoddart. L'eruption de la montagne pelée is a 1976 documentary, short film directed by Manolo Otero. A Life Apart: Hasidism in America is a 1997 documentary film written by Menachem Daum and Robert Seidman, and directed by Menachem Daum and Oren Rudavsky Kids Rights: Anna is a 2010 documentary film directed by Ayfer Ergün. Tillie Olsen: A Heart in Action is a 2007 documentary film directed and produced by Ann Hershey on the life and literary influence of Tillie Olsen, the U.S. writer best known for the books Tell Me a Riddle and Yonnondio: From the Thirties. The film includes extensive interviews with Olsen and with prominent fans of her work, including writers Alice Walker and Florence Howe and feminist political leader Gloria Steinem. Oh, Saigon is a 2007 autobiographical documentary by Vietnamese American director Doan Hoang about her family's separation during the fall of Saigon and her attempt to reunite them afterwards. Oh, Saigon was executive produced by Academy Award and Emmy winner, John Battsek. Oh, Saigon received film grants from the Sundance Institute Documentary Fund, ITVS, and the Center for Asian American Media, and after its release, received a number of film festival awards and accolades. Bitter Seeds is a 2011 documentary film by American filmmaker and director and political commentator Micha Peled. The film is the third part of Peleds globalization trilogy after Store Wars: When Wal-Mart Comes to Town and China Blue. Paper Cannot Wrap Up Embers is a 2007 French-Cambodian documentary film directed by Rithy Panh. In this film, the director examines prostitution in Cambodia. The Hornet's Nest is a 2014 American documentary film about the Afghanistan war, directed by David Salzberg and Christian Tureaud. The film follows two journalists, a father and son, embedded with an elite group of United States Armed Forces troops sent on a mission into one of Afghanistan's most hostile valleys. The three days mission becomes an intense nine days of fighting against the enemy. Much Ado About Knotting is a documentary film directed by Geetika Narang and Anandana Kapur. When China Met Africa is a 2010 documentary film by Nick Francis and Marc Francis, set on the front line of Chinaʼs foray into Africa, following the lives of a Chinese farmer, a road builder, and the Zambian trade minister. When China Met Africa was an international co-production involving BBC Storyville, Arte France, VPRO, the Sundance Institute, CNC and the Media Fund, and produced by Speakit Films and Zeta Productions. The film played at international film festivals including Rotterdam Film Festival, Munich, Goteburg and at the Margaret Mead Film Festival in New York, where it won best film. It was released in cinemas in the UK in 2011 and was seen on television around the world. When China Met Africa was characterised by The Guardian as 'An eye-opening documentary that puts into concrete images that truism of the geo-political commentariat: that China is a new economic superpower' and The Times summarised it as 'A rare, grass-roots view into one of the most important economic developments of the age'. The film was also covered by media outlets including CNN, The Economist and The Atlantic. Tomorrow There Will Be... (Czech: Zítra se bude ...) is a 2010 film directed by Jan Hřebejk. Repare Bem is a 2013 documentary film written by Maria de Medeiros and Ana Petta and directed by Maria de Medeiros. Cruzada is a 2011 documentary directed by Cinthia Marcelle. The Living Desert is a 1953 American nature documentary film that shows the everyday lives of the animals of the desert of the southwestern United States. The movie was written by James Algar, Winston Hibler, Jack Moffitt and Ted Sears. It was directed by Algar, with Hibler as the narrator and was filmed in Tucson, Arizona, at the Westward Look Wyndham Grand Resort and Spa. The film won the 1953 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It is featured in the 2006 DVD Walt Disney Legacy Collection Volume 2: Lands of Exploration. A Day in the Death of Sarajevo is a 1992 documentary film written by Bernard-Henri Levy and directed by Thierry Ravalet and Alain Ferrari. Little Matador is a 2012 documentary film written by Sandra Jordan and directed by Gabriel Range and Sandra Jordan. Queens of Heart brings to the screen the first psychological study of drag performance, set in the oldest surviving female impersonation club in the United States. Portland's Darcelle XV Showplace has become a rite of passage for young women throughout the Pacific Northwest celebrating their "last night out" before getting married.Seventy-five year old Darcelle XV, co-proprietor, performer, and activist, comforts and confronts her audiences, from the brides gone wild and their nervous male companions, to gays and lesbians celebrating a step in coming out, to older women recovering from an illness or divorce. Guardians Of Time Lost is 2014 documentary film written and directed by Diala Kachmar. The Power of Myth is a book based on the 1988 PBS documentary Joseph Campbell and the Power of Myth. The documentary was originally broadcast as six one-hour conversations between mythologist Joseph Campbell and journalist Bill Moyers. Resistir is a 1978 documentary film written by Juan Gelman an directed by Jorge Cedron. "When mustachioed, manly-man Steve decided to make the transition to become Sara, he abandoned his true calling: to be a Pastor. After a difficult divorce and a transition period filled with countless gender specialists and hostility from family members, a higher power prevails, and Sara — now an out and proud transsexual woman — can no longer ignore her call to ministry. Thy Will Be Done follows Sara on her quest to be ordained in the Presbyterian Church. With many members of the Presbytery not only protesting her candidacy but also calling her an abomination against scripture and God’s will, Sara is constantly confronted with opposition, intolerance and irrationality. The Church considers her to be a gay man (huh?) and won’t formally recognize her gender change. But the Church also condemns her for being in a same-sex marriage with a woman. Sara’s obstacles bring to light the contradictions of organized religion, while creating a new arena for the fight for gender recognition and equality." Quoting ANGELIQUE SMITH from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Living Hope is a 2014 drama adventure documentary film written by Mitchell Galin and David Kiern and directed by David Kiern. Rome: Engineering an Empire is a documentary written and directed by Christopher Cassel. The Fantastic Plastic Machine is a 1969 documentary film following a group of California surfers as they journey to an Australian surfing competition. The film is narrated by Jay North. It was directed by Eric and Lowell Blum and was filmed in California, Hawaii, Australia, New Zealand, and Fiji. Mother Teresa is a 1986 biographical documentary film directed by Ann and Jeanette Petrie. Who Framed Jesus is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mark Lewis. Ballet aquatique is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Raoul Ruiz. "A documentary recounting the life story of elderly prostitutes working at Luz Square, in São Paulo, Brazil. These five women narrate exciting and unusual stories, as well as a few dramatic experiences; revealing, in detail, their life in those numerous years of prostitution." Quoting the description from the 2008 Queer Lisboa Film Festival site. Added Attractions: The Hollywood Shorts Story is a documentary film directed by John Griffin. God, the Universe and Everything Else is a 1988 talk-show directed by Hector Stewart. Cage/Cunningham is a 1991 film directed by Elliot Caplan. The Self-Made Man is a 2005 documentary film directed by Susan Stern. The Recruiter is a 2008 documentary film directed by Edet Belzberg. One of every four high school graduates cannot pass the basic military entrance exam. Couple that with high obesity and rise of criminal records means there is a much lower chance of getting military recruits. Despite these obstacles recruitment numbers are hitting their marks. The economic crisis is giving way to more willing recruits and many of them have one of the key measures to join, a high school diploma. Still the ineligibility rates some military leaders say are, “a matter of national security.” The Recruiter takes viewers to the Louisiana coast, where they witness firsthand Sergeant First Class Clay Usie’s struggle to enlist new soldiers into the U.S. Army in his hometown of Houma, LA. Sgt. Usie believes that every American should serve their country and he sets his sights on Lauren, Matt, Bobby, and Chris, four teenagers who think that the Army is the answer for them. Shot in verite style over a nine-month period the film shows the new recruits in their last semesters of high school as they prepare with Sgt. Usie for boot camp. Next Year in Bombay is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mathias Mangin and Jonas Parienté. This Prison Where I Live is a 2010 documentary film directed by Rex Bloomstein. The Driven Man is a humorous documentary film written by British comedian and well-known car collector Rowan Atkinson, penned as a series of sketches featuring himself driving around London trying to solve his car-fetish, and discussing it with taxi drivers, policemen, used-car salesmen and psychotherapists. It was released in 1991. Alphaville - Do Lado de Dentro do Muro is a Documentary film by Luiza Campos and Gustavo Ribeiro. Punk Jews is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jesse Zook Mann. Soul Patron is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Frederik Rieckher. Grand Opera marks a stock-taking of Benning's work and his life, presenting a personal and artistic autobiography woven together with a series of events dealing with the historical development of the number pi, Benning's travels, and homages to Michael Snow, Hollis Frampton, George Landow (Owen Land), and Yvonne Rainer Blaze Foley: Duct tape Messiah is a 2011 documentary film written by June Burnum and Kevin Triplett and directed by Kevin Triplett. Binka: To Tell a Story about Silence is a documentary film directed by Elka Nikolova. It is 48min in length, and was released in Bulgaria and in the United States in 2006. The topic of the film is the life of Bulgarian director Binka Zhelyazkova. Neon, an Electric Memoir is a 1984 Short Documentary film. Taxi Beirut is a documentary film directed by Hady Zaccak, produced by Issam Dakroub that stars three average taxi drivers. It was released on October 8, 2011 BIFF, the Beirut International Film Festival. It was produced by the Al-Jazeera documentary channel. The movie follows a day in the life of three Lebanese taxi drivers working in the metropolitan city of Beirut. It features the taxis going around the Beirut area, picking up tourists and locals alike. The three taxi drivers are Beirut residents of different religious and cultural backgrounds and give the viewers a picture of the pros and cons of Lebanon's diverse population. The movie includes Arabic, English and French dialogue. The movie has a 51 minute running time and is still circulating film festivals across Europe and the Middle East. Straits of Magellan: Drafts & Fragments is a 1974 film directed by Hollis Frampton. Circle the Wagen is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ryan Steven Green. Slumming It: Myth and Culture on the Bowery is a documentary film directed by Scott Elliott. Goa Hippy Tribe is a 2011 documentary film directed by Darius Devas. On the Trail with Miss Snail Pail is a 2009 short documentary film that follows Colleen Flanigan, aka Miss Snail Pail, as she provides a snail removal service that recycles the garden pests into food. On the Trail's first festival screening was at the 2009 Tucson Slow Food & Film Festival in Arizona. The film was also selected for screening by the 2009 Modesto Reel Food Film Festival in California, the 2009 Colorado Environmental Film Festival in Golden, Colorado, and the 2011 9th Annual Wild and Scenic Film Festival in Nevada City, California. Brian Deegan : Disposable Hero is a 2006 documentary directed by Dave Dawes. Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin is a 2003 documentary film written by Marc Weiss and directed by Nancy D. Kates and Bennett Singer. Israel vs Israel is a 2010 documentary on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict by Swedish freelance journalist and filmmaker Terje Carlsson about Israeli peace activists. The film portrays four Israelis struggling against the military occupation of the Palestinian territories: Jonathan Pollak from Anarchists Against the Wall, Yehuda Shaul from Breaking the Silence, Ronny Perlmann from Machsom Watch and Arik Ascherman from Rabbis for Human Rights. The film won the Best International Documentary award at the 2011 Turkish Radio and Television Corporation documentary film festival as well an award from the Doha Center for Media Freedom at the 2011 Al Jazeera Film Festival, and has been screened at festivals in Stockholm, Montreal, Tromsø, and Trondheim. Metanoia is a 1991 film directed by Peter Voigt. Watershed: Exploring a New Water Ethic for the New West is 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mark Decena. I Am a Sex Addict is a 1993 film directed by Vikram Jayanti and John Powers. Born to Fly is a 2013 documentary film directed by Catherine Gund. Cailleach is a 2014 short film written and directed by Rosie Reed Hillman. The Children of Chabannes is a 2001 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Historical Programming with Limited Dramatization - Programs nominated/winning TV program. Jaime is a Portuguese medium-length film, directed by António Reis and released in 1974. Its subject is Jaime Fernandes, a deceased pacient of the psiquiatric hospital Miguel Bombarda in Lisbon. Die widerrechtliche Ausübung der Astronomie is a 1967 short film directed by Peter Schamoni and written by Max Ernst and Peter Schamoni. Tantrums & Tiaras is a 1997 documentary about the musician Sir Elton John directed by his civil partner David Furnish. It was recorded during Elton's tour Made in England in 1995 and includes parts of interviews and concerts. Included in the documentary is a large part of a concert John performed in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in November 1995. In 1998, the documentary won a Chris Award at the Columbus Film and Video Festival. It was also re-released on DVD in November 2008 as a "Director's Cut" with extra material. Richard Garriott: Man on a Mission is 2010 documentary film directed by Mike Woolf. Tokko Shigan is a 2013 short drama war family documentary film written and directed by Kenshow Onodera. High Five: A Suburban Adoption Saga is a 2012 documentary film directed by Julia Ivanova. OUT in the Line-Up is a 2014 adventure, documentary, drama, sports film written and directed by Ian Thomson. Yoga and the Individual is a 1966 documentary film directed by John B. Murray. The Kid Stays in the Picture is both the name of the 1994 autobiography by film producer Robert Evans, and the title of the 2002 film adaptation of Evans' book. The title comes from a line attributed to studio head Darryl F. Zanuck, who was defending Evans after some of the actors involved in the 1957 film The Sun Also Rises had recommended he be removed from the cast. The film adaptation was directed by Nanette Burstein and Brett Morgen and released by USA Films. It was screened out of competition at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival. Living Dolls is a 2013 documentary film written by Maureen Judge and Martin Waxman and directed by Maureen Judge. Little Dear Ones is a short documentary film. The Invisible Ones is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sébastien Lifshitz. Run Ricky Run is a film directed by Sean Pamphilon and Royce Toni. Hidden Cities is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Gusztáv Hámos and Katja Pratschke. Flying Monsters 3D is a natural history documentary about the pterosaurs. It was written and presented by David Attenborough and was produced by Atlantic Productions for Sky 3D. Originally broadcast on Christmas Day 2010, it was the first 3D documentary to be screened on British television and was released in theatres and IMAX cinemas the following year. Flying Monsters 3D went on to become the first 3D programme to win a BAFTA award. Mud-covered City is a 1963 short documentary film written and directed by Václav Táborsky. Little Rock Central High: 50 Years Later is an HBO film about the Little Rock Nine. A Plate of Sardines is a Syrian documentary film by the director Omar Amiralay. This short documentary tells Amiralay's own story about how he first heard of Israel. In his own words, "The first time I heard of Israel, it was in Beirut, talking about a sardine dish. I was 6 years old, Israel was 2." The film records Amiralay's filmmaker friend Mohamed Malas own reflections on his own native city of Quneitra before and after the Israeli-occupation and later liberation of the city. All the while strolling around the ruins of what's left of Quneitra. Steal This Film - Part One is a 2006 documentary short film. Music Inn is a 2005 documentary film. Flashover is a 2008 documentary film concerning the release of John Deacon from prison after he was wrongfully convicted of arson in 2005. Code Breakers is a two-part BBC World Documentary on free open-source software and computer programming that started on BBC World TV on 10 May 2006. Code Breakers investigates how poor countries are using FOSS applications for economic development, and includes stories and interviews from around the world. As the digital divide is getting wider, The Codebreakers examines whether free and opensource software might be the bridge. A 40-minute version of The Codebreakers is available for free download online as of 2014. FOSS contains 'source code' that can be used, copied, studied, modified and redistributed without restriction. It has been around for over 20 years, but most PC owners are not aware that many internet search engines and computer applications run on FOSS. It's not that FOSS has had a bad press, it has had no press because there is no company that 'owns' it. But we found that in the computer industry and among the aficionados, it is well known and its virtues well understood. Unstoppable is an 2013 American documentary film hosted by Kirk Cameron. Directed by Darren Doane. Inspired by the death of a close friend who succumbed to cancer at age 15, Cameron has stated that his mission for the film is to answer the question of, "Where is God in the midst of tragedy and suffering?" The film is being made in partnership with Liberty University and was released for a one-night-only screening in theaters on September 24, 2013. Links to the film's official website were blocked from Facebook and the trailer was removed from YouTube. After widespread news coverage and outrage from fans, the Facebook block was lifted. Spokespeople for Facebook said that the domain name purchased for the film was previously used for spam, and the link was reinstated after a short period of time. YouTube reallowed the trailer, but did not make a public comment. Velvet Terrorists is a 2013 drama film written and directed by Péter Kerekes, Ivan Ostrochovský, and Pavol Pekarcik. Ngaben: Emotion And Restraint In A Balinese Heart is a 2012 documentary film directed by Robert Lemelson. Broadcasting The End - A Tale About A Magic Mountain is 2013 experimental & documentary film written and directed by Martijn Payens. Madre Cuba is a 2004 documentary film written by Lucia Balducci, Francisco Recio, Miriam Ruiz, Demian Sabini and Salomón Shang and directed by Salomón Shang. Ice Age Columbus: Who Were the First Americans is a 2005 film directed by Nicolas Brown. Ghosts of the Abyss is a 2003 documentary film released by Walt Disney Pictures and Walden Media. It was directed by Academy Award-winning filmmaker James Cameron after his 1997 Oscar-winning film Titanic. During August and September 2001, Cameron and a group of scientists staged an expedition to the wreck of the RMS Titanic, and dive in Russian deep-submersibles to obtain more detailed images than anyone has before. With the help of two small, purpose-built remotely operated vehicles, nicknamed "Jake" and "Elwood", the audience too can see inside the Titanic and with the help of CGI, audiences can view the ship's original appearance superimposed on the deep-dive images. Also along for the ride Cameron invites friend and actor Bill Paxton who played Brock Lovett in the 1997 film. He narrates the event through his eyes. The film itself was premiered for IMAX 3D and was also nominated for a BFCA award for Best Documentary. The submersibles Mir 1 and Mir 2 carried the filming team on twelve dives. The film is also known as Titanic 3D: Ghosts of the Abyss. The Dust Bowl is a documentary film directed by Ken Burns which aired on Public Broadcasting System on November 18 and 19, 2012. The four-part miniseries recounts the impact of the Dust Bowl on the U.S. during the Great Depression of the 1930s. The film features the voices of Patricia Clarkson, Peter Coyote, and Carolyn McCormick. El Pipiripau is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Gabriel Volcovich. State of Fear: The Truth about Terrorism is a documentary film produced by Skylight Pictures and directed by Pamela Yates. It won the 2006 Overseas Press Club Award for "Best Reporting in Any Medium on Latin America". It has been translated into 48 languages and broadcast in 157 countries. Based on the findings of the Peruvian Truth and Reconciliation Commission, State of Fear uses personal testimony, history and archival footage to tell the story of escalating violence in Peru, and how the fear of terrorism undermined democracy. In 2000, after President Alberto Fujimori's regime collapsed under corruption scandals, the new government of Valentin Paniaqua established the Truth and Reconciliation Commission to investigate atrocities that had resulted from the violence had engulfed Peru for twenty years through the 1980s and 1990s. The Truth Commission granted Skylight Pictures access to its extensive testimonial evidence as well as hundreds of hours of rarely seen archival material and thousands of photographs. Saudate for the Future is a 2000 documentary film written by César Paes, Marie Clémence Paes and directed by César Paes. Chef Thémis, cuisinier sans frontières is a Canadian 2009 documentary film. Into the Cold: A Journey of the Soul is a documentary film written and directed by Sebastian Copeland that follows two men's journey to the geographic North Pole in 2009, commemorating the centennial of Admiral Peary's successful 1909 reach. The film retraces the training and two-month expedition of Sebastian Copeland and his partner Keith Heger as they cover more than 400 miles on foot in sub-zero temperatures. Into the Cold communicates the message that there will be no bicentennial expedition to the North Pole due to the rapidly vanishing polar ice cap. Memoirs of a Frustated Hedonist is a 1995 film written and directed by Claas Danielsen. Cinema of Unease is the New Zealand contribution to the British Film Institutes Century of Cinema Series. Written and directed by Sam Neill, the title refers to the dark and brooding nature of many of New Zealand's most notable films, which Neill considers a reflection of the nation's struggle to find, or form, its own identity. It won Best Documentary in the 1996 TV Guide Film and Television awards. It also screened at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival. All Eyes on Me – Trans Identity Through Photography is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Harun Güler and Larissa De Filippo. Autopsy on a Dream is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by John Weiley. If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front is a documentary film by filmmaker Marshall Curry, exploring the origins, motives, and organization of the Earth Liberation Front and Eco-terrorism in general. Additionally, it explains how the Department of Justice was able to find and arrest Daniel McGowan and his co-conspirators in a nationwide sweep in December 2005 and raises questions as to whether or not they deserved to be sentenced as "terrorists." The film premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, where it also won an award for editing, and went on to screen within such festivals as Maryland Film Festival. On January 24, 2011, the film was announced as one of the five nominees for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. A Steam Train Passes is an award winning Australian 1974 short film set in the 1940s, featuring the construction and operation of locomotive 3801. O Pão e o Vinho is a 1981 Portuguese documentary feature film produced and directed by Ricardo Costa, his second docufiction after Changing Tides – 1996/7. The third is Mists - 2003. A Little Vicious is a 1991 American short documentary film directed by Immy Humes about a dog in Connecticut about to be killed for biting people, until animal trainer Vicki Hearne steps in to help. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Blood on the Flat Track: The Rise of the Rat City Rollergirls is a documentary film produced and directed by Lainy Bagwell and Lacey Leavitt. The film documents the formative years of the Seattle women's flat track roller derby league, the Rat City Rollergirls. The Black Sabbath Story Vol. 1 - 1970-1978 is a documentary video by heavy metal band Black Sabbath. Toward Independence is a 1948 American short documentary film. It won an Academy Award in 1949 for Documentary Short Subject. Into the Belly of the Whale is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Hazim Bitar. Beginning Filmmaking is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Jay Rosenblatt. Camels and the Pitjantjara is a 1969 documentary film directed by Roger Sandall. Antonio Gaudi is a 1984 Japanese documentary film by Hiroshi Teshigahara about the works of Antoni Gaudi. In the film the director visits the buildings including houses in Barcelona and the Sagrada Família. Bombs on Berlin is a 1963 film directed by Irmgard von zur Mühlen. Inlaws & Outlaws is a documentary by filmmaker and oral historian Drew Emery that weaves together the true stories of couples and singles—both gay and straight—to create a collective narrative of stories of love, loss and belonging. The film was produced by Larry Schlessinger, Lisa Halpern, and Emery for the True Stories Project, Emery's production company. The original version of the film premiered at the Seattle International Film Festival in May 2005. After a successful run in the festival circuit, the film was edited further and received its theatrical premiere in July, 2007 at the Seattle Cinerama. The Blue Hills is a 2006 Estonian film directed by Raimo Jõerand. It is a documentary film about the 1944 Battle of Tannenberg Line. Based upon the war diaries of Paul Maitla, the film tells the story of this epic battle and the young Estonian men who had to choose between two totalitarian powers. The film received special mention at the 10th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival. Charles Bradley: Soul of America is a 2012 documentary film directed by Poull Brien. Zone M is a 2000 film directed by Eduard Schreiber. The Presumption of Justice is a 2012 documentary film, directed by Boris Malagurski and Ivana Rajović, it deals with the September 2009 murder of Brice Taton, a fan of Toulouse FC, who arrived to Belgrade, Serbia in order to support his club in its UEFA Europa League away match versus FK Partizan. The film focuses on the subsequent court case in Serbia which, resulted in a dozen FK Partizan fans being convicted of the crime. It argues that the handling of the case was negligent at both its investigative and trial stages, resulting in a miscarriage of justice in the case of Stefan Veličković, one of the 12 convicted fans. The film premiered in Belgrade on June 29, 2012, with subsequent showings in Subotica, Novi Sad, Niš, Bačka Palanka, Zrenjanin, Pančevo, Sremski Karlovci, Nova Pazova and other cities. The Death of Jaime Roldos is a 2013 documentary film directed by Manolo Sarmiento and Lisandra Rivera. Stealing Home: The Case of Contemporary Cuban Baseball, commonly known as Stealing Home, is a 2001 documentary about Cuban baseball defectors. The documentary was filmed in the United States, Cuba, and the Dominican Republic. Everything Will Be Alright is a 2012 documentary and comedy film written by Kiki von Glasow and Niko von Glasow, and directed by Niko von Glasow. A documentary film about the influence of "ancient astronauts" in mankind's history. Pimps Up, Ho's Down is a 1998 television documentary about pimping in the United States as part of the HBO documentary anthology series America Undercover. The film features interviews with American pimps and explores the modern pimping lifestyle. The film has received some controversy over some pimps using the documentary as an instructional video for their prostitutes, as well as over concerns over HBO paying the pimps for rights to film their businesses and the Players Ball. Our Nixon is an all-archival documentary providing a view of the Nixon presidency through the use of home movies filmed by top Nixon aides combined with other historical material. Word Wars is a 2004 documentary film directed by Eric Chaikin and Julian Petrillo about competitive Scrabble playing. Its full title is: Word Wars - Tiles and Tribulations on the Scrabble Circuit. The film was an official selection at the 2004 Sundance film festival, had a 25-city theatrical run, was included as part of the Discovery Times Channel's "Screening Room" series, and was nominated for numerous awards including a 2004 Documentary Emmy for "Best Artistic or Cultural Programming" and an International Documentary Association Award. The film is distributed by 7th Art Releasing. The film follows four players in the nine months leading up to the 2002 National Scrabble Championship, which was held in San Diego, California: Joe Edley, Matt Graham, Marlon Hill, and Joel Sherman. These players also appear in Stefan Fatsis's book Word Freak, as does Chaikin. Fatsis and Chaikin are both tournament Scrabble players themselves. From The Ground To The Clouds is a 2003 short documentary biographical film directed by Denise Zmekhol. Payback is a 2012 documentary film from Jennifer Baichwal based on Margaret Atwood's Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth, which investigates the concept of debt in societies across the world. As a Canadian, Baichwal was quite familiar with Atwood's reputation: Her books are almost required reading if you grow up in Canada. I was almost nervous about meeting her because she’s so intelligent and articulate, but she puts you so much at ease. As intelligent as she is, she never makes you feel that you’re not on her level. As Mark Twain said, “Really great people make you feel that you, too, can become great.” A number of prominent intellectuals provide commentary, including economist and writer Raj Patel, ecologist William E. Rees, historian of religions Karen Armstrong, and former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour. The film is produced by Ravida Din for the National Film Board of Canada. It premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. Payback is distributed by Zeitgeist Films, which also distributed Baichwal's previous works Act of God and Manufactured Landscapes. The film is being distributed in Canada by Mongrel Media, beginning March 2012. How William Shatner Changed the World is a 2005 two-hour television documentary, commissioned by Discovery Channel Canada and co-produced for History Channel in the United States and Channel Five in the United Kingdom. Hosted and narrated by William Shatner, known for his portrayal of Captain James T. Kirk, and based on his book, I'm Working on That, the show focuses on technological advancements and people in the real world that were inspired by the Star Trek phenomenon. The Children's Storefront is a 1988 American short documentary film about The Children's Storefront, an independent tuition-free school in Harlem set up in 1966 to help underprivileged children get a better education. Directed by Karen Goodman, it was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Urethra Chronicles II: Harder Faster Faster Harder is a documentary about pop punk band Blink-182, and is the follow-up to the first Urethra Chronicles. The DVD was released by MCA Records on May 7, 2002, and contains music videos, bonus footage, making of videos, band biographies, and other bonus content. We Are Poets is a documentary film directed by Daniel Lucchesi and Alex Ramseyer-Bache. It follows six young poets from Leeds Young Authors performance poetry group in Leeds on their visit to the international Poetry Slam Competition in Washington D.C, USA. It premièred at Europe's largest Documentary Film festival - Doc/Fest in Sheffield's Showroom Cinema on 11 June 2011, where it won the coveted Sheffield Youth Jury Award. Sing Blue Silver is a documentary about Duran Duran's 1983-1984 World Tour directed by Michael Collins. A sixty-minute edited version of the documentary was aired on MTV under the title Blue Silver. Sing Blue Silver was originally released on videotape and on laserdisc, near the end of 1984. It was re-issued on DVD in April 2004. A 1984 book of the same name featured still photography by official tour photographer Denis O'Regan. The title comes from a verse from the song The Chauffeur, released in 1982. Lost Songs of Anatolia is a 2010 Turkish musical documentary film directed by Nezih Ünen. The film, which has been hailed as the first musical-documentary, features around 20 musical numbers shot on location in various places around Anatolia and examines the influence of ancient civilizations, rituals and mythology of the land on traditional music and dance. 9-11: American Reflections is a 2001 documentary film. Captures the attitudes of the American public in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks. It is directed by Shireen Kadivar and edited by Boris Elkis. The runtime is 50 minutes. Richard Feymann was one of the most brilliant theoretical physicists and original thinkers or the 20th century. He rebuilt the theory of quantum electrodynamics, and it was for this work that he won the Nobel Prize in 1965. In this documentary he talks about his motivations to be a scientist and a teacher of science. The Rock Star and the Mullahs is a 2003 documentary film directed by Ruhi Hamid and Angus MacQueen and by producer Pamela Friedman. The film follows the journey of the biggest Southeast Asian rock music band Junoon and regarding music in Islam. The film won the "Outstanding story on South Asia - Broadcast" award at the South Asian Journalists Association Awards. On July 17, 2003, the documentary was aired by BBC on the television programme Wide Angel based upon Junoon and music in Islam. And Baby Makes Two is a 1999 documentary film directed by Judy Katz and Oren Rudavsky. The Forgotten Space is a 2010 documentary film directed by Noël Burch and Allan Sekula. Nach Jerusalem is a 1990 film directed by Ruth Beckermann. Ballin' at the Graveyard is a 2012 documentary film directed by Basil Anastassiou. God Is Kidding is a 2012 animation, short film, documentary written and directed by Boaz Balachsan and Dima Tretyakov. Tom Dowd and the Language of Music is a documentary profiling the life and work of music producer/recording engineer Tom Dowd. Historical footage, vintage photographs and interviews with a "who's who" list of musical giants from the worlds of jazz, soul and classic rock provide insight into the life of Tom Dowd, whose creative spirit and passion for innovative technology helped shape the course of modern music. It was a 2005 Grammy award nominee. A long-time engineer and producer for Atlantic Records, Tom Dowd was responsible for some of the most important R&B, rock, and jazz records ever made. In his own words, Tom Dowd relates how he went from working on the Manhattan Project as rising physicist, while still high school age, to recording some of the greatest music ever made over the last half of the 20th Century. His technical genius opened the door to modern music and made the studio a crucial element in the formula of musical artistry. What's Left of Pancho? is a 2003 short documentary film written and directed by Amir Galván Cervera. Model is a 1980 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. American Harmony is a 2009 documentary film directed and produced by Aengus James, produced by Colin Miller, and edited by Kate Amend. American Harmony, the documentary, was initially screened at the Barbershop Harmony Society’s 2008 International Convention in Nashville. The film is a tribute to the human musical spirit as practiced in the barbershop genre. It was in production for more than three years and was edited by Kate Amend, the editor of two Oscar-winning documentaries. American Harmony was filmed by James and his camera crews during the Society’s 2005, 2006 and 2007 International conventions and is interspersed with footage and other graphic elements provided by the Barbershop Harmony Society. Facing Animals is a 2012 short drama documentary film directed by Jan van Ijken. Paris 1900 is a 1947 French documentary film directed by Nicole Védrès, and entered into the 1947 Cannes Film Festival. Thunder in Guyana is a feature film by Suzanne Wasserman released in 2003. It is a documentary about Janet Jagan, an American-born Jewish woman who moved to then-British Guiana and was later elected President. The film was shown on Independent Lens, a series on PBS. Asleep is a 2011 documentary film directed by Clarissa Campolina. Tugs is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Jessica Edwards. Crawford is a 2008 documentary film about Crawford, Texas, and the impact of President George W. Bush having relocated to the town shorty after announcing his nomination for the 2000 presidential election. The film spans nearly the entirety of Bush's presidency, from 1999 to mid-2008. Crawford was directed by David Modigliani and distributed by B-Side Entertainment. On October 7, 2008, the complete film was made available for free in a streaming format on the legal video website Hulu, and was billed as the site's "first movie premiere." Indyfans and the Quest for Fortune and Glory is a 2008 American feature length documentary fan film written and directed by Brandon Kleyla to examine interest in the Indiana Jones films through interviews and profiles of more than 50 devotees of the films. Herinneringen aan vuur is a 2012 documentary film directed by Heddy Honigmann. Around L'Argent is a 1928 short comedy film directed by Jean Dréville. A powerful film that follows the lives and devastating histories and dreams of individual homeless street kids as they attend the only annual Prom for homeless youth in the country. The Winner Loser is a 2011 documentary film directed by Darren Hercher. The 6th Marine Division on Okinawa is a 1945 Kodachrome color documentary film produced about the action of the 6th Division during the Battle of Okinawa. The film was released shortly after the event. The film begins by outlining the strategic and psychological importance of Okinawa, including its use as a supply base for Japanese forces in Malaya, the Marianas and the Philippines, as well as a "choke hold" over China. It also informs the audience that Okinawa is an actual part of the Japanese homeland, only a few hundred miles south of Kyushu. The movements of the units and their order of battle is carefully traced, from the landings on April 1 to the assault on Naha. Some interesting footage is also shown on life in northern Okinawa soon after liberation, with the locals setting up a democratic government under the US military and opening up schools while the battle raging in the south. Some of the footage includes the use of flame-throwing tanks and close air support in an attempt to dislodge heavily dug-in Japanese defenders. Yessongs is a 1975 English-produced concert film featuring progressive rock band Yes performing during their Close to the Edge Tour in December 1972. The film contains performances of nine songs, including tracks from Close to the Edge, the album supported by the tour. Africa, Prelude to Victory is a 1942 documentary film. Flor de Toloache is a 2013 documentary short biographical music film directed by Jenny Schweitzer. Frank Lloyd Wright is a 1998 biography, history and documentary film written by Geoffrey C. Ward and directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick. The Other Side of AIDS is a 2004 documentary film by Robin Scovill. Through interviews with prominent AIDS denialists and HIV-positive people who have refused anti-HIV medication, the film makes the claim that HIV is not the cause of AIDS and that HIV treatments are harmful, conclusions which are rejected by medical and scientific consensus. The film was reviewed in Variety and The Hollywood Reporter in 2004, and received additional attention in 2005, when Scovill's three-year-old daughter died of untreated AIDS. The Other Side of AIDS was shown at the AFI Los Angeles International Film Festival in 2004, where it received special mention in the International Documentary category. The film had its international premiere at the 2004 Vancouver International Film Festival, and also played at the Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema in Argentina. Minecraft: The Story of Mojang is a 2012 documentary about the history of the company Mojang and its creation, Minecraft. Minecraft is an open-world game where players can craft, build and mine. The film features interviews of key personnel of the company including Markus Persson and Jens Bergensten. The film was produced by 2 Player Productions and production was funded through a Kickstarter campaign. The film premiered first on Xbox Live on December 22, 2012, and was made available for download and streaming the following day. 2 Player Productions also uploaded the documentary to torrent index The Pirate Bay but urged people to consider purchasing the film. By Pain and Rhyme and Arabesques of Foraging is a 2013 short experimental documentary film directed by David Gatten. I Am the One Who Carries Flowers to Her Grave is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Hala Abdallah and Ammar Al Beik. Can’t Stand Losing You is a 2012 documentary film directed by Andy Grieve and Lauren Lazin. Tim's Vermeer is a documentary film, directed by Teller, produced by his stage partner Penn Jillette and Farley Ziegler, about inventor Tim Jenison's efforts to duplicate the painting techniques of Johannes Vermeer, in order to test his theory that Vermeer painted with the help of optical devices. The film premiered at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival and was released in limited theatrical release in the United States by Sony Pictures Classics on January 31, 2014. Big Men is a 2013 film written and directed by Rachel Boynton. Growing up The most Wonderful Children is a 2013 documentary film directed by Nobue Miyazaki. Ewiger Wald is a 1936 German film directed by Hanns Springer and Rolf von Sonjevski-Jamrowski. The film is also known as Enchanted Forest Band of Sisters is a 2012 documentary by director Mary Fishman that tells the story of U.S. women religious from the Second Vatican Council to 2010. The documentary claims that, more than most other Catholic organizations, U.S. women religious followed the "spirit" and "letter" of the church council, heeding its call to renewal and involving themselves with systemic change inside and outside the convent. Among the activities chronicled are the Santuario Sisterfarm, Genesis Farm, CORE/El Centro in Milwaukee, Mercy Housing, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, and the Center for Earth Jurisprudence at Barry University. The film includes a discussion of the conflict between U.S. women religious and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith over questions regarding the sisters' positions on women's ordination, obedience, and religious life in general. Absolut Warhola is a 2001 film directed by Stanislaw Mucha about Andy Warhol's extended family, whom he never met, from rural Slovakia. The film follows the filmmakers as they travel through eastern Slovakia to interview Warhol's surviving relatives, ethnic-Ruthenians living near the Polish border in Miková, and to visit the Andy Warhol Museum of Modern Art in Medzilaborce. The museum is shown to be in a poor state, with the museum director and staff openly soliciting donations from the viewer and giving out the museum's bank account details. The living situation in the underdeveloped rural east of Slovakia prior to EU-membership is also shown. The film also notes the levels of homophobia still present in this part of the world, with several of Warhol's relatives openly criticizing the "rumours" of his sexuality. One man even goes as far to suggest that Valerie Solanas, the radical feminist and misandrist who attempted to assassinate Warhol, was in fact a spurred former lover. Čeburekai sellers is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Tomas Bručas. On the Bench is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Maha Taki. 1977, STAR WARS premieres at Mann's Chinese Theater. It triggers a pop culture phenomenon that has lasted to this day. 1999. Fans anticipate the release of Episode I, The Phantom Menace. A GALAXY FAR FAR AWAY features interviews with hundreds of fans, movie executives and high profile celebrities, shedding new light on the film trilogy that has captivated generations of moviegoers. It takes us to Star Wars conventions, to nationwide premieres, into the homes of devoted fans showing off their treasures and to the box office ticket lines of die-hard fans who wait eagerly for forty-two days in the spring of 1999.The complete, often hilarious exploration of the phenomenon brings together a group of interesting, hysterical and often touching fans. Not just a movie about zealous fans, GALAXY offers new insight into the reasons these fast-paced science fiction films struck a mysterious and powerful chord amongst all the races, genders and generations. Pills Profits Protest is a 2003 documentary film directed by Ann T. Rossetti. Daybreak in Udi is a 1949 British documentary film directed by Terry Bishop about cultural changes in Udi, Nigeria. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Downhill from Here is a concert performance video by the Grateful Dead. It was recorded at Alpine Valley Music Theatre, near East Troy, Wisconsin, in July, 1989. It was released by Monterey Home Video, on VHS videotape in 1997 and on DVD in 1999, and has a running time of 2 hours 30 minutes. It was released on LaserDisc in 1997 by Pioneer Entertainment. Most of Downhill From Here was recorded on July 17, 1989. However, the last four songs of the first set from July 17 — "Row Jimmy", "When I Paint My Masterpiece", "When Push Comes to Shove", and "The Music Never Stopped" — have been replaced with the last three songs of the first set from July 19 — "West L.A. Fadeaway", "Desolation Row", and "Deal". The title of the video is a double entendre playing off the steep hill that comprises Alpine Valley's general admission section and the popular notion, as well as opinion of several members of the Grateful Dead, that 1989 through 1990 was the band's final peak period. Henri Storck: ooggetuige is a 1987 film directed by Robbe De Hert. Six months after a devastating tsunami hit South Asia, Muslim-American and Sri Lankan born Dr. M. Rahmi Mowjood led a team of American doctors and medical students on a relief trip to Sri Lanka. While mentoring medical students and aiding injured villagers, Dr. Mowjood also finds a way to ask someone to become a member of his own family. Wigstock: The Movie is a 1995 documentary film focusing on Wigstock, the annual drag music festival that had been held New York City's East Village through the 1980s and 1990s. The film presents a number of performances from the 1994 festival, including Crystal Waters, Deee-Lite, Jackie Beat, Debbie Harry, Leigh Bowery, Joey Arias and the Dueling Bankheads. The film also captures a performance by RuPaul at the height of his mainstream fame during the 90s. Wigstock: The Movie also goes behind the scenes, examining the rehearsal process of a number of the performers including Lypsinka and the "Wigstock Dancers." Members of the crew assembling the stage and attendees are interviewed about their experiences at the festival and some of the performers give interviews about the importance of drag and transgressive gender expression in their lives. One memorable moment features Wigstock Mistress of Ceremonies Lady Bunny on the telephone with a city representative inquiring about the possibility of placing a wig on the Statue of Liberty. Going Cardboard: A Board Game Documentary is a 2012 documentary about the American adoption of German-style board games, and includes coverage of the 2009 board game event Spiel in Essen, Germany, as well as interviews with many prominent game designers. The film was written, directed and produced by Lorien Green, who was introduced to board gaming by her husband, and the film was financed through the crowd funding service Kickstarter. Occupation: Dreamland is a "grunt's-eye view," 2005 documentary film focused on a company of the 1/505 of the 82nd Airborne Division in Fallujah, Iraq, in early 2004. It is directed by Ian Olds and Garrett Scott. The title comes from the nickname of the base, Camp Volturno, on the outskirts of Fallujah. The American soldiers housed there called the place "Camp Dreamland." The film includes interviews with US soldiers, footage of their patrols in Fallujah, as well as interviews with Iraqi civilians. Garrett Scott died of a heart attack at age 37 in 2005, days before Occupation won the Independent Spirit Award. Ian Olds has written and directed several short fiction films and is now working on a documentary about journalists in Afghanistan. 14-18 is a 1963 French documentary film directed by Jean Aurel. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Why do the comic-strip Adventures of Tintin, about an intrepid boy reporter, continue to fascinate us decades after their publication? "Tintin and I" highlights the potent social and political underpinnings that give Tintin's world such depth, and delve into the mind of Hergé, Tintin's work-obsessed Belgian creator, to reveal the creation and development of Tintin over time. Rare and surprisingly candid 1970s interviews reveal the profound insecurities and anxieties that drove Hergé to produce stories that have not only entertained millions of children but also helped to satisfy a personal longing for self-expression. With stunning visual effects, "Tintin and I" takes us on a fascinating journey into the psyche and brilliant work of Hergé, in his own words. Spanish Lake is a documentary film directed by Phillip Andrew Morton. First Cousin Once Removed is a 2012 documentary film directed by Alan Berliner. The premiered at the New York Film Festival in October 2012. Depois Dos Nossos Ídolos is a 2013 short film written by Manuel Guerra, Joana Góis, Ricardo Penedo and Inês Teixeira and directed by Ricardo Penedo. Hubble's Amazing Universe is a 2008 documentary film directed by Dana Berry. In the Forest Hangs a Bridge is a 1999 short documentary film directed by Sanjay Kak. My Kosher Shifts is a 2011 short, drama, documentary film directed by Iris Zaki. American Swing is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jon Hart and Mathew Kaufman and written by Jon Hart. President McKinley Inauguration Footage is the name given to two different short documentary films which were combined as one. The two titles are President McKinley Taking the Oath and President McKinley and Escort Going to the Capitol. Both date from 1901. The two show president William McKinley arriving at the United States Capitol in order to take the oath of office for President of the United States as part of the second inauguration of William McKinley. Both were produced by the Edison Manufacturing Company, under the direction of Thomas Edison, and in 2000 the United States Library of Congress deemed the two "culturally significant" and selected them for preservation in the National Film Registry. Han wo toite, Jodo wo ikiru is a documentary film directed by Masahiro Nishiyama. Pink Saris is a 2010 documentary drama film directed by Kim Longinotto. ""If you're shy, you'll die," preaches Sampat, the eloquent leader of the Gulabi Gang. For the past 20 years, she has been battling for women's rights in northern India. We follow her on her journey as she visits many families, giving them a lash of her sharp tongue if she discovers that they have beaten their daughter or kicked her out of the house. Often, the caste system is at the root of family and relationship misery. Sampat believes that the problems are fundamentally caused by the religion adhered to by the lowest caste, the "Untouchables." She does everything in her power to break up the tradition and the caste system. She approaches groups of men in a raging fury, seeking compensation, and gives fiery advice to the female onlookers: "When a man goes wrong, give him a beating." Sampat is evidently something of a Mother Teresa to these runaway or disowned girls, and she is evidently fully aware of that fact: "If you didn't have me, who would wipe your tears?" It is only when Sampat's husband starts to have enough of his wife's celebrity status that we see her vulnerable side for the first time." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site. You Don't Know Jack: The Jack Soo Story is a 2009 film written and directed by Jeff Adachi. Commandment Keeper Church, Beaufort South Carolina, May 1940 is a 1940 short documentary film which shows religious services taking place in a South Carolina Gullah community. In 2005, Commandment Keeper Church was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". My Mother's Garden is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Cynthia Lester. Mama Africa is a 2011 documentary film written by Mika Kaurismäki and Don Edkins and directed by Mika Kaurismäki. "Twin brothers (Gary and Larry Lane, from the TV show ”Fear Factor”), write a script with a major character in it written with Dolly Parton in mind. After receiving the advice and encouragement from the likes of Chad Allen, Beth Grant, Dustin Lance Black and Leslie Jordan - the twins decide to rent an RV, drive across the country and hopefully hand deliver the unsolicited script to Ms Parton at her amusement park. On their road trip the twins survive desert heat, wind storms and floods - all while encountering everyday people who relate their gay experiences in the South, and how Dolly Parton has impacted their lives. The brothers also come to terms with the fact that their coming out (via the screenplay), might jeopardize their relations with their parents and family. Hollywood to Dollywood is both a road-trip documentary and an odyssey of self discovery." Quoting Dudley Best from the 2011 Philadelphia QFEST site. "The Prophet of Pot" reveals the propaganda to criminalize hemp use. Liliana Cavani, Una Donna Nel Cinema is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Peter Marcias. Trash Dance is a 2012 documentary, family, music, comedy film directed by Andrew Garrison. Celebrating Orgasm: Women's Private Selfloving Sessions is a 1997 adult documentary. Fat Head is a 2009 American documentary film directed by and starring Tom Naughton. The film seeks to refute both the documentary Super Size Me and the lipid hypothesis, a theory of nutrition started in the early 1950s in the United States by Ancel Keys and promoted in much of the Western world. Das späte Glück der Sandra K. is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Timo Großpietsch and Hans-Jürgen Börner. Livin' It LA is a skateboarding video, directed by Stephen Baldwin. This latest installment of Livin' It features 16 skaters including Lance Mountain, Ray Barbee, Jay Haizlip, and Christian Hosoi in his first film appearance since being released from prison. The DVD will also feature Reliance Pro Brian Sumner, Chocolate Pro Richard Mulder, Zoo York Pro Donny Barley, Reliance Pros Josh Kasper, Tim Byrne, Elijah Moore, and many others. YouTube Bazzar is a 2013 film written and directed by Dan Chisu. Mr. Angel is a 2013 documentary film directed by Dan Hunt. Mystic India is a 2004 large format film about India's culture, people, and traditions. It is told through the 12,000 km barefoot journey throughout 18th century India undertaken by the Hindu adolescent ascetic Nilkanth, later known in life as Swaminarayan by his followers. The film was directed by Keith Melton and financed and produced by BAPS Charities. The film is available in Hindi, English, French and Spanish. Bluden Harbour is a 1951 documentary by filmmaker Robert Gardner. Holes In My Shoes is an award-winning documentary feature film. It chronicles the life of Jack Beers, covering 94 years of his life from 1910 to 2004. Patience: After Sebald is a 2012 documentary film directed by Grant Gee. V-Day: Until the Violence Stops is a 2003 documentary film directed by Abby Epstein. It follows events marking 2002 V-Day — a grassroots movement inspired by Eve Ensler's 1996 play The Vagina Monologues. The film focuses on V-Day activities in the United States, Kenya, Croatia and the Philippines. Van Gogh: Brush with Genius is a 2009 short film directed by François Bertrand. Street Fighting Man is a documentary directed by Andrew James. The Stars Are Underground is a 24-minute film documenting the underground music scene in Dublin, Ireland, in 1996. The film was first shown in the same year, 1996, and a VHS was released by Folkrum Records. Directed by Daragh McCarthy, the film documents a generation of Irish bands who took their inspiration from American hardcore punk bands who, rather than pursuing major label deals, made their own self-financed records and released their own material. The bands featured and interviewed include Female Hercules, The Mexican Pets, and The Jubilee Allstars. The Stars are Underground also features interviews with Andy Cairns from Therapy? and Dischord Records' Ian McKaye from the group Fugazi. The film inspired Academy Award winning singer/songwriter Glen Hansard of The Frames to write a song of the same name after he played on a tour of the film's screenings in rock venues in rural Ireland. The Frames "The Stars Are Underground" appeared on their Dance the Devil album in 1999. Long Live Me! is a 1989 short film written and directed by Tania Cypriano. Man-Eaters of India is a 1986 documentary drama film written by Martin Booth and John Elliot and directed by Alex Kirby. Ensaio Geral is a 2000 documentary film written by Flávio Pinheiro and directed by Arthur Fontes. America's infrastructure is collapsing. Tens of thousands of bridges are structurally deficient or functionally obsolete. A third of the nation's highways are in poor or mediocre shape. Massively leaking water and sewage systems are creating health hazards and contaminating rivers and streams. Weakened and under-maintained levees and dams tower over communities and schools. And the power grid is increasingly maxed out, disrupting millions of lives and putting entire cities in the dark. The Crumbling of America explores these problems using expert interviews, on location shooting and computer generated animation to illustrate the kinds of infrastructure disasters that could be just around the bend. First Person Plural is a 2000 film written by Deann Borshay and Vivien Hillgrove Gilliam and directed by Deann Borshay. Lollywood is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Todd Looby. The Resolution is a 1972 documentary film directed by Gyula Gazdag and Judit Ember. Do As I Say is a 2008 documentary film based on the novel by Peter Schweizer titled Do as I Say: Profiles in Liberal Hypocrisy. The book, an eight-week New York Times bestseller, was adapted for the screen by writer and director Nick Tucker. As the book's title indicates, several outspoken left-wing politicians and other public figures are profiled, and evidence is presented for the alleged hypocrisy seen in the disparity between what the individuals do and what they advocate publicly. You See Me Laughin' is a documentary film directed by Mandy Stein. Ultimate X: The Movie is a 2002 documentary film based on the 2001 X Games. It features athletes including Dave Mirra, Mike Metzger, Brian Deegan, and Mat Hoffman. It also features clips from the actual event, including the amazing finals between Bob Burnquist, and Bucky Lasek, which Bob won by a first ever score of 99, and the crash of Carey Hart, when he attempted the first ever Moto-X Backflip. Army Champions is a 1941 American short documentary film directed by Paul Vogel. It was nominated for an Academy Award at the 14th Academy Awards for Best Short Subject. What Is to Be Done? (A Journey from Prague to Český Krumlov, or How I Formed a New Government) is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Karel Vachek. How Nice to See You Alive is a 1989 drama documentary written and directed by Lúcia Murat. The enduring partnership between magicians and their animal assistants is as old as the magic arts themselves. Nearly every order of animal from insect to elephant, from domesticated to exotic has been utilized by magicians to illustrate their incredible powers of appearance, disappearance and transformation. The one hour special The Secrets Of Animal Magic offers the first comprehensive treatment of this unique relationship between man and beast, by exploring the history, zoology, breeding, training, and ethical considerations of this partnership – as well as a look behind the mystique to see just how is it they do what they do! Magicians featured are John Thompson AKA The Great Tomsoni, Joseph Gabriel, Steven and Maria August, and Rick Thomas. The Brain That Sings is a 2013 documentary film written by Amal Al-Agroobi and Alan Mackay and directed by Amal Al-Agroobi. "The filmmaker meets the Tuareg rebels in the desert of Mali. He’s asked to record their history, even when he doesn’t understand what he is documenting." Quoting the description from the 2010 Mar del Plata Film Festival site. Everyday, each American throws away an average of 4.5 pounds of garbage. But where exactly is "away"? Trashed, a 20-minute documentary, dives headlong into the world of garbage and surfaces in some unlikely places.An existential road trip through the quixotic American waste stream, Trashed asked the question, "What does our trash say about us?"For some, like veteran garbage truck driver Eddie Scott, "trash is a way of living." For others, like expert Eugene Tseng, deemed "The World's Most Over-Educated Garbage Man," trash is a mindset.Eugene has personally dug through local garbage cans to analyze their contents. His findings? Everything from non-biodegradable medical waste to 50-year-old newspapers, still intact. He reminds us that we use many products for a fraction of the time that they spend at a landfill./The film draws us into the unusual worlds of people whose lives revolve around strangers' waste.They represent the enormous invisible network that is dedicated to putting garbage as far out of sight as possible, resulting in a system that is largely taken for granted. Sam Pedroza, an environmental engineer at the largest operating US landfill, wonders whether our trash-collectors may be doing "too good of a job." obscuring questions liike, "Where will our trash go when out largest landfills run out of space in the next decade?"As the film dives deeper, however, we find that the system itself is comprised of a Byzantine network of private industries whose interests are not always aligned. By the time the film arrives in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, researchers Captain Charles Moore and Dr. Marcus Erksen have discovered garbage patches in the Pacific that are twice the size of Texas and growing.These massive collections of trash are having a dramatic effect on the entire Earth's good chain, filtering all the way up to us./Trashed brings you in the world of garbage and ultimately forces us to confront our distant relationship with our trash. For better or worse, it will change the way you think about your garbage. Learning How to Read to Teach My Fellows is a biographical documentary film directed by Joao Guerra. Finally is a documentary about Eric Burdon. It was released in 1991 on VHS and in 2003 on DVD. It features clips from 1964 - 1970 and some from 1991. People who were interviewed in this documentary including Sammy Hagar, John Steel, Chas Chandler, Zoot Money, Hilton Valentine, Brian Auger and Eric Burdon. Clips of John Weider, War and Jimi Hendrix were also shown. The film shows live recordings of See See Rider, Talkin' 'Bout You, Hey Gyp, Wild Thing, Good Times, Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood, We Gotta Get out of This Place and video clips of Monterey, When I Was Young, House of the Rising Sun, Spill the Wine and many more. A short clip of Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood is also included. In October 2008 it was re-issued. The Phenomenon: The Comic That Changed Comics is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Eric Matthies. The film accompanies teams of Bounty Hunters night and day as they track down America's most wanted criminals. Many of the Bounty Hunters are former criminals themselves, and know how a fugitive thinks, acts, and hides. Birth of the B-29 was a 1945 propaganda film commissioned by the US War Department. As the name implies, it concerned the production of the B-29 Superfortress bomber and its use in the aerial bombing of Japan in World War II. Opening amid scenes of volcanic eruptions, the narrator gives a brief description of the Japanese and their warlike nature, mentioning such concepts as bushido, Hakko ichiu, and Shinto, and states the belief that everything comes from the sky. The Americans are building a devastating new weapon that will be able to travel vast distances and drop giant payloads of bombs on the Japanese mainland: the B-29. The manufacturing of Superfortresses in huge factories is then chronicled, as Americans from every walk of life, black, white, male and female, work together to assemble the giant airplanes, each one larger than the Mayflower. The creation of the bomber is the product of all of their work, as well as the work of the miners and lumberjacks who supplied the raw material, the people who bought war bonds, and the servicemen who died so that the workers could have the time to build it. Derby is a 1971 American documentary film directed by Robert Kaylor about the world of professional roller derby in the 1970s. The film is also known as Roller Derby in the United Kingdom. Go Public: A Day in the Life of an American School District is a documentary biographical family film directed by James Wharton O'Keefe. From One Film to Another is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Claude Lelouch. Britten's Endgame is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by John Bridcut. "The film is a glimpse of a day in the lives of the three protagonists living in Mumbai. The characters are an ageing actress, a prostitute and a gay typist who negotiate their existence from the mundane to their transformation, and the search for their utopias." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Wizards of Waverly Place: Fashionista Presto Chango is a 2009 short documentary film starring Jake T. Austin. The Soft Atlas of the Netherlands is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jan Rothuizen. Front of Steel is a 1940 documentary film directed by John McDougall. True Guts: Struggle and Triumph over Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis is a documentary film created by Josh Golder to raise awareness for Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis, both of which are forms of Inflammatory Bowel Disease True Guts premiered in Boston on November 9, 2006 at the Loews Boston Common. The film was also entered into the 2007 FREDDIE Awards. The FREDDIE Awards, also known as the International Health and Medical Media Awards, is a film festival launched in 1974 that has become the pre-eminent health and medical media competition. True Guts won two FREDDIE Awards in the 2007 festival including its category, Inflammatory Diseases, and the Michael E. DeBakey, M.D. Award, which is give to the "finest educational entry of the year." One School to Another is a 2013 documentary film directed by Pascale Diez. Tales of the Maya Skies is a short animated documentary directed by Arnie Wong. Sokaishita 40-mansatsu no tosho is a documentary film directed by Kenji Kanetaka. No Man's Zone is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Toshi Fujiwara. The First Emperor of China is a 1990 documentary film directed by Tony Ianzelo and Liu Hao Xue. The Last Days of Peter Bergmann is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ciaran Cassidy. Ford Transit is a 2003 documentary film written by Hany Abu-Assad and Bero Beyer and directed by Hany Abu-Assad. Syntoniser Amani is a 2008 documentary film. Into the Shadows is a 2009 documentary film by co-directors Andrew Scarano and Phil Hignett about the state of Australia cinema. Into the Shadows placed 2nd in the Audience Award for Documentary in the 2009 Canberra International Film Festival. The Triangle Wars is a 2011 social documentary film directed by Rosie Jones. Castañuela 70, el teatro prohibido is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Manuel Calvo and Olga Margallo. "Do you recall the moment you knew you were a little different than all the other boys and girls? In this sweet and funny documentary from HBO and Frameline Award honorees Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, based on the book of the same name by Robert Trachtenburg, men and women from various walks of life discuss the moment they discovered they were gay. LGBT people from all over the country were invited to share their memories of the moment they knew they were attracted to the same sex (a very different experience than coming out) and what followed were unforgettably touching, sad, sweet and outright hilarious stories: from the boy whose heart started racing when he saw Grizzly Adams appear on the TV screen (yes, it was a precursor to the type of guys he’d end up dating as an adult) to the woman who knew something was different when she started making out with her blonde baby doll. In a uniquely interactive program, the filmmakers will present the screening in two parts: The first is their completed 35-minute film, the culmination of over 150 interviews held across the country, and the second will be composed of your stories! Frameline Festival-goers will have the opportunity to record their own story in the When I Knew Video Booth located in the AT Festival Pavilion (see details below). You just might see yourself or people you know on the Castro’s silver screen!" Quoting the description from the 2008 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. The Road to Moneygall is the 2011 documentary film directed by Edward Godsell. Street Years is a 2012 documentary drama film directed and written by Alejandra Grinschpun with Laureano Ladislao Gutiérrez as co-writer. The Cockettes is a 2002 American documentary film. It was directed by Bill Weber and David Weissman, and produced by Weissman. Its subject is the 1960s-70s San Francisco performance group The Cockettes. The film debuted at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival, where it was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize. It went on to a limited theatrical release and to play the film festival circuit. The Cockettes received the LA Film Critics Award for Best Documentary of 2002. Life After Manson is a 2014 short documentary and crime film written and directed by Olivia Klaus. A propósito de Cristian is 2005 documentary written by Eduardo Zerov and directed by Emmanuelle Fuentes. Life. Support. Music. is a 2008 documentary film and is Eric Daniel Metzgar's second documentary. It premiered at the 2008 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival in Durham, North Carolina. Sunday By The Sea is a 1951 Documentary film written and directed by Anthony Simmons. Dave Chappelle: Killin' Them Softly is a 2000 comedy documentary film written by Dave Chappelle and directed by Stan Lathan. Oswald Wiener - Table Remarks November 1985 is a 1985 documentary film directed by Valie Export. "A youth produced video that uses sex-positive and lgbtq-inclusive educational approach as a practical alternative to abstinence-only education. The voices of HIV positive urban youth encourage their peers to combat the spread of HIV/AIDS through safer sex." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. History in These Streets is a 2011 documentary film directed by Brian Birchett, Nick Liem and Patrick Manning. Kuxa Kanema: The Birth of Cinema is a 2003 documentary by Margarida Cardoso on the National Institute of Cinema, created by President Samora Machel following the 1975 independence of Mozambique. At the time of independence, Mozambique lacked a national television network, so a newsreel program was the only way to reach the population through visual media. The first cultural act of President Machel’s government was the establishment of the Kuxa Kanema weekly newsreel program. The newsreels were shown in Mozambique’s relatively few cinemas in the 35mm format. In the rural areas, mobile units provided by the Soviet Union offered the newsreels in the 16mm format. Machel's government, however, did not finance or encourage the creation of a film industry designed strictly for entertainment value. The film also details the struggle to get INC up and running: Mozambique had no film industry or film schools. The resulting newsreels were shot in black-in-white because color film was too expensive. Sailing Miss Sadie is a British documentary film produced and presented by Sadie Kaye and directed by Johnny Lambe. White Like Me is a 2013 documentary film based on the book White Like Me by Tim Wise. The film was financed through a successful Kickstarter campaign. Carlo Giuliani, Boy is a 2002 Italian documentary film directed by Francesca Comencini. It was screened out of competition at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival. It details the death of Carlo Giuliani, who was shot dead by a police officer during the demonstrations against the Group of Eight in 2001. Shining Night: A Portrait of Composer Morten Lauridsen is the documentary film about the American choral composer Morten Lauridsen, National Medal of Arts recipient and most-performed living American choral composer. American Threnody is a 2007 American documentary film, directed by Robert Rex Jackson. It concerns the Maxey Flat Low Level Radioactive Waste facility in eastern Kentucky. The facility was built on the former site of the farm where the filmmaker's grandfather was born. The film examines the impact of the facility on the community and examines the persistent containment problems that have been the subject of media coverage. Current methods of storing and disposing of transuranic isotopes and how they differ from the techniques used at Maxey Flat are also explored. The Devotion Project: Foremost in my Mind is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Antony Osso. Moog is a 2004 documentary film by Hans Fjellestad about electronic instrument pioneer Dr. Robert Moog. The film features scenes of Dr. Moog interacting with various musical artists who view Moog as an influential figure in the history of electronic music. Moog is not a comprehensive history of electronic music nor does it serve as a chronological history of the development of the Moog synthesizer. There is no narration, rather the scenes feature candid conversation and interviews that serve more as a tribute to Moog than a documentary. The film was shot on location in Hollywood, New York, Tokyo, and Asheville, North Carolina where Moog's company is based. Additional concert performances were filmed in London and San Francisco. The film's 2004 release was designed to coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of Moog Music, Robert Moog's company that was founded as R.A. Moog Co. in 1954. Tonite Let's All Make Love in London is a 1967 documentary film directed by Peter Whitehead. Rice and Rasam is a 52 minutes documentary film produced by Rajiv Mehrotra of the PSBT or the Public Service Broadcasting Service in the year 2012. It is directed by Ramchandra PN, under a fellowship that is awarded by PSBT for the year 2011-2012. The film is about the nomadic life style of the artists of the professional theater troupes in Karnataka, South India. Beef II is a sequel to the 2003 documentary Beef, which continued to document the history of rivalries in hip-hop and rap music. Like its prequel, the film was executive produced by Quincy Jones III, written by Peter Alton and Peter Spirer, and was this time narrated by actor Keith David. Beef II shows a chronological look of battles, dating back to rap music's infancy in the early 1980s. Among the rivalries that were profiled, they include KRS-One vs. Nelly Roxanne Shante and Marley Marl vs. U.T.F.O. LL Cool J vs. Canibus K-Solo vs. DMX Cypress Hill vs. Ice Cube & Westside Connection D12 vs. one-time Detroit cross-town ally Royce da 5'9" EPMD partners Erick Sermon vs. Parrish Smith Eminem vs.Benzino. Once again, similar to the first film, Russell Simmons, Snoop Dogg, Kool Moe Dee, Jay-Z, KRS-One, Mack 10, DMX, Big Daddy Kane, Redman, Method Man and Ice-T participate in the film through interviews, as well as archived interviews from footage of other sources. Beef II also features never-before seen performances of many of the film's participants, plus extended portions of interviews that did not make the final cut of the film. Burma Soldier is a 2010 documentary film written by Annie Sundberg and Nic Dunlop and directed by Ricki Stern, Annie Sundberg and Nic Dunlop. Krumped is a 2004 short documentary directed by David LaChapelle. Tutu Much, stylised as TuTuMUCH, is a 2010 Canadian documentary film that focuses on the 9-12 year old entering class of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet's Summer School Program. It is produced by Ballet Girls Inc, a co-production between Merit Motion Pictures and Vonnie VON HELMOLT Films. It is directed by Elise Swerhone. This award-winning documentary recounts the remarkable life of John G Morris, the revered Life Magazine photo-journalist who was involved in the D-Day Normandy landings. Morris worked alongside many of the greatest names in photography, during some of the most pivotal moments in the 20th Century. ‘Get the Picture’ provides a distinct insight into the power of one man’s passion for photography. Brave New River is a 2012 documentary film directed by Nicolas Renaud. Ray Charles America is a 2010 documentary film directed by Alexis Manya Spraic. Fools Rush In is a 1973 documentary that was made as part of the Omnibus series and followed the popular double act of Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise whilst they were rehearsing one of the programmes for transmission on their BBC programme; it was to become the seventh episode of their seventh series and was broadcast on 16 February 1973 with guest stars Anita Harris and Anthony Sharp, both of whom appear in the documentary which is filmed in a fly-on-the-wall style. The programme is an insight into how the popular duo honed their material and how they run through bits of "business" with the guest stars, adding and subtracting material as they go. The sketches featured are also shown at the recording stage giving the viewer an insight as to how they developed from the page to the screen. Interviews are also included with the two stars and director John Ammonds who is also present at the script read-throughs. Death Of A Prisoner is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Laura Poitras . Children of Manila is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Alessandro Molatore. Phillipa Lord: She's the Shit is a 2008 documentary short film directed by Joni Alexander and Katie McQue. One Big Hapa Family is a 2010 animated/live-action documentary film directed by Canadian director Jeff Chiba Stearns. The documentary explores aspects that influence most Japanese-Canadians to marry inter-racially and how the mixed Japanese generation perceives its multiracial identity. Martyr Friday is a 2011 short, documentary, drama, news, war film directed by Abu Bakr Shawky. Secrets of Body Language is a 2008 documentary film James Millar. Wyscig pokoju – Warszawa-Berlin-Praga is a Polish-East German film based on the Peace Race. It was released in 1952. ""We work far away from home. The old and young are still in the village. If the family can't even spend New Year together, life would be pointless." These are the words of one of the countless Chinese workers who make the heroic journey each year from the new industrial areas to their villages in the provinces. In a calm and observational style devoid of comment, Lixin Fan captures two years in the life of one of these families. The father and mother left the poverty of the country 16 years ago to try their luck in the new economic zones, leaving their daughter behind with her grandparents. Now they work long hours in one of the numerous gray factories that supplies the West with cheap clothing. That said, the most toilsome endeavor is the New Year trip. The sight of the multitude gathered at the station is disconcerting, and the couple waits for a ticket for days. When a snowstorm throws rail service into disorder, the chaos is complete. They still manage time and again, but will they also succeed in keeping the family together and ensuring an education for their children, with the money they send home? Painful moments reveal that the patience the Chinese are known for has its limits." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. Grave Goods is a 2012 short family documentary directed by Leslie Tai. Becoming Bert Stern is a 2011 documentary film directed by Shannah Laumeister. An Indian Story is a National Film Awards winning film. All My Mothers is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Ebrahim Saeedi, Zahavi Sanjavi and Abbas Ghazali. La Passione Di Erto is a 2013 documentary film directed by Penelope Bortoluzzi. The Magnum Story I - Decisive Moments is a 1989 documentary film directed by Patricia Wheatley. Beatles manager Brian Epstein is widely regarded as the band's unofficial fifth member. But in addition to The Beatles, Epstein also discovered other British Invasion acts--such as Gerry and the Pacemakers, Billy J. Kramer, and Cilla Black--and wrote record reviews for the music publication Mersey Beat. Utilizing newsreel footage, television clips, and candid interviews with those who knew Epstein best, this documentary chronicles the extraordinary life and times of the influential man who helped redefine the world of pop music. Killing Kasztner: The Jew who Dealt with the Nazis is a feature-length theatrical documentary directed by Gaylen Ross. The film features Ross and her search for the truth about Rudolf Kastner. Ross first heard about Kasztner from a Hungarian woman while working on another documentary, Blood Money: Switzerland's Nazi Gold. Ross interviewed the woman who asserted that she had Kasztner to thank for her life. Ross spent eight years researching and filming the documentary on Kasztner. She interviewed survivors who had been rescued by Kasztner, some of Kasztner's living relatives, the son of the opposing lawyer in Kasztner's case, historians, journalists, and Kasztner's assassin, Ze'ev Eckstein. The film premiered at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival and has been critically acclaimed in Israel, Hungary, and the UK. Its U.S. premiere was October 23, 2009. Rogue Walk is a 2010 documentary short film written and directed by Treasa O'Brien. Back when Black 47's breakout hit, FUNKY CEILI, was the most requested song on the then booming alt-radio format, Co-Directors Vic Zimet and Stephanie Silber sang along fiercely as it blasted from their speakers, but they could never have imagined that in the fullness of time they'd be producing a documentary about "The House Band of New York City." Malcolm and Barbara: Love's Farewell is a 2007 documentary biography film directed by Paul Watson. Broke is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Billy Corben. Portrait of a Winemaker: John Williams of Frog's Leap is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Deborah Koons. There is No Sexual Rapport is a 2011 adult documentary film directed by Raphaël Siboni. Children of the Revolution is a 2010 documentary by Irish filmmaker Shane O'Sullivan about Ulrike Meinhof and Fusako Shigenobu, leaders of the German Red Army Faction and the Japanese Red Army. Inspired by the student revolutions of 1968 and appalled by the killing in Vietnam, Meinhof and Shigenobu set out to destroy capitalist power through world revolution. They travelled to the Middle East to train with Palestinian militants and, alongside Leila Khaled, became the leading female revolutionaries of their time. Authors and journalists Bettina Röhl and Mei Shigenobu explore the lives of their mothers, Ulrike and Fusako, providing a unique perspective on two of the most notorious “terrorists” in contemporary history. On the run or kidnapped when their mothers went underground, May and Bettina emerged from difficult childhoods to lead their own extraordinary lives. With capitalism once more in crisis, they reflect on their mother's actions as the film asks: what were they fighting for and what have we learned? Crimes Without Honour is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Raymonde Provencher. Atanka Ka Andhakar is a 1999 film directed by Rajiv Kumar. No Strangers is a 2013 short, history, documentary film directed by Steven Kochones. Former Models is a 2011 documentary short biographical film directed and written by Benjamin Pearson. Quest for King Arthur is a 2004 History Channel production introduced by Ioan Gruffudd and narrated by Patrick Stewart. The production delves into multiple historical figures who may have contributed to Arthurian legend as early as the third century and as late as the 9th. It cites as our primary source of the legend the writings of Sir Thomas Mallory. Other writings and sources, many used by Mallory, are cited for their specific contributions to the legend. Children Hand in Hand is a 1963 Japanese documentary film directed by Susumu Hani. It was entered into the 4th Moscow International Film Festival where it won a Special Diploma. Space Pioneers, A Canadian Story is a 1988 documentary film written by David Sobelman and directed by David Sobelman and Rudy Buttignol. Taste The Waste is a 2011 film directed by Valentin Thurn. Peaceable Kingdom is a documentary produced in 2004 by Tribe of Heart is about several farmers who refuse to kill animals and how they convert to veganism as a way of life. A newer version of the film premiered in 2009 called Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home which featured different people. On the Tribe of Heart website for the 2009 film, there is no apparent mention of the 2004 movie. The 2004 film tells the story of how the farmers create an animal sanctuary farm called "Farm Sanctuary" where they rescue injured animals, half dead, abandoned, and rejected by the farm industry for not being productive. A few examples are a cow with mastitis or newborn chicks unfit for production. It has won awards such as the Festival Theme Award in 2004 of the Ojai Film Festival, with music by Moby. Images of exploitations are shown during the film. According to the primatologist Jane Goodall, "Peaceable Kingdom is a piece of art" The documentary's producers, James LaVeck and Jenny Stein, have created a website called HumaneMyth.org that explores whether animals can be used humanely for food - advocating that it is generally not possible to do so. Empty House is a 2012 documentary, biographical, short film written and directed by Jesús Mª Palacios. Kamlabai is a 1991 film directed and produced by Reena Mohan. Rich Hill is a 2014 American documentary film co-produced and directed by Andrew Droz Palermo and Tracy Droz Tragos. The film premiered in the competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2014. It won the U.S. Grand Jury Prize: Documentary Award at the festival. After its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, The Orchard and Independent Lens acquired distribution rights to the film. Independent Lens broadcast the film nationally on PBS, while The Orchard distributed the film in the U.S. and Canada outside of linear broadcast. The film was released on August 1, 2014 in the United States. ABBA: The Movie is a 1977 film about the pop group ABBA's Australian tour. It was directed by Lasse Hallström, who directed most of the group's videos. The film has become a cult film among ABBA fans. Its release coincided with the release of ABBA: The Album, the group's fifth studio album, and features many songs from that album as well as many of their earlier hits, and one, "Get on the Carousel", unavailable anywhere else. Ink Deep is a 2012 short documentary animation biographical film directed by Constance Levesque. The Immigration Paradox is a crime fiction drama historical documentary film directed by Lourdes Lee Vasquez. RuPaul narrates this affectionate look at everyone's favorite televangelist/living cosmetic display: Tammy Faye Bakker. The eldest of eight children in rural Minnesota, Tammy Faye married Jim Bakker in 1960, and soon they found a following on the gospel circuit. This eventually led to a gig on Christian media mogul Pat Robertson's first television shows, including the ever-popular 700 Club. Perhaps jealous of their rising profile, Robertson soon usurped the show for himself.The Bakkers went on to co-found the Trinity Broadcasting Network, until that too was wrestled away from them by investors. Riding a tide of religious fundamentalism, the Bakkers reached their gaudy heights with the PTL Network and the spinoff Christian theme park Heritage USA. Then the roof caved in. Jim was forced to pay hush money to future Playboy centerfold model Jessica Hahn and then was submitted to rival Jerry Falwell's hostile take-over of the network. Soon Jim was in jail for fraud, and Tammy was at Betty Ford for addiction to prescription drugs. Rock Hudson's Home Movies is a 1992 documentary by Mark Rappaport. It shows clips from Rock Hudson's movies that could be interpreted as gay entendres. Eric Farr speaks to the camera as if speaking Rock Hudson's words from a posthumous diary. Film clips from more than 30 Hudson films illustrate ways in which his sexual orientation played out on screen. First there are tenuous and unresolved relationships with women, then clips of Rock with men, cruising and circling. Second, there is pedagogical eros: Hudson with older men. Rock is seen with his male sidekicks, often Tony Randall. Next, the film looks in depth at comedies of sexual embarrassment and innuendo: films in which Hudson sometimes plays two characters, "macho Rock and homo Rock." Lastly, the film reflects on Hudson's death from AIDS. Rite of Passage is a 1997 documentary film directed by Richard Keddie. Ghosts of Abu Ghraib is a 2007 documentary film, directed by Rory Kennedy, that examines the events of the 2004 Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse scandal. The film premiered January 19, 2007 at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. The film aired on HBO on February 22, 2007. It was also shown at the Human Rights Watch Film Festival on March 23, 2007 and at the Cleveland International Film Festival on March 25, 2007. Working Films coordinated the US national community engagement campaign with Ghosts of Abu Ghraib. It brought together the National Religious Campaign Against Torture, the American Civil Liberties Union, faith groups, and others to end US policy sanctioning torture. Talk Back Out Loud is a biographical documentary film directed by Kaori Sakagami. These Girls Are Missing is a 1995 documentary film from directors Shari Robertson and Michael Camerini. In a striking and bold manner, it addresses the gender gap in education in Africa. Its world premiere was at the UN Fourth World Conference on Women. The film grew out of an initiative by the FAWE, The Forum for African Women Educationalists, with additional support from the Rockefeller Foundation and UNICEF. The film's purpose was to address, as Robertson puts it, "the elephant in the room" about girls in school and allow for discussion of attitudes about the effect of education on African girls and their societies. It is currently used for training within the Peace Corps who, in statements, have described the film as "rich in its learning opportunities as well as being beautifully filmed." Downtown Locals is a documentary film directed by Rory Muir and Robin Muir. Original Schtick is a 1999 comedy documentary directed by Maciek Wszelaki. Everything's Going To Be Fine is a 2011 short film written and directed by Ryan Malloy. The Best That Never Was is a documentary film directed by Jonathan Hock that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. We Were Rebels is a 2014 Documentary film directed by Katharina von Schroeder. Accelerating America is a 2007 film directed by Timothy Hotchner. Pierre Schoendoerffer, the Sentinel of Memory is the first feature length documentary about French writer and filmmaker Pierre Schoendoerffer, directed by Raphaël Millet and produced by Olivier Bohler for Nocturnes Productions in 2011. Tutto il mondo ride is a 1952 Italian film. "Teens interview gay elders about their experiences growing up in the 1950s and how they created, formed and nurtured a gay community in a time when gay lives were underground and hidden" - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. World of People is a 1966 documentary short film written and directed by Artavazd Peleshian. Technicolor for Industrial Films is a sponsored film about how Technicolor can be used in industrial films. The film features footage of various objects in Technicolor, showing how it can be used in filmmaking. One scene shows a bunch of everyday goods, first being shown in black-and-white, then in Technicolor. The film is notable because it's an ephemeral film about ephemeral films, and very few ephemeral films were made about ephemeral films at the time this film was made. The film is now in the public domain. Bomgay is a 1996 Indian short film directed by Riyad Vinci Wadia and Jangu Sethna. The film stars Kushal Punjabi and Rahul Bose with music by Ashutosh Phatak. It is often regarded as India's first gay film and is known for its controversial gay sex scene in a library. Bomgay consists of six segments, each based on a poem by Indian writer R. Raj Rao. From a Night Porter's Point of View is a 1977 documentary film by Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski. It won the Grand Prix at the nineteenth Kraków Film Festival in 1979. The 16 minute film consists of an interview with Marian Osuch, a minor security official. Most of the footage is of Osuch performing the various duties of his job, while he narrates his opinions on various subjects. Osuch talks mostly about his position, how he personally enjoys enforcing various bureaucratic rules, arresting petty offenders, and confiscating fishing rods. He also details his support for the government and capital punishment, saying that criticism of the government should be silenced, and that criminals should be hanged in public. English-subtitled versions of the film are included on Polskie Wydawnictwo Audiowizualne's double-disc survey of Kieślowski's non-fiction work Polish School of the Documentary: Krzysztof Kieślowski and as an extra on the Artificial Eye DVD of Kieślowski's A Short Film About Killing. Sunday, We'll See is a 2013 short film directed by Sophie B. Jacques. Intonation. Segrey Slonimsky is 2009 documentary film written and directed by Alexander Sokurov. NWD VII- Flying High Again will rock you harder than Ozzy's epic anthem! Once again, Freeride Entertainment travels the globe to capture the best riding on the planet! Filmed in HD and 16 mm, Flying High Again presents a visual landscape that feels weightless one moment and powerfully raw the next. Your heart will race as you witness in vibrant clarity the hugest airs, sickest stunts, and gnarliest urban assaults ever performed on a mountain bike! Hard-hitting tunes and loads of bonus features juice up this visually tasty movie, making it a must see! Shot on location in Austria, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Germany, Italy, Turkey, and the USA. SELF AND OTHERS is a documentary film directed by Makoto Satō. Une sorte de journal vidéo is a 2011 film directed by Agnès b. Dinosaur 13 is a 2014 American documentary film directed and produced by Todd Douglas Miller. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 16, 2014. After its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, CNN Films and Lionsgate acquired distribution rights of the film. Veteran Documentary Corps: Zoe Dunning is a 2014 documentary,LGBT, biographical and drama film directed by Silvia Turchin. Birds is a 2014 mystery, documentary and short film written and directed by Ulu Braun. Rwanda: Beyond the Deadly Pit is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Gilbert Ndahayo. Yume to kyôki no ohkoku is a 2013 documentary film directed by Mami Sunada. Sin by Silence is a domestic violence documentary film by Olivia Klaus that offers a unique gateway into the lives of women who are the tragedies living worst-case scenarios and survivors - women who have killed their abusive husbands. Based on the first inmate-initiated and led support group in the entire United States prison system, the film reveals the history and stories of the members of the group Convicted Women Against Abuse created by inmate Brenda Clubine in 1989. By following five women's abusive experiences that led to their incarceration, the film take viewers on their journeys from victim to survivors, reveals the history of the Battered Women Syndrome in the state of California, and shatters misconceptions. This documentary is a production of Quiet Little Place Productions. The award-winning film premiered at the Cleveland International Film Festival 2009, and went on to screen nationally as part of the grassroots tour, entitled Stop the Violence, that took the film to over 40 communities in 10 states through the United States. Team Qatar is a 2009 documentary film directed by Liz Mermin. Take Away One is a 2013 biographical documentary film directed by William Lorton. High Over the Borders is a 1942 short documentary film directed by Raymond Spottiswoode. Life in Perpetual Beta is a 2010 documentary film directed by Melissa Pierce. Monster Camp is a 2007 documentary film that chronicles a live action role-playing game organization. Monster Camp looks at the lives of the participants, and considers the pro and cons of escapism through fantastical outlets. Freedom State director Cullen Hoback documents the fantasy world, following several participants over the course of one year. The group followed is a Seattle, Washington chapter of NERO Alliance, one of many live-action role-playing organizations in the US. Players create their own identities selecting from a variety of races and classes, similar to Dungeons and Dragons or World of Warcraft. Participants dress up and are involved as either player characters, non-player character, or Plot Members. It premiered at the Cinequest Film Festival 17 in 2007, where it received the Audience Award for Best Documentary. Monster Camp screened at the Seattle International Film Festival and the Corvallis da Vinci Film Festival. The movie's web site claims that it has screened in approximately 40 film festivals around the world. Moscow Sketches. Festive Moscow is a 2003 documentary film directed and produced by Aleksander Melkumov. Afgan: The Soviet Experience is a 1989 documentary film produced and directed by Jeff B. Harmon about the Soviet war in Afghanistan. It tells the stories of officers and soldiers serving in various units of the Soviet Armed Forces just prior to their withdrawal from Afghanistan, after the signing of the Geneva Accords. The 40 minute film includes combat missions with the Spetsnaz elite units, never before filmed by a Western crew. It also shows helicopter gunship pilots from a Kabul-based Air Assault Unit flying missions, the patrolling of the Salang mountain pass and the military hospital in Kabul. Soviet General Lev Serebrov referred to the making of the film as "An experiment in glasnost". The film won the Blue Ribbon at the American Film & Video Festival. It was a Duce Films International Ltd. Production for Channel 4 and National Geographic Explorer. The film is part of Harmon's "Afghan Trilogy", which also included the documentaries “Jihad” and “Warlord of Kayan”. Saravah is a 1972 documentary film directed by Pierre Barouh. Jivin' in Be-Bop is a 1947 musical film. It was produced by William D. Alexander and stars Dizzy Gillespie and His Orchestra, which included notable musicians such as bassist Ray Brown, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, and pianist John Lewis. The film also features singers Helen Humes and Kenny "Pancho" Hagood, Master of Ceremonies Freddie Carter, and a group of dancers. The film consists of a plotless revue presented in a theatrical setting, offering a total of 19 musical and dance numbers. Gillespie and his band are shown performing eight songs, including "Salt Peanuts", "One Bass Hit", "Oop Bop Sh'Bam", and "He Beeped When He Should Have Bopped". The band plays off-camera while dancers perform during the remaining songs, which include "Shaw 'Nuff", "A Night in Tunisia", "Grosvenor Square", and "Ornithology". The liner notes that accompany the DVD release suggest the tracks were prerecorded. One of Gillespie's biographers confirms this, although at least one critic believes the musicians were playing live. The dancing in the film has been described as "dull and frequently silly" by writer Phil Hall, who wrote that Jivin' in Be-Bop includes "one of the worst ballets ever put on film". "A frank and snappy documentary about a unique family of two gay men and their two children. It is all about love and family bondings." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Moravian Hellas is 1963 documentary short documentary film written and directed by Karel Vachek. We Are All Alone My Dear is a 1975 short documentary film directed by Paul Cox. The Moon and the Sledgehammer is a British 1971 cult documentary film directed by Philip Trevelyan and produced by Jimmy Vaughan which documents the eccentric lives of the Page family, consisting of the elderly Mr Page and his adult children Jim, Pete, Nancy and Kath, who live in a wood in Swanbrook, near Chiddingly, Sussex without mains gas, mains electricity or running water. The sons find employment by fixing mechanical things as odd jobs and maintain two traction engines. The film, which is 65 minutes long, consists of interviews with the Page family, interspersed with footage of them going about their lives in the forest. It was shot using natural light onto on 16mm colour film. The sound is mono and there is no voice-over narration. The film was previewed at the 1971 Berlin Film Festival, and the first reviews were in the West German press. The British press subsequently picked it up resulting in short positive reviews by John Russell Taylor, David Robinson, George Melly, Dilys Powell. After its distribution it was also positively reviewed by Philip Oakes In 2009 the film was released on DVD for the first time. To coincide with this it had showings at various cinemas. The Sentence: The Accusation is a 1999 documentary film directed by Anna Petkova. Quebec filmmaker Leonard Forest visits Vancouver, BC, Canada, to discover how its poets and visual artists live their lives and create their art forms. He takes in art galleries, coffee bars and private studios. In one scene The Al Neil Trio is playing at The Cellar nightclub. Strictly Bolshoi is a 2007 documentary film directed by Oliver Manzi. Soy Andina is a 2007 American documentary film directed by Mitchell Teplitsky. It tells the story of two New York dancers and their exploration of mixed Peruvian and American identities. Q.R.R (Quien resulte responsable) is a 1970 Mexican film. It was directed by Gustavo Alatriste. Here Is Always Somewhere Else is a 2007 documentary film directed by Rene Daalder and co-produced and edited by Aaron Ohlmann. The film is about the life and work of Dutch/Californian conceptual artist Bas Jan Ader, who in 1975 disappeared under mysterious circumstances at sea in the smallest boat ever to cross the Atlantic. As seen through the eyes of fellow emigrant filmmaker Rene Daalder, the picture becomes a sweeping overview of contemporary art films as well as an epic saga of the transformative powers of the ocean. Featuring work from artists Tacita Dean, Rodney Graham, Marcel Broodthaers, Ger van Elk, Charles Ray, Wim T. Schippers, Chris Burden, Fiona Tan, Pipilotti Rist and many others. The film was released on DVD in November 2008. STEM CELL REVOLUTIONS is a documentary film directed by Amy Hardie. Por Ejemplo: Marcelo Romo is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Armando Espinoza. SpokAnarchy! is a 2011 documentary film that chronicles the 1980s punk rock scene in Spokane, Washington. Mixing vintage music videos, live clips, and found footage with contemporary interviews, the film portrays what happened when a group of disaffected teenagers from a small, isolated Northwest city embraced the music and fashion of the big-city punk scenes. The interviewees reminisce about their early years as rebels and misfits in a conservative town, and reflect on how their participation in the scene continues to influence their lives as middle-aged adults. Several of the cast have achieved notoriety since the perod depicted in the film, including Paul D'Amour, the original bassist for the band Tool, circus sideshow performer Zamora the Torture King, and the creator of Internet meme Keyboard Cat. The film is not credited to a single director, but to the core production team of David W. Halsell, Erica K. Schisler, Jon Swanstrom, Heather Swanstrom, Theresa Halsell, and Cory Wees. SpokAnarchy! Confession to Murder is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by David Ridgen. Mom is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Lidia Sheinin. The Link is a 2009 documentary film directed by Tim Walker. The Antics Roadshow is an hour-long 2011 documentary focused on "famous pranks and acts of activism which have become iconic". Red Ashes is a 2013 documentary film written by Adriano Aprà and directed by Adriano Aprà and Augusto Contento. We Shall Not Be Moved is a 2001 tv movie documentary. Its Us is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Mariano Blanco. H2Mexico is a documentary film directed by Brent Deal. The documentary film Chevolution examines the history and legacy of the photo Guerrillero Heroico taken by famous Cuban photographer Alberto Díaz Gutiérrez. This image has thrived for the decades since Che Guevara's death and has evolved into an iconic image, which represents a multitude of ideals. The documentary film explores the story of how the photo came to be, its adoption of multiple interpretations and meanings, as well as the commercialization of the image of Ernesto “Che” Guevara. Chevolution utilizes historic images and a multitude of artists, musicians, photographers,actors, academics, friends, fans, and acquaintances to explore the contrasting themes of “communism and capitalism, idealism and opportunism, art and commerce and how they have interacted and operated on the same materials during the past half century.” Bullies in Uniforms is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Montel Liggins. Texas - Kabul is a 2003 film directed by Helga Reidemeister. How to Make Glass by Machine is one of the films pertaining to the series "Biographies of Objects" directed by Peter and Zsóka Nestler. Dark and Bloody Ground is a 2007 documentary film directed by Alex Farnsley and Kevin Gordon King. On a Mission is a documentary film directed by Ofer Cohen. America on Wheels: The Model T chronicles the 100-year anniversary celebration held in Richmond and Hagerstown, Indiana in 2008. The Model T is remembered as the car that single-handedly revolutionized transportation in this country in stories told by Model T enthusiasts and collectors from just down the road and from the farthest corners of America. Every conceivable version of the Model T is showcased, from touring cars complete with “mother-in-law seats” to speedsters to a mail delivery truck and more. This nostalgia- and history-rich documentary captures the many personalities of this indelible automobile and those who love it, and proves that the allure of the open road and the spirit of adventure are alive and well in the U.S.A. The Planets is an educational miniseries produced by the BBC and A&E and released in 1999. It documents the Solar System and its nature, formation, and discovery by humans during the space age. The series of eight episodes includes a substantial amount of archival footage from both the United States and Soviet space programs. It also depicts the Solar System through computer graphics. There were a total of eight episodes produced for the series. The series featured appearances from famous pioneering space scientists and explorers, and was narrated by Samuel West. City Life is a 1990 film directed by Alejandro Agresti, Gábor Altorjay, José Luis Guerín and Tato Kotetshvili. Yartsa Rinpoche: Precious Caterpillar is a documentary film directed by Dorje Tsering Chenaktsang. Love Asia is a 2006 documentary film directed by Chun-Chun Wong Left by the Ship is a 2010 documentary film directed by Emma Rossi Landi and Alberto Vendemmiati following two years in the life of four Filipino Amerasians, co-produced by Italian production company VisitorQ, together with Rai Cinema, ITVS international and YLE. The film was shot in the Philippines, mostly in the town of Olongapo, between 2007 and 2009. Saving Marriage is a 2006 documentary film directed by John Henning and Mike Roth. Song of Summer is a 1968 black-and-white television film written, produced and directed by Ken Russell for the BBC's Omnibus series which was first broadcast on 15 September 1968. It portrays the final six years of the life of Frederick Delius, when he was blind and paralysed, and when Eric Fenby lived with the composer and his wife Jelka as Delius's amanuensis. The title is borrowed from the Delius tone poem A Song of Summer, which is heard along with other Delius works in the film. It stars Max Adrian as Delius, Christopher Gable as Fenby, and Maureen Pryor as Delius's wife Jelka, with director Russell in a cameo role as a philandering priest. The cinematography was by Dick Bush, and the editing was by Roger Crittenden. It was shot on black-and-white 35mm film. It has received wide praise since its first screening, and Ken Russell himself said it was the best film he ever made and he would not have done a single shot differently. Bondi Tsunami is a 2004 feature length Australian indie film directed by Rachael Lucas, inspired by young Japanese tourists who come to Australia on working holiday visas in search of sun and surf. The film plays as a road movie about Japanese surfing culture, told through a series of extended montages set to music, interspersed with poetic zen musings. Much of the film's dialogue is in Japanese, with little English spoken despite the Australian setting. The movie was billed as "The first Japanese surfing road movie in Australia." Although unable to secure an official cinema release due to its limited appeal, the film has attracted a cult following based on its controversial style. Two scenes from the Bondi Tsunami were adapted into separate short films, with Beach Route winning the 2003 Port Macquarie Short Film Festival and Gunja Men Ahead in the official selection at the International New York Short Film Festival in 2004. Conversations with the Dead marks the return of more paranormal activity and even more haunted places. Witness first-hand the supernatural presence felt at these locations through clear sound clips and captivating images. Includes footage from Witches Castle, Benton County Jail, Fowler City Theater and Drena's Bar and Grill. Anand Bhavan is a 1991 film directed by Yash Chaudhary. Part of the Weekend Never Dies is a rockumentary film depicting the worldwide concert tour of the Belgian band Soulwax. Director Saam Farahmand filmed Soulwax on their recent international tour dates, capturing all the excitement, chaos and humour of the world tour. Whereas the Beastie Boys filmed one gig with 50 cameras, Soulwax filmed 120 shows with one camera in Europe, Japan, the US, Latin America and Australia. This resulted in 2 films: a live music film and a documentary which includes 2manydj’s and Soulwax Nite Versions, and features James Murphy, Nancy Whang, Erol Alkan, Tiga, Boys Noize, Justice, Busy P, So-Me, Peaches, The Naked Guy, Kitsuné, Klaxons in behind the scenes footage, interviews and music. The DVD also includes a CD recording of "Live At Fabric", and is available in a hardbook DVD case and in a traditional CD case. Black Sabbath's Paranoid is a video by heavy metal band Black Sabbath. The video features archive footage of the band, as well as interviews with Ozzy Osbourne, Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi, Neil Murray and Bobby Rondinelli. The Dialogue is a 2013 documentary film by Michigan State University and Crossing Borders Education . Friends in High Places is a 2001 documentary film directed by Lindsey Merrison. An intense documentary investigating the dark and hidden world of sexual molestation of children by trusted family members or friends. The Tribunal - The Murders on Bullenhuser Damm is a 1986 documentary film written by Gunther Schwarberg and directed by Lea Rosh. Led Zeppelin DVD is a double DVD set by the English rock band Led Zeppelin, released in the United Kingdom on 26 May 2003, and the United States on 27 May 2003. It contains live concert footage of the band spanning the years 1969 to 1979. The DVD includes performances from the Royal Albert Hall in 1970, Madison Square Garden in 1973, Earls Court in 1975, and Knebworth in 1979, plus other footage. Bootleg footage from some of the concerts is interspersed with the professionally shot material. The DVD cover features West and East Mitten Buttes, photographed from the visitor centre at the Navajo Tribal Park located at Monument Valley, Arizona. Embracing is a 1992 short, biographical documentary film directed by Naomi Kawase. Original Child Bomb is a 2004 documentary about the aftermath of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The film premiered at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival and was aired on many stations on August 6, 2005, the 60th anniversary of the bombings. The title of the film was inspired by Thomas Merton's poem of the same name, which is quoted throughout the film. The documentary employs color footage that had previously been labeled top secret by the US government. The 2005 airing of Original Child Bomb was the most extensive exposure to date of this footage in the United States. It had been filmed by both the United States military and Japanese camera crews. Original Child Bomb was directed by Carey Schonegevel and produced by Holly Becker. Winter Present is a 2014 documentary film directed by Robert Todd. I Want to Be a Pilot, is a 2006 award winning Kenyan - Mexican short film documentary written and directed by Diego Quemada-Diez. The film won international seven awards including the Audience Award at the Los Angeles Film Festival. The movie has earned more than 50 international prizes and has participated in over 200 film festivals such as Sundance, Locarno, Telluride, Edinburgh, Amiens, Los Angeles, São Paulo, Manhattan, Silverdocs, Bermuda, San Francisco. Imams Go to School is a 2010 film written and directed by Kaouther Ben Hania. Music For Mandela is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jason Bourque. The high cost -- to both the environment and our health -- of bottled water is the subject of this documentary that enlists activists, environmentalists, community leaders and others to expose the dark side of the bottled water industry. Fish Meat is a 2012 documentary by Fish Navy Films that analyzes and questions current fish farming practices. It was an official selection at the Blue Ocean Film Festival, Idyllwild Film Festival, San Francisco Ocean Film Festival, Catalina Film Festival and. It has also screened around the country, including at the University of Colorado and at University of Massachusetts Amherst. The documentary examines different methods used in modern aquaculture from Atlantic bluefin tuna ocean pens, to trout closed system farms, to old fashioned carp farms and concludes that the fish from lower in the food chain is better for sustainable aquaculture. Algorithms is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ian McDonald. Annabelle Butterfly Dance is an 1894 short film. It is one of the several silent films produced by the Edison Manufacturing Company starring Annabelle Moore. In the film, Annabelle performs one of her popular dances while wearing a butterfly costume. White Knight is a documentary film directed by Aarti Shrivastava. Its subject is Chewang Norphel, a 78-year-old engineer in Leh who, over the last 15 years, has invented and implemented a technology that is helping provide a solution to an ecological disaster created by climate change. The land of Ladakh is grappling with an alarming water scarcity situation. In this high altitude desert where the melting of glaciers has been the traditional source of fresh water, a warmer planet is playing havoc with lifestyles and the ecology. With glaciers melting faster and leaving the people quite literally high and dry, fresh water is more precious than oil, especially post the Ladakhi summer. His solution uses common sense and elementary observational science to create artificial glaciers. This film was created as a tribute to this man, and it honors him as a hero who relentlessly and persistently carries on a lone struggle against an insipid bureaucracy, myopic governance and a planet seemingly striking back as it adjusts to global warming. Romans d’ados 4 – Adulte mais pas trop is a 2010 documentary film written by Nasser Bakhti and directed by Béatrice Bakhti. Scrap Yard is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Nadège Trébal. Lusitania Illusion is a 2010 historical drama documentary film written by João Canijo, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Alfred Döblin and 2 more and directed by João Canijo. LaLee's Kin: The Legacy of Cotton is a 2001 American documentary film directed by Deborah Dickson, Susan Frömke and Albert Maysles. It was nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the 74th Academy Awards. Katya Krenalinova is a documentary film directed by Alexandra Lihacheva. Vapor Trail is a 2010 documentary film directed by John Gianvito. 500 Dunam on the Moon is a 2002 documentary film directed by Israeli director Rachel Leah Jones about Ayn Hawd, a Palestinian village that was captured and depopulated by Israeli forces in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Bones of the Forest is a 1995 documentary film directed by Heather Frise and Velcrow Ripper. Die Nacht der Regisseure is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Edgar Reitz. Ready to fly is an American documentary by William A. Kerig following the true story of the fight of American women's ski jumping athletes Lindsey Van, the rest of her U.S Women’s Ski jumping Team members, Jessica Jerome, Alissa Johnson, Abby Hughes, Sarah Hendrickson and many other elite ski jumping athletes around the world to be part of the Olympic Winter Games. It was first screen during the 2013 Banff Mountain Film Festival. Narration of the documentary is made by Diana Nyad, an American author, journalist, motivational speaker, and long-distance swimmer. Nyad first got national attention in 1975 when she swam around Manhattan island and in 1979 from the Bahamas to Florida. In 2013, at age 64, after many long distance swimming exploits, she became the first person confirmed to swim from Cuba to Florida. She swam to raise funds for victims of Hurricane Sandy. Here There Is No Why is a documentary film directed by Charles Rotmil. Ascent to the Sky is a 2010 documentary film directed by Stephane Breton. Yesterday will Be Tomorrow is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Janina Lapinskaitė. Digital Underground in the People's Republic is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Rachel Tejada. Africa: Blood and Beauty is a 2012 documentary directed by Sergey Yastrzhembsky. What Remains of Us is a 2004 Canadian documentary film exploring the survival of the nonviolent resistance movement in Tibet. The documentary was shot over eight years without the knowledge of the Chinese authorities. Jimi Plays Monterey is a 1986 documentary film directed by Chris Hegedus, D.A. Pennebaker. Pretty as a Picture: The Art of David Lynch is a documentary biographical TV movie directed by Toby Keeler. I Saw U is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Maile Martinez and Lane Stroud. The film is written by Reid Kuennen. Bullets for Breakfast is a 1992 film directed by Holly Fisher. A Bridge Life: Finding Our Way Home is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Joshua Grossberg. The main focus of the documentary is Dan Sheffer a loan officer husband and father of two from Plantation Florida. He watched on television like all of us the trials and tribulations of the Katrina evacuees and wrestled with what to do or what he could do. Inspired by a Good Samaritan who aided hurricane victims in his own state Dans goal became clear find evacuees willing to leave the hard cement of the Astrodome and escort them to relative safety and the chance of a new life in Florida. He then solicited pledges from friends and colleagues to help cover the cost of flying 10 evacuees from the Houston Astrodome which he would recruit himself back to Florida. Putting his life on hold Dans act of Good Samaritanship turned out to be a much tougher road than he or anyone else imagined. Finding evacuees prepared to trust him enough to leave for an unknown future in another state would prove near impossible. But after several days and with the help of other volunteers Dan had finally enlisted seven evacuees ready to believe. Pope John Paul II's historic nine-day pilgrimage to Poland in June of 1979 created a revolution of conscience that transformed Poland and fundamentally reshaped the spiritual and political landscape of the 20th Century.Newt and Callista Gingrich, along with a Polish, American, and Italian cast, explore what transpired during these nine days that moved the Polish people to renew their hearts, reclaim their courage, and free themselves from the shackles of Communism.Millions of Poles, almost one third of the nation, turned out to see the Holy Father in person, while the rest of the country followed his pilgrimage on television and radio. Within sixteen months, Solidarity became the first officially recognized free trade union in the Communist bloc, with over 10 million members. The momentum of this nine-day visit would eventually lead to the fall of the Berlin Wall in November of 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. Encirclement – Neo-Liberalism Ensnares Democracy is a 2008 Canadian documentary film by Richard Brouillette which was awarded the Robert and Frances Flaherty Prize at the 11th Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival, the Grand Prize at the 15th Visions du réel festival, the Audience Award for Best feature film, along with a Special Jury Mention for the Amnesty International Award, at the 6th IndieLisboa festival, the Pierre and Yolande Perrault Award for Best first or second documentary at the 27th Rendez-vous du cinéma québécois, and the La Vague Award for Best documentary film at the 23rd Festival international du cinéma francophone en Acadie. The world premiere took place at the 11th Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal on November 20, 2008. The international premiere took place at the 59th Berlinale, in the International Forum of New Cinema section, on February 7, 2009. Ski Film Festival is a 1992 sport documentary film written and directed by Warren Miller. Summer Snapshot is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Ian McCluskey. THE TENTH INNING is a two-part, four-hour documentary film directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick. A new chapter in Burns's landmark 1994 series, BASEBALL, THE TENTH INNING tells the tumultuous story of the national pastime from the 1990s to the present day. Introducing an unforgettable array of players, teams and fans, the film showcases the era's extraordinary accomplishments and heroics — as well as its devastating losses and disappointments. Combining extraordinary highlights, stunning still photographs, and insightful commentary by players, managers, and fans, THE TENTH INNING interweaves the story of the national pastime with the story of America. %In August 1955, a fourteen-year-old black boy whistled at a white woman in a grocery store in Money, Mississippi. Emmett Till, a teen from Chicago, didn't understand that he had broken the unwritten laws of the Jim Crow South until three days later, when two white men dragged him from his bed in the dead of night, beat him brutally and then shot him in the head. Although his killers were arrested and charged with murder, they were both acquitted quickly by an all-white, all-male jury. Shortly afterwards, the defendants sold their story, including a detailed account of how they murdered Till, to a journalist. The murder and the trial horrified the nation and the world. Till's death was a spark that helped mobilize the civil rights movement. Three months after his body was pulled from the Tallahatchie River, the Montgomery bus boycott began. Where's the Fair? is a 2012 documentary, drama, and mystery film directed by Jeffrey Ford and Brad Bear. Divide in Concord is a 2013 documentary and biographical film directed by Kris Kaczor and Dave Regos. The Master's Touch: Hitchcock's Signature Style is a 2009 film documentary directed by Gary Leva. Bells from the Deep: Faith and Superstition in Russia, is a 1993 documentary film written and directed by Werner Herzog, produced by Werner Herzog Filmproduktion. Condition One is a 2011 documentary film directed by Danfung Dennis and Patrick Chauvel. Mumford and Sons' unique fusion of traditional and modern folk, has sold over 10 million albums worldwide. This is the true story of how Marcus Mumford, Ben Lovett, Winston Marshall, and Ted Dwane forged together to create one of the greatest bands of the 21st century. Hi-Ho Mistahey! is a 2013 National Film Board of Canada feature documentary film by Alanis Obomsawin that profiles Shannen's Dream, an activist campaign first launched by Shannen Koostachin, a Cree teenager from Attawapiskat, to lobby for improved educational opportunities for First Nations youth. The film premiered on 7 September 2013 at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. It was subsequently named first runner-up for the festival's People's Choice Award in the documentary category, behind Jehane Noujaim's The Square. The film's title is Cree for "I love you forever." Obomsawin has said she heard about Koostachin's story from children's rights activist Cindy Blackstock. Obomsawin had been in the community of Attawapiskat working on this film when the Attawapiskat housing and infrastructure crisis broke. So she put this project aside and completed her film The People of the Kattawapiskak River, before completing Hi-Ho Mistahey! The film was a shortlisted nominee for the Canadian Screen Award for Best Feature Length Documentary at the 2nd Canadian Screen Awards. Beauty and the Breast is a 2012 documentary drama film written and directed by Liliana Komorowska. Prabhat Nagari is a 2012 short biographical historical fiction documentary film written and directed by Aman Wadhan. My Prairie Home is a 2013 Canadian documentary film about transgender singer/songwriter Rae Spoon, directed by Chelsea McMullan. It features musical performances and interviews about Spoon’s troubled childhood, raised by Pentecostal parents obsessed with the Rapture and an abusive father, as well as Spoon's past experiences with gender confusion. The film was shot in the Canadian Prairies, including the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology in Drumheller. My Prairie Home was produced by Lea Marin for the National Film Board of Canada. McMullan has said she first found out about Spoon around 2007, when she was making a western-themed NFB film set in the B.C. Interior. She was searching for "subversive" country-folk soundtrack music when someone suggested Spoon. According to Spoon, the idea for the documentary came out of a discussion with McMullan in 2010 about the musician’s perceived lack of marketability, a criticism Spoon sometimes receives when applying for music video funding. Spoon has stated that it had initially been difficult for to open up so much about personal details, so McMullan suggested writing it down before they talked. Norman Rockwell's World... An American Dream is a 1972 short documentary film directed by Robert Deubel. It won an Academy Award in 1973 for Best Short Subject. Whistling Smith is a 1975 Canadian short documentary film about Vancouver policeman Sergeant Bernie "Whistling" Smith, directed by Marrin Canell. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short at the 48th Academy Awards. Whistling Smith was produced for the National Film Board’s Pacificanada series, which aired on CBC-TV in early 1975. The film's narration was written and read by Donald Brittain. Along with its Oscar nomination, the film won a Canadian Film Award for Sound Re-Recording. A Day Called X is a dramatized CBS documentary film set in Portland, Oregon, in which the entire city is evacuated in anticipation of a nuclear air raid, after Soviet bombers had been detected by radar stations to the north; it details the activation of the city's civil defense protocols and leads up to the moment before the attack. The operations were run from the Kelly Butte Bunker, which was the EOC during the time. It was filmed in September 1957 and aired December 8 of that year. Apart from presenter/narrator Glenn Ford, none of the people shown are actors. They are locals of Portland shown in their real jobs, including Mayor Terry Schrunk. Its local rebroadcast in 2004 and appearance in the on-line Prelinger Archives attracted interest among local history buffs due to its extensive outside shots of the city, and the use of non-actor participants. Whenever one of these individuals is heard uttering warnings or statements regarding attack, the words "An attack is not actually taking place" are superimposed over the picture. Tales Of The Tide is a 2013 short documentary film written by Allan Ribeiro and directed by Douglas Soares. Cartoons and Cartoonists is a short documentary film directed by Harold Baim. Australians Hit Hollywood is a 2009 documentary film directed by Kalee St. Clair. The Soviet Story is a 2008 documentary film about Soviet Communism and Soviet–German collaboration before 1941 written and directed by Edvīns Šnore and sponsored by the UEN Group in the European Parliament. The film features interviews with western and Russian historians such as Norman Davies and Boris Sokolov, Russian writer Viktor Suvorov, Soviet dissident Vladimir Bukovsky, members of the European Parliament and the participants, as well as survivors of Soviet terror. Using these interviews together with historical footage and documents the film argues that there were close philosophical, political and organizational connections between the Nazi and Soviet systems before and during the early stages of World War II. It highlights the Great Purge as well as the Great Famine, Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, Katyn massacre, Gestapo-NKVD collaboration, Soviet mass deportations and medical experiments in the GULAG. Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers is a 2006 documentary film made by Robert Greenwald and Brave New Films. Produced while the Iraq War was in full swing, the film deals with the alleged war profiteering and negligence of private contractors and consultants who went to Iraq as part of the US war effort. Specifically, the film claims four major contractors - Blackwater, K.B.R.-Halliburton, CACI and Titan - were over-billing the U.S. government and doing substandard work while endangering the lives of American soldiers, Iraqi civilians, and their own employees. These corporations were tasked with “virtually everything except the actual killing,” including food, laundry, housing, security, intelligence gathering and interrogation. I Was Born in Delhi is the 2011 drama film directed by Bishnu Dev Halder. Living on the Junk is a 1991 documentary film directed by Debal Basu. Harvest Of Shadows is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Matt Black. Sri Lanka's Unfinished War is a 2013 documentary examining the alleged genocide and crimes against humanity against Sri Lankan Tamils by the Sri Lankan Government. It was presented by Frances Harrison former BBC correspondent to Sri Lanka, and was first screened on the BBC World News on November 9, 2013. Sri Lanka's Unfinished War which presents harrowing cases of testimony from interviewees, brings to light evidence on the systematic post-war rape and torture in detention, organized by the State on the Tamil minority in the Sri Lanka. The Sri Lankan Government denied the evidence that was put forth to them from the video. The Political Dr. Seuss is a 2004 documentary film written by Ron Lamothe, Eric Martin and Lois Vossen, and directed by Ron Lamothe. Wüste Westberlin is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Helmut Wietz. Ground operations: Battlefields to farmfields is a 2013 short documentary news war biographical film directed by Dulanie M. Ellis. Jonas in the Desert is a 1994 film directed by Peter Sempel. QPOLA PICTURE LIVE SHOW 2013 #7 is a documentary film directed by Morio Agata. Lady Gaga: One Sequin at a Time is a 2010 music documentary film written and directed by Sonia Anderson. Hakani is a 30 minute movie alleging the occurrence of infanticide in tribal communities in Brazil. It was by ATINI and Youth With A Mission, the director's father's organization. The Brazilian government officials said "the missionaries are exaggerating and exploiting the issue to justify their attempts to convert Indians to Christianity". In 2009, Survival International released a statement that film is "faked, that the earth covering the children's faces is actually chocolate cake, and that the film's claim that infanticide among Brazilian Indians is widespread is false." Let It Rock! is a 2002 film directed by Igor Paasch. Why Can't We Be a Family Again? is a 2002 American short documentary film directed by Murray Nossel about two African American brothers in Brooklyn struggling to reunite with their mother, a recovering drug addict. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Missing Allen is a documentary about the search for the disappeared cameraman Allen Ross. It has been nominated with the Adolf Grimme Award, Best Documentary Award and German Camera Award. It won the Certificate of Merit at the San Francisco International Film Festival and was named best documentary at Montreal's Festival du Nouveau Cinéma and the Venice International Television Festival. Victims of the Past was a Nazi propaganda film made in 1937. This movie was a sequel to Erbkrank, which showed horrific images of lunatics in German asylums in order to bolster public support for the planned T-4 Euthanasia Program for the mentally ill. The practices of providing institutions and care for the victims of hereditary diseases are described as transgressing the law of natural selection, and the expense of such care is depicted as drain on healthy workers, and preventing the use of such money to help healthy Germans make better lives. It was shown in every cinema in Germany. Adolf Hitler reportedly liked it. Like the other five movies depicting the condition of the mentally ill in Germany, the movie was produced by the NS-Rasse und Politisches Amt. However, this film was the only one produced with sound. Mercado de futuros is a 2011 documentary film written by Mercedes Álvarez and Arturo Redín and directed by Mercedes Álvarez. I Thought It Was Forever is a biographical drama documentary film directed by Maniko Barthelemy and Lawrence Dortch. "The French director Henri-Georges Clouzot is renowned for suspenseful classics such as Le Salaire de la peur (in English, The Wages of Fear) and Diabolique. Now this incredible documentary gives us new appreciation for his creativity by bringing to light footage from his unfinished film L'Enfer. In 1964, Clouzot set out to direct the story of a husband, played by Serge Reggiani, who suffers bouts of paranoid jealousy over his new bride, played by the twenty-six-year-old Romy Schneider. Hollywood investors promised Clouzot an unlimited budget, which he spent experimenting with months of camera tests. As an art lover – his previous films included Le Mystère Picasso – Clouzot took inspiration from the kinetic and kaleidoscopic visuals that were emerging in galleries. L'Enfer'simages were rumoured to be incredible, but the film was shut down three weeks into production and the footage went unseen for over forty years." Quoting Thom Powers IIFA 2007 Backstage is a 2008 documentary film. Pirate Radio USA is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Jeff Pearson, with musical director Mary Jones. Its running time is 82 minutes in length. The Company of Strangers is a Canadian film, released in 1990. It was directed by Cynthia Scott, and written by Scott, Sally Bochner, David Wilson and Gloria Demers. The film depicts eight women on a bus tour, who are stranded at an isolated cottage when the bus breaks down. Created in a genre defined as docufiction, semi-documentary/semi-fiction, the film is not tightly scripted. The writers wrote a basic story outline but allowed the eight women to improvise their dialogue. Each of the women, all but one of whom were senior citizens, told stories from her own life. A major theme of the film is how the elderly women each face aging and mortality in their own way, and find the courage together to persevere. At various points throughout the film, a montage of photos from each woman's life is shown. The women are: Alice Diabo, 74, a Mohawk elder from Kahnawake, Quebec, Constance Garneau, 88, born in the United States and brought to Quebec by her family as a child, Winifred Holden, 76, an Englishwoman who moved to Montreal after World War II, Cissy Meddings, 76, who was born in England and moved to Canada in 1981, Where Heaven Meets Hell is a 2011 dramatic documentary film directed by Sasha Friedlander. Too Cold Out There Without You is a 2012 drama documentary film written and directed by Amy Gattie. CowJews and Indians is a war western historical documentary film directed by Marc Halberstadt. Mugabe's Zimbabwe is a factual film directed by Shrenik Rao. Kill Yourself: The Movie; the bulk of the footage on this DVD was shot during the S.O.D. promotional tour for Bigger Than The Devil in Japan and America, interspersed with footage from various events, such as some 1999 shots from the Dynamo Open Air in the Netherlands. Also appearing on the DVD are Dimebag Darrell, Paul Baloff and Kerry King. DVD extras include a bonus concert—which must be unlocked by a "secret" code—and a commentary track by Scott Ian and the producer Bill Philputt. The movie is also available on VHS without the extra footage. The cover parodies that of the Guns N' Roses album Appetite for Destruction. Grazing the sky is a 2013 film written and directed by Horacio Alcalá. When Boris Met Dave is a 2009 docu-drama which investigates the shared past of David Cameron and Boris Johnson who, at the time of broadcast, were two of Britain's most influential Conservative Party politicians – Cameron as Conservative leader and Johnson as Mayor of London. The film features interviews with people who knew Cameron and Johnson both at Eton College and Oxford where they were both members of the Bullingdon Club. The programme also looks at Johnson's campaign to become president of the Oxford Union and dramatises some of the other key events of their student days. The film was first broadcast on More4 on 7 October 2009 and was later repeated on Channel 4. Public Hearing is a 2012 documentary film directed by James N. Kienitz Wilkins. The Machine Which Makes Everything Disappear is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Tinatin Gurchiani. "Eco-activist Mikael Rioux from Trois-Pistoles in Québec is looking for ways to create support in his own community for the creation of a more sustainable way of life. Having shorn off his dreadlocks at the beginning of the film, the young father decides to pursue a more constructive course of action than continuing his battle against the local authorities. Inspired by his mentor Christian de Laet -- an old hand in the environmental movement -- Rioux travels the world to seek the counsel of his mentor's sympathizers in poverty-stricken India, in wealthy, progressive Sweden, and elsewhere. The problem is clear: there is a crisis on the way. Leaving the car at home once in a while is not going to be enough to avert an environmental disaster -- not by a long shot. Earth Keepers shows that there are still opportunities for sustainable action, but only if we are prepared to change the way we think. Rioux's voice-over, the talking heads, and the animations that elucidate the film's sometimes complex issues all combine to convey a single message: "We need to start living in a way that provides for everyone's needs." And this is what makes Earth Keepers a worthwhile journey for outsiders as well as insiders." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. Marina Abramovic, From Tuesday To Friday is a documentary film directed by Ximena Cuevas. City of Water is a documentary about the future of the New York City waterfront by the Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance and the Municipal Art Society. Alice Neel is a 2007 documentary film about the life of Alice Neel, exploring the struggles she faced as a woman artist, a single mother, and a painter who defied convention. The documentary was directed by Neel's grandson, Andrew Neel. Alice Neel premiered at The Sundance Film Festival in 2007 and later won the Audience Award at the 2007 Newport Beach Film Festival later that year. The film was produced by SeeThink Productions. The Pioneer is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Daniela Abke. "Angels in the Dust" is a documentary film by filmmaker Louise Hogarth. An inspiring story about Marion Cloete, a university-trained therapist whose self-sacrificial courage motivates change and hope. In a nation plagued by the HIV/AIDS epidemic, orphans, rape, and violence, Marion abandons a life of privilege in Johannesburg to build Botshabelo, a village and school that provides orphaned children with shelter, food and education. The stories of the orphaned children are paralleled with the orphaned elephants of Pilanesberg National Park in South Africa. In this poignant film, Marion attempts a similar strategy by re-parenting the orphaned children. "Angels in the Dust" won the 2007 Emerging Pictures/Full Frame Audience Award at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival.It also won an Audience Award at the Encounters South African International Documentary Festival in 2008 It is produced by Dream Out Loud Films and Participant Productions. 1001 Apples is a 2013 documentary film, written and directed by Taha Karimi. Michael Jackson's This Is It is a 2009 American documentary–concert film directed by Kenny Ortega that documents Michael Jackson's rehearsals and preparation for the concert series of the same name scheduled to start on 13 July 2009, but canceled due to his death eighteen days prior on 25 June. It is the last film Jackson starred in. The film consists of Jackson rehearsing musical numbers and directing his team, and additional behind the scenes footage including dancer auditions and costume design. The film's director Kenny Ortega confirmed that none of this footage was originally intended for release, but after Jackson's death it was agreed that the film be made. The footage was filmed in California at the Staples Center and The Forum, and features a clip from London's O2 Arena where Jackson publicly announced the concert series. Despite originally being set for 30 October, the film's release date was rescheduled for 28 October 2009, due to a strong demand by Jackson's fans. The film was given a worldwide release and a limited two-week theatrical run from 28 October, to 12 November 2009, but theatrical release was later extended. The Game of Their Lives or "Chollima Chookgudan" is a 2002 documentary film directed by Daniel Gordon and his executive Nicholas Bonner about the seven surviving members of the North Korean national football team who participated in the Football World Cup 1966. Its victory over the Italian team propelled the North Korean team into the quarterfinal: it was the first time an Asian squad had advanced so far in a World Cup. The English Harvest is a 1938 short documentary film. In the Shadow of the Blade is a 2004 American documentary film produced and directed by Patrick and Cheryl Fries. It won awards in the film industry and with the Vietnam veteran community, including the WorldFest-Houston International Film Festival "Best of Show" and "Gold Documentary" and the Vietnam Veterans of America President's Award for Outstanding Documentary. The documentary was acquired for North American television broadcast by Discovery Communications. Ultimate Air Jaws is a News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography – Nature nominated film. The D Train is a 2011 short film directed by Jay Rosenblatt. UB Lama is a 2011 family drama documentary film directed by Egle Vertelyte. Town Hall is a family documentary film directed by Sierra Pettengill and Jamila Wignot. It for Others is a 2013 short experimental documentary film written and directed by Duncan Campbell. The Mother and the Sea is a documentary film directed by Gonçalo Tocha. Poor Us - An Animated History of Poverty is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Ben Lewis. Quest for Atlantis: Startling New Secrets is a 2006 documentary film. Naked Africa is a 1957 documentary about Africa. It was released on a double bill with White Huntress. The film was later re-rereleased under the title Mondo Africana to exploit the shockumentaries Mondo Cane and Africa Addio. Wind Over Water: The Cape Wind Story is an independent documentary film which chronicles the controversy over the Cape Wind Project. The film, by journalist Ole Tangen Jr. documented both sides of the debate as it unfolded on the Cape. An independent production, the filmmaker interviewed numerous people involved with the project including Jim Gordon of Cape Wind and Isaac Rosen, then director of the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound. Focusing also on wind power in general, Wind Over Water features aerial footage of the offshore wind farm at Horns Rev in Denmark and footage from various wind farms in the US. The film had its world premiere on December 6, 2003, at Lillie Auditorium, Woods Hole, MA. It has also been screened across the USA and in Canada and New Zealand. God Save My Shoes is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Julie Benasra. United States of Africa is 2011 documentary film written by Yanick Létourneau, Hany Ouichou, Sebastien Tetrault and directed by Yanick Létourneau. Marching Once More is a 2011 documentary film directed by Adam Alphin. The Cinderella of Tallinn is a 1996 documentary film directed by Pirjo Honkasalo and written by Marja Pensala and Pirjo Honkasalo. Blue Sky - Journey Into the Land of Memories is a 1978 film directed by Peter von Bagh. Livin' It is a 45 minute Christian-themed skateboarding DVD directed by actor Stephen Baldwin. The film was filmed in Portland, Oregon and stars skateboarders Jud Heald, Tim Byrne, Luke Braddock, Anthony Carney, Jared Lee, Phil Trotter, and Sierra Fellers. More than 100,000 copies of Livin' It have been distributed. It combines skateboarding footage with what Baldwin calls a real message about life. Best Friend Forgotten is a 2004 American documentary film that sheds light on the difficult issue of pet overpopulation. The documentary, hosted by David Duchovny, tells the stories of Oreo the cat and Clover the dog as they face the harsh realities of pet overpopulation. Viewers get a thoughtful and balanced look at the controversial practice of euthanasia and the alternative no-kill movement. Candid interviews reveal common myths about spaying and neutering, and leaders from government to animal rights groups discuss the plague of pet overpopulation and the impact on our society. Luboml: My Heart Remembers is a 2003 documentary film produced by Eileen Douglas and Ron Steinman and funded by The Aaron Ziegelman Foundation. It compiles survivor interviews, archival photographs and film footage to reconstruct a sense of life in Luboml, one of the five thousand small shtetls that were destroyed by the Holocaust. The film, explores the vibrant Jewish life that –once central to European Jewry – is now forever lost. Made in 2003, Luboml: My Heart Remembers was called a “must see gem” by The Forward. "An elegiac portrait of goings-on in the middle-American town of Sydney, Ohio, a celebration of everyday life, be it mundane or profound. The title is the zip code for the middle-American town of Sydney, Ohio (population, 20000), the hometown of brothers Bill and Turner Ross, who, with their debut feature, present an elegiac portrait of goings-on there and a celebration of everyday life, be it mundane or profound. Filmed over the course of a nine month period, the camera follows events at the county fair, at the radio station, on a judge's re-election campaign, with the football team, at a care home, in the church, at the barbershop and elsewhere, presenting fascinating and engaging images of modern Americana, while stories about the relationships between lovers, between fathers and sons, and between cops and offenders, emerge almost incidentally. At turns hauntingly eerie and frequently humorous, 45365 is a patient, inquisitive and non-judgemental study of community, lives and landscape, a beautifully simple and affecting film, one that is deeply astute and artistic, at times reminiscent of, and as insightful as, a William Eggleston photograph or an Edward Hopper painting. This strikingly original documentary took the jury prize at this year's SXSW Film Festival." Quoting Michael Hayden Thus Spoke Habip is a 2012 documetary film directed by Minür Alper Doğan. A provocateur, a rebel, a performer and notorious anarchist, Norman Mailer never stopped giving people something to talk about. Containing never-seen-before material, this shocking documentary goes beyond the Mailer of the bookshelves and bestseller lists to reveal Mailer the social critic, filmmaker, family man and lover, giving a rare and unique insight into the life of a complex, intellectual man and villainous hero. Cosmic Collisions is a short documentary film directed by Carter Emmart. In ‘Thomas L. Friedman Reporting: Straddling the Fence,’ Thomas Friedman travels to the West Bank to see The Fence, also known as The Wall or The Barrier. Featuring firsthand accounts from those at the front lines, Friedman captures many of the views and opinions that set the recent Arab Spring movements and demonstrations into motion. Polio v/s Polio Victims is the National Award Winning Documentary film. The documentary won "Best Motivational/ Educational Film" at the 56th National Film Awards. The documentary follows a group of polio victims who took to the streets in 2008 to spread the message of Pulse Polio Campaign. The film follows them as they go door to door, in various slums in Mumbai, to spread awareness about the upcoming Pulse Polio Day. The film is written by Samrat Rane and directed by Aman Sachdeva. La patrona is a 2009 short documentary film written by Lizzette Arguello and Javier García and directed by Lizzette Arguello. Kein Abschied - Nur Fort is a 1991 film directed by Lew Hohmann and Joachim Tschirner. Remembering Jacqueline Du Pre is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Christopher Nupen. CUBERS is a documentary directed by Richard LeBlanc and produced by Walter Forsyth. The documentary's production began in Toronto, Canada, but visits Paris, Budapest, Orlando, Tel Aviv, Toulouse and more. It was released in North America on CBC The Lens, followed by Biography, Access, and three other major stations. According to the official CUBERS website, the documentary is rated G. The documentary has already appeared in the Orlando Film Festival, Asheville Film Festival, and the Silver Wave Film Festival. The official television premiere was on November 25, 2008 on CBC's Newsworld. Splinters - A Century of an Artistic Family is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Peter von Bagh. Tree surgeon-turned-filmmaker Robb Leech is an ordinary white middle-class boy from the Dorset seaside town of Weymouth. So too is his stepbrother Rich, but a little over a year ago Rich became a radical Islamist who now goes by the name of Salahuddin. He associates with jihadist fundamentalists and believes the UK should be ruled by Sharia law. In a film that took over twelve months to shoot, Robb sets out to reconnect with his extremist stepbrother and find clues to what led Rich to become Salahuddin. It charts the brothers' relationship and Robb's attempt to understand why the person he'd once looked up to as a teenage role model could so strongly reject all that his family and the Western world believe in. As Robb spends time with Salahuddin, he witnesses a very particular phenomenon - the embrace of radical Islamism by young men, many of them white. Robb first heard of Rich's conversion in a national newspaper in the summer of 2009. The article said Rich had converted under Anjem Choudary, leader of the radical Muslim group Islam4UK (later banned under Britain's anti-terror laws). Robb was horrified by the things his stepbrother was telling him - that under Sharia law, women should be stoned to death for committing adultery, that he was prepared to die for Islam and that as a non-believer, Robb was going to hell. Just the previous summer the two brothers had shared a room on holiday in Cyprus and been practically inseparable. Robb began filming what was happening to Rich to try to understand why it had happened and what the world was like that Rich had chosen. First Steps is a 1947 American short documentary film about the treatment of children with disabilities in India. Produced by the United Nations and directed by Hans Burger, it won an Academy Award at the 20th Academy Awards in 1948 for Documentary Short Subject. Persistence is a 1996 documentary film directed by Daniel Eisenberg. The Great Chess Movie is a 1982 Canadian film directed by Gilles Carle and Camille Coudari, starring Bobby Fischer, Viktor Korchnoi, Anatoly Karpov and Ljubomir Ljubojević among other notable chess players. The 80-minute documentary is produced by the National Film Board of Canada. American Beauty Ltd is a 1988 documentary film written by Liora Hilb, Dieter Marcello, Walter Sachers and directed by Dieter Marcello. 15 Reasons to Live is a 2013 documentary film written by Ray Robertson and directed by Alan Zweig. Valley Of Tears is a 2003 documentary film written by Juan Gonzales and directed by Hart Perry. Scattered Windows, Connected Doors is a 2013 documentary film produced and directed by Ziba Bhagwagar and Roohi Dixit. What's on Your Plate? is a documentary film directed by Catherine Gund. The AckerMonster Chronicles! is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jason Brock. Sting: All This Time is a 2001 music documentary directed by Jim Gable. When I Will Be Dictator is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Yaël André. Breaking the Taboo is a 2011 documentary film about the War on Drugs. The film recounts the history of the war on drugs, beginning with the 1961 Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs. Breaking the Taboo explores the conclusion reached by the Global Commission on Drug Policy in 2011 that drug liberalization is the best approach in dealing with drug policy. Cello Tales is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Anne Schiltz. Standing on Sacred Ground 3 : Fire and Ice is a 2013 historical documentary film written by Jennifer Huang and directed by Christopher McLeod. Koryo Celadon is a 1979 American short documentary film directed by Paul Raimondi about Goryeo dynasty pottery. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Plastic Oceans is 2013 Documentary film directed by Craig Leeson. "An affectionate but revealing portrait of filmmaker Michel Gondry's aunt. This deceptively simple documentary tribute to Michel Gondry's formidable great aunt sees him eschewing most of the stylistic flourishes of his earlier work whilst holding on to the affectionate tone that has characterised films such as The Science of Sleep and Be Kind Rewind. Clearly both an important figure in Gondry's life and something of the family matriarch, Aunt Suzette worked as a schoolteacher in rural France from the early 1950s to the mid-80s. Returning to some of her schools during filming proves a mixed experience – she finds not all have survived the country's social changes; and the reminiscences of her former students and colleagues are similarly equivocal, building a picture of a woman who was committed to her pupils, but firm in her treatment of them. Gondry has a considerable archive of wonderful family home movies to draw on, mostly filmed by Suzette's son Jean-Yves, and it is the troubled relationship between mother and son which provides the most compelling and at times uncomfortable viewing. Gondry is a gentle investigator, albeit one who doesn't shy away from awkward moments, and his love for this proud, strong woman is never in question." Quoting Sandra Hebron Cambodia: The Betrayal is a documentary film. INORI Prayer: Conversation with Something Great is a documentary film directed by Tetsu Shiratori. Running the Sahara is a 2007 documentary feature film that chronicles Ray Zahab, Charlie Engle, and Kevin Lin's attempt to run across the entire Sahara desert. They traveled a total of 6920 kilometers, reaching the Red Sea on February 20, 2007. Producers Marc Joubert, Keith Quinn, Larry Tanz and director James Moll filmed on location in Africa across six countries: Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Libya, Egypt. Prepare2go.com supported the film crew with the logistics throughout. The Books and the Night is a 2000 film directed by Tristán Bauer. Trece entre mil is a 2005 documentary film written by Iñaki Arteta and Alfonso Galletero and directed by Iñaki Arteta. jefftowne is a 1998 documentary shot and directed by Daniel Kraus and distributed by Troma Entertainment. It chronicles the life of Jeff Towne, a 40 year old Iowa City resident who suffers from Down syndrome, obesity, alcoholism, and circulation problems. Towne also enjoys pornography and lives with his 90-year-old adoptive grandmother. Classic Ski Films: The Last of the Ski Bums is a 1969 action sports documentary written and directed by Dick Barrymore. Painting The Town is a 1986 documentary film directed by Trevor Graham. Doing Time, Doing Vipassana is a 1997 Israeli independent documentary film project by two women filmmakers from Israel, Ayelet Menahemi and Eilona Ariel about the use of Vipassanaas taught by S. N. Goenka as a rehabilitation method and its impact on foreign and Indian prisoners which was then known as one of the harshest prisons in the world. The film inspired other correctional facilities such as the North Rehabilitation Facility in Seattle to use Vipassana as a means of rehabilitation. Rescate Islas Revillagiged is a 1986 short documentary film written by Matilde Landeta & Elda Peralta and directed by Matilde Landeta. Speak the Music: Robert Mann and the Mysteries of Chamber Music is a music documentary directed by Allan Miller. Decolonize: Aztlan Underground And The Rising Of The Sixth Sun is a 2014 documentary short film directed by YCM. Festival in Adelaide is a 1962 film directed by Ian Dunlop, Richard Mason, Malcolm Otton & Loch Townsend. Heaven Adores You is a 2014 documentary about the life and music of indie rock singer-songwriter Elliott Smith. It premiered at the San Francisco International Film Festival on May 5, 2014. Yiddish: The Mame-Loshn is a 1979 film directed by Pierre Sauvage. Fire in Babylon is a 2010 documentary sport film written and directed by Stevan Riley. "The West Indian team of the 1970s and 80s is regarded as having been one of the greatest in cricket's history. Captain Clive Lloyd managed to transform a failing side, winning the inaugural World Cup in England in 1975. Lloyd skippered bowlers who were not just fast, but fierce; and players like Michael Holding, Colin Croft and Joel Garner gained a reputation for ruthlessness. They were heavily criticised, but, combined with batting from such as Lloyd, Gordon Greenidge and the incomparable Viv Richards, they proved impossible to beat, and built the foundations for a side recognised as world champions until the beginning of the 90s. Their emergence coincided with a time of apartheid in South Africa, race riots in England and civil unrest in the Caribbean, and, it's argued here, their success proved a major inspiration in the struggle for black equality. From the director of Blue Blood, which focused on Oxbridge boxing rivalry, and Passion Pictures, producers of the Oscar-winning One Day in September, Fire in Babylon celebrates the golden age of Windies cricket, featuring interviews with playing legends, exhilarating archive footage and a great soundtrack from the likes of Bob Marley, Gregory Isaacs and Burning Spear." Quoting Michael Hayden from the 2010 BFI London Film Festival site Fughe E Approdi is a 2010 Italian film directed by Giovanna Taviani. Made in Jamaica is a 2006 documentary and music film written and directed by Jérôme Laperrousaz. The Last Flight Of Peter Ginz is a 2012 documentary film written by Sandra Dickson and directed by Sandra Dickson and Churchill Roberts. Tsahal is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Claude Lanzmann. Fraught is a 2007 documentary animated short film directed by Stephanie Brotchie and Maia Tarrell. Ask Us Who We Are is a 2011 documentary film directed by Bess O’Brien and Mary Arbuckle. COMPOST-a-lujah! is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Trevor Gill and Christopher Paetkau. Dams: The Lethal Water Bombs is a short documentary film about the Mullaperiyar Dam, and the possible natural disaster inherent in the structure. This 21-minute documentary was produced by Aries Telecasting Private Ltd., and directed by Sohan Roy. Strange Storms And Symphonies: The Life Of George Lloyd, Cornish Composer 1913-1998 is a 2013 documentary film written by Anthea Page and directed by Diana Taylor. Hedley: Try This At Home is a music DVD that was nominated the award for Music DVD of the Year in the 2007 Juno Awards. The Thick Dark Fog is a 2011 documentary film directed by Randy Vasquez. Little World is a 2013 Catalan documentary movie about Albert Casals, a young man who has been in a wheelchair since suffering leukemia at the tender age of five. But this hasn't stopped him from pursuing his dream: to travel around the world. And to do it his way. Without money, without companions, without luggage. He sets off from home armed with nothing but his imagination and his courage. Little World takes us along on his greatest challenge yet: to reach the exact opposite side of the planet. Is it possible to cross the earth in these conditions? Mixing home video techniques and traditional documentary methods, we will get to know this young man, his love story, his philosophy of life and his parents' approach to raising him. We will see how Albert and his girlfriend, Anna, go from Barcelona to a remote lighthouse in New Zealand... or how they fail in the attempt. The journey can be considered sheer madness, an endearing romance or an epic adventure. Or perhaps a little of everything. The director of the film is Marcel Barrena and is produced by Umbilical Produccions with TV3, TVE, ICAA, ICEC, and Corte y Confección de Películas. "Meet an ordinary officer with an extraordinary story. Llanden has been a police officer for barely six weeks, and although he is prepared to dedicate his life to the service, is the service prepared to accept his way of life? A portrait of an officer beginning his journey in a profession coming to grips with a multicultural society." Quoting the description from the Official Site. Walter Cronkite's pronouncement "You are there" -- a witness to history's greatest moments -- greeted viewers of this popular TV series that aired from 1953-1957. Hosted by correspondents such as Charles Collingwood and Mike Wallace, the show investigated key historical events as though they were breaking news. This volume chronicles World War II's initial battles, including Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor and Adolf Hitler's invasion of Poland. Last Hippie Standing is a 45 min. documentary by the German filmmaker Marcus Robbin about Goa, India. The film compares the 1960s and 1970s hippie era with the situation in 2000. The film works without commentary and consists of documentation of the ongoing party culture in Goa, as well as private and previously unreleased Super 8 footage from the 1960s and 1970s in Goa, filmed by Cleo Odzer. This material is the only existing contemporary film document of the hippie era in Goa. Furthermore, interviews with hippie veterans like Goa Gil, locals, and the former chief minister of Goa, Francisco Sardinha, describe the clashes that occur between the party culture and Indian conservatism. The last part of the documentary is shot at the Berlin Love Parade, where the protagonists reflect on their own spiritual development and the changes that have occurred since the hippie movement's advent. The film was shot in December 1999 and January 2000 with an estimated budget of $20,000. Since 2004, it has been distributed by Nowonmedia. Despite the refusal of many TV stations and film funding institutions to cooperate, the documentary became very popular online. DJ Goa Gil in Last Hippie Standing Arabesques on the Pirosmani Theme is a 1985 short documentary film directed by Sergei Parajanov. The Block (Das Block) is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Stefan Kolbe and Chris Wright. Jimi Hendrix is a 1973 rockumentary about Jimi Hendrix, directed and produced by Joe Boyd, John Head and Gary Weis. The film contains concert footage from 1967 to 1970, including the Monterey Pop Festival the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival, Woodstock and a Berkeley concert. The film also includes interviews with Hendrix' contemporaries, family and friends. People appearing in the film include Paul Caruso, Eric Clapton, Billy Cox, Alan Douglas, Germaine Greer, Hendrix' father, James A. "Al" Hendrix, Mick Jagger, Eddie Kramer, Buddy Miles, Mitch Mitchell, Juggy Murray, Little Richard, Lou Reed and Pete Townshend. The film is also known as A Film About Jimi Hendrix. The title was used on the 2005 DVD-cover and theatrical poster. This documentary attempts to explain the mystery behind an unusual ancient burial site unearthed in England, and it's connection with a Roman Emperor. There's Gonna Be a God Damn Riot in Here is a film documenting the last live poetry reading given outside the US by Charles Bukowski, even though he lived and wrote for another 14 years. The reading was given at the Viking Inn, a small concert hall in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada on October 12, 1979. It is produced by Dennis Del Torre and directed by Jon Monday for mondayMEDIA distribution. The Nazi Plan is a 1945 American documentary film directed by George Stevens. The film, extensively compiled from captured Nazi propaganda and newsreel footage, was produced and presented as evidence at the Nuremberg Trials for Hermann Göring and twenty other Nazi leaders. Lost Bohemia is a 2010 documentary film directed by Josef Astor. John Boorman, a Portrait is a 2009 documentary film written by Michel Ciment and directed by Philippe Pilard. A Permanent Part-Timer In Distress is a film directed by Hiroki Iwabuchi. Dave Travis presents live footage featuring the Meat Puppets, Minutemen, Twisted Roots and Redd Kross interspersed with interviews. Each song by each group is presented from start to finish. Rare interviews with Mike Watt (Minutemen), Jeff and Steve McDonald (Redd Kross), Cris and Curt Kirkwood (Meat Puppets), Paul Roessler (Screamers, Twisted Roots, DC3) and Hellin (Killer) Roessler. An intimate look behind the scenes at the world's most prestigious haircutting competition. The American team competes against the world. Includes interviews with Robert Cromeans, John Paul Mitchell and Stephen Moody of Vidal Sassoon. Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer is a documentary film about Aileen Wuornos, made by Nick Broomfield. It documents Broomfield's attempts to interview Wuornos, which involves a long process of mediation through her adopted mother Arlene Pralle and lawyer, Steve Glazer. The film essentially highlights the exploitation of Wuornos by those around her and questions the fairness of her trial, given the vested interests of the police. The film was used by the defense in the Wuornos trial in 2001 to highlight the incompetence of Wuornos' original lawyer. It was through this process that Broomfield decided to make a second film, Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer. Furthermore, for the feature film Monster, Charlize Theron used this film as source material, apparently watching clips in-between takes in order to perfect her character. For her performance, Theron won a Best Actress Oscar, awarded on what would have been Wuornos's birthday. Love the Beast is a 2009 documentary film directed by Eric Bana, and featuring Bana, Jay Leno, Jeremy Clarkson, and Phil McGraw. Check Your Body At The Door is a 2011 documentary film written by Sally R. Sommer and Archie Burnett and directed by Sally R. Sommer, Charles Atlas, and Michael Schwartz. Ornette: Made in America is a 1984 American documentary film directed and edited by Shirley Clarke that studies acclaimed saxophonist and free jazz innovator Ornette Coleman. The film does not chronicle the life of Coleman but rather emulates his freeform style by mixing together excerpts from performances, interviews, experimental music videos and reenactments of Coleman's childhood. Included are interviews with and original footage of William S. Burroughs, Buckminster Fuller, Ed Blackwell, Robert Palmer, George Russell, John Rockwell, Don Cherry and Denardo Coleman. The film intercuts interviews, archive footage and psychedelic sequences around Coleman's performance of Skies of America with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra at the city's Convention Center. The opening of the now-defunct Caravan of Dreams nightclub serves as a catalyst for the film's production, but Shirley Clarke had actually been working on the film for a span of over 20 years. The 1968 footage with Ornette, his young son, Denardo, and frequent collaborator Charlie Haden was filmed by Clarke for a separate film that never came to fruition. Ze ozzer vun and his mozzer is a 2008 short biographical film written and directed by Philipp Hartmann. Runners, Swimmers, Banders & Trackers is a 2013 documentary film directed by Christopher Roach. Sad Song of Yellow Skin is a 1970 direct cinema-style documentary film on the effects of the Vietnam War on street children in Saigon. The 58-minute documentary was written, directed and narrated by Michael Rubbo and produced by Tom Daly for the National Film Board of Canada. Shibam - Stadt in Südarabien is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Walter Jacob. World of Comedy, also known as Harold Lloyd's World of Comedy, is a 1962 American documentary compilation of scenes from Harold Lloyd's best known films. The clips were personally selected by Lloyd, who also wrote the voiceover narration. The film marked the return of Lloyd to cinemas after an absence of more than two decades, and it included extended excerpts from the classics Safety Last! and Feet First which hadn't been publicly screened during the previous three decades. 101: Manoel de Oliveira as seen by Luis Miñarro is a 2012 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Luis Miñarro. A Massacre Foretold is a 2007 documentary film by Nick Higgins. The film was released 10 years after the Acteal massacre in Chiapas, Mexico, of which the film is an account. Tatay is a 1987 short documentary film directed by Sergio Muñoz Güemes. Singletrack High is a documentary sports film directed by Isaac Seigel-Boettner and Jacob Seigel-Boettner. Sticks & Stones is a 2014 short music film written and directed by Silas Howard. The Sun Behind the Clouds looks at China's occupation of Tibet from the perspective of the vocally secessionist Tibetan youth, and from that of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, whose reaction to the Chinese presence has been markedly less confrontational. Directed by Ritu Sarin and Tenzing Sonam, the film features interviews with the Dalai Lama and Tenzin Tsundue. The Sun Behind the Clouds premiered in the United States at the 2010 Palm Springs International Film Festival before playing at Film Forum in New York City. The film covers the 2008 Tibetan unrest, including Buddhists' protests in Lhasa and the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Tulku is a 2009 documentary film, written and directed by Gesar Mukpo. The film details the personal experiences of five young Western men who were identified in childhood as being tulkus, or reincarnated Tibetan Buddhist masters. For over 700 years tulkus have been sought out as highly revered leaders and teachers of Tibetan Buddhism. Beginning in the 1970s, several tulkus have been identified as having incarnated in the West. These new, Western-born, very modern tulkus lead lives prone to culture clash and identity confusion. The Keeper of Time is a 2009 documentary film directed by Dali Rust. 16 In Webster Groves was a 1966 award-winning documentary one-hour TV special produced by CBS News focusing on the experiences of adolescents growing up and living in Webster Groves, Missouri, United States. Produced by Arthur Barron and narrated by Charles Kuralt, the program was inspired by a survey conducted by the University of Chicago. It showed the middle-American, middle-class town to be a superficially friendly, prosperous, progressive, religious, charitable, arts-and-education oriented bedroom community whose adolescent culture, with the complicity of the adult population, was in fact clique-ridden, status-oriented, hypercompetitive, hypocritical, prejudiced, and materialistic. In stark contrast to the popular view in the mid-1960s that young people were rebelling against the values of their parents, the program depicted the Webster Groves teenagers as unimaginative and conformist. One sixteen-year-old girl, for example, declares that her dream is to live in a house down the street from the one she lives in now. Midsummer Night`s Tango is a 2013 documentary music film written and directed by Viviane Blumenschein. Mobile in Black and White is a crime documentary directed by Robert Gray. A Life Without Pain is a documentary film by Melody Gilbert about children who can't feel pain. Bill's Thud is a 2013 documentary film directed by Leo Evans. Rats Island is a 2011 biographical documentary short film directed by Mike Hannon. Diaries of Transformation is a 2011 documentary biography film directed by Anirban Ghosh. Joschka & Mr. Fischer is a 2011 biographical documentary history film written and directed by Pepe Danquart. Love Always, Carolyn is a 2011 English-language Swedish documentary film written and directed by Malin Korkeasalo and Maria Ramström. The film is about Carolyn Cassady's recollection of life with husband Neal Cassady and Jack Kerouac, and her concern that the truth about these men is being lost in their mythos. It features interviews with Carolyn Cassady and her children as well as archive footage. The film premiered at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival. American Wine Story is a documentary film directed by David Baker. Manufactured Fortunes is a 2011 short documentary and adventure film directed by Kevin Gordon. When Yellowstone Erupts is a documentary about Yellowstone National Park produced for television in 2005. It explains how scientists are trying to predict when the next supereruption of the Yellowstone supervolcano will occur and what its effects may be. Prince Among Slaves is a 2006 historical documentary directed, written and produced by Andrea Kalin and narrated by Mos Def made for PBS by Unity Productions Foundation. The film, made in association with Spark Media and Duke Media, retells the story of Abdulrahman Ibrahim Ibn Sori, a prince from West Africa who was made a slave in the United States and freed 40 years later. Where the Darkness Has to Run is a documentary biographical drama film directed by Yolanda Barker. Disneyland Dream is a home movie made by Robbins and Meg Barstow that documents their family's free trip to the newly opened Disneyland. The one-week trip was a prize that they won in a contest sponsored by Scotch tape. The movie was shot with a 16 mm handheld camera. It lasts approximately 30 minutes. An audio track was added to the film in 1995. The Barstows lived in Wethersfield, Connecticut. They flew to California with TWA and stayed at The Huntington Sheraton hotel in Pasadena. They visited other Southern California locations, including Knott's Berry Farm, Hollywood, Grauman's Chinese Theatre, Beverly Hills, Universal Studios, Will Rogers' home and Catalina Island on their July 1956 trip. Comedian Steve Martin who worked at Disneyland as a child, appears at about twenty minutes into the film, briefly walking left to right in the lower part of the frame, dressed in top hat, vest, and pink striped shirt. "This short documentary focuses on the issues faced by Haitian migrant women living in the Dominican Republic. Many Haitians cross the island of Hispaniola to the neighboring country with the hope of finding a better life. As migrants they become a particularly vulnerable population that is often discriminated against, exploited and whose human rights are violated. The Haitian migrant women were taught by industry professionals to use digital cameras and audio recorders to become efficient storytellers in their communities." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Doing Time: Life Inside the Big House is a 1991 documentary film directed by Alan Raymond. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Why was New York's most famous skyscraper dubbed the "Empty State Building?" Tour the world's most incredible skylines with award-winning author-illustrator--and captivating storyteller--David Macaulay (The Way Things Work), from France's Gothic cathedrals to Malaysia's record-breaking Petronas Towers. Way of Passion is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Joerg Burger. Plastic Galaxy: The Story of Star Wars Toys is a documentary film directed by Brian Stillman. "n response to police corruption, the private detective business has become increasingly common in India. The Bengali Detective follows the life of detective Rajesh Ji, who, along with his ragtag team of assistants, investigates cases ranging from counterfeit hair products to a brutal triple murder. When Rajesh is not sleuthing, he has big dreams of competing on a televised national talent show, so he and his detective gang form a dance troupe—which must be seen to be believed—and rehearse for their big audition. Set in chaotic Kolkata, formerly known as Calcutta, the film is shot with atmosphere and immediacy, complementing the mystery and suspense of the investigations. Director Philip Cox finds a riveting subject in Rajesh. He’s all at once a showman, a dedicated husband, and a humanitarian. The Bengali Detective is a layered, wildly entertaining film: a poignant profile of a delightful character, a gripping detective narrative, and a detailed look at the middle class in contemporary India." Quoying the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. JFK in Tampa: The 50th Anniversary is a 2013 documentary film directed by Larry Wiezycki. Karearea: The Pine Falcon is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Sandy Crichton. Self-Loving: Portrait of a Woman's Sexuality Seminar is a 1993 adult documentary video produced by Betty Dodson. Wonder Women! explores the nation’s long-term love affair with comic book superheroes and raises questions about the possibilities and contradictions of heroines within the genre. The film goes behind the scenes with Lynda Carter, Lindsay Wagner, Gloria Steinem, Kathleen Hanna, comic writers and artists, and others who offer an enlightening and entertaining counterpoint to the male-dominated superhero genre. The Referees is a 2009 documentary sport film directed by Yves Hinant, Eric Cardot and Delphine Lehericey. The Houses are Full of Smoke is a 1987 film directed by Allan Francovich. Last Dreams is a 2013 biographical drama documentary film directed by Estephan Wagner. "The Stinking Ship chronicles the odyssey of an oil toxic waste shipment and the human tragedy that followed the dumping of the ship's cargo in the middle of an African city, causing perhaps one of the biggest environmental disasters of the last decade. At the same time, the film examines how a corporation with revenues twice as large as that of Côte d'Ivoire was able to hold the local government on ransom while successfully forcing British media to back off from reporting on the disaster and the company's cover up. The film starts with a view of the ship, the Probo Koala, when on August 19, 2006 it sneaked into port and spread its toxic cargo across Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire's largest city. In recollection interviews, residents describe how a strange stench filled the city and the unprecedented health catastrophe that followed that same night. Using archival footage and confidential documents, the film investigates the scandal which started in early 2006, when Trafigura, the world's largest oil and commodities trading company, was looking for cheap ways to dump tons of highly toxic oil chemicals on board the Probo Koala, a ship they used as a floating refinery to process dirty oil bought from Mexico." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site, Rules (experiment 2) is a 2013 short/documentary/experimental film directed by Renata Ferraz. Ikuska 20 is a 1984 documentary short film written and directed by Antonio Eceiza. A Mother's Promise: Barack Obama Bio Film is a 2008 Documentary film directed by Davis Guggenheim. A Universal Language is a 2013 documentary comedy history film written and directed by Igal Hecht. Garibong is a 2013 documentary film directed by Park Ki-yong. Immortalized by Sir Walter Scott, the romantic figure of Rob Roy MacGregor looms large in Scottish history. but who was the real Rob Roy? Regarded by many as a hero, others say he was little more than a cattle rustler, blackmailer and coward! The third son of a clan chieftain, he embarked on a outlaw's life after the Duke of Montrose seized his lands in 1712. We examine his daring escapes, belief in his clan's code of honor, and questions surrounding the true loyalties of Scotland's most famous rogue. Citizen 63 is a 1963 TV series written and directed by John Boorman. Muhammad Ali: The Greatest 1964-74 is a 1974 film directed by William Klein. Behind The Screen is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Aung Nwai Htway. Museum is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Džemila Mešić, Belmin Mustajbašić and Benjamin Ramić. Battle for the Xingu is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Iara Lee. Taubman Sucks is an award-winning short documentary about a precedent-setting intellectual property lawsuit. The documentary was written and directed by filmmaker Theo Lipfert, an Associate Professor in the School of Film and Photography at Montana State University in Bozeman, Montana. An original score was created for the documentary by composer Stefan Hakenberg of Juneau, Alaska. The six-minute film explores Taubman v. WebFeats, a lawsuit that involved the complex relationships between domain names, trademarks, and free speech. As the first "sucks.com" case to reach the level of the United States Court of Appeals, the decision in Taubman v. WebFeats established precedents concerning the non-commercial use of trademarks in domain names. Presenting Frank Edwards’ FLYING SAUCERS: SERIOUS BUSINESS. Hear stories of flying saucers and ships at sea, astronomer reports, power sources, censorship, moon signals, contactees and kooks and much more. A comme Adrienne is a 2000 film directed by Boris Lehmann. The film GO IN PEACE, RAIN! is a journey following the metamorphosis of one Jewish melody, an ancient prayer of parting from the rain - "Who Brings The Dew"- and following its many incarnations which bring it to its final dramatic stance - to be the anthem of the State of Israel.From what is known, the melody began in Italy, and from there took a northerly turn to France, then West into Spain, Portugal and Gibraltar. During the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisition, the melody was spread amongst the northern Portuguese communities - to cities such as Amsterdam, London, Hamburg, Paris and Prague; and to communities in the East: Greece, Bulgaria, Rumania and Turkey. From there, it would seem, the melody moved to Eastern Europe. It was also nurtured among the southern Portuguese communities, in Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia.The tune of the melody can be found in many variations. Among these: a Flemish National Song, a Polish air, a Turkish melody, a Slavic Shepherd Song, an ancient Italian song, a Czech children's tune, the "Hallel Blessings" (Sephardic Style), the scoring for the prayer " The Living God is Exalted " as per the customs of the Jews of Rome, a Swedish ditty called "Ack, Vrmeland," a Bohemian Folk Song, an original tune sung in the synagogue in the town of Yassi, a Valachian national song, a Basque national song, the opening of the symphonic poem "The Moldau," by Czech composer Bedrich Smetana, and others. The melody left Gibraltar, crossing the Atlantic Ocean and arriving in America; and on its journey across the globe, at the end of the 19th Century, the same tune returned to the Land of Israel. The film moves around two axes: The wandering journey of the melody is its central axis. The other is that which takes the film from country to country and city to city, will be constructed from diaries of the Rabbinical Emissaries, mainly the wonderful journal of Rabbi Chayim Joseph Azulay (The "Chida"): "A Perfect Circle: A Story of Travels," which was written between 1753-1794.The film will recreate the journey of the melody, except instead of doing so on rickety wagons and boats, it will be done using Europe's modern transport of today. And because ultimately, there are people at the core of every film, the film will reach the remaining of the relevant Jewish communities scattered around the world, and those in Israel. Through the journey of the melody in the film, the richness and depths of this musical culture will be revealed, in an encounter with those who created and still create it. People who learned their daily ancient musical repertoire by ear, and continue this musical tradition upon which they were weaned. The Man That Got Away is a 2012 documentary, biographical, musical and short film written and directed by Trevor Anderson. The Journalist and the Jihadi is a 2006 TV Documentary written by Amit Roy and directed by Ahmed A. Jamal, Ramesh Sharma,and Asad Qureshi. A Era dos Campeões is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Marcos Bernstein and Cesario de Mello Franco. Ephemeral City is a short documentary comedy drama film directed by Phil Davis. Enjoy Your Meal - How Food Changes the World is a 2010 documentary film directed by Walther Grotenhuis. Los Wild Ones is a 2013 documentary, drama, music, family, biographical film written by Ryan Brown and Elise Salomon directed by Elise Salomon. Great Women Artists: Frida Kahlo is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Dominique Mougenot. Train Life is a 2006 documentary film about riders on Amtrak's Capitol Corridor. It tells the story of life aboard the train through interviews with 12 commuters. Train Life received a Best of Festival - Documentary award from the Berkeley Video & Film Festival in 2004 but was first screened at the Davis Film Festival in 2006. Flock of Dodos: The Evolution-Intelligent Design Circus is a documentary film by American marine biologist and filmmaker Randy Olson. It highlights the debate between proponents of the concept of intelligent design and the scientific consensus that supports evolution. The documentary was first screened publicly on February 2, 2006 in Kansas, where much of the public controversy on intelligent design began, as well as the starting point of discussion in the documentary. Other public screenings followed in universities, including Harvard and the SUNY Stony Brook, marking the celebration of Charles Darwin's birthday. Et slot i et slot: Krogen og Kronborg is a 1954 short documentary film written by Carl Theodor Dreyer, and directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer and Jørgen Roos. Full Battle Rattle is a 2008 documentary film directed by Tony Gerber and Jesse Moss. White Man's Country is a documentary film directed by Anthony Howarth and David R. Koff. It is a part of The Black Man's Land Trilogy. It's Up To You is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Kajsa Næss. Danach hätte es schön sein müssen is a 2000 film directed by Karin Jurschick. First Contact is a 1983 documentary by Bob Connolly and Robin Anderson which recounts the discovery of a flourishing native population in the interior highlands of New Guinea in 1930 in what had been thought to be an uninhabited area. It is based on the book of the same name by the same authors. Inhabitants of the region and surviving members of the Leahy brothers' gold prospecting party recount their astonishment at this unforeseen meeting. The film includes still photographs taken by a member of the expedition and contemporary footage of the island's terrain. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It won Best Feature Documentary at the 1983 Australian Film Institute Awards. Beyond the Moon: Failure Is Not an Option 2 is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Rushmore DeNooyer. Dzi Croquettes is a 2009 Brazilian documentary about a Brazilian dance and theater group. "This short documentary dives into the life of someone who creates formulas for happiness on a daily basis. Jeff Young is the head brewer beer for The Black Star Co-op in Austin. This is the story of how he got into it, and why he stays." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. Orphans of Apollo is a documentary film directed and produced by Michael Potter, co-directed by Becky Neiman and edited by Todd Jones describes how a band of entrepreneurs tried to privatize the space station Mir and tells the story that led to the development of MirCorp. It features prominent NewSpace entrepreneurs and space advocates, backed financially by Walter Anderson. Bhopali is a 2011 documentary film directed by Max Carlson. Inside the Game: Controlling Gamer is a 2010 documentary film produced by Miguel Casillas and Cliff Stephenson. "POSTCARD TO DADDY tells the autobiographical story of sexual abuse experienced between the ages of eight and sixteen by the filmmaker Michael Stock at the hands of his own father. Twenty-five years later he confronts his father and his family with this past – before a rolling camera. In doing so, the director digs deep into the history of his left-wing-liberal family in which sexual abuse would seem unimaginable. And yet a transgression did occur, which subsequently turned into years of sexual abuse. Why only the youngest of the three children was the target of this abuse is one of the many questions for which the film’s director is unable to find an answer – even as an adult. Yet time and again feelings of guilt and shame have forced Michael Stock to confront his traumatic past. In conversations with his siblings and his mother Margret at home in the Black Forest, he learns what consequences their family drama has had – and still has – for them today. His sister, Anja, a qualified social educator and the mother of two sons herself, has cut herself off from their father. Michael’s brother Christian, a political scientist and editor, is the only one who keeps in touch with their father, although he too condemns the abuse unequivocally. At the same time Christian remembers the good times, and his father’s bid to create for his children a happier childhood than he himself had known. Michael Stock also provides an insight into the extremes of his own life – a life that is still overshadowed by his childhood trauma. He discusses his shame, his feelings of guilt, his promiscuity and how he now lives with HIV. A heart attack in autumn 2007 prompts him to broach the subject of his trauma once again. On a trip to Thailand he decides to make POSTCARD TO DADDY, a video message to his father." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Berlin Film Festival. An Evening with Quincy Jones is a 2008 biography film produced by Julieanna Richardson. Unlawful Killing is a 2011 British documentary film, directed by Keith Allen, about the deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales and Dodi Fayed on 31 August 1997. It was financed by Mohamed Al-Fayed and Associated-Rediffusion and shown in Cannes while the 2011 Cannes Film Festival was in progress. It argues that the British and French authorities covered up uncomfortable facts about the crash, accuses Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Margaret of being 'gangsters in tiaras', and alleges that Prince Philip is a psychopath, in the mould of British serial killer Fred West, who orchestrated the murder of Diana and Dodi. It also alleges that Diana's life could have been saved had she been taken to hospital quickly and efficiently, and condemns the inquest into her death for failing to investigate why this action was not taken. It perpetuates the long-standing allegation by Al-Fayed that the Royal Family was opposed to Diana's relationship with Dodi due to his religion. Martyn Gregory, author of a book on the Princess of Wales' last days, has described the film as "ludicrous". He said: "It simply regurgitates everything Mohamed Fayed has been saying since the year 2000. Bigger Questions: The Psychic Matrix is a 2008 documentary film directed by Ron James. Original Cast Album: Company is a documentary film directed by D.A. Pennebaker. I'm still is a 2013 film written by Javier Corcuera and Ana de Prada and directed by Javier Corcuera. Puolustusvoimain katsaus 49 is a 1942 documentary short film. Being Osama is an award-winning documentary produced in 2004 by Tim Schwab and Mahmoud Kaabour. Director Mahmoud Kaabour is the founder and managing director of Veritas Films, now based in the United Arab Emirates. Co-director Tim Schwab is an Associate Professor of film at Concordia University. Bananas!* is a 2009 Swedish documentary directed by Fredrik Gertten about a conflict between the Dole Food Company and banana plantation workers in Nicaragua over alleged cases of sterility caused by the pesticide DBCP. The film was criticized by Dole for containing "patent falsehoods". After a screening at the Los Angeles Film Festival in June 2009, Gertten was sued for defamation by Dole on 8 July. The lawsuit was preceded by threats of legal action from Dole aimed against the LA Film Festival, which resulted in sponsors pulling support and the film being removed from competition. Dole dropped their lawsuit against Fredrik Gertten and Bananas!* on 15 October 2009. In September 2009, the Swedish parliament members Mats Johansson and Luciano Astudillo took the initiative of displaying the movie in the Parliament of Sweden, this being its premiere in Sweden. In late 2010 a court in Los Angeles decided in favor of the movie crew, making it possible to release the film in the USA. A judge awarded the filmmakers nearly $200,000 in fees and costs. In 2011, Gertten directed the film Big Boys Gone Bananas!* about how the company was sued by Dole. Actually I Wanted to Be a Forester - Bernd from Golzow is a 2003 film directed by Barbara Junge and Winfried Junge. Starting off with the end of WWI, this film is a play by play of the events leading up to America's involvement in WWII. Quickly covering a forty some odd year period, this film is about ninety percent tag team narration over top of stock footage. You will also be enjoying a handful of rather corny and overly dramatic reenactment scenes peppered in to highlight certain events and express the general sentiment of the period. Prepare yourself to see Adolph's face superimposed over various archival footage. Endgame in Ireland is a documentary which follows the inside story of the efforts to end the violence in Northern Ireland. It won a Peabody award in 2001. Hochseefischerei Der Deutschen Marine is a 1918 documentary short film. Facing the Music is an Australian film directed by Bob Connolly and Robin Anderson about the wish by some staff members to keep the University of Sydney Department of Music alive in the face of budget overspending. The film features the composer Professor Anne Boyd and head of the department in her struggle to run a dysfunctional department despite budget pressure. She has no training or capacity for the fund-raising that is apparently called for. The film won the Cinematic Intelligence Agency Trenchcoat Awards 2002 for best documentary or true drama, Film Critics Circle of Australia 2002 for Best Australian documentary, and the if Awards 2001 for Best Documentary. At the end of 2004, the Music Department was merged with the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. Louise Dahl-Wolfe: Painting with Light is a 1999 documentary film about Louise Dahl-Wolfe, an important woman in the history of photography. It was written and directed by Tom Neff, and produced by Neff and Madeline Bell, who previously collaborated on the Oscar nominated short-documentary Red Grooms: Sunflower in a Hothouse. Vor der Hochzeit is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Antonia Lerch. …and the friends of Kaziranga is a short documentary film directed by Kaju. The Scared Is Scared is a 2013 short documentary film directed and co-written by Bianca Giaever with writer Asa Baker-Rouse. "In 1953 Herbert Tobias was the first German photographer to work for “Vogue” in Paris. He was expelled from France in the same year however for protesting during a raid at a gay venue in the French capital. Success and failure were always Herbert Tobias’ twin companions. Having taken his first photographs as a soldier in the German army, after the war he worked as an actor and fell in love. After coming out in 1950, he escaped arrest by going to Paris where he found refuge at Willy Maywald’s studio. His initial success as a photographer was swiftly followed by his expulsion. Moving to Heidelberg, he competed successfully with 18,000 contestants to win a newspaper photography competition run by the “Frankfurter Illustrierte”. Tobias was on top again; much in demand as a photographer, his work was shown at exhibitions and he was also the subject of articles. But Tobias was not just a fashion photographer; his nude photography, his portraits and his documentary images would have graced any collection of contemporary art had art photography been more acknowledged and marketable at the time. Today, his portraits of Hildegard Knef, Andreas Baader, Klaus Kinski or Amanda Lear are now considered classics in the art of portrait photography. Sadly, Herbert Tobias was not to experience this late recognition of his work. Finding it increasingly hard to submit himself to the daily madness of fashion photography, he withdrew from photography, preferring to work in film and appear as an actor. Herbert Tobias died in 1982 as a result of an Aids-related infection. His grave in Altonaer cemetery in Hamburg was later turned into a memorial – albeit not until 2007. This film illuminates the life and work of this artist in all its breadth and diversity." Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Ordinary Bolshevism is a 1999 documentary film directed by Evgeny Tsymbal. Remembering Arthur is a documentary about collage filmmaker Arthur Lipsett that debuted at the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival. It is directed by Lipsett's close friend Martin Lavut and takes a personal approach to the story of his life through interviews with family, friends and colleagues. The film was produced by Public Pictures in association with the National Film Board of Canada, Bravo! and TVOntario. In 2007 it won the "Best Cinematography in a Documentary" Award from The Canadian Society of Cinematographers. 33 Animals of Santa Claus is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Laila Pakalnina. SHReD: The Story of Asher Bradshaw is a 2012 documentary/biography film directed by Kathy Herndl. Cher... at the Mirage is a 1990 documentary and musical TV movie. Andre Gregory: Before and After Dinner is a 2013 biographical drama documentary film directed by Cindy Kleine. Awake Zion is a 2005 documentary by Monica Haim that documents a connection between Jews and Rastafarians. Rasta is a religious movement that came out of Jamaica. The followers accept Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia as God incarnate, grow their hair in dreadlocks and smoke cannabis for religious purposes. Jews trace their history back to the Holy Land of Israel and look to the Torah for instruction. Although Jews and Rastas appear different, both claim figures from the Old Testament as their forefathers, both send a message of truth and love to their followers, both speak of Zion, both have integrated their beliefs into their lifestyles and Rastafarians also claim to be descended from the children of Israel. Haim, who relates to and enjoys both cultures, raises the question, "if we're both identifying with the same things, are we not then identifying with one another?" Shooting the Messenger is a 2009 International Emmy Award nominated TV documentary program in Qatar. Coffee Time is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Maria Fredriksson. The Staten Island Catapult is a 2005 documentary about a disgruntled commuter and his proposal to build a catapult that launches individuals from Staten Island to Downtown Manhattan in 5 minutes. The film was written and directed by independent filmmaker Gregorio Smith. The film won a Verrazzano Award for Best Documentary Short at the inaugural Staten Island Film Festival. Anvil! The Story of Anvil is a 2008 rockumentary film about the Canadian heavy metal band Anvil. The film is directed by screenwriter Sacha Gervasi, in his directorial debut, and features interviews with other musicians who have been influenced by the band, including Slash, Tom Araya, Lemmy, Scott Ian, and Lars Ulrich. The Canneries is a 1987 documentary film. Hidden Colors 3: The Rules of Racism is a documentary film directed by Tariq Nasheed. NBA at 50 is a 1996 documentary film written by Larry Weitzman and directed by Joe Cortina and Glenn Lazzaro. Inside Islam is a History Channel documentary talking about the history of Islam. It shows Islam as a peaceful religion with several similarities to Judaism and Christianity and that some people fear Islam because of the extremists who claim to act in the name of Islam. They show the Radical Islamists as just such extremists. It talks about the days of Muhammad and his clashes with his tribe that disapproved of his monotheistic religion to their empires to the nation of Islam and the Arab-Israeli conflict. It was first aired on 4 September 2002. It is also played on Wealth TV. "Fear and loathing in Hebden Bridge... The market town of Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire has a reputation as being something of a bohemian idyll, a thriving tourist destination and a haven for an artistic community, for creative industries and for independent retailers. Filmmaker Jez Lewis grew up there, and was prone to question this image of the place, particularly as he was returning there frequently to attend funerals. A number of people he grew up with have developed drink and drug problems, while others have committed suicide, so he started out to make a film asking why people of his generation are killing themselves. He reconnects with an old friend, Cass, who is suffering from hepatitis and liver cirrhosis, and has been given two years to live if he doesn't stop drinking. Yet Cass is to be found most days supping cans of extra-strong lager in the park, surrounded by characters doing the same. Spending time with Cass, his friends and their families, Lewis finds them smart, articulate, funny and occasionally heroic, despite their often desperate circumstances. Shot through with compassion, Shed Your Tears and Walk Away is bold, deeply personal documentary filmmaking, providing an insight into the lives of lost souls that is both sympathetic and urgent." Quoting Michael Hayden Rudolf Klein-Rogge - Gestorben zu Pfingsten 1955 in Wetzelsdorf und nicht in Graz is a 2000 Film. Blood Brother is a 2013 documentary written by Phinehas Hodges, Steve Hoover and Tyson VanSkiver and directed by Steve Hoover. Jimmy Johnstone: Lord of the Wing is a 2004 documentary narrated by Scottish comedian Billy Connolly, on the career of Jimmy 'Jinky' Johnstone, a Celtic FC and Scottish footballer in the 1960s and '70s and voted Celtic's greatest ever player by the fans of the club. The 'Lord of the Wing' Johnstone is so well loved by Celtic fans that two memorial bronze statue tributes to the legendary player have been erected in his honour, one outside Celtic Parkhead stadium and the other in the year 2011 in a memorial garden of remembrance on a site at his former school close to his home, where he grew up on the Old Edinburgh Road, Viewpark, Uddingston. The garden was opened by Jimmy Johnstone's wife, family and some of the surviving members of the 'Lisbon Lions' team. The bronze life size statue created by sculptor John McKenna from Ayrshire was paid for by money raised by the Jimmy 'Jinky' Johnstone memorial statue fund and the memorial garden from kind donations from the public and the business world. A plaque on the statue reads "Jinky - the Gretest ever Celt". Andermann and Us is a 2013 short documentary directed by Luis Oliva. Long After the Battle is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Regine Kühn and Eduard Schreiber. Billy Mize and the Bakersfield Sound is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by William J. Saunders. Pearl Jam Twenty is a 2011 American rockumentary directed by Cameron Crowe about the band Pearl Jam. Preliminary footage was being shot as of June 2010. Crowe completed filming in April 2011, after using 12,000 hours of footage of the band for the documentary. The film premiered at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival and also had an accompanying book and soundtrack. The documentary charts the history of the band, from the demise of Mother Love Bone, their battle against Ticketmaster and the tragedy of the Roskilde Festival in 2000. The film was presented theatrically at select cinemas in the US during the month of September 2011, and premiered on October 21, 2011 on PBS' American Masters. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray on October 24, 2011. A book, written by Jonathan Cohen, was published concurrent to the film's release. Hiker Meat is a 2013 documentary film written by Mike Harte and directed by Jamie Shovlin. Gorging is a 2012 documentary, adventure, sports and biographical film directed by Brian Olliver. Santa Cruz del Islote is a 2013 short documentary drama adventure film written and directed by Luke Lorentzen. Starring David is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Ester Gould. 10 Questions For The Dalai Lama is a 2006 documentary film in which filmmaker Rick Ray meets with Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama at his monastery in Dharamsala, India. The film maker asks him ten questions during the course of the interview which is inter-cut with a biography of Tenzin Gyatso, a history of modern Tibet and a chronicle of Ray's journey securing the interview. General Idi Amin Dada: A Self Portrait is a 1974 documentary film by French director Barbet Schroeder with English dialogue. It was made with the support and participation of its subject, the Ugandan dictator Idi Amin. The film depicts Amin at the height of his power as the ruler of Uganda. Poet of the Elephant House is 2010 documentary short film written and directed by Anna Juhlin. Right is a 2008 short film directed by Scott Stark. "In 1915, two Sikh mill-workers, Dalip Singh and Naina Singh, were entrapped by undercover police in Vancouver and accused of sodomy. This extraordinary film takes four different viewpoints on the same case to discover what actually went on…" Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. The Sugar Curtain is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Camila Guzmán Urzúa. Paraiso For Sale is a 2011 documentary film directed by Anayansi Prado. Moskwa is a 1927 film directed by Michail Kaufman and Ilja Kopalin. BigTime is a 2010 documentary biography film directed by Kara Kurcz. High Lonesome: The Story of Bluegrass Music is a 1994 music documentary written and directed by Rachel Liebling. Whether someone is Atheist, Agnostic, Muslim, Hindu, Jewish, - or yes, even Christian - all can identify at times with the cry, "Lord, Save Us from Your Followers!" The Man Nobody Knew: In Search of My Father, CIA Spymaster William Colby is a 2011 American documentary film exploring the life and career of former CIA director William Egan Colby. His son Carl Colby narrated and directed it; David Johnson produced. Steam of Life is a Finnish documentary film about male saunas directed by Joonas Berghäll and Mika Hotakainen. The movie was produced by Joonas Berghäll. It opened theatrically in New York City on July 30, 2010 and opened in Los Angeles on August 6, 2010 at the 14th Annual DocuWeeks. It was selected as the Finnish entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 83rd Academy Awards, but it didn't make the final shortlist. It is the first documentary film to represent Finland at the Academy Awards. It was also nominated for "Best Documentary" at the 23rd European Film Awards. It won the Best International Cinematography at the Documentary Edge Festival in New Zealand in 2011. Castro in Winter is a 2012 documentary film directed by Oliver Stone. Damnation of Faust: Will-O-The-Wisp (A Deceitful Goal) is a 1985 film directed by Dara Birnbaum. The American Ruling Class is a 2005 dramatic documentary film written by Lewis H. Lapham and directed by John Kirby that "explores our country’s most taboo topic: class, power and privilege in our nominally democratic republic." It seeks to answer the question, "Does America have a ruling class?" Its producers consider it the first "dramatic-documentary-musical." A rough-cut of the film was shown at the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival, the final version of the film was shown on the Sundance Channel in July 2007, and it had its theatrical premiere at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in April 2008. Almost a Legend is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Mia Vuorio. Living Goddess is a 2008 film that documents lives of three young Kumaris against the backdrop of the Nepalese Civil War. Premiered at Silverdocs, the AFI/Discovery Channel Documentary Festival in Downtown Silver Spring. The Rubber Room is a 2010 documentary film about the reassignment centers run by the New York City Department of Education, which the filmmakers claim exist in various forms in school districts across the United States. Allegedly intended to serve as temporary holding facilities for teachers accused of various kinds of misconduct who are awaiting an official hearing, these reassignment centers have become known amongst the "exiled" teachers subculture as "rubber rooms", so named after the padded cells of psychiatric hospitals. School of Babel is a 2014 documentary film directed by Julie Bertucelli. Off Label is a 2012 documentary film directed by Donal Mosher and Michael Palmieri. The Abominable Crime is 2013 drama documentary film written and directed by Micah Fink. Head Games: The Global Concussion Crisis is an expanded version of Head Games, a 2012 documentary film that examines the effects of repeated concussions and subconcussive blows, particularly those associated with sports. It focuses on American football and hockey, but also covers boxing, soccer, lacrosse, and professional wrestling. It covers findings that chronic traumatic brain injury is occurring in female sports. Also covered is physiological evidence of brain injury in adolescent athletes. Head Games is directed by Steve James, director of the highly acclaimed documentary, Hoop Dreams. It is film followup to Christopher Nowinski's book, Head Games. The film features interviews with Nowinski, Dr. Robert Cantu. In addition to other medical experts, it also extensively interviews athletes, their families, and journalists. Young Turks is a 2013 documentary film directed by Stephen Seemayer. The Pebble Beach Experience is a 2011 documentary directed by Gregory Berkin. "Director Esther Robinson's personal inquiry into the truth behind her Uncle Danny Williams' mysterious 1966 disappearance. Virtually unknown today, Danny was Andy Warhol's lover, and a promising young filmmaker. The discovery of 20 never-before-seen films William's made during his time at the Factory-- and whose many subjects include Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick, Paul Morrissey, Brigid Berlin, Billy Name and what may be the earliest known footage of the Velvet Underground— reveals a luminous talent and a stark gap in the historical record. Combined with Robinson's intimate interviews of surviving Factory members, the film gets beyond the icons and quietly dismantles the Warhol myth-making machine, allowing a deeper examination of the human fragility on which Andy Warhol's empire was built. " Quoting the syopsis from the film's Official Site. Please Don't Beat Me, Sir! is a 2011 crime fiction historical fiction documentary film directed by Shashwati Talukdar and P. Kerim Friedman. Filmmaker's Holiday is a 1974 documentary film directed by Johan van der Keuken. Rêve Kakudji is a 2013 documentary, biographical, family, music film written and directed by Ibbe Daniëls and Koen Vidal. The Winding Stream is a 2014 biographical family music documentary film directed by Beth Harrington. Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Case For Reasonable Doubt? is a documentary film about Mumia Abu-Jamal, directed by John Edginton. There are two versions, both produced by Otmoor Productions Ltd, UK. The first version was 57 minutes long and released in 1996 by HBO. The second version, which was 74 minutes long contained additional interview material, most notably with the witness and ex-prostitute, Veronica Jones. This longer version was not executive-produced by HBO. It was released in a small number of US cinemas and on DVD, first through FoxLorber and then in 2008 through Docurama Films/New Video Group. One by One is a documentary about the deadliness of Grand Prix racing, including footage of fatal racing accidents. It is narrated by Stacy Keach. The film was reissued as "The Quick and the Dead" in 1978 including the death of Tom Pryce at the 1977 South African Grand Prix. and was later released also as "Champions Forever: The Formula One Drivers". Bailey House: To Live As Long As You Can is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Alain Klarer and Richard Dindo. In/Out of the Room is a documentary film directed by Dina Hamza screened at 2012 International Film Festival Rotterdam. Mighty Jerome is a 2010 sports documentary film written and directed by Charles Officer. All Hell Broke Loose is a 1995 Israeli documentary that follows the victims of a Hamas suicide bombing in Israel a year after the attack. Trainwreck to Narnia is a 2013 documentary and musical film directed by Dylan Bergeson. Broken Land is a 2014 documentary film directed by Stéphanie Barbey and Luc Peter. Dig! is a documentary film directed by Ondi Timoner, and produced by Timoner, Vasco Nunes and David Timoner. Compiled from seven years of footage, it contrasts the developing careers and love–hate relationship of the bands The Dandy Warhols and The Brian Jonestown Massacre and the bands' respective frontmen Courtney Taylor-Taylor and Anton Newcombe. It won the Documentary Grand Jury Prize at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival. The Last Paradises: On the Track of Rare Animals is the title of a German nature documentary from 1967. It was filmed by Eugen Schuhmacher and Helmuth Barth. Marking The Distance is a 2012 short documentary animation film directed by Mike Rauch and Tim Rauch. The History of Heavy Metal is a Swedish 2001 documentary movie made for TV spanning through the timeline of heavy metal music. It starts with the roots of heavy metal and ends with the metal of present times. Through interviews and archive material, the movie tries to give answers on many questions, including "which was the first heavy metal band?". It was produced by Malik Bendjelloul and edited by Mikael Björnsson and Johan Larsson for Barracuda Film & TV. The documentary also focuses on the three "enemies" of heavy metal including punk rock, glam metal and grunge. The movie was presented in TV by Backyard Babies singer Dregen and TV host Per Sinding-Larsen. Red Shirley is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Lou Reed. Cuba may have been restricted politically and economically for the past 50 years, but its borders have remained open to wildlife for which Cuba’s undeveloped islands are an irresistible draw. While many islands in the Caribbean have poisoned or paved over their ecological riches on land and in the sea in pursuit of a growing tourist industry, Cuba’s wild landscapes have remained virtually untouched, creating a safe haven for rare and intriguing indigenous animals, as well as for hundreds of species of migrating birds and marine creatures. Coral reefs have benefited, too. Independent research has shown that Cuba’s corals are doing much better than others both in the Caribbean and around the world. Chef-d’oeuvre? is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Luc Moullet. Les travailleu(r)ses du sexe is a 2009 Belgian-French documentary film directed by Jean-Michel Carré and produced by France 2. It deals with the life of prostitutes and other people who works for the industry of sex. It received mixed reviews. Le Parisien, even defining the film interesting, complained about the "lack of genuine cinematic appeal" of the film, "more suited to TV than to the big screen". L'Express wrote that if even it "remains too superficial on some topics the real interest of his documentary is to be able to touch the depths of these stakeholders, an aspect rarely approached in this way on this subject". Queen of the Mountain is a 2005 documentary about Theresa Goell, a middleaged woman who, in 1947, left her husband and son to dig beneath the Sanctuary of Nemrud Dagh. Theresa was fascinated by this shrine to King Antiochus I Theos of Commagene, which had been neglected by previous archaeologists. Queen of the Mountain tells her story through archival footage, family photographs, oral histories, commentary from Theresa's friends and her own letters. The New York Times said it offered a "strong, rich narrative with visuals to match." Un tournage à la campagne is a 1994 documentary film directed by Alain Fleischer. Hearing Silence is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Hilary Fennell. The Shadow of Your Smile is a 2014 short romantic documentary film written and directed by Alexei Dmitriev. Learning Gravity is a 2007 documentary film written by Cathal Black and Philip Davison, and directed by Cathal Black. Trente tableaux is a 2011 autobiographical feature documentary by Quebec film director Paule Baillargeon, made during her two-year film residency with the National Film Board of Canada. It is an anthology film composed of 30 filmic portraits of her 66 years of life to date, reflecting her experiences as a woman in Quebec's changing society. The film explores Baillargeon's feminist and sovereigntist views, her struggles with her depression, her childhood, the great landscapes of her native Abitibi-Témiscamingue, her daughter Blanche and her close relationship with her dog, Watam. She revisits pivotal moments in her life, including her experiences while directing her controversial 1979 film, La cuisine rouge, in which her actresses, inspired by the film's feminist message, insisted on improvising the end of the film. The film had its world premiere in October 2011 in Montreal, at the Festival du nouveau cinéma. Jim McKay: My World in My Words is a documentary film written by Jim Mckay. The Lost Republic II is a 1986 documentary film written by Miguel Pérez and María Elena Walsh and directed by Miguel Pérez. Rave On is a 1996 short television documentary directed by Steven Dupler. The Second World War in Colour is a 1999 television program directed by Polly Bide. Global Haywire is a 2006 documentary and animation film written and directed by Bruce Petty. Adios, Paquetes de Diez! is a 2007 film directed by Ken Wardrop. Kike Like Me is a 2007 biographical history documentary written and directed by Jamie Kastner. De l'Argentine is a 1985 film directed by Werner Schroeter. Hurricane! is a Nova episode that aired on November 7, 1989 on PBS. The episode describes the fury of a hurricane and the history of hurricane forecasting. The episode features footage of Hurricane Camille of 1969 and Hurricane Gilbert of 1988 and behind the scenes footage at the National Hurricane Center as forecasters tracked Hurricane Gilbert from its formation to its landfall in northern Mexico. Meteorologists, Hugh Willoughby, Bob Sheets and Jeff Masters were shown in the episode. The episode was released on VHS home video under the same episode title and distributed by WGBH Boston video. In 2004, the Nova episode was released on DVD and featured a different cover picture and title style. In 1997, UAV Corp. also distributed the Nova episode under the title Deadly Hurricanes which contains additional footage of Hurricane Andrew and Hurricane Iniki of 1992. The UAV version of the episode has since been discontinued. American Zeitgeist is a 2006 documentary film by Rob McGann. It discusses the war on terror and religion. It was the winner to the best feature length documentary at the Houston International Film Festival. Yellow Horse is a 1965 short experimental documentary and historical fiction film directed by Bruce Baillie. Earth: Making of a Planet is a 2011 documentary film and tv program written by Billie Pink and directed by Yavar Abbas. Ladyboy is a 2013 short and documentary film directed by Claes Lundin and David Sandberg. Puhelinkoppi (1882–2007) is a 2010 documentary film directed by Hope Tucker. Lettres Du Voyant is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Louis Henderson. Koukan Kourcia is a 2010 documentary film. Peddlers of God is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Hans Heijnen. The Living Sea is a 70mm American documentary film exploring marine locales intended to show the importance of protecting the ocean, released to IMAX theaters in 1995. It is narrated by actress Meryl Streep, with music by Sting, produced by Science World, a Vancouver based science education centre, and underwater imagery directed by filmmaker Greg MacGillivray. Aidan Walsh: Master of the Universe is an Irish documentary film exploring the life of Aidan Walsh, directed by Shimmy Marcus. Où est l'amour dans la palmeraie? is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Jérôme Le Maire. Murder By Proxy: How America Went Postal is a 2010 documentary film that examines the phenomenon of spree killing, particularly in a workplace, that became known in the United States as "going postal". The Battle of San Pietro is a documentary film directed by John Huston about the Battle of San Pietro Infine sixty miles from Naples during World War II. It was shot by Jules Buck. It was released in the U.S. in 1945 but shown to U.S. troops earlier. Huston and his crew were attached to the U.S. Army’s 143rd Regiment of the 36th Division. Unlike many other military documentaries, it was claimed Huston’s cameramen filmed alongside the infantrymen as they fought their way up the hills to reach San Pietro. Houston's claim that the film was made during the battle was proven false by the research of Peter Maslowski in his 1993 book, Armed With Cameras The film is unflinching in its realism. One scene includes close-up views of the faces of dead soldiers as they are being loaded into body bags, a level of realism unheard of in both fictional portrayals as well as newsreel footage of the time. The United States Army delayed its release to the public. Because it showed dead GIs wrapped in mattress covers, some officers tried to prevent soldiers in training from seeing it, for fear of damaging morale. Award-winning director Robert Wise was dedicated, inventive, and ready to tackle any genre, all while living a quiet life amidst the scandal of Tinsel Town. With Tom Proveaux. "Ridden with crime and drugs, Bogotá was once considered one of the most dangerous cities in the world. Then Antanus Mockus – a man fired from his university job for mooning his students in a fit of rage – was elected mayor, and turned the city into a model for the rest of the world; a rare example of the power of politics to effect change for the better." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Melbourne International Film Festival. Beyond Hatred is a 2005 French documentary film written and directed by Olivier Meyrou. The documentary tells the story of a French couple seeking justice and feeling acceptance after the homophobic murder of their gay son, 29-year-old Francois Chenu. He was murdered by three white power skinheads in 2002, who beat him severely in the face and threw him into a pond. The attackers were arrested one month after the incident, and Meyrou read about the case on the front page of Le Monde. He had been wanting to make a film about homophobia for some time, and decided that the Chenu case was very emblematic. The film's French television premiere was on 19 June 2005; Eurozoom distributed the film's French theatrical release the following year. It was shown at the 2006 Berlin International Film Festival, the Paris Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, and the 2007 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. It had a limited theatrical release in the United States on 15 June 2007, distributed by First Run Features. Rotten Tomatoes gave Beyond Hatred a "fresh" rating of 89% based on 18 reviews. Metacritic gave it a "generally favorable" rating of 65% based on five reviews. Bugarach, a small village in the Corbières and the target of an online rumour which states Bugarach is THE place on Earth that will be spared the apocalypse forecast for december 2012. What began as a viral web post becomes a social trend as lost souls, sect hunters, sceptics and opportunists flock from around the world to the small village. Assailed, the Mayor and inhabitants of Bugarach struggle with their newfound fame. A Year in Port is a documentary film directed by David Kennard. Public Housing is a 1997 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. Albedo is a 1982 film directed by Jacques Leduc and Renée Roy. Musical Comedy Tonight is a television program. Satsuma moso biwa is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Atsushi Suwa. America the Beautiful 2: The Thin Commandments is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Darryl Roberts. A Trip Through the Walt Disney Studios was a documentary made in response to requests from members of RKO Radio Pictures for a behind the scenes look at Walt Disney Studios. The film was never intended for public showing; it was only shown to executives at RKO. However, footage from this documentary was recycled into a shorter featurette, How Walt Disney Cartoons Are Made, which was released to public audiences. It was shot in the first week of July 1937. The film opens with the Walt Disney Studios sign with Mickey Mouse on it. The camera then pans over to the studio building and parking lot. Before the tour, Walt Disney is at his desk with a snappy outfit with a tie and a boutonniere, with a baby photo of him on the left, and models of the dwarfs on the right and right next to him is lifelong secretary, Dolores Vought. When you see the legendary animator Fred Moore draw Mickey Mouse, he is using a grease pencil instead of a normal lead pencil, because drawings with thin pencil lines wouldn't photograph well. Shirley Muldowney: Behind the Wheel is a 2006 short documentary film directed by Gary Hertz. Monumento is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Gregorio Graziosi. Special Effects: Anything Can Happen is an American documentary film directed by Academy Award-winning sound designer Ben Burtt and narrated by John Lithgow. It was released to IMAX theaters in 1996. The Unauthorized Biography of Johnny Cash is the real story of America's most beloved music icon. Come walk the line with the man and his music, and uncover all the facets of a truly larger-than-life American hero. From Folsom prison to his final days, this moving tribute to the Man in Black covers all aspects of his career from his battles with drug addiction to his days topping the charts as one of best-selling musicians in the world. The winner of 11 Grammys and an inductee of both the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Cash's musical legacy encompasses a range of styles from the comic to the deeply religious. This extensive study of the music legend includes exclusive photos and footage from his childhood home in Arkansas, his early concerts, and a never before seen film of his White House performance for President Richard Nixon. Explore what is fact and what is fiction about this "walking contradiction," the one and only Johnny Cash. A Place Between – The Story of an Adoption is a 2007 documentary film dealing with cross-cultural adoption and aboriginal life in Canada. It was directed by Curtis Kaltenbaugh and produced by the National Film Board of Canada. Curtis and Ashok Kaltenbaugh were born in Manitoba and are of First Nations ancestry. After the 1980 death of their younger brother, at the ages of 7 and 4 respectively, they were removed from the custody of their birth mother and placed for adoption with a middle-class white family living in Pennsylvania. The film chronicles their search for identity and the meeting of their adoptive and birth families. The film won Best Public Service Award at the Annual American Indian Film Festival, held in San Francisco during November 2007. Dinosaurs: Giants of Patagonia is a 2007 film about life in the Early Cretaceous, Patagonia. It features paleontologist Rodolfo Coria and his work, with Donald Sutherland acting as main narrator. Dolphins is an IMAX documentary produced in 2000. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject. Directed by Greg MacGillivray, with Chris Palmer serving as executive producer, this feature follows a few scientists studying dolphins as they work to learn more about dolphins. The main focus is on research into dolphin communication and intelligence, along with some exploration of feeding habits and human interaction. Several species of dolphins are shown, primarily the bottlenose dolphin, the dusky dolphin, and the Atlantic spotted dolphin. Dolphins is narrated by Pierce Brosnan with music by Sting. This DVD displays through many interviews with Madonna Louise Ciccone Ritchie, better known as Madonna, why she is so adored and revered by her legions of fans worldwide. As the ultimate American dance-pop singer-songwriter, record and film producer, dancer, actress, author and fashion icon, she is also noted for her ambitious music videos and stage performances as well as using political, sexual, and religious themes. The Guinness World Records lists Madonna as the most successful female recording artist of all time,with estimated worldwide album sales of 175 million Madonna is the highest earning female singer of all time according to both the 2007 Guinness Book of Records,and Billboard Magazine. Forbes magazine has estimated her net worth at $325 million. In addition, Madonna holds the record for the top-grossing concert tour by a female artist. This interview DVD provides an incredible amount of insight to her illustrious career. Mazzaropi is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Celso Sabadin. Freedom from Despair is a 2004 documentary by Croatian-American director Brenda Brkusic about the Croatian struggle against communism in Yugoslavia. The film was narrated by John Savage. Voiceovers were provided by actors Michael York and Beata Pozniak. Among those interviewed for the film were U.S. congressmen George Radanovich and Dennis Kucinich, both of Croatian background. The Croatian actor Petar Cvirn is also in this movie. The film won awards for best documentary at the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival and the International Student Film Festival Hollywood, as well as Viewer's Voice Award at the Cinequest Film Festival. "Documentary following the preparations for the Oklahoma State Penitentiary Rodeo, in just the second year female inmates are allowed to compete. The prison rodeo at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary has been running annually since 1940, and is one of the last of its kind. The state has one of the highest female incarceration rates in the country, and in 2006 women were allowed to compete at the rodeo for the first time. Filmmaker Bradley Beesley, director of The Flaming Lips films Christmas on Mars and The Fearless Freaks, as well as the celebrated cult gem Okie Noodling, was allowed behind the prison's bars in the build up to the 2007 event, and filmed the inmates as they prepared for it. The result is an extremely moving, compassionate tribute to the human spirit. These women face being seriously injured when stepping into an arena with bucking broncos and bulls, yet the fleeting sense of freedom they feel is seen to be worth the risks. Amid the desperate tales of drug addiction and broken homes, the women come across as dignified and honest, flawed human beings, undoubtedly, but deeply regretful for the mistakes that they have made, and pragmatic about having to face the consequences of them." Quoting Michael Hayden Pourquoi l'étrange Monsieur Zolock s'intéressait-il tant à la bande dessinée? is a 1983 documentary film written by Marie-Loup Simon and directed by Yves Simoneau. The War at Home is a documentary film about the anti-war movement in the Madison, Wisconsin area during the time of the Vietnam War. It combines archival footage and interviews with participants that explore the events of the period on the University of Wisconsin–Madison campus. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film focuses on student protests of government policies in the Vietnam War, clashes between students and police, and the responses of politicians and the public to the turmoil. Among the major events included is the Sterling Hall bombing. Intended to destroy the Army Math Research Center in the building, the bombing caused massive destruction to other parts of the building, resulting in the death of a physics researcher, Robert Fassnacht, who was not involved in the Army Math Research Center. Jesse and the Fountain of Youth is a 2013 short drama documentary film written and directed by Tracey Anarella. The Treasures of Long Gone John is a 2006 documentary film directed by Greg Gibbs. Street Dogs of South Central is an 85 minute documentary film directed by Bill Marin and distributed by Lions Gate in association with Animal Planet. Narrated by Queen Latifah, it is a nature documentary depicting the lives of stray dogs on the streets of South Central Los Angeles. The story follows the life of Elsie—a black labrador mix—and her struggles in raising her pups on the streets of Los Angeles. This 85 minute film is set to premiere on Animal Planet and OWN in 2012 . Distancias is a Spanish 2008 short documentary film. Jeppe On A Friday is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Shannon Walsh and Arya Lalloo. Hating Breitbart is a 2012 political documentary concerning conservative and new media icon Andrew Breitbart and his efforts to expose purported media bias in the United States. The documentary was released on October 19, 2012, just seven months after Breitbart's unexpected death. The film was released by Rocky Mountain Pictures. Seven Dumpsters and a Corpse is a documentary film by Swiss journalist Thomas Haemmerli. Yiddish: A Tale of Survival is a 2012 documentary film directed by Abigail Hirsch. Virsa and the Magic Doll is a 1958 documentary film directed by Santi P. Choudhury. Ben Webster: The Brute And The Beautyful is a 1989 film directed by John Jeremy. Trouble the Water is a 2008 documentary film produced and directed by Tia Lessin and Carl Deal, producers of Fahrenheit 9/11. Trouble the Water is a redemptive tale of a couple surviving failed levees, bungling bureaucrats, and their own troubled past and a portrait of a community abandoned long before Hurricane Katrina hit, featuring music by Massive Attack, Mary Mary, Citizen Cope, John Lee Hooker, The Roots, Dr. John and Blackkoldmadina. Trouble the Water is distributed by Zeitgeist Films and premiered in theaters in New York City and Los Angeles on August 22, 2008, followed by a national release in more than 200 theaters. It had its television premiere on HBO and has been rebroadcast on National Geographic Channel and Turner Classic Movies. Trouble the Water is available on DVD. When We Were Kings is a 1996 documentary film directed by Leon Gast about the famous "Rumble in the Jungle" heavyweight championship match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman. The fight was held in Zaire on October 30, 1974. The film features a number of celebrities, including James Brown, Jim Brown, B.B. King, Norman Mailer, George Plimpton, Spike Lee and Thomas Hauser. When We Were Kings was released in 1996 to strong reviews, and won the 1996 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Plimpton! Starring George Plimpton as Himself is a 2013 American documentary film directed by Tom Bean and Luke Poling about the writer George Plimpton, who was a co-founder of The Paris Review and contributor to the participatory journalism genre. Until We Could is a 2014 short documentary film written by Richard Blanco, David Lowery and Yen Tan and directed by Yen Tan and David Lowery. The Noon of the 10th Day is a 1988 documentary film by Mahmoud Shoolizadeh about people mourning in Ashoora in the city of Khansar in Isfahan province, Iran. In this ceremony, which is taken place every year in the tenth day of Moharram by Shiite Muslims, the customs of the public mourning for the loss of their religious leader is shown. In this film, poetic and dramatic scenes from the battle of karbala is reconstructed. This film participated in Short Film Festival in Esfahan, Iran, in 1991. The Passaic Textile Strike is a 1926 American silent film directed by Samuel Russak and produced by Alfred Wagenknecht. The film was produced to raise public awareness and financial support for the 1926 Passaic Textile Strike, which involved over 15,000 New Jersey textile mill workers in a work stoppage lasting more than a year. Although in good part a fictional melodrama, The Passaic Textile Strike is regarded as important by film historians both for its documentary footage and for the fact that it is one of the only early American labor films to have been preserved largely intact. Warriors of Honor is a 2004 documentary film directed by Brian Barkley. Bananaland is a documentary film directed by Lloyd Bryan Adams and Richard Fortenberry. Madame L'Eau is a 1992 documentary film written by Philo Bregstein and Jean Rouch and directed by Jean Rouch. Children Of Kabul is a 2011 documentary/drama short film directed by Jawad Wahabzada and Jon Bougher. Kichot is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Jagoda Szelc. Right America: Feeling Wronged – Some Voices from the Campaign Trail is a documentary film directed by Alexandra Pelosi. The film premiered on HBO on President's Day 2009. This is the first film to document the birth of the Tea Party Movement. More Business of Being Born is a documentary film directed by Abby Epstein. The Poot is a 40-min. documentary film by Elham Asadi about Persian carpets. It was selected and screened at Amsterdam International Documentary Films Festival in November 2009. The Poot won the Jury Award for Best Short at the 2010 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival in Durham, NC, USA. This 78-minute film chronicles what it was like to live along Hunter Mill Road during the Civil War Years. Narrated by Dave Yoho, with commentary from historian Tom Evans, an understanding of the difficulty of life along this passageway unfolds as the military records, civilian journals, and archeological evidences are blended together to bring the conflict between the armies and the antagonism between neighbors to life. American Revolutionary: The Evolution Of Grace Lee Boggs is a 2013 biographical documentary film written and directed by Grace Lee. Karuvari Pookkal is a 2011 Tamil real life story film co-written and directed by IPS Xavier. The film features Smile Vidya and Julia Robert in the role of Gopi/Gopika, a transgender person, and Pallavias the widowed mother; Aswatha as sister and Haris as brother play supporting roles. A Cemetery Special is a 2005 PBS television documentary film by Rick Sebak of WQED. The documentary profiles cemeteries and cemetery-related businesses and events across the United States. The following cemeteries are covered in the film: Allegheny Cemetery — Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Mount Auburn Cemetery — Greater Boston, Massachusetts Rock of Ages Corporation — Graniteville, Vermont Hope Cemetery — Barre, Vermont Cypress Lawn Memorial Park — Colma, California Key West Cemetery — Key West, Florida Memorial Day — Waterloo, New York Lake View Cemetery — Cleveland, Ohio Oakland Cemetery — Atlanta, Georgia Birch Hill Cemetery — Fairbanks, Alaska Domestic Violence is a 2001 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. One Day on Earth is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Kyle Ruddick. Free Improvisation is a 2011 documentary film written by Doron Djerassi and Adin Weiner, and directed by Doron Djerassi. A La Orilla De Este Mundo is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ariel Di Marco. Democracy's Ghosts is a 2005 documentary film. No Land No Food No Life is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Amy Miller. Glastonbury Anthems is a DVD featuring live performances from the Glastonbury Festival from 1994 to 2004. The performances on the DVD were voted for by fans on the official festival website. Extras include A Visit to the Glastonbury Greenfields, Glastonbury by Air, a 1995 interview with Michael and Jean Eavis, a photo gallery and footage from the 1971 film Glastonbury Fayre Producer: Ben Challis. Co-producer: Caroline McGee. Executive producers for EMI: Stefan Demetriou and Jo Brooks. Executive producers for the BBC: Mark Cooper and Alison Howe. Artwork Alex Creedy. Festival Organisers Michael Eavis & Emily Eavis. Mastered and authored at Abbey Road Studios. Directors: Gavin Taylor Janet Fraser Crook, Declan Lowney & Phil Heyes. A Visit To The Glastonbury Greenfields directed and Produced by Dorian Williams. Released by EMI. Substitute is a film by French former footballer Vikash Dhorasoo. Filmed before and during the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Dhorasoo "recorded his thoughts and feelings throughout the tournament," resulting in a "deeply unconventional sporting film". Die lange Hoffnung - Erinnerungen an ein anderes Spanien is a 1984 film directed by Medienwerkstatt Freiburg. Kink is a 2013 American documentary, produced by James Franco about the BDSM website Kink.com. Signing On: Stories of Deaf Breast Cancer Survivors - Their families and the Deaf Community is a documentary and drama film directed by Barbara Allen. Objectified is a feature-length documentary film examining the role of everyday non-living objects, and the people who design them, in our daily lives. The film is directed by Gary Hustwit. Objectified premiered at the South By Southwest Festival on March 14, 2009. According to Swiss Dots Production, the film is the second part in a 3-film series Design Trilogy the first being Helvetica about the famous typeface and the third and last film being the documentary Urbanized. Song from the Forest is a 2013 documentary music biographical film written and directed by Michael Obert. Styles of Krump is a 2005 documentary film directed by Kokie Nassim Emile Habibi - I Stayed In Haifa is a 1996 documentary film directed by Dalia Karpel. What We Did Last Summer – Robbie Williams: Live at Knebworth is a live DVD by Robbie Williams, recorded between 1 - 3 August 2003 at Knebworth, England as part of the Weekends of Mass Distraction Tour, the second last venue on the first leg of the tour. The album is a DVD companion to the live album Live at Knebworth. Jan Klusák – Axis Temporum is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Dan Krameš. Kiss Bill is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Ina Holmqvist and Emelie Wallgren. Beyond the Mat is a 1999 documentary directed by Barry W. Blaustein. The film focuses on the lives of professional wrestlers outside of the ring, primarily Mick Foley, Terry Funk, and Jake Roberts, as well as some aspiring wrestlers. It focuses on the World Wrestling Federation, and follows Extreme Championship Wrestling during its rise in popularity and many other independent wrestlers and organizations. The film was originally released in American theaters in March 2000 and later released on DVD. Using archival footage and dramatic re-enactments, this documentary deals with the immediate aftermath of the 1918 armistice that brought World War I to an end. From January to July 1919, the Paris Peace Conference dealt not only with issues related to Germany but with the thorny issue of national boundaries in Europe, the Middle East and Asia. From this conference emerged Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia; the annexation of parts of Germany by other countries; the creation of Iraq; and the transfer of German colonies in Africa and China to new colonial masters. It also led to the creation of the League of Nations, championed by President Woodrow Wilson but which the US never joined. When they finally dealt with the issue of war reparations, they imposed a payments schedule on Germany that many believe provided the underpinnings of World War II. Driving Me Crazy is a 1988 documentary film directed by Nick Broomfield. A Man Without Words is a short documentary biographical dramatic film directed by Zack Godshall. Sisters of '77 is a documentary film that chronicles an unprecedented event in women's history, the first National Women's Conference in Houston, Texas in November 1977. The purpose of the National Women's Conference was to end discrimination against women and promote their equal rights. The conference was the first federally funded women's conference, and brought together over 20,000 women and men from around the United States. Sisters of '77 provides a look at a pivotal weekend that changed the course of history and the lives of the women who attended. The film incorporates rare archival footage and interviews of leaders relating this history to the present. The conference attendees included former first ladies Lady Bird Johnson, Betty Ford, and Rosalynn Carter. The women present included Republicans, Democrats, African Americans, Asian Americans, Latinas, Native American, pro-choice, pro-life, straight, gay, liberal and conservative women. The most influential leaders attending the burgeoning women’s movement included Bella Abzug, Betty Friedan, Gloria Steinem, Eleanor Smeal, Ann Richards, Coretta Scott King, Billie Jean King, and Barbara Jordan. Seeds of Hope is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Giorgos Gioulis. 29 Years - Bong, Sarah, and the King is a short documentary film directed by John Anglim. Mémoire moire des souvenirs is a 1998 documentary film directed by Lara Fitzgerald. It's a controversy 400 years in the making; who wrote the works of Shakespeare? Derek Jacobi leads a stellar cast in a quest to uncover the truth behind the world's most elusive author. We Are the Champions: Final Live in Japan is a live concert video of English rock band Queen's performance at the Yoyogi National Gymnasium, Tokyo on 11 May 1985 as part of the Japanese leg of The Works Tour. The film's title is slightly inaccurate, as Queen actually performed two more shows in Japan. The 90-minute film is not the full concert, leaving out Brian May's guitar solo and Dragon Attack. The video is also edited for time by cutting away setup waits between songs. Only officially released in Japan, it first appeared as a video release in 1992, then as a laserdisc release, before a DVD release in 2004 with new artwork, and a 2006 under the title Live in Japan 1985. The concert footage has not been studio-corrected to remove errors in sound, unlike other Queen concert video releases. It features an extensive synth playing. Doc Next: Wires is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Jacob Dwyer. Breaking A Leg: Robert LePage And The Echo Project is a 1992 short documentary film. Five Times Five is a 1939 American short documentary film directed by Frank P. Donovan. It was nominated for an Academy Award at the 12th Academy Awards in 1940 for Best Live Action Short Film, Two-Reel. The Dionne Quintuplets have a private five-years-old birthday party in their garden. De Udstillede is a 2000 Danish documentary film directed by Jesper Jargil. It documents a theatrical experiment devised by Lars von Trier. Busking The System focuses in on the very different lives of several subway musicians in New York City. We follow three fresh-faced musicians from Kansas City, MO, Seattle, WA and Cleveland, OH on their journey to see if they can make it in the New York subway and launch their career. Will they discover success or be obscured in failure? Another musician already in New York is seen actually making a name for himself as a subway performer. There is also the familiar darker story of a man who plays strictly as a means for survival. From inspiring idealism to heartbreaking reality, BUSKING THE SYSTEM finally puts a spotlight on the musicians that make up the sounds of the underground. Children of Mini-Japan is an award-winning Tamil documentary film directed by Chalam Bennurkar. Upon release, the film met with widespread critical acclaim. Get Out of the Car is a 2010 short film directed by Thom Andersen. Ten Ten is a 2008 South Korean film directed by Lee Su-yeon. ¡Que viva la lucha! is a 2007 film directed and produced by Gustavo Vazquez about Lucha libre in Tijuana, Mexico, considered to be a form of extreme lucha libre. The film follows Extreme Tiger, an up-and-coming professional luchador from Tijuana, on a journey that places him in a mask vs. hair match against Joe Líder. In addition, he follows other new talent, Angel Negro Jr. and Pancho Cachondo. In the process, the film also interviews other luchadores, promoters, commissioners, families, and fans who discuss the cultural significance of lucha libre as sport, ritual, and spectacle.The film includes music by Carne Cruda, Marziano, and Nortec Collective. ¡Que viva la lucha! premiered at the 30th annual Mill Valley Film Festival on Saturday, Oct. 13, 2007, and has won two awards; at the Latino Film Festival and at the San Francisco International Film Festival. La Otra Cara de la Moneda is a 2008 film directed by Angelo Antonucci. Gender Trouble is a 2003 short documentary film directed by Roz Mortimer. Quality Control is a 2011 documentary film directed by Kevin Everson. War & Truth is a 2005 documentary film written by Debbie Etchison and directed by Michael Samstag. Noe Kuremoto: Muay Thai Kick Boxer is a 2012 short sports action documentary film directed by Ben Tubby and Daniel Tubby. The Collective Evolution is a 2010 documentary and drama film directed by Matthew Peter Christodoulou, Mark DeNicola and Joe Martino. For Better or For Worse is a 1993 American documentary film produced by David Collier. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Masai on the Move is a 2010 documentary directed by Morten Vest and Robin Schmidt. Too Close To Home is a 1994 documentary film directed by Ori Inbar. Confessions Of A Simple Surgeon is a documentary film nominated for the 1989 Australian Film Institute Award Best Documentary. Primate Cinema: Apes as Family is a 2011 short drama film written and directed by Rachel Mayeri. Pig Country is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Andreas Koefoed. Crystal Lake Memories: The Complete History of Friday the 13th is a documentary film directed by Daniel Farrands. The Naked Room is a documentary film directed by Nuria Ibañez. My Tale of Two Cities is a 2008 documentary film written by Tjardus Graidenus, Carl Kurlander, Stephanie Dangel Reiter and directed by Carl Kurlander. Christ Alone is a documentary film directed by Jason Paul Charles. Ecumenopolis: City Without Limits is a 2011 Documentary film written and directed by Imre Azem. Nice Time is a 1957 documentary film made by Alain Tanner and Claude Goretta in Britain and included in the third Free Cinema programme at the National Film Theatre, London in May 1957. It won the Experimental Film prize at the film festival in Venice and much critical praise. It is approximately 17 minutes in length, and comprises 190 shots of crowds of leisure-seeking people taken over 25 weekends in London's Piccadilly Circus. There is no narration, and no dialogue; a soundtrack consisting of several folk songs ties shots together into groups, while there is little recorded sound from the scenes shown on screen. The filmmakers, both in their late twenties, made the documentary on a shoestring budget after receiving a grant of £240 from the British Film Institute. Chief among the film's subjects are movies and other entertainment; flirting, sex, and prostitution; and salesmanship and commodity culture. Dirty Wars is a 2013 American documentary film, which accompanies the book Dirty Wars: The World Is a Battlefield by Jeremy Scahill. The film is directed by Richard Rowley, and written by Scahill and David Riker. Classic Albums: Phil Collins: Face Value is a 1999 documentary/music film directed by Jeremy Marre. Local is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Christian Remde. Journal is a 2013 documentary film directed by Sirah Foighel and Brutmann Eitan Efrat. Rocking the Boat: A Musical Conversation and Journey is a musical documentary by Hawaii-based film maker Jay Curlee. The feature includes interviews and performances by Delbert McClinton, Marcia Ball, Rodney Crowell, Stephen Bruton, Wayne Toups, Jimmy Hall, Paul Thorn, Jeffrey Steele and Teresa James. Sometime author, musician, sheriff and Texas gubernatorial candidate Kinky Friedman also stars. The film was the opening night feature of 37th Annual USA Film Festival, April 19, 2007 in Dallas, Texas. It won Best Documentary Feature at the 2007 Woods Hole Film Festival and Best Music Documentary at the 2007 Lone Star International Film Festival. Rocking the Boat also played the 26th Breckenridge Festival of Film and the 2007 Dixie Film Festival. Source of Pride: The Making of 'Pride and Glory' is a 2009 documentary film directed by Stephen Earnhart. Lia is a 1977 short documentary film directed by Alberto Grifi. And We Made The Room Shine is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Lallier and François Clos. Forget about nuclear missiles, the decisive weapon of the twentieth century is the car bomb. We now know you can defeat a Superpower, start a civil war or just blow up your own government with a trunk-load of homemade explosives and a battered old car. From the Middle East to Oklahoma, Afghanistan and most recently New York's Times Square, the car bomb has shaped human conflict. Even today it remains the number one terrorist threat across the world. In this startling film, ex-CIA agent Robert Baer, whose life was depicted by George Clooney in the Oscar-winning movie "Syriana," uncovers the history of this extraordinary weapon for the first time. Seawards the Great Ships is a 1961 British short documentary film directed by Hilary Harris. It won an Academy Award in 1962 for Best Short Live Action Subject, the first Scottish film to win an Oscar. The film chronicles the Shipbuilding industry of the River Clyde during the early 1960s, featuring footage from the Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, John Brown & Company and Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Company. It was produced by Glasgow-based Templar Films for the Clyde Shipbuilders' Association and the Central Office of Information. It was released onto Blu-ray by Panamint in 2010 as part of their 'Faces of Scotland' compilation. It includes dialogue between shipyard workers, but this is all scripted. They had hoped to use genuine dialogue between shipyard workers, but this included too many swearwords to be usable. Latecomers is a short documentary film directed by Olivia Humphreys. Monty Python Almost the Truth Obligatory Making of Special is a 2009 documentary film directed by Debbie Harris-Balling. How TV Messes with Your Head is a 2010 documentary film written by Christophe Nick and directed by Jean Robert Viallet. Twenty years after unleashing Blizzard of Aahhh's upon the world, Greg Stump returns to explore the history of ski films. In his first ski film in ten years, Stump pursues and captures the culprits behind the evolution of both this intense genre and sport, and through unseen footage and interviews, he and his gang of misfits find themselves at the vanguard of a new age of skiing. California Is a Place is a 2010 documentary film directed by Zackary Canepari and Drea Cooper. Min søn, min mand, min far is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Kathrine Windfeld. Gigantic (A Tale of Two Johns) is a documentary profiling the alternative rock band They Might Be Giants, featuring interviews with Frank Black, Sarah Vowell, Dave Eggers, Jon Stewart, and others. It was directed by AJ Schnack and premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival in 2002. It was released in theaters by Cowboy Pictures, and on DVD by Plexifilm in 2003. The DVD includes bonus features such as music videos, vintage live performances, and more. France, Here We Are! is a 1999 documentary film directed by Michael Glawogger. The Paper Bridge is a 1987 documentary film written and directed by Ruth Beckermann. Mystery of the Maya: IMAX is 1995 short, documentary film directed by Barrie Howells and Roberto Rochín. A game inventor from Israel returns to his childhood neighborhood in Holland to reunite with five of his and Anne Frank's former classmates, only to discover a confusing truth about the village where he was hiding during World War Two. Geraldine Ferraro: Paving the Way is a documentary film directed by Donna Zaccaro. Eat, Sleep, No Women is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Heiner Stadler. Ernst Barlach - Teil I is a 1950 short documentary film directed by Alfred Ehrhardt. Jesus Camp is a 2006 American documentary film directed by Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing about a charismatic Christian summer camp, where children spend their summers being taught that they have "prophetic gifts" and can "take back America for Christ." According to the distributor, it "doesn't come with any prepackaged point of view" and attempts to be "an honest and impartial depiction of one faction of the evangelical Christian community". Jesus Camp debuted at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival, and was sold by A&E Indie Films to Magnolia Pictures. Nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the 79th Academy Awards, the film was met with controversy that led to the closure of the camp. The Beauty Exchange is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Erika Hníková. Fernando Nation is a documentary film directed by Cruz Angeles that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. I'm from Hollywood is a 1989 comedy documentary film about the adventures of late performance artist Andy Kaufman in the world of professional wrestling. The film includes interviews with Taxi co-stars Marilu Henner and Tony Danza and interviews with comedian Robin Williams, wrestler Jerry Lawler, wrestling commentator Lance Russell, and Kaufman's best friend, Bob Zmuda. Other people seen in the film include TV host David Letterman and Jimmy Hart of Continental Wrestling Association. The film's title refers to a phrase spoken by Kaufman to the Memphis wrestling audience. The documentary was directed by Kaufman's girlfriend, Lynne Margulies, and Joe Orr. Kaufman himself began work with Margulies and Orr on the film in 1983, shortly before he was diagnosed with cancer. Margulies and Orr, at Kaufman's request, finished I'm from Hollywood after the performer's death. Comedy Central aired the documentary numerous times during the late 1990s wrestling boom. Superjews is a 2013 documentary film produced and directed by independent Israeli-Dutch filmmaker Nirit Peled. The film premiered 24 November 2013 at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam. The film is entirely spoken in Dutch and Hebrew, but subtitles are shown. On Thursday, 2 January 2014 the film premiered on national television, when it was broadcast by NTR on channel Nederland 3. Sikh Formaggio is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Dan Duran, Devyn Bisson and Katie Wise. The Talkbackers is a 2007 TV Documentary film written and directed by Tzvika Binder. Archeology of Memory: Villa Grimaldi is a documentary film directed by Quique Cruz and Marilyn Mulford. Nordlicht is a 1988 documentary film directed by Rüdiger Neumann. Portrait of Boy with Dog is a 1994 short documentary film directed by Robin Hessman and James Longley. Los Ninos De Cuba is a 2013 short experimental documentary film written by Aubrey Allison and directed by Ryan Paul Curtis. The Battle for L.A. is a 2004 documentary music film directed by Darren Doane. Kinbaku is a 2010 short independent film written and directed by Jouni Hokkanen. A Film Unfinished is a 2010 documentary film by Yael Hersonski, which re-examines the making of an unfinished 1942 German propaganda film depicting the Warsaw Ghetto two months before the mass extermination of its inhabitants in the German operation known as the Grossaktion Warsaw. The documentary features interviews with surviving ghetto residents and a re-enactment of testimony from Willy Wist, one of the camera operators who filmed scenes for Das Ghetto. It premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the "World Cinema Documentary Editing Award", the film was released theatrically in the US on 18 August 2010. The film's distributor, Oscilloscope, appealed to the MPAA over the film's R-Rating, but were unsuccessful in reclassifying the film. Oscilloscope says the R-rating is inconsistent with cultural norms because the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, which is visited by school children, has more graphic footage. Standing By Yourself is a 2002 documentary that marked the directing debut of filmmaker Josh Koury. Set in Clinton, New York, a suburb of Utica, the film follows Koury’s maladjusted teenage younger brother and his rambunctious best friend Josh, who share social and economic frustrations of living in a small working-class neighborhood. They express their pent-up energy and anger through pranks, loitering and mild acts of rebellion, but their friendship is ruptured when Josh’s behavior spirals out of control and he gets in trouble with the law. By the film’s end, the once-inseparable friends barely know each other as they move into different social spheres. Koury began Standing By Yourself as a 20-minute senior project at Pratt Institute. The film was expanded to 57 minutes for presentation at the 2002 Slamdance Film Festival, where it was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize. The total budget for the finished film was reportedly U.S.$1,000 Standing By Yourself had its theatrical debut in New York in May 2002, where it received strong reviews for its harsh glimpse of alienated and seemingly self-destructive youth. Antarctic Winter is a documentary film directed by David Parer. Cuba: The Forgotten Island is a 2000 history documentary music film directed by William Knight and Mark Ubsdell "Necessity may be the mother of invention. But who is the parent of a child when the sperm comes from Israel, the egg comes from the United States and the surrogate pregnancy takes place in Gujarat, India? Welcome to the brave new world of outsourcing birth. The system is driven by law and economics. In Israel, the practice of using surrogate mothers is marred by legal roadblocks. In the United States, it's expensive. In India, it's affordable, but Western clients want white babies. Israeli director Zippi Brand Frank travels to three continents, following an entrepreneur named Doron who takes globalized business to a new level. Google Baby skilfully humanizes the people involved at every step of the pregnancy. No one would participate in any aspect of this process without having strong motivations, from the couples who yearn to have a child, to the American women who undergo the gruelling process of fertility treatments to increase egg production, to the impoverished Indian women who carry the child only to have the baby taken away at birth. Wherever she goes, Brand Frank has a knack for gaining access to moments of powerful intimacy and anxiety. She elicits candid interviews and composes images that are worth a thousand words. The film swings from absurdity to profundity, and raises myriad questions about women's rights, gay rights, science, law, ethics, economics, parenting and even hygiene. A key figure in the narrative is Dr. Nayna Patel, who started the Gujarat clinic that recruits surrogate mothers, houses them for the duration of their pregnancies, then removes the babies by Caesarean section and hands the infants over to paying clients. Patel is blunt about the risks (including fatality), yet persuasive in describing the financial benefits for the destitute surrogates. Like any modern business, her services are advertised on the Internet with a video. As the director, Brand Frank doesn't interject her own opinions or make snap judgments. She delves into the nuances and grey areas. As shocking as it seems, you might be witnessing the birth of a movement." Quoting Thom Powers on the 2009 TIFF site. Cativeiro is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by André Gil Mata. Kansas vs. Darwin is a feature-length documentary film about the 2005 Kansas evolution hearings. It was released by Unconditional Films on DVD in December, 2007, and again on an enhanced-edition DVD in November, 2008, through New Day Films. This was the first feature film for Director Jeff Tamblyn. Shot at the hearings in Topeka, it also includes interviews with most of the principals in the event and many others, including then-president of the National Academy of Sciences, Bruce Alberts. One of the most infamous spats involved Bette Davis and Joan Crawford, whose on screen chemistry belied the fact that the two loathed each other when the camera was switched off. Belle Isle Revealed is a News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography – Nature nominated film. Joan Does Dynasty is the 1986 short documentary film written and directed by Joan Braderman. The Man Who Became King is a 2007 TV documentary film written by Don Murray and directed by Edith Champagne. Wings of Silver: The Vi Cowden Story is a 2010 documentary film by Mark and Christine Bonn detailing the story of the Women Airforce Service Pilots of World War II through the eyes of Vi Cowden. As one of only 114 women to pilot fighter planes from the factories to their debarkation points, Ms. Cowden has a unique view of women's place in the world of 1943 United States. The News Tribune in Washington says, "This documentary tells the unsung story of the W.A.S.P.s during World War II. It’s a true story of women triumphing over adversity." Gold: You Can Do More Than You Think is a sport documentary film written by Ronald Kruschak, Andreas F. Schneider and Marc Brasse and directed by Michael Hammon. Todos son mexicanos is a 1975 short documentary film directed by Óscar Menéndez. Amy Muller is a 1896 short, documentary film directed by William Heise. The Team is a 2010 documentary film directed by Patrick Reed. Moscow Strikes Back is a Soviet war documentary about the Battle of Moscow made in October 1941 – January 1942, directed by Leonid Varlamov and Ilya Kopalin. the memories of the film's director Ilya Kopalin It's been severe, but happy days. Severe, because we made a movie in a front-line city. Basement studio has turned into the apartment where we lived like in casern. At night, we discussed with the cameramen the job for the next day, and in the morning the machine took away the cameramen to the front to back in the evening with the footage. The shooting was very heavy. There were thirty-degree frosts. The mechanism of the movie camera froze and clogged with snow, numbed hands refused to act. There were times when in the car, which returned from the front, lay the body of our dead comrade and broken equipment. But the knowledge that the enemy pulls back from Moscow, that collapses the myth of the invincibility of the Nazi armies, gave us strength. We knew that the film should be created as soon as possible, that the people should as soon as possible to see on the screen the offspring of the first victories of the army. The Collective Evolution II: The Human Experience is a 2011 documentary and drama film directed by Matthew Peter Christodoulou, Mark DeNicola, Joe Martino and Elina St-Onge. My First Guitar is a 2011 documentary biography and musical film directed by Nick Mead. "This documentary explores one man’s search for justice following a vicious murder in a small, apathetic town. One man’s dream of becoming a Vegas performer is abruptly cut short when he is attacked and brutally killed in his small hometown of Yuma, Arizona. The news that Amancio Corrales’ body was found floating in the Colorado River instigates a flurry of interest, but it soon fades. Area resident Michael Baughman, refusing to let the hate crime go unsolved, takes it upon himself to ensure justice is served. The truth unfolds through both interviews with Amancio’s family and friends and a recounting of the investigation which concludes with a staggering verdict." Quoting Jayson Bucy from the 2009 Pihiladelphia QFEST site. Danse La Danse is a 2012 documentary film directed by Alain Deymier. Und ich rannte nach Hause - Kindersoldaten erzählen is a 2009 documentary film written by Jörg Altekruse and Sophie Haarhaus and directed by Sophie Haarhaus and Kullar Viimne. D.I.Y. or Die: How to Survive as an Independent Artist is a low-budget documentary film released by Music Video Distributors in 2002. The film is a "celebration of the underdog" and deals with why artists do what they do, regardless of the lack of a continuous paycheck. Wrestling is a 1961 documentary film about professional wrestling in Montreal, co-directed by Michel Brault, Marcel Carrière, Claude Fournier and Claude Jutra. Wrestling was shot in the Montreal Forum, where major bouts were staged, as well as wrestling parlors where would be wrestlers learned and practiced their craft. The filmmakers had intended to make a film exposing, in slow motion, the fakery of professional wrestling, until a chance encounter with French philosopher Roland Barthes changed their minds. Barthes was appalled by what they were planning to do, and spoke urgently about the beauty and social role of pro wrestling in the lives of ordinary people. Persuaded by Barthes, the filmmakers set out to make a film that captured the spectacle of the sport, without judging it. The film shows the wrestling arena to be a sort of modern day shrine, with wrestling and its rituals taking the place of religion in the then-recently secularized Quebec. Wrestling was produced by Jacques Bobet for the French program branch of the National Film Board of Canada. Running Fence is a 1977 documentary film directed by Albert Maysles, David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin. When The War Ends is a 2011 short documentary drama film directed by Thijs Schreuder. The Kids Play Russian is a 1993 film directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Malcolm X: Make It Plain is a 1994, English language documentary by PBS about the life of Malcolm X, or El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz. The documentary was narrated by Alfre Woodard, produced and directed by Orlando Bagwell, written by Steve Fayer and Orlando Bagwel and co-produced by Judy Richardson. The documentary has been screened on the BBC, History Channel, Discovery Channel, Biography and PBS. Interviewees include Ossie Davis, Alex Haley, Betty Shabazz and Wallace D. Muhammad, among others. The Year 1952 is a 1980 historical documentary film written and directed by Peter von Bagh. Dandy Kids Documentary is a 2008 documentary film written by Darla Rae and Karen Hemmerle and directed by Darla Rae. This Chair is not Me is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Andy Taylor Smith. Bread Day is a 1998 documentary directed by Sergey Dvortsevoy. Otaku Unite! is a 2004 documentary film by Eric Bresler on American fans of Japanese culture, specifically anime and manga, known as Otaku. City of Wax is a 1934 American short documentary film produced by Horace and Stacy Woodard about the life of a bee. It won the Academy Award at the 7th Academy Awards in 1935 for Best Short Subject. Electroboy is a 2014 Swiss documentary film directed by Marcel Gisler about the life of Florian Burkhardt, alias Electroboy, model, snowboard pioneer, advertiser, author, party organizer and composer during the 90ies, who now suffers from a generalized anxiety. Hey Bartender is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Douglas Tirola. That's My Face is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Allen Harris; with writing credits by Don Perry. Backstage is a 2000 documentary film directed by Chris Fiore, chronicling the 1999 Hard Knock Life tour that featured several of hip hops top acts including Jay-Z, DMX, Method Man and Redman. Produced by Damon Dash, Backstage featured live performances by several members of Def Jam's roster and gave an in-depth look at what happened backstage. H-2 Worker is a 1990 documentary film about the exploitation of Jamaican guest workers in Florida's sugar cane industry. It was directed by Stephanie Black, and won the Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize for documentaries in the 1990 festival. It was shot in Belle Glade, Clewiston, and Okeelanta, Florida as well as Jamaica and includes cane fields and worker camps owned by US Sugar Corporation and the Okeelanta Corporation. The cane harvesters were brought in to perform the autumn harvest of sugar cane under the H-2A Visa program. The Jamaicans replaced earlier generations of Bahamian seasonal workers who in turn replaced migrant labor recruited from the Cotton Belt in the first half of the 20th century. A documentary short that accompanies the DVD version of the film states that human labor was abandoned for mechanical harvesters in 1992. The film features interviews with a United States Department of Labor official, a Florida Sugar Cane League official, Jamaican Prime Minister Michael Manley, local merchants, and a dozen or so field workers. It also includes footage of César Chávez, US Representative Thomas Downey, and US Senator Bill Bradley. Growing Up is a sex education film for schools, 23 minutes in length, first shown in April in 1971, which was made by Dr Martin Cole. It is now available as part of The Joy of Sex Education DVD and was described by one critic as "the most famous and controversial inclusion", and by Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian as the "undoubted masterpiece of this double-DVD set". At the time of its release it was said to be "the most explicit and frank film ever made for use in schools", and attracted condemnation by Mary Whitehouse, Lord Longford, Margaret Thatcher and members of the Women's Liberation Movement who attended the first public screening. Made two years before its earliest screening, Cole though regretted a traditionalist description of gender roles in the film's opening commentary. There was a version of the film shown to Aston University students earlier for feedback prior to the final version being released. It featured actual film rather than drawings of naked people, which included intercourse and masturbation. Teachers and pupils gave it positive feedback, but the absence of a discussion of venereal disease was noted by sympathetic reviewers. That B.E.A.T is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Abteen Bagheri. Iceberg Slim: Portrait of a Pimp is a 2012 documentary biographical film directed by Jorge Hinojosa. Stop the Pounding Heart is a 2013 drama film written and directed by Roberto Minervini. It is a co-production between the United States, Italy and France and had a special screening at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival. It was screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. Reporting ... A Revolution is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Bassam Mortada. The Silent World is a 1956 French documentary film co-directed by the famed French oceanographer Jacques-Yves Cousteau and a young Louis Malle. The Silent World is noted as one of the first films to use underwater cinematography to show the ocean depths in color. Its title derives from Cousteau's 1953 book The Silent World: A Story of Undersea Discovery and Adventure. The film was shot aboard the ship Calypso. Cousteau and his team of divers shot 25 kilometers of film over two years in the Mediterranean Sea, the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean, of which 2.5 kilometers were included in the finished documentary. The film later faced criticism for environmental damage done during the filmmaking. In one scene, the crew of the Calypso massacre a school of sharks that were drawn to the carcass of a baby whale, which itself had been mortally injured by the crew, albeit accidentally. In another, Cousteau uses dynamite near a coral reef in order to make a more complete census of the marine life in its vicinity. Cousteau later became more environmentally conscious, involved in marine conservation, and was even called "the father of the environmental movement" by Ted Turner. Kushaya Ingagasi is a documentary film nominated for Best Documentary at the 10th Africa Movie Academy Awards. River of Renewal is a 2009 documentary film written by Stephen Most and directed by Carlos Bolado. Lullaby to My Father is an upcoming 2012 feature documentary directed by Amos Gitai that premiered at the Venice Film Festival. The film relates the story of Gitai's father, Munio Weinraub, an eminent Israeli architect. Weinraub was a student at the Bauhaus design and architecture school in the city of Dessau when Hitler closed the school in 1933. In May 1933, Weinraub was accused of "treason against the German people", sent to prison and later expelled from Germany. The film traces Munio's route from Poland to Germany, from Switzerland to Palestine. Gitai has written that his film "is a voyage searching for the relationships between a father and his son, architecture and movies, the history of a journey and intimate memories. Like in my movie Carmel, based on my mother, Efratia's, letters, there is no chronological sequence of events. It is not a reconstituted biography, but a mosaic. The story comes together piece by piece, as a poetical association of pictures, faces, voyages, real architecture and snippets of fiction." Has God Forsaken Africa? is a Canadian 2008 documentary film. Letter to Anna is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Eric Bergkraut. Hongrie vers quel socialisme? is a 1976 documentary, short film directed by Claude Weisz. The Time We Have is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Mira Jargil. Hooligans & Thugs: Soccer's Most Violent Fan Fights is a 2003 documentary film directed by Ian Carrington. Viramundo is a 2013 documentary film directed by Pierre-Yves Borgeaud. Under the Southern Cross also known as The Devil’s Pit or Taranga, is a 1929 American drama film set in New Zealand, directed by Lew Collins for Universal Studios, who also wrote the screenplay. Originally titled Taranga by the original director Alexander Markey, but was completed by Collins and released as Under the Southern Cross in 1929, then with the introduction of sound was given a soundtrack and retitled The Devil’s Pit in 1930. The film was shot on White Island, which has an active volcano. It is one of four films which lay claim to be the first "New Zealand talkie", although dubious as the sound was added to the 1930 release in the United States. Only fragments of out-takes are left. The film probably has no connection with the 1927 British film of the same name, Under the Southern Cross, directed by Gustav Pauli. Tathagatha Buddha: The Life & Times of Gautama Buddha, also known as Gautama Buddha and as The Path Finder, is a multilingual feature film on the life and times of the Buddha directed by Allani Sridhar and is based upon the story by Sadguru Sivananda Murty. The film was released in Telugu in 2007 and in other languages in 2008. "A documentary exploring the pro-sex movement over the past three decades through interviews with activists, sex workers and performers alongside archive footage of actions and excerpts from feminist pornography. The pro-sex feminist movement began in the United States in the 1980s. Among other things it asserts that pornography must be taken outside of patriarchal control, and that in the hands of women and sexual minorities it can become a tool of liberation. Despentes (Baise Moi) takes a wide ranging look at the movement, conducting interviews with key figures in the USA, France and Spain, and mapping the evolution of pro-sex, or post-porn, from its pioneers like Annie Sprinkle to newer European work like Emilie Jouvet's Too Much Pussy! Thought provoking and explicit, Mutantes is part of a very queer feminist revolution." Quoting Nazmia Jamal from the 2011 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival site. The Cube is an hour-long teleplay that aired on NBC's weekly anthology television show NBC Experiment in Television in 1969. The production was produced and directed by puppeteer and filmmaker Jim Henson, and was one of several experiments with the live-action film medium which he conducted in the 1960s, before focusing entirely on The Muppets and other puppet works. The screenplay was co-written by long-time Muppet writer Jerry Juhl. The teleplay only aired twice: first on February 23 of 1969, with a rerun on February 21 of 1971. The Table is a 2011 documentary biography film directed by Ana Barredo. Los montes is a 1982 documentary, short film directed by José María Martín Sarmiento. Dave Mason: Live At Sunrise was recorded at the Sunrise Musical Theater in Sunrise, Florida, and released by Image Entertainment in 2002. The 66 minute DVD is the first video release for Mason since his 1981 Laserdisc release Dave Mason - Live At Perkins Palace. This performance was also released as an audio-only CD that same year. Executive Producers Pierre Lamoureux Barry Ehrman Enliven Entertainment LLC Producer Dave Mason Co-Producer and Mix Engineer Phil Bonanno Performers Dave Mason - Vocals & Guitar Richard Campbell - Bass Guitar, Vocals Johnne Sambataro - Rhythm Guitar, Vocals Bobby Scumaci - Keyboards, Vocals Greg Babcock - Drums Songs Let It Go, Let It Flow Only You Know And I Know World In Changes We Just Disagree 40,000 Headmen Look At You, Look At Me Dear Mr. Fantasy All Along the Watchtower Feelin' Alright Journey Of The Cake is a 2013 Documentary film directed by Ayşe Funda Aras. The Air Force Thunderbirds have been thrilling audiences since the 1950's. Their awe-inspiring demonstrations are seen by millions of people all over the world. Few however get to witness what it takes behind the scenes to safely execute their dazzling air show. The demonstrations only last about 45 minutes, but it takes 14 hours of preparation to make that happen. Of Mines and Men is a 1991 film directed by Raghu Krishna. Nice Bombs is a 2006 documentary film directed by Iraqi-American filmmaker Usama Alshaibi about his return to his home country to visit his family after the 2003 invasion of Iraq. The film is co-produced by Alshaibi's wife Kristie Alshaibi and co-executive produced by Studs Terkel. Gambia, The Smiling Coast is a Spanish 2010 documentary film. The Shebabs of Yarmouk is a 2013 drama documentary film written and directed by Axel Salvatori-Sinz. The End of the Game is a 1975 American short documentary film directed by Robin Lehman. It won an Academy Award at the 48th Academy Awards in 1976 for Documentary Short Subject. Filming Othello is a 1978 documentary film directed by and starring Orson Welles about the making of his award-winning 1952 production Othello. The film, which was produced for West German television, was the last completed feature film directed by Welles. Lucky Jack - Three Attempts to Stop Smoking is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Peter Liechti. Chelsea on the Rocks is a documentary film directed by Abel Ferrara about the Hotel Chelsea. It premiered out of competition at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival. The film features Ferrara interviewing people who have and had lived at the hotel and intercutting that dramatized footage of some famous events that took place there. During the film's interviews and docudrama Gaby Hoffmann, Dennis Hopper, Robert Crumb, Adam Goldberg and Bijou Phillips make appearances. "As director John Waters puts it in Yony Leyser’s long-awaited documentary, William S. Burroughs became famous “for all the things you were supposed to hide: He was gay; he was a junkie; he shot his wife.” William S. Burroughs: A Man Within examines the cultural forces and tragic biographical events that shaped The Naked Lunch author, while tracing the wide range of his influence from punk rock to performance art. Burroughs’ education and pedigree set him apart from his Beat compatriots. He privately mourned the death of his wife, whom he shot in Mexico playing a drunken round of William Tell, and his estranged son, who died attempting to approximate his father’s former junkie lifestyle. Though he chaffed at being labeled a “gay revolutionary,” Burroughs’ writing envisioned queer sexuality as something far more subversive and unstable than mere identity politics. Combining clips from Burroughs’ own experimental films, later home movies and interviews with a the writers’ close associates, friends, and admirers — among others, Waters, Thurston Moore, Diane DiPrima, James Grauerholz, Patti Smith and Genesis P-Orridge — A Man Within is both a stylistic testament to Burroughs’ incalculable effect on contemporary culture and a revealing portrait of the guarded, contradictory man behind the countercultural icon in the gray flannel suit." Quoting the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. All the Labor is a 2013 documentary and musical film directed by Doug Hawes-Davis. Project Censored the Movie: Ending The Reign of Junkfood News is a 2013 documentary film about the news media in the United States written and directed by Christopher Oscar and Doug Hecker. The film is based on the work by Project Censored, a media organization at Sonoma State University that publishes under-reported news stories. It was released in April 2013 at the Sonoma International Film Festival. Comic Book Confidential is an American/Canadian documentary film, released in 1988. Directed by Ron Mann and written by Mann and Charles Lippincott, the film is a survey of the history of the comic book medium in the United States from the 1930s to the 1980s, as an art form and in social context. Atle Antonsen er en av Norges mest prisbehengte komikere med blant annet 7 komipriser og 3 gullruter. Denne 5 timers dobbeldiskutgaven inneholder høydepunkter fra store deler av Atle Antonsens svært varierte og innholdsrike karriere. Inkludert på DVDen er selvsagt en raus rekke legendariske sketsjer fra storsuksessene Team Antonsen, Uti Vår Hage 1 og 2, Tre Brødre som ikke er brødre, Etaten, Nissene på Låven, XLTV og TVTV. I tillegg er det viet plass til en bunke høydepunkter fra mer ukjente TV-programmer han har bak seg, som En LUN aften med Antonsen og Golden fra Metropol TV og skjult kameraprogrammet TAXI på TVNorge så langt tilbake som 1995. Det hele er toppet med musikkvideoer og LIVE-opptredener med det tyskspråklige bandet DDR samt masse kuriosa og bonusmateriale. Deriblant klipp fra flere sceneshow som Team Eckbo og ikke minst hans første enmannshow Vårherre med bart fra 1996. The Palace of Knossos-did this building house the terrifying Minotaur? The Theate of Epidaurus-a front row seat for this dazzling fieat of engineering The Colossus of Rhodes-a lost triumph that has baffled experts for centuries The Lost Coty of Atlantis-join the search for this legendary lost civilization The Parthenon-a scandalous foundation for the greates wonder of ancient Greece Acropolis Inside Ancient Greece I Trust You To Kill Me, released in January 2006, is a documentary film directed by Manu Boyer and featuring the California band Rocco DeLuca and the Burden and Canadian actor Kiefer Sutherland, who acted as the band's tour manager during their 2006 European tour. The band is currently signed to Sutherland's independent record label Ironworks. Originally broadcast in the UK on Sky One in February 2006, it has also been released on DVD in North America and broadcast on the American cable television channel VH1. Other DVD release dates are unknown. Volcano: An Inquiry into the Life and Death of Malcolm Lowry is a 1976 Canadian documentary film about writer Malcolm Lowry. Written and directed by Donald Brittain and John Kramer, it was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It can currently be seen as a bonus feature on the Criterion Collection DVD release of Under the Volcano. World Safari is a documentary film released in 1977 made from footage of Alby Mangels and John Field's six-year journey around 56 countries and four continents in the 1970s. Includes a motorcycle trip across Australia, living with Buddhist monks, selling life insurance on the side of the road, and getting lost in a two-cylinder DAF van while crossing the Sahara desert. Originally titled Happy Go Lucky Highway, World Safari has two sequels, World Safari II: The Final Adventure, released 20 December 1984 and Escape:World Safari III released 26 December 1988. Do You Speak American? is a documentary film and accompanying book about journalist Robert MacNeil's investigation into how different people throughout the United States of America speak. The book and documentary look at the evolution of America's way of speaking from the English language to various ways of speaking in regions throughout the country. Divisions of ethnicity, geography and social status and how they affect how Americans communicate are addressed. As part of the project, MacNeil traveled across the country conducting interviews with ordinary people as well as experts such as William Labov. In the United States, the documentary was broadcast in several parts on PBS. The companion book was co-authored by MacNeil and William Cran. DAM/AGE traces writer Arundhati Roy's bold and controversial campaign against the Narmada dam project in India, which will displace up to a million people. The author of The God of Small Things, which won the prestigious Booker Prize in 1998, Roy has also published The Cost of Living, a book of two essays critical of India's massive dam and irrigation projects, as well as India's successful detonation of a nuclear bomb. In her most recent book Power Politics, Roy challenges the idea that only experts can speak out on such urgent matters as nuclear war, the privatization of India's power supply by Enron and issues like the Narmada dam project.As the film traces the events that led up to her imprisonment, Roy meditates on her own personal negotiation with her fame, the responsibility it places on her as a writer, a political thinker and a citizen.As she puts it in DAM/AGE, "The God of Small Things became more and more successful and I watched as in the city I lived in the air became blacker, the cars became sleeker, the gates grew higher and the poor were being stuffed like lice into the crevices, and all the time my bank account burgeoned. I began to feel as though every feeling in The God of Small Things had been traded in for a silver coin, and I wasn't careful I would become a little silver figurine with a cold, silver heart." The film shows how Roy chose to use her fame to stand up to powerful interests supported by multinational corporations and the Indian government. For her, the story of the Narmada Valley is not just the story of modern India, but of what is happening in the world today, "Who counts, who doesn't, what matters, what doesn't, what counts as a cost, what doesn't, what counts as collateral damage, what doesn't." In a clear and accessible manner, the film weaves together a number of issues that lie at the heart of politics today: from the consequences of development and globalization to the urgent need for state accountability and the freedom of speech. Mr. Dial Has Something to Say is a 2007 documentary film directed by Celia Carey. Fight for the Planet is a 2009 Canadian film. Directed, produced, and edited by Colin Carter, Fight for the Planet is a call to action film about global warming, and the future of our society as it steps into a new environmentally conscious era. Fight for the Planet was 16 year old director Colin Carter's first feature film, and is the first in a row of award winning features. The film went on the tour the international film festival circuit in the summer of 2010, and later was distributed for curricular use in Ontario high schools. A page about the film and the Director is published in the current Ontario grade 10 science textbook. Tom Zé: Liberated Astronaut is a 2010 film directed by Ígor Iglesias González. One Ocean: No Limits is a 2014 documentary film directed by Sarah McCann. Neruda is a 2004 documentary film directed by Ebbo Demant. Le Volcan interdit is a 1966 French documentary film directed by Haroun Tazieff. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film is set in Zaire, following an expedition exploring the crater of the Niragongo volcano of the Virunga chain, whose eruptions are known for their violence and their massive lava flows. Felicita ad Oltranza is a 1982 film directed by Paolo Quaregna. More Than Famous is a documentary film about Salvadoran-American boxer Carlos 'Famoso' Hernández. It was produced and directed by Graham Rich. The film follows Hernández's fights in 2001 against Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Juan Angel Macias. It won the Grand Festival Award at the 2003 Berkeley Video & Film Festival. The film was the first collaboration between director Graham Rich and producer Evan Klinger, who both attended the University of California, Santa Cruz. El cuaderno de barro is a 2011 documentary film written by Isa Campo & Isaki Lacuesta and directed by Isaki Lacuesta. Birth Story: Ina May Gaskin and The Farm Midwives is a 2011 historical and biographical documentary film directed by Sara Lamm and Mary Wigmore. Man in the Shadows is a film directed by Peter von Bagh, Elina Katainen and Iikka Vehkalahti. The Great American Cowboy is a 1973 documentary film by Kieth Merrill. The film, which won the 1973 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, is about the battle between two rodeo stars for the world championship: veteran Larry Mahan and newcomer Phil Lyne. Al Nisa: Black Muslim Women in Atlanta's Gay Mecca is a documentary film directed by Red Summer. Une Enfance A Natashquan is a 1992 documentary film. A Nourishing Journey is a 2012 short documentary film directed by 5th Grade Students at South Shore K-8, Seattle. We Die is a 2011 documentary short film written and directed by Josephine Links. Let It Be is a 1970 documentary film about the Beatles rehearsing and recording songs for the album Let It Be in January 1969. The film features an unannounced rooftop concert by the group, their last performance in public. Released just after the album, it was the final original Beatles release. The film was originally planned as a television documentary which would accompany a concert broadcast. When plans for a broadcast were dropped, the project became a feature film. Although the film does not dwell on the dissension within the group at the time, it provides some glimpses into the dynamics that would lead to the Beatles' break-up. The film has not been officially available since the 1980s, although original and bootleg copies of home video releases still circulate. The film's director Michael Lindsay-Hogg stated in 2011 that a DVD and Blu-ray was possibly going to be released sometime in 2013, but this was not likely given the film's negative portrayal of The Beatles. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr collectively won an Academy Award for Best Original Song Score for the film. Mr. Frank – Radio Man is a 2012 film. The Grand Olympics is a 1961 Italian documentary film, directed by Romolo Marcellini, made in 1961. It was nominated as Best Documentary Feature at 34th Academy Awards in 1961. A love and a marriage that spanned decades. Drawing on a lifetime of her family's home movies and interviews made over 12 years, filmmaker Cindy Kleine uncovers the truths to her parents' 59-year-long marriage -- which was anything but happily ever after. La Robe du temps is a 2008 film from Niger directed by Malam Saguirou, whose documentaries have won a number of international awards. Ginga is a 2005 sport documentary film written and directed by Tocha Alves, Hank Levine and Marcelo Machado. Silo is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Leandro Bartoletti. The Seine Meets Paris is a 1957 French short documentary film directed by Joris Ivens from a screenplay by Jacques Prévert. Told from the perspective of a boat trip through the city, it features scenes of daily life along the river. The film won the short film Palme d'Or at the 1958 Cannes Film Festival. In Cane for Life is a 2002 documentary film directed by Jorge W. Atalla. How to Sharpen Pencils is a 2013 short comedy documentary film written by David Rees and directed by Kenneth Price. Mrs. Carey's Concert is a 2011 documentary film directed by Bob Connolly and Sophie Raymond. Fighting Spirit is a 2013 short film directed by Linda Hamback. Song is a 2013 documentary experimental short film directed by Nathaniel Dorsky. Whats Up? is a 2010 short documentary news film written and directed by Kim Sheridan. All Tomorrow's Parties is a 2009 documentary film directed by All Tomorrow's People and Jonathan Caouette covering the history of the long running All Tomorrow's Parties music festival. Described as a "post-punk DIY bricolage", the film was created using footage generated by the fans and musicians attending the events themselves, on a multitude of formats including Super8, camcorder and mobile phone. All Tomorrow's People is a name representing the contributions of these attendees. The film features music and performance from Belle And Sebastian, Grizzly Bear, Sonic Youth, Battles, Portishead, Daniel Johnston, Grinderman, Lightning Bolt, David Cross, Animal Collective, The Boredoms, Les Savy Fav, Mogwai, Octopus Project, Slint, Dirty Three, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, the Gossip, GZA, Roscoe Mitchell, Seasick Steve, Iggy and the Stooges, A Hawk and a Hacksaw, Fuck Buttons, Micah P Hinson, Two Gallants, The Mars Volta, Akron/Family, Jah Shaka, Saul Williams, Shellac, Patti Smith and John Cooper Clarke. Life Below the Line: The World Poverty Crisis, a one-hour television program directed by David Mckenzie. Forerunners is a 2011 documentary film directed by Simon Wood. Who Killed Jenny Langby? is a 1974 Australian TV documentary. Patagonia se Levanta is a documentary film directed by Brian Lilla. The Last Tasmanian is 1978 Documentary written by Tom Haydon and Rhys Jones and directed by Tom Haydon. Queen of Splinters is a 2012 short documentary film written by Eva-Maria Koskinen and Anna-Sofia Nylund, and directed by Anna-Sofia Nylund. The Blues is a 2013 short music documentary film written and directed by Antoine Masson MacLean. La Mémoire maritime des arabes is a 2000 documentary film. The Little Prince's Rap Against the Wicked Souls is a film directed by Paulo Caldas and Marcelo Luna. Ácratas is a 2000 Uruguayan documentary film. It was written and directed by Virginia Martínez, and premiered in Argentina in 2004. The film is about anarchism in Uruguay, and gives controversial insight into the minority and indigenous movement within the libertarian movement of the 30's. It has received critical acclaim for its comprehensive documentation, and for the way its construction captivates the attention of the viewer, reinforcing the impact of the film. The film, long esteemed by cinephiles in Buenos Aires, also received recognition, winning First Prize for Documentary at the Festival del Cinema Latinoamericano di Trieste, and the second prize at the Festival "Contra el silencio todas las voces" of Mexico. Nida's Expression is a 2008 documentary short film written and directed by Algirdas Tarvydas. Productivity and Performance by Alex K. is a 1984 documentary short film written and directed by Anthony Currie. Tattoo Nation is a documentary film directed by Eric Schwartz. Butterflies and Hurricanes is a documentary which follows Alisanne Casey, an American Muay Thai boxer, 24 hours before, during and after one of her fights. Filmed during a championship match in Las Vegas, the film takes the audience behind the scenes as she goes through the process of weighing-in and preparing herself mentally and physically for her bout.From Salt Lake to Bangkok to New York City, interviews with Ali's trainers, peers and colleagues offer insights into the impact of fighting on her life. Featuring a soundtrack with new songs by Gina Volpe (Bantam, Lunachicks), Butterflies and Hurricanes gives us a glimpse into one woman's struggle to achieve professional and personal fulfillment by virtue of her own blood, sweat and tears. Baavra Mann is a documentary film on the Indian filmmaker Sudhir Mishra directed by Jaideep Varma. Though ostensibly a biographical film, it is equally a portrait of the decline of the Indian creative and intellectual scene as touched by Sudhir Mishra’s life, especially with regard to Sagar University, the theatre scene in Delhi and the film culture of Mumbai. The film was begun and completed as a part-time film project through 2010 to 2013. The film’s production house was called Saturday Films because the majority of the work used to happen on Saturdays. In 2013 the film was taken over by Films Division, India, who is now the official producers. The film was completed in 2013 and travelled to festivals in New York Indian Film Festival and DC South Asian Festival – it won the “Best Documentary” award at the latter. 2011 was the 82nd year in the extraordinary life of arguably the greatest saxophone player in the world, Sonny Rollins. Four decades ago, as a young filmmaker and aspiring musician, Dick Fontaine followed Rollins up onto the Williamsburg Bridge in Manhattan during one of his legendary escapes from the perils of 'the jazz life'. Today, still resisting stereotype and compromise, and revered by a new generation of young musicians, Rollins continues his single-minded search for meaning in his music and his life. Dick Fontaine's film is built around the explosive energy of Sonny's 80th Birthday Concert, where legendary figures Roy Haynes, Jim Hall and Ornette Coleman join him to celebrate his journey so far, his music and its future for a new generation. 14 Degrees - A Paranormal Documentary is a documentary film directed by Michael Baker. The Battles of Coronel and Falkland Islands is a 1927 British documentary film directed by Walter Summers. The film focuses on the naval warfare around the Battle of Coronel and Battle of the Falkland Islands during the First World War. It was the last in a successful series of documentary reconstructions of First World War battles by British Instructional Films made between 1921 and 1927. The film was produced at Cricklewood Studios using a mixture of historic footage and filmed recreations of events in a docudrama format. The film cost an estimated £18,000 to make. It grossed £70,000 in Britain alone. Spartree is a 1978 short documentary film directed by Phillip Borsos. When Dinosaurs Roamed America is a two-hour American television program that first aired on Discovery Channel in 2001. It was directed by Pierre de Lespinois and narrated by actor John Goodman. The featured dinosaurs were designed by Paleo-artist and art director Mark Dubeau, noted for creating dinosaurs for many other Discovery Channel and National Geographic specials. The dinosaur animation was accomplished by animator Don Waller at Meteor Studios, in Montreal, Canada. The music was composed by Christopher Franke. When Dinosaurs Roamed America premiered to 5 million viewers. KaTalk Project is a 2014 documentary film directed by Kim Jeong-Wook. Blue Collar Comedy Tour Rides Again is the 2004 direct to video sequel to the film Blue Collar Comedy Tour: The Movie. A Vision of Blindness is 2008 documentary film directed by David Gelb, Francisco Meirelles and Pedro Morelli. The Personal File of Anna Akhmatova is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Semyon Aranovich. I Was A Jewish Sex Worker is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Phillip B. Roth. New Muslim Cool is a 2009 documentary film directed and produced by Jennifer Maytorena Taylor. The film was initially released on POV and follows the life of Hamza Perez, a Puerto Rican American Rap artist who converted to Islam after he decided to quit his life as a drug dealer. Hamza spends his time on the streets and jail cells spreading the message of Islam to at-risk youth and communities. The film also features the hip-hop group M-Team, a musical collaboration between Hamza and his brother Suliman Perez. The duo utilize the medium of hip-hop to spread their faith and religious message to other young people. In the midst of his journey to establish a new religious community and a new family in the North side of Pittsburgh, Hamza is forced to face the reality of being an active Muslim in a post 9/11 America when the community’s Mosque gets raided by the FBI. Rudolf Nureev: Rebellious Demon is a 2012 documentary film written Vilen Vizilter and Tatyana Malova and directed by Tatyana Malova. South of the Border is a 2009 American documentary film directed by Oliver Stone. The documentary premiered at the 2009 Venice Film Festival. Writer for the project Tariq Ali calls the documentary "a political road movie". Stone stated that he hopes the film will help people better understand a leader who is wrongly ridiculed "as a strongman, as a buffoon, as a clown." The film has Stone and his crew travel from the Caribbean down the spine of the Andes in an attempt to explain the "phenomenon" of Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, and account for the continent's "pink tide" leftward tilt. A key feature is also Venezuela's recent Bolivarian revolution and Latin America's political progress in the 21st century. In addition to Chávez, Stone sought to flesh out several other Latin American presidents whose policies and personalities generally get limited, or according to Stone, biased media attention in the United States and Europe, notably: Evo Morales of Bolivia; Cristina Kirchner and former president Néstor Kirchner of Argentina; Rafael Correa of Ecuador; Raúl Castro of Cuba; Fernando Lugo of Paraguay; and Lula da Silva of Brazil. American Tongues is a 1988 sociolinguistic documentary examining American English dialects and accents and perceptions thereof. It was produced and directed by Louis Alvarez and Andrew Kolker. The Center for New American Media won a Peabody Award for the film in 1987. Hayal is a 1990 documentary film directed by M. Solakhan and Manfred Blank. Festival Express is a 2003 documentary film about the 1970 train tour of the same name across Canada taken by some of North America's most popular rock bands, including Grateful Dead, Janis Joplin, The Band and Delaney & Bonnie & Friends. The film combines live footage shot during the 1970 concerts, as well as footage aboard the train itself, interspersed with present-day interviews with tour participants sharing their often humorous recollections of the events. The film, released by THINKFilm, was produced by Gavin Poolman together with John Trapman, and directed by double Grammy Award-winner Bob Smeaton, with music produced by Eddie Kramer, and features original footage shot in 1970 by Academy Award-winning cinematographer Peter Biziou. The original 1970 footage was filmed by director Frank Cvitanovich. A DVD release followed the film's 2003 theatrical run. Total Badass is a 2010 documentary by American director / producer Bob Ray that first premiered on May 19, 2010. Forgoing the usual route of signing a deal with a film distributor, the film will instead be showcased at different venues around the United States, along with some of the filmmaker's other independent films; such as the 2007's documentary Hell on Wheels. For Once in My Life is a 2009 documentary film directed by Jim Bigham and Mark Moormann. We get a bizarre look at the life of Adolf Hitler, including interviews with Adolf's sister and the loyal Nazis who were there during his last days in the Berlin bunker. Un' Ora prima di Amleto, più Pinocchio is an Italian film which was released in 1965. Beyond The Edge is a 1987 documentary written and directed by Warren Miller. Kijima Stories is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Laëticia Mikles. Cadillac Desert: Water and the Transformation of Nature is a 1997 American four-part documentary series about water, money, politics, and the transformation of nature. The film was produced and directed by Jon Else and Linda Harrar. Women in Boxes is the first film to uncover the Unsung Hero behind the musician. The devoted Magic Assistant who distorts her body into impossible positions while the magician cuts her in pieces, stabs her, sets her on fire, crushes her and restores her to life with a dramatic Taa Daa. "In his 1971 standard work Open Veins in Latin America, Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano describes the centuries of economic exploitation of his part of the world. Almost 40 years later, Uruguayan documentary filmmaker Gonzalo Arijon reevaluates the situation in Eyes Wide Open -- A Journey through Today's South America. His search takes him from the soybean plantations of the Brazilian Amazon and the tin mines of Bolivia to the deep jungles of Ecuador. Arijon, winner of the Joris Ivens Award in 2007 for Stranded, shows how the current crop of leftist leaders in these countries are attempting to resist the squandering of natural resources by large, international companies. The principal culprits he identifies are the neoliberal ideology and the ensuing wave of privatizations. Arijon's politically committed film allows the local populations to speak for themselves, interspersing this with archive footage of speeches by the likes of Hugo Chávez (Venezuela), Lula da Silva (Brazil), and Evo Morales (Bolivia). Galeano himself also talks -- sometimes in poetic language -- about how the rise of socialist governments in the early 21st century is benefitting Latin America, and what more can be done." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. Evaporating Borders is a 2014 documentary and drama film written and directed by Iva Radivojevic. L’Ultimo Gattopardo: Ritratto Di Goffredo Lombardo is a 2010 Italian documentary film written and directed by Giuseppe Tornatore. The Turtle's Rage is a 2012 documentary film written by Pary El-Qalqili and Silvia Wolkan and directed by Pary El-Qalqili. With the advent of the WWF (and later, the WWE), female wrestling entered a new phase in its popularity, with the top stars in the game earning considerable amounts of money, and taking up the sport professionally. This film takes a look at the trailblazers of the sport--the women who bucked tradition and decided to become wrestlers in the 1940s and '50s. The recollections veer dramatically between good and bad times, making some fascinating viewing for any enthusiasts of the sport. With all-time greats such as The Fabulous Moolah, Gladys "Killem" Gillem, and Ella Waldek dipping into the memory banks, LIPSTICK & DYNAMITE is a fond look back on a bygone era for women's wrestling. American Jerusalem: Jews and the Making of San Francisco is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Marc Shaffer. There's Always Next Season is a 2014 documentary film directed by Carl Christian Lein Størmer. Sinking of the Lusitania: Terror at Sea is an English-German Docu-drama produced in 2007. This 90-minute film is a dramatization of the sinking of the RMS Lusitania on May 7, 1915 by a German U-boat, U-20. The outside filming was done in South Africa; the inside submarine scenes were filmed in Munich using the 25-year-old U-boat-model of the film Das Boot. Despues de La Neblina is a film directed Anne Slick and Danielle Bernstein. The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl is a 1993 German documentary film about the life of German film director Leni Riefenstahl, directed by Ray Müller. A Century of Women is a 1994 TV Mini-Series. Gitmo: The new rules of war is a Swedish documentary about the Guantanamo Bay detention camp by Erik Gandini and Tarik Saleh. The film features interviews with Janis Karpinski, Mehdi Ghezali and Geoffrey Miller, among others. Gitmo premiered at IDFA in 2005 and reached mainstream theaters in Sweden on 10 February 2006. In 2003, a year after Swedish citizen Mehdi Ghezali was detained at "Gitmo", which sparked some media interest in Sweden, Erik and Tarik started filming the documentary and visited the base on a guided tour of selected areas. Mehdi Ghezali was released in 2004, and was interviewed for the film. In 2006, the musical score composed by Krister Linder won first prize for music in a TV feature at the Festival international Musique et Cinéma in Auxerre, France. The Return Of The Pri is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Patricio Salinas. A Normal Life Please is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Tokachi Tsuchiya. The Medicine Game is a 2013 drama and documentary film directed by Lukas Korver. Death on a Factory Farm is a 2009 television documentary film concerning the animal rights abuses at the Wiles hog farm, and the subsequent investigation and trial. The Resurrection Tomb Mystery is a television documentary program produced and first broadcast on the Discovery Channel and Vision TV in Canada on Thursday, April 12 at 10pm e/p during Easter week 2012. The documentary was executive produced by Simcha Jacobovici, Ric Esther Bienstock and Felix Golubev of Associated Producers, Ltd. The documentary was preceded by a companion book authored by James Tabor, Professor and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte, and Jacobovici entitled, The Jesus Discovery. The documentary and book claimed to have revealed the earliest evidence of resurrection of Jesus ever discovered. The Man With 80 Wives is a British documentary that aired on Channel 4 on July 19, 2006. It featured journalist Sanjiv Bhattacharya, trying to find the whereabouts of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints leader, Warren Jeffs. The Bastard Sings the Sweetest Song is a 2012 family, drama documentary film directed by Christy Garland. La ruée vers l'art is a documentary film directed by Marianne Lamour. Fassbinder's Women is a 2000 German documentary film directed by Rosa von Praunheim. The original German title translate as Fassbinder Was the Only One for Me: The Willing Victims of Rainer Werner F. The film consists of several interviews with the women who linked their professional and personal lives to the career of German film director Rainer Werner Fassbinder. These include: Hanna Schygulla, the director's favorite actress; Ursula Strätz, who founded the Munich Action Theater, where Fassbinder began his career on the stage and actresses Barbara Valentin and Brigitte Mira, the star of Fassbinder’s Fear Eats the Soul. Four of the director’s male collaborators: assistant director Harry Baer; cinematographer Michael Ballhaus; musician Peer Raben and producer Peter Berling, also talk about Fassbinder's working methods and personality. The film opens with actress Irm Hermann, who worked in nineteen films with Fassbinder while he made life a living hell for her. Juliane Lorenz, Fassbinder’s last female partner, film editor and executor of his estate after his death, is also interviewed. Frank Kearns: American Correspondent is a documentary film directed by Gerald Davis. Black Wind, White Land is a 1993 documentary film, researched and produced by the founders of the Chernobyl Children's Project International and explores the Chernobyl nuclear disaster of 1986 and its consequences for the handicapped development of the people in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine. The film was directed by Gene Kerrigan and produced by Ali Hewson, the wife of U2's singer Bono. Landslide: A Portrait of President Herbert Hoover is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Chip Duncan. Kiran is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Alexander Riedel and Bettina Timm. Neurosia: 50 Years of Perversity is a 1992 German film directed by Rosa von Praunheim. The film is a mockumentary, an autobiography of Rosa von Praunheim, framed as murder mystery in which the director is the victim. All The Years Of Trying is a 2009 documentary film directed by Dom Shaw. Margo is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Frank Stiefel. Gordonia is a 2010 feature documentary film directed and produced by New Zealand filmmaker Tom Reilly. Filmed over the course of seven years Gordonia follows the struggle between West Auckland landowner Graham Gordon and the former Waitakere City Council over Gordon's car wrecking business and illegal dwellings. As well as Gordon's story, the film traces the lives of several tenants living on his property, some of whom have mental health problems and claim to have nowhere else to live. Ulrike Ottinger - Nomad from the Lake is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Brigitte Kramer. Mothers of Life is a 2002 documentary film from Finland, written and directed by Anastasia Lapsui and Markku Lehmuskallio. A Just War? is a documentary film directed by Maj Wechselmann about the destruction of the Iraq civilian infrastructure during the 1990-1991 Gulf War. Bonsai People: The Vision of Muhammad Yunus is a documentary drama film directed by Holly Mosher. High School Musical: The Music in You is a documentary from Award winning filmmaker Barbara Kopple as she follows students from Arlington Heights and Western Hills High School in Fort Worth, Texas as they prepare to put on their version of the Disney hit High School Musical. The Summer Theatre show was directed by Ann Hunter and Julia Worthington. The production was attended by over 2800 people during its four day run. The documentary premiered in October 2007. La Madonna di Pompei a Napoli is a 1948 documentary film. A iucata is a 2013 short film written and directed by Michele Pennetta. Gutter Punks is a documentary film directed by Brent Sims. The true story of the troubled marriage of Jaap and Manja Polak, who lived in German occupied Amsterdam. Insight to Strengths is a 2012 short, documentary, comedy and drama film directed by Jen Ackerman. Persona Non Grata is a 2003 documentary film directed by Oliver Stone for the HBO series America Undercover about the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. It includes interviews with Israeli Prime Ministers Ehud Barak and Benjamin Netanyahu, Palestinian President Yasser Arafat, and various Palestinian activists. Geologist and explorer John Wesley Powell undertakes a dangerous water trip down the Colorado River with a crew of adventure-seekers. Xmas Without China is a 2013 documentary, comedy, family film directed by Alicia Dwyer. A film about pit bulls and those who love and defend the breed, Beyond the Myth explores the contributing factors behind the public's generalized fear of pit bulls and examines the conflict existing between advocates and opponents of Breed Specific Legislation. Cinema Cinemas is a 1987 Documentary film directed by Claude Ventura. Emerald Cowboy is a docudrama film directed by Andrew Molina. Anna Zeit Land is a 1993 film directed by Christoph Hübner. The Singing Revolution is a documentary film created by James Tusty and Maureen Castle Tusty about the nonviolent Singing Revolution in Estonia in which hundreds of thousands of Estonians gathered publicly between 1986 and 1991, in an effort to end decades of Soviet occupation. The revolutionary songs they created anchored Estonia’s non-violent struggle for freedom. If That's So, Then I'm a Murderer is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Walter Manoschek. Al Franken: God Spoke is a 2006 documentary film starring political commentator and current United States Senator Al Franken. The film was made by the same producers of The War Room. It was released in April 2006 at the Tribeca Film Festival and was released in the USA in September 2006 starting in New York City. Sweden: Heaven and Hell is an Italian mondo film from 1968 directed by Luigi Scattini. The English language print was narrated by British actor Edmund Purdom. The film which is made up of nine segments focuses on different aspects of sexuality in Sweden such as lesbian nightclubs, porn films, swinging lifestyle of married couples and sex education of teenagers. The film also examines drug addiction, alcoholism and suicides in Sweden. The film also featured the debut of the song "Mah Nà Mah Nà" by Piero Umiliani, later made famous by The Muppets. America's Most Hated Family in Crisis is a 2011 BBC documentary film presented and written by Louis Theroux, who revisits the family at the core of the Westboro Baptist Church. It is a follow up to 2007's The Most Hated Family in America, also written and presented by Theroux. The documentary first aired on BBC Two in the United Kingdom on 3 April 2011 at 9pm. It received mainly positive reviews from critics, with the Metro calling it "terrifying". The documentary had 3.33 million viewers and was BBC Two's most watched programme of that week. John Paul II Vol 3: 1992-1995: Witness to Peace is a 2006 biographical documentary film. Confidencias de un cineasta, Alejandro Galindo is a 1990 short documentary film written and directed by Ana Rebuelta. The River Must Live is a 1966 short documentary film directed by Alan Pendry. Country Music: The Spirit of America is a 2003 documentary film, in the IMAX format, written and co-produced by Tom Neff and co-directed by Neff, Steven Goldmann and Keith Melton. Randy Scruggs was also a producer on the film and wrote the music score. The film traces the history of the United States in the 20th Century through country music, and is also known as Our Country. Tattooed Walls is a 1987 short documentary film written and directed by László Sántha. Meet Skeletor, Steve, Eric, Mo and Evangelis in this in-depth, high speed look at one of Manhattan's least known subcultures: New York Bicycle messengers. The film explores the intensity and subculture of the lives of the messengers as they speed in and out of traffic through the streets of Manhattan. The film is highly innovative and was shot mainly on a skateboard to give the feel of this high-risk profession. Sewing Woman is a 1983 American short documentary film directed by Arthur Dong about one woman's journey to America, from an arranged marriage in old China to life in San Francisco. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The best of the 1967 National Hockey League season, set to music in the Tijuana Brass style and filmed with an eye to grace and style of movement suggestive of the bull ring as well as the hockey arena--a novel view, with soaring sound that gives even more drama to the struggle on the ice. Camera tricks enhance the unusual presentation of this fastest of winter sports. Better Living Through Circuitry is a 1999 documentary directed by Jon Reiss about the electronic dance music cultural scene of the 90's. This is considered the first full-length documentary film that goes behind the electronic dance scene and uncovers the culture it has spawned. The film presented aspects of rave culture such as: empowerment through advances in musical electronics technology, the DIY ethic, and the flowering of a new spirituality embracing transcendence through sound and rhythm. A cross-section of the techno subculture is represented. Ravers, DJs and musicians speak for themselves about their music and ideals. Produced by Cleopatra Pictures and Entertainment Group, presided by Cleopatra Records founder Brian Perera. Wilhelm Pieck – Das Leben unseres Präsidenten is an East German film. It was released in 1950. Roman Amiti is a 1989 documentary film written and directed by Lihi Efron. 5000 Miles is a 2006 American documentary by filmmaker Michael Rozumalski that tells the story of a young couple adopting a child from Poland. This independent film was produced for an estimated $120,000 and was primarily filmed by Rozumalski. The story begins in Wisconsin and takes the audience to Nowa Sól, Poland. The film spans almost two years in the life of Rozumalski and his wife, Amy. The film was released in 2006 by Splice Films. Original titles for the film included, Adopting Ally and 5000 Miles Away. Michael & Amy Rozumalski divorced in 2009. Michael is remarried and still lives in Wisconsin. He maintains a strong relationship with his daughter. Shunned is a 2013 documentary drama film written by Janice Villarosa, Mark Celestino and directed by Janice Villarosa. The Delicate Art of the Bludgeon is a 2009 documentary short film directed by Jean-Gabriel Périot. Ape and Super-Ape is a 1972 Dutch documentary film directed by Bert Haanstra. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Bottom of the Ninth is a 2002 documentary film directed by Charles Braverman. The Door Ajar is a 2011 biographical historical drama documentary directed by Patrick Jolley. Procedure 769, Witness to an Execution is a 1995 Dutch documentary film by director Jaap van Hoewijk about the execution of convicted murderer Robert Alton Harris in 1992. The Cole Nobody Knows is a documentary film about musician Freddy Cole, the younger brother of Eddie Cole, Ike Cole & Nat King Cole. The film tells Mr. Cole’s story through interviews with musicians Monty Alexander, Nancy Wilson, David “Fathead” Newman, John di Martino, H Johnson and Carl Anthony. Photographed in Atlanta, New York City, Los Angeles, Switzerland & France, “The Cole Nobody Knows” also features live performance material with Freddy Cole and his quartet. Directed by filmmaker Clay Walker, "The Cole Nobody Knows" has been featured in over 40 international film festivals and awarded the Cine Golden Eagle Award. The film received its PBS premiere on WPSU Pennsylvania in December 2009. Glass Eyes Of Locust Bayou is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Simon Mercer. Night Waltz: The Music of Paul Bowles is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by Owsley Brown. The Mormons is a four hour PBS documentary about The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The production originally aired in two-hour segments on April 30 and May 1, 2007. It was produced by Helen Whitney, and was the first joint production of Frontline and American Experience. In Satmar Custody is an independent documentary film, written and directed by Nitzan Gilady. It tells the story of the Jaradis, a Yemeni Jewish married couple whose children were removed and forcefully put into the custody of a Satmar orphanage within its community in Brooklyn, New York. Aside from illustrating the sorrowful position of the refugee Jaradis, the film also displays many characteristics of the Satmar order as it operates today, from its Haredi withdrawal from secular society, as well the community's vehement denial of the legitimacy for the State of Israel to exist. With a running time of over 5 hours, this extensive, in-depth documentary has been released to coincide with the Stones 40th anniversary. A vast array of friends, family, fellow musicians, biographers, and managers recollect the amazing career of the band in old and new interview footage. ROLLING STONES - JUST FOR THE RECORD is neither endorsed nor authorized by The Rolling Stones. Extraordinary Women: Women in Time, Women Without It; is a 2009 Dominican documentary feature by director Yildalina Tatem Brache, where she captures the lives of six influential women from the Dominican Republic. McKinley at Home, Canton, Ohio aka William McKinley at Canton, Ohio is a silent film reenactment of William McKinley receiving the Republican nomination for President of the United States in September 1896. The actual nomination had been several weeks earlier. McKinley is shown emerging from his house to receive the news from his secretary George Cortelyou. His wife Ida can be seen in a rocking chair on the porch. McKinley is seen removing his hat and wiping his forehead with a handkerchief after receiving the news. It was filmed by a two man crew for American Mutoscope and Biograph Company on 68 mm film, 60.02 m in length. McKinley's brother Abner and former US president Benjamin Harrison were stockholders in the film company. Yellow Sticky Notes is a 2007 animated short film by Canadian artist Jeff Chiba Stearns. The film uses a series of sticky note papers to tell the events that happened to the filmmaker and the rest of the world during nine years. A bio picture about the controversial life of the most famous and best chess player who has ever lived. The Word is a 1953 American short documentary film produced by John Adams. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. An off-beat, irreverant and often hilarious documentary about the making and the makers of a modern myth - the widespread belief in flying saucers and alien visitations. Combining strange and unusual archive footage from the 1950s with several contemporary interviews, the film focuses on a few people who helped to pioneer such beliefs; the so-called 'contactees' and on one leading researcher who believes in them. Ludwig van is a black-and-white German film by Mauricio Kagel. Filmed in 1969, it was first screened the following year. The work was commissioned by Westdeutscher Rundfunk for the bicentennial celebrations of the birth of Ludwig van Beethoven in 1970. The film examines the reception of the composer and his works and how he has become a consumer product of the culture industry. The soundtrack is an arrangement of fragments of Beethoven's works, modified as if heard by the deaf composer himself; it is distinct from Kagel's 1970 composition Ludwig van. Prominent contemporary artists including Dieter Roth, Stefan Wewerka, Robert Filliou, and Joseph Beuys were involved in the design. According to Gramophone, "at first it’s a laugh a minute ... then Kagel's film turns dark". US 41 is a 2014 short film directed by James Benning. Vampire Secrets is a 2006 docudrama about the mythology and lifestyle of vampires, produced by Indigo Films for the History Channel, and narrated by Corey Burton. The documentary features the history of vampires from Indian, Greek, and Chinese origins, and references to the Bible and ancient Mesopotamia. Other topics include: Bram Stoker's 1897 novel, Dracula James Spalding, a Scotsman, 1632 Elizabeth Báthory Haidamaque, Hungary, 1715 Blood ritual Anne Rice's vampire novels Vampire: The Masquerade: Rod Ferrell, killed two people in Eustis, Florida, USA, and was sentenced to death Sex appeal: Nosferatu, 1931 film with Béla Lugosi, Vampirella, Demonlover; and others. Vampire underground and gothic subculture: Susan Walsh who falls for a purported "living vampire" and disappears in January 1996 Psychic vampire, Sanguine, vampire lifestylers Features commentaries by authors Katherine Ramsland, and J. Gordon Melton, parapsychologist Loyd Auerbach, psychic vampire author and spokesperson Michelle Belanger, Father Sebastiaan, forensic biologist Mark Benecke, professor Thomas Garza, and others. 9-Man is a historical documentary sports film directed by Ursula Liang. At the Green Line is a 2005 documentary made by Jesse Atlas that profiles several members of Courage to Refuse, a political group that refuses service in the Israeli military, as well as several Israelis serving in the military as part of their reserve duty. The title refers to the 1949 Armistice line between Israel and Syria, the Jordanian-held West Bank, and Egyptian-held Gaza Strip. The film takes a look at the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians from the perspective of soldiers in the Israeli Defence Force. Specifically, it discusses the motivations of those who refuse service, as well as the feelings of soldiers actively serving, weighing various issues related to suicide bombings, checkpoints, and the West Bank barrier. Amma & Appa is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jayakrishnan Subramanian and Franziska Schönenberger. Depart is a 2012 short animated fantasy film directed by Blake Williams. Inocente is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Sean Fine and Andrea Nix. The film received the 2013 Academy Award for Best Documentary. It tells the story of a 15-year-old homeless girl from California who has ambitions to become an artist. The film was partially financed by the crowd funding website Kickstarter. After being nominated for an Academy Award the film was released along with all the other 15 Oscar-nominated short films in theaters by ShortsHD. Terrorists, Killers and Middle-East Wackos (also Terrorists, Killers and Other Wackos in the UK) is a shockumentary video from the makers of Bumfights. It includes footage of riots, suicides, executions, and the televised suicide of Budd Dwyer. All the scenes included are real scenes of death and suffering. The Bumfights website store touts the video as "One hour of the sickest images ever put to film." The video was released in the US on the June 21, 2005. It was due to be released in the UK, but was refused a certificate (mandatory for commercial release of most video material) by the British Board of Film Classification. In its rejection commentary, the Board noted: "The work presents no journalistic, educational or other justifying context for the images shown. Rather, the work presents a barrage of sensationalist clips, for what appears to be the underlying purpose of providing prurient entertainment... The work invites the viewer to take sadistic pleasure in death." It was also suggested that the content may be in breach of the Obscene Publications Act. In June 2006 a spokesman the BBFC cited the film as an example of, "something the majority of people would want not to view," in the context of proposals for a UK ratings system for online content. Secretariat's Jockey - Ron Turcotte is a 2013 biographical documentary film written and directed by Phil Comeau. Jackass 3D is a 2010 American 3D comedy film and the third film in the Jackass film series. It was released on October 15, 2010 by Paramount Pictures and MTV Films to American theaters and marked the 10th anniversary of the franchise, which started in 2000. This and Jackass 3.5 are the final Jackass films that Ryan Dunn appeared in before his death in 2011. John Cage is a 1966 documentary film written and directed by Klaus Wildenhahn. Visiting Desire is a 1996 comedy documentary film directed by Beth B. Wisecrack is a 1992 documentary film directed by Gail Singer. L'amministratore is documentary film directed by Vincenzo Marra. Imágenes de la expropiación petrolera is a 1988 short documentary film directed by Jaime Tello C. Of Pups and Puzzles is a 1941 American short documentary film directed by George Sidney. It won an Academy Award in 1942 for Best Short Subject. The Road to Guantánamo, alternatively The Road to Guantanamo, is a British 2006 docudrama film directed by Michael Winterbottom and Mat Whitecross about the incarceration of three British citizens, who were captured in 2001 in Afghanistan and detained by the United States there and for more than two years at the detainment camp in Guantánamo Bay Naval Base, Cuba. It premiered at the Berlinale on 14 February 2006, and was first shown in the UK on Channel 4 on 9 March 2006. The following day it was the first film to be released simultaneously in cinemas, on DVD, and on the Internet. It was generally well received: Michael Winterbottom won the Silver Bear for Best Director at the 56th Berlin International Film Festival, and the film won the Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary Feature at the Sundance Film Festival. The Times criticised Winterbottom for accepting the men's stated reasons for going to Afghanistan at a time of danger after the 9/11 attacks in the United States, as it was known as al-Qaeda and Taliban territory. Guerrillera is a 2011 short documentary and biographical film directed by Elle Sillanpaa. "An eye-opener of a documentary, that takes a close look at the lives of immigrants in USA with diverse sexualities. It depicts their challenges, triumphs and dreams." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. The Pioneertown Palace is a 2014 documentary short music film directed by Andrew McAllister. Letter from Aldershot is a 1940 short documentary film directed by John Taylor. Portrait of Gina, or Viva Italia is a 1958 documentary film by Orson Welles. It was funded by ABC TV. Around 30 minutes long, it follows a similar style to F for Fake and The Fountain of Youth. It was intended to be the pilot for a television series called "Around the World with Orson Welles", which is also the name of a series Welles made for the BBC in 1955. The film is about Italy, where Welles's third wife, Paola Mori, was from, and where Welles lived and worked on-and-off for about 20 years. The picture discusses both negative and positive aspects of Italian culture. Actress Gina Lollobrigida, who is interviewed at the end of the film, has refused to allow the public release of the film, reportedly because she was displeased by its portrayal of her as an ambitious young actress. Vittorio De Sica, Rozzano Brazzi, Anna Gruber and Welles' wife, Paola Mori, are also briefly interviewed, and the film moves along at a rapid speed: it is cut 'quick on the eye' in the style of Welles's film-making. When Welles submitted the film to ABC, they complained that they only received one reel of unorthodox material which they deemed unshowable, and it was never broadcast. The Edge of Things is a 2009 documentary film directed by Carolyn Corbett. Albino United is a 2010 documentary film directed by Marc Hoeferlin, Juan Reina and Barney Broomfield. "The opening scene reveals a white baby feeding from a black woman's breast. The baby's race is also black, but because of a pigment defect he has no coloring. Because their skin and eyes are very sensitive to sunlight, albinos have to avoid it as much as possible. And in Tanzania, they have yet another enemy: fellow citizens who believe that they are a precious ingredient in a magical potion that offers protection from evil spirits. The macabre result is trade in albino body parts, which get sold to medicine men. The government wants to put a stop to this and has taken firm measures against the albino killers. Albino United follows the soccer team of the same name (composed entirely of albinos) that is playing in a Tanzanian competition. Although they don't win all the games and they sometimes rub a referee the wrong way, they do manage to foster understanding for their perilous position in society. Through conversations with the players, we realize that all they want is a normal life and equal rights. When they have a match in a region that is highly dangerous for albinos, it becomes clear that this is easier said than done. Nonetheless, Albino United remains hopeful, even if it's only because star soccer player Didier Drogba drops in to lend the boys a hand." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site. Waldo Salt: A Screenwriter's Journey is a 1990 American documentary film directed by Eugene Corr. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film was screened at the 1990 Sundance Film Festival and is a part of the PBS American Masters series of documentary films. The documentary is about the life and work of American screenwriter Waldo Salt who won two Academy Awards and was put on the Hollywood blacklist in the 1950s. The story is told through interviews with collaborators and friends such as Dustin Hoffman, Robert Redford, Jon Voight, John Schlesinger and with clips from Salt's films, chiefly Midnight Cowboy. Sobukwe – A Great Soul is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Mickey Madoda Dube. Before Stonewall: The Making of a Gay and Lesbian Community is a 1984 American documentary film about the LGBT community prior to the 1969 Stonewall riots. It was narrated by author Rita Mae Brown, directed by Greta Schiller, co-directed by Robert Rosenberg, and co-produced by John Scagliotti and Rosenberg, and Schiller. It premiered at the 1984 Toronto Film Festival and was released in the United States on June 27, 1985. In 1999, producer Scagliotti directed a companion piece, After Stonewall. Klitschko is a 2011 sport documentary biographical film written and directed by Sebastian Dehnhardt. "Behind drugs, people, and weapons, falcon smuggling has become the world's most mysterious and profitable illegal trade. Held in highest esteem by the wealthy elite throughout the Persian Gulf, the sporting birds have earned the label "feathered cocaine" as thieves race to ransack them from all parts of the world. This bold investigative documentary unspools the surprising links between the falcon trade and royal dynasties, the CIA and KGB, the oil industry, and Al Qaeda." Quoting the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival. Of Men and Music is a film directed by Alexandr Hackenschmied and Irving Reis released on September 24, 1951. Páramos: Water for Life, is a 2012 Telly Award Winning film created for Conservation International. Disney Parks: Undiscovered Disney Parks is a 2010 documentary film written by Jamie Iracleanos, Andy Perrott and Jamie Smith. "The conflict in northern Uganda has shattered the lives of many. Joseph Kony, wanted for war crimes by the International Criminal Court, continues to evade capture while his ragtag group of fighters, known as the "Lord's Resistance Army," easily slips over borders killing, mutilating and abducting at will. In efforts to capture Kony, the Ugandan military ordered more than 1.4 million people off their land and into camps for "Internally Displaced People." For women and girls caught in the middle of the conflict, the road to reconstruction is particularly difficult. This film, narrated by Oprah Winfrey, is an intimate look into the lives of some of these brave women, exposing the difficulties they face and revealing a remarkable organization that is helping to rebuild their lives." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. "Three women travel to a distant place to do welfare work. They assist, listen, stay with the unprotected. An old hospital in ruins accommodates them. The imposed group life gets more complex as they start to know each other. The relationship with the others, the community, is also difficult. But, as days go by, they will start to melt into that human landscape surrounding them. To be part of the mystery of otherness." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Cannes Film Festival site. The Making of Fanny and Alexander is a 1986 Swedish documentary film directed by Ingmar Bergman which traces the making of his film Fanny and Alexander. Its running length is 110 minutes and it's photographed by Arne Carlsson, Bergman's long time photographic collaborator and former neighbor at the island of Fårö. It documents the full production scope "behind-the-scenes" with Bergman, the actors and staff. The film was awarded as "Best documentary" at Chicago International Film Festival 1986 and the Golden Gate Award as "Best film about film" at San Francisco International Film Festival 1987. Gunnin' For That #1 Spot is a 2008 documentary directed by Adam Yauch, founding member of the Beastie Boys. The movie premiered at the Tribeca/ESPN Sports Film Festival in April 2008 and opened in theaters June 27, 2008. I Want to Tell You Something is a 2006 documentary film directed by Martin Nguyen. The Little Snow Animal is a 2009 short drama film written and directed by Miia Tervo. Year of the Dogs is a 1997 documentary detailing the 1996 season of the Footscray Football Club. Waiting for Lightning is a 2012 documentary film written by Bret Anthony Johnston and directed by Jacob Rosenberg. Ecopia: Eco-cities is a 2013 film directed by Loh Kok Hong, Eva Mehl and Daisy Weisbrodt. Memorias Del Calavero is a 2014 documentary film directed by Rubén Mendoza. Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars is a 1973 documentary and concert movie by D.A. Pennebaker. It features David Bowie and his backing group The Spiders from Mars performing at the Hammersmith Odeon, 3 July 1973. The DVD release was later retitled Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars: The Motion Picture. Acercadacana is a 2010 short documentary action drama film written and directed by Felipe Peres Calheiros. The Numbers Start with the River is a 1971 American short documentary film about smalltown life in Iowa. Produced by Donald Wrye for the United States Information Agency, it was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. More than Honey is a 2012 Swiss documentary film directed by Markus Imhoof about honeybee colonies in California, Switzerland, China and Australia. The film was nominated for an Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards. Children in Hiding is a documentary film directed by Vassilis Loules. The Alcohol Years is a 2000 documentary tv movie written and directed by Carol Morley Fun At Iron Dog is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Kaden Mwarey and Dios Heath. Red Jacket is a 1998 documentary film about the life of the world's best-selling artist, Vladimir Tretchikoff. The film was produced by Technitronics and televised by the SABC. Follie di notte is an Italian erotic-documentary film directed by Joe D'Amato and released in 1978. Passing Through Sweden is a 1969 short documentary film directed by Martin Duckworth. Torpedo Squadron is a 1942 American short documentary film shot by John Ford while he was on the island of Midway. Native Country is a 1945 documentary film written by Aleksandr Dovzhenko, H. Grigoryan, Levon Isahakyan, Ashot Shaibon and directed by Gurgen Balasanyan, Aleksandr Dovzhenko, Levon Isahakyan and G. Zargaryan. Vampira and Me is a 2012 documentary film directed by R. H. Greene. The Cowboy And I is a 2013 documentary short comedy drama western film written and directed by Dominik Suppiger. Jajo's Secret is a 2009 made for TV documentary film about the internment of Ukrainians by the government of Canada during the First World War. It was produced and directed by James Motluk and broadcast on OMNI TV. The Story of Short Stack is a 2011 documentary which documents the journeys of pop punk band Short Stack. It was directed, produced and edited by band member Andy Clemmensen. It starred many people, notably the band itself. The film was premiered on 27 October 2011 and officially released on 4 November 2011. The documentary spent years being made. It included the band's entire back catalogue of film clips and highlights of their career from their debut album Stack Is the New Black through to the cover of Rolling Stone on their 2010 album This is Bat Country and their single "Bang Bang Sexy". The revelation of the title and track listing of Short Stack's third studio album was on this documentary. It was revealed as Art Vandelay. Art Vandelay was released on Friday 18 October 2013, however with a slightly altered tracklisting. Siberia: How the East Was Won is a documentary film that aired on The History Channel. It attempts to describe Russia's eastward expansion, beginning with the Cossack invasions some five centuries back. The film was produced using the English language. Pier Paolo Pasolini e la ragione di un sogno is a 2001 written by Laura Betti and Pasquale Plastino and directed by Laura Betti and Paolo Costella. Banaz A Love Story is a 2012 documentary film directed and produced by Deeyah Khan. The film chronicles the life and death of Banaz Mahmod, a young British Kurdish woman killed in 2006 in South London on the orders of her family in a so-called honour killing. The film received its UK premiere at the Raindance Film Festival in London September 2012. Hood 2 Hood: The Blockumentary is a straight-to-DVD documentary about the subculture of Inner-city street gangs in American neighborhoods, released in 2005. It was produced by Rich Kid Entertainment. A Dream of Iron is a 2014 documentary film directed by Kelvin Kyung Kun Park. Neshoba is a 2008 documentary film about events and attitudes in Neshoba County, Mississippi, 40 years after the 1964 Mississippi civil rights workers murders. Tara motilor is a 1938 short film directed by Paul Călinescu. Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! is a 2012 documentary film directed by Fabrice Ziolkowski. Paul McCartney in Red Square is a live DVD by Paul McCartney, released in June 2005. It is composed of footage taken during his concerts in Moscow's Red Square and St Petersburg's Palace Square. Songs from Beatles, Wings and solo albums are performed. Each song is interspersed with interviews regarding the Beatles' banning in the Soviet Union in the 1960s, and how fans had to spend large sums of money on buying records from the black market. The DVD was authored by Neil Matthews at Ascent Media in NYC. Michael Jordan to the Max is an American documentary released in IMAX in 2000. The film is about the life and career of basketball player Michael Jordan, focusing mainly on him during the 1998 NBA Playoffs. It is narrated by Laurence Fishburne. The film includes appearances by numerous celebrities and professional athletes including Phil Jackson, Doug Collins, Bob Costas, Bill Murray, Ken Griffey, Jr., Steve Kerr, Spike Lee, Willie Mays, Stan Musial, Ahmad Rashad, and Pat Riley. Decoding Deepak is a 2012 feature-length documentary film directed by Gotham Chopra about his father Deepak Chopra. It was released in the United States in theaters, on video on demand and digital platforms, on October 5, 2012. It was distributed by SnagFilms, a digital distributor of independent films. The film is dedicated to David Simon M.D., close friend of the Chopra family who died of a brain tumor on January 31, 2012. Blues Masters is a 1999 documentary and music film. Beautifully Broken, The Life & Work Of Rafael Goldchain is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Vladimír Kabelík True Son is a 2013 documentary, biographical and family film written by Jhanvi Shriram and directed by Kevin Gordon. With the Marines at Tarawa is a 1944 short documentary film directed by Louis Hayward. It used authentic footage taken at the Battle of Tarawa to tell the story of the American servicemen from the time they get the news that they are to participate in the invasion to the final taking of the island and raising of the Stars and Stripes. The film is in full color and uses no actors, making it a valuable historical document. The documentary showed more gruesome scenes of battle than other war films to date. According to the documentary The War, President Roosevelt himself gave approval for showing the film, against the wishes of many advisors. Since the pictures were far too graphic to meet the standards of Hollywood producers and distributors, only the President could grant permission for its release to the general public. President Roosevelt consulted the only man who was present at the Battle of Tarawa that he personally knew and trusted, Time-Life photographer Robert Sherrod. Quoting Sherrod, "I tell the President the truth. Our soldiers on the front want people back home to know that they don't knock the hell out of them every day of every battle. Black Diamonds: Mountaintop Removal & the Fight for Coalfield Justice is a 2006 documentary film directed by Catherine Pancake. Code Name Melville is a feature length documentary about Jean-Pierre Melville, directed by Olivier Bohler and produced by Raphaël Millet for Nocturnes Productions in 2008. Its world premiere took place in November 2008 at the Golden Horse Film Festival in Taipei. It has been shown on French channel CinéCinéma Classic in March–April 2010, and on Belgian channel La Deux in May 2010. It is the first feature documentary about Jean-Pierre Melville since he died in 1973. I Send You This Place is a 2012 documentary drama film directed by Peter Ohs and Andrea Sisson. Sound and Chaos: The Story of BC Studio is a documentary music biographical film directed by Ryan Douglass and Sara Leavitt. Forschen und Schaffen. Folge VI is an East German film. It was released in 1954. Sharks 3D is a 2004 short documentary film directed by Jean-Jacques Mantello. "40 Years of Silence: An Indonesian Tragedy" is a documentary by anthropologist Robert Lemelson about the personal effects of Indonesian killings of 1965-66. The film was shot on the islands of Bali and Java from 2002–2006. The score is a collaboration between the British composer Malcolm Cross and the Balinese musician Nyoman Wenten, and combines Western tonalities and chordal structures with Balinese and Javanese scalar progressions and melodies. The film was released in the United States in 2009, and has had limited screenings throughout Indonesia. Image Matters is a 2011 documentary drama family film directed by Rozy Sarkis. The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin is a 2014 documentary, historical fiction film written by Patrick Lope, Daniel Mross and Nicholas Mross and directed by Nicholas Mross. The Rep is a documentary film directed by Morgan White. Reality Trip is a 1997 documentary film directed by Louis Heaton. The Connected Baby is a 2011 documentary film produced by Dr Suzanne Zeedyk, a developmental psychologist based at the University of Dundee, Scotland. The film-maker was Jonathan Robertson. The film had its premiere on 25 July 2011 at the Dundee Contemporary Arts centre in Scotland. Funded by the British Psychological Society, the film explores research showing that infants are born with active social abilities, already able to communicate and connect emotionally with others. This view of infants contrasts with traditional claims that they are born as passive ‘blank canvases’, who acquire communicative capacities as they develop. Fifi Howls from Happiness is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mitra Farahani. The Atom Strikes is a document commissioned by the U.S. Army Signal Corps Pictoral Division shortly after the end of the Second World War. It documents the findings of a commission sent to Japan to assess the damage caused by the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Opening with the blast of the experimental bombing in Los Alamos, New Mexico in July 1945, the film turns to the Enola Gay and its mission over the Japanese city of Hiroshima. The narrator informs the audience about the military significance of the city and that it had not experienced bombing as yet, but it had been warned. The results of the bombing are then explained, with footage and descriptions of how various buildings were affected by the blast at different distances from ground zero. Afterwards, an interview with Father John A. Siemes, a Jesuit priest who was living at the Novitiate of the Society of Jesus in Nagatsuka, is shown to give the audience a firsthand account of the bombing. Near the end of the interview, the priest is seen reading from a prepared statement. Celebrating the Life of Del Martin is a 2011 documentary film directed by Debra Chasnoff. Arutz 2: Achshav HaSeret is a 2003 documentary TV movie directed by Yuval Natan. Wood If is a 2010 documentary short film written and directed by J.B. Sugar. Moving From Emptiness: The Life and Art of a Zen Dude is a documentary film directed by Shaeri Richards and Jerry Hartleben. I Don't Wanna Be a Boy is a 1994 documentary film written by Loubna Freih and directed by Alec Behrens and Marijn Muijser. Sleep Furiously is a 2007 film directed by Gideon Koppel. Sleep Furiously is set in a small farming community in mid Wales, a place where director Gideon Koppel's parents - both refugees - found a home. This is a landscape and population that is changing rapidly. Small-scale agriculture is disappearing and the generation who inhabited a pre-mechanized world is dying out. Much influenced by his conversations with the writer Peter Handke, the film maker leads us on a poetic and profound journey into a world of endings and beginnings; a world of stuffed owls, sheep and fire. Kangaroos is a 1971 documentary film directed by John Shaw. Hood to Coast is a 2011 documentary film directed by Christoph Baaden and Marcie Hume. The World According to Sesame Street is a 2006 documentary film created by Participant Productions, looking at the cultural impact of the children's television series Sesame Street, and the complexities of creating international adaptations. It focuses on the adaptations of Sesame Street in Bangladesh, Kosovo, and South Africa. The film premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival in the documentary competition. The film was released on DVD on October 24, 2006. It was also featured that month on the public television documentary series Independent Lens. The documentary included a segment featuring the introduction of an HIV-positive character on the South African version of Sesame Street, noting the short-lived negative reaction of some members of the U.S. Congress to the character. Moshe Safdie: The Power of Architecture is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Donald Winkler. Kosovo: Can You Imagine? is a 2009 documentary film directed by Serbian Canadian Boris Malagurski about the plight of Serb communities living in Kosovo at the time the documentary was filmed. Former Canadian general Lewis MacKenzie, former Canadian diplomat James Byron Bissett, former UNMIK officer John Hawthorne and economist Michel Chossudovsky appear in the film. The Light of Forgiveness is a documentary film directed by Eileen Richardson. Four Hectic Days is a 1965 documentary film directed by Eric Fullilove. Miss Gulag is a 2007 documentary film directed by Maria Yatskova. Crossfire Hurricane is a 2012 documentary film about The Rolling Stones written and directed by Brett Morgen. The film chronicles the early years of the band through their gradual mainstream acceptance in 1981. The film is a series of interviews conducted without cameras, while showing various points of interest that the band is discussing as archival footage. The title of the film comes from the first line of the band's 1968 hit "Jumpin' Jack Flash". Sex in Dangerous Places is a 1995 documentary film written by Leland Zaitz and directed by Ingo. My Mother's Countryside is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Lucas Sá. Hit Me With Music is a 2011 documentary film written by Laura Carulla and directed by Miquel Galofré. Meet Mr. Toilet is a 2012 short film directed by Jessica Yu. Obscurantist and His Lineage or The Pyramids' Tearful Valleys is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Karel Vachek. My Father’s Emails is a documentary film directed by Hong Jae-Hui. Many challenges are ahead for Peter Kohn, a beloved collegiate lacrosse field manager who is believed to be autistic. As the team seeks a national championship, Peter must choose between his allegiance to the student athletes and his devotion to a cancer-stricken friend, all while reacting emotionally to his upcoming retirement. Can anyone, let alone Peter, negotiate such dramatic changes? Read the announcement from Middlebury.Thoughts on Peter Kohn from Keeper of the Kohn director, David GaynesAugust 6, 2008Many people today mourn the passing of Peter Kohn, a wonderful man who was hard to summarize as he was everything from a simple equipment manager to a prophet. My relationship with Peter was one of deep respect, mutual trust, and enduring love. I have been interviewed a few times in the past 24 hours, I suppose because it is assumed that I knew Peter's story well and can tell it succinctly. What these interviews do not give me the chance to express is that fact that Peter knew me incredibly well. It was the process of revealing myself to Peter that made our relationship so meaningful-- so much deeper than simply the cooperation between a biographer and his subject. Today there is a piece of me missing, as all those who knew Peter can attest.Any time a person consents to have their most private self revealed through the medium of documentary film, intimate moments will be captured on tape, synthesized in editing, and eventually revealed to an audience. I advised Peter to not take this process lightly, to appreciate what I was trying to accomplish by telling his story and to work with me as we exposed more and more people to the messages in the film. Peter, a thoughtful person throughout his life, always wanted the film to affect people in a positive way and I hope that every decision I have made for the film satisfies this noble wish. As new people experience Keeper of the Kohn, it is my great desire-- and I believe Peter's as well-- that we think critically about the friendships and life experiences depicted in the work and apply those lessons to our daily lives. We are all better for having known Peter, whether we met him in waking life or in the world of moving images.David GaynesDirector, Keeper of the KohnClick the QA tab for an interview with Keeper of the Kohn Director, David Gaynes Weaving the Past: Journey of Discovery is a 2014 documentary film directed by Walter Dominguez. Tandberg on Page One is a 1983 short documentary film written by Maree Teychenne and directed by Ivan Gaal. In 2000, Nili Tal produced a film about Israeli men traveling to the Ukraine in search of young wives. Eight years on, she returns to see what's happened to the couples since. Perhaps unsurprisingly, many of these relationships did not survive. One bride ended up homeless and alone in Israel. Another was forced to return to the Ukraine, leaving her baby behind. But other couples are still together. How were these wives able to overcome the cultural and religious divides and adapt to life in Israel? Soul Red: Yusaku Matsuda is a 2009 documentary film directed by Osamu Minorikawa. Helsinki Music Centre is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Miisa Latikka and Matti Reinikka. An inquisitive man sets out to find the facts about milk and discovers more about the growing controversy surrounding it. Throughout the journey, he is left with more and more questions instead of answers and remains dangling and confused amidst vastly opposing position held by various doctors, scientists, nutritionists and experts. Milk is a food so fundamental to our daily diet that its value for our health, it seems, is meant to be left unquestioned. Milk is the perfect food. Or is it? Dagny is a 1977 Norwegian-Polish documentary film directed by Haakon Sandøy. It is narrated by, among others, Lise Fjeldstad, Daniel Olbrychski, Per Oscarsson and Nils Ole Oftebro. The subject of the film is the Norwegian writer Dagny Juel, and her relationship to such men as Stanisław Przybyszewski, Edvard Munch and August Strindberg. World of Plenty is a 1943 British documentary film directed by Paul Rotha for the Ministries of Food and Agriculture. It discusses problems with, and possible improvements to, global food distribution. In this documentary, stand in the Magick Circle with Masters of the Art as they conjure the Spirits from the outer dimensions, and learn how to use these ancient skills to invoke Angels to visible appearance. Disarm is a documentary film which spans a dozen countries to look at how, despite a global ban, millions of antipersonnel landmines continue to claim victims daily in more than eighty countries. Defined as a conventional weapon, landmines inflict destruction upon civilian populations for decades after the initial conflict has ended. Disarm juxtaposes government and public opinion- that of diplomats, mine victims, deminers, soldiers, campaigners and aid workers- to explore the issues that both hinder and further the case against the weapon. Visually stunning, Disarm features harrowing footage smuggled out of isolated nation of Burma, scenes from war-ravaged Colombia and Iraq, never-before-seen helmet camera footage shot by Afghan and Bosnian deminers, unprecedented access into warehouses stockpiling millions of Soviet-made mines, and insightful comments by outspoken Nobel Peace Laureate Jody Williams. Looking beyond landmines, Disarm offers a contemporary, intelligent and critical investigation into how weapons systems, war, and the way it is waged are being redefined in the 21st century with devastating consequences. The Empire of Evil is a 2007 war documentary film written by Mohammad Farokhmanesh and Frank Geiger and directed by Mohammad Farokhmanesh. City of Freedom - City of Slaves is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Pravin Mishra. The Summit is a 2011 documentary film written by Vincenzo Crocitto, Eleonora Ferrazzi, Franco Fracassi, Massimo Lauria, Daniela Mastrosimini, Vincenzo Perrone, Andrea Petrosino and Fabiana Tacente, and directed by Franco Fracassi and Massimo Lauria. Innocent Until Proven Guilty is a 1999 documentary film directed by Kirsten Johnson. Amore rosso (Marianna Sirca) is a 1952 Italian drama film directed by Aldo Vergano. Los Increíbles is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by David Valero. Inside Nazi Germany is a 1938 short documentary film directed by Jack Glenn. It is an episode of the newsreel series The March of Time. In 1993, Inside Nazi Germany was deemed "culturally significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. Arcade Fire: Miroir Noir is a 2008 music documentary film directed by Vincent Morisset. Zero Killed is a 2012 documentary, crime film written and directed by Michal Kosakowski. Where Is My Seed is a documentary film directed by Lee Joo-ho. The Polar Explorer is a documentary film directed by Mark Terry. Iztacalco, campamento 2 de octubre is a 1979 documentary film directed by Jose Luis Gonzalez and Alejandra Islas. Still Born is a 2014 Documentary, Animation, Short, and Drama film written and directed by Åsa Sandzén. Guest of Cindy Sherman is a 2008 film directed by Paul H-O and Tom Donahue. A Not So Still Life is a 2010 documentary film directed by Karen Stanton. Blaue Wimpel im Sommerwind is an East German film. It was released in 1952. Oceans is a 2009 French nature documentary directed, produced, co-written, and narrated by Jacques Perrin, with Jacques Cluzaud as co-director. The film explores the marine species of Earth's five oceans and reflects on the negative aspects of human activity on the environment. Disneynature released the film in the United States on April 22, 2010, with narration provided by Pierce Brosnan. It was the nature label's third release following Earth and The Crimson Wing in 2009.Intended for a younger audience, the North American version is twenty minutes shorter than the original French version of the film, which depicts violent massacres of sea animals, recreated through visual effects. Budgeted at around €50 million, it was filmed in over 50 different places and took four years to film. Miss Navajo is a 2007 independent documentary film directed by Billy Luther. It tells the story of a 21-year-old Navajo woman, Crystal Frazier, who decides to compete in a beauty pageant for the title of Miss Navajo for 2005-2006. La Operación is a 1982 short documentary film by Ana María García about US-imposed sterilization policies in Puerto Rico, exploring the mass sterilization of Puerto Rican women during the 50s and 60s. The Landfill is a 2012 short news documentary film directed by Jessica Edwards and Gary Hustwit. Without Shepherds is a documentary film directed by Cary McClelland. THE DEATH OF ANDY KAUFMAN takes on the many mysteries and theories surrounding Andy Kaufman's death, and through exclusive interviews with family and friends, rare performances by Kaufman, and the filmmakers own personal investigation, we are brought closer to understanding mind and myth of one of the most celebrated and mysterious performance artists all time, often with unexpected results. Nuclear Split is a 1986 documentary film written by Bertram Verhaag and directed by Claus Strigel and Bertram Verhaag. A profile of champion bodybuilder Linda Berry, and her trials and tribulations after losing a daughter to bulimia. Collision Over the Amazon is a 2007 TV documentary film directed by Alan Tomilson and written by Carlos Adese and Alan Tomilson. 0.56% is a 2010 documentary film directed by Lorenzo Hagerman. "Many will recall the news footage from Mexico in the summer of 2006, when dozens of politicians ripped into one another in parliament. This was the culmination of an exceptionally tumultuous presidential election campaign ending with the controversial candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador losing by only 0.56 percent to his opponent Felipe Calderón Hinojosa. This documentary begins with those moments of utter chaos before going back in time to analyze the events that led up to this explosive protest. The camera follows Obrador in particular, hot on the heels of this former mayor of Mexico City. For the previous few years he had been enjoying the support of a large section of the Mexican population, and he feels confident of victory. But when he fails to appear at a debate with his opponents, some of the electorate loses faith in him and polls later indicate that Calderón will win. On Election Day itself, the tension is palpable, with the final result yet to be announced. The first counts reveal that Calderón and López Obrador are running almost neck-and-neck, and both candidates declare themselves to be the victor. When it turns out that Calderón has won after all - with just a minuscule margin - the power struggle really breaks out." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site. Habana Muda is a 2011 documentary film directed by Eric Brach. Unbeaten is a 2009 sport documentary film written by Paul Freedman and directed by Steven C. Barber. Semillas que el mar arrastra is a 2008 documentary film. The Boys of 2nd Street Park is a 2003 documentary film. It premiered at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival and won of Best Documentary at the River Run Film Festival. The film recounts the lives of 5 boys in Brighton Beach Brooklyn, NY during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, then reunites the men in modern day to share their triumphs and tragedies. In The Boys of 2nd Street Park, a new documentary about Satin and five of his basketball-playing boyhood friends. "I knew this could be a good story because so many different things had happened to people," said the soft-spoken Klores, sounding more like an introvert than a schmoozer. "You have a group of guys, and one is homeless, one wins a $45 million lottery, two lose their children and one lives without electricity or running water in Woodstock, N.Y." - Dan Klores When Brian Newmark was growing up in Brooklyn's Brighton Beach neighborhood, basketball was king. "Everybody would rush home from school, throw the books down, and run off to the park to play basketball," said Brian Newmark, 53, a clinical psychologist from Lincoln featured in a new documentary about a group of friends who grew up in New York. Investigate the deceptive world of espionage during the Cold War. The KGB used one of the most ingenious and unobtrusive weapons to murder an outspoken Bulgarian dissident. The Umbrella Assassin investigates the cloak and dagger world of Cold War espionage and political intrigue, and examines newly discovered evidence that may reveal just how the umbrella gun actually worked, and who pulled the trigger. Comstock Films has created a unique film series that explores sexual relationships among couples. Each film focuses on one couple and begins with an intimate interview that sets up the background of the couple's relationship: how they met, the basis of their intimacy, what attracts them sexually to one another, and how they share their innermost desires and fantasies. The camera then turns to an intimate lovemaking session, recording in detail the passion and eroticism that exists between the two. Coverage is explicit, but not provocative; it allows viewers to share in the couple's healthy, passionate, romantic relationship and to experience first hand the erotic intimacy of their lovemaking. The first film in the series features the relationship between adult film stars Marie and Jack. Exploring both the physical and emotional sides of their relationship, the revealing interview and lovemaking session capture the passion and eroticism that exists between the two. Charles Lloyd: Arrows Into Infinity is a documentary film directed by Dorothy Darr and Jeffery Morse. Stop Snitchin–Stop Lyin is a mixtape album/DVD by rapper The Game. It features artists like Lil' Kim, Ice Cube, E-40, Chingy, WC, Paul Wall and others. This mixtape is the third of three diss mixtapes aimed at the G-Unit members. It is quite possibly the most popular of the three due to the DVD advertisement. It also features disses by other Black Wall Street Members. Repeatedly DJ Clue says "Come on Game it's the last one" suggesting there would be no more diss tracks or mixtapes aimed at G-Unit any more. The track "Niggaz Bleed" is rumoured to be a subliminal diss to Suge Knight, however, there is no solid evidence to support this. BBOY for Life is a 2012 crime adventure documentary drama film directed by Coury Deeb. The Real Life is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Arnaud Gerber. Ski Bums is a 2002 documentary directed by John Zaritsky. Powerful: Energy for Everyone is a 2010 Canadian documentary that explores different sources of renewable energy. David Chernushenko takes audiences on a global journey to discover different ways of achieving a more sustainable lifestyle.The film introduces audiences to communities, both small and large, that have managed to adapt their way of life and embrace renewable energy. Portrait of a Bookstore as an Old Man is a 2003 documentary film directed by Benjamin Sutherl and Gonzague Pichelin. about George Whitman who opened a bookshop-commune in Paris in 1951 called Shakespeare and Company. "If you dream your own death, can it come true? Director Amy Hardie thinks so. At least if you really start to believe in the dream. The Edge of Dreaming shows how this happened to her. One night, she wakes with a start after dreaming that her horse has died. The next morning, she finds him dead in the fields near her house. When, shortly afterwards, the deceased father of her oldest child comes to her in a dream and tells her that her next birthday will be her last, she starts to worry. She doesn't want to believe it, but the thought just won't let her go. The seed of fear has been sown and it starts to grow, particularly when she gets sick and can't pinpoint the cause. While she films her family life and the changing of the seasons around her, she also dives into her richly documented past. Little by little, she becomes obsessed by the idea that she is going to die. Her search for a solution leads her to neuroscience, psychotherapy, Shamanism, and the insight that she cannot ignore the ravaged state of our planet. Her final conclusion is that she doesn't want to live as if each day may be her last, but as if we will all be here forever." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. Eisenstein: The Master’s House is a 1996 documentary film directed by Aleksandr Iskin and Marianna Kireyeva. Amsterdam Global Village is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Johan van der Keuken. "Young Sergey is an openly gay activist in Belarus and has endured violence from police and skinheads. When his boyfriend is shot on the border he begins his fight for gay equality. Preparing for a defiant stand on the streets of the nation's capital Minsk, Sergey and a few brave activists brace to show their PRIDE against the last dictatorship in Europe." - Quoting the synopsis from East Bloc Love's official website. "After a much-publicized separation with his former employers, did Conan O'Brien hit the road on a 32-City tour to connect with his fans or fill a void within himself? Filmmaker Rodman Flender followed O’Brien on his “Legally Prohibited From Being Funny on Television Tour” and returned with an intimate portrait of an artist trained in improvisation, captured at the most improvisational time of his career." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. S’HE is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Artur Rabinski. Two Sided Story is a documentary film directed by Tor Ben-Mayor. The Agony And The Ecstasy Of Phil Spector is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Vikram Jayanti. Think Global, Act Rural is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Coline Serreau. Yedidyah's Collection is a 2005 short documentary film written and directed by Noam Demsky and Mordy Kershner. C'est Dur D'Etre Aime Par des Cons is a 2008 film directed by Daniel LeConte. In Search of Noah's Ark is a 1976 documentary film released by Sunn Classic Pictures that explores the alleged final resting place of Noah's Ark. Second Skin is a 2008 American documentary film that follows the lives of seven people as they delve into the world of MMORPGs. The film was directed by Juan Carlos Piñeiro Escoriaza and produced by Victor Piñeiro Escoriaza and Peter Brauer. Second Skin premiered to positive reviews and sold-out crowds at the South by Southwest film festival in 2008. It become the No. 1 movie on online streaming site Hulu.com, before completing a limited theatrical run. The film was released on DVD August 25, 2009. Ramp is a 2012 documentary,short and fantasy film directed by Sama Waham. "Do looks matter? When it comes to the male physique in the gay community, the answer is of course a resounding YES. In this fascinating, thought-provoking documentary, filmmaker Christopher Hines (The Butch Factor, Frameline33) turns his camera on guys of all shapes and sizes to explore how body image affects status among gay men. Through intimate interviews with men across the United States, including several from the Bay Area, Hines uncovers the very common, often unsettling reality of how many gay men struggle to achieve and maintain a particular image in order to be accepted. As he talks with experts and everyday folks, we hear how body discrimination can lead to feelings of inadequacy, as well as issues around drug abuse and severe eating disorders that transcend sexual orientation. One especially muscular guy admits that even though he knows it’s superficial, he “feels more respected and accepted” when people compliment his look. Hines explores how these issues trickle into other areas of our modern world by looking at everything from the gay porn industry to a naked yoga class in San Francisco that helps students feel more comfortable with their bodies. The Adonis Factor deftly balances diverse viewpoints and voices to paint a picture of a complex world where beauty is too often considered skin deep." Quoting Brendan Peterson from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. The Life and Times of Paul the Psychic Octopus is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Alexander C. Philippe. Nobody Wants Your Film is a 2005 documentary film directed by Peter Judson. Bouton is a 2011 documentary film directed by Res Balzli. Versailles, a tight-knit neighborhood on the edge of New Orleans, is home to the densest ethnic Vietnamese population outside of Vietnam. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, residents rebuild their homes — only to have them threatened by a toxic landfill planned in their neighborhood. As the community fights back, it turns a devastating disaster into a catalyst for change. Cinerama Holiday is a 1955 film shot in Cinerama. Structured as a criss-cross travelogue, it shows an American couple traveling in Europe and a European couple traveling in the U.S. Like all of the original Cinerama productions, the emphasis is on spectacle and scenery. The European sequences, for example, include a point-of-view bobsled ride, while the U.S. sequences include a point-of-view landing on an Aircraft carrier. It was enormously popular. Largely unseen for decades, it was released on Blu-ray in 2013, restored and remastered from the original camera negatives. La maréchal-ferrant is a 1977 documentary, short film directed by Georges Rouquier. Rotterdam is a 1930 short documentary film written by Andor von Barsy and directed by Andor von Barsy, Albrecht Viktor Blum, Friedrich von Maydell. A Night in Havana: Dizzy Gillespie in Cuba is a 1989 documentary film written by Allen Honigberg and Patrice Levy and directed by John Holland. This collection of archive footage from martial arts films offers an array of power-packed kicks, chops, leaps, and other dramatic fighting moves from expert martial artists Sonny Chiba, Carter Wong, Bruce Lee, and others. Ken Howard hosts. a digital documentary film investigating ev01ving relationships between Internet & humanity's [sub | un] consciousness, created via webcam interviews as a mash-up of internet meta-memes and phenomenon, served and presented as edutainment new media. (Note: When viewing the list below of 30+ interviewed visionaries, some of the profile photos are missing. This is because freebase automatically pulls data from wikipedia.org) The Colors of Hope is a 1986 documentary film directed and written by David Grubin. The Overnighters is a 2014 American documentary film written, directed and produced by Jesse Moss. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. It won the Special Jury Award at the festival. After its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, Drafthouse Films acquired distribution rights of the film. The film is scheduled to be released on October 24, 2014 in United States and a portion of all box office receipts will be donated to North Dakota's local affordable housing charities. The film also premiered at 2014 Miami International Film Festival on March 13, 2014 and won a prize at the festival. A documentary portrait of the African photographer Malick Sidibe, and a journey through Malian history inspired by his iconic images. Sidibe's snapshots from the late 50s through to the early 70s capture the carefree spirit of a youth asserting their freedom from colonialism in the early days of Malian independence - until a coup ushered in decades of austere military dictatorship. So this is a film not only about art, but also about a culture reflected through a camera lens, in a country that today is one of the poorest in the world. Children Underground is a 2001 documentary film directed by Edet Belzberg. In an effort to increase the Romanian work force, former communist leader Nicolae Ceauşescu outlawed contraception and abortion in 1966. Thousands of unwanted children were placed in state orphanages where they faced terrible conditions. With the fall of Communism, many children moved onto the streets. Some were from the orphanages. Others were runaways from impoverished families. Today there are 20,000 children living on the streets while the resources for sheltering these homeless youths are severely limited. Children Underground follows the story of five street children, aged eight to sixteen who live in a subway station in Bucharest, Romania. The street kids are encountered daily by commuting adults, who pass them by in the station as they starve, swindle, and steal, all while searching desperately for a fresh can of paint to get high with. To the Arctic 3D is a 2012 IMAX 3D documentary film directed by Greg MacGillivray. It was narrated by Meryl Streep. It has a 67% on Rotten Tomatoes. The Man Who Stole My Mother's Face is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Cathy Henkel. Life On Ice is a 2013 Documentary film written by Greg Chaney, Erin McKittrick and directed by Greg Chaney. Maria Bethânia: Music is Perfume is a 2005 documentary by French-born, Swiss-based director Georges Gachot that focuses on Brazilian singer Maria Bethânia. The film follows the star in the recording studio, the concert stage and in a visit to her 100-year-old mother in Bahia. The film also included appearances by Brazilian music stars including Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Chico Buarque and Nana Caymmi. The Doctor, the Tornado and the Kentucky Kid is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Mark Neale American Addict is a 2012 documentary drama film written and directed by Sasha Knezev. Citizens Against Basswood is a 2013 documentary comedy short film directed by Jaimz Asmundson and Karen Asmundson. Teshuinada, semana santa Tarahumara is a 1979 documentary short film directed by Nicolás Echevarría. Lost for Life is a crime documentary film directed by Joshua Rofé. Black Stone is a 2006 documentary film directed by Nidal Al-Dibs. Nijyuhibaku, Kataribe Yamaguchi Tsutomu no Yuigon is a 2011 biography short film directed by Hidetaka Inazuka. Tantric Tourists is an independent British feature documentary film directed by Alexander Snelling and produced though Slack Alice Films by Kirsty Allison and Alexander Snelling. The film was shot entirely in India over a period of two weeks and is essentially a road movie, featuring various forms of transport, mainly bus, but also train, plane, boat, elephant, bicycle and rickshaw. Famous Nathan is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Lloyd Handwerker. Tahrir: Liberation Square is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Stefano Savona. "The life and adventures of local artist and all-around eccentric Harrod Blank, creator of such interactive spectacles as the Camera Van and the Flash Suit. Oh My God! It’s Harrod Blank! mines more than 20 years of footage to show a loveable boy-man in all his oddball glory. The more Harrod's family, friends, and (most hilariously) ex-girlfriends kvetch about his obsessions and goofy naiveté, the more you’d like to meet him yourself. But what really sticks with us? The way an initial spark of creativity, doggedly pursued, can become a life’s work." Quoting the description from the 2010 IndieFest site. Finding Farley is a 2009 documentary directed by Leanne Allison as she and her husband Karsten Heuer travel across Canada in the literary footsteps of Canadian writer Farley Mowat. Heuer, a biologist and author, had written a book on his experiences making the documentary Being Caribou, in which he and Allison traveled 1500 km by foot across Arctic tundra following a herd of 120,000 Porcupine caribou. After reading a draft of Heuer's account, Mowat invited them to visit him at his summer farm in Cape Breton Island. Accompanied by their two-year old son Zev and dog Willow, the couple left their home in Canmore in May 2007 for a 5000 kilometre, six-month trek east across Canada. From Canmore, Alberta, 100 kilometres west of Calgary, they canoed to Hudson Bay, visiting many of the settings Mowat wrote about in Never Cry Wolf, Lost in the Barrens and People of the Deer. From Hudson Bay, their plan was to travel by sea to northern Labrador, the setting of Mowat stories such as The Serpent's Coil, Grey Seas Under, Sea of Slaughter and A Whale for the Killing. From Newfoundland and Labrador they planned a final journey by water, arriving at Cape Breton near the end of October. As its title suggests, this release from Widowmaker Films is comprised of real-life uncensored clips of gruesome and disturbing executions. Intended for adult audiences only, the program features car-bombings, firing squads, concentration-camp footage, and other grizzly acts of cruel and unusual punishment Combat America is a 1943 Allied propaganda film of World War II: "1st Lieutenant Clark Gable is hereby directed to proceed to England ... for making a combat film dealing particularly with the combat phases of aerial gunnery ... ". Initial footage depicts aircraft flying over American mountains, with Gable narrating that this is what they are fighting for. Bob Hope also appears in the film, and the film mostly depicts 351st Bombardment Group life at RAF Polebrook. Combat footage begins three-quarters of the way into the movie and includes take off and return of aircraft. The film depicts a wall poster with target names and, for confirmed kills, swastika stickers. Footage at the end of the film includes a B-17 in an uncontrolled dive with a portion of the horizontal stabilizer missing and shoot-down of Messerschmitt Bf 109s. Intercut with the combat footage is close-up footage of machine gun firing from a B-17 waist gun port. Gable flew five World War II combat missions from May 4-September 23, and during one of them, his shoe was struck by an anti-aircraft shell. Gable's film crew included MGM cameraman Andrew J McIntyre; "1st Lt. Howard Voss, a sound engineer; Master Sgt. Zone / The life that did not exist is a documentary film directed by Naotoshi Kitada. The Missing Picture is a 2013 Cambodian-French documentary film directed by Rithy Panh about the Khmer Rouge. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival where it won the top prize. It was also screened in the World Cinema section at the 2013 Cinemanila International Film Festival where it won the Grand Jury Prize. The film was selected as the Cambodian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards, and was nominated. Approximately half of the film uses news and documentary footage, with the other half using clay figurines to dramatise what happened in Cambodia when Pol Pot came to power. The Marvels of Mick Murphy is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Etain Mcguckian and Clare O'Connor. Two and Two Make Six is a 1962 film directed by Freddie Francis. It stars George Chakiris and Janette Scott. Constructions is a documentary film directed by Kathryn Xian. Seeking Asian Female is a 2012 documentary film directed by Debbie Lum. This Is My Life, Brother is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Jawara Drigo. Nippon no misemono is a Japanese documentary film directed by Yoichiro Okutani. Second Chance is a 2007 sport documentary film directed by Daniel H. Forer. In the Raw is a 2009 documentary film about Lubricated Goat's nude appearance on Australian TV. In November 1988, Andrew Denton's Blah Blah Blah program caused a nationwide stir by allowing guitar group Lubricated Goat to perform on Australian Broadcasting Corporation TV completely naked. The resulting media frenzy jammed phone lines as the public debated this supposed decline in Australian media standards. In The Raw dispels myths which have arisen as a result of Lubricated Goat's nude appearance by exposing the politics, censorship, and nudity of this event through extensive interviews with the members of the band, ABC Management, and the Blah Blah Blah production team. The project was directed by Cousin Creep and made for Happening Films of Melbourne, Australia. In the Raw debuted on Friday 11 December, at the 19th Meredith Music Festival Outlands Ecoplex Cinema. No More Sunsets is a 2006 American short documentary film starring former trucker Shawn Bridges and filmed by Chip Rosetti at the former's request. The 29-minute black-and-white film presents a warning to children about the drug meth by way of an object lesson: the ravage of Bridges' long-time meth use and its effects on his family. At the time of filming Bridges was near-catatonic, bedridden with a catheter and a feeding tube, dying at the age of 34. His father was quoted as saying that he had the body of a 70- 80-old man. Shawn Bridges used meth for most of his adult life, suffering his first heart attack at the age of 26. By the time he eventually quit, it became clear that the damage done was lethal. He had intended the film to be shown at his local church; instead, it sparked international attention and media coverage. Bridges died in late March 2007, aged 35. At the time, Rosetti stated that he had sold 500-600 copies and was planning on a sequel. Filthy Gorgeous: The Bob Guccione Story is a Canadian biographical documentary film which is a biography of Penthouse magazine founder Bob Guccione. Dancing Like Home is a 2014 short adventure documentary film written and directed by Joyce Guy. High Tech, Low Life is a 2012 documentary film directed by Stephen T. Maing. Chaplin's Art of Comedy is a 1966 comedy documentary film directed by Samuel M. Sherman. The Save The Children Fund Film is a 50-minute British documentary from 1971 directed by Ken Loach and produced by Tony Garnett. Originally known as In Black and White, It was commissioned by London Weekend Television on behalf of the charity Save the Children. Hr 6161: An Act Of Congress is a 1979 documentary film directed by Charles Guggenheim. Germany Awake! is a 1968 documentary film directed and written by Erwin Leiser. A Dream in the Making is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Bartosz M. Kowalski. Let the Fire Burn is a 2013 documentary film about the events leading up to and surrounding a 1985 stand-off between the black liberation group MOVE and the Philadelphia Police Department. The film is directed and produced by Jason Osder and is being distributed by Zeitgeist Films. It was released in October, 2013 and, as of April 2014, has grossed $64,489 domestically. Attack on the Pentagon is a 2008 documentary film directed by David Alter. Make Me a Tory is a 2007 British authored documentary film directed by Daniel Cormack for Channel 4. Aldona is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Emilija Škarnulytė. Harry Hopkins: At FDR's Side is a 1990 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Informational or Cultural Programming - Programs nominated tv program aired in 1989 in U.S.A. A Tale of the Wind is a 1988 French film directed by Joris Ivens and Marceline Loridan. It is also known as A Wind Story. It stars Ivens as he travels in China and tries to capture winds on film, while he reflects on his life and career. The film blends real and fictional elements; it ranges from documentary footage to fantastical dream sequences and Peking opera. It was Ivens' last film. The creators of ``Undercover Boss'' are behind this unscripted TNT series, which gives the popular CEO-in-disguise premise a bit of a twist. ``Inside Job'' puts candidates for six-figure executive positions through a unique screening process. Four people in each episode live and work together during a weeklong job interview, but what three of them don't realize is there is a spy in their midst -- one of the ``candidates'' is already an executive with the hiring company. That allows the insider to closely watch the other three and report the findings -- good and bad -- to his or her boss. As the week concludes, the insider is revealed and chooses the most deserving applicant to be offered the job. Mugabe and the White African is a 2009 documentary film by Lucy Bailey and Andrew Thompson. The film documents the lives of a white Zimbabwean family who run a farm in Chegutu, as they challenge the Fast Track land redistribution programme that redistributed white-owned estates, a legacy of colonialism and UDI, beginning in 2000. The film follows Mike Campbell, his son-in-law Ben Freeth, and their family as they challenge Robert Mugabe and the Zimbabwean government before the Southern African Development Community tribunal for racial discrimination and human rights violations. The film premiered in the UK on 21 October 2009 at the London Film Festival. Une affaire de famille is a short 2012 documentary film directed by Justin Guitard. Bandas, vidas y otros sones is a 1985 short documentary film directed by Sonia Fritz. Way Back (L'shuv B'hazara) is a documentary film directed by Avinda Lovny. Rise is a 2009 documentary short film written and directed by Visra Vichit-Vadakan. The Quiet Philanthropist: The Edith Gaylord Story is a historical documentary film directed by Bryan Beasley. Dreams Are Colder than Death is a 2014 documentary indie film directed by Arthur Jafa. The Apollo 17 mission was the final opportunity to collect first hand information about the history and origin of the Moon. This film looks at this historic mission through the eyes of those who participated in it. Including Commander Eugene Cernan, Lunar Module Pilot Harrison Schmitt, and Command Module Pilot Ron Evans. From Czarist Russia's Moscow Art Theatre to Hollywood's biggest film, narrator Gregory Peck joins an A-list of Hollywood stars to take us through the odyssey of two Russian born Hollywood legends: The great acting teacher Michael Chekhov and the amazing director George Shdanoff. With actors Anthony Quinn, Lloyd Bridges, Robert Stack, Jack Palance, Patricia Neal, Mala Powers and many more. We follow the lives of those who made Hollywood what it is today. Bavaria blue is a 1989 film directed by Jörg Bundschuh. Im Schatten des Karakorum is a documentary film directed by Eugen Schuhmacher and written by Mathias Rebitsch and Eugen Schuhmacher. A Pinch of Skin is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Priya Goswami. Oh Holy Cow is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Alexandre Rufin. Black Block is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Carlo A. Bachschmidt. Free Them Now is a 2009 documentary film written by Judith Vélez Aguirre and Pablo O´Brien and directed by Judith Vélez Aguirre. Footprints on the Moon is a 1969 documentary film covering the flight of Apollo 11 from vehicle rollout to splashdown and recovery. It was directed by Bill Gibson, produced by Barry Coe, edited by Frank Roh, cinematographer, and is narrated by Wernher von Braun, with Pierre Jalbert doing additional voiceover as Jules Verne. It is largely assembled from a variety of NASA and other news footage, with montage scenes assembled from still images standing in where no motion picture footage exists. The score includes Philip Moody's Laguna Concerto, a short work for piano and orchestra. Although Footprints on the Moon has the distinction of being the only contemporary theatrically released documentary of Apollo 11, it lay almost forgotten for decades, until it was finally released on DVD in early 2010, missing the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing by less than a year. A lively portrait of 76-year-old Harold "Louie Bluie" Armstrong, musician, artist, raconteur and rogue. Bye Bye Africa is a 1999 award winning Chadian film. It was the first by Chadian director Mahamat Saleh Haroun, who also starred. The docu-drama centers on a fictionalized version of Haroun. The Queen's Garden is a 1977 documentary film written and directed by James Hill and Bill Travers. Grant Morrison: Talking with Gods is a feature-length documentary that takes an in depth look at the life, career and mind of the Scottish comic book writer Grant Morrison. Talking with Gods features interviews with Morrison and many his most collaborators, such as artists, editors and other industry professionals. Secret Moments is a film by Swiss filmmaker Steff Gruber. It was filmed in the early 1990s in the Netherlands and edited in 2006. The Fabric of Home is a 2011 documentary film written by Othmar Schmiderer and Elsbeth Wallnöfer and directed by Othmar Schmiderer. American Interior is a 2014 documentary film directed by Gruff Rhys. California Company Town is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Lee Anne Schmitt. Long Night's Journey Into Day is a 2000 American documentary film about the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in post-Apartheid South Africa. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. My Red Shoes is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Sara Rastegar. "Waterlife is an immersion into the beauty and toxicity of the Great Lakes. Following the epic cascade from Lake Superior to the Atlantic Ocean, Waterlife reminds us of our essential connection to the water that we drink every day. Waterlife is a stunning ode to the last great supply of fresh water on earth, the Great Lakes. Kevin McMahon navigates with fluid clarity through industrial intervention and natural splendor, from northern Lake Superior to the Atlantic Ocean. This eloquent poetic essay transforms the way we think and inspires us to act before it's too late." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Tokyo International Film Festival site, Rostige Bilder is a 1991 film directed by Manfred Wilhelms. España 1936 is a Spanish short documentary film. Loners on Wheels is a 1998 documentary directed and produced by Susan Morosoli. Anosmia is a 2012 short documentary adventure biographical drama film directed by Jacob LaMendola. L'écuelle et l'assiette is a 1984 short, documentary film directed by Raoul Rossi. Power Erotic is a documentary drama film directed by Lawrence Ferrara. Der Videopionier is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Gerd Conradt. Cross The T's and Gouge Your I's is Sum 41's second DVD. It was released in 2002, as the bonus DVD for the USA and UK editions of their hit album Does This Look Infected?, and as a separate DVD worldwide. The DVD includes six sections: "Play Videos", "Reign of Pain", "Home Movies", "Pain for Pleasure Songs", "Lucifer Recommends" and "Weblink." I Am Hardwell is a music documentary film directed by Robin Piree. Five Ways to Dario is a 2010 documentary film directed by Dario Aguirre. Art/Crime is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Frédérick Maheux. Children Full of Life is a 2003 Japanese documentary film directed by Noboru Kaetsu that follows a 4th grade teacher in Japan. June 6th is a 2010 film directed by Simon Kreitem. ¿¡Revolución!? is a 2006 political documentary directed by Quebec journalist and filmmaker Charles Gervais. It examines the Bolivarian Revolution led by Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez. It was produced by Télé-Québec, the Quebec government's public television network. As part of the Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal film festival, first screenings occurred on November 10 and 14, 2006 at the Cinéma ONF in Montreal. The general opening happened on December 8, 2006, at Cinéma Ex-Centris, also in Montreal. This version showed the original Spanish spoken by the subjects, as well as narration and subtitles in French. Cinema Jenin: The Story of a Dream is a 2011 documentary film written by Marcus Vetter and Aleksei Bakri and directed by Marcus Vetter. In 1979 Norma Bailey made the gritty documentary Nose and Tina, about a prostitute, Tina, and her boyfriend, Nose. Fifteen years later Tina (now Linda), contacted Bailey from an alcohol rehabilitation center. Sometimes funny, sometimes upsetting, but always reveting, Bailey follows Linda and her children, sisters, mother, boyfriends and various extended family members as they move in and out of Linda's life. The True Story of Linda M. takes us on a remarkable journey into the heart and soul of a woman struggling with the darkness that lurks beneath the surface of her psyche. Taiga is an eight-hour documentary directed and photographed by Ulrike Ottinger. It focuses on the life and rituals of nomadic peoples in Northern Mongolia, specifically the Darkhad nomads and the Sojon Urinjanghai. In the Family is a 2008 documentary film, produced by Kartemquin Films, about predicting breast and ovarian cancer and the choices women make when they are faced with the dangers of a possible life-threatening disease. The film's director, Joanna Rudnick, tests positive for the familial BRCA mutation that increases her chances of developing breast cancer by 60%. Faced with these odds, Rudnick must examine her choices of possibly taking her chances or possibly having her breasts and ovaries removed. In the Family takes a look at genetic testing, something that was an impossibility to previous generations, but for some women, the decision to be tested is not easy. Rudnick follows several women going through the decision to be tested, some who are cancer survivors and some that are losing that battle. The question for each woman is, "how much do you sacrifice to survive?" Produced by Kartemquin Films, In the Family premiered on PBS's P.O.V. on October 1, 2008. It was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Informational Long Form Programming in 2009. The ABC of Love and Sex: Australia Style is a 1978 Australian documentary. "The Alberta tar sands are easily the most controversial natural resource in the country, providing filmmaker Peter Mettler with the focus for his latest conceptual documentary. Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands is full of the stunning imagery one has come to expect from Mettler, but what is perhaps most incredible about the film is the way in which he conveys so much with so little conventional voiceover narration. True to his style, this auteur lets the images speak for themselves. The spat over the sands is an epic one. Proponents point to massive profits that may be gained from the oil-rich project, while detractors suggest that the process of extracting and refining the oil will have a devastating long-term environmental impact. Mettler's vision certainly leads us to question how clean such a project could ever really be, and he manages, through a series of sweeping shots, to indicate just how mammoth the tar sands are. While Mettler's perspective is never in question – this film was produced by Greenpeace Canada, after all – what's striking is his ability to capture images that are at once shocking in their perverse beauty and utterly horrifying in their implications. As he takes us from the abstract to the real, we realize the true nature of these visuals: what initially appears to be a beautiful series of fluid lines is in fact the ooze and flow of dire toxic pollution. quoting While this is clearly an opinionated doc with an environmental bent, it is also most distinctly a Peter Mettler film. As he repeatedly casts his lens over the tar sands, he reminds us of the undeniable power and responsibility inherent in capturing an image. Petropolis makes for one of those very rare experiences: an aesthetically beautiful film that also packs a social conscience." Quoting Matthew Hays from the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival site. Aegean Tragedy is a 1961 historical documentary film written by Angelos Prokopiou and directed by Basil Maros. In 1955, Oscar Robertson and his teammates at the segregated Crispus Attucks High School rose from the hatred and racism of the time to be the first all-black team ever to win a state championship. With their innovative style of play, this brilliant group of athletes changed basketball forever. This is an amazing true story of the coach, school and team that inspired the nation. We Are Rhino is a 2013 documentary film directed by Spencer Austin. After Shock is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Arenessa Gutierrez. A House in the Jungle is a 1969 documentary film directed by John Power. Aamra is a Bengali Movie was released in 2006. Directed by Mainak Bhaumik, the movie featured Jisshu Sengupta, Parambrata Chatterjee, Nilanjana Sharma. It is an uncredited remake of the movie Sidewalks of New York, 2001. Liberators: Fighting on Two Fronts in World War II is a 1992 documentary film directed by Bill Miles. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. La vie passionnée de Clémenceau is a 1953 documentary film written by Jacques Le Bailly and directed by Gilbert Prouteau. "With disturbing honesty, performance dancer Li Ning turned his life in China into a work of art. Using a range of cinematographic means for five often absurd years, swerving between harsh reality and artistic pretensions, between pathos and insight, between perseverance and self-pity. 'A person is nothing more than a series of undertakings', said Jean-Paul Sartre and it is a statement that is very apt for the Chinese dancer and performance artist Li Ning. Not only at his avant-garde performances but also in his private situation, where he wrestles with two 'families': his wife, his son and his mother who accuse him of earning too little money for them and his guerrilla dance group, which is enthusiastic about not very well organised. In the almost three-hour long Tape, Li records five years from his own life, balancing between the harsh reality and his artistic pretensions, between pathos and insight and between perseverance and self-pity. He uses a motley collection of cinematographic techniques: observing images, self reflective confessions, and written voice-over and also digital special effects. This story has a jumpy chronology, in which some scenes are repeated. Tape is a recalcitrant, confrontational ego document in which Li succeeds in revealing his own soul and all its nakedness." Quoting the description from the 2011 International Film Festival Rotterdam site. This two-hour special, hosted by ABC "Nightline" correspondent Robert Krulwich, chronicles the race to capture one of the biggest prizes in scientific history: the complete letter-by-letter sequence of genetic information that defines human life -- the human genome. The Apothecary is a 2013 documentary, western, drama and biographical short film written and directed by Helen Hood Scheer. Third World California is a 2006 documentary film by Otavio Juliano. It depicts the substandard living conditions of undocumented immigrants living within an Indian reservation in the Lower Coachella Valley in the California desert. Because of the reservation's status as a sovereign entity, environmental regulations, building codes, fire safety codes and other basic legal protections cannot be enforced there. As a result, the undocumented residents of the reservation live in squalor next to mounds of sewage sludge, enduring some of the highest summer temperatures in the world in metal trailers without air-conditioning or reliable plumbing, all the while being charged high rentals by their tribal member landlords. The film debuted at the 22nd Chicago Latino Film Festival. Through the Walls of the Heart is a documentary film written and and directed by Anne Lévy-Morelle. Forty-Seven Views of Leslie Laskey is a 2012 documentary and biographical film directed by David Wild. Sie heirateten in Gretna Green is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Fritz Illing. Little Heaven is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Lieven Corthouts. Father's Land is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Peter Krieg. Damn Good Dog is a 2004 documentary film detailing the history of the Uga dynasty, which was produced by Nowhere Productions, directed by Erica McCarthy. Damn Good Dog is a full length movie about the life and times of Uga, the mascot of the University of Georgia Bulldogs and Nation's Most Famous College Mascot. Larry Munson stars as the voice of Uga. The documentary also features appearances by Herschel Walker, Sonny Seiler, John Berendt, The Lady Chablis, and many more. The movie was released in 2004. Barn Dance is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Kristine Samuelson, Amy Seiwert and John Haptas. Matéria De Composição is a 2013 documentary directed by Pedro Aspahan. White Wash is a documentary film directed by Ted Woods, and is a film exploring the complexity of race in America through the struggle and triumph of black surfers. The story is narrated by Grammy Award® winner Ben Harper with Tariq "Blackthought" Trotter of the Roots and told through the eyes of black surfers from Hawaii, Jamaica, Florida, and California. This controversial and probing film looks deep into America's painful and pervasive legacy of slavery and exclusion. From surfing's "discovery" by Captain James Cook in Hawaii in 1778 through the explosion of surf culture during the days of segregated Jim Crow America in1960's, this film explores the myths that black surfers have overcome in their search for waves. White Wash is a story of transcendence in the face of aggression and a glimpse into the American psyche. From the shores of California, Hawaii, Mexico, and Puerto Rico to the basketball courts of New York City, through the cotton fields of the Mississippi Delta up to the ivory towers of Texas and back into the swimming pools of Florida, White Wash is a historical exploration of race, identity, and the myths we live by and that ultimately unite us all. Dalekmania is a 1995 direct-to-video documentary released in the United Kingdom. "Dalekmania" is the name given to the craze or "mania" among children in the United Kingdom in the 1960s for all things associated with writer Terry Nation's creations, the Daleks, who were then regularly appearing in the BBC's television drama series Doctor Who. Chocolate Comedy is a 2013 short film directed by Chairun Nissa. Azul - The Poetry Of Nicaragua is a 1988 documentary film directed by Roland Legiardi-Laura. Icebreakers is a 2012 documentary, short film directed by Maximilien van Aetryck. McCullin is a 2012 documentary film directed by David Morris and Jacqui Morris. The Farmer And The Chef is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Michael Whalen. The Radiant is a 2012 documentary film directed by The Otolith Group. FIXING THE FUTURE discovers communities across America using innovative approaches to create jobs and build prosperity. Stars David Brancaccio, Bill McKibben, Majora Carter and Mike Brady. Timothy Leary's Last Trip is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by O.B. Babbs and A.J. Catoline. Ben annemin kiziyim is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Seyhan Derin. Reptilicus: Initial Conditions is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Guðmundur Ingi Markússon. From Stump to Ship is an amateur industrial film by Alfred Ames, owner of the Machias Lumber Company, in Machias, Maine and by Dr. Howard Kane of Washington, DC. The half-hour 16mm film was shot over the winter of 1930 in the logging woods and shows logging in the forest with hand tools and horses, then moves to the spring log drive, with loggers using peaveys to break up log jams on icy rivers as the logs are moved from the forest to the mill. Detailed views of mill work, changing the bandsaw, and making shingles. Lumber is loaded onto schooners in Machias for transport to New York. The film was originally silent, with a typed script which Ames read aloud when he showed the film. In 1985, with funds from the Maine Humanities Council, the narration was recorded with the film. The film is distributed by Northeast Historic Film, in Bucksport, Maine. Footage was included in the compilation documentary Woodsmen and River Drivers, Another Day, Another Era which also interviewed the surviving woodsmen of the Machias Lumber Company. Thought Moments is an anthropological short film in the style of cinéma vérité by Michael Simon Toon. Toon, a former Buddhist monk, titled Thought Moments after the Buddhist term for the mental states we experience when a physical or mental object enters the mind. The film is used in the study of microexpressions, eye accessing cues, and the universality of facial expressions. Toon interviews a diverse sample of individuals in public places across the United Kingdom asking a set of ten simple but emotionally evocative questions. The film uses variable frame rates to highlight distinct emotions, as well as their sequence and timing, that each individual expresses within seconds or fractions of a second after being asked questions, such as "What do you love most?" "Are you happy or sad?" and "What are you afraid of?" Consistency of composition, lighting, and contrast facilitates the analysis of both the differences and similarities of the interviewees' facial expressions. Toon also released a version of the film with superimposed theoretical eye accessing cue chart. Both versions are studied and reproduced by students of psychology in several languages. Divine Horsemen: The Living Gods of Haiti is a black-and-white documentary film of approximately 52 minutes. It is about dance and possession in Haitian vodou that was shot by experimental filmmaker Maya Deren between 1947 and 1954. In 1981, twenty years after Deren's death, the film was completed by Deren's third husband Teiji Ito and his wife Cherel Winett Ito. Most of the film consists of images of dancing and bodies in motion during rituals in Rada and Petro services. Deren had studied dance as well as photography and filmmaking. She originally went to Haiti with the funding from a Guggenheim fellowship and the stated intention of filming the dancing that forms a crucial part of the vodou ceremony. In 1953, Deren's book Divine Horsemen: The Voodoo Gods of Haiti, on the subject of vodou, was published by Vanguard Press. The film that resulted, however, reflected Deren's increasing personal engagement with vodou and its practitioners. While this ultimately resulted in Deren disregarding the guidelines of the fellowship, Deren was able to record scenes that probably would have been inaccessible to other filmmakers. Transparent is a 2006 documentary film about the experiences of 19 female-to-male transgender parents as they are coming to terms with gender transitioning. The title, "Transparent", is a play on the words "trans" and "parent", while suggesting the invisibility of transgender parenting in contemporary discourse. The film was featured in the September 2006 issue of Curve magazine as one of the Ten Must-See Gender Documentaries and one of the best examples of New Trans Cinema, alongside Transamerica, Boys Don't Cry and Soldier's Girl. Bustin' Down The Door is a 2008 documentary film chronicling the rise of professional surfing in the early 1970s. The film follows a group of young surfers from Australia and South Africa, including Shaun Tomson, Wayne 'Rabbit' Bartholomew, Ian Cairns, Mark Richards, Michael Tomson and Peter Townend, as they relocate to Hawaii encountering obstacles, turf wars and massive wipeouts along the way. Clashes with the locals, some of whom find the newcomers' bravado to be insulting to Hawaiian culture, eventually culminate in death threats against the subjects of the film. Luchadoras is a 2009 short drama documentary film written by Benet Román and Alejandra Musi and directed by Benet Román. Missile is a 1987 American documentary film by Frederick Wiseman. It chronicles the 14 week training course for the men and women of the United States Air Force who are charged with manning the ICBM silos in remote places like Minot AFB and Whiteman AFB. The film shows discussions of the ethics of nuclear war, shows scenes from the daily lives of trainees, and shows demonstrations of training exercises such as counterterrorism, the launching of nuclear missiles, the command and control process, and basic military training. Most scenes in the film are of classroom training, interspersed with exercises in training facilities. The film includes a scene of an Air Force church service memorial for the astronauts killed in the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. In the typical style of Wiseman's films, the documentary is unadorned by commentary, narration, or music. Herriott Grace is a 2012 short, biographical, documentary and drama film directed by John Cullen. Anti-Semitism in the 21st Century: The Resurgence is a documentary film that first aired on PBS on January 8, 2007. Directed, produced, and written by Andrew Goldberg, this documentary, hosted by Judy Woodruff, examines the roots of modern antisemitism and why it flourishes today. The program explores why attacks on Jews in Europe have more than doubled since the 1990s, and its connections to the Arab-Israeli conflict. The purpose of the program is to explore the origins of antisemitism and why it has surged in recent times. It mainly focuses on antisemitism in the Muslim world and its connections to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It explores the history of Islamic antisemitism from pre-Zionism as well as how it has grown since the creation of Israel. The film also explores the similarities between modern Muslim antisemitism and antisemitism in Europe before World War II. Bobcaygeon is a 2012 documentary film directed by Andy Keen. The God Makers is a book and film highlighting the inner workings and perceived negative aspects of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The book and film were co-authored by Ed Decker and Dave Hunt. The film, produced by Jeremiah Films in 1982, takes a highly critical view of the LDS Church, its practices, and its teachings. The film is an exposé of the Church's secrets, which has been controversial among church members and non-members since its release, provoking passionate debates about its veracity and message. 52 Percent is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Rafal Skalski. Stalin's Ghost is a documentary film written by Richard Ellison & Bob Abernathy. The Galapagos Affair: Satan Came to Eden is a 2013 feature-length documentary directed by Daniel Geller and Dayna Goldfine. It is about a series of unsolved disappearances on the Galapagos island of Floreana in the 1930s among the largely European expatriate residents at the time. The voice cast includes Cate Blanchett, Sebastian Koch, Thomas Kretschmann, Diane Kruger, Connie Nielsen, Josh Radnor and Gustaf Skarsgård. Gates of Life is a 2012 short film written and directed by Hannes Vartiainen and Pekka Veikkolainen. Echoes From a Sombre Empire is a documentary film by Werner Herzog about Jean-Bédel Bokassa. Unlike most of Herzog's documentaries, the main body of the film does not provide any narration or commentary by Herzog himself. Instead, the film follows journalist Michael Goldsmith as he revisits the Central African Republic, where he was imprisoned and tortured by Bokassa's regime. Goldsmith interviews two of Bokassa's wives, several of Bokassa's children, two of Bokassa's lawyers, and Central African Republic President David Dacko. Bokassa himself appears only in stock footage. Goldsmith was working as a French journalist when he was imprisoned after reporting on Bokassa's elaborate coronation. In the film, he says that he had written his report and used a telex machine to send it to his employer. There was a power failure during the transmission, causing the text to become jumbled. The message was intercepted by the government of the CAE, who decided that it was a coded message, and that Goldsmith was a French spy. Goldsmith was taken to a prison, where he says that he was beaten personally by Bokassa, almost to death. Bikini Kill in the U.K. “It Changed My Life" is a 1993 short, documentary film directed by Lucy Thane. Spanish Teen Rally is a 2014 Spanish documentary film directed by Amparo Fortuny. The film delves into the world of a group of teenagers whose protests in defense of Public Education triggered the so-called Valencian Spring. It was the very first experience of protest for many of them and lead to their crash with reality. Not only did these teenagers become the symbol of the student protests throughout Spain; they also became a reflection of the youth's disenchantment facing an uncertain future in a country where the austerity policies are beginning to seriously affect society. In the documentary we find testimonials from students from 13 to 19 years of age with shocking images of the demonstrations together with foregrounds of the young protagonists enduring police charges and the destruction of children icons Sex Slaves is a 2005 documentary by Ric Esther Bienstock that was created in association with CBC, Channel 4 and Canal D. It provides a firsthand account of international human trafficking by going to the countries such as Moldova and Ukraine where girls are recruited, then following the trail to the various countries and locales where they end up. Interviews with traffickers, experts, police vice-squads and former sex slaves, along with undercover footage, provide a glimpse into the frightening reality and scope of the problem. One husband's journey is documented as he attempts to rescue his pregnant wife who was sold by a trafficker who befriended them, to a notoriously powerful and violent pimp in Turkey. Sex Slaves won numerous awards, including a 2007 Emmy Award for Outstanding Investigative Journalism, the Edward R. Murrow Award from the Overseas Press Club of America, a Gracie Award from American Women in Radio and Television, a British Broadcast Award for Best Documentary. a Royal Television Society Award from the UK and a BAFTA nomination, among others. Vanishing of the Bees is a 2009 documentary film by Hive Mentality Films & Hipfuel films, directed by George Langworthy and Maryam Henein and released in the United Kingdom on October 9. The story centers around the sudden disappearance of honey bees from beehives around the world, caused by the poorly understood phenomenon known as Colony Collapse Disorder or CCD. Although the film does not draw any firm scientific conclusions as to the precise cause or causes of CCD, it does suggest a link between neonicotinoid pesticides and CCD. The UK cinema release of the film was supported by The Co-operative Group. An inside look at the infamous competition that takes place in downtown Los Angeles, Califormia. Four graffiti artists from L.A. and the UK battle it out on canvas in a judged competition, to benefit charity. Best Worst Movie is an American documentary film about making the 1990 horror film Troll 2 and its subsequent recent resurgence as a cult film. Directed by Michael Stephenson, the child star of Troll 2, the film debuted March 14, 2009. Best Worst Movie was released on DVD on November 16, 2010, distributed by New Video Group, and can currently be seen on Epix Drive-In. A documentary which takes a revealing look at families left behind after coping with the loss of their loved ones in the shadow of the American Army's claim that their deaths were suicides. Handel und Wandel is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Katharina Geinitz. Dior and I is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Frédéric Tcheng. Pornstar Pets is a 2005 documentary film directed by Margie Schnibbe. The 52 minute film includes 25 pornographic actors and their sometimes exotic pets in a vein similar to Celebrity Pets. Sleepy Labeef Rides Again is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Seth Pomeroy. Stepping Out? is a 2011 short documentary romance family film directed by Yaminah McKessey. Ocean Oasis is a short film directed by Soames Summerhays. Trumpeter-bandleader Miles Davis (1926-91) was a catalyst for the major innovations in post-bop, cool jazz, hard-bop, and jazz-fusion, and his wispy and emotional trumpet tones were some of the most evocative sounds ever heard. He was also one of the most identifiable and misunderstood pop icons of the 20th century. This engrossing British documentary shows the complex layers of this magnificent and mercurial artist. Through rare footage and interviews, we learn of Davis's middle-class upbringing and his early days with bop legends Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker. The documentary bluntly deals with Davis's narcotic nadir and his rise from the depths to become a bona fide jazz icon in the mid-'50s to late '60s. But the most penetrating and poignant portraits of Davis come from musicians who played with and were influenced by him, including Shirley Horn, Herbie Hancock, Joe Zawinul, and Keith Jarrett. Outstanding musical selections include modal masterpieces "So What" and "Blue in Green," the haunting soundtrack to the 1957 French film Ascenseur pour l'échafaud, his romantic rendition of Cyndi Lauper's "Time After Time," and his collaborations with arranger Gil Evans. The most surprising aspects of Davis's personality that emerge from this film are his shyness, vulnerability, and, yes, humility. As he said himself, "Don't call me a legend. Call me Miles Davis." --Eugene Holley Jr. The Gettysburg Story is a documentary film directed by Jake Boritt. A Cat on the Shoulder is a 2013 documentary film directed by Julie Conte. Where are we? is a 1990 short film written and directed by Elefterie Voiculescu. Kill the Day is a 2010 documentary film written by Andrei Kutsila and directed by Aleksander Nalivaiko and Andrei Kutsila. El Mar, Mi Alma is a documentary film directed by Stephen L. Jones and Tatiana Velasco. Electrocute Your Stars is a 2005 film directed by Marie Losier. What Happened to This City? is a 1987 film written by Keshav Rao Jadav and directed by Deepa Dhanraj. Love Ya is a 2014 short, documentary and romance film written by Jessica Hayes and directed by Chris Altorf and Jessica Hayes. Czech Peace is a 2010 Czech documentary film directed by Vít Klusák and Filip Remunda. The film won the White Goose award at the DMZ Korean International Documentary Film Festival in 2010. The film followed a 2004 documentary from the same pair of directors, Czech Dream. Following the release of Czech Peace, the directors announced plans to make a third documentary film to complete a trilogy. The Bravest Team: The Rebuilding of the FDNY Football Club is a 2002 documentary TV movie. Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life is a 1997 American documentary film written, produced, and directed by Michael Paxton. Its focus is on novelist and philosopher Ayn Rand, the author of the bestselling novels The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged, who promoted her philosophy of Objectivism through her books, articles, speeches, and media appearances. In addition to color and black-and-white archival footage of Rand, the film includes appearances by philosophers Harry Binswanger and Leonard Peikoff, CBS News correspondent Mike Wallace, television interviewers Phil Donahue and Tom Snyder, architect Frank Lloyd Wright, political figures Joseph Stalin and Leon Trotsky, and Hollywood personalities Cecil B. DeMille, Edith Head, Adolphe Menjou, Marilyn Monroe, and Robert Taylor. The documentary is narrated by actress Sharon Gless. Portrait of an Urban Beekeepr is a 2013 short, documentary and biographical film written and directed by Steve Ellington. Extreme Private Eros: Love Song 1974 is a documentary film directed by Kazuo Hara. Four Women of Egypt is a 1997 Canadian-Egyptian documentary film by Tahani Rached. The film revolves around four female friends from Egypt with opposing religious, social, and political views in modern-day Egypt. The film was highly acclaimed and won several awards in documentary film festivals. The Rising Tide is a 1949 Canadian short documentary film directed by Jean Palardy. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, the film shows how cooperatives in the Maritime provinces gave new life and hope to poverty-stricken fishermen. The Rising Tide received a special citation at the Canadian Film Awards. Barefoot to Herat is a 2002 Iranian film by Majid Majidi. It is a documentary about the plight of Afghani refugees just after the 2001 military offensive against the Taliban. Film Portrait is a full-length autobiographical movie directed by, and about, the life of Minnesotan film-maker and artist, Jerome Hill. It was selected as an outstanding Film of the Year for presentation at the London Film Festival in 1972 and won the Gold Dukat Prize at the 21st Annual Mannheim Film Festival. Jerome Hill died shortly after the completion of Film Portrait, and so the work is often described as his memoir. In 2003, Film Portrait was added to the National Film Registry at the Library of Congress, recognizing the cultural, historical and aesthetic significance of the work, as well as ensuring the preservation of the original film footage. Slave Queen is a 2013 crime drama thriller documentary film written and directed by Masud Akhond. Questions à la terre natale is a 2006 documentary film. Vietnam, Long Time Coming is a documentary released in 1998 by Kartemquin Films. The film follows a 16-day, 1100 mile bicycle expedition through once war-torn Northern and Southern Vietnam that was organized by World T.E.A.M. Sports. The event drew an array of veterans from the U.S. and Vietnam, as well as celebrity riders like Greg LeMond and Senator John Kerry. Those without use of their legs used special hand-powered bikes, while blind riders pedaled from the back of tandem bikes. Past enemies ride as one team in peace across a landscape they once killed to stay alive on. Winner of Outstanding Directorial Achievement at the 1998 Directors Guild Awards, as well as Outstanding Program Achievement at the 1998 Emmy Awards, Vietnam, Long Time Coming won multiple national awards. The films soundtrack featured such artists as Bruce Springsteen, Emmylou Harris, and Shawn Colvin. A portion of the proceeds went to groups promoting medical and educational programs in Vietnam. A Life with Asperger's is a 2013 animated short documentary drama written by Jaime Ekkens and Emmett Goodman. The film was also directed by Jaime Ekkens. Wilt Chamberlain: Borscht Belt Bellhop is a 2013 short documentary biographical sport film directed by Caroline Laskow and Ian Rosenberg. Dalida is a French and Italian two-parts-film for television directed by Joyce Buñuel released on TV in 2005. This movie tells Dalida's life. Rebel Menopause is a 2014 documentary short film directed by Adele Tulli. The March, also known as The March to Washington, is a 1964 documentary film by James Blue about the 1963 civil rights March on Washington. It was made for the Motion Picture Service unit of the United States Information Agency for use outside the United States – the 1948 Smith-Mundt Act prevented USIA films from being shown domestically without a special act of Congress. In 1990 Congress authorized these films to be shown in the U.S. twelve years after their initial release. In 2008, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Patu! is a 1983 documentary/sport film by Merata Mita. La peau du foot is a 1997 documentary film written by Albert Knechtel and Jacques Maigne and directed by Albert Knechtel. Daddy Tran: A Life in 3-D is a 2008 documentary film directed by Siu Ta. The Trachtenburg Family Slideshow Players: Off & On Broadway is a documentary featuring the Trachtenburg Family Slideshow Players, a self-described indie rock-vaudeville conceptual art rock pop music collective band. The documentary was directed and produced in 2005 by Richard Drutman, the same person who directed the family’s music video for the song “Mountain Trip to Japan, 1959”. It was released on August 1, 2006. The concert performances at Lamb's Theater as well as the performances in the bonus features introducing the family was shot on July 29, 2005 at Lamb’s Theatre in New York City. The DVD is a collage of live musical performances of the Trachtenburgs at Lamb’s Theatre in NYC, old performances/interviews of the family as well as interviews of other such celebrities such as Nellie McKay and Regina Spektor. The Face of Evil: Reinhard Heydrich is a 2002 documentary film written by Robert Beemer and directed by Robert Beemer and Michael Kase. The Other Side of Immigration is a 2009 documentary film directed by Roy Germano that explores why so many people leave the Mexican countryside to work in the United States and what happens to the families and communities they leave behind. The film is based on Germano’s interviews with over 700 households in Mexico, which he carried out while doing Ph.D. research on remittances at the University of Texas at Austin. The Other Side of Immigration is distributed by Team Love Records, a company founded by musician Conor Oberst. Disrupted is a 2013 documentary biography family musical film written by Roberto Fiesco and Julián Hernández and directed by Roberto Fiesco. Half A Life is a 1983 short film directed by Christine Noll-Brinkmann. The Kyrgyzstan Project is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jim Aikman and Matt Segal. Children Of The Deaf is a 2013 family documentary film written and directed by Marie-Eve Nadeau. Courting Condi is a 2008 film by British filmmaker Sebastian Doggart that portrays the quest of a love-struck man, actor Devin Ratray, who wants to win the heart of US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. The Compleat Beatles, released in 1982, is a two-hour documentary, chronicling the career of the Beatles. Although it has since been supplanted by the longer and more in-depth documentary Beatles Anthology, The Compleat Beatles was for many years largely regarded as the definitive film about the Beatles. The word "compleat" is a tongue-in-cheek reference to the intentional misspelling of "Beetles" and a reference to the famous book on fishing, The Compleat Angler. Narrated by actor Malcolm McDowell, it includes extensive interviews with a number of sources close to the Beatles. Some of the people interviewed are producer George Martin, their first manager Allan Williams, Cavern Club DJ Bob Wooler, music writer Bill Harry, and musicians Gerry Marsden, Billy J. Kramer, Marianne Faithfull, Billy Preston and Tony Sheridan. The film also includes archival footage of interviews with members of the Beatles and their manager Brian Epstein. Authors Nicholas Schaffner and Wilfred Mellers are among the commentators who offer their views on the band's career. Storstrømsbroen is a 1950 short documentary film written and directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer. Jean Seberg, American Actress is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Donatello Dubini and Fosco Dubini. RasTa: A Soul's Journey is a 2011 documentary, biographical, history and music film directed by Stuart Samuels. Cloven Horizon is a 1965 documentary film directed by Kantilal Rathod. Neues in Wittstock is a 1992 documentary film directed by Volker Koepp. Straight Up: Helicopters in Action is a short documentary film directed by David Douglas. Arts Vietnam, a Protest to Stop the War is a 1968 short documentary film directed by Sasha Ivanovich. To Singapore, With Love is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Tan Pin Pin. Pay It No Mind: Marsha P. Johnson is a documentary film directed by Michael Kasino. "Silent Stories is a portrait of four individuals—Sara, Jean-Louis, Rabiatou, and Arezki—who were forced to flee their homes of Baghdad, Algiers, Conakry, and Dakar, respectively." - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Figure Of Armen is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Marlene Edoyan. La doppia vita di Anna is a 1975 documentary film directed by Alberto Grifi and Massimo Sarchielli. It's All True is an unfinished Orson Welles feature film comprising three stories about Latin America. "My Friend Bonito" was supervised by Welles and directed by Norman Foster in Mexico in 1941. "Carnaval" and "Jangadeiros" were directed by Welles in Brazil in 1942. It was to have been Welles's third film for RKO Radio Pictures, after Citizen Kane and The Magnificent Ambersons. The project was a co-production of RKO and the Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs that was later terminated by RKO. The unrealized production was the subject of a 1993 documentary written and directed by Richard Wilson, Bill Krohn and Myron Meisel. While some of the footage shot for It's All True was repurposed or sent to stock film libraries, approximately 200,000 feet of the Technicolor nitrate negative, most of it for the "Carnaval" episode, was dumped into the Pacific Ocean in the late 1960s or 1970s. In the 1980s a cache of nitrate negative, largely black-and-white, was found in a vault and presented to the UCLA Film and Television Archive. El milagro de Candeal is a 2004 music documentary film directed by Fernando Trueba. The Road To Memphis is a documentary directed by Richard Pearce. The film follows the career of Blues musician B.B. King. It features performances by B.B. King, Bobby Rush, Rosco Gordon and Ike Turner, as well as historical footage of Howlin' Wolf and Rufus Thomas. Said Pearce: "The Blues is a chance to celebrate one of the last truly indigenous American art forms, before it all but disappears, swallowed whole by the rock and roll generation it spawned. Hopefully we'll get there before it's too late." The film is part of The Blues, a seven part series, with Martin Scorsese acting as executive producer. Toy Masters is a documentary film directed by Corey Landis and Roger Lay Jr. Ociel del Toa is a 1965 documentary short film written by Nicolás Guillén and directed by Nicolás Guillén Landrián. Moments choisis des histoire(s) du cinéma is a documentary film directed by Jean-Luc Godard. History of the Eagles is a 2013 two-part authorized documentary about the career of the American rock group the Eagles, directed by Alison Ellwood and co-produced by Alex Gibney. After screening at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival in January, it aired on Showtime in February, and was released in April on DVD and Blu-ray Disc with a third disc containing eight songs from the band's performance at the Capital Centre in March 1977. A concert tour of the same name is currently taking place, beginning in 2013 visiting North America and Europe. At the 65th Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards, the film received the award for Outstanding Sound Mixing for Nonfiction Programming. It was also nominated for Outstanding Sound Editing for Nonfiction Programming. The Super Deluxe Limited Edition Box Set received a Bronze Prize at the 2013 Key Art Awards. The Cemetery Club is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Tali Shemesh. The Burger and the King is a 1996 documentary film written by David Adler and directed by James Marsh. A documentary about the making of the Yule Ball scenes from Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. "I Think We're Alone Now" is a documentary that focuses on two individuals, Jeff and Kelly, who claim to be in love with the 80's pop singer Tiffany.Jeff Turner, a 52-year-old man from Santa Cruz, California has attended Tiffany concerts since 1988. Diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, Jeff lives alone off of government checks and has never had a girlfriend. Jeff spends his days hanging out on the streets of Santa Cruz, striking up conversations with anyone who has a moment to spare about conspiracy theories, God and Tiffany.Kelly McCormick is a 35-year-old intersex sports fanatic from Denver, Colorado, who claims to have been friends with Tiffany as a teenager. She credits Tiffany as the shining star who has motivated her to do everything in her life.Through both humorous and heartbreakingly sensitive scenes, the film takes look at Jeff and Kelly's lives, revealing the source of their clinging obsessions. still/here is a 2000 documentary film directed by Christopher Harris. The Saltmen of Tibet is an award-winning 1997 film that chronicles the trek undertaken by a clan of Tibetan salt harvesters across scenic but dangerous territory from their settlement to the sacred lakes where salt is harvested. The salt is then traded for foodstuffs to maintain the clan for the following year. Woven into the movie are excerpts of a Tibetan singer from the tribe telling the tale of King Gesar of Ling, a traditional Tibetan epic. The film is written in Tibetan with English subtitles. Baseball in the Time of Cholera is short documentary directed by David Darg and Bryn Mooser. Latent Argentina is a 2007 documentary film directed by Fernando Solanas. They Came for Good: A History of the Jew in the US is a 1997 documentary by Oscar nominated director Amram Nowak that explores the challenges and contributions of Jews during America's founding history. The film brings to life a series of personalities, including Asher Levy, Louis Moses Gomez, Rebecca Gratz, Uriah Phillips Levy, Levi Strauss, Isaac Leeser, Isaac Mayer Wise, Judah Benjamin, the Warburgs, the Schiffs, and Emma Lazarus. Hecho en Juárez is 2003 short documentary film written by Eduardo Zerov and directed by Arturo Chacon. De Corpo e Alma is a 2010 Mozambican documentary film. Menem, retrato de un hombre is a 1989 documentary film directed by Nicolás Sarquís. All Jews Out is a 1990 film directed by Emmanuel Rund. Zerda And The Songs Of Forgetting is a 1978 film directed by Assia Djebar. The Magic Hands is a 1978 short documentary film directed by Santi P. Choudhury. Sholem Aleichem: Laughing in the Darkness is a 2011 documentary written and directed by Joseph Dorman. Pete Seeger: The Power of Song is a documentary film about the life and music of the folk singer Pete Seeger. The film, which won an Emmy Award, was executive produced by Seeger's wife, filmmaker Toshi Seeger, when she was 85 years old. The documentary was directed by Jim Brown, who also directed The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time!. The film includes interviews with Arlo Guthrie, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Tom Paxton, Mary Travers, Natalie Maines, and numerous Seeger family members. One of its associate producers was Kitama Jackson, a grandson of Seeger. We Ride: The Story of Snowboarding is a feature-length documentary produced by Burn, and filmed and edited by creative production company Grain Media. The film traces snowboarding’s routes back to the very beginning of the sport, starting in 1965 with Sherman Poppen’s home-made invention for children, chronicling its boom in the 90s up to its present mainstream status as a global cultural phenomenon. We Ride features interviews with some of the sport’s most influential figures, including Todd Richards, Jake Burton Carpenter, Tom Sims, Craig Kelly, and burn-sponsored snowboarders Ståle Sandbech and Gigi Rüf. It was narrated by actor, comedian and pro-skater Jason Lee and directed by Grain Media founders John Drever and Orlando Von Einsiedel, who had been a pro-snowboarder before turning his hand to film. The film premiered at the opening of the annual snowboarding contest Air & Style in Innsbruck on 31 January 2013, and made its online premiere on 24 February 2013. Leo Beuerman is a 1969 American short documentary film directed by Gene Boomer. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. "LOVE BITES: THE 80s POWER BALLAD SINGALONG Ah, Valentine's Day. It's one of the busiest days of the year in the restaurant business, and for some of us it's a night of long gazes across that candle-lit table into the eyes of the person of our dreams. Our hands reach across the linen table-cloth, our fingers gently brush against each others', and our loins fueled by wine are just ready and waiting for a tumble in our satin sheets covered with rose petals. For the rest of us, Valentine's Day is a time to remember how we didn't even get the little "I choo-choo-choose you" cards in our paper mailbox at the end of our desk in elementary school, even though it was a CLASS ASSIGNMENT to find one special thing about all of your classmates and write it on a Valentine. Seriously, Mrs. Shellhouse's third grade class? You can't find ONE THING to write on a Valentine to me? WHY DO YOU HAVE TO MOCK US SO, HALLMARK SPONSORED HOLIDAY??? Fortunately, there is an entire genre of music made just for our pain, and it just happens to also be the most badass music ever: POWER BALLADS. When metal went glam, and glam boys needed radio hits to afford the fancy hair product they'd grown addicted to, they slowed it down a bit for the ladies and created the anthems that would become theme songs for an entire generation. We'll hold lighters in the air and sway, we'll pound our fists at the sky in defiance of those who would dare not love us, and we'll do it all with teased hair and animal print tights on. Featuring the music of Guns 'n Roses, REO Speedwagon, Warrant, and more... It's okay to cry, just make sure your hair is big while you do it." Quoting the description from the 2010 IndieFest site. Martins Tagebuch is an East German film. It was released in 1955. Manufacturing Dissent is a 2007 documentary that asserts that filmmaker Michael Moore has used misleading tactics, primarily using on-camera statements by interviewees with personal grievances against Moore as proof. The documentary attempts to expose what the creators say are Moore's misleading tactics and mimics Moore's style of small documentary makers seeking and badgering their target for an interview to receive answers to their charges. The film was made over the course of two years by Canadians Debbie Melnyk and Rick Caine after they viewed Fahrenheit 9/11, Moore's controversial film that attacked the Bush administration and its policies. Melnyk and Caine have stated that when they first sought to make a film about Moore, they held great admiration for what he had done for the documentary genre and set out to make a biography of him. During the course of their research, they became disenchanted with Moore's tactics. The title is a parody of the book Manufacturing Consent by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky, and the film it inspired. In June 2007, Liberation Entertainment Inc. signed an exclusive deal with the filmmakers for all video and theatrical rights in the US & UK. Ebb and Flow is a 2012 short drama and documentary film written and directed by Gabriel Mascaro. Lass uns'n Wunder sein - auf der Suche nach Rio Reiser is a 2008 documentary film written by Gert C. Möbius and Stefan Paul and directed by Stefan Paul. Fake It So Real is a documentary film directed by Robert Greene. Cravos de Abril is a Portuguese historic short film by Ricardo Costa. Covering the events between April 24 and May 1, it portrays the Carnation Revolution, which took place in Portugal in April 1974 and put an end to Oliveira Salazar’s dictatorship. Under the Boardwalk: The Monopoly Story is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Kevin Tostado. Hazaribag, Cuir Toxique is a 2012 documentary biography drama film written by Véronique Mauduy, and directed by Elise Darblay and Eric de Lavarene Haiti Redux is a 2012 documentary film directed by Fredric King. "Portugal’s Pedro Costa, one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary cinema, has created a concert film unlike any other. Ne change rien captures, in lustrous, spectral black and white, a series of rehearsals and performances by the French actress and chanteuse Jeanne Balibar. It’s a film to get lost in: a symphony in light and shadow, a monument to artistic creation and process. The breathy Balibar and her collaborators (including the guitarist Rodolphe Burger) embark on long, looping jams or break a song down into bars and phrases, reshaped and repeated until they resemble an incantation." Quoting the synopsis on the 2009 New York Film Festival site. Generation on the Wind is a 1979 documentary film produced by David Vassar. The film is a character study centered on a rag tag group of young artists, mechanics and environmental activists who successfully built the largest electrical generating windmill in the world. The documentary required two years of shooting to finish the film. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Secrets of Mary Magdalene is a 2006 documentary film written by Lori Nelson and directed by Rob Fruchtman. End of the Century: The Story of the Ramones is a 2003 documentary film about highly influential New York punk rock band the Ramones. The film, produced and directed by Jim Fields and Michael Gramaglia, documents the band's history from their formation in the early 1970s and 22 subsequent years of touring, to their 1996 breakup and the deaths of three of the four original members. The title is taken from the Ramones' 1980 album, End of the Century. The Manhattan Dating project, directed by Alexander von Roon and produced by Allison Teich, follows some hot twentysomethings, negotiating their way through NYC. Dating, Loving and Partying pre 911 and pre bubble burst. The Manhattan Dating project started the Dating-Reality-TV craze at a time, when Sex and the City was what Lena Dunham's "Girls" is trying to be today. It Went On All Day and All Night, Dear Child is a 1982 film directed by Katrin Seybold and Melanie Spitta. Aufbruch 89 - Dresden is a 1989 film directed by Thomas Eichberg and René Jung. La Mort du Dieu serpent is a 2014 drama documentary film written and directed by Damien Froidevaux. Homecoming: A Texas Tradition is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Sammy Ali and Bridgett Falcone. A Summer in the Cage is filmmaker Ben Selkow's feature-length documentary chronicling his friend Sam's battle with bipolar disorder. But as this dramatic story unfolds and heads to an explosive standoff, it also becomes a unique tale about friendship and the ethical responsibilities of a documentary filmmaker. Euskadi, cocina en la cumbre is a 2013 documetary film written by Nerea Barrueta and Izaskun Rodriguez and directed by Francisco Javier Gutiérrez Pereda and Jon Arregui. Bypass To Life is a documentary film directed by Peter Maund. Enkidu is a 1999 documentary film directed by Mario Catto and Giovanni De Roia. Rodina Means Home is a 1992 film directed by Helga Reidemeister. The Best of Safari Africa: Vol. 1 is a 2004 travel documentary film. The Lost JFK Tapes: The Assassination is a News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Editing documentary film. Me and Me Dad is a 2012 documentary, drama, family film directed by Katrine Boorman. Medulla is a 2013 documentary film directed by Melisa Miranda. Innocence Unprotected is a compilation film by Yugoslavian director Dušan Makavejev. Makavejev's film is based on a 1941 film Nevinost bez zaštite in Serbia by Dragoljub Aleksić that was never released. In 1968, Makavejev established the film and expanded it with newsreel footage and interviews with surviving cast members. Bi the Way is a 2008 documentary film about bisexuality in the United States. It had its world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival in Austin, Texas. The film has aired at film festivals throughout the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Portugal, Turkey, Greece, Australia, Brazil, and Taiwan, including at Silverdocs Film Festival, Outfest, Newfest, !f Istanbul, and Rio de Janeiro Film Festival. It was aired on the Logo Network in summer 2009. The film follows the lives of several young bisexual people in the United States. Its makers, Brittany Blockman and Josephine Decker, also appear on camera to frame the stories. Bhiwani Junction is a 2013 short documentry drama film written and directed by Abhi Singh. My Left Breast is a 2002 Canadian documentary film, produced by Pope Productions and directed and filmed by filmmaker Gerry Rogers and her partner Peg Norman. The film documents Rogers' experience being diagnosed with and treated for breast cancer. The film screened in 2001 at the Dallas OUT TAKES Lesbian and Gay Film Festivall, and received a 2001 Gemini Award for 'Best History/Biography Documentary Program'. It screened October 12, 2002, at the OutFLIX Tennessee GLBT Film Festival, followed in January 2003 by screening at the Utah Pride Fest Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, and in April 2003 at the One World Film Festival in the Czech Republic. Cathedrals is a 2013 short historical documentary film written and directed by Konrad Kästner. Mapping Journey #5 is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Bouchra Khalili. Martial Arts: Kung Fu Fighter is a 2001 documentary television movie directed by Donnie Yen. The House of Steinbrenner is a documentary film directed by Barbara Kopple that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. A Piece of Summer is a 2010 documentary short film written and directed by Marta Minorowicz. Rompiendo el silencio is a 1979 documentary short film directed by Rosa Martha Fernandez. The Exquisite Continent is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Stephen Gyllenhaal. All his life, award-winning filmmaker Macky Alston has believed in a merciful and benevolent God. The untimely death of a close friend and fellow seminary student Alan Smith, however, challenges Alston's deepest convictions. He initiates his film with the pressing question: How does one believe in God in the face of so much human suffering?In an effort to resolve this quandary, QUESTIONING FAITH sets out on a journey of probing self-discovery. After visiting Alan's hometown hoping to learn what he believed in his final days, Alston sets up a network of interviews with a wildly diverse group of people in New York, including the pastor of his theological school who views her battle with cancer as an opportunity, a Muslim woman who sees angels during brain surgery, and a straight-talking atheist who lived through the Russian Revolution. At stake here is not only whether or not Alston can maintain his faith, but also how human beings navigate their way through the darkest hours of seemingly senseless loss.A deeply moving and uplifting film, QUESTIONING FAITH reveals an underlying principle common to us all: the "power of presence," as life calls us to be there for each other. Kilowatt Ours is a film designed to educate the general public regarding where electricity comes from, why it is important that we reduce the amount of electricity we use, and practical steps we can take as individuals, families and organizations to cut our electrical use. Examples of significant energy savings are drawn from the filmmaker' s own apartment, from other homeowners, from school districts, cities, and large businesses. This film was produced by Jeff Barrie and Southern Energy Conservation Initiative. It suggests connections between an average homeowner's electrical energy use and adverse health and environmental impacts, including mountain top removal coal mining, global warming, and asthma. Kilowatt Ours shows the actions that homeowners, businesses and communities can take to save money by saving energy and reducing their demand for energy. The film also suggests benefits of sustainable energy. Nach der fiktiven Geschichte des DJ Ikarus aus "Berlin Calling", hier nun der Einblick in das wahre Leben des Musikers Paul Kalkbrenner! Nach 140.000 verkauften Exemplaren des Berlin Calling Soundtracks (OST) und einer ausverkauften Tournee mit über 65.000 verkauften Tickets (nur GAS!), ist diese DVD das nächste große Kapitel in der Erfolgsgeschichte des Paul Kalkbrenner! Mit weit über 100.000 Besuchern, stellt die 2010er Tournee von Paul Kalkbrenner einen Meilenstein für elektronische Musik dar. Keinem anderen Musiker aus Deutschland erschlossen sich in diesem Genre in solch überwältigendem Masse, nicht nur die ganz großen Hallen, sondern auch europaweit die Herzen der Fans. Um dieses einmalige Erlebnis zu dokumentieren, entschlossen sich Paul Kalkbrenner und sein Team über 20 Konzerte auf höchstem technischen Niveau filmen zu lassen. Daraus entstanden ist ein faszinierender 10 Titel langer Streifzug durch Paul Kalkbrenners Konzertreise durch ganz Europa, der beeindruckend zeigt, welchen Ausnahmestatus der Künstler mittlerweile erreicht hat. In einem weiteren dokumentarischen Teil gibt die DVD Einblick in Backstage- und On the road Szenen aus dem Leben von Kalkbrenner, abgerundet durch Interviews mit ihm, seinem Bruder Fritz Kalkbrenner und einer Vielzahl anderer. "A 75-year-old Japanese man has been acting in adult videos for 15 years without telling his family." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Walden is a 1969 documentary film directed by Jonas Mekas. Jesus Loves You is a 2008 documentary film written by Lilian Franck, Michaela Kirst and Robert Cibis and directed by Robert Cibis, Lilian Franck, Michaela Kirst and Matthias Luthardt. "It's been said, “Gays have a past but no history.” Swimming with Lesbians explores an upstate New York community’s efforts to create an LGBT historic archive, led by the extraordinary Madeline Davis. Davis is more than the keeper of Buffalo’s archive. In addition to writing and recording the song “Stonewall Nation,” produced by the Mattachine Society, she was the first openly lesbian elected delegate to speak at the Democratic National Convention, she taught the first course on lesbianism ever offered at a major American university, and she co-authored a seminal history of blue collar lesbian life, Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold. The work of Davis and her community highlight the movement to pull gay rights out of urban gay meccas and onto Main Streets in small towns. Davis’s own story is surrounded by the stories of five unique Buffalo residents who have suffered and continue to suffer homophobia and transphobia in this blue collar city. Davis poignantly summarizes her motivations for starting the archive as she says, “We are ephemeral. We will be gone. This is for the ages.” She is determined to see this archive installed in a library or university in Buffalo but continues to struggle with the straight gatekeepers who hold the key to preserving her life’s work." Quoting the synopsis from the 201 Frameline 34 0 SF LGBT Film Festival site. Achieving The Perfect 10 is a television documentary film released on CNN on August 10, 2003 about young girls training gymnastics at the highly competitive Parkettes National Gymnastics Training Center in Allentown, Pennsylvania, in the United States. The documentary follows several Parkettes gymnasts—ranging from the novice competitor Ashley Barry to the elites Nicole Harris, Annie Fogerty and Kristina Coccia—through their daily training routines. It focuses largely on the dynamics between the athletes and their coaches, their parents' sacrifices, expectations and observations, and their experiences dealing with injuries and preparing for competitions. Several sequences in the documentary have sparked controversy and debate in the gymnastics community and others, such as one in which a seven-year old gymnast works out on a broken ankle at the urging of her parents. After it was aired for the first time on CNN, Parkettes' coaches and some gymnasts stated that the documentary did not present an accurate picture of the gym. How To Start Your Own Country is a 2010 documentary film written by Denis Seguin and Jody Shapiro and directed by Jody Shapiro. Plot For Peace is a 2013 South African documentary directed by Carlos Agulló and Mandy Jacobson. The film tells the story of Algerian-born French businessman Jean-Yves Ollivier's involvement in Cold War-era African parallel diplomacy, the signing of the 1988 Brazzaville Protocol and discussions surrounding the eventual release of Nelson Mandela. Using archive footage from apartheid-era South Africa alongside interviews from Winnie Mandela, Thabo Mbeki, Denis Sassou-Nguesso and Mathews Phosa, Ollivier is revealed as a key architect of the withdrawal of Cuban troops from Angola and a 1987 prisoner-exchange programme involving six African nations. Memories of Rain is a 2004 documentary film directed by Angela Mai and Gisela Albrecht. 1, 2, 3 is a short film directed by Rudolfas Levulis. Baghdad or Bust was a small budget documentary filmed in Canada, Turkey, Kurdistan, Iraq, Israel, Palestine, Jordan, and Washington, D.C. USA during the US-led 2003 invasion of Iraq. Baghdad or Bust was an official selection at several Film Festivals including Hot Docs, the Bergen Film Festival in Norway, and it received the top award for Best Documentary at the 2003 Whistler Film Festival. Baghdad or Bust was described as "a funny, poignant piss-take on the war in Iraq, chronicling the misadventures of Gordon and two fellow Yellowknifers as they meander through the Middle East during the U.S. invasion, interviewing such stranger-than-fictional characters as a piratical Kurd and a Turkish rug-monger with a cat named Bush. Armed with a microphone, director Matt Frame's self-effacing and sardonic wit wins the day with his parody of Michael Moore's filmmaking style. " Lost Town is a documentary film written by Richard Goldgewicht and directed by Richard Goldgewicht and Jeremy Goldscheider. Mardi Gras: Made in China is a 2005 documentary film directed by David Redmon. When Stand Up Stood Out is a documentary film by former Boston comedian Fran Solomita which chronicles the explosive popularity of the Boston Stand-up comedy scene in the 80s and early 90s. It was released on DVD on June 20, 2006 by THINKFilm, the distributor behind the documentary The Aristocrats. The run time of the movie is 78 minutes. Factor 8: The Arkansas Prison Blood Scandal is a feature length documentary by Arkansas filmmaker and investigative journalist Kelly Duda. Through interviews and presentation of documents and footage, Duda alleges that for more than two decades, the Arkansas prison system profited from selling blood plasma from inmates infected with viral hepatitis and AIDS. The documentary contends that thousands of victims who received transfusions of a blood product derived from these plasma products, "Factor 8", died as a result. Factor 8 uses in-depth interviews and key documents as well as never-before-seen footage, to allege wrongdoing at the Arkansas state government, and at the United States federal level. Through in-depth interviews with a number of players, including victims in Canada who contracted the diseases, US state prison officials, former employees, high-ranking Arkansas politicians and inmate donors, Factor 8 examines a prison blood-harvesting scheme run by prisoners to earn them an income; the blood was then sold by blood companies for millions of dollars. "‘It’s really a pity I haven’t left it in. This is a genuine ‘darling’, Andrei Dascalescu says about this sequence. His film consists of a succession of domestic scenes featuring his grandparents, Constantin and Elena, all shot from the same camera angle. Thus, Dascalescu documented their daily routine: everything breathes love and harmony between the two elderly people. In this scene, conflict briefly flares up, or at least an underlying tension, when Constantin quasi-seriously wonders whether he shouldn’t have been more of ‘a real man’. ‘A drunkard beating his wife.’ But oh well, Constantin is simply a softie, prepared to do anything for Elena. Affectionately, he strokes Elena’s back - it is the only time he touches her like this. ‘Too long and too dark’, Dascalescu judged, although it’s always hard and painful to cut out scenes. Initially, the film was intended as a happy love story of his grandparents, who have been together for over 50 years. But six months after Dascalescu had started shooting, his uncle died. ‘From that moment, death played an important role.’ Elena and Constantin meanwhile regularly reflect on their life, and their death, which ‘God willing’ will stay away for some time yet. Elena still wants to weave a few rugs, for her grandchildren’s dowries. Dascalescu filmed his grandparents for two years, in and around their house in a remote village in Rumania. He also did the editing at Constantin and Elena’s place. They occasionally looked over his shoulder. ‘They were surprised to see how they came across on film. They feel much younger.’" Quoting Marjanne de Haan from the program notes of the 2009 IDFA site. Tilly Bébé is a 1908 short documentary film. Grandma Lo-fi: The Basement Tapes of Sigrídur Níelsdóttir is a 2011 biographical documentary film written by Kristín Björk Kristjánsdóttir and Orri Jonsson; and directed by Ingibjörg Birgisdóttir, Orri Jonsson, and Kristín Björk Kristjánsdóttir. The definitive account of the 'wiki-saga', featuring the first major television interview with Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. The film unites all the major protagonists for the first time, including Assange's erstwhile partner Daniel Domscheit Berg, and the editorial teams at the Guardian, Der Spiegel and New York Times newspapers, as well as the US state department spokesperson who had to deal with the leaks. At the film's core the largely overlooked story of US Private Bradley Manning, accused of the biggest leak in history. Without that leak, there would have been no story at all. When Assange launched his whistle-blower website he was heralded as a hero, bravely publishing classified material to highlight government wrongdoings to its peoples. He won awards around the world and was credited with creating a historic moment for journalism. But the story took a dark twist when Assange was accused of rape and sexual assault in Sweden. Award-winning film-maker Patrick Forbes presents the story of Wikileaks, using the words of people at the heart of the story, and on both sides of the fence. This is the story of Wikieaks told by the people involved: sulphurous, personal and moving, it documents history in the making and the frontier of new technology and journalism. It's also a story of human emotions clashing with the advent of new technologies, summed up in the words of Guardian journalist Nick Davies as 'a Greek tragedy... as triumph was turned into disaster through the actions of one man.' True Stories commissions and showcases the best international feature documentaries. La Mort de la gazelle is a 2008 documentary film. Interrupted Streams Hebrew: זרמים קטועים‎ Zramim Ktu'im) is a 2010 documentary film co-directed by Swiss Alexandre Goetschmann and Academy Award Nominee Israeli Guy Davidi. Red Ant Dream is a 2013 docuemtnary film directed by Sanjay Kak. This documentary is based on the revolutionary Maoist movement in India. The documentary has been screened in various cities in India since May 8, 2013. Faith Connections is a 2013 documentary and biographical drama film written and directed by Pan Nalin. A propósito de Sudán is a 2009 documentary film directed by Lidia Peralta and Salah Elmur. Steal This Film - Part Two is a 2007 documentary short film. The Nazi Officer's Wife is a 2003 historical documentary and war film written by Jack Youngelson and directed by Liz Garbus. Love Still is a 2012 family drama documentary romance film written and directed by Guzmán García. Pick Up the Mic is a documentary film, released in 2006, which profiles the underground homo hop scene, which is a subgenre of hip hop that includes gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender artists. The film was directed by Alex Hinton. The documentary had its premiere at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival. Subsequently the film screened at other film festivals around the world. An edited version aired nationally in the United States on the Logo cable television channel. Though homophobia is a phenomenon commonly laid at the feet of mainstream hip hop, pop culture's relationship to it has also been shaped by white middle class LGBT communities' covert and overt racism and internalized homophobia. As a result, the attendant conversations in LGBT and straight mainstream media around the subject tend to gravitate toward the speculative and the apocryphal. Homohop is a growing subgenre of aggressive pro-gay lyrics directly confronting the perceived homophobia of mainstream rap. It is a significant underground gay hip hop movement, spearheaded by many of the artists profiled in Pick Up the Mic. This documentary is featured on the 2-Disc Special Edition DVD for King of New York, released in 2004. Autoluminescent is a 2011 documentary film about musician Rowland S. Howard directed by Lynn-Maree Milburn and Richard Lowenstein. Mekong Downstream is a documentary film directed by David W. Liddle. Alberi is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Michelangelo Frammartino. Shot in the center of Egypt's Tahrir Square from the beginning of the battles to the climax of the celebration, 'In Tahrir Square - 18 Days of Egypt's Unfinished Revolution' helps audiences experience first-hand the people-powered revolt that brought down a dictator and changed Egypt forever Renzo Gracie: Legacy is a 2008 documentary film about Brazilian jiu jitsu pioneer Renzo Gracie, directed by Gethin Aldous and written by Aldous, Steve Allen and Adrian Miller. Shot over a ten-year period, it shows the origins of the sport of Mixed martial arts from its bare knuckle days to the explosion of the sport in both Japan and America. "One of Van der Keuken’s first films made over a period of several years using extremely modest means, with no pre-planned script or story. It begins with the movements of cars and people in the streets of Amsterdam which are gradually slowed down until they become motionless. While making this fragment Van der Keuken took the opportunity of filming a commemorative festival being held on one of the city’s squares. The following scenes, which are set in motion once more from their state of stagnation, now contain elements of poetic unreality and strange melancholy. Images of urban courtyards, embankments, riverbanks and boats, where we often see only individuals, come together to create a subjective world with its own distinct tempo and atmosphere. In this film, Amsterdam has found its poet." Quoting the synopsis from the 2002 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival site. Gay Muslims is a Channel 4 documentary about how the experiences of five lesbian and gay Muslims challenge the heterosexual bias within their British communities and illustrate the diversity within Islam. An Encounter with Simone Weil is a 2010 documentary film directed by Julia Haslett. "How do we deal with someone else's suffering? The French philosopher Simone Weil dedicated her life to this moral question, not to mention her death. During World War II, she stopped eating anything more than the rations her countrymen back in France had to survive with. She was only 34 when she died in Great Britain in 1943. Filmmaker Julia Haslett is fascinated by Weil's intellectual legacy and life story. She makes an attempt to penetrate the essence of Weil's thought processes, in the hope of gaining personal enlightenment: Haslett's father committed suicide, and her brother struggles with depression. The film is a respectful homage to the relatively unknown philosopher, but it functions primarily as a chronicle of Haslett's own quest. The atmospheric music, the philosophical voice-over, and the experiment in which an actress portrays Weil and talks to Haslett all stress the filmmaker's need to fathom this woman - not to mention to cope with the powerlessness she feels in the face of her father and brother. Haslett sees Weil, who wanted to experience others' suffering firsthand, as a morally superior example. The question in the film is if her philosophical insights ultimately offer the key to genuine compassion." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 IDFA site. Sawada is a documentary film directed by Shô Igarashi. Steven-Charles Jaffe is a 2013 documentary film directed by Steven-Charles Jaffe. Public Lands, Private Profits: A Grand Threat is a 2012 short Documentary film directed by Jessica Goad, Andrew Satter and Christy Goldfuss. Black Indians: An American Story is a documentary film directed by Chip Richie. Darius Goes West: The Roll of his Life is a documentary by Logan Smalley about Darius Weems, a teenager living with Duchenne muscular dystrophy who embarked during the Summer of 2005 on a 7,000 mile road trip across the United States to promote awareness of the fatal disease Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and to raise money for research into a cure. À propos de Sarajevo is a name of a documentary written and directed by Haris Pašović. It is the story about a Sarajevo festival led by Edin Zubcevic and the city of Sarajevo which, despite four years of the brutal siege of Sarajevo, still nourishes multiculturalism and love of jazz music. The documentary is 30 minutes long and features E.S.T., Denis Baptist, Bojan Zulfikarpašić Trio, Dhafer Yousuf, Anuar Brahem and several other European bands. The documentary was screened at Sarajevo Film Festival and Bangkok International Film Festival. Stories Of Trust: Calling For Climate Recovery, Part 1: Trust California is a 2011 documentary film which is part of the Stories of TRUST: Calling for Climate Recovery series. Once Upon a Mountain is a documentary, biographical and historical film directed by Reuben Street. Three of Hearts: A Postmodern Family is a 2004 documentary film directed by Susan Kaplan. It spans several years of a trinogamous relationship between two men and one woman. Piloten, Propeller und Turbinen is an East German film. It was released in 1958. Troubadours is a 2011 documentary film directed by Morgan Neville. Wild Texas Weather is a short documentary film narrated by Ray Wylie Hubbard. I'm Never Afraid! is a 2010 Dutch Super 16mm documentary film about Mack Bouwense an eight-year-old professional motorcross racer who has a mirrored heart, a condition known as dextrocardia. It is directed by award winning Dutch filmmaker Willem Baptist and broadcast by VPRO on 20 November 2010. In German and French speaking countries the documentary was broadcast by ARTE. It premiered at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, and screened at more than 80 film festivals worldwide including BFI London Film Festival, Slamdance, Sprockets; Toronto Film Festival, and Kraków Film Festival. It won multiple international awards including a Golden Gate Award at San Francisco International Film Festival, Documentary Short Grand Jury Prize at Atlanta Film Festival, and a Kinderkast Jury award non-fiction at Cinekid Festival. In 2011, the documentary was nominated for a broadcast award for Best Children Programme at the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision. The Devotion Project: More Than Ever is a 2011 short documentary, biographical film directed by Antony Osso. No Man's Land is a 2013 British documentary film by Michael Graversen that focuses on Center Jægerspris, a facility in Denmark that houses unaccompanied minors who have entered Denmark seeking asylum, mainly from conflict zones such as Afghanistan, Iran and Ethiopia. The asylum process in Denmark may take years to reach a verdict. In the meantime, the residents of the Jægerspris center live in a kind of limbo, leading to tension and stress for residents and staff alike. No Man's Land follows the events over several days in which several residents receive notice that their asylum applications have been rejected. The film was shown on Danish television with the title For ung til udvisning [Too Young for Deportation]. Red Orchestra is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Nicolás Herzog. The Legend of Cool Disco Dan is a historical crime documentary film directed by Joseph Pattisall. The Unbelievers is a 2013 documentary film that follows Richard Dawkins and Lawrence Krauss as they speak publicly around the globe about the importance of science and reason in the modern world, encouraging others to cast off religious and politically motivated approaches toward what they think to be important current issues. The film includes interviews with influential people and celebrities such as Stephen Hawking, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Sam Harris, Cameron Diaz, Woody Allen, Penn Jillette, Ian McEwan, and David Silverman. When Hari Got Married is a 2013 documentary family film directed by Ritu Sarina and Tenzing Sonam. Ghosts of Tangier is a 1997 French film written and directed by Edgardo Cozarinsky. Forever Wild: Celebrating America's Wilderness is a documentary film directed by Chelsea Congdon. The Hidden World is a 1958 American documentary film produced by Robert Snyder. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. "Affection and humor fill the life of an elderly couple in Mexico as they count down the days until their family is once again reunited for the holidays. Director Dariela Deloya’s grandparents, Don Eme (age 97) and Doña Carmen (age 84), are well aware of the passing of time. Yet, neither is slowed by the inevitable process we all must face — instead embrace the joy and pain they have endured together for many years. One Day Less follows their daily routines, their light-hearted reflections on their lives and their constant poking fun at one another that keeps each moment alive for them. Bookended by consecutive New Year’s celebrations, Deloya’s comically reflective film compels viewers to contemplate the realities of aging through a humorous lens rather than hiding it behind the doors of a senior citizens home. And those realities are far more poignant than you might expect in this perfectly balanced story of life and love." Quoting Katherine Geiger from the 2011 Cinequest site A Baker on the Bread Line is a 2012 documentary film directed by Hans-Georg Ullrich and Detlef Gumm. A Home For Lydia is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Eline Helena Schellekens. Zagorka is a 2007 Croatian documentary drama film written and directed by Biljana Cakic-Veselic. Sadness is a 1999 documentary film directed by Tony Ayres. The Last Black Sea Pirates is a 2013 documentary film written by Vanya Rainova and directed by Svetoslav Stoyanov. All the Lines Flow Out is a 2011 short film directed by Charles Lim Yi Yong. Where Is Musette ? is a 1991 film directed by Veikko Nieminen. Journey to Planet X is a 2012 documentary film directed by Josh Koury and Myles Kane. The Coastline is a film by Peter Greenaway, made in 1983. Also known as The Sea in Their Blood, and exhibited at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, as Beside the Sea. It is a mockumentary or "artificial documentary", featuring images of the British seaside and voiceovers of endless dubious statistics. For example: "Most fish is eaten in Britain fried in batter and breadcrumbs. 10 percent is boiled, 5 percent grilled, 3 percent is steamed. Very little is eaten raw except by cats and in Japanese restaurants, 29 in London and 1 in Milton Keynes." Sentinels of Silence is a 1971 short documentary film on ancient Mexican civilizations. The film was directed and written by Mexican filmmaker Robert Amram, and is notable for being the first and only short film to win two Academy Awards. One Six Right: The Romance of Flying is an independent film about the general aviation industry as seen through a local airport. Within a short period of time, it has achieved a passionate following and presence among pilots and aviation enthusiasts worldwide who see the film as being able to communicate their passion for aviation. Concurrently, the film has garnered both local and national political attention in the United States as an accurate depiction of general aviation and its important contributions to all aviation industries worldwide. Within the entertainment industry, the film has attracted the sponsorship and support of many large media companies, including Apple Inc., Sony Electronics, Toshiba, Technicolor, Bose, and Dolby, as pioneering new standards in high definition film making and distribution. Harlem Street Singer is a documentary and biographical film directed by Simeon Hutner and Trevor Laurence. Busch Singt is a 1982 film directed by Konrad Wolf and R.Bredemeyer. Wanted: Loving Father and Mother is a 1987 film directed by Sarah Marijnissen and Agna Rudolph. The Biggest Chinese Restaurant in the World is a 2008 documentary directed by Weijun Chen. The Trews: Acoustic - Friends & Total Strangers is a 2009 music documentary film directed by Tim Martin. Thunder Soul is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mark Landsman. Make Believe is a 2011 documentary film written by Cleven S. Loham and directed by J. Clay Tweel. With Byrd at the South Pole is a documentary film about Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd and his 1st quest to the South Pole beginning at the Little America-Exploration Base. The film's soundtrack consists mostly of music and sound effects, with narration read by Floyd Gibbons. The film won at the 3rd Academy Awards for Best Cinematography. This was the first documentary to win any Oscar and the only one to win cinematography. Sing! is a 2001 American short documentary film about the Los Angeles Children's Chorus, directed by Freida Lee Mock. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. We Are the Marines is a 1942 full-length documentary film produced by The March of Time. It was directed by Louis De Rochemont and distributed by 20th Century Fox. Nomadic is a 2011 short, documentary film written and directed by Artykpay Suyundukov, Moldoseit Mambetakunov. Happiness Building 1 is a 2012 documentary film directed by Chen Chieh-jen. White Light/Black Rain: The Destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki is an HBO documentary film that was directed and produced by Steven Okazaki and was released on August 6, 2007, on HBO, marking the 62nd anniversary of the first atomic bombing. The film features interviews with fourteen Japanese survivors and four Americans involved in the 1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. "This moving documentary is the story of the life-long love affair of two New York based lesbians, who after 42 years together are finally getting married. Meeting in the 1960s when being out as a lesbian was much more problematic than it is now, Edie and Thea knew they were meant to be together even if society was not ready for them to be. Through the use of old photographs, home movies and insightful and entertaining interviews with these two remarkable women Muska and Olafsdóttir (The Brandon Teena Story) have created a tender portrait of their life together. In doing so they've made a film which is an important document of the struggles gay people faced growing up and living in a less tolerant time. A truly heartfelt and inspiring story of two women in love who would not let society tell them it was wrong, and who waited a lifetime to say 'I do'. ES" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. The image of featureless steel structures catastrophically crumbling into a fatal dust storm was indelibly imprinted on the minds of millions of people around the world. Yet the enormous plumes of smoke, the soaring balls of fire and the sheer scale of the buildings masked the human face of the tragedy. For the first time, through drama supported by interviews and archival footage, TV audiences will be invited to venture inside the towers to follow the stories of more than a dozen individuals whose daily routine is swept aside by events that changed the world forever. Based on the testimonies of survivors, victims’ families, emergency workers and city officials, Inside the Twin Towers opens with a glimpse of the everyday world of work and office life. It is easy to relate to Melanie de Vere, the 30-year-old British publishing executive helping to host a conference in the North Tower, and also with Stanley Praimnath, a banker devoted to his religion and family. Prince - The Glory Years is a documentary film that reviews and re-captures this golden decade and with the aid of his friends, colleagues, fellow musicians and other notable contributors, helps discover why Prince Rodgers Nelson simply stole the '80s as far as music was concerned. No Sense of Crime is a 1987 film directed by Julie Jacobs. Normal People Scare Me: A Film about Autism is a documentary film about autism, produced by Joey Travolta, older brother of actor John Travolta. The documentary initially began as a 10-minute short film co-directed by an autistic teenager named Taylor Cross, and his mother Keri Bowers. Joey Travolta first met Cross at a program Travolta led teaching the art of filmmaking to children with special needs. He helped educate Cross about filmmaking, and the documentary was expanded into a feature-length film. It includes interviews with 65 people, including those that are autistic as well as friends and family. Cross asks them about their experiences with autism and how they feel about it, and elicits multiple insightful responses from his subjects. The short version of the film was shown at a student film festival at Chaminade High School in West Hills, California in April 2004, and co-director Cross won multiple awards at the festival. In November 2004, Cross was honored for his work on the film, at a gala benefit dinner for the Bubel-Aiken Foundation in Los Angeles, California; the foundation's co-creator is Clay Aiken of American Idol. The Iranian Film is a 2014 documentary drama film written and directed by Yassine el Idrissi. Cologne: From the Diary of Ray and Esther is a 1939 short documentary film which deals with the German-American community on the eve of World War II. It was filmed and directed by amateur filmmakers Esther Dowidat and Raymond Dowidat, residents of Cologne, Minnesota. In 2001, this fourteen-minute film Cologne was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant". Under The Moonlight - Memory Of A Night High School is a documentary film directed by Naoko Ota. 1968-Hope is a 2008 documentary film written by Pavel Kosatík and directed by Viktor Polesný. A Kind Of Family is a 1992 short documentary film written by Robert Lower and directed by Andrew Koster. King Me explores the surreal world of competitive checkers play as seen through the eyes of South African township resident, Lubabalo Kondlo. While under the radar of oppressive forces in his homeland, Kondlo, travels to the U.S. to compete in the U.S. National Championship of Checkers. Bolinao 52 is a documentary by Vietnamese American director Duc Nguyen about the Vietnamese boat people ship that was originally stranded in the Pacific Ocean in 1988. During their 37 days at sea, the group encountered violent storms and engine failures. They fought their thirst and hunger and a US Navy ship reportedly refused to rescue them, forcing the boat people to starve despite resorting to cannibalism. Only 52 out of the 110 boat people survived the tragedy and were rescued by Filipino fishermen who brought them to Bolinao Island, Philippines. Musicians is a 1999 documentary film written by Ivan Arsenyev and directed by Miroslav Janek. This film tells the unknown story of the WW2 Nazi concentration camp where some of the world's greatest musicians, composers, artists and theatre professionals continued to create despite the near certainty that they would be transported to Auschwitz. The Nazis exploited their art as propaganda -- 'evidence,' that refuted emerging allegations of a Holocaust. They even made a movie to glorify the lie. The unknown story of these people and their struggle is being rediscovered - in art museums, concert halls, school auditoriums and on the web. West 47th Street is a documentary film produced by the Peabody Award-winning Lichtenstein Creative Media. "West 47th Street" is an intimate cinéma vérité portrait of four people with serious mental illness as their lives naturally unfold over a three-year period beginning in spring 2001. The characters are all members of Fountain House, a psychiatric rehabilitation programme located on West 47th Street in a part of New York City once known as Hell's Kitchen. At times hilarious and at other times tragic, West 47th Street provided an unprecedented window on the lives of people who are often feared and ignored, seldom understood. The film features Fitzroy Fredericks; Zeinab Wali; Nathanial "Tex" Gordon; and Frances Olivero. The film highlights the faith and courage with which these four people fight to regain control of their lives. Viewers see them on and off the streets, in and out of the hospital, on and off medication, at home and at work. The film was the “Editors’ Choice – Pick of the Night," by TV Guide. Generation Green is a 2012 short documentary drama film written by Briony Benjamin, Laura Noonan and directed by Briony Benjamin. Customer (Dis)Service is a documentary that premiered on January 5, 2012 at 9PM Eastern Time on CNBC. The documentary is about outsourcing and call centers and how customers are using social media to fight back against bad customer service, such as musician Dave Carroll and his bad experience with United Airlines. The documentary also features Ben Popken, a journalist and former Managing Editor of The Consumerist. The show was originally shot for CBC Television. Stunt People is a 1989 documentary film directed by Lois Siegel. The Dancing Boys of Afghanistan is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jamie Doran. "As the West pours billions of dollars into the fight against the Taliban in southern Afghanistan, an ancient tradition (banned when the Taliban were in power) has re-emerged across the rest of the country. Many hundreds of young boys living in extreme poverty are lured off the streets on the promise of a new life away from destitution, unaware their real fate is to be used for entertainment by the warlords and other powerful men of Afghanistan. Having gained remarkable access inside a sexual exploitation ring, award-winning Afghan journalist Najibullah Quraishi investigates this illegal practice, the consequences of which are shrouded by a focus on the war. The film exposes the lack of support from those in authority and explores possible responses to the plight of children in this conflict zone." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. The Gay Agenda is a 2013 short, biographical, artistic, historical and documentary film written and directed by Anna McGrath. Metal and Melancholy is a 1993 documentary film directed by Heddy Honigmann. Private Violence is a 2014 American documentary film directed and produced by Cynthia Hill. The film premiered in the U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2014, where it won the Candescent Award. A Stitch for Time is a 1987 documentary film directed by Nigel Noble. The film documents the making of the National Peace Quilt. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. In 1961 Barney and Betty Hill were driving at night through the White Mountains of New Hampshire when they noticed that a bright light in the sky was following them. The Bicknell is 2014 short documentary film directed by Genevieve Bicknell. Fly Colt Fly is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Adam Gray and Andrew Gray. The Bell is a 2007 documentary film directed by Audrius Stonys. SING*ularity is an independent documentary film produced and directed by Brad Mays, and co-produced by Lorenda Starfelt at LightSong Films in North Hollywood. Deriving its title from Shakespeare's Twelfth Night - "put thyself into the trick of singularity" - SING*ularity portrays the unique training approach of OperaWorks, an intense training program in Northridge, California for opera singers founded by Ann Baltz in which the entire body is engaged. This rigorous approach to tuning the "total instrument" is rooted in various avant-garde techniques common to theatre training, but unique to the world of classical music. The film follows a group of singers - both student and professional - through the entire course, where they are instructed in Yoga, movement, visualization, conducting, acting and, of course, given traditional vocal coaching. The singers are also taught to improvise arias in a manner not unlike the scat approach used by jazz vocalists. Diário de Sintra is a 2007 film written and directed by Paula Gaitán. Me & Isaac Newton is a 1999 documentary directed by Michael Apted. Returning is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Joanna Helander and Bo Persson. A Quiet Inquisition is a documentary film directed by Holen Kahn and Alessandra Zeka. Akin is a 2012 short drama film written and directed by Chase Joynt. Amancio Williams is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Gerardo Panero. Kalte Heimat is a 1995 documentary film directed by Volker Koepp. "Waited For interweaves three stories of South African lesbians who adopt across racial lines. The film explores the ways in which these families challenge and are challenged by the traditional hierarchies of race and heterosexism that are still deeply entrenched in the South African psyche." - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. George Grosz' Interregnum is a 29-minute long documentary film about the artist George Grosz produced by Altina Carey and Charles Carey, and narrated by Lotte Lenya. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The original music was by Paul Glass, and the cinematography by Terry Sanders. The film was released on video as "Germany Between The Wars." Still Playing is a 2012 short animated comedy sports documentary film directed by Dacia Saenz and Mandy Hubbard. Peter Katz & Friends: Live at The Music Gallery is a music DVD that was nominated the award for Music DVD of the Year 2012 Juno Awards. Horn Please is a 2013 short family documentary film written by Shreedavy Babuji and directed by Shantanu Suman and Istling Mirche "The Homeless World Cup is an annual soccer tournament comprised of the homeless and the excluded that draws teams from over fifty-six countries. The South African team consists of ex-convicts, former gangsters, orphans and recovering drug addicts that band together to represent their country, proving that no one is beyond redemption. Out of 250 athletes who try out for the country's team, only eight are chosen. After years of neglect, abuse and rejection by society, these players are recognized for their sporting talent and grab the opportunity to train daily to the peak of fitness before they leave for Melbourne. With tougher rules and higher stakes, these eight players compete not only to win the cup but also to leave life on the streets and begin the life of prosperity promised to them. Streetball is a story of hope and of the resilience that dwells within the human spirit." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site, She Sat in a Glass-house Throwing Stones is a 1992 documentary film directed by Nadja Seelich and Bernd Neuburger. Hamshen Community at the Crossroads of Past and Present is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Lucine Sahakyan. Great Crimes of the Century is a 1986 documentary film directed and written by Matthew White. El largo viaje de Rústico is a 1993 documentary directed by Rolando Díaz. Mustang - Journey of Transformation is a 2009 short documentary film written by Sarah Kass and directed by Will Parrinello. Finding Carlton is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Susheel Kurien. The Dungeon Masters is a 2008 documentary film about the role playing game Dungeons & Dragons and its significance in the lives of three dungeon masters: Scott Corum, Richard Meeks and Elizabeth Reesman. The film is director Keven McAlester's second feature documentary, and premiered at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival. It was an official selection of the South by Southwest Film Festival and the AFI Dallas Film Festival. The original film score is by Blonde Redhead. Cinematography is by Lee Daniel. The film's executive producers are Phil Hay and Matt Manfredi, the directors of Bug. The film's producers are Jeff Levy-Hinte, Brian Gerber and Kel Symons. Mohiniyattam is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Sivan. Moving the Mountain is a 1993 Canadian documentary film on the effects of the head tax and Chinese Exclusion Act in Canada. The film debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival in 1993 was co-directed by William Ging Wee Dere and Malcolm Guy, written by William G.W. Dere and produced by Productions Multi-Monde of Montreal. Forest of the Dancing Spirits is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Linda Västrik. Seven Up! is a 1964 documentary film directed by Paul Almond. On the Outskirts is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Aysun Bademsoy. The KGB was, for 50 years, an intelligence agency using money, sex, and blackmail as tools to entice foreigners to betray their countries and hand over secret information. We enter the vaults of the KGB to see the use of the "Honey Trap" -- the use of women in sexual situations to snare victims and obtain secret information. How did the KGB identify U.S. Marines who worked at the U.S. Embassy and target them, leading to compromise and in the case of marine Lonetree, to a 30 year prison sentence? We see a bumbling FBI agent selling out his country for sex in a car, and the CIA officer who lived a lavish lifestyle at the cost of agents' lives. Hidden cameras reveal seduction, passion and sexual conduct all used to destabilize enemy governments. In Heaven There Is No Beer? is a documentary film by Les Blank about polkas and their devotees. It won an awards from the Sundance Film Festival and in 1985 the Grand Prix at the Melbourne International Film Festival. 40 Bands 80 Minutes! is a 2006 American rockumentary directed by Sean Carnage about the Los Angeles underground music scene in 2006. In the style of Urgh! A Music War, 40 Bands 80 Minutes! is a series of punk and experimental musical performances and performance art pieces, with minimal narration. The film was conceived as a way to systematically document the music of the entire L.A. underground music scene. Big Shot is a 2013 film directed by Kevin Connolly. Stolen Seas is a 2012 crime and adventure documentary film written by Mark Monroe and directed by Thymaya Payne. Femme: Women Healing the World is a 2013 documentary and crime film directed by Emmanuel Itier. Welcome to Japan, Mr. Bond is a 1967 made-for-television promotional documentary for the release of the James Bond movie "You Only Live Twice", featuring clips from earlier James Bond films, written by Edwin Apfel and directed by Daniel Davis. Dogs, Cats & Humans is a documentary film directed by Motoharu Iida. No One Can Achieve Perfection is a 2008 documentary film directed by Katrin Ottarsdóttir. It is a portrait of the Faroese sculptor Hans Pauli Olsen. "In a recycling factory, the machines dance, the workers join in song, and the truck drivers circle as if part of a factory ballet." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. The pond. This is where hockey was born-under the open sky-where the ice is gritty and so is the play. For generations, Northlanders have grown up on outdoor ice. But, there are new climate- controlled arenas in every town, and that's where the kids go to practice year-round now. The frozen ponds are losing their inhabitants.In Pond Hockey, director Tommy Haines and his Minnesota crew chronicle the changing culture of hockey. Through interviews from Wayne Gretzky, Neal Broten, and Sidney Crosby to local rinkrats, Pond Hockey examines the true meaning of sport.More than just a celebration of a beloved game, Pond Hockey asks: is there room for the free spirit of the pond in today's sports experience, or will the open sky and howling winds give way to whistles and metal ceilings? "Three years in the making, this cinéma-vérité feature from acclaimed filmmaker Joe Berlinger (Brother’s Keeper, Paradise Lost, Metallica: Some Kind of Monster) is the epic story of one of the largest and most controversial environmental lawsuits on the planet. The inside story of the infamous “Amazon Chernobyl” case, Crude is a real-life high stakes legal drama, set against a backdrop of the environmental movement, global politics, celebrity activism, human rights advocacy, the media, multinational corporate power, and rapidly-disappearing indigenous cultures. Presenting a complex situation from multiple viewpoints, the film subverts the conventions of advocacy filmmaking, exploring a complicated situation from all angles while bringing an important story of environmental peril and human suffering into focus." Quoting Crude the Movie Site - see weblink below. “A fascinating and important story. CRUDE does an extraordinary job of merging journalism and art.” Quoting Christiane Amanpour, CNN Chief International Correspondent Outro is a documentary short film written and directed by Ky Newman. The Animal World is a 1956 documentary film that was produced, written and directed by Irwin Allen. The film includes live-action footage of animals throughout the world, along with a ten-minute stop motion animated sequence about dinosaurs. Irwin's intention was to show the progression of life over time, although he noted, "We don't use the word 'evolution.' We hope to walk a very thin line. On one hand we want the scientists to say this film is right and accurate, and yet we don't want to have the church picketing the film." In Search of Oil and Sand is a 2012 documentary film written by Rasha El Gammal and directed by Philippe Dib and Wael Omar. Fresno is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Leandro Listorti. Adventures of the Quest: Hidden Deep is a 1996 documentary film directed by Wes Skiles. Congo – A Political Tragedy is a 2008 independent documentary about the political history of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, starting with Leopold II of Belgium in 1885 and continuing to Laurent-Désiré Kabila's death. Weekend of a Champion is a British 1972 documentary film that captures the effort of British Formula One racing driver Jackie Stewart to compete in the 1971 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo. Stewart's friend Roman Polanski produced the film and shadows him throughout the weekend of the race. The film premiered at the 1972 Berlin Film Festival and— after a small theatrical release in Europe— was unscreened for 40 years. The archive in possession of the negative contacted Polanski, inquiring as to whether they should keep the film or throw it away. Polanski restored the film from the original print, remixing and slightly recutting it. An approximately 15-minute epilogue was added, showing Polanski and Stewart reminiscing in present-day Monaco, having a conversation about their friendship, the evolution of racing safety, hairstyles, and life in general. Let's Tango is a documentary film directed by Bert Shapiro. Seal Island is a 1948 American documentary film directed by James Algar. The film was produced by Walt Disney and was the first installment of the True-Life Adventures series of nature documentaries. It won an Academy Award in 1949 for Best Short Subject. Philémon Chante Habana is a 2012 documentary musical film written and directed by Pedro Ruiz. Our Summer Made Her Light Escape is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Sasha Waters Freyer. Autumn Snow is a 1992 documentary short film written and directed by Valdas Navasaitis. Salaam Dunk is a 2011 American documentary film directed by David Fine about an Iraqi university's women basketball program, spearheaded by a US-born instructor as coach. Miller's Tale is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Rebecca Marshall. A look into the complex and contradictory personality of Yossef Nachmani, the man largely responsible for the first Zionist settlements in the Galilee. Indie Game: The Movie is a 2012 documentary film by Canadian filmmakers James Swirsky and Lisanne Pajot. The film documents the struggles of independent game developers Edmund McMillen and Tommy Refenes during the development of Super Meat Boy, Phil Fish during the development of Fez, and also Jonathan Blow, who reflects on the success of Braid. After two successful Kickstarter funds, interviews were conducted with prominent indie developers within the community. After recording over 300 hours of footage, Swirsky and Pajot decided to cut the movie down to follow the four developers selected. Their reasoning behind this was to show game development in the "past, present and future" tenses through each individual's story. The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter is a 1980 documentary film and the first movie ever made by Connie Field about the American women who went to work during World War II to do "men's jobs". In 1996, it was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". The film's title refers to "Rosie the Riveter", the cultural icon that represented women who manned the manufacturing plants which produced munitions and material during World War II. Connie Field got the idea for the film from a California “Rosie the Riveter Reunion”, and, with grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities and other charitable sources, conducted interviews with many hundreds of women who had gone into war work. Out of these she chose five representatives—three black, two white—all marvelously lively, intelligent, and articulate women who recall their experiences with a mixture of pleasant nostalgia and detached bitterness. The reminiscences are intercut with the realities of the period – old news, films, recruiting trailers, March of Time clips, and pop songs such as “Rosie the Riveter”. Antonia: A Portrait of the Woman is a 1974 documentary about symphony conductor Antonia Brico, including her struggle against gender bias in her profession. The film was directed by Judy Collins and Jill Godmilow. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. In 2003, this film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. Golden Earth is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Vishram Revankar. The Mary Tyler Moore Reunion is a retrospective television special of the 1970-77 comedy series The Mary Tyler Moore Show which aired on CBS on May 13, 2002. Mary Tyler Moore hosted the special in which she personally reminisces one-on-one with her former co-stars Ed Asner, Valerie Harper, Gavin MacLeod, Georgia Engel, Betty White and Cloris Leachman, as well as a special tribute to the late Ted Knight and also includes clips from the show's best episodes. During the special, Mary reveals the result of an online poll at CBS.com where viewers were asked to vote for their favorite Mary Tyler Moore Show episode and the winner was: "Chuckles Bites the Dust". The show's original theme song used for this special is the version recorded in 1996 by Joan Jett which had previously been used for the opening to the 2000 TV movie reunion Mary and Rhoda. Better Than Something - Jay Reatard is a 2011 biographical documentary drama directed by Alex Hammond, Ian Markiewicz. Inside the Revolution: A Journey into the Heart of Venezuela is a documentary written and directed by Pablo Navarrete and released by Alborada Films in 2009. Staged in Caracas in November 2008 on the eve of local elections, the documentary offers a grassroots perspective of the Venezuelan Bolivarian Revolution from the people driving the process forward and reflects more widely on the significance of the revolution for the future of Venezuela, US imperialism and socialism. A Year Toward Tomorrow is a 1966 American short documentary film about the Volunteers in Service to America, directed by Edmond Levy. It won an Academy Award in 1967 for Documentary Short Subject. Rewilding America: Lessons Learned from the Cape Cod Bear is a adventure comedy documentary film directed by Maryanne Galvin. Into the Arctic II is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Cory Trepanier. The Good Fight is a 2008 feature-length documentary about the 2007 Florida State Football season. The Good Fight follows Bobby Bowden and the Florida State Football team for over 18 months as they faced off-season training, unprecedented injuries, critical media, family challenges, and one of the nation's toughest schedules in the Atlantic Coast Conference. As of January 2009, several screenings had been shown across the United States, but an official nationwide release date had not been announced. Tagfish is a 2010 documentary film directed by Berlin. A Century of Science Fiction is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Ted Newsom. An American Mirror is a documentary directed by Stefani Elkort Twyford. Steve Lowther is on a mission. He's determined to take his hometown of Philomath, a rural Oregon timber town of 4,000, back from the "urban immigrants" who now run the school district. At stake: a generous college scholarship Lowther administers that has paid the college tuition of thousands of Philomath graduates for the last 40 years. La Fiesta de todos is a 1979 Argentine film produced by the Ente Autartico Mundial 1978 organization in charge of the organization of the 1978 FIFA World Cup where with a cast of Argentine actors like Luis Sandrini and other shows the feeling of the Argentinian people towards the event. White Lake is a 1989 documentary film directed by Colin Browne. Johnny Cash's America is a film directed by Morgan Neville. Tomato Republic is a documentary film directed by Whitney Graham Carter and Anthony Jackson. What the Bleep!?: Down the Rabbit Hole is a 2006 drama and documentary film directed by William Arntz, Betsy Chasse and Mark Vicente. Fukushima, Rokkasho and Message to the Future is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kei Shimada. A Year In The Wild: Snowdonia is a 2012 documentry film directed by Jeff Wilson. Children of the Secret State is a documentary on homeless North Korean orphans, released in 2000. It was shot by a UK film duo in conjunction with underground North Korean cameramen. The Echo of Astro Boy's Footsteps is a 2011 music documentary film directed by Masanori Tominaga. Célébration is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Olivier Meyrou. Tectonics is a 2012 animated documentary film directed by Peter Bo Rappmund. The Power of Emotion is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Alexander Kluge. Method Man follows the lives of five strippers living in five different states. More than a voyeuristic trek between strip clubs, the film is an insightful, intimate look at the everyday lives of strippers. On the Side of the Road is a 2013 Israeli documentary film written and directed by Lia Tarachansky. The film, focuses on Israeli collective denial of the events of 1948 that led to the country's Independence and the Palestinian refugee problem. It follows war veterans Tikva Honig-Parnass and Amnon Noiman as they tackle their denial of their actions in the war. The film also tells the story of the director, Lia Tarachansky, an Israeli who grew up in a settlement in the West Bank but as an adult began to realize the problems of the Israeli Occupation for the Palestinians. The film was shot over the course of five years and premiered at the First International Independent Film Festival in Tel Aviv. Route 181—Fragments of a Journey in Palestine-Israel is a documentary film directed by Michel Khleifi and Eyal Sivan. The Lost World of the Crystal Skull is a human interest docudrama by director Gabriel Murray and producer Yvette Hoyle about a crystal skull discovered by F. A. Mitchell-Hedges. The Mitchell Hedges Crystal Skull was discovered by Albert Mitchell Hedges in a lost city in Belize in 1924, it is the artifact which inspired the movie Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. The English explorer found the skull while in search of the lost continent of Atlantis. This documentary explores this lost world where the skull was linked to Atlantis, the Mayan Prophecies of 2012 and a lost white tribe of Thule. In recent years new evidence has emerged which may support Mitchell Hedges theory that the edge of Atlantis was indeed off the coast of Cuba and Belize. This is as a result of the uncovering of a vast complex of pyramids found beneath Cuban waters and the discovery of the lost White City in the Jungles of Honduras. Japanese and European space agencies have recently pinpointed their locations, again seeming to support Mitchell Hedges discoveries and theories. The documentary premiered at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France. 9500 Liberty is a 2009 documentary film about the struggle over immigration in Prince William County, Virginia. It was directed by Annabel Park and Eric Byler. The film chronicles an eight-week period wherein an "Arizona-style" immigration crackdown was implemented and quickly repealed. 9500 Liberty began as an "interactive documentary," allowing its viewers to not only comment, but to help determine direction and additional coverage of the story, which was uploaded to a YouTube channel as footage was shot. These videos were combined with additional unreleased footage to create the documentary. 9500 Liberty garnered four film festival awards, and was released theatrically in select cities; it was picked up by MTV Networks for a Sept. 26, 2010 cable premiere. Vegucated is a 2011 American documentary film that explores the challenges of converting to a vegan diet. It "follows three meat- and cheese-loving New Yorkers who agree to adopt a vegan diet for six weeks." The director interviewed a number of people to participate in this documentary and chose Brian, who likes to eat meat and eat out; Ellen, a psychiatrist, part-time comedian and single mother; and Tesla, a college student who lives with her family. In the film Dr. Joel Fuhrman and Professor T. Colin Campbell discuss the benefits of a plant-based diet consisting of whole foods. The film also features Howard Lyman and Stephen R. Kaufman. Kneel Cohn makes a cameo appearance. The documentary addresses the resistance that some people feel towards vegetarianism and veganism, the disconnect between farm animals and the purchasing of meat, the origins of omnivorism and the ethical, environmental and health benefits of a vegan diet. During the filming, participants visited an abandoned slaughterhouse and investigated the reality of intensive animal farming in the US. Surf Crazy was the second surf movie by Bruce Brown. Filmed in 1959, it follows surfers to Mexico, Hawaii and California. Among the locations filmed was Velzyland in Hawaii, named for Brown's employer, surfboard manufacturer Dale Velzy. Hanna Ranch is a biographical documentary drama directed by Mitch Dickman. Forbidden Love: The Unashamed Stories of Lesbian Lives is a 1992 Canadian documentary film about the lives of lesbian women and their experiences of lesbian pulp fiction. It was written and directed by Lynne Fernie and Aerlyn Weissman and featured author Ann Bannon. It premiered at the 1992 Toronto Film Festival and was released in the United States on 4 August 1993. It was produced by Studio D, the women's studio of the National Film Board of Canada. In May 2014, the NFB re-released the film in a digitally remastered version. "Why do Italians vote Berlusconi? The violence of propaganda, the impotence of citizens, questions of the economy, illicit power relationships... And a catastrophe: the city of L'Aquila devastated by an earthquake... all these combine to show how the young Italian democracy has been subdued. The caricature of Berlusconi - one of the director’s most celebrated impersonations - strolls through Aquila’s refugee camp and wanders the deserted town like an emperor at the end of his reign. A town devastated by an earthquake - the perfect location from which to recount Italy’s drift into authoritarianism, the mess of blackmail, scandal, swindles and inertia of the political classes, the media and the citizens, that have paralysed the country. Why do the Italians vote for Berlusconi? Why do they consider democracy an unsuitable system of government? Aquila - this magnificent city laid low by an earthquake - will give us the answers. Why did the proud people of Aquila exchange their most precious commodity - their community, a dynamic town full of students and works of art - for a little apartment in a dormitory town, furnished by Berlusconi? Why did they believe TV propaganda rather than the evidence of their own eyes? And how did it happen to others too, as quickly and as deceitfully? Who was leaning on them? The days of Berlusconi’s reign seem numbered: it’s time to search through the rubble and draw what conclusions we can." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Cannes Film Festival site. Electric Train Driver: Driving Techniques - Passenger Trains is a 1964 documentary film directed by Ken Fairbairn. Yulu is a 2010 documentary film directed by Wei Tie, Tan Chui Mui, Jia Zhangke, Chen Tao, Chen Zhiheng, Song Fang, and Wang Zizhao. In the Shadow of the Moon is a 2007 British documentary film about the United States' manned missions to the Moon. It premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the World Cinema Audience Award. In March 2008, it was the first film to win the Sir Arthur Clarke Award for Best Film Presentation. It was given a limited release in the United States on September 7, 2007, and in Canada on October 19, 2007. It was released on DVD in the United States on February 22, 2008, and March 31, 2008, in the United Kingdom. It is also notable for giving Gareth Edwards an early credit in visual effects. United in Anger: A History of ACT UP is a 2012 documentary film written by Jim Hubbard and Ali Cotterill and directed by Jim Hubbard. Putin's Kiss is a 2012 documentary, directed by Lise Birk Pedersen, about Russian youth activist Masha Drokova and her experiences with the youth organisation Nashi. "Cult film buffs may be familiar with the cycle of "nudie cutie" exploitation films released in the wake of Russ Meyer's hugely successful The Immoral Mr. Teas, at the very end of the 1950s. These films offered many moviegoers their first filmed view of naked flesh, with many featuring unexpurgated views of nudist colonies. What is less known is that the same type of films were made over 25 years earlier. This Nude World is a prime example of this genre, and like the later films, was made chiefly to exploit scenes of naked bodies by very independent (and very low budget) filmmakers. It was probably distributed by just a few people who rented theaters and transported prints from town to town, staying one step ahead of the censors. The film was either directed or re-edited from a German import by Mike Mindlin. It features brisk editing, glib (and campy) narration, and a globe-trekking continuity as it travels from the Catskills through France and into Germany in search of sun worshippers. In each outpost of nudism, countless naked enthusiasts are shown in all their glory, both male and female (as well as children). Along the way, more traditional travel scenes are shown as well, setting a backdrop for the different cultures where the movement had taken root. Including an American nudist camp in this film was significant, for while the naturalism movement began in Europe around the turn of the century, the first known permanent nudist camp in the U.S. opened just the year before this film was shot. The controversial periodical The Nudist (later renamed Sunshine & Health) appeared on newstands in 1933, and the nudist lifestyle continued to spread and flourish. This Nude World, a quickie exploitation film made to cash in on headlines, likely provided inspiration for new recruits to the lifestyle, at least among those who managed to see it in its original limited release. Quoting Jay Schwartz from the 201 Philadelphia QFest site. Naked Idol is the seventh TV movie on the part documentary and part rock-mockumentary musical comedy series which was created by Polly Draper. Naked Idol is expected to air on March 14, 2009. The premise of Naked Idol is that The Naked Brothers Band have a Naked Idol contest for a new bassist replacing Rosalina. It also features guest appearances by David Desrosiers and Tobin Esperance. Heavy Metal Night At Gus' Pub is a 2013 short music drama film directed by Ruby Boutilier and written by Sue Goyette. Tussilago is a 2010 short animated drama documentary film written and directed by Jonas Odell. Tabloid is a 2010 American documentary film by Errol Morris. It tells the story of Joyce McKinney, a former Miss Wyoming and mentally ill woman, who in the 70s was accused of kidnapping and raping Kirk Anderson, an American Mormon missionary. The incident, known as the Mormon sex in chains case, became a major tabloid story in Britain and triggered a circulation battle between two popular newspapers, The Daily Mirror and The Daily Express. The film is based on interviews of McKinney conducted by Morris, who also interviewed journalists involved with her story. The film makes reference to Mormon culture, such as temple garments. 9/11: Phone Calls from the Towers is a 2009 documentary film directed by James Kent. The Green Cold is a 2002 film directed by Nasser Saffarian. Ritratto Di Mio Padre is a 2010 documentary film directed by Maria Sole Tognazzi and written by Manuela Tempesta and Maria Sole Tognazzi. Strongman is a 2009 documentary about Stanley Pleskun. El chahuistle is a 1981 animated documentary film directed by Carlos Cruz. The Respected Comrade Supreme Commander Is Our Destiny is a 2008 North Korean film, described by the North Korean State news agency KCNA as a "documentary film". It was screened at the People's Palace of Culture in Pyongyang in August 2008 for the 48th anniversary of Kim Jong-il's first steps in his Songun revolution leadership, and aimed at celebrating him as the author of the policy. Selected spectators included Party, army and state officials, as well as "officials of working people's organizations" and of "national institutions". KCNA published the following review: The film impressively deals with the immortal feats Kim Jong Il performed by developing the Korean People's Army into invincible revolutionary armed forces and leading the confrontation with the imperialists and the U.S. to victory in the 90s of the last century under the uplifted banner of Songun and thereby demonstrating the might of Juche Korea. The First Rasta is a 2010 documentary film written by Hélène Lee and directed by Christophe Farnarier and Hélène Lee. Quarter No. 4 is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Ranu Ghosh. The Real Shaolin is a 2008 documentary film directed by Alexander Sebastien Lee. The Real Shaolin follows the story of two Chinese and two Westerners who journey to the Shaolin Temple in China, inspired by the legends portrayed in Kung Fu movies with Bruce Lee and Jet Li. In the course of excruciating martial arts training, their fantasies to become Kung Fu warriors collide with harsh reality, as the Shaolin Temple is the ultimate test for martial artists from all over the world. The Real Shaolin had its World Premiere at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival, and USA Premiere and winner of Special Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the 2009 Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival. The Real Shaolin has played in festivals around the world including Hawaii International Film Festival, Doc NZ, Planet Doc Review, San Diego Asian Film Festival, and the DC Asian Pacific American Film Festival. In October 2009, The Real Shaolin premiered at New York City's IFC Center for the documentary screening series Stranger than Fiction Hunger in Los Angeles is a 2012 immersive journalism film written and directed by Nonny de la Peña. No Impact Man is a 2009 American documentary film directed by Laura Gabbert and Justin Schein, based on the book by Colin Beavan. The film, which premiered September 4, 2009, follows Colin Beavan and his family during their year-long experiment to have sustainable zero impact on the environment. The film mostly takes place in New York City. DeLorean is a 1981 documentary film directed by Chris Hegedus and D.A. Pennebaker. The Eye of Vichy is a 1993 film directed by Claude Chabrol. The documentary is about propaganda produced by Nazi-occupied France during World War II from 1940 to 1944. The film documents the pro-Nazi sentiments of Philippe Pétain's Vichy regime and its efforts to spread propaganda against both the Allied Forces and the Jews. It contains authentic newsreels, advertisements, and feature-film footage produced by the Nazis and their collaborators. May I Be Frank is a documentary biographical comedy film directed by Gregg Marks. When You're Strange is a 2009 documentary about the Doors. It is written and directed by Tom DiCillo and for the first time makes material from Jim Morrison's 1969 film fragment HWY: An American Pastoral publicly available. Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek has stated that "This will be the true story of the Doors," and that the film will be "the anti-Oliver Stone," referring to the 1991 film about the group that Stone directed, and which drew criticism from many Doors fans and several people who knew Morrison. "Throughout his 30+ year career, French pop maestro, writer, composer, performer, film director and superstar Serge Gainsbourg was the dirty old man of popular music; a French singer/songwriter and provocateur notorious for his voracious appetite for alcohol, cigarettes, and women, his scandalous, taboo-shattering output made him a legend in Europe. Come join us in celebrating the life and work of the suave Gallic bard with the SF premiere of the acclaimed 2010 French TV doc Serge Gainsbourg: The Man Who Loved Women!" Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. Huie's Sermon is a 1981 documentary film made for television by Werner Herzog. It consists almost entirely of a sermon delivered by Huie Rogers of the Bible Way Church of Our Lord Jesus Christ in Brooklyn. PolyCultures: Food Where We Live is a documentary film directed by Tom Kondilas. The Rhythm Of My Life: Ismael Sankara is a short documentary film produced in Libreville, Gabon. It is written, directed and produced by Franck A. Onouviet and Marc A. Tchicot. The music is composed by Michael “Mike Mef” Mefane and Rodney “Hokube” Ndong-Eyogo. It focuses on musical moments between people sharing a strong passion for their craft and an in depth and personal interview of rapper Ismael Sankara. The documentary is presenting a new recording artist with a passion going further than the name he is carrying. The true-life story of the Miracle Survivors of 9/11/01 when the World Trade Center was destroyed, the Pentagon hit, and a plane full of heroes headed for the White House crashed in Pennsylvania. Sex-Business - Made in Pasing is a 1969 documentary film directed by Hans-Jürgen Syberberg. Anthony Edwards (ER, Top Gun) met Ole Kane Lettura while Lettura was working as a scout for a safari company in western Kenya. Lettura had a natural ease about him and warmth towards the Edwards' family that was immediately ingratiating. Lettura took Anthony for a run around the safari camp one day and shared that he loved to run. Edwards a basic recreational runner had an idea that it would be great to give Lettura the opportunity to run in the New York City Marathon. Not to win the race but like thousands of other runners to participate.Six months later accompanied by two talented filmmakers Edwards Spent a week documenting Lettura's life. With one week to go before the marathon they all went to New York and explored the city and life in the urban jungle. The story of the film comes out of these two weeks shared by this eclectic group.Two worlds that could not be more different on the exterior have subtle and deep connections through the spirit of the people. Project 10 - Real Stories From a Free South Africa: Hot Wax is a 2003 film directed by Andrea Spitz. Holiday Around My Bedroom is a 2003 short comedy documentary film written and directed by Jamie Jay Johnson. Watchers of the Sky is a 2014 American documentary film directed and produced by Edet Belzberg. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. It won the two awards at the festival. After its premiere at Sundance Film Festival, Music Box Films acquired distribution rights of the film. The film is scheduled to be released in late 2014. Pow Pow, also known as Lyrical War Report, is a documentary film released in 2005 and based on the release of "Pow" by Lethal B. "Grimes first ever documentary investigates the highs and lows of the number 11 chart smash hit." There are interviews from Tim Westwood, Fumin, D Double E, Napper, Jamakabi, Neeko, Flow Dan, Ozzie B, Forcer, Demon, Purple, Fire Camp, Knowledge, Dexplicit, 2 Face and Footsie. It was made in joint production by Club Sidewinder, NuthingSorted.com, MMG and Ablaze. The DVD was released by Nu-Era. Spiritual Voices is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Alexander Sokurov. Werewolves Across America is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Edward Lovelace and James Hall. "The cane toads are ba-a-a-ck! But this time those pesky varmints are coming at you in glorious 3-D. In 1988, filmmaker Mark Lewis had tongues wagging when he unleashed his celebrated documentary Cane Toads: An Unnatural History, exposing a bizarre biological blunder. Here, Lewis takes a giant leap forward as he revs up the technology, once again tracking the unstoppable march of the cane toad across the Australian continent. Reviled by many, adored by a few, the toad has gripped Australia's consciousness, achieving both cult and criminal status. Imported to save the sugar cane crop, the toad’s spread is considered one of Australia’s greatest environmental catastrophes. Yet for a world awakening to the daunting prospect that we have forever altered our ecosystem, this is a story of global implication. With its tongue not so firmly in its cheek, Cane Toads: The Conquest is a comic, yet provocative, journey of a species that has already invaded planet Earth." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Sounds Like a Revolution is a feature documentary about recent protest music in America. Directed by Canadian directors Summer Love and Jane Michener, the film was released in June 2010 and had its world premiere at NXNE festival and its theatrical premiere at The Royal Theatre in Toronto, Canada. Focusing on the personal experiences of four independent musicians, the film portrays Michael Franti, Fat Mike, Paris, and Anti-Flag and a collection of live performances, political rallies, music videos and uncensored commentaries from Pete Seeger, The Dixie Chicks, David Crosby, Steve Earle, Jello Biafra, Ani DiFranco, Wayne Kramer to Tom Morello and more. Bering. Equilibrio y resistencia is a 2013 documentary film written by Lourdes Grobet, Montserrat Larque and directed by Lourdes Grobet. Feeding Sea Lions is short silent film featuring Paul Boyton feeding sea lions at his Sea Lion Park at Coney Island. Boyton is shown feeding the trained sea lions, twelve in number. The sea lions follow Boyton up the steps of the pool and then follow him back into the water. One of them steals food out of the basket. The film was made by Lubin Studios on March 10, 1900. The Challenge... A Tribute to Modern Art is a 1974 American documentary film directed by Herbert Kline. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Film for Blind Poet is a 2012 short documentary drama film written and directed by Gustavo Vinagre. Underground Inferno is a 2008 documentary film directed by Sanjeev Sivan and Umesh Aggarwal. Original Wolfen. Aus der Geschichte einer Filmfabrik is a 1995 documentary film directed by Niels Bolbrinker and Kerstin Stutterheim. Reel Paradise is a 2005 documentary film directed by Steve James. What Is Left? is a 2014 documentary film written by Gustav Hofer, Luca Ragazzi and Sara Ventroni and directed by Gustav Hofer and Luca Ragazzi. Theaters of the Outgoing Summer is a 2007 documentary film directed by Kornelijus Matuzevicius and Diana Matuzeviciene. Jan Plewka singt Rio Reiser - Eine Reminiszenz an den König von Deutschland is a 2005 documentary and music film written by Stefan Paul and directed by Stefan Paul. Mother is God is a 2013 film written and directed by Maria Bäck. 'Tis Autumn: The Search for Jackie Paris is a 20076 documentary film written and directed by Raymond De Felitta. Slaughter Nick for President is a documentary film directed by Rob Stewart, Liza Vespi and Marc Vespi. It's Not an Illness is a 1979 documentary film. The Times of Harvey Milk is a 1984 American documentary film that premiered at the Telluride Film Festival, the New York Film Festival, and then on November 1, 1984 at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco. The film was directed by Rob Epstein, produced by Richard Schmiechen, and narrated by Harvey Fierstein, with an original score by Mark Isham. In 2012, this film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. Helvetica is an independent feature-length documentary film about typography and graphic design, centered on the typeface of the same name. Directed by Gary Hustwit, it was released in 2007 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the typeface's introduction in 1957 and is considered the first of the Design Trilogy by the director. Its content consists of a history of the typeface interspersed with candid interviews with leading graphic and type designers. The film aims to show Helvetica's beauty and ubiquity, and illuminate the personalities that are behind typefaces. It also explores the rift between modernists and postmodernists, with the latter expressing and explaining their criticisms of the famous typeface. Helvetica premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival in March 2007. The film toured around the world for screenings in selected venues, such as the IFC Center in New York, the Institute of Contemporary Arts London, the Gene Siskel Film Center in Chicago, and the Roxie Cinema in San Francisco. Helvetica was nominated for the 2008 Independent Spirit's Truer than Fiction Award. Reisen ins Leben - Weiterleben nach einer Kindheit in ... is a 1995 documentary film written by Thomas Mitscherlich and Gerhard Durlacher directed by Thomas Mitscherlich. Checkpoint is a 2003 documentary film by Israeli filmmaker Yoav Shamir, showing the everyday interaction between Israeli soldiers and Palestinian civilians at several of the regions Israel Defence Forces checkpoints. The film won five awards at various film festivals, including Best International Documentary at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, best feature-length documentary at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam and the Golden Gate Award for Documentary Feature at the San Francisco International Film Festival. Although the film was generally well received, it was also controversial and reactions from audience members and critics were sometimes very angry. Terms and Conditions May Apply is a documentary that discusses how corporations and the government utilize the information that users provide when agreeing to browse a website, install an application or purchase goods online. Created in 2013, a mere 9 years after the launch of Facebook and only 15 years after the founding of Google, this documentary inspected the language used in user-service agreements on the web. The collection tactics implemented by these entities were examined and the usage of the information gathered was outlined. Companies such as Google, Facebook and LinkedIn were cited for having poorly-worded and misguiding privacy policies/terms of service. The language used in these novel-length documents allowed their publishers to harvest the agreeing users’ information as they please and to legally provide it to third-party users. Through the lens of filmmaker Cullen Hoback, viewers are provided with a chilling reminder of how heedlessly we may click “I Agree” after scrolling through pages of uninviting text. He also demonstrates how what can be perceived as harmless can just as easily summon a SWAT team. A young school boy's tweet did just that. Benda Bilili! is a 2010 documentary by Renaud Barret and Florent de La Tullaye, produced by Yves Chanvillard and Nadim Cheikhrouha. The film follows the Kinshasa street musician group Staff Benda Bilili, whose core members of the group are disabled due to polio. "Benda Bilili" means “look beyond appearances” in Lingala. Renaud Barret and partner Florent de La Tullaye first spotted the group performing on the streets of Kinshasa in 2004. The shooting lasted 5 years until the Staff Benda Bilili became worldwide acclaimed. Amid this larger arc of triumph over adversity, it’s Barret and de La Tullaye’s joint eye for smaller personal and environmental details that keep the film witty and surprising: the camera captures the social cut-and-thrust of urban Kinshasa, before reflecting the group’s wonder at a wider world they previously imagined only in mythic terms. In Benda Bilili!, the sense of discovery between subject and audience is thrillingly mutual. Benda Bilili! received standing ovations when it opened at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival, with the group in attendance, and performing at the Directors' Fortnight opening party. Blue Horizon is a 2004 documentary film directed by Jack Mccoy. Seven Songs for Malcolm X is a British documentary film about the life of Malcolm X, the influential civil rights activist who was assassinated in 1965. The film was written and directed by John Akomfrah, with co-writer Edward George, and produced by Lina Gopaul. The Black Audio Film Collective, Akomfrah’s London-based company, and Channel 4 Television Corporation were both involved in the production of the film. It was first aired at the Toronto Film Festival in Canada, on September 15, 1993, and then at the Chicago International Film Festival in October 1993. On March 15, 2009, it was released in the Czech Republic at the One World Film Festival. The film was distributed by Channel 4 Television Company. It was filmed in London and has a runtime of 52 minutes. Namibia? Für uns immer noch Südwest is a 1984 documentary film written by Norbert Bunge, Caroline Goldie and Ron Orders and directed by Norbert Bunge. Beyond the Line of Duty is a 1942 American short drama film directed by Lewis Seiler. It won an Academy Award at the 15th Academy Awards in 1943 for Best Short Subject. Compound Eyes 4: Araneae is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Paul Clipson. Out in the Night is a documentary crime fiction biographical film directed by Blair Doroshwalther. Reach for the Sky is a 2001 Israeli documentary film which follows a group of young Israelis as they struggle to become pilots in their nation's army. But after all that they go through, only some will enjoy the honor of wearing those wings. The rest will be ordinary soldiers. After the six days are over, they sit the young soldiers down, and in a frank tone the leading officer reads off everyone’s names, telling them bluntly whether they passed or failed. Naturally Obsessed is a 2009 documentary film that opens a view on the training of scientists and the process of discovery. Shot over three years’ time in the molecular biology laboratory of Dr. Lawrence Shapiro of the Columbia University Medical Center, the film chronicles how the tool of X-ray crystallography enables the discovery of the workings of the AMPK protein molecule, revealing a new path towards the treatment of diabetes and obesity. The focus of the film, however, is mostly on the human side of doing science. Following the emotional ups and downs of three graduate students guided by their professor and laboratory head along the challenging and uncertain journey to the PhD degree, it highlights the qualities that contribute to the making of a scientist, such as persistence, skill in asking the right questions, mastering the needed technology, mentoring and being mentored, collaborating and facing competition. Ayurveda: The Art of Being is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Pan Nalin. The Man with the 7 Second Memory is a 2005 documentary film directed by Jane Treays. Voices from the Magdalena: Communication for Peace is a documentary film directed by Alfonso Gumucio Dagron. Mystic Iran: The Unseen World is a 2002 documentary film written by Janelle Balnicke and written and directed by Aryana Farshad. AM/PM is a 1999 short documentary film directed by Sarah Morris. Cherub of the Mist is a documentary film based on the life of two Red pandas, namely, Mini and Sweety, who were released into the Singalila National Park in the Darjeeling District, India. The documentary was filmed by Naresh Bedi and Rajesh Bedi during a period of about 14 months. It was the first time that someone had filmed the rare red pandas in their natural habitat. Red Pandas are found in Nepal, through North-eastern India and Bhutan, and into China and are listed in the Red Data Book. Their population is estimated to be around 2,500. The film shows the courtship, mating, nest building, and rearing of cubs of these little creatures. He ruled with an iron fist, treating his people like grist for the mill of power and threatening the world with his expansionist fantasies. One of the most influential and notorious leaders of the 20th century, he was likely also the greatest murderer of history, sending an estimated 20 million people to their deaths. STALIN: MAN OF STEEL is a multi-faceted portrait of the man who succeeded Lenin as the head of the Soviet Union. What America Needs: From Sea to Shining Sea is a 2003 documentary film movie filmed by Mark Wojahn. It is a sequel to the award winning 1995 film What America Needs: An Interior Expedition, which was produced in conjunction with the progressive film co-op, the New Kinomatagraphic Union. A breathtaking journey through the exotic, surreal and dramatic natural environment of Australia. Marriage Equality: Byron Rushing and the Fight for Fairness is a 2010 short, biographical, documentary film directed by Thomas Allen Harris. Monjas coronadas is a 1978 short documentary film directed by Paul Le Duc. Heart Stop Beating is a 2012 short film directed by Jeremiah Zagar. American Bellydancer is a 2005 documentary film directed by Jonathan Brandeis. It features Bellydancers including Ansuya, Rachel Galoob-Ortega, Suhaila Salimpour, Rachel Brice and Sonia. Sound Proof is a 2013 short music documentary film written and directed by Darren Cole. Wärst Du lieber tot? is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Christina Seeland. Disasterpieces is the second video album by American metal band Slipknot. Released on November 22, 2002, a 2-disc case DVD features Slipknot performing a concert at London Dockland Arena, as well all of the band's music videos up until its release including songs from Slipknot and Iowa. The concert was filmed by 26 cameras, including a camera on the headstock of Mick Thomson's guitar and a "first person" point of view of several band-members. The show was edited in part by band member Shawn Crahan who watched all of the footage recorded from the show. Disasterpieces was met with positive critical reception, with many citing the quick editing and high sound quality as strong points. In 2005 the DVD was certified quadruple platinum by the RIAA and is the band's highest selling DVD to date shipping at least 400,000 units as a longform video. Follow one man's dream to engeneer a submarine with panaramic views. Stand Up and Resist is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Klaus Volkenborn and Johann Feindt. Wohnkultur is an East German film. It was released in 1955. Lonely Boy is a 1962 cinéma vérité documentary about former teen sensation Paul Anka. The film takes its name from Anka's hit song, Lonely Boy, which he performs to screaming fans in the film. This short documentary is also unique for its use of hand-held cameras to record intimate backstage moments. Co-directed by Roman Kroitor and Wolf Koenig, this National Film Board of Canada production won a Canadian Film Award as top film of the year and was nominated at the BAFTA Awards for its best short film prize. Colored Frames is a 2007 documentary film taking a look at the role of fine art in the Civil Rights Movement, as well as the legacy of discrimination in the art community both historically and contemporarily. The documentary is a showcase of a wide variety of works primarily by African-American artists, and a discussion of modern sociopolitical topics focused on race, gender, and class. Beginning in late 2011 the film began airing nationally in the U.S. via American Public Television. Artists who appeared on camera in this documentary included: Benny Andrews John Ashford Gustav Blache Linda Goode Bryant Mary Schmidt Campbell Nanette Carter Ed Clark Francks Deceus Larry Hampton Gordon C. James June Kelly of the June Kelly Gallery Wangechi Mutu Ron Ollie Danny Simmons Duane Smith Tafa Se le movió el piso: A portrait of Managua is a documentary film by Anne Aghion about the many layers of destruction that the people in Managua, Nicaragua endured: the 1972 Nicaragua earthquake, four decades of dictatorship and many years of war. Most of the film was centered on the Salazar theater and the many families that lived there. Sofìa Montenegro, a journalist and a former Sandinista, was also interviewed as a person who lived and experienced the challenges of the Managuans. Directed by Anne Aghion and produced by Chaz Productions, this 1996 film won the Coral Award for "Best Non-Latin American Documentary on Latin America" at the Havana Film Festival in Havana, Cuba. Filmed in Managua, the language of Se le movió el piso: A portrait of Managua is Spanish and English with English subtitles. On a Day of Ordinary Violence, My Friend Michel Seurat... is a Syrian documentary film by the director Omar Amiralay. The film is an elegy by Amiralay to his friend Michel Seurat, who was kidnapped along with Jean-Paul Kauffmann on May 22, 1985 by the Islamic Jihad on the road to Beirut airport. Seurat died after eight months of captivity. Global Warming: The Signs and The Science is a 2005 documentary film on global warming made by ETV, the PBS affiliate in South Carolina, and hosted by Alanis Morissette. The documentary examines the science behind global warming and pulls together segments filmed in the USA, Asia and South America and shows how people in these different locales are responding in different ways to the challenges of global warming to show some of the ways that the world can respond. Spacetime is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Ryan Wicks. Choreography is a 2013 short documentary action film written and directed by David Redmon and Ashley Sabin. Search and Destroy: Iggy Pop & The Stooges Raw Power is a 2010 documentary film directed by Morgan Neville. Bob Marley: La Creación de la Leyenda is a 2011 documentary, musical, biographical and Romance Film written and directed by Esther Anderson and Gian Godoy. This documentary follows a young Ron Kovic, author of "Born on the Fourth of July," and crew as they descend upon the Republican National Convention in Florida in 1972. The world-famous march is captured on film, and Kovic's journey from soldier to activist is revealed. The Chickens is a 1977 short documentary film written and directed by Omar Amiralay. Last Act But One: Brundibar is a 1965 documentary film directed and written by Walter Krüttner. In Fear of Women is a 1991 film directed by Birgit Hein. Haiti: Harvest of Hope was originally planned as a documentary about democracy coming to Haiti with the election of Jean-Bertrand Aristide in December 1990. During the final editing of the original Haiti was struck by yet another military coup. Editing of the first version came to a halt as Kevin Pina returned to Haiti and spent the next three weeks chronicling the brutality and machinations of Haiti's new military leaders and their supporters. Kevin Pina returned to Haiti in late July 1993 just after the negotiation of the Governor's Island Accord between the Haitian Government in exile and General Raoul Cédras. Pina returned again in 1994 to film Aristide's return to Haiti. The world television premiere of Harvest of Hope was in Haiti on Mother's Day, May 28, 1995. The Kreyol version was produced in association with Jean-Claude Martineau who also introduced the film on Télévision Nationale d'Haïti. The English version is narrated by Roscoe Lee Brown and premiered at the Mill Valley Film Festival in the summer of 1994. Bronies: The Extremely Unexpected Adult Fans of My Little Pony is a 2012 documentary film centering on bronies, the adult fans of the 2010 animated television series, My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic. The film, funded through crowd-sourcing via Kickstarter, was originally envisioned to follow voice actor and executive producer John de Lancie to the 2012 Summer BronyCon in New Jersey. The project raised much more than anticipated, allowing it to grow in scope to bring on Lauren Faust, Friendship Is Magic's original creator, and Tara Strong, a principal voice actress on the show, as executive producers and to include additional convention footage from European conventions. Grünes Gold is a 2012 short animation film written by Susanne Mikulski and Barbara Marheineke and directed by Barbara Marheineke. Nestled below the rugged peaks of the Northern Rockies in Montana—as iconic a representation of America’s “purple mountain majesties” as one can find—lies the worst case of community-wide exposure to a toxic substance in U.S. history. In the small town of Libby, many hundreds of people are sick or have already died from asbestos exposure. Libby, Montana takes a long working day’s journey into a blue-collar community, and finds a different reality—one where the American Dream exacts a terrible price. (packaged to 86:46) Fragmentos de Paixão is a 2013 Brazilian documentary film directed by Iara Cardoso. The film was produced by INPE, and it's about the frequency of lightning in Brazil. In this personal documentary, actress Brook Bello embarks on an international journey to expose her troubled childhood as a runaway from a home marred by sexual abuse. Her troubles escalate when she becomes the victim of human trafficking and is forced into sex slavery and drug use. Brook’s journey is the ultimate triumph of the human spirit in this gripping story of life after trauma. Herring Hunt is a 1953 documentary, short film written by Leslie McFarlane and directed by Julian Biggs. Lone Samaritan is a 2009 documentary drama film directed by Barak Heymann. Where Have All the Flowers Gone? is a 2008 documentary film directed by Arturo Perez Jr. and produced by Arturo Perez Jr., Joel Sadler and Billy Troy. Perez, Sadler, and Troy travel to San Francisco to recapture the Summer of Love more than 40 years previously. The film premiered at the Wine Country Film Festival on August 4, 2008 and at San Francisco State University on September 26, 2008. The Crash Reel is a documentary film directed by Lucy Walker which premiered as the Opening Night Gala film on 19 January 2013 at the Sundance Film Festival. Lucy first met Kevin Pearce while mentoring at a retreat intended to inspire Nike's action sports athletes to use their platform for social change at the invitation of David Mayer de Rothschild who had created the event. Lucy was immediately struck by Kevin and wanted to make a documentary film about him, and the result is The Crash Reel, which premiered at Sundance on January 18, 2013 as the Opening Night Gala film in the Documentary Premieres section. The film is described as a jaw-dropping story of one unforgettable athlete, Kevin Pearce; one eye-popping sport, snowboarding; and one explosive issue, traumatic brain injury. Through 20 years of sports and verite footage, The Crash Reel chronicles the epic rivalry between Kevin and Shaun White which culminates in Kevin's life-changing crash and a comeback story with a difference. The film also showcases the Pearce family, including Kevin's father glass-blower Simon Pearce and Kevin's brother David C. Pearce who describes his struggle to accept his Down Syndrome. Eight Minutes to Midnight: A Portrait of Dr. Helen Caldicott is a 1981 American documentary film about anti-nuclear weapons activist Helen Caldicott, directed by Mary Benjamin. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Not So Black or White is a 2006 animation and documentary film directed by Col Cruise. The Impossible - Pieces Of Fury is a 2009 film written and directed by Sylvain George. MUSH: The Movie is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Alex M. Stein. A Queen Who Returned is a 1958 documentary film directed by Gil Brealey. Hoffenheim is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Rouven Rech and Frank Pfeiffer. Tidikawa and Friends is a 1974 documentary film written and directed by Jef Doring & Su Doring. Mike's Migration is a 2013 biographical documentary adventure short film written and directed by Adam Kunz. Drexciya is a 2011 short history documentary film written by James Stinson and Gerald Donald and directed by Akosua Adoma Owusu. Find out why some feel the Federal Reserve's practices are a violation of the U.S. Constitution and others feel it's simply "a bunch of organized crooks." Discover why experts agree the Fed is a banking cartel that benefits mainly bankers and their corporate clients as well as a Congress that would rather increase the National Debt to over $10 trillion than raise taxes. Find out how the corporate media facilitates the partnership between the Fed and Congress and why it fails to disclose what's going on. Lastly, find out how the Federal Reserve-member banks are owned and controlled by an elite group of insiders. No Sleep til Shanghai is a 2007 documentary film. It stars Jin and was directed by Todd Angkasuwan. Good People Go to Hell, Saved People Go to Heaven is a documentary film directed by Holly Hardman. Portrét krále komiků is a Czech comedy film. It was released in 1987. Ex-voto for Three Souls is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Diego Rivera Kohn. Joffa: The Movie is a 2010 independent Australian buddy movie starring Australia's best known sports fan, Joffa Corfe. The film was financed by Chris Liontos, the Director/ Producer, along with actor Shane McRae, Joffa’s buddy in the movie. Journey through 100 years of comedy with this survey of the funniest moments in entertainment history, from the slapstick of the silents to the screwball comedies of the 1930s and '40s to the red hot hijinks of Hollywood's most recent comic offerings. Features footage of Laurel and Hardy, the Three Stooges, Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Lucille Ball, Jerry Lewis, Richard Pryor, and many other icons of comedy. Our World is a 2007 documentary film. Call Me Ehsaan is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Micah Garen. The Fab Five is a 2011 ESPN Films documentary about the 1990s Michigan Wolverines men's basketball players known collectively as the Fab Five: Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard, Jimmy King, and Ray Jackson. It chronicles the recruitment, glory years, notorious time-out fiasco, cultural impact and the scandal that followed these players who are described as iconic figures in the media. The film originally aired on March 13, 2011 on a national broadcast on ESPN. The film was noted as the highest-rated ESPN documentary of all time. The film spawned critical commentary in a broad spectrum of media outlets which include leading newspapers such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post; leading periodicals such as Forbes; online forums such as Slate; and leading news outlets such as MSNBC. In particular, the film sparked a verbal war between Jalen Rose and Duke University's Grant Hill through the media regarding issues of race in sports and education that fueled the Duke–Michigan basketball rivalry. One Today is a 2013 short biographical documentary film directed by Lara Johnson. Video Diaries: Dying For Publicity is a 1993 documentary film directed by Chris Steele-Perkins. Yoyochu in the Land of the Rising Sex is a 2010 documentary film directed by Ishioka Masato. Thembi`s Diary is a 2010 short animated documentary film directed by Jisoo Kim. Club 7 is a 2014 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Even Benestad and August B. Hanssen. Ferlinghetti is a 2009 documentary film directed by Christopher Felver. Live from New York: The First 5 Years of Saturday Night Live is a 2005 TV movie written and directed by Kenneth Bowser. Behind the Hatred: Mortal Enemies is a TV movie documentary. Jets: Vol. 3: Fury is a 2002 military documentary. A Song for Tibet is a 1991 Canadian short documentary film about efforts of Tibetans in exile, led by the Dalai Lama, to free their homeland and preserve their heritage. Directed by Anne Henderson, A Song for Tibet received the Award for Best Short Documentary at the 13th Genie Awards as well as the People's Choice Award for Best Documentary Film at the Hawaii International Film Festival. The film was co-produced by Arcady Films, DLI Productions and the National Film Board of Canada. Ali Kazimi was director of photography. The film focuses on two Tibetans in exile in Canada: Thubten Samdup, who escaped from Tibet after the 1959 uprising against the Chinese, who teaches traditional performing arts in Montreal and heads the Canada-Tibet Committee; and Dicki Chhoyang, born in a refugee camp in India, who knows Tibet only through stories recounted by her parents. The film follows Dicki and Samdup from Montreal to Dharamshala, India and also documents the Dalai Lama's first public appearance in Canada. Battle For Bats: Surviving White Nose Syndrome is a 2013 short documentary film directed by David McGowan. MicroWorlds is a 2010 documentary short family film directed by Greg Passmore. Freddie Mercury: The Great Pretender is a the Emmy/Rose d'Or award winning 2012 feature length documentary about Queen star Freddie Mercury and his attempt to forge a solo career. The documentary premiered on BBC One in edited form as part of the Imagine series and later the Director's Cut was shown on BBC 4. It gained 3.5 million viewers when aired on BBC One in October 2012 and a further 1.2 million when shown on BBC 4. Reuniting the producer, editor and director of photography behind 2011's widely acclaimed “Queen: Days of Our Lives” BBC documentary, “The Great Pretender” in similar vein presents a compelling insight into its subject matter, unearthing previously undiscovered or rarely seen footage. Produced and directed by Rhys Thomas, lifelong Queen fan and expert, Rhys has this time turned his attention to the Freddie archive, going back as early as 1976 in search of vintage gems which reveal more than ever before the inside story of Freddie’s life and career and the solo projects he worked on outside of Queen. A Place to Live is a 1941 documentary film directed by Irving Lerner and produced by the Philadelphia Housing Association, a nonprofit affordable housing advocacy group. The film was designed to call attention to inner city squalor in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania by focusing on a child’s journey from school to his family’s cramped and squalid apartment in a rat-infested slum neighborhood. A Place to Live was nominated for the 1941 Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. Guerra is a 2003 documentary film directed by Pippo Delbono. J'ai tant aimé... is a 2008 documentary film. Classic Albums: The Who – Who's Next is a musical documentary detailing the recording of The Who's album, Who's Next. It features various interviews with the surviving members of the band Pete Townshend, Roger Daltrey, and John Entwistle noted writers, including Dave Marsh. The DVD also feature outtakes from the gig at Shepperton Studios on May 25, 1978 and a performance of Behind Blue Eyes at Charlton Athletic Football Grounds in 1974. "Imagining tomorrow’s America today, FUTURESTATES returns with a second season of independent short narrative films commissioned by ITVS and created by veteran filmmakers and emerging talents transforming today’s complex social issues through a surreal lens into visions about what life in America will be like in decades to come." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. Public School is a TV film. Layali Bala Noom is a 2012 documentary film written by Nizar Hassan and directed by Eliane Raheb. I Love America is a 2001 documentary film directed by Tõnu Trubetsky. Strange Lights is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Joe King and Rosie Pedlow. The Center is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Stanislaw Mucha. Leahy in Concert is a 1998 documentary/musical film directed by Michael Watt. Chicks in White Satin is a 1994 American short documentary film about the Jewish same-sex marriage of two lesbians, including interviews with the Rabbi and various family members. The film was directed by Elaine Holliman and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Alaskan Eskimo is a 1953 American short documentary film produced by Walt Disney. It won an Academy Award at the 26th Academy Awards in 1954 for Documentary Short Subject. The Gaskettes is a 2012 Telly Award winning film, created by thestealthcrew. Capitalism: A Love Story is a 2009 American documentary film directed, written by and starring Michael Moore. The film centers on the late-2000s financial crisis and the recovery stimulus, while putting forward an indictment of the current economic order in the United States and capitalism in general. Topics covered include Wall Street's "casino mentality", for-profit prisons, Goldman Sachs' influence in Washington, D.C., the poverty-level wages of many workers, the large wave of home foreclosures, corporate-owned life insurance, and the consequences of "runaway greed". The film also features a religious component where Moore examines whether or not capitalism is a sin and whether Jesus would be a capitalist, in order to shine light on the ideological contradictions among evangelical conservatives who support free market ideals. The film was widely released to the public in the United States and Canada on October 2, 2009. Reviews were generally positive. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray on March 9, 2010. Pachamama is a 2008 documentary film directed by Eryk Rocha. History of Postwar Japan as Told by a Bar Hostess is a 1970 Japanese film by director Shohei Imamura. After the poor box-office performance of his ambitious 1968 film, The Profound Desire of the Gods, Imamura decided to undertake a more modestly budgeted film. This was Imamura's second foray into the documentary format, after 1967's A Man Vanishes. Characteristically, Imamura seeks to investigate an alternative interpretation of recent Japanese history through the eyes of a person living in the lower strata of that society. Beginning with this film, Imamura was to spend the next decade working in the documentary format. He returned to purely fictional narrative with Vengeance is Mine. Hats Off is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jyll Johnstone. It screened at the Telluride Film Festival and the Palm Springs International Film Festival, as well as on Sveriges Television in Sweden. Hats Off tells the story of actress and model Mimi Weddell who, at the age of 93, still enjoys a successful career in New York City. The film centers around Mimi's day-to-day life, focusing on her exuberant personality and relationship with her children. It follows Mimi from her apartment to dance lessons, auditions, Elizabeth Arden appointments, and fashionable strolls around New York City. The film was shot over a period of ten years by Directors Guild of America Award-nominated director Jyll Johnstone, a childhood friend of Mimi's daughter Sarah Dillon. It features interviews with family members, casting agents, and fellow actors, all of whom shed light on what they see as Mimi's apparently unending energy and devotion to her craft. From her debut role in cult classic film Dracula's Last Rites to a recent print ad for Juicy Couture, Mimi's work is described in anecdote and often presented onscreen. Christopher Lee - Gentleman des Grauens is a 2010 biography documentary film written and directed by Oliver Schwehm. Girls Aloud: Home Truths is a fly on the wall style documentary that was broadcast as a prelude to the group's first full length documentary series, Girls Aloud: Off the Record. The programme was first broadcast on 12 October 2005 on ITV2. Dance for Me is a 2012 documentary film directed by Katrine Philp. Lumière and Company was a collaboration between forty-one international film directors in which each made a short film using the original Cinématographe camera invented by the Lumière brothers. Shorts were edited in-camera and constrained by three rules: A short may be no longer than 52 seconds No synchronized sound No more than three takes James May: My Sisters' Top Toys is a British television documentary. Presented by James May, it was first broadcast on 23 December 2007 on BBC Two. The show was a spin-off from the 2005 documentary James May's Top Toys, and was first shown as one of three shows which made up the "Top Gear Night In". The show focused on the toys loved by his elder and younger sisters, including dolls, dolls' houses, dolls' prams, Girls' World, Ladybird Books, Spirograph, and a Palitoy Tree Tots Family House. May speaks about how he often played with them as they were hand-me-downs. During the show, May sets up a race as a girls' school and a boys' school battle it out in a go-kart time trial, using their own converted Silver Cross prams. May gets his own made by the pram factory. He tests it out, battling for first place alongside the girls and the boys. Drift: The Sideways Craze is a 2007 documentary television film about professional drifting. It features drifting champion Samuel Hubinette and upcoming star Ken Gushi preparing for the D1 Grand Prix, while teaching an amateur the basics of drifting. The film was aired for four years by Discovery HD and is included as bonus content in Fast and The Furious Blu-ray Box Set. End Of An Era is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Chris Devanney. Homeless in America is a 2004 documentary short film written by Tommy Wiseau and directed by Kaya Redford and Tommy Wiseau. Girl with Black Balloons is a film directed by Corinne Borch van der released on Jun 17, 2010. Mindscapes... of Love and Longing is a film directed by Arun Chadha. Legend: A Film about Greg Garing is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Emily Branham. Aliyah's Ascent is a short documentary film directed by Rad Young. Cinéast(e)s is a 2013 French documentary film about filmmakers who are women. Julie Gayet interviews twenty-one French female filmmakers about the relevance of gender to filmmaking and the issues encountered by women in making films. It begins with the question: "is cinema gendered?" No Cameras Allowed is a documentary film directed by Marcus Haney. Trumbo is a 2007 documentary film directed by Peter Askin, produced by Will Battersby, Tory Tunnell, Alan Klingenstein, and David Viola and written by Christopher Trumbo. It is based on the letters of Trumbo's father, Dalton Trumbo, an Oscar-winning screenwriter who was imprisoned and blacklisted as a member of the Hollywood Ten, ten screenwriters, directors and producers who refused to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1947 during the committee's investigation of Communist influences in the Hollywood film industry. The film debuted at the Toronto International Film Festival and includes film clips and interviews, readings from Trumbo's letters by performers such as Michael Douglas, Joan Allen, Donald Sutherland, Liam Neeson, and Paul Giamatti, and a reenactment by David Strathairn of a speech given by Dalton Trumbo in 1970. The readings include parts of what the New York Times calls "Dalton Trumbo's remarkably stage-ready personal letters" that cover the period from the late 1940s to the early 1960s. Air Guitar in Oulu is a documentary film by Canadian filmmaker Kent Sobey. The film follows the quest of Andrew "Air Raid" Buckles as he attempts to raise enough funds to travel to Oulu, Finland for the Air Guitar World Championships. His efforts include bake sales and street performance, backed by a boom box, of his air guitar techniques. The Last Paradise is a 1955 romance documentary film written by Folco Quilici, Ennio Flaiano and Dario Cecchi and directed by Folco Quilici. Science Fiction: A Journey Into the Unknown is a 1994 documentary directed by Scott Goldstein. La Maison de la radio is a documentary film directed by Nicolas Philibert. Signs of the Time is a 60-minute documentary on the origin of hand signals in baseball. There are several myths in regards to how signals were started, and the film addresses some of the mysteries that led to umpires giving hand-signals to call plays in the field, base coaches to relay hand signals to players on the field, and catchers to relay hand signals to pitchers. Mother: Caring for 7 Billion is a 2011 documentary film directed by Christophe Fauchere. Fog is a 2014 documentary drama film written by Nicole Vögele and Elsa Kremser, and directed by Nicole Vögele. Musidora, the Tenth Muse is a 2013 documentary and biographical film written and directed by Patrick Cazals. Technocalyps is an intriguing three-part documentary on the notion of Trans-humanism by Belgian visual artist and filmmaker Frank Theys. The latest findings in genetics, robotics, artificial intelligence, bionics and nanotechnology appear in the media every day, but with no analysis of what seems to be their common aim: exceeding human limitations and creating higher, trans-human forms of life. Technocalyps presents a thorough and critical enquiry into the scientific, ethical and metaphysical dimensions of technological development. The film includes interviews by top scientists and thinkers on the subject worldwide, such as Marvin Minsky, Ray Kurzweil, Terence McKenna, Hans Moravec, Bruce Sterling, Robert Anton Wilson, David Noble, Margaret Wertheim, the Dalai Lama and many others. Part 1: Trans-human - Leading scientists from the fields of genetics, artificial intelligence, brain research and nanotechnology explain and reflect upon their research. Their prognoses for the near future all share one common view: we are now on the verge of a trans-human era, faced with the options to either improve or to surpass human-kind as we currently know it. Part 2: Preparing for the Singularity - Advocates and opponents of a trans-human future are weighed against each other. Prognoses are made about when we can expect this trans-human revolution, and how people are preparing for it already now. Part 3: The Digital Messiah - This part covers the metaphysical consequences of the new technological revolution. Scientists start to use metaphysical concepts to describe the impact of their research. A surprisingly large number of scientific projects are inspired by religious aspirations and more and more theologians from various religious or spiritual orientations are becoming interested in these aspirations of new technology, making the debate inextricably complex. Women for Sale is a 2005 documentary by Nili Tal. It explores the phenomenon of Russian women who immigrate to Israel to work as prostitutes. Chris Rock: Bigger and Blacker is a 1999 comedy documentary film written by Chris Rock and directed by Keith Truesdell. Det kære legetøj, made in 1968 by director Gabriel Axel, is a Danish feature film advocating the legalizing of pornography. A campaigning film, it mixes interviews, reconstructions and fiction in playful fashion, seeking to ridicule and undermine Denmark's censorship laws at the time. The film may be said to have been successful in its objective, as a year after its release Denmark completely legalized pornography. The film was banned in France but released in both England and the United States. It started a whole wave of documentary films about pornography in Denmark. A Place We Call Home is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Albina Griniute. Jeg taler til jer - John Kørners verden is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jørgen Leth. Great cities for cycling, are better places for everyone. Bike City, Great City is an uplifting ride through cities that are embracing cycling as a liberating, convenient and healthy way to get where you want to go. David Chernushenko is a citizen, cyclist and city councillor in Ottawa, Canada. Ottawa was awarded a “Silver level” Bicycle Friendly City designation in 2011. That’s pretty good. But for David, and all the cyclists and aspiring cyclists, silver is not good enough. They want gold. And not just North American gold. They want “Copenhagen gold,” where people of any age, gender and income level see the bicycle as a practical, appealing and affordable choice for traveling to work, to school, to the shops, to everywhere. The great cycling cities of the world know that when you take bold steps to make cycling safer and more attractive, you create a better city for everyone. Now North American citizens (and mayors) are catching on. They want a bit of cycling gold for themselves. In North American cities, less than two percent of people choose the bicycle as a regular mode of transportation. In some European cities, more than 30 percent do. But in the last five years, dozens of major American and Canadian centres have figured out what Copenhagen knows: when you give people a real choice, by making cycling a safe and appealing way to travel, they flock to it in droves. Even better, the city becomes a better place for everyone to travel, and to live. Even for drivers. Ai kontakuto: Mouhitotsu no Nadeshiko Japan - Rousha sakkâ is a documentary film directed by Kazuhiko Nakamura. Chichi wo meguru tabi is a documentary film directed by Masanori Kondo and Kunio Takeshige. Two out of work television writers are hired by the publicity-obsessed promoter Kevin Blatt, the force behind the notorious Paris Hilton sex tape, to create a brutal all-or-nothing reality television show "where survival is just the beginning. Die Generalprobe is a 1980 documentary film directed and written by Werner Schroeter. Battlestar Galactica: The Last Frakkin' Special is a 2009 documentary film directed by John Murphy. David der Tolhildan is a 2007 documentary film directed by Mano Khalil and produced in Switzerland. The story of the career of the extremely influential evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson. The Last Reef 3D is a 2012 short family documentary film written and directed by Luke Cresswell and Steve McNicholas. Breaking the Code: Behind the Walls of Chris Jericho is a 2010 film directed by Kevin Dunn. Dinosaurs Alive! is a 2007 IMAX documentary produced by Giant Screen Films about various dinosaurs that inhabited the Earth between 251 and 65 Ma. The documentary features animals from the Triassic period of New Mexico to the Cretaceous period of Mongolia. Stolen is a 2009 Australian documentary film that uncovers slavery in the Sahrawi refugee camps controlled by the Polisario Front located in Algeria and in the disputed territory of Western Sahara controlled by Morocco, written and directed by Violeta Ayala and Dan Fallshaw. It had its world premiere at the 2009 Sydney Film Festival, where a controversy started after one of the participants in the documentary, Fetim, a black Sahrawi, was flown to Australia by the Polisario Liberation Front to say she wasn't a slave. The POLISARIO, avowing that it doesn’t condone slavery and needing to safeguard its image on the world stage to support its independence fight, began an international campaign against the film. It put out its own video denouncing Stolen, in which several people who Ayala and Fallshaw interviewed say they were coerced or paid by the Australian duo. On May the 2nd 2007, while filming in the refugee camps Ayala and Fallshaw were detained by the Polisario Front and Minurso and the Australian ministry of foreign affairs negotiated their release. The Cry of Jazz is a 1959 documentary film by Ed Bland that connects jazz to African American history. It uses footage of Chicago's black neighborhoods and performances by Sun Ra, John Gilmore, and Julian Priester interspersed with scenes of musicians and intellectuals, both black and white, conversing at a jazz club. It has been credited with predicting the urban riots of the 1960s and 70s, and has also been called the first Hip-Hop film. In 2010, this film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". The Library of Congress had this to say of the film and its significance: Cry of Jazz...is now recognized as an early and influential example of African-American independent filmmaking. Director Ed Bland, with the help of more than 60 volunteer crew members, intercuts scenes of life in Chicago’s black neighborhoods with interviews of interracial artists and intellectuals. Cry of Jazz argues that black life in America shares a structural identity with jazz music. You'll be a Man is a 2012 family documentary film directed by Robert C. Goodwin. Non-fiction Diary is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Yoon-suk Jung. Anna German "Life And Legend" is a biographical documentary film directed by R. Wolański. Munda Nyuringu: He's Taken The Land, He Believes It Is His, He Won't Give It Back is a documentary film directed by Jan Roberts. "Have you heard the one about the yodelling, country singing, lesbian twin sisters with a penchant for dressing up and comedy? Well, if you heard it you probably wouldn't believe it, but here come Jools and Lynda Topp to prove to you that reality is stranger and far more wonderful than fiction. The Topp Twins are huge celebrities in New Zealand. Regarded as national treasures, they are firmly entrenched in the cultural landscape of their homeland with a career that spans over two decades, eight albums and the prime time TV series, Do Not Adjust Your Twinset which features such much-loved creations as Camp Mother and Camp Leader, the busty, bossy, Kiwi matron and her naïve, cardigan wearing sidekick. The Topps are also hardcore political activists who were at the forefront of campaigns for a Nuclear Free New Zeland, Maori Land Rights, a halt to the 1981 Springbok Tour and Homosexual law reform. Their commitment to progressive change coupled with their down-home, diary-farm, up-bringing reflects as much on their country as it does them. In telling the twins' story, director Pooley also deftly manages to map out a history of cultural change in New Zealand. Such is the significance of the Topp Twins that former Prime Minister Helen Clark, who was interviewed for the documentary, says of them "I think the Topps being so proudly who they were helped make (gay) issues more mainstream… That helped carry the day." Untouchable Girls, the award-winning documentary about the Topps incredible lives, has grossed more than any other documentary at the New Zealand box office and has gained fans all over the world. Using an engaging mixture of live performance, early footage of the twins as young performers and campaigners, and interviews with their comic creations, alongside interviews with those around them, this is a warm, intelligent and truly inspiring look at two women who have engaged the hearts and minds of their country just by being their radical, fun-loving selves. NJ" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. The Living Stone is a 1958 Canadian short documentary film directed by John Feeney about Inuit art. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The film is included in the 2011 Inuit film anthology Unikkausivut: Sharing Our Stories, bringing together over 100 films by and about the Inuit people of Canada, distributed on DVD to Inuit communities across the Canadian North and available online. Soundtrack to War is a 90 minute documentary by Australian war artist George Gittoes. Filmed throughout 2003-2004, Gittoes bypassed the U.S. military's media lockdown on the war in Iraq to capture an authentic account of the human experience of the war. Gittoes interviewed American soldiers deployed in Iraq to create an account of the role of music in the contemporary battlefield. The film was followed by a sequel, Rampage. Songs featured in the movie include Slayer's "Angel of Death" and Drowning Pool's "Bodies", as well as freestyle rap and gospel choirs. Seventeen of the early-filmed scenes from the documentary were used in Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11. The film is mentioned in the 2009 book Sound Targets: American Soldiers and Music in the Iraq War by Jonathan Pieslak. Light Plate is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Josh Gibson. The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time! is a 1982 documentary film about the folk group The Weavers and the events leading up to their 1980 reunion concert at Carnegie Hall. The film was the inspiration for the 2003 mockumentary film A Mighty Wind. The legendary Les Paul, father of the solid-body electric guitar, inventor of overdubbing and multi-track recording, king of the '50s pop charts, rock 'n' roll pioneer, tells his own rags-to-riches story in a performance-documentary by filmmakers John Paulson and James Arnts - with a wall-to-wall soundtrack of the greatest hits from "Hold That Tiger" to "My Generation."A joyous 90th-birthday celebration at the Iridium Jazz Club and the accolades that follow (induction into National Inventors Hall of Fame, Grammy-winning "rock duets" album; School of Rock tribute at Roseland, lifetime achievement award from Songwriters Hall of Fame) provide the verité framing device for Mr. Paul's lively recollections of his remarkable life.An artful blend of interviews, vintage film and television clips, recordings, radio show excerpts, still photographs, advertising art, personal memorabilia and a rich variety of location B-roll illustrate Mr. Paul's narrative and examine his accomplishments in the distinctive in-depth style of American Masters.The intricate technology and sensuous beauty of solid-body electric guitars will be of special interest to the filmmakers, who will employ computer animation and still-life artistry to examine and display the legendary Les Paul guitars and the genius of their inventor.Les Paul has been "chasing the perfect sound" since his boyhood in Waukesha, Wisconsin, when he punched new chords into his mother's piano roll and turned his bedsprings into a radio antenna which would pull in the raucous jazz broadcasts from Chicago and the lonesome harmonica from the Grand Old Opry.Irascible, egotistical, indefatigable, an inveterate tinkerer and practical joker, he's the last of that self-educated, brilliantly innovative generation of musicians and media pioneers who revolutionized popular music and re-invented the global culture. Larry Flynt: The Right To Be Left Alone is a sensational portrait of America's most famous smut peddler and his many First Amendment court battles over the past 30 years. An often polarizing figure, Larry Flynt has long struggled to expand the parameters of free speech and expose the hypocrisy of this country's elected leaders. He's spent more time in court than many lawyers and even spent time in jail for his beliefs. When he talks about the meaning of democracy, he's earned the right to be heard! Last Year Titanic is a 1990 documentary film written by Sebastian Richter and Andreas Voigt and directed by Andreas Voigt. Balseros is a 2002 Catalan documentary co-directed by Carles Bosch and Josep Maria Domènech about Cubans leaving during the Período Especial. As a consequence of the widespread poverty that came with the end of economic support from the former USSR, 37,191 Cubans left Cuba in 1994, unimpeded by the Cuban government, using anything they could find or build to get to Florida in the USA. Most left with improvised rafts, which were often not seaworthy, and some even hijacked a ferry. The documentary consists largely of interviews with the rafters, over the course of seven years the lives of seven of those refugees, from the building of their rafts to their attempts at building new lives in America, giving insight into daily life in Cuba and the USA in those days. The documentary is 2 hours long. The first half is filmed in Cuba, with in the end some scenes of the rafters' months long detention in Guantanamo Bay, where lotteries were used to decide who would be allowed to go to the US. All the while, their families didn't know their whereabouts. The last hour is about the lives of those who managed to get to the USA. That's Entertainment, Part II is a 1976 motion picture by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and a sequel to the 1974 documentary That's Entertainment!. Like the previous film, That's Entertainment, Part II was a retrospective of famous films released by MGM from the 1930s to the 1950s. For this second documentary, archivists featured more obscure musical numbers from MGM's vaults, and also featured tributes to some of the studio's best known comedy teams such as the Marx Brothers and Laurel and Hardy, romantic teams such as Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, and a montage of iconic stars such as Clark Gable, Mickey Rooney, John Barrymore, Wallace Beery, Joan Crawford, Jean Harlow, James Stewart, Lana Turner, and Greta Garbo. Gene Kelly and Fred Astaire hosted the film and Kelly directed the introductory segments featuring him and Astaire, which included location footage of Kelly returning to the city of Paris which was featured in two of MGM's most famous productions, An American in Paris and Gigi. This was the last film he directed. Cousin Jules is a 1972 documentary film written and directed by Dominique Benicheti. Global Steak: Demain nos enfants mangeront des criquets is a 2010 French documentary television film directed by Anthony Orliange. Hearts and Minds is a 1974 American documentary film about the Vietnam War directed by Peter Davis. The film's title is based on a quote from President Lyndon B. Johnson: "the ultimate victory will depend on the hearts and minds of the people who actually live out there". The movie was chosen as Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 47th Academy Awards presented in 1975. The film premiered at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival. Commercial distribution was delayed in the United States due to legal issues, including a temporary restraining order obtained by one of the interviewees, former National Security Advisor Walt Rostow who had claimed through his attorney that the film was "somewhat misleading" and "not representative" and that he had not been given the opportunity to approve the results of his interview. Columbia Pictures refused to distribute the picture, which forced the producers to purchase back the rights and release it by other means. The film was shown in Los Angeles for the one week it needed to be eligible for consideration in the 1974 Academy Awards. Shark Quest is a one hour documentary filmed by Robert Torelli and Mark Priest. This documentary features Rob and Mark as they travel around Australia and South Africa on a quest to film sharks like never before. Moonwalking: The True Story of Michael Jackson - Uncensored is a 2009 documentary film directed by Bob Carruthers. Charlie Brown and Charles Schulz is a documentary about the creator of the Peanuts series, Charles Schulz. The special first aired on the CBS television network on May 22, 1969. It features many different segments, including footage from the first Peanuts feature length film, A Boy Named Charlie Brown. Fighter Pilot: Operation Red Flag is an IMAX film centered on the experiences of a USAF F-15 Eagle fighter pilot, then-Captain John Stratton, who wants to be professionally successful as a fighter pilot. It chronicles his experience during USAF Red Flag training at Nellis AFB, a simulated air war designed to train pilots for combat. Directed by Stephen Low and presented by Boeing, the film shows how airmen simulate a war without killing one another, as well as the training of military air base firemen, military ordnance crews, midair refueling operations, cockpit views, and other aspects of aerial combat. The film was released in December 2004. Bayou Blue is a 2011 documentary drama crime news film directed by Alix Lambert and David McMahon The Man on Lincoln's Nose is a 2000 American short documentary film about Hollywood art director Robert F. Boyle, directed by Daniel Raim. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Solar System is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Heise. If I Was a Man is a 2012 short film Directed by Margot Reumon. Immortelle is a 2013 short documentary and romance film written and directed by David Verbeek. Real Vs. Barcelona is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Tofan Abubaker. Seville, Southside is a 2002 film directed by Dominique Abel. Searcy County is a 2012 short documentary comedy drama film directed by Noam Osband. Treasures of the Scopitones is a documentary film directed by Michéle Collery and Anaïs Prosaic. In a remote corner of Tibet, seven young world-class kayakers take on the most feared whitewater river on earth, through the 18,000 ft. deep Tsangpo Gorge. A raging torrent that drops 9,000 ft. in 150 miles, it is known as the "Everest of Rivers," and is considered the last great adventure prize left on the planet. "Into the Tsangpo Gorge" was honored as one the "Top 20 Adventure Films of All Time." Directed by Scott Lindgren. Torn Cloth is a 2013 history, action, documentary film written and directed by Tate Zandstra. Balance Beams is a 2003 documentary film directed by Jonas Leddington. King Corn is a 2007 documentary film released in October 2007 following college friends Ian Cheney and Curtis Ellis as they move from Boston to Greene, Iowa to grow and farm an acre of corn. In the process, Cheney and Ellis examine the role that the increasing production of corn has had for American society, spotlighting the role of government subsidies in encouraging the huge amount of corn grown. The film shows how industrialization in corn has all but eliminated the image of the family farm, which is being replaced by larger industrial farms. Cheney and Ellis suggest that this trend reflects a larger industrialization of the North American food system. As was outlined in the film, decisions relating to what crops are grown and how they are grown are based on government manipulated economic considerations rather than their true economic, environmental, or social ramifications. This is demonstrated in the film by the production of high fructose corn syrup, an ingredient found in many cheap food products, such as fast food. Witness to Jonestown is a 2008 documentary film written by Stephen Stept which aired on November 9, 2008 as a part of MSNBC Documentaries series. Passage Upon the Plume is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Fern Silva. The Dhamma Brothers is a documentary film released in 2007 about a prison meditation program at Donaldson Correctional Facility near Bessemer, Alabama. The film features four inmates, all convicted of murder, and includes interviews with guards, prison officials, local residents and other inmates, and reenactments of their crimes. The soundtrack includes music by Low, New Order and Sigur Rós. The film was directed by Jenny Phillips, a cultural anthropologist and psychotherapist, Andrew Kukura, a documentary filmmaker, and Anne Marie Stein, a film-school administrator. In 2008 Phillips released Letters from the Dhamma Brothers: Meditation Behind Bars, a book based on follow-up letters with the inmates. The Dhamma Brothers has been compared with another documentary, Doing Time, Doing Vipassana, which documented a large scale meditation program at Tihar Prisons in India with over a thousand inmates using the same meditation retreat format. For No Good Reason is a 2012 American-British documentary film about Ralph Steadman, directed by Charlie Paul. The film was in competition for the Grierson Award for Best Documentary at the 2012 BFI London Film Festival. It premiered at the 2012 London Film Festival, and was released in 2014 in the United States. Self-Portrait Auschwitz / The Eye is so to Speak the Biological Evolution of a Tear is a 2007 Documentary/ Short film written and directed by Alberto Grifi. We is a documentary about the words of Indian activist and author Arundhati Roy. The film combines her speech "Come September" with a wide-variety of video footage and music. The film was produced by an unknown artist and uploaded anonymously to the Internet. Since that time, another person has adopted the film's promotion via a website called www.weroy.org. Roy's speech and the film focus on issues of nuclear weapons, nationalism and patriotism, power, US military force abroad, Israel's occupation of Palestine, and capitalism. H2indo is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Brent Deal. In the 1990s, at the height of the prison-building boom, a prison opened in rural America every 15 days. Prison Town, USA tells the story of Susanville, California, one small town that tries to resuscitate its economy by building a prison – with unanticipated consequences. Weaving the stories of a laidoff mill worker turned guard, a struggling dairy owner and an inmate’s family stranded in Susanville, the film sheds light on an industry that is transforming the social and economic landscape of rural America. A co-production of the Independent Television Service (ITVS) and KQED/Truly California. (packaged to 86:46) I'm Not Dead Yet is a 2011 half biopic, half tour film written and directed by Janine Hosking. Luckus is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Giedrė Žickytė. Jandek on Corwood is a documentary about veteran reclusive folk/blues artist Jandek. Unlike most popular music documentaries, the subject himself is not seen in the film in any way; instead, various critics, disc jockeys and journalists, many of whom have had some contact with the notoriously reclusive artist, discuss Jandek, his equally mysterious independent record label Corwood Industries, and his music. While Jandek himself does not appear in the movie, he did authorize and endorse the project through Corwood Industries, allow the filmmakers to use whatever recordings from his discography they saw fit, and suggest people that could be interviewed for the documentary. The film ends with the mention of the release of his 2002 album I Threw You Away; after the film's release in theaters, this album and its succeeding four releases are excerpted in a bonus feature on the DVD. Chop Socky: Cinema Hong Kong is a 2003 documentary film directed by Ian Taylor. Hospital is an 84 minute 1970 American documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman, which explores the daily activities of the people at Metropolitan Hospital Center, a large-city hospital, with emphasis on its emergency ward and outpatient clinics. The film won two Emmys for Outstanding Achievement in News Documentary Programming - Individuals and Outstanding Achievement in News Documentary Programming - Programs. In 1994, it was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry as being deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Pas de pain, pas de gain is a 2009 short film directed by Lawrence Côté-Collins. Deadly Currents is a 1992 documentary film directed by Simcha Jacobovici. End of the Road: How Money Became Worthless is a 2012 film written by Tim Delmastro and Jason Spencer, and directed by Tim Delmastro. Surpriseville is a documentary film directed by Tim Travers Hawkins. Bala is a 1976 short documentary film made by Satyajit Ray, about a Bharata Natyam dancer, Balasaraswati, fondly known as "Bala". The film was jointly produced by National Centre for the Performing Arts and Government of Tamil Nadu. The thirty three minute documentary features the life and some of the works by Balasaraswati in the form of narration and dance, starring herself. At the age of fourteen, Ray had seen a performance of Balasaraswati in Kolkata, then known as "Calcutta", in 1935, when she was seventeen years old. Ray had initially planned to make a film on Bala in 1966 when she was in her prime. However, he could only start filming in 1976. Incidentally, though Bala was often called as "a revolutionary Bharata Natyam dancer", she had never been filmed till she was 58 years old, in spite of having a career spanned over four decades. Ray decided to make the film on Bala, "the greatest Bharata Natyam dancer ever" according to him, to document her art for future generations with the "main value as archival". RoachTrip is a 46-minute 2003 Canadian documentary about two punks, Roach and his friend Smash down the invisible punk highway across Canada. It captures their goal to escape the streets of Montreal as they cross 5,000 km to reach the "promised land" of British Columbia's Okanagan Valley. The film is an autobiographical coming-of-age chronicle told in an intimate point-of-view style, directed by Eric "Roach" Denis of EyeSteelFilm, a Montreal-based documentary production company, as a continuation of the autobiographical journey that he had started by being portrayed as one of the main characters in Daniel Cross award-winning documentary S.P.I.T.: Squeegee Punks in Traffic where Eric Denis contributed with his RoachCam. The film RoadTrip became the directorial debut film of Eric "Roach" Denis. La neta no hay futuro is a 1987 short documentary film directed by Andrea Gentile. Fermière à Montfaucon is a 1967 short documentary film directed by Eric Rohmer. Plan 9 from Syracuse is a documentary by independent filmmaker Ryan Dacko about his attempt to gain attention of film producer Mark Cuban by staging a cross-country run from Syracuse, New York, to Hollywood. Despite a lack of experience in marathon running, Dacko left from Syracuse’s Eastwood Palace Theatre on August 15, 2006. He planned to reach Hollywood in 90 days, but problems with weather and unreliable support crews delayed his arrival until December 31, a 139-day journey. In the course of the run, he used the Internet to urge supporters to lobby Mark Cuban to agree for a meeting. Cuban, learning about the endeavor, responded negatively and refused to meet with Dacko. With this run, Dacko became the 175th person to cross America on foot. Plan 9 from Syracuse had its premiere at the B-Movie Film Festival in October 2007. Two months later, it was reviewed by Film Threat as “the best documentary of the year, bar none.” It was screened on the U.S. film festival circuit, winning awards for Best Picture and Best Director at the 2008 New Haven Underground Film Festival. The film was released on DVD release on August 26, 2008, by SRS Cinema. Air Racers 3D is a 2012 documentary, action, adventure, family and sports film directed by Christian Fry and Jean-Jacques Mantello. House With The Green Roof is a 2010 documentary film directed by Blanka Zavitkovska. Great River is a 2010 documentary film from director Matt LeMay and McIntyre Media. Great River won the 2011 Award of Excellence in Film making at the 2011 Canada International Film Festival. This installment in BET's "Journeys in Black" series traces the rise of Master P -- born Percy Miller -- from his humble beginnings in New Orleans to his exalted status as one of the nation's most powerful entrepreneurs. The program goes behind the scenes of the rapper and mogul's No Limit entertainment empire, which began as a record label and grew to encompass sports management, fashion, real estate, film and more. Abby, I Hardly Knew Ya is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Linda Lee Tracey. Pam Kuso Kar is a 1974 short film directed by Jean Rouch. Sardar Vallabhai Patel is a 1976 documentary film directed by Kantilal Rathod. My Buddy, Zé Ketti is a 2003 short musical documentary directed by Nelson Pereira dos Santos. Wonder of Work is a 1955 documentary film. "The Cambodian killing fields, once Khmer Rouge genocidal abattoirs, are still mine-strewn disasters waiting to explode. Aki Ra is determined not to let that happen. In Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, Aki Ra was one of thousands of young children stolen from their families and turned into killing machines. Living with the horrors of his past and armed only with a stick and a kitchen knife, he has cleared over 50,000 land mines, while teaching others his craft. A quiet hero, working alone in obscurity, he has undoubtedly saved as many lives as he was forced to take. His life lived in atonement, the man is a quiet hero who carries an amazing amount of sadness with dignity, hope and belief that he can help make things better." Quoting Charlie Cockey from the 2011 Cinequest Film Festival site. Anton Webern is a 1991 short documentary film written by Michel Baudour and Antoine-Marie Meert and directed by Thierry Knauff. Il giardino della speranza is a 2011 short documentary drama film written and directed by Antonello Faretta. The Iron Wall is a 2006 documentary film about the establishment of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, which, the film argues, is a strategy for permanent occupation of the territory. Produced by the Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committees and Palestinians for Peace and Democracy, it was the "Official Selection" of the Al-Jazeera Television Production Festival. The Iron Wall follows the timeline of the settlements and examines their effect on the peace process, featuring interviews with noted peace activists and political analysts, both Israeli and Palestinian, including Jeff Halper, Akiva Eldar and Hind Khoury. The film also covers the controversial construction of the Israeli West Bank barrier. The Iron Wall features English, Arabic and Hebrew, and has English subtitles. Homo Ciris is a short documentary science fiction film written and directed by Jana Minarikova. Why We Ride is a documentary, family and historical film directed by Bryan H. Carroll. Reminiscencias is a 2011 Peruvian experimental documentary film written, produced, and directed by Juan Daniel Fernández Molero. Jungle Cat is a theatrical feature film produced by Walt Disney Company. Ispanja is a 1939 documentary film written by Vsevolod Vishnevsky and directed by Roman Karmen and Esther Schub. Jaipur Mahouti is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Deborah Harse. "Much like the written ideograms in Chinese languages, the twelve chapters forming Guo Xiaolu's latest documentary, Once Upon a Time Proletarian: 12 Tales of a Country, transcend conventional narrative and float into a poetic world of images that succeed in rendering a sharp portrait of post-Maoist China. These twelve lyrical and politically insightful visual essays unveil the social landscape of China today. While shooting She, a Chinese –her fiction film also screening in the Festival – Guo felt the urge to document the lives of peasants and onlookers surrounding the production, to probe their dreams and vibrant authenticity without the filter of an invented story. Once Upon a Time Proletarian is a gallery of these honest portraits. Though Guo follows a variety of personalities, the new faces of China too often exhibit greed, indifference and small-mindedness. Her subjects range from a peasant who criticizes indecent businesses as he displays his poverty with the dignity derived from a strong work ethic, to millionaires chatting about the new Russian prostitutes in town and exchanging information on the stock market. A weapons factory worker who misses the time when Mao was still alive tells his story alongside young students dreaming of freedom and becoming famous artists in the West. As the director's scarcely concealed sadness, anger and disenchantment seep through beautifully composed frames, we glimpse the revolutionary greatness and heroism of the past, especially as compared to today's reality. It's almost impossible to imagine what the future holds for the disoriented children of China's liberal economy. Determined to relay the truth, Guo endows the film with a fresh literary touch borrowed from her graceful writing style – each chapter features a separate universe, where images appear to seamlessly match what is said and where words seem depicted more than pronounced." Quoting Giovanna Fulvi from the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival site. The Blue Identity is a 2012 short drama documentary film directed by Mumin Baris. Egungun is a 1982 film directed by Carlos Brajsblat. The Five Faust of F.W. Murnau is a 2002 film directed by Luciano Berriatúa. The Betrayal — Nerakhoon is a 2008 documentary film directed by Ellen Kuras and Thavisouk Phrasavath. Pellat Newsreel is a documentary film. Through the lenses of cameras, an exploration into the minds - the hopes, dreams, & expectations - of their bearers reminds us of the value that has been so deeply ingrained into the generation.About Campus Movie FestLike the story from a classic Hollywood film, Campus MovieFest (CMF) came from a humble beginning. Seven years ago, a band of friends attending Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, thought it would be fun to give computers, camcorders and training to students to make their own movies and then share the five minute films the teams created. The four Emory students had no idea the project would change the course of their lives and the lives of countless students across the globe as the program grew to become the world's largest student film festival. Pottery Wars is a 2013 short documentary comedy film written and directed by Michelle Naomi Swallow. "In an enduring photograph of September 11, a team of rescue workers carry a Franciscan priest’s body from the World Trade Center. The world came to know Father Mychal Judge, a Chaplain of the Fire Department of New York City, in death as a symbol of courage and sacrifice. Saint of 9/11 presents the turbulent, restless, spiritual and remarkable journey of Father Mychal Judge. Compassionate champion of the needy and forgotten, a beloved Fire Department Chaplain, rousing Irish-American balladeer and iconoclast, Father Judge was a humble parish priest who wrestled with his own private demons while touching others in powerful and miraculous ways. Throughout his career as a friar, he lived a life of witness, action and love. He provided hope, warmth, compassion, and acceptance. Mychal Judge knew the pain of loss and suffering. He struggled with alcoholism and was an outspoken AA advocate. Through his own vulnerability, imperfection and fragile humanity, he was able to reach people in their pain, shame and fragility. Father Judge was a gay man who loved his priestly work. Saint of 9/11 weaves interviews with friends, colleagues, congregants and archival footage with Mychal’s words. The film portrays Mychal’s life as a spiritual adventure and an honest embrace of life, where alcoholism and sexuality were acknowledged. Saint of 9/11 is the story of a life’s journey interrupted. Inspired by his life, the documentary embraces Mychal’s full humanity." Quoting the description from the Official Site. Dancing with the Trees is a 2012 short, biographical documentary film written and directed by Dennis Scholl. Moment of Impact is a 1998 American documentary film directed by Julia Loktev. Bailoretto, la aventura de un rebelde is a 1985 Argentine historical drama about Juan Bautista Bailoretto directed and written by Atilio Polverini and Sebastián Larreta. My Terrorist is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Yulie Gerstel. The Valiant Ones is a 1991 film directed by A. K. Balakrishnan. This is a documentary filmed over a year and a half about what it means to be a horror fan. With interviews from Sid Haig, Tom Savini, Doug Bradley, Bill Moseley, Dee Wallace, and many others. Radio Amina is a 2011 documentary, short, biography film directed by Orlando von Einsiedel. The Farmer And His Prince is a 2013 film written and directed by Bertram Verhaag. Men of the Lightship is a short propaganda film produced by the Crown Film Unit for the British Ministry of Information in 1940, the year after the beginning of the Second World War. It dramatises the bombing of the East Dudgeon lightship by the Luftwaffe on 29 January 1940 and was designed to portray Germany as a barbaric enemy. An opening narration explains the traditional understanding of lightships as neutral vessels during war. The filmmakers attempted to recreate the original incident as realistically as possible; the crew of the lightship is composed of real lightship men rather than professional actors. The realism of the film was praised in press reviews upon its release, and it was considered one of the best British propaganda films of the period. Men of the Lightship was also distributed in America in 1941, in an edited version produced under the supervision of Alfred Hitchcock. The Grateful Dead Movie, released in 1977 and directed by Jerry Garcia, is a film that captures live performances from the Grateful Dead's October 1974 five-night stand at the Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco. This end-of-tour run marked the beginning of an extended hiatus for the band, with no shows planned for 1975. The movie also faithfully portrays the burgeoning Deadhead scene. The film features the "Wall of Sound" concert sound system that the Dead used for all of 1974. 15 Attempts is a 2013 documentary film directed by Aliona van der Horst. Pasty Hunters is a 2013 film written by Laurence Pears and Sam Carrick and directed by Laurence Pears. Message by Music: Senegal in Transition is a documentary film directed by Cornelia Strasser. Escarpment Blues is a Canadian concert and documentary film starring singer-songwriter Sarah Harmer. Directed by Andy Keen and produced by Keen, Harmer and Patrick Sambrook, it was released theatrically in 2006. In June 2005, Harmer launched a tour, called I Love the Escarpment, across southern Ontario to promote Protecting Escarpment Rural Land, a conservation group she cofounded to battle a proposed quarry development on the Niagara Escarpment near her hometown of Burlington. Harmer toured communities near the escarpment, both performing and speaking about the PERL campaign. The film documents both her live performances and her activist work from the tour, and takes its name from "Escarpment Blues", a song from her 2005 album I'm a Mountain. Poet Tanis Rideout also participated in the PERL tour and appears in the film. Escarpment Blues won the award for Best Music DVD at the 2007 Juno Awards. Gyumri is 2008 documentary film written and directed by Jana Sevciková. Zwischen Himmel und Erde is an East German film. It was released in 1957. Antonioni on Antonioni is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Carlo Di Carlo. Thorvaldsen is a 1949 short documentary film written and directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer. In The Shadow of Little Rock:The Life of Daisy Bates is a 2010 documentary film. Oil Rocks: City Above the Sea is a 2009 documentary film directed by Marc Wolfensberger. To preserve their culture, the Pamir Kirghiz people have migrated across Central Asia from the U.S.S.R to China to Afghanistan to Pakistan and finally to remote eastern Turkey, but now they face the most serious threat to their traditions, globalization. Between the Harvest is a 2011 documentary short adventure drama film directed by Scott Drucker The Windmill Movie is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Alexander Olch. Sign Painters is a 2014 documentary film directed by Faythe Levine and Sam Macon. Chevette 83 is a short documentary film written and directed by Luis Oliva. "Mormons can be movie lovers too. The problem is that their religious leaders strongly discourage R-rated content. As one Mormon prophet explained, “The mind through which this filth passes is never the same afterwards.” In order to better serve their Mormon clientele, enterprising video stores in Utah started to offer “clean” versions of popular titles like The Matrix and Titanic. Using digital editing software, self-appointed censors removed nudity, gratuitous violence and profanity, then mass duplicated the clean versions for DVD rental. Soon the idea took off, and multiple franchises sought to capitalize on brands like Clean Flicks and Flick's Club. For a brief spell, it seemed like the perfect business. Unfortunately, no one consulted the copyright holders. Hollywood figures such as Steven Soderbergh, Curtis Hanson and Michael Mann became vocal opponents of having their work re-edited. As quickly as the clean movement blossomed, it started to unravel, with legal threats from Hollywood, accusations among rivals and even a sex scandal in the backroom of a clean video store. In Cleanflix, directors Andrew James and Joshua Ligairi chronicle the rise and fall of the clean movement. Having grown up in the Mormon community, the duo gained close access to the main players that outsiders might never have achieved. The controversy over cleaning films raises further questions: Who gets to set cultural standards? Does what we watch affect how we behave? The film gives a broader context for understanding the Mormon institution (known as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) by talking to its adherents and those who have dropped out, most notably the playwright and filmmaker Neil LaBute, known for the dark themes in scripts like In the Company of Men and Bash. As events unfold, one thing becomes clear: in movies, you can skip over the parts you don't like. But in real life, you can't." Quoting Thom Powers. The Flea Theater: A Portrait is a 2010 drama documentary film directed by Bethany Jacobson. Woodstock: The Director's Cut is a music documentary film directed by Michael Wadleigh. A healing journey through the most beautiful and sacred places in the American Southwest. Rye Coalition: The Story of the Hard Luck 5 is a biographical music comedy documentary film directed by Jenni Matz. To Parsifal is a 1963 short experimental historical documentary film directed by Bruce Baillie. "Montreal readies itself for the holiday season, its usual quick tempo accelerated into one last spurt of spending, rehearsing, preparation and merrymaking. In this early Candid Eye doc, Macartney-Filgate develops his observational, free-form approach and direct cinema style." Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Hot Docs site. John & Jane is a 2005 documentary film directed by Ashim Ahluwalia. If We Shout Loud Enough is a 2013 documentary directed by Gabriel DeLoach and Zach Keifer. The documentary focuses on the final tour of Double Dagger, a post-punk trio from Baltimore, Maryland. The film was released by Thrill Jockey with the final record by the band, 333, and had its festival premiere within Maryland Film Festival 2013. Cosmic Energy Inc. is a documentary film written by Giuseppe Schillaci and Paolo Pallavidino and directed by Giuseppe Schillaci. Eastern Avenue is a 1985 documentary film directed by Peter Mettler. Relative Madness is a short film directed by Vika Evdokimenko. Invoking Justice is the 2011 documentary film directed by Deepa Dhanraj. The Daredevil Men is a 1972 British short subject detailing the activities of stunt performers and stunt arrangers featuring Tom Adams. Tunten lügen nicht (Queens Don't Cry) is a 2001 German Documentary film written and directed by Rosa von Praunheim. In this release that aims to demystify the controversial phenomenon of unidentified flying objects, former government officials, astronauts, and military men offer firsthand accounts of their experiences with the unknown, and the government conspiracies designed to bury their secrets at any cost. From firsthand accounts of the recovery of alien spacecraft and the harvesting of extraterrestrial technology by Head of U.S. Army's Foreign Technology Division (Col. Phillip J. Corso), to Apollo 14 astronaut Dr. Edgar Mitchell's explosive revelations regarding the 1947 Roswell UFO incident, and former intelligence analyst Command Sgt. Major Robert O. Dean's confirmation of the existence of Area 51, this release offers explosive information about some of the most controversial cover-ups of the last century George Carlin: Back in Town is a 1996 documentary comedy film written by George Carlin and directed by Rocco Urbisci. Once upon Our Time is a 2010 documentary film directed by Hichem Ben Ammar. Dragonflies with Birds and Snake is a 2012 documentation film written and directed by Wolfgang Lehmann. This Side of Paradise is a 1999 short documentary film written and directed by Jonas Mekas. Two in the Wave is a 2009 documentary film written by Antoine De Baecque and directed by Emmanuel Laurent. Papa 2 is a film about the notorious interrogation centre, Papa 2. This interrogation center was run by the Indian Armed Forces in Kashmir till 1996. Officially, over 2000 - unofficially, over 8000 - people have disappeared from the Kashmir Valley over the past 15 years. Most of these are enforced disappearances. The film, PAPA 2, documents the struggle of the mothers and wives of disappeared persons to trace their loved ones. It features interviews with the families of the affected people and also members of the Association of Parents of Disappeared People. The Road: A Story of Life and Death is a 2012 documentary film written by Iqbal Ahmed and Marc Isaacs, and directed by Marc Isaacs Tabu: Final Voyage is a 1996 film directed by Yves de Peretti. New Yorker Nicholas White was trapped in an elevator for 41 hours. How did it happen? How do elevators work? Are they safe? Why are so many people afraid of them? Across North America, elevators move 325 million passengers every day, most of the time without problems. But will the elevator-wary be comfortable handing over the reins to computers? Once brawny but simple machines, elevators are now getting a brainy makeover and reaching new heights. "Trapped in an Elevator" reveals the secrets of these ubiquitous machines and investigates personal stories of those who have been caught inside when they do fail. Yunbogi's Diary is a documentary film directed by Nagisa Oshima. Der Fater is a 1986 documentary film directed by Christine Noll Brinckmann. And The Bamboo Blooms is a 1999 film directed by Joshy Joseph. Shaped On All Six Sides is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kat Gardiner. Heino Jaeger-Look Before You Kuck is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Gerd Kroske. Predators of the North is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Wes Skiles. Jammed - Let's Get Moving is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Heise. Banking on Heaven is a documentary film which exposes the largest polygamous enclave in the United States and its leader, Warren Jeffs. Banking on Heaven was written, produced, and narrated by Laurie Allen, who escaped a similar polygamous sect at age sixteen. Banking on Heaven focuses on the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, a schismatic polygamous sect of the Latter Day Saint movement that existed in Colorado City, Arizona. The documentary holds interviews with many escapee's as well as those that have been excommunicated from the church. The documentary also interviews law enforcement as well as Utah and Arizona State politicians and poses questions on what can be done to rescue or help the women of the FLDS. Le Ring intérieur is a 2002 documentary film directed by Dan Bigras. Blue End is a 2000 film directed by Kaspar Kasics. A Trip Down Memory Lane is a 1965 experimental collage film by Arthur Lipsett, created by editing together images and sound clips from over fifty years of newsreel footage. The film was intended as an audiovisual tour of the post-war technocracy. In his notes for producer Donald Brittain about the film, Lipsett wrote that “as science grows, religious belief seems to have diminished... The new machines are now invested with spiritual qualities. They have become ritualistic implements.” Lipsett envisioned his film as a kind of cinematic time capsule for future generations, and sub-titled the film accordingly, as "Additional Material for a Time-Capsule." A Trip Down Memory Lane combines footage from a beauty contest, religious procession, failed airflight, automotive and science experiments, animal experimentation, skyscraper construction, military paraphernalia, John D. Rockefeller and scenes of leisure, Richard Nixon and scenes of war, blimps and hot air balloons, and a sword swallower. To create the film, Lipsett travelled from Montreal to New York City to obtain stock footage in 35mm which he had reduced to 16mm. He then drew new edge code on it by hand. Ici Najac, A Vous La Terre is a 2006 documentary drama comedy film directed by Jean-Henri Meunier. Chasing Ice is a 2012 documentary film about the efforts of nature photographer James Balog and his Extreme Ice Survey to publicize the effects of climate change, directed by Jeff Orlowski. It was released in the United States on November 16, 2012. The documentary includes scenes from a glacier calving event that took place at Jakobshavn Glacier in Greenland, lasting 75 minutes, the longest such event ever captured on film. Two EIS videographers waited several weeks in a small tent overlooking the glacier, and were finally able to witness 7.4 cubic kilometres of ice crashing off the glacier. "The calving of a massive glacier believed to have produced the ice that sank the Titanic is like watching a city break apart." Prosecutor is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Barry Stevens. "Upon learning of the filmmaker’s transition, a mother declares to the family that her daughter is dead. The filmmaker documents transgender people as they are being styled for a photo shoot" - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. The Life and Death of Grigori Efimovich Rasputin. Klos City is a 2013 documentary film directed by Denis Hoxha. Two Million Minutes: A Global Examination is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Chad Heeter. The 'Rainforest 3D' stunning stereoscopic documentary movie transports you deep into the awe-inspiring Central America tropical rainforest. Join scientists, as they visit Barro Colorado Island in the centre of the Panama Canal, travelling deep into nature’s most stunning habitats and there you will meet the beautiful, dangerous and most intriguing of Mother Nature’s creatures. Follow the human drama and the wildlife action, as the dedicated and courageous team push themselves to the limit to gather data that could not only provide vital information about the future of our planet, but also save the rainforest and all that lives in it! Enjoy this incredible journey in this 3D adventure as you are taken into the heart, and made privy to the secrets, of the Rainforest! Random Principle is a 2011 documentary and short film directed by Romeo Grünfelder. Fathers & Sons, 10 True Stories is a 2011 documentary film directed by Gary Weimberg. Bernadette: Notes on a Political Journey is a 2011 documentary film directed by Lelia Doolan. Bartleby en coulisses is a documentary film shot in 2009 by the filmmaker Jérémie Carboni. Yitzhak Rabin: a Biography is a 2004 two-part documentary film that tells the life story of the former Israeli Prime Minister and Nobel Laureates, Yitzhak Rabin. The documentary offers interviews with Rabin's fellow politicians and family members. Their insights along with historic film footage offers a history of modern Israel through Rabin's biography. Part I of Rabin describes Rabin's childhood in Israel, his military service that began at sixteen, and the roots of his rivalry with Shimon Peres. Part II follow the politician from an upsetting lull in his career, to the height of his popularity, ending with his shocking assassination. Papa Blue is a 2003 documentary animation family film written and directed by Charlene Shih. Storm in Poland is a 1947 short documentary film directed by Jerzy Bossak and Waclaw Kazmierczak. Step on Silence is a 1982 documentary film written and directed by Jørgen Leth. Journey to the Land of the Traveller is a 1993 Iranian documentary film directed by Bahman Kiarostami. Sachsenhausen is a 1993 film directed by Walter Krieg and Dieter Vervuurt. My Life Inside is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Lucía Gajá. Dream Girls is a 1993 documentary film directed by Kim Longinotto and Jano Williams. Islamabad: Rock City is a 2001 documentary film produced by Michael Hirschorn and Shelly Tatro. The film follows the journey of the biggest South Asian rock music band Junoon and struggle they face to become one of the biggest band in the world. Conspiracy 58 is a Swedish mockumentary from 2002, produced by Sveriges Television, the Swedish public broadcaster. The plot of the film is that the 1958 FIFA World Cup in Sweden didn't really take place, but was faked and exists only as forged television and radio coverage in a conspiracy between American and Swedish television, the CIA and FIFA as part of the Cold War. In the film it is said that Sweden did not have the economic or technical resources to actually host such a large event. In the plot, the American motive for doing this was to test the effectiveness of televised propaganda. When the film originally aired, the audience was not told in advance that it was a mockumentary, giving the impression that Conspiracy 58 was a regular documentary film. Transpass is a 2012 short film directed by Wren Warner. NOVA follows the long and exacting centuries-old process of making a Japanese samurai sword, from smelting the ore to the finished katana. This Is Nollywood is a 2007 Nigerian documentary film by Franco Sacchi and Robert Caputo, detailing the Nigerian film industry, much along the same lines as the acclaimed 2007 documentary, Welcome to Nollywood, by Jamie Meltzer Through the story of director Bond Emeruwa, this documentary tells the story of a $250 million industry that has created thousands of jobs. As the documentary follows Emeruwa's production of Check Point, various members of the Nigerian filmmaking community discuss their industry, defend the types of films they make and the impact they have, and describe common difficulties they encounter, from hectic shooting schedules to losing electricity mid-shoot. Pour Un Maillot Jaune is a French 1965 documentary – described as a cinematic tribute – about the 1965 Tour de France. It was made by the French film director, Claude Lelouch. Lelouch is best known as the director of Un Homme et Une Femme in 1966. The Sweetest Sound is a 2001 documentary film directed by Alan Berliner. Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead is a 2010 American documentary film which follows the 60-day journey of Australian Joe Cross across the United States as he follows a juice fast to regain his health under the care of Dr. Joel Fuhrman, Nutrition Research Foundation's Director of Research. Cross and Robert Mac, co-creators of the film, both serve on the Nutrition Research Foundation's Advisory Board. Following his fast and the adoption of a plant-based diet, Cross lost 100 pounds and discontinued all medications. During his road-trip Cross meets Phil Staples, a morbidly obese truck driver from Sheldon, Iowa, in a truck stop in Arizona and inspires him to try juice fasting. Reviewers compared it to an infomercial. The film has been credited with doubling the sales of Breville juicers since the documentary launched on Netflix in the US in July 2011. Eating Alabama is a 2012 documentary film directed by Andrew Beck Grace. The People vs. Paul Crump is a 1962 documentary about the prisoner Paul Crump who was on death row for robbery and murder. The film was made for Chicago television and was highly praised and crucial to the career of its director William Friedkin, helping him get an agent and jobs making documentaries for David Wolper, and then an episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. The film won the Golden Gate Award Winner for Film as Communication at the 1962 San Francisco International Film Festival. Friedkin says when he made the film he was convinced Crump was innocent but now feels he was guilty. A digitally restored version of the film was released by Facets in May 2014. Koran By Heart is a 2011 documentary film directed by Greg Barker. "The world’s preeminent Koran-recitation competition takes place each year in Cairo, drawing Muslim children from as far as Tajikistan and the Maldives to perform in front of a panel of prominent judges. Following these talented youngsters from their intense preparation regimes through the rigorous rounds of the tournament, Koran By Heart is both an inspirational competition film and an engaging survey of the unique experiences of Muslim children throughout the world. In Arabic, Dhivehi, English, Tajik, Wolof with English subtitles." Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. The Belgrade Phantom is a Serbian Historical, Drama, Thriller, Documentary film directed by Jovan B. Todorović. It was released in 2009. This film combines archival television footage, and current interviews with witnesses and participants of the events from 1979, as well as acting scenes. Rumstick Road is a 2013 documentary and music film directed by Ken Kobland and Elizabeth LeCompte. Les murs d'une révolution is a 1976 documentary, short film directed by Jean-Paul Dekiss. Frida Still Life is a 1983 Mexican drama film directed by Paul Leduc. The film was selected as the Mexican entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 58th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. Shot Countershot is a 1990 film directed by Thomas Tielsch and Nils Bolbrinker. If Himmler Played Guitar is a 2012 documentary film directed by Andy Taylor Smith. Abortion: Desperate Choices is a documentary special, filmed in and around the Women's Health Services Clinic, that tells the stories of several women who make the painful decision to terminate their pregnancies. Entangled is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Lidia Duda. This Film is Not Yet Rated is a 2006 American documentary film about the Motion Picture Association of America's rating system and its effect on American culture, directed by Kirby Dick and produced by Eddie Schmidt. The film premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival and was released limited on September 1, 2006. The Independent Film Channel, the film's producer, aired the film later that year. It was rated TV-MA in the United States. The MPAA ironically gave the original cut of the film an NC-17 rating for "some graphic sexual content" - scenes that illustrated the content a film could include to garner an NC-17 rating. Dick appealed, and descriptions of the ratings deliberations and appeal were included in the documentary. True to its title, the new version of the film is not rated. The film discusses disparities the filmmaker sees in ratings and feedback: between Hollywood and independent films, between homosexual and heterosexual sexual situations, between male and female sexual depictions, and between violence and sexual content. Memories of a Future is a 2007 documentary film directed by Margaret Dickinson and Pepe Petos. Everything or Nothing focuses on the thrilling and inspiring narrative behind the durability, popularity and survival of the longest running film franchise in cinema history since Mr. Bond hit the big screen in 1962. Khodorkovsky is a 2011 documentary biographical film written and directed by Cyril Tuschi. BIEBERMANIA! tells the story of the meteoric rise of singing sensation Justin Bieber. From his first YouTube video, where he was discovered by manager Scooter Braun, to his meeting with Usher. Stars Justin Bieber, Lloyd Banks, Snoop Dogg. Sexy Money is a 2014 documentary biographical film written and directed by Karin Junger. Oni ni kike: Miyadaiku Nishioka Tsunekazu no yuigon is a documentary film directed by Yuji Yamazaki. Soldier Child is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Neil Abramson. Mariem Hassan, la voz del Sáhara is a 2007 documentary film directed by Manuel Domínguez. Great Old Amusement Parks is a 1999 PBS television documentary by Rick Sebak of WQED Pittsburgh. The Other Half of Tomorrow is a 2012 documentary film directed by Samina Quraeshi and Sadia Shepard. New Jersey: The Movie is a 2009 American documentary film written and directed by Steve Chernoski. The film examines the cultural divide that exists in the state of New Jersey between North and South. It was released on DVD in February 2010. The film was produced by Alena Kruchkova and edited by Andrei Litvinov. Starring Katharine Hepburn is a 1981 documentary directed by David Heeley Twittamentary is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Siok Siok Tan. The Monkey Sanctuary is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Chris Jones. Death Metal Angola is a 2012 music war documentary film written and directed by Jeremy Xido. The Story of Mr. Love is a 2013 documentary/drama film written and directed by Dagmar Smrzová. In this 1991 video Cecilia is still in her 20's and sharing with us a life that brought her to vocal maturity under the guidance of her dedicated mother, a singer with the Rome opera in her youth. For so many qualities to converge in one person, in such unique circumstances, under such judicious guidance, in the country of the birth of opera is four times more rare than Haley's Comet. The video begins with a recording session in Venice's historic La Fenice, with a Rossini aria from Semiramide. Cecilia then walks and drives us through her favorite countryside and seaside haunts claiming that she is "una zingara nobile" a noble gypsy, claiming the world as her home. (Although her parents are divorced she does, in fact, have a connection with her operatic father, a brother--now deceased--sister, and a very stable family system in Rome.) The DVD also contains an example of a singing lesson with her mother, a brief interview with her mother in which Mrs. Bartoli declares that her her hope for her daughter is to "continue that which I had to interrupt and to bring to full potential this great gift." At the end we have a recital with pianist Gyorgy Fischer at London's Savoy Hotel with Cecilia singing Italian art songs, Rossini, and Vivaldi. Her exquisite vocal line, profound and impeccable range of expression, physical stature, vivacious connection with her public, and elegant presence show a gift to the world that is at the threshold of an unimaginable career. In the 18 years since the release of this video Cecilia Bartoli has proven herself to be the greatest singer to come along in 250 years. Her extensive vocal range and unparalleled vocal flexibility have compelled her to seek out works of vocal prowess that have not been executed since the time of the Italian castrati--castrated Italian males whose breath capacity and vocal agility inspired Vivaldi (in particular) to write some of his most spectacularly graceful, sensitive, and ornate vocal calisthenics. A Portrait of Giselle is a 1982 documentary film, produced by Joseph Wishy and directed by Muriel Balash. It features Patricia McBride and Anton Dolin along with famous ballerinas who danced the role of Giselle in the past. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Mama Awethu! is a 1994 documentary film directed by Bethany Yarrow. Fall Run is a 2013 short adventure documentary film directed by Todd Moen. Jockey is a 2004 documentary directed by Kate Davis. "This honest, insightful, and straightforward documentary about the International Mr. Leather contest held in Chicago each Memorial Day Weekend provides an intimate glimpse into the leather subculture. Who hasn’t heard of and wasn’t curious about the legendary International Mr. Leather, (IML) Contest that has become a celebrated event among the nation’s (and the world’s) leather community? Following the annual event over the past few years, this documentary provides rare interviews with its former contestants, winners, supporters and spectators .. The title of the film is more tongue-in-cheek than serious, as one of the main messages of the documentary is that the participants of the IML contest as well as the increasingly diverse leather folk in general are as normal as anyone else. They’re plumbers and insurance brokers, and their commonality lies in their fascination with and commitment to the leather community, the subculture, the lifestyle, and not just the fetish." Quoting Thom Cardwel from the 2011 Philadelphia QFEST site. Einstein's Brain is a 1994 documentary by Kevin Hull following Japanese professor Kenji Sugimoto in his search for Albert Einstein's brain. It is produced by BBC Films. Exit Point is a 2012 documentary short film written and directed by Jagoda Szelc. In 2010 Telford police allowed cameras to start filming what was to become one of the biggest child sex abuse cases in the UK. The investigation, Operation Chalice, eventually encompassed over 100 victims, and around 200 suspected perpetrators. The Hunt for Britain's Sex Gangs follows - with unprecedented access - a live police investigation, showing just how difficult it is to secure justice for victims of sexual abuse, especially when some girls were just 11 when they were first abused. Gaining the trust of victims - who as a result of the grooming process, don't see themselves as victims - is key to the success of the case, but it takes months for the police to win their trust and keep them on board as they prepare for the harrowing process of going to court. Through a Lens Darkly: Black Photographers and the Emergence of a People is a 2014 documentary film directed by Thomas Allen Harris. It is based on the book Reflections in Black: A History of Black Photographers 1840 to the Present by Deborah Willis, who also produced the film. The film had its premiere at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. The film later screened at 64th Berlin International Film Festival in February 2014. The film also screened at 2014 Santa Barbara International Film Festival on 5 February 2014. It won the Justice Award at the festival. The film had a theatrical release on August 27, 2014 in United States. Dorothy Dandridge: Singing at Her Best is a 2003 film directed by Obba Babatundé. Flying Words Town is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Martina Diosi. Barefoot in the Kitchen is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Diego Galán. Deutschlandbilder is a 1983 documentary written by Hartmut Bitomsky and directed by Hartmut Bitomsky and Heiner Mühlenbrock. Lost Book Found is a 1996 short documentary film directed by Jem Cohen. Alec Mapa: Baby Daddy is a 2014 documentary comedy biographical film directed by Andrea James. "With fierce seduction, fat femmes of color discuss their desires, sexuality and empowerment in With Conviction, featuring author/activist Jewelle Gomez, among others" - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Freak Out is a 2014 documentary film written by Carl Javér, Fredrik Lange and David Wingate and directed by Carl Javér. What does it take to make a living in the death business? Explore the rituals, personalities, and products that animate this thriving industry in in this amusing and emotional tour of the National Funeral Director Association’s annual convention. Shanghai Banzai is a 2010 short and documentary film directed by Jurate Samulionyte. Mysterious Mamberamo is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Pavol Barabas. Arches and Canyonlands is a 2005 documentary film, written and directed by David Ellis, Dan Gallagher and Jares Gallagher. Sang-e-Meel Se Mulaqat is a documentary on life of Ustad Bismillah Khan by Goutam Ghose. Divine Madness is a 1980 concert film directed by Michael Ritchie, and featuring Bette Midler during her 1979 concert at Pasadena's Civic Auditorium. The 94-minute film features Midler's stand-up comedy routines as well as 16 songs, including "Big Noise From Winnetka," "Paradise," "Shiver Me Timbers," "Fire Down Below," "Stay With Me," "My Mother’s Eyes," "Chapel of Love/Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," "Do You Want to Dance," "You Can’t Always Get What You Want/I Shall Be Released", "The E-Street Shuffle/Summer /"Leader of the Pack" and "The Rose". Richie filmed four of Midler's concerts on the tour and cut them together to look like one. Divine Madness was released in 1980 to relative critical success. Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert awarded the film three and a half stars, saying that the film's only weakness was that there was not "enough close-up shots of the audience". The tracks "Shiver Me Timbers" and "Rainbow Sleeve" were edited out of the Home Video Version. Divine Madness has been re-released on DVD but as yet only in the US. Ao Fundo is a 2012 short documentary film written by Luis Coelho and directed by Luis Coelho, Marco Min and Telmo Domingues. Chasing Water is a 2011 short drama adventure documentary film directed by Peter McBride and Robin Hardy. The Beatles: Celebration is a 1999 documentary film written by Geoffrey Giuliano, directed by Mark Devito and Geoffrey Giuliano. Doc.8 is a 2007 film written and directed by Christian Schneider. We Feed the World is a 2005 documentary in which Austrian filmmaker Erwin Wagenhofer traces the origins of the food we eat and views modern industrial production of food and factory farming in a critical light. His journey takes him to France, Spain, Romania, Switzerland, Brazil and back to Austria. The film features interviews with several people, including one with sociologist and politician Jean Ziegler. The film was the most successful Austrian documentary ever. In German-speaking countries it was seen by about 600,000 cinemagoers. Misa's Fugue is a 2012 documentary film written by Sean D. Gaston, Jennifer L. Goss and Zachary Steven Houp and directed by Sean D. Gaston. American Arab is a 2013 documentary film by Iraqi-American filmmaker Usama Alshaibi. The film follows the personal story of Alshaibi's life in post-9/11 America and concentrates on sensitive issues pertaining to race and identity. The perceptions and misconceptions of the Arab American community are closely analyzed and deconstructed over the course of the film to reveal a more complex culture of individuals rather than a singularly stigmatized group of people. Alshaibi himself was the victim of a hate crime in 2011 so the film therein tackles the subject of racism and oppression towards Arab Americans in today's society. American Arab is a production of Kartemquin Films, and is part of their Diversity Fellowship program. We Dreamed America is a 2008 documentary film, directed by Alex Walker, that delves deep into the dark recesses of the British music scene. Examining the relationship and ongoing exchange between British and American roots music, the film looks at the British fascination with the most American of genres, Country Music. The film tells the stories of six British 'Americana' bands, while giving an insight into how country music fits into the British music industry. The Leader, His Driver and the Driver's Wife is a 1991 British feature-length documentary film set during the final days of the apartheid regime in South Africa, particularly centring on Eugène Terre'Blanche, founder and leader of the far-right, white supremacist political organisation AWB. The film was directed by Nick Broomfield and released in 1991. It received an average of 2.3 million viewers during its screening on Channel 4. A year later it was the subject of legal action brought by the journalist, Jani Allan, in what has been described as "the libel case of the summer". In 2006, Broomfield released a follow-up, His Big White Self. September Wheat is a documentary film directed and written by Peter Krieg. Enzo Avitabile Music Life is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jonathan Demme. From the Pole to the Equator is a 1987 documentary film directed by Yervant Gianikian and Angela Ricci Lucchi. Acid Test is a 2009 documentary film directed by Tristan Bayer and Daniel Hinerfeld. One Day in September is a 1999 documentary film directed by Kevin Macdonald examining the 5 September 1972 murder of 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Germany. Michael Douglas provides the sparse narration throughout the film. The film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2000. Tourfilm is a documentary-style concert film by American rock band R.E.M. The film chronicles the band's 1989 Green tour of North America. Produced by frontman Michael Stipe and director Jim McKay, the black-and-white film features aspects of avant-garde and experimental filmmaking, including handheld camera shots and stock footage. Unlike most films of its genre, Tourfilm is noticeably devoid of standard rock movie staples such as backstage footage and interviews with band members. The film was released on LaserDisc and VHS in 1990 and DVD in August 2000. Caballé Beyond the Music is a 2003 documentary film written by Antonio A. Farré and Alberto Sabaté and directed by Antonio A. Farré. Lobotomy is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Yury Khashchavatski. Targeting Iran is a 2013 documentary film "designed to help Western audiences understand the complexities of historic and contemporary U.S./Iranian relations in an effort to derail potential military action." Based on the 2007 book of the same name by David Barsamian, the film "seeks to elucidate the myths and popular misconceptions surrounding Iran's nuclear aspirations." Dead Body Welcome is a 2013 documentary film written by Desiree Duwel and directed by Kees Brienen. As a young couple who were high school sweethearts, Danny and Leslie went to the same church and attended youth group together. After dating, marriage and building a new home together, they were ready to start a family. With several failed attempts to get pregnant, the couple encounter complications, and a very slim chance of conceiving a child. Through several strange events Danny and Leslie both learn what it means to become parents, raise a family and find true redemption. Kumbha Mela is a 1989 short documentary produced and directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. Veinte años no es nada is a 2004 film written by Joaquim Jordà and Laia Manresa and directed by Joaquim Jordà. Cooking At Iron Dog is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Alana Anselment. War Reporter is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mohamed Amine Boukhris. No Limits is a 2013 documentary film directed by Alison Ellwood. Pink Ribbons, Inc. is a 2011 National Film Board of Canada documentary about the pink ribbon campaign, directed by Léa Pool and produced by Ravida Din. The film is based on the 2006 book Pink Ribbons, Inc: Breast Cancer and the Politics of Philanthropy by Samantha King, associate professor of kinesiology and health studies at Queen's University. The film documents how some companies use pink ribbon-related marketing to increase sales while contributing only a small fraction of proceeds to the cause, or use "pinkwashing" to improve their public image while manufacturing products that may be carcinogenic. For the millions that are raised for breast cancer research by the campaign, the film argues that not enough money goes to prevention or exploring possible environmental factors. Pink Ribbons, Inc. features interviews with critics of the pink ribbon campaign, researchers and cancer patients as well as cancer fundraisers such as Nancy Brinker, head of Susan G. Komen for the Cure. Divine Providence is a 1988 short drama film written by José Ramón Mikelajáuregui, Alberto Moravia and Maria Rodriguez, and directed by Maria Rodriguez. Focus Forward: The Invisible Bicycle Helmet is a film directed by Fredrik Gertten. Standardized is a documentary film directed by Daniel Hornberger and Jim del Conte. We Are Aliens is 2012 documentary short film directed by Max Crow. Making the River is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Sarah Del Seronde. Attack on Democracy: An Intervention is a 2012 documentary directed by Romuald Karmakar and Niels Negendank. The UK Gold is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mark Donne. Adele began singing at the age of 4. Four months after she graduated music school, a friend posted a few of her songs on a popular social network. The songs caught the attention of a music executive who was blown away by her voice. In this revealing documentary we examine her trials and triumphs. Thomas Keating: A Rising Tide of Silence is a 2013 documentary film directed by Peter C. Jones. The Green Mountain Upset is a historical fiction sports documentary film directed by Nick Hanson and Mark Mooney Jr.. Rohmer In Paris is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Richard Misek. Roads of Kiarostami is a 2005 Iranian documentary film directed by Abbas Kiarostami. Looking to his own art for inspiration, Abbas Kiarostami reflects on the power of landscape, which combines views of the Iranian auteur's austere black-and-white photographs with poetic observations, engaging music and a politically provocative finale. Radioactive City is a 2012 short horror documentary film directed by Richard Sandler. "A president and a citizen—bound together by a profound love of country and an unquenchable desire to see the truth revealed—fight to uncover the mystery behind a murder and France's hidden role in the horrific 1994 Rwandan genocide. This powerful investigative documentary from the director of The War Tapes (best doc, TFF ’06) is driven by the inspiring and uplifting stories of Rwandan president Paul Kagame and genocide survivor Jean-Pierre Sagahutu. In English, French, Kinyarwandan with English subtitles." Quoting the description from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. A Link TV exclusive documentary that presents highlights of an extraordinary day-long ethics conference, featuring the Dalai Lama in conversation with some of the nation's leading activists. A co-production of Tibet House U.S. in New York and Link TV, the program brings together for the first time ever one of the world's most important spiritual leaders with renowned journalists, economists, environmentalists, and politicians to discuss the ethical dilemmas of the new millennium.With allegations of government subterfuge, corporate malfeasance scandals and a devastating global warming crisis dominating the headlines, this unprecedented television program gives millions of Americans a rare glimpse into the enlightening ethical teachings, peaceful nature, and often surprising humor of the Dalai Lama.The program shows highlights from four panels: Ethics and the Environment (with David Crow, Randall Hayes, Paul Hawken), Ethics and the Media (with Amy Goodman, Katrina vanden Heuvel, Susan Sarandon); Ethics and Economics (with Ben Cohen, Amy Domini, Russell Simmons); and Ethics and the Politics of Peace (with Dr. Helen Caldicott, Dennis Kucinich, and Rev. Al Sharpton). The discussions are intercut with interviews from the panelists, who provide personal insights into their impressions of the dialogue and what ethics means to them.The program was filmed in September, 2003 at New York's Town Hall. Flight Over Lithuania or 510 Seconds of Silence is a 2000 short documentary film directed by Arunas Matelis and Audrius Stonys. The Face of a Genius is a 1966 documentary film about Eugene O’Neill, produced by Alfred R. Kelman for WBZ-TV Boston. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, the first time that a film originally produced for television was recognized by the Academy as a nominee for Best Documentary Feature. In Bad Taste is the second documentary film from Steve Yeager, who had first made Divine Trash in 1998. The documentary follows the cinematic ideas of American filmmaker John Waters, and includes interviews with Waters and his ensemble cast, known as the Dreamlanders. La Jeunesse At-elle Une Histoire? is a 2012 documentary TV movie written by Cédric Klapisch and Jacques Royer and directed by Jacques Royer. Confiseries et jouets is a 2012 documentary film. Benjamin Smoke is a 2000 documentary film directed by Jem Cohen and Peter Sillen. Look At Me Again is a 2012 documentary film written by Claudia Priscilla and directed by Kiko Goifman and Claudia Priscilla. The Quilted Conscience is a documentary film directed by John Sorensen. The Happiest People In the World is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Shaheen Dill-Riaz. An abused young man. A hair-trigger temper. A trail of dead bodies. What makes a cold-blooded killer tick? Renowned forensic psychologist Dr. Park Dietz gets up close personal and even confrontational with psyche of one of the most dangerous men alive. Bringing together the earlier THE ICEMAN TAPES: CONVERSATIONS WITH A KILLER and THE ICEMAN: SECRETS OF A MAFIA HITMAN with the newly released Dietz interview this new special edition THE ICEMAN INTERVIEWS is the ultimate compendium of the mind of a murderer. Includes Richard “The Iceman” Kuklinski’s riveting on-camera confession exclusively for HBO of the murder of police officerPeter Calabro. Making news in February 2003 Kuklinski accepted a plea bargain for a concurrent 30-year term to his 60-year prison sentence and implicated Sammy “The Bull” Gravano in the crime. The Laying On Of Hands is a 2011 short independent documentary film directed by Nick Twemlow. Cydeways: The Best of the Pharcyde is a 2002 music documentary video directed by Spike Jonze, Kevin Kerslake, The Pharcyde and Sanji Senaka. Kinoglaz is a 1924 documentary film written and directed by Dziga Vertov. Valentin de las Sierras is a 1971 short musical film directed by Bruce Baillie. Avenge But One Of My Two Eyes is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Avi Mograbi. A documentary on the treatment of Palestianians by members of the Israeli army. Avi Mograbi draws an analogy between the Jewish myths of Samson and the Zealots who committed mass suicide in Masada and the terrible experience of today’s Palestinians. He contrasts images with groups of Jewish tourists receiving enthusiastic explanations of Samson’s feats with the humiliating treatment of Palestinians at the Israeli checkpoints. Fragments * Jerusalem is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Ron Havilio. Mama, L'Chaim! is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Elkan Spiller. The Secret Trial 5 is a 2014 documentary film directed by Amar Wala. Waiting for Godik is a 2007 documentary written and directed by Ari Davidovich, chronicalling the rise and fall of the Israeli theater producer and impresario Giora Godik. Phnom Penh Lullaby is a 2011 documentary film written by Pawel Kloc and Przemyslaw Niczyporuk and directed by Pawel Kloc. Who Is Pauline Park? is a 2013 documentary, short film and biographical film directed by Jamerry Kim. Keep A Modest Head is a 2012 short biography film written and directed by Deco Dawson. Beyond Right & Wrong: Stories of Justice and Forgiveness is a 2012 American documentary film about restorative justice and forgiveness. It is directed by Roger Spottiswoode and Lekha Singh and produced by Lekha Singh and Rebecca Chaiklin. The film depicts victims and perpetrators of the Rwandan Genocide, the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, and The Troubles in Northern Ireland. The film tells the stories of Bassam and Salwa Aramin, Emmanuel Bamporiki, Jo Berry, Robi Damelin, Rami Elhanan and Nurit Peled-Elhanan, Patrick Magee, Richard Moore, Beatrice Mukangarambe, and Jean-Baptiste Ntakirutimana. Commentators include Lord John Alderdice, Denis Bradley, Marina Cantacuzino, Bishop John Rucyahana, and Dr. James Smith. Georgi and the Butterflies is a Bulgarian documentary film from 2004. It was directed by Andrey Paounov. The film won the "Silver Wolf" award at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam. UFOs: It Has Begun is a 1976 documentary film directed by Ray Rivas. I Am Divine is a 2013 American documentary film produced and directed by Jeffrey Schwarz of the Los Angeles-based production company Automat Pictures. The documentary focuses on the American actor, singer and drag performer Divine, born Harris Glenn Milstead, a lifelong friend and collaborator of filmmaker John Waters. The film features extensive contemporary interviews with Waters, as well as Divine's mother Frances Milstead, and surviving members of the Dreamlanders. The Dutch Masters: Van Dyck is a 2000 documentary film. Woodrow Wilson and the Birth of the American Century is a 2002 documentary, narrated by Linda Hunt, that was aired in the United States as a two-part limited television series starting on January 6, 2002. The documentary won an IDA Award for its directors Carl Byker and Mitch Wilson in the category of "Limited Series". Conversation is a 2007 film directed by James Pryce and Lenka Clayton. Las Marthas is a 2014 historical documentary film directed by Cristina Ibarra. D Tour: A Tenacious Documentary is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jeremy Konner. It was premiered at the 2008 Santa Barbara film festival on January 31, 2008. The film focuses on the tour Tenacious D made in support of the film and soundtrack of Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny and the consequences of their film's poor showing at the box office. The film has been released on DVD and Blu-ray in The Complete Masterworks Part 2, which also contains a full live show. Mass Dolphin Stranding is a 2012 Telly Award winning film. Back from the Brink: Inside the Chilean Mine Disaster is a documentary program. The Slanted Screen is a 2006 documentary film written, produced, and directed by Jeff Adachi about the stereotypical depictions and absence of Asian males in American cinema and other media from the silent era to the present day. Lights, Action, Africa! is a 1982 documentary film directed by Joan Root and Alan Root. Love Hate Love is a 2011 documentary film written by Dana Nachman and directed by Don Hardy Jr. and Dana Nachman. The War You Don't See is a 2010 British documentary film written, produced and directed by John Pilger with Alan Lowery, which challenges the media for the role they played in the Iraq, Afghanistan, and Israel/Palestine conflicts. The film, which went on nationwide general release on December 13, 2010, had its premiere at the Barbican and was aired through Britain's ITV1 on December 14, 2010 and later through Australia's SBS One on April 10, 2011. Finding Truelove is a 2012 a comedy adventure documentary film directed by Samuel Kuhn. Null Defizit is a 2001 short documentary film written and directed by Ruth Mader. Flag Wars is a 2003 American documentary film about the conflict between two communities during the gentrification of a Columbus, Ohio neighborhood. Filmed in a cinéma vérité style, the film is an account of the tension between the two historically oppressed communities of African-Americans and gays in Columbus' Olde Towne East neighborhood. The film was nominated for an Emmy Award and won three awards, including a Peabody Award. Semester På Atlanten is a 1954 film directed by Håkan Cronsioe. Kino-Diaries Cine-Portraits is a 2011 documentary film directed by Edgar Pêra. The Battle for Barking is a 2010 British documentary film, chronologically filming the campaign for the election of MP to the Barking constituency. "What would Jesus do with a lesbian daughter? Paige Williams really needs to know. Happily married to Amelia with a baby on the way, Paige is troubled by her strained relationship with her devout Southern Baptist parents. They run the only ex-gay ministry in Mississippi. With an open mind and a daughter’s respect, Paige documents her pilgrimage to the crossroads of faith and love. Paige meets male and female ex-gay ministers who once identified as gay. Called by their faith to leave ‘the lifestyle’ and support others to do so, they believe that loving Jesus and loving someone of the same sex are mutually exclusive. How they choose a ‘purity of heart’ over a ‘life of sin’ differs. And then there are her parents, the only ex-gay ministers Paige meets who aren’t converted LGBT people themselves. In heartbreaking exchanges with Judy and Jerry, Paige investigates how much her coming out at seventeen played a part in their vocation. Does her mother truly love the sinner but hate the sin? Is this all about Judy’s guilt about ‘failing’ as a mother? Or is there something more? Nothing’s simple in love and faith, and this documentary is big and bold enough to hold the complexity." Quoting Carol Harada & Angelique Smith from the 2010 Frameline 34 SF LGBT Film Festival site. Rockabilly 514 is a 2008 Canadian feature documentary directed by Patricia Chica and Mike Wafer. The film documents the lives of a group of people belonging to the rockabilly sub-culture in Montreal, Quebec. Some of the original 1950s rockabilly stars also appear in the documentary: Wanda Jackson; The Comets and Joe Clay. The film has been presented at numerous film and music festivals including Pop Montreal, Viva Las Vegas, Gimme Shelter Music and Film Festival and Don't Knock The Rock Film and Music Festival. On October 18, 2009 the film won two awards at the Director's Chair Film Festival in New York; the Best Documentary Award and the Best Original Soundtrack award. It was also a finalist in the Best Sound and Best Editing categories. The film was commercially released at Cinéma du Parc in Montreal, Quebec on October 6, 2008. Cast members of the film include Bloodshot Bill, The Cockroaches, Nathalie Lavergne, Mademoiselle Oui Oui Encore, Mister Blue Eyes, Guillaume Ozoux and Sonya Topolnisky. It was narrated by ethnomusicologist Craig Morrison. Out of Print is a 2013 documentary family history film directed by Vivienne Roumani. Arab Israeli Dialogue is the tenth and final film directed by American independent filmmaker Lionel Rogosin. It is a filmed debate between the Palestinian poet Rashed Hussein and Amos Kenan, shot in the basement of Rogosin's Bleecker Street Cinema by Louis Brigante. Though Rogosin would live until 2000, he did not complete another film in his lifetime, causing him immense personal and artistic frustration. Herr Wichmann aus der dritten Reihe is a documentary film directed by Andreas Dresen. The film was released in 2012 and follows the CDU politician Henryk Wichmann as a member of the Landtag of Brandenburg. Kurosawa's Way is a 2011 French documentary directed and written by Catherine Cadou. The film features 11 major filmmakers from Asia, America and Europe as they discuss how the films of Japanese director Akira Kurosawa influenced them. A Nightmare in Las Cruces is a 2011 documentary film written by Charlie Minn and Sara Vander Horn and directed by Charlie Minn. O Presidente Roosevelt no Rio is a 1936 short documentary film directed by Alberto Botelho. The Light Bulb Conspiracy is a 2010 documentary film written by Cosima Dannoritzer. The film was directed by Cosima Dannoritzer and Joan Ubeda. The Blinding Sunlight is a 2013 documentary drama indie film written and directed by Yu Liu. Madonna: Sticky & Sweet Tour is a 2010 documentary music film directed by Nathan Rissman and Nick Wickham. La Minaccia is a 2008 documentary film directed by Silvia Luzi and Luca Bellino. The Painter is a 1982 Swedish documentary film directed by Göran du Rées and Christina Olofson. It was entered into the 13th Moscow International Film Festival. Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest, is a 2011 documentary about the music group A Tribe Called Quest, directed by Michael Rapaport. The Condition of the Working Class is a 2012 historical documentary film directed by Deirdre O'Neill and Mike Waye. Virtual JFK: Vietnam if Kennedy Had Lived is a 2008 documentary film by Koji Masutani. It applies what Niall Ferguson of Harvard University has called 'virtual history' to consider what President John F. Kennedy might have done in Vietnam if he had not been assassinated in 1963. The film was unveiled at the 2008 HotDocs Canadian International Documentary Film Festival, and its theatrical premiere took place at New York City's Film Forum six weeks before the 2008 U.S. presidential election. Franco, ese hombre, translated into English as Franco, that man, is a 1964 documentary film by Spanish director José Luis Sáenz de Heredia. It follows the military and political career of the Spanish Head of State Francisco Franco until the 25th anniversary of the end of the Civil War. It uses diverse footage and interviews Franco's doctor in Morocco, Manuel Aznar Zubigaray, and Franco himself. It is a commemorative fascist documentary of the 25th anniversary of Franco's victory in the Spanish Civil War. Hard To Windward is a 1958 documentary film directed by Max Graham. Comandante is a political documentary film by American director Oliver Stone. In the film, Stone interviews Cuban leader Fidel Castro on a diverse range of topics. Stone and his film crew visited Castro in Cuba for three days in 2002, and the film was released in 2003, having its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival early that year. Cooper and Hemingway: The True Gen is a 2013 documentary film about the 20-year friendship between writer Ernest Hemingway and film actor Gary Cooper. Written and directed by John Mulholland, it is narrated by actor Sam Waterston with actor Len Cariou as the voice of writer Ernest Hemingway. Rokkasho Rhapsody is a Japanese documentary directed by Hitomi Kamanaka and released in 2006. It is the second in Kamanaka's trilogy of films on the problems of nuclear power and radiation, preceded by Hibakusha at the End of the World and followed by Ashes to Honey. Donna Roman Hernandez exposes her family’s 40-year secret of domestic violence that had life-altering consequences for her entire family. Donna felt bound to keep this abuse a secret as she survived more than two attempts by her father to end her life. This edgy, empowering documentary is about a “woman in blue” who suffered in silence and lived under the shadows of violence from an abusive father who physically and emotionally terrorized her, her mother, and her siblings. She broke her silence about the domestic violence in her family after the death of her mother. Donna directed and produced herself in this documentary as she exposes the lifetime of domestic violence she witnessed her mother endure during her 48-year marriage and chronicles the abuse she and her siblings suffered at the hands of their father, a WWII veteran. Donna hopes to bring public awareness to the cycle of domestic violence and to empower other survivors of abuse to leave their batterers. The Walls of Dakar is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Abdoul Aziz Cissé and Wagane Guéye. Cafeteria Man is a 2011 documentary biographical film written by Sheila Kinkade and directed by Richard Chisolm. Viva Cuba Libre: Rap Is War is a 2013 music and documentary film directed by Jesse Acevedo. W.E.B. Du Bois: A Biography in Four Voices is a 1996 documentary biographical film written by Toni Cade Bambara, Amiri Baraka, Wesley Brown and Thulani Davis and directed by Louis J. Massiah. The Hunting Fever is a 2008 documentary short film written and directed by Alessandro Comodin. The Social Seminar is a series of educational films for adults produced by the Extension Media Center of the University of California at Los Angeles in the early 1970s. The series was executive produced by Gary Schlosser, an Oscar-nominated producer of short-subject documentaries. The films were distributed nationally, for example to state educational film offices. The series was produced for the National Institute of Mental Health as a "multi-media training series." Five episodes of The Social Seminar are known to have been produced: "Bunny," "Guy," "Teddy," "Tom," and "Changing." Each depicted, in a cinema-verite style without voiceover or introduction, aspects of the lives of a selected person or family as they dealt with personal, interpersonal and societal change. The episode "Changing," for example, showed how one man's reevaluation of his life and social standing led to his becoming a "hippie" in the eyes of his family and coworkers; though his home life was enhanced, he found himself increasingly socially isolated. The films are now part of the Prelinger Archive and are available freely online. Das Reichsorchester - Die Berliner Philharmoniker und der Nationalsozialismus is a documentary film directed by Enrique Sánchez Lansch. The Scottish Covenanters is a 1909 film directed by Joseph Perry. Beige is a 2012 documentary short film written and directed by Sylvie Hohlbaum. Unwanted Soldiers is a 1999 made-for-TV documentary written, directed and narrated by Jari Osborne for the National Film Board of Canada. It won the Canada Award at the 2000 Gemini Awards. The film tells the story of Osborne's father and other Chinese-Canadian veterans who fought in World War II, documenting a history of discrimination against them and the Chinese-Canadian community in British Columbia. Osborne's father and his compatriots recall their training for clandestine missions behind enemy lines in Southeast Asia, as they fought for a country that had discriminated again them. Into the Deep: America, Whaling & the World is a two hour documentary by Ric Burns about the history of the whaling industry in the United States. A film chronicling the American whaling industry from its origins in New England in the 17th century, through the golden age of deep-sea whaling, up to its decline following the Civil War. Narrated by Willem Dafoe, this film binds the story of American capitalism on the rise with a case study in maritime culture. The fate of the whaleship Essex—which set sail from Nantucket in the summer of 1819—is interwoven with the story of a young Herman Melville, whose own imaginative voyage into the deep would give rise to one of the greatest works of American literature, Moby Dick. Other voices heard in the film include Robert Sean Leonard as Herman Melville, Josh Hamilton as Owen Chase & Peleg Folger and Vincent Kartheiser as Thomas Nickerson. The Man Who Could Be King is a 2004 documentary film written by Mark Johnston, Edith Champagne, Don Murray, Nancy Ing-Duclos and directed by Edith Champagne, Nancy Ing-Duclos. Video Fragment 83 -Notorische Reflexe is a 1983 film directed by Hoffmeister and Doehring. Permis De Conduire is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Mahbooba Ibrahimi. Congo: The Grand Inga Project is a documentary action adventure sports film directed by Steve Fisher. Twice as Wise is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Piet Eekman. To Give to Receive to Return is a 2011 short family documentary film written and directed by Gabriela Yepes. Children of Fate: Life and Death in a Sicilian Family is a 1993 documentary film about life in the slums of Palermo, Sicily, directed by Andrew Young and Susan Todd. The film is a sequel to Cortile Cascino, a 1961 documentary shot by Andrew Young's father, Robert M. Young, which depicted the eponymous Palermo slum and told the story of Angela Capra and her family. Children of Fate picks up the story 30 years on, showing Capra now separated from her husband, and the fates of her children. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. In Search of the Future is a 2008 documentary film directed by Andrew Cameron Bailey. Cine Y Revolución, El Camino De Santiago: Periodismo is a 2013 documentary film written by Fernando Krichmar and Omar Neri and directed by Alejandra Guzzo and Fernando Krichmar. Gazzara is a 2012 film set in New York, based on the life and career of actor Ben Gazzara who writer/director Joseph Rezwin met in 1977 on the set of John Cassavetes’ Opening Night. Their conversations about acting and art, fears and desires, life and death all culminate in the final Central Park sequence where Ben persuades Joe it is time to cut the cord, end the obsession with him and Cassavetes and pursue his passion of art and filmmaking in his own individual way as Ben did throughout his entire life. Fluchkes (Yiddish for flabby arms) follows the creation process of the dance performance "Gila". A group of colorful, energetic 72 to 82 year old women, bravely confront the hardships and demands of the art of dance. Beneath The Helmet - From High School to the Home Front is a documentary film directed by Wayne Kopping. Heidi Fleiss: Hollywood Madam is a feature-length documentary film by Nick Broomfield. It is an examination of the woman herself, Broomfield attempting to uncover if she truly is a 'horrible person', and what made her that way. The film ends up an account of the power struggle between Fleiss, another Madam named Alex, and Fleiss' former lover Ivan Nagy, himself allegedly involved in prostitution. Furthermore the destructive relationship between Fleiss and Nagy is discussed, a sort of mutual aggressiveness that both seem to find appealing. Einzelkämpfer is a 2013 documentary, biography, history and sport film directed by Sandra Kaudelka. When Brummies Met Sindhis is a documentary film made by Pakistani documentary filmmaker, Azfar Rizvi. The Brick is a 2013 documentary and short film directed by Htuu Lou Rae, Htoo Tay Zar, Zin No No Zaw, Yan Naing Ko and Min Thu Aung. Hijab - Mulheres de véu is a 2013 Brazilian documentary film directed by Paulo Halm. Chernobyl Heart is a 2003 documentary film by Maryann DeLeo. The film won the Best Documentary Short Subject award at the 2004 Academy Awards. In the film, DeLeo travels through Ukraine and Belarus with Adi Roche, the Irish founder of the Chernobyl Children's Project International, observing the effects of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster on the health of children in the area. Many children suffered from a previously unknown cardiac degradation condition known in the area as "Chernobyl heart", in addition to other severe radiation poisoning effects DeLeo explored the Chernobyl disaster again in 2008 with the film White Horse. Do You Believe In Love? is a 2013 family, romance, and documentary film written and directed by Dani Wasserman. Niagara: Miracles, Myths and Magic is a 1986 IMAX film directed and produced by filmmaker Kieth Merrill. The film, currently shown hourly at Niagara Falls State Park's Adventure Theater, shows the history of the Niagara Falls, dating back to the earliest legends. The film also shows the creation and history of the Maid of the Mist boats. Part of the film's focus is people that braved the Niagara Falls, such as tight-rope walkers, barrel riders, and those unfortunate enough to accidentally plunge over the Falls. Actors portraying Annie Edson Taylor, Roger Woodward and Blondin played by Philippe Petit appear in the film. Unwanted Cinema is a documentary film by Petrus van der Let and Armin Loacker that looks at the lives and careers of Jewish filmmakers in Budapest and Vienna during the 1930s after Hitler came to power. Unwanted Cinema features Henry Koster, Felix Jackson, Joe Pasternak, Otto Wallburg, Hans Jaray, Franziska Gaal, Rosy Rarsony, Hortense Raky, Oskar Pilzer, Zolan Vidor, Ernst Verebes. The documentary shares clips from their films and interviews with their family. The Legend of Shorty is a documentary film directed by Angus MacQueen. The Hole Story is a 2011 documentary film and web documentary directed by Richard Desjardins and Robert Monderie about mining in Canada and its impact on the environment and workers' health. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, the film had its world premiere in October 2011 at the Festival du cinéma international en Abitibi-Témiscamingue, before opening in Quebec theatres. El Laberinto De Lo Posible is a 2012 biographical documentary film written and directed by Wanadi Siso. The Wizard of the Strings is a 1985 American short documentary film about Roy Smeck, directed by Peter Friedman. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Dinosaurs vs. Mammals – Secrets of Mammalian Survival is a 2007 International Emmy Award nominated documentary. Portuguese Rhapsody is a 1959 Portuguese documentary film directed by João Mendes. It was entered into the 1959 Cannes Film Festival. I Shall Not Be Removed: The Life of Marlon Riggs is a 1996 biographical documentary film written by Barbara T. Christian and directed by Karen Everett. Sobhraj, or How to Be Friends with a Serial Killer is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Jan Wellmann. Two Million Minutes: In India is a 2008 documentary film. In the Womb is a documentary television special miniseries that was premiered on March 6, 2005, on the National Geographic Channel. Originally beginning as a special about human pregnancy, the program features the development of embryos in the uterus of various animal species. The show makes extensive use of computer-generated imagery to recreate the real stages of the process. Difficult Love is a 2010 documentary film directed by Zanele Muholi and Peter Goldsmid. Gainsbourg by Gainsbourg: An Intimate Self Portrailt is a documentary film directed by Pierre-Henry Salfati. Big Deal at Gothenburg is a 1967 International Emmy Awards winning documentary film. Timur Novikov. Object-Zero is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Aleksandr Shein. Rude Boy is a 1980 British film directed by Jack Hazan and David Mingay and filmed in 1978 and early 1979. The film, part fiction, part rockumentary, tells the story of Ray Gange, a Clash fan who leaves his job in a Soho sex shop to become a roadie for the band. The film includes footage of The Clash at a Rock Against Racism concert at Victoria Park, on their "On Parole" and "Sort It Out" tours, and in the studio recording the album Give 'Em Enough Rope. The film was named after the rude boy subculture. The band became so disenchanted with the film, that by its release, they had Better Badges make badges stating 'I don't want Rude Boy Clash Film'. In 1980, the film won the Honorable Mention, and was nominated for the Golden Bear at the 30th Berlin International Film Festival. It was re-released on DVD the UK in 2003 by Fremantle Media with a host of special features including interviews with 'Rude Boy' Ray Gange, The Clash's road manager Johnny Green and film makers Jack Hazan and David Mingay. The Play is On is a 2001 documentary short film from India, directed by Pankaj Rishi Kumar. Hippie Masala: Für immer in Indien is a 2006 Swiss documentary film directed by filmmaker Ulrich Grossenbacher and anthropologist Damaris Lüthi. In 2007, the film was one of five nominated for "Best Documentary" in the Swiss Film Prize, though the prize was taken by Das kurze Leben des José Antonio Gutierrez. The film focuses on the aftermath of the Hippie migration to Asia, specifically documenting the lives of six Hippies who chose to remain in India: Cesare from Italy, Erica and Gillian from South Africa, Hanspeter from Switzerland, Meera from Belgium and Robert from the Netherlands. No longer in their 20s, they are leading the lives of a traditional yogi and a female meditator in retreat, a painter with a local wife and children, designers of beach clothing in Goa, and a farmer who hunts and cares for his cows in the Himalayas. First Kill is a 2001 Dutch documentary film that revolves around the psychology of war. Important turning points in the Vietnam War are used to illustrate the effect of war on body and mind. The documentary consists of interviews with Michael Herr and several Vietnam veterans. The depth of the interviews provides insight into the feelings that accompany violence, fear, hate, seduction and pleasure. First Kill was directed by Coco Schrijber and produced by Lemming Film. The Red Cross is still one of the richest stories of our history. The Red Cross Committee is the only organization working in every country, on every conflict. This film follows the training of the young delegates on their first mission. Of the 1.5 million adopted children in the United States, international adoptees are the fastest growing segment – and the most adopted segment within that group are Asian girls. While many of their stories are heartwarming and play into our self-image of American compassion and generosity, the realities are much more complex. Director, Barb Lee, goes deep into the intimate lives of two well-meaning families and shows us the subtle challenges they face. One family is just beginning the process of adopting a baby from China and is filled with hope and possibility. The other family’s adopted Korean daughter is now 32 years old. Prompted by her adoptive mother’s terminal illness, she tries to create the bond they never had. The results are riveting, unpredictable and telling. While the two families are at opposite ends of the journey, their stories converge to show us that love alone isn’t enough to make a family work. A very terrifying documentary about the Gothic subculture, and the revealing of a cover up ritual murder; the so called "Cigil Murder". Love in India is a 2009 documentary drama film written and directed by Qaushiq Mukherjee. Natural Resistance is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jonathan Nossiter. Year of the Bull is a 2003 documentary film directed by Todd Lubin Charismatic is a documentary film directed by Jonathan Koch, Steven Michaels and Joel Surnow that was to air as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30 but the airing was postponed. This program takes a stark look at humankind's embarrassing past history of driving several bird species to extinction, and the resulting implications for a humanity left unchecked. Why Korea? is a 1950 American short documentary film produced by Edmund Reek. It won an Academy Award in 1951 for Documentary Short Subject. Give Me The Banjo is a 2011 documentary film directed by Marc Fields. Runaway Slave is an American independent political documentary hosted by Baptist minister C.L. Bryant. The film premiered in Los Angeles on January 13, 2012. The film expresses Rev. Bryant's belief that the African-American community, "has traded one form of tyranny for another" by "buying into the entitlement mindset of Progressives." The film, directed by Pritchett Cotten, is backed by the FreedomWorks Foundation. America's Medicated Kids is a British documentary that was televised on 18 April 2010. The Louis Theroux documentary ran for 60 minutes. The documentary follows Theroux as he travels to one of America's leading children's psychiatric treatment centres, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and investigates the effects of having to put children with obsessive compulsive disorders on prescription medication and the impact that medicating the child has on the family group. ""Sometimes living one's honest life is damn near impossible." Or so it felt to award-winning country music star Chely Wright for most of her closeted life-first raised in a Christian home in a tiny Bible-Belt town and then as a member of the sexually repressed and homophobic country music industry in Nashville. Surrounded by a family, community, culture and religion that all believed that being gay is just wrong (and, to many, "of the devil"), Wright prayed regularly for God to rid her of her homosexuality, vowing to give up on love in return. Instead, music became her love, as she scored hits like "Shut Up and Drive" and "Single White Female". But while her dreams of stardom came true, she remained tormented by her sexuality and paralyzed by the fear of coming out. Would the country music industry tolerate a lesbian in their ranks? Would her fans reject her? She tried dating men (including fellow country star Brad Paisley), poured her energy into philanthropic endeavors, and contemplated suicide before finally acknowledging what she knew she needed to do. In 2010, she began calculated preparations to release an album and a book (Like Me) that would finally reveal her coming-out story and make country music history. Through sometimes-tearful interviews and conversations, video diary entries, music videos, and several of her songs, this touching portrait follows Wright up to her full-court media press, from Oprah to People magazine, as she discovers the transformational power of living an authentic life." Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Mauro In Cayenne is a 2012 documetary film written by Leonardo Mouramateus, Solomon Santana and directed by Leonardo Mouramateus. Rarely before has the drama of life on the wild plains of Africa been portrayed more intimately than in this remarkable film from renowned wildlife filmmakers Dereck and Beverly Joubert. It's the gripping story of a growing lion pride in Botswana that begins as three outsiders-young and aggressive-invade the pride's territory and depose its aged leader. Their swift, merciless victory opens a new era for the pride. Animalicious is a documentary film released in 1999. It told the stories of five incidents in which animals had a profound impact on a person's life. It was produced and directed by Mark Lewis. Shooting Indians: A Journey With Jeffrey Thomas is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Ali Kazimi. The Juche Idea is a 2008 film directed by Jim Finn. Soldiers in Hiding is a 1985 documentary film directed by Malcolm Clarke. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Football Under Cover is a 2008 German/Iranian documentary film directed by David Assmann and Ayat Najafi. It follows the attempts of German Marlene Assmann and Iranian Ayat Najafi to organise a football match between Assman's team BSV Aldersimspor and the Iranian national woman's team. Into the Gyre is a 2012 documentary film directed by Scott Elliott. Vera and Gabriel have been married for sixty years. In Undertow Eyes they wander about their own history: the first flirt, the birth of their children, life and aging. In this remembrance, images from their family collection mingle with images of the present, weaving an emotional and dreamlike universe. As a mosaic of stories and impressions, this short film looks like a personal and existencial diary about love and death. 08:15 DE 1945 is a documentary film directed by Roberto Fernandez. Surviving Progress is a 2011 Canadian documentary film loosely based on A Short History of Progress, a book and a 2004 Massey Lecture series by Ronald Wright about societal collapse. The film was produced by Daniel Louis, Denise Robert, and Gerry Flahive and written/directed by Mathieu Roy and Harold Crooks. Stalin's Wife is a 2004 documentary directed by Slava Tsukerman. Angels & Dust is a adventure drama documentary film directed by Héctor Herrera. Earthlings is a 2005 documentary film about humanity's use of animals as pets, food, clothing, entertainment, and for scientific research. The film is narrated by Joaquin Phoenix, features music by Moby, was directed by Shaun Monson, and was co-produced by Maggie Q, all of whom are practicing vegans. What are you complaining about? This is the question that two Finnish artists have journeyed out to ask people in all four corners of the world in documentary director Ada Bligaard Søby's docu-musical. Their aim is not to pour salt in the wounds of the world's grumpy complainers, but to let everyone vent their dissatisfaction about everything from parking fines to climate change in a liberating chorus of whining harmonies. Score by Danish electronica producer Trentemøller. SpyTek is a 1999 News & Documentary Emmy Awards for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Title Sequences nominated/winning tv program. Impressions de la haute Mongolie was a 1976 surrealist film directed by Salvador Dalí and José Montes-Baquer, starring Salvador Dalí himself. It is a false documentary about a hunt through Mongolia for a giant hallucinogenic mushroom. The film is dedicated to Raymond Roussel, author of the similarly titled poem Homage to Impressions d’Afrique. Vervains is a 2012 short drama musical film written and directed by Ana Aurora Rodríguez. Pirinop, My First Contact is documentary film directed by Kumaré Txicão, Karané Txicão and Mari Corrêa. Today, the Same Day Is Different is a 2007 film directed by Xavier Baig and scar Moreno. Defiant Requiem is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Doug Shultz. The Rise of the Celebrity Class is a 2004 documentary film directed by Colin Barr, Nathalie Ginvert and Mark Jackson. Cathedrals of Culture is 2014 documentary film directed by Robert Redford. Kings Point is a 2012 short documentary film about five seniors living in a retirement resort in Kings Point, Florida, directed by Sari Gilman. The film was nominated for the 2013 Academy Award for Best Documentary. After being nominated for an Academy Award the film was released along with all the other 15 Oscar-nominated short films in theaters by ShortsHD. Truth Be Told is a 2012 documentary about growing up in the Jehovah's Witnesses religion. The title refers to the Jehovah's Witnesses’ perception that their beliefs are 'the truth.' The Killing Ground is a 1979 documentary film written by Brit Hume. The film portrays environmental and human health effects of toxic waste dump-sites in Niagara, New York and other locations. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Back Home to the Reich with „Bubi“ is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Stanislaw Mucha. Pantani: The Accidental Death of a Cyclist is a sports biographical documentary directed by James Erskine. The Phantom of the Operator is a film directed by Caroline Martel. Uncounted is a 2008 documentary directed by David Earnhardt. Sector Zero is a 2011 documentary film directed by Nadim Mishlawi. Between Frames: The Art of Brazilian Animation — released in Brazil as Luz, Anima, Ação — is a 2012 Brazilian documentary film directed and written by Eduardo Calvet. The film recalls the memory of almost 100 years of history of Brazilian animation, revealing the main personalities who helped to build this trajectory and remembering landmarks and creations of all times from films, TV and advertising. Mayurakshi Dam is a 1959 documentary film directed by N. K. Issar. Eldorado: Lithuanians in Brazil is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Fabiano Canosa and Julius Zis. Copyright by Inge Morath is a 1991 documentary film written and directed by Sabine Eckhard. The Sixth Battalion is a 1998 documentary film that examines the history of Jewish soldiers who fought for the Slovak Republic, which was closely aligned with Nazi Germany during World War II. The documentary combines interviews with archival footage and photographs of the Slovak Republic in order to provide a brief history of the state, exploring the rise of antisemitism and how it affected these Jewish soldiers. The Iconographer is a 2013 documentary short film. Heima is a documentary film and double DVD set about the tour around Iceland in the summer of 2006 of the band Sigur Rós. During the tour the band played two big open-air concerts at Miklatún - Reykjavík and Ásbyrgi, as well as small scale concerts at Ólafsvík, Ísafjörður, Djúpavík, Háls, Öxnadalur and Seyðisfjörður. In addition, a protest concert against the Kárahnjúkar dam was performed at Snæfellsskála. The documentary also includes footage of an acoustic concert played for family and friends at Gamla Borg, a coffee shop in the small town Borg, on 22 April 2007. The documentary premiered in Iceland at the Reykjavík International Film Festival opening day, 27 September 2007. Heima was released 5 November 2007 in two editions, one including atmospheric photos in a photobook documenting the tour. The DVD has sold 5,000 copies in Canada earning it a Gold Award under the Video Certifications. On May 27, 2011 the band released an official HD-quality version of Heima on their website, available as digital download in QuickTime format. Self - Portrait is a 1993 documentary film directed by Arunas Matelis. Island Shunters is a 1977 short documentary film directed by Tim Woolmer. El desencanto is a 1976 Spanish documentary film written and directed by Jaime Chávarri about the family of famous poetry writer Leopoldo Panero. It tells the story of the Panero's family told by themselves twelve years after the death of patriarch Leopoldo Panero, poet of the Franco regime. The documentary is based on the testimony of the remaining four members: the poet's widow, Felicidad Blanc, and the couple's three sons: Juan Luis, Leopoldo Maria and Michi. In their intertwined testimonies, they deal with family relations, the weight of their share past and about themselves. El desencanto was made as the Francisco Franco's regime was ending and was released during the Spanish transition to democracy becoming a symbol of the decadence of the Fracoist family. El Desecanto is considered a seminal work among Spanish documentaries and has achieved cult status. Twenty years later Ricardo Franco made a second part, Después de tantos años. By then the mother has already died, but the three brothers were interviewed. Neanderthal is a 2005 documentary film directed by Cameron Balbirnie. 40 Days at Base Camp is a 2011 documentary film directed by Dianne Whelan. Impact is a 2004 documentary film directed by Max Bervy. Sunday School with Franz Hinkelammert is a 2012 documentary historical and biographical film directed by Jim Finn. The Unlikely Pilgrims is a 2013 adventure documentary film written by Kirsten Mallyon and directed by John Cherry. The Donner Party is a 1992 documentary film that traces the history of the Donner Party, an ill-fated pioneer group from Springfield, Illinois to Sutter's Fort, California - a disastrous journey of 2500 miles made famous by the tales of cannibalism the survivors told upon reaching their destination. The film, narrated by David McCullough, premiered at the Telluride Mountainfilm Festival in May 1992 with an introductory lecture on the Donner Party by noted Western historian David Lavender. It subsequently aired on PBS as part of the American Experience program in October, 1992. The film was produced using a combination of archival materials, including letters, photograph, paintings, and diaries from members of the Donner Party, as well as new footage shot of the trail the Party journeyed along in Oregon and California. Animated maps are used to show the route the Donner Party took. On-camera experts include Harold Schindler, Joseph King, Donald Buck, and Wallace Stegner. Timothy Hutton, Amy Madigan, Frances Sternhagen, George Plimpton, Lois Smith, and Eli Wallach perform the letters and diaries written by the Donner Party before, during, and after their journey. Kobe Doin' Work is a 2009 documentary film directed by Spike Lee. It focuses on Kobe Bryant during one day of the 2007–08 Los Angeles Lakers season. Bryant granted filmmaker Spike Lee and 30 cameras unprecedented access to his life for one day. Kobe: Doin' Work premiered on ESPN on May 16, 2009. Chanel Aubazine - Paris is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Jérôme Schlomoff. The Troubles We've Seen is a 1994 documentary, war film written and directed by Marcel Ophüls. Journey Through the Bible Lands is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Dan Neira. At Berkeley is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Frederick Wiseman. When It Was a Game 3 focuses on the 1960s, a time of change for all of America. Through sharp, incredibly clear color footage of players and fans, the film shows how Major League Baseball slowly but surely evolved from pure sport to moneymaking entertainment. Covering the mighty Yankees, the western expansion of both leagues, the increasing inclusion of black players, and the rise of free agency and increased salaries, the film shows the growth of baseball from adolescence to adulthood. --Rob Lightner "We join Wesley Pentz – a.k.a. DJ Diplo and part of Major Lazer soundsystem – for one day at the annual Philadelphia block party of record label Mad Decent. In a candid portrait of an artist otherwise better known for Mad Decent’s madcap antics, Diplo shares his thoughts on people, culture and traveling - as well as what he would do should he stop making music." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. La última huella is a 2001 documentary film from Chile, written and directed by Paola Castillo. Balkan Xpress is a 2012 short film directed by Barış Karamuço. Where the Pelican Builds Her Nest is a 1966 short documentary film directed by Harold J. Pollock. Rockshow is a 1980 concert film by Paul McCartney and Wings, filmed during the band's 1976 North American tour. The film features 30 songs from four concerts of the tour: New York, on 25 May; Seattle, Washington, 10 June; and Los Angeles, California, 22 June and 23 June. Both the cover of the home video release and McCartney himself in his intro to McCartney Years DVD acknowledge only the Seattle concert, however. These concerts were part of the 1975–76 Wings Over the World tour, which also produced the triple live album Wings over America and the Wings Over the World television documentary. Kokoda Front Line! was a full-length edition of the Australian newsreel, Cinesound Review, produced by the Australian News & Information Bureau and Cinesound Productions Limited in 1942. It was one of four winners of the 15th Academy Awards for best documentary, and the first Australian film to win an Oscar. It was filmed by the Australian war photographer Damien Parer and directed by Ken G. Hall. Damien Parer is often cited as one of Australia's early Academy Award winners, however the award was made to the director, Ken G. Hall. The Mechanical Bride is a 2012 fantasy science-fiction documentary film directed by Allison de Fren. Among Revolutionaries is a 2011 documentary film written by Nancy De Santiago directed by Ernesto Camarillo and Aldo Laurel Fernández. Bunarman is a Croatian documentary film directed by Branko Ištvančić. It was released in 2003. Schaut auf diese Stadt is a 1962 documentary film directed by Karl Gass. The Human Experiment is a 2013 documentary film written by Dana Nachman and directed by Don Hardy Jr. and Dana Nachman. Frontrunner is a 2008 documentary film directed by Virginia Anita Williams. Young Americans is a 1967 documentary film chronicling the travel experiences of The Young Americans choir. It was given an Academy Award in 1969, though it was revoked because it was released in 1967 and was thus ineligible, the only film in history to have done so. Nobody Passes Perfectly is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Saskia Bisp. The Markus Family is a 1999 film directed by Elfi Mikesch. The Wagner Family is a documentary film directed by Tony Palmer. Genese d'un repas is a 1979 documentary film written and directed by Luc Moullet. Sing Me the Songs That Say I Love You: A Concert for Kate McGarrigle is a 2012 documentary film directed by Lian Lunson. The compilation album Sing Me the Songs: Celebrating the Works of Kate McGarrigle serves as the film's soundtrack. I Remember Better When I Paint is a feature length international documentary film about the positive impact of art and other creative therapies in people with Alzheimer's disease and how these approaches can change the way the disease is viewed by society. The film examines the way creative arts bypass the limitations of dementia disorders such as Alzheimer's and shows how patients' still-vibrant imaginations are strengthened through therapeutic art. Dreams Are Free is a 2013 documentary film directed by Gary Barber. luXury is a 2003 short documentary film written and directed by Jordi Niubo. Comfort Zone is a 2013 documentary, drama and news film directed by Sean P. Donnelly. The Hero's Journey is a 1987 filmed biography of mythologist Joseph Campbell, directed by Janelle Balnicke and David Kennard. In the years just before his death, Campbell was filmed in conversation with his friends and colleagues, discussing his own life and career in terms of the myths that he studied throughout his life. The conversations in the film lead to the book, The Hero's Journey: Joseph Campbell on His Life and Work. Real Man’s Film is a 2012 short documentary, war film written and directed by Nebojsa Slijepcevic. Meaning of Robots is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Matt Lenski. Where Did the Horny Toad Go? is a documentary historical fiction family film directed by Stefanie Leland. The Deceivers and the Dead is a 1988 short documentary film written and directed by Stephan Hermlin, Walter Heynowski and Gerhard Scheumann. Roshni is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Bobby Wahengbam. Farewell To Hollywood is a 2013 documentary drama romance film written by Kimberley Hassett and written and directed by Regina Nicholson and Henry Corra. Mustafa is a 2008 Turkish biographical documentary about Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder and first president of the Republic of Turkey, which was written and directed by Can Dündar. The film, which controversially concentrates on Atatürk's personal life, is the first documentary covering Atatürk's life from his early years to his death. It was released on Republic Day, 2008, to coincide with the 85th anniversary of the foundation of the Turkish Republic. The city that rose from this desert, Broken Hill, is now the subject of a fascinating documentary by filmmaker Greg Parker. Mission to Mir is a 1997 documentary film about the Mir Space Station. Edible City: Grow the Revolution is a documentary film directed by Andrew Hasse. Nerdcore for Life is a 2008 documentary film about the world of Nerdcore hip-hop directed Dan Lamoureux and produced by Crapbot Productions. Hineini: Coming Out in a Jewish High School is a documentary film by director Irena Fayngold. Housing First is a 2013 short documentary film written by Nate Cooper, Neil Robmann, John Smathers and directed by John Smathers. The Battle Of The Java Sea is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Niek Koppen. The Journey of Sacagawea is a 2003 documentary film about Sacagawea, who was part of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, directed by Alan Austin. Mojave Magic: A Turtle's Eye View of SpaceShipOne, shot on location at the remote Mojave Airport, documents the historic flights of SpaceShipOne, including the first privately funded human spaceflight on June 21, 2004, and the two subsequent flights on September 29 and October 4, 2004, that won the $10-million Ansari X Prize. The DVD includes the popular song, "I Want To Go In A Space Ship", honoring SpaceShipOne, Burt Rutan and the two civilian astronauts, Mike Melvill and Brian Binnie. In addition to the flights themselves, the documentary includes: Pre-launch festivities, including open house at XCOR Aerospace. Comments from Mike Melvill from atop SpaceShipOne immediately after landing. Post-X Prize celebration hosted by X Prize Foundation chairman Dr. Peter Diamandis with comments from Burt Rutan, Paul Allen, Brian Binnie and Sir Richard Branson. Hotel Nueva Isla is a 2013 documentary drama film written by Javier Labrador Deulofeu, Irene Gutiérrez Torres and directed by Irene Gutiérrez Torres. Sex(Ed) the Movie is a 2014 history and documentary film written and directed by Brenda Goodman. THE YOUNGEST CANDIDATE is a feature length documentary film directed by Jason Pollock. It is produced by David Letterman's company, Worldwide Pants, in partnership with Oscar winning producer Lawrence Bender (Pulp Fiction and An Inconvenient Truth) and Balance Vector Productions.It follows the story of 4 teens that ran for public office in America; funny, inspiring, poignant, and ultimately uplifting, THE YOUNGEST CANDIDATE is not just a film about running for office. It is the coming of age story of four idealistic young adults who dared to confront the corrupt political systems in America. Through their journey these young candidates learn about fair play, leadership development, racism in politics, the importance of family, and many other lessons that they will carry with them throughout their lives. In the face of great adversity, these four young adults braved all the odds to make it to Election Day to show that regardless of the outcome, it didn’t matter… It’s all about how you play the game. Painting with Light in a Dark World is a 2002 documentary short film written and directed by Sascha Ettinger-Epstein. Awaken the Dragon is a 2013 Telly Award winning film, created for Awaken the Dragon Community Outreach Initiative. In the Year of the Pig is a 1968 American documentary film about the origins of the Vietnam War, directed by Emile de Antonio. It was nominated for an Academy award for best documentary. The film, which is in black and white, contains much historical footage and many interviews. Those interviewed include Harry Ashmore, Daniel Berrigan, Philippe Devillers, David Halberstam, Roger Hilsman, Jean Lacouture, Kenneth P. Landon, Thruston B. Morton, Paul Mus, Charlton Osburn, Harrison Salisbury, Ilya Todd, John Toller, David K. Tuck, David Werfel and John White. Produced during the Vietnam War, the film was greeted with hostility by many audiences, with bomb threats and vandalism directed at theaters that showed it. De Antonio cites the film as his personal favorite. It features the ironic use of patriotic music, portrays Ho Chi Minh as a patriot to the Vietnamese people, and asserts that Vietnam was always a single country rather than two. The poster, displaying Marine Corporal Michael Wynn, was famously used as an album cover for The Smiths' second album, Meat Is Murder. The insignia on Wynn's helmet was changed to "meat is murder". Pastures In The Sky: The Art Of Patrick Woodroffe is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Dennis Lowe. Special Ed is a 2013 biographical documentary film directed by John Paskievich. Destination Hitchcock: The Making of North by Northwest is a 2000 documentary film about the making of Alfred Hitchcock's classic thriller film North by Northwest. It is hosted and narrated by the film's female lead, Eva Marie Saint and features interviews with Hitchcock's daughter, several of the technical and behind-the-scenes people involved with the production of the film, and the main surviving actor, Martin Landau. The film has gained wide circulation due to its inclusion in Universal's release of North by Northwest in VHS and DVD formats which include this film as an additional feature. Bhutan is a country that is immensely rich in medicinal plants. This has led Europe to invest in and be supplied by these plantations, at a time when this activity represents one of the few connections that the eastern Kingdom has with the outside world. Family Meals is a 2012 documentary film written by Dana Budisavljevic and Ana Opalic, and directed by Dana Budisavljevic. "It is happening all across America—rural landowners wake up one day to find a lucrative offer from an energy company wanting to lease their property. Reason? The company hopes to tap into a reservoir dubbed the “Saudi Arabia of natural gas.” Halliburton developed a way to get the gas out of the ground—a hydraulic drilling process called “fracking”—and suddenly America finds itself on the precipice of becoming an energy superpower. But what comes out of the ground with that “natural” gas? How does it affect our air and drinking water? GASLAND is a powerful personal documentary that confronts these questions with spirit, strength, and a sense of humor. When filmmaker Josh Fox receives his cash offer in the mail, he travels across 32 states to meet other rural residents on the front lines of fracking. He discovers toxic streams, ruined aquifers, dying livestock, brutal illnesses, and kitchen sinks that burst into flame. He learns that all water is connected and perhaps some things are more valuable than money." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. The Disposed-Of Koreans: The Great Kantō Earthquake and Camp Narashino is a documentary film directed by Oh Choong-kong. Balancing Acts is a 2005 documentary film by Donna Schatz that chronicles the lives of Chinese acrobat Man-Fong Tong and his wife Magda Schweitzer, a Jewish acrobat from Budapest, Hungary. The two met in Europe on the eve of World War II. They were both at the peak of their careers, performing at the Moulin Rouge and Cirque Medrano, and alongside acts such as Maurice Chevalier and Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson. While their careers were full of success, the spread of Nazism brought them great hardships. Their marriage saw the trials of wartime Europe, post-war poverty, the birth of two sons, and a difficult ten-year separation from one another. Breakfast with Hunter is a documentary about the everyday life of gonzo-journalist Hunter S. Thompson by Wayne Ewing. The film includes a variety of well-known figures involved with Thompson throughout his life, including P. J. O'Rourke, Ralph Steadman, Roxanne Pulitzer, Johnny Depp, Terry Gilliam and Benicio del Toro. Chicano! History of the Mexican-American Civil Rights Movement is a 1996 documentary film. Que esperen los viejos is a 1976 short documentary film written by José Bolaños & Juan Rulfo and directed by José Bolaños. Holy Trinity (1577-1579) is a painting by Spanish artist El Greco. Originally painted as an altarpiece for Santo Domingo el Antiguo in Toledo, Spain, it is now in the collection of the Prado Museum. Its companion piece, The Assumption (1577-1579), is in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. The Attempt at Living is a 1983 film directed and written by Johann Feindt. Bonds Are Forever is 1983 documentary film written and directed by Ray Reese. The Devil and Daniel Johnston is a 2005 documentary film about the noted American musician Daniel Johnston. It chronicles Johnston's life from childhood up to the present, with an emphasis on his experiences with bipolar disorder, and how it manifested itself in demonic self-obsession. The film was directed by Jeff Feuerzeig and produced by Henry S. Rosenthal. Filmmaker Angela Shelton journeys across the United States meeting other Angela Sheltons in an effort to survey women in America. She discovers that 24 out of 40 Angela Sheltons have been abused just like herself. Then the filmmaker meets an Angela Shelton who tracks sexual predators and lives in the same town as the filmmaker's father who molested her and her stepsiblings for years. The filmmaker's survey of women becomes a journey of self discovery during which she decides to finally confront her past and her own father - on Father's Day. Director Andrew Szava-Kovats presents a portrait of Rollie's Farm in Lowell, Massachusetts, where the Parron family has been growing fresh produce and more for over 50 years. Family owned since 1953, Rollie's Farm has eschewed the corporate trend, and thanks to the supportive locals they've always managed to stay in business. But that's not to say that it's been all smooth sailing for the Parron's; a conversation with Rollie and his elderly parents reveal just how close they came to losing the farm due to taxation issues in the mid-1970s. As always, however, they managed to bounce back, and today their far is the pride of the entire community. HMS Brilliant is a 1996 British Academy Television Craft Award nominated TV program aired on 1995 in UK. Annigoni: Portrait of an Artist is a 1995 documentary film about the life and times of Italian portrait painter Pietro Annigoni. Paraíso is a Cuban/German film of 2003. It was directed by Alina Teodorescu. I Am Steve McQueen is a 2014 documentary by Jeff Renfroe. The King and the People is a 2013 documentary film by Simon Bright, a Zimbabwean filmmaker. It follows problems of Swaziland, a landlocked country in southern Africa. The film features Mswati III, the king of Swaziland, and his heiress and self claimed rapper Princess Sikhanyiso. Eyes and Ears of God: Video Surveillance of Sudan is a 2012 documentary film by Tomo Križnar and Maja Weiss. It shows the ethnic Nuba civilians defending themselves with the help of over 400 cameras distributed by himself and Klemen Mihelič, the founder of humanitarian organisation H.O.P.E., to volunteers across the war zones in the Nuba Mountains, Blue Nile, and Darfur, documenting the Sudan military's war crimes against local populations. Child Fidencio, the Healer of Espinazo is a 1981 film directed by Nicolás Echevarría. Live in Cuba is the first live DVD of the American rock supergroup Audioslave, containing footage of the free concert that the band performed in Cuba in front of over 70,000 people. The concert itself is considered to be an historical event, as it marks the first time in Cuban history that an American rock band has been permitted to perform within the country. The DVD features the show itself, and also a 37 minute documentary based on the band and their time spent in Cuba. According to Chris Cornell, at the time the concert was performed it was the longest one that Audioslave had played. The setlist consists mainly of songs from the first two Audioslave albums, Audioslave and Out of Exile, however a selection of older songs from the band's previous groups Soundgarden and Rage Against the Machine are also featured. The band had previously refused to perform any pre-Audioslave material on their first tour, as they felt it would only damage their attempts to establish themselves as a new band who were independent of their former groups. The Trouble With Bread is a short documentary 2013 film written and directed by Maggie Beidelman. Back Issues: The Hustler Magazine Story is a biographical drama historical documentary directed by Michael Lee Nirenberg. Everything's Cool is a 2007 documentary film that examines the divide between scientists and the general populace on the topic of global warming. Director Dan Gold said of the motivation for the film that "I'm optimistic that finally the message that this is real, that human beings are the cause of the most recent warming trend, and that it's an important issue, that message is actually reaching America. On the other hand ... if that message was fully understood, we would be moving a lot faster to slow this down and to reverse this course." The documentary was shown at the Sundance film festival in January 2007 and at the San Francisco International Film Festival in May 2007. The directors also took Blue Vinyl, a film about plastic pollution, to Sundance in 2002. It was shown on CBC in Canada as part of the Passionate Eye series. The New York Times called it "a breezy polemic about the politics of global warming ... [that] adopts a cheerful comic tone to avoid scaring audiences." The LA Times said that "With wit and passion, Gold and Helfand marshal a plethora of data and developments yet never lose their narrative thread.". Saving Face is a 2012, Academy and Emmy winning, documentary film directed by Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy and Daniel Junge about acid attacks on women in Pakistan. The film won the 2012 Academy Award for Best Documentary, making its director, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, Pakistan's first Oscar winner. The European art trade, synonymous with wealth and glamour, has always involved a degree of stolen and smuggled art. Now, Afghanistan's rich cultural heritage is financing terrorism and the Taliban. Blood Antiques' uncovers one of the most outrageous illegal trades since blood diamonds. The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil is an American documentary film that explores the Special Period in Peacetime and its aftermath; the economic collapse and eventual recovery of Cuba following the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. Following the dramatic steps taken by both the Cuban government and citizens, its major themes include urban agriculture, energy dependence, and sustainability. The film was directed by Faith Morgan, and was released in 2006 by The Community Solution. Crackle Of Time - Christoph Schlingensief And His Opera Village In Burkina Faso is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Sibylle Dahrendorf. City Dump: The Story of the 1951 CCNY Basketball Scandal is a 1998 documentary film by George Roy and Steven Hilliard Stern, produced by Black Canyon Productions, and HBO Sports about the CCNY Point Shaving Scandal. The documentary was shown on HBO. Soul of Athens is an innovative online publication which seeks to explore the Southeast Ohio region through in-depth reporting and technological innovation. What began in Ohio University’s School of Visual Communication in 2007 has exploded into a collaborative endeavor between students of many paths, expanding to include E. W. Scripps School of Journalism and the School of Media Arts and Studies. "In his new film, Lothar Lambert has chosen to portray eleven women over forty in Berlin, interweaving accounts of their experiences, their current lives and their expectations for the future. The line-up includes a number of well-known Berliners such as Irene Schweitzer, who runs the shop “Kaufhaus Schrill” in Bleibtreustrasse, photographer Erika Rabau and painter Evelyn Sommerhoff. The women talk about their chaotic family backgrounds, dramatic twists and turns, courageous decisions, failed relationships, breakdowns and new beginnings, as well as the art of gritting your teeth in spite of all of life’s blows. In no uncertain terms the women tell the filmmaker how they came to be the people they are; they also chat unabashedly about their sexual antics and reflect en passant on the social climate in Germany. Although only one or two of the protagonists are known to each other, they all share their acquaintance with Lothar Lambert, whom they know either socially or from having worked with him. They also have something else in common: they’ve all been through a hell of a lot – and they’re all ballsy." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Berlin Film Festival site. Satoyama: Japan's Secret Forest is a 2008 documentary film directed by Kikuchi Tetsunori. A Place Called Chiapas is a 1998 Canadian documentary film of first-hand accounts of the Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional the and the lives of its soldiers and the people for whom they fight. Director Nettie Wild takes the viewer to rebel territory in the southwestern Mexican state of Chiapas, where the EZLN live and evade the Mexican Army. Magnavox Presents Frank Sinatra is a 1973 tv film directed by Marty Pasetta. Sosialismi is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Peter von Bagh. Manhunt: The Search for Bin Laden is a 2013 documentary directed by Greg Barker that explores the CIA's investigation of Osama bin Laden starting from 1995 till his death in 2011. It was premiered on HBO on May 1, 2013, two years after the mission that killed bin Laden in May 2011. The documentary features narratives by many of the CIA analysts, operatives who worked over almost two decades understanding and then tracking bin Laden and also includes archival film footage across Washington, D.C., Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the Middle East. It also features extensive and rarely seen footage of Al-Qaeda training and propaganda videos, including digital suicide notes from various terrorists who later worked as suicide bombers. On release, the documentary was noted as a "less Hollywood-ized version" of the film Zero Dark Thirty and appreciated for showcasing "the nitty-gritty" of decade-long search for Bin Laden and the CIA analysts' job. It was acknowledged for putting "a human face on the secret world of intelligence gathering". The documentary was selected for 2013 Sundance Film Festival and was part of U.S. Documentary Competition. Archival footage, still photographs, and contemporary interviews tell the story of Hilla Rebay (1890-1967), who convinced Solomon Guggenheim to establish the Guggenheim Foundation to promote and collect non-objective art, build the museum that bears his name, and use Frank Lloyd Wright as its architect. The film's thesis is that without Hilla there would be no museum. It traces her early talent, friendships in Zurich with artists, falling in love with Rudolf Bauer, coming to America in 1927, and becoming Guggenheim's guide to modern art. The arrogant Bauer spurns her, Guggenheim's death leads to her dismissal from the foundation, but she maintains her high spirits to the end. The Sole of the Foot is a 2011 documentary,short film directed by Robert Fenz. A Brony Tale is a 2014 Canadian-American documentary film directed by Brent Hodge. The film explores the brony phenomenon, the adult fan base of the children's animated show My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic that arose shortly after its premiere in 2010. The film is structured around the journey of Ashleigh Ball, one of the principal voice actresses for the show, including her initial reactions to learning of this older fanbase, and her travel as a Guest of Honor to one of the first fan conventions BronyCon held in New York City in 2012. Hodge, a close friend of and previous collaborator with Ball, was curious as she was as to this phenomenon and opted to film her travel and appearance at the convention for the documentary. Hodge's film gained interest of film producer and publisher Morgan Spurlock who helped to promote wider distribution of the documentary. Initially slated to be show for Vancouver-area film festivals, the film was highlighted at the 2014 Tribeca Film Festival in New York City, and received critical praise. The film received a wider theater release starting in July 2014, and is currently available on DVD, Blu-ray, Digital Download and On Demand. Still Reigning is a live performance DVD by the thrash metal band Slayer, released in 2004 through American Recordings. Filmed at the Augusta Civic Center on July 11, 2004, the performance showcases Slayer's 1986 album, Reign in Blood, played in its entirety with the four original band members on a set resembling their 1986 "Reign in Pain" tour. Still Reigning was voted "best live DVD" by the readers of Revolver magazine, and received gold certification in 2005. The DVD is notable for the finale, which features Slayer covered in stage blood while performing the song "Raining Blood", leading to a demanding mixing process plagued by production and technical difficulties. The DVD's producer Kevin Shirley spent hours replacing cymbal and drum hits one-by-one. He publicly aired financial disagreements he had with the band and criticized the quality of the recording, and as a result was allegedly subjected to threats and insults from people associated with the band. STRONG! is a 2012 biographical sports documentary film directed by Julie Wyman. Land of Opportunity is an urban documentary released in 2011 and directed by Luisa Dantas. Set in New Orleans, Louisiana, the film tracks eight protagonists as they maneuver a post Hurricane Katrina landscape. After years of investigation, Dr. Stanton Friedman is convinced that not only are UFOs real, but the government has known about them since 1947. Dr. Friedman exposes the layers to the conspiracy. The First Basket is a 2008 documentary film on professional basketball's influence on Jewish culture. It is narrated by Peter Riegert. The film includes interviews and narratives provided by, and footage of, well known Jewish basketball personalities including Ossie Schectman, Red Auerbach, Sidney Hertzberg, and Edward Gottlieb as well as other Jewish basketball players. Forbidden Iran is a 2004 documentary film based on Jane Kokan's investigation and report on Zahra Kazemi's murder and opposition movements inside Iran. Kokan travels undercover to Iran in order to investigate the clerical government's crackdown on the Iranian students, journalists and dissidents. One of the film's interview subjects, Confederation of Iranian Students co-founder Arzhang Davoodi, was subsequently arrested for his criticism of the government in the film. He was tried in 2005 by the Islamic Revolutionary Court for "spreading propaganda against the system" and "establishing and directing an organization opposed to the government". The court found him guilty and sentenced him to 15 years' imprisonment and 75 lashes; as of August 2012, the latter part of his sentence had not been implemented. Through the Wire is a 1989 documentary film written by Nina Rosenblum, Carlos Norman and Angelo Corrao and directed by Nina Rosenblum. Who Killed Martin Luther King? is a 1989 documentary film written and directed by John Edginton. One of Us (Either / Or) is a 1998 documentary film directed by Susan Korda. The Muslim Jesus is a 2007 British documentary directed and produced by Irshad Ashraf, and commissioned and narrated by Melvyn Bragg. The documentary is about the Islamic view of Jesus. It was broadcast by ITV on 19 August 2007. Oil is a 2009 documentary film directed by Massimiliano Mazzotta. It explores the Italian energy provider Saras S.p.A., operating in the area of oil refining and the production of electricity, located in the island of Sardinia, near Cagliari and the impact of oil development on the land and lives of the local population. Divan is a 2003 documentary film written by Pearl Gluck and Susan Korda and directed by Pearl Gluck. Talking Architect is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jae-eun Jeong. Children: Kosovo 2000 is a 2001 documentary film directed by Ferenc Moldoványi. Seobu jeonseon is a 1950 film written and directed by Bong-chun Yun. Myths Behind the Miracle is a 1982 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Writing nominated tv program in the US. The legendary stories of Washington baseball greats Walter Johnson, Joe Judge, Clark Griffith, The Homestead Grays, Mickey Vernon, Frank Howard and many others are brought to life by stories and recollections from family members, writers, sportscasters and fans.Featuring rare photographs from Mark Stang and Phil Wood's book "Nationals on Parade" and film clips & photos from the National Archives and The Library of Congress, "The Game Comes Home"is a must see documentary for all baseball fans. Gertrudis Blues is a 2003 short documentary film written and directed by Patricia Carrillo Carrera. History of Writing is a 2012 short documentary family film directed by Students at the Seattle World School. Inuuvunga: I Am Inuk, I Am Alive is a joint 58-minute 2004 documentary about Inuit high school students in Inukjuak, Quebec, Nunavik, documenting their final year in the high school. Filmed in Inuktitut with subtitles in English, it was produced by National Film Board of Canada, and chronicles the students' efforts to learn how to come of age in a rapidly changing culture, while coping with issues like suicide and substance abuse. NFB dispatched EyeSteelFilm directors Daniel Cross, Mila Aung-Thwin, Brett Gaylor to the Inukjuak – Innalik School in Nunavik, Quebec, to teach the students the skills of filming. The students who took part in the filming were Bobby Echalook, Caroline Ningiuk, Dora Ohaituk, Laura Iqaluk, Linus Kasudluak, Rita-Lucy Ohaituk, Sarah Idlout and Willia Ningeok. They Call It Acid is a 2009 documentary history music film written by and directed by Gordon Mason. The Oil Factor, alternatively known as Behind the War on Terror, is an approximately 90 minute 2004 movie written and directed by Gerard Ungerman and Audrey Brohy, narrated by Ed Asner. The documentary analyzes the development of some global events since the beginning of the century from the perspective of oil and oil-abundant regions. The documentary aspires to bring an untraditional point of view over the reasons, aspects and motives of this war and the direction of current US foreign policy. The Dreams of Sparrows is a documentary film about post-war Iraq, by Hayder Daffar of the Iraq Eye Group, an Iraqi filmmaking group. The film was shot throughout 2003 and 2004 with a hand-held camera, consisting of street level interviews with various Iraqi citizens and explores their feelings about the changes occurring around them. The film was produced by digitally sending footage to the United States via e-mail where it was assembled in rough sequences and posted on the internet. A DVD version of the film was released in 2005. Dreams of the Sparrows offers many differing viewpoints in its interviews. Some Iraqis place photos of U.S. President George W. Bush in shrines, while others oppose the presence of American forces. Some admit a longing for the days of Saddam Hussein's rule, while others, having survived torture under his regime, express happiness with his removal. The capture of Hussein occurred during filming and street interviews cover the topic. In the film, one of the photographers was allegedly killed by US forces before the film was completed. Pombagira is a 1998 short film written and directed by Maja Vargas and Patricia Guimaras. Fabricating Tom Zé is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Décio Matos Júnior. The Free Voice of Labor: The Jewish Anarchists is a 1980 documentary by Steve Fischler and Joel Sucher of Pacific Street Films. It memorializes the story of the Yiddish anarchist newspaper Fraye Arbeter Shtime, and the Jewish anarchist movement of the early 20th century. The movie contained a short interview with a very young Joe Conason. Paul Avrich was a consultant on the film. As of 2006, AK Press has begun distributing it as part of a double DVD release with Anarchism in America, named after the latter. Imagine the Sound is a 1981 Canadian documentary film about free jazz, directed by Ron Mann. It features interviews with and musical and dramatic performances by pianist Cecil Taylor, saxophonist Archie Shepp, trumpeter Bill Dixon and pianist Paul Bley. The film has been digitally restored and was screened at the 2007 SXSW festival in Austin, Texas. Beyond The Divide is a 2014 documentary, biography, war, history film directed by Jan Selby. Gay Republicans is a 2004 television documentary film directed by Wash Westmoreland that focuses on four Log Cabin Republicans as they struggle with President George W. Bush's unequivocal opposition to gay marriage and are forced to make a choice: Whether to be good Republicans and support the President, or stand up for their civil rights as gay Americans. This decision afforded them a historic opportunity to affect the 2004 presidential election, but it also opens schisms that threatens the unity of the Log Cabin itself. Playboy: Hot Latin Ladies is a 1995 documentary film directed by Roshie. Howard Zinn: You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train is a 2004 documentary film narrated by Matt Damon that documents the life of Howard Zinn. The film was directed by Deb Ellis and Denis Mueller. The film boasts a 97% fresh rating by critics on Rotten Tomatoes. Railway Redemption is a 2012 short documentary directed by Santiago Posada. The Communists Are Comfortable is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Ken Kobland. Unity is an upcoming educational documentary film written, directed and produced by Shaun Monson. The film picks up where Monson's 2005 film Earthlings left off. The film will be narrated by numerous actors, artists, athletes, authors, businessmen, entertainers, film-makers, military personnel, and musicians. The film is set to release on 21 April 2015. Schumann At Pier2 is a 2012 musical documentary film written by Christian Berger and directed by Alexander Radulescu & Christian Berger. Koncert is a 1982 Polish documentary movie. Directed by Michał Tarkowski, it shows the popular Rockowisko music festival, which took place in Łódź in late November 1981. Among others, the film features performances of such bands, as Perfect, Republika, TSA, Maanam, and Brygada Kryzys. Roam Sweet Home is a road-trip documentary about the lives of retirees who live on the road full-time in trailers, due to economic necessity, pleasure, or both. Filmmaker Ellen Spiro and her dog, Sam, join a community of American nomads in order to explore their unconventional lifestyle first hand. Through Spiro’s innovative and interpersonal style of filmmaking she captures the spirit of the roamers and the wide variety of reasons they abandoned the more traditional means of retirement. One group of women discusses the thrill of independence and sheer freedom they discovered after escaping repressive relationships. Another expounds upon the pleasures of traveling unencumbered throughout the country. The film is narrated by Spiro’s dog, Sam, as he shares his perspective on the whims and follies of human nature. Aging himself, Sam adds an emotional perspective through his musings on death and the journey through life. A.K.A. Doc Pomus is a 2012 biography music documentary film directed by Peter Miller and William Hechter. Das weiße Stadion is a 1928 documentary film directed by Arnold Fanck and Othmar Gurtner. "Renowned photographer Catherine Opie and award-winning filmmaker Lisa Udelson became interested in the lack of children’s voices in California during the debate over the anti-gay marriage bill Proposition 8." - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Forced Confessions is 2012 documentary film by the Persian-Canadian journalist and filmmaker Maziar Bahari about the forced confessions in Iran. The filmed was premiered at 25th International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam in November 2012. The short version of the film was aired by BBC Persian TV at the same time. Being Ginger is a documentary film directed by Scott P. Harris. The Silent Majority Speaks is 2010 documentary film directed and produced by The Silent Collective. Think of England is a 1999 documentary film directed by Martin Parr. HEAVY METAL PARKING LOT is considered one of the greatest rock and roll movies of all time, although it's actually a hilarious documentary tribute to rock and roll's GREATEST FANS. Filmed in 1986 at a Maryland concert arena parking lot before a heavy metal show, HMPL is an unvarnished anthropological study of American metalheads in their mid-'80s glory.It is the quintessential '80s magnum opus, made complete with a vast display of muscle cars, spandex, bleach-blonde frizzy perms, bare-chested dudes, Mullets From Hell, faded denim metal chicks, and the largest collection of late '70s Camaros ever seen in one location. Virtually unknown to mainstream audiences for two decades, HMPL was a VHS bootleg favorite among musicians, movie stars and cult-video fanatics worldwide. Peau is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Marine Koenig. Aral, El Mar Perdido is a 2010 short film directed by Isabel Coixet. On the Bowery is a 1956 American docufiction film directed by Lionel Rogosin. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. After the Second World War Lionel Rogosin made a vow to fight fascism and racism wherever he found it. In 1954 he left the family business in order to make films in accordance with his ideals. As he needed experience, he looked around for a subject and was struck by the men on the Bowery and decided that this would make a strong film. Thus On the Bowery was to be Rogosin's provocative film school that would prepare him for the filming of his anti-apartheid film: Come Back, Africa. In 2008, On the Bowery was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Satyajit Ray is a 1985 biographical documentary film directed by Shyam Benegal. Raoni is a 1978 French-Belgian documentary film directed by Jean-Pierre Dutilleux and Luiz Carlos Saldanha on the life of Raoni Metuktire. The film portrays issues surrounding the survival of the indigenous Indian tribes of north central Brazil. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Polar Bears: Spy on the Ice is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by John Downer. Olives and Their Oil is a 1914 educational short film about the production of olive oil. The film was released by Keystone Studios on February 7, 1914, on a split reel with the Charlie Chaplin comedy Kid Auto Races at Venice. Hasta que se ponga el sol is a 1973 Argentine film. "God himself could not sink this ship.''-Titanic crewman. The unsinkable ship sank at 2:20 a.m. on April 14, 1912. Approximately 1,500 people perished with her, a loss that stunned the world. For seven decades the fabled liner lay hidden 13,000 feet below the North Atlantic surface. Various expeditions tried to find her, but they were defeated by wild weather, the extreme depth, and conflicting accounts of the ship's last moments. Finally, in 1985, explorer Bob Ballard and a French-American team located the Titanic. Years of painstaking research paid off as they became the first humans to see the great ship since that awful night to remember in 1912. You can join Ballard on the search-and see what his team saw-through this acclaimed film. Kha-chee-pae is a 2005 film written and directed by Miroslav Janek. Bobby Fischer Against the World is a documentary feature film that explores the life of the late chess Grandmaster and 11th World Champion Bobby Fischer. It incorporates interviews with chess players Anthony Saidy, Larry Evans, Sam Sloan, Susan Polgar, Garry Kasparov, Asa Hoffmann, Friðrik Ólafsson, Lothar Schmid and others. It includes never-before-seen footage from the World Chess Championship 1972. Coming Out Under Fire is a film documentary, based on the critically acclaimed 1990 book by Allan Berube, of nine gay and lesbian veterans of WWII who told their stories in interviews which are combined with an array of declassified documents, photographs and archival footage. Drenaje profundo is a short documentary film directed by Carlos Prieto. Stories Of Trust: Calling For Climate Recovery, Part 3: Trust Alaska is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Christi Cooper-Kuhn, Katie Lose Gilbertson and Kelly Matheson. Derrelicto is a 2014 short mystery documentary experimental film written and directed by Juan Manuel Erazo. Eufrosina´s Revolution is a 2013 documentary film written by Luciana Kaplan and Diego Delgado, directed by Luciana Kaplan. Soferet is a 2006 documentary about Avielah Barclay, who studied to become a sofer, which is a traditionally male position transcribing Jewish Hebrew texts. The documentary explains how she became the world’s first known traditionally trained female scribe in October 2003. The film explores the importance of the Torah in Jewish life, the perfection required to execute a kosher Torah scroll, and a feminist perspective on the battle waged by some Jewish women to assume responsibilities traditionally reserved for men. Signals Through the Flames is a 1983 documentary film directed by Sheldon Rochlin and Maxine Harris. Stephen Tobolowsky's Birthday Party is a 2005 documentary about Stephen Tobolowsky in which he tells stories from his life. The actor, who is usually in a supporting role, takes center stage in the 87-minute birthday party. Walk the streets of Munich, the very heart of Bavaria, as only a local can. Follow along on eleven must see strolls viewing a Munich that is both chic and modern, Oktoberfest and Lederhosen. Meet the people of Munich and see why even the winter seems inviting! A Room Nearby is 2003 animated television special written and directed by Paul Fierlinger and Sandra Fierlinger. Louder Than Love: The Grande Ballroom Story is a documentary, history and music film directed by Tony D'Annunzio and Karl Rausch. Zechmeister is a 1981 film directed by Angela Summereder. Icelandic Volcanoes, Who is Next? is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jacques Bedel and François de Riberolles. The County is a short documentary biographical film directed by Chris Giamo, Kelsey Kobik and Michael Ferry. The Life of Reilly is a 2006 American film adaptation of actor Charles Nelson Reilly's one-man play "Save It For the Stage: The Life of Reilly". Written by Reilly and Paul Linke, and directed by Frank L. Anderson and Barry Poltermann, the film is an edited version of Reilly's much longer stage show, filmed live before audiences at the El Portal Theater in North Hollywood, California in October 2004. The final film is compiled from Reilly's final two performances, interspersed with clips, images and music. The Life of Reilly premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival in March 2006 to positive reviews and proceeded to play for over a year on the festival circuit, including the Seattle International Film Festival and Newfest. A limited theatrical release began in November 2007. Louis Theroux: Under the Knife is a TV documentary written and presented by Louis Theroux about the people and doctors involved in plastic surgery operations. Filmed mostly in the USA, in the programme, Louis himself ends up getting liposuction. The Last Ice Merchant is a 2012 short family documentary film directed by Sandy Patch. Cree Hunters of Mistassini is a 1974 documentary film co-directed by Boyce Richardson and Tony Ianzelo, chronicling a group of three Cree families from the Mistassini region of Quebec, as they set up a winter hunting camp near James Bay and Ungava Bay. The film explores the beliefs and the ecological principles of the Cree people. Richardson had previously written a series of articles for the Montreal Star on Native rights and the environmental damage done by development on their land. He traveled to Mistassini to speak with Cree friends, pledging that their film would allow Native people to tell their own stories, and filming went ahead with three hunting families in the bush, over five months from 1972 to 1973. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada Cree Hunters of Mistassini received the award for Best Documentary over 30 minutes at the Canadian Film Awards as well as the Robert Flaherty Award for best one-off documentary from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Ill Be Your Mirror is a 1995 documentary film directed by Edmund Coulthard and Nan Goldin. Getting Up: The TEMPT ONE Story is a 2012 biographical and documentary film written and directed by Caskey Ebeling. Slam Planet is a documentary film directed by Kyle Fuller and Mike Henry. Prince! Behind the Symbol is a 2011 TV documentary written by Gene Anderson. A Day at Karl Marx's Grave is a 1983 short film directed by Peter von Bagh. Robert Towne is a 2006 short documentary film directed by Sarah Morris. Despicable Dick and Righteous Richard is a 2011 documentary directed by Joshua Neale. " Richard has been pissing people off for 50 years. A recovering alcoholic from North Dakota, he finally musters the courage to complete the eighth and ninth steps of the 12-Step Program. With a list of everyone he’s wronged—from ex-wives to ex-mistresses, abandoned children to slighted pals—Richard tries to make amends. But has he really changed? Soulful folk music and rich characters bring levity and humor to an emotional story of redemption." Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. A Sacred Duty, subtitled Applying Jewish values to help heal the world, is a 2007 60-minute documentary from Jewish Vegetarians of North America, written and produced by Lionel Friedberg. The film focuses on Jewish teachings about caring for the earth, treatment of animals, and the environment, with a focus on vegetarianism. Interviews with rabbis, activists, and scholars are interspersed with footage and stills illustrating the points being discussed. Thug Life in DC is a 1998 documentary film directed by Marc Levin. One Life is a 2011 British nature documentary film directed by Michael Gunton and Martha Holmes. The film is narrated by the British actor Daniel Craig. Though modern scholars fail to agree whether he actually existed, the legend of King Arthur and his noble knights of the Round Table has endured throughout the ages, thanks in part to its immortalization in works by Chretien de Troyes, Richard Wagner and Alfred, Lord Tennyson. This installment of the Celtic Legends series explores Arthur's ever-changing image throughout history, from fearless warlord to romantic hero. Action Stations is a 1963 Honourable Mention recipient of AACTA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Television Screen Craft category. We Won't Bow Down is a 2014 documentary and history film written and directed by Chris Bower. Papa Miya of Aligarh is a 1975 Documentary film directed by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas. We Are Legion: The Story of the Hacktivists is a 2012 documentary film about the workings and beliefs of the self-described "hacktivist" collective, Anonymous. Brothers on the Line is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sasha Reuther. 20 Years Of Dysfunction is a DVD/CD released in 2005 by crossover thrash band Stormtroopers Of Death. Mainly created by singer Billy Milano, the material for the 2-disc DVD/CD is mostly culled from fan-shot amateur footage. The relative scarceness of available material has resulted in some hilarious decisions by the production team; for instance, Milk is sung by Danny Lilker but the video footage inappropriately shows vocalist Milano singing. Also notable is that the DVD does not include any material from the second Stormtroopers Of Death studio album Bigger Than The Devil. The DVD extras include five mini concerts from various performances, "backstage shenanigans", interviews with S.O.D. members, several never before heard ballads and a for-this-DVD-made video for the track Fuck The Middle East. Also included is the 1985 bootleg 'Pussywhipped' in its entirety. And We Will Go By Boat is a 1976 short film directed by Mirel Iliesiu. Why do the Americans stage fashion shows where prospective parents can view children available for adoption. And should we try it in Europe? We travel to Middle America to witness the extraordinarily aggressive way they market children available for adoption. The catwalk shows, photos in shopping malls and weekly TV spots are highly controversial. Critics claim that putting the most vulnerable members of society on display in this way is dangerous and question the motives of adults who appear to be “shopping for a child”. But they work. Children deemed impossible to adopt - teenagers, sibling groups and those with special needs - often find permanent homes thanks to these events. Studies have shown that young people are much more likely to become homeless, suffer mental illness, and ultimately, end up in the criminal justice system if they do not have a permanent home. With unprecedented access we speak to adoption industry insiders, social workers and parents, as well as children participating in these events – some who have been lucky enough to find families, and others who continue to wait, and wait and wait. In contrast, in European countries like Spain, thousands of young children grow up in group homes, never finding permanent families. So which system is better? Are the catwalks the lesser of two evils? One Bridge to the Next is a 2007 short drama film directed by Kim Snyder. Just the Right Amount of Violence iis a 2013 documentary and drama film written and directed by Jon Bang Carlsen. The Art Star and the Sudanese Twins is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Pietra Brettkelly. Dust Games is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Martin Marecek. My Herzl is a 2013 documentary film directed by Eli Tal-El. "Pianomania is a film about love, perfection and a little bit of madness. "The tone isn’t breathing." – complains pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard, distraught. This is a typical sentence in Steinway & Sons’ chief technician and Master Tuner Stefan Knüpfer’s normal work day. Each piano has its own personality, each piece demands its own timbre, and every interpretation has a particular temperament. Pianomania takes the viewer along on a humorous journey into the secret world of sounds, and accompanies Stefan Knüpfer at his unusual job with world famous pianists like Lang Lang, Alfred Brendel, Rudolf Buchbinder and Pierre-Laurent Aimand, among others. To find the right instrument with the necessary qualities, compatible with the vision of the virtuoso, to tune it to perfection and finally to get it on the stage, needs nerves of steel, boundless passion, and the extraordinary competence in translating words into sounds. This unusual film by Lilian Franck and Robert Cibis tells – with love and humor – of moments of absolute love of attention to detail and perfection. Pianomania observes, from unique angles, the suspenseful search for the perfect tone." Quoting the synopsis from the film's Official Site The Ballot or the Bullet is a documentary film directed by Paul Biedrzycki. Hackney Lullabies 2011 is a documentary short film written and directed by Kyoko Miyake. Children Playing is a 2012 short, drama, family, and documentary film directed by Kai Raisbeck and Matty Braid. Mein Boss bin ich is a 2000 film directed by Niki List. Race to Nowhere is a 2009 documentary film written by Maimone Attia and directed by Vicki Abeles and Jessica Congdon. Le Monologue de la muette is a 2008 documentary film directed by Khady Sylla and Charles Van Damme. Highwater is a 2008 documentary film centered on surfing's Triple Crown competitions, the professional surfing tour's final three competitions held each year on the North Shore of Oahu. The film is directed by Dana Brown, son of famed surfer and filmmaker Bruce Brown. Hans: Het Leven voor de dood is a 1983 Dutch documentary feature film by Louis van Gasteren about the life of the young composer Hans van Sweeden and those who knew him intimately. The film deals intimately with the children of the Nazis. It won the Golden Calf for Best Feature Film in 1983. Award of the Dutch film critics, 1983; the Belgian film critics Award, 1984; Best Dutch Documentary 1980-1990. 35 mm, b/w & color, 155 min. The film is about the harrowing life of the musician, poet and actor Hans van Sweeden, who ended his life at the age of 24. Simultaneously, the film offers a poignant portrait of his contemporaries in the turbulent fifties and sixties. Louis van Gasteren received a Golden Calf. Leveled is a 2013 short documentary, biographical and drama film written and directed by Patrick Gillespie and David Stewart. Brutality Factory is a 2007 short, documentary film directed by Wang Bing. The true story of the people and events that produced the greatest diplomatic achievement of the 20th century – the 1979 Camp David Peace Accords between Israel and Egypt. “Back Door Channels” is a story of secret missions, internal power struggles and diplomatic brinkmanship by a cast of characters never before revealed — until now. “A well-reported history of the Camp David talks, the events that led to them, and the difficult negotiations that followed to forge the peace treaty that was signed the next spring. Reminds us what it takes to resolve the seemingly unresolvable… Leon Charney practically jump-started the final round of talks.” — NEW YORK TIMES “Riveting… Enthralling” — VARIET" Smiling in a War Zone is a partly documentary film by artist Simone Aaberg Kærn about flying from Denmark to Afghanistan to help a young Afghani girl becoming a pilot. It was filmed in 2002 and released on 14 September 2006. To Die in Madrid is a 1963 French documentary film about the Spanish Civil War, directed by Frédéric Rossif. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Flunked is a 2008 documentary film narrated by Joe Mantegna, that discusses the problems in America's education system and provides education reform solutions. Let America Laugh is a 2003 documentary film produced and directed by Lance Bangs of stand-up comedian David Cross's tour of small alternative rock clubs. While it does feature small portions of David's stand-up routines, it consists mostly of interactions between David and the people accompanying him on tour. Each segment on the DVD has a title taken from a Bible tract by Jack T. Chick. In October 2005, Cross was sued by Nashville club owner Thomas Weber, accusing Cross of taping him without permission for Let America Laugh, in violation of Weber's privacy rights. In April 2006 the case against David Cross himself was dismissed, leaving Thomas Weber to face Warner Music, Sub-Pop, WEA Corporation, and the Alternative Distribution Alliance. In June, the four companies together offered Weber an 'offer of judgement' of $30,000. Weber then attempted to force each of the four companies to pay $30,000 and in the end received nothing. The case was dismissed on July 25, 2006. My Football Summer is a 2006 documentary film directed by Taiwanese directors Yang Li-chou and Chang Rong-ji about a group of young aboriginal football players in pursuit of a dream. Crime that Changed Serbia is a 1995 made-for-TV 35-minute documentary film, authored by Aleksandar Knežević and Vojislav Tufegdžić, technical part of the film directed by Janko Baljak, based on the book of the same title by Aleksandar Knežević and Vojislav Tufegdžić and produced by the Belgrade-based independent news broadcaster B92. The unprecedented contacts and subsequent interviews with the criminals would have not been possible had not Knežević and Tufegdžić been covering the post of organised crime in their respective magazines, gaining the trust of the depicted characters. In more than 90 percent of cases Knežević and Tugedžić, due to the dangerous circumstances that required extreme caution and as small film crew as possible, were accompanied only by a camera operator. Made in the form of an extended news report and narrated by journalist Dina Čolić-Anđelković, the film presents a snapshot of the chaotic Belgrade criminal underworld in the early 1990s which sprung up against the backdrop of Yugoslav wars. The virtuoso violinist Nigel Kennedy became Britain's most celebrated classical musician after the release of his 1989 recording of Vivaldi's Four Seasons, which sold 2 million copies. But Kennedy had always harboured a love of jazz - an affection which the former child prodigy has been pursuing in his new home. Kennedy now lives in Poland, where he fronts an all-Polish jazz band, the Nigel Kennedy Quintet, and has recently founded The Orchestra of Life, an ensemble consisting of mostly young musicians. In Imagine: Nigel Kennedy's Polish Adventure, Alan Yentob traces Kennedy's personal odyssey, and follows him as he explores the rich musical traditions of his adopted homeland. Kanyini is a 2006 documentary film which explores the philosophy and the life of Bob Randall, an Aboriginal man who lives beside the world's greatest monolith, Uluru, in Central Australia. He is an elder of the Yankunytjatjara people and a member of the Stolen Generations. The film, directed by Melanie Hogan, is based on Bob Randall's own personal journey and the wisdom he learnt from the old people living in the bush. Bob tells the tale of why Indigenous people are now struggling in a modern world. Kanyini is a Pitjantjatjara word meaning interconnectedness; to care for, to support, to nurture, and to protect. Grandpa is a 2011 animated short film directed by Luiz Lafayette Stockler. Wednesday is a 1997 documentary film written by Victor Kossakovsky and Viola Stephan and directed by Victor Kossakovsky. Louis and the Brothel is a British documentary that was televised on 9 August 2003. It is a Louis Theroux documentary that runs for 60 minutes. In the documentary, Theroux visits the Wild Horse Adult Resort & Spa brothel. Louis Theroux would revisit the subjects of the documentary in his book The Call of the Weird: Travels in American Subcultures. Powaqqatsi, or Powaqqatsi: Life in Transformation, is the 1988 sequel to the experimental 1982 film, Koyaanisqatsi, by Godfrey Reggio. It is the second film in the Qatsi trilogy. Powaqqatsi is a Hopi word meaning "parasitic way of life" or "life in transition". While Koyaanisqatsi focused on modern life in industrial countries, Powaqqatsi, which similarly has no dialogue, focuses more on the conflict in third world countries between traditional ways of life and the new ways of life introduced with industrialization. As with Koyaanisqatsi and the third and final part of the 'Qatsi' trilogy, Naqoyqatsi, the film is strongly related to its soundtrack, written by Philip Glass. Here, human voices appear more than in Koyaanisqatsi, in harmony with the film's message and images. Speed & Angels is a 2008 documentary drama film directed by Peyton Wilson. Nirnaya is a 1979 documentary film directed by Arun Khopkar. The Trail of the Painted Ponies is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Elizabeth Gaylynn Baker. The People of the Kattawapiskak River is a 2012 documentary film by Alanis Obomsawin exploring conditions inside the Attawapiskat First Nation, which in October 2011 declared a state of emergency due to health and safety concerns over a lack of housing and infrastructure, and remained in the public spotlight during the Idle No More protests. Obomsawin was present in the community in 2011, working on another film for the National Film Board of Canada, Hi-Ho Mistahey!, when the housing issue came to national attention. The film follows the crisis up to the Federal Court of Canada decision in August 2012 that ruled the appointment of a third-party manager to fix the housing crisis was unjustified. In addition to filming conditions in the community and interviewing residents, Obomsawin recounts the history of the village, which dates back to 1850 when Catholic missionaries built a chapel on the land. Obomsawin has stated that she uses the name "Kattawapiskak" in place of Attiwapiskat in the film and its title because she believes it to be the community's correct name. F-Line is a 2013 short historical documentary film written and directed by Silvia Turchin. Freedom Machines is a 2004 PBS/P.O.V. documentary that looks at disability in the age of technology, presenting intimate stories of people ages 8-93, whose talents and independence are being unleashed by access to modern, enabling technologies. Nearly twenty years after the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, the film reflects on the gaps between its promise and the realities for our largest minority group – 54,000,000 Americans with disabilities. Whether mainstream tools or inventions such as a stair climbing wheelchair, Freedom Machines examines the power of technology to change lives. Manshin is a 2013 documentary film directed by Park Chan-kyong. Who Shall Live and Who Shall Die is a 1982 documentary that asks whether the United States could have stopped the Holocaust. The film combines previously classified information, rare newsreel footage, and interviews with the politicians who were in office at the time, to tell a behind-the-scenes story of secret motives and inane priorities that allowed for the death of millions. The Los Angeles Times called it, “a devastating political story,” and the New York Times said the, "unadorned" film tells a story not to be proud of. The Queen's Flower is a 1946 Romanian film directed by Paul Călinescu. It was entered into the 1946 Cannes Film Festival. Italia '61 is a 1961 short documentary family film directed by Wojciech Zamecznik and Jan Lenica. Flying over Blue Fields is a 1996 documentary short film written and directed by Audrius Stonys. In the frozen wilderness of Antarctica, where oceans ice over and just staying alive is an achievement, one creature has perfected the art of survival - the emperor penguin.Emperor penguins are sublimely built to conquer the cold - but in a world threatened by climate change, can they take the heat?Parts of Antarctica are warming, giving birth to huge icebergs, and the consequences could be catastrophic in a place where all life is touched by the ice.Using Crittercam technology, National Geographic goes on a virtual ride under the ice with the emperor penguin to study the dramatic impact of climate change on the penguin's world. Portrait of a Girl is a 1966 documentary film directed by John M. Bale. Sailing is a 1963 short documentary film written and directed by Hattum Hoving. The Boys from Baghdad High, also known as Baghdad High, is a British-American-French television documentary film. It was first shown in the United Kingdom at the 2007 Sheffield Doc/Fest, before airing on BBC Two on 8 January 2008. It also aired in many other countries including France, Australia, the United States, Canada, Germany and the Netherlands. It documents the lives of four Iraqi schoolboys of different religious or ethnic backgrounds over the course of one year in the form of a video diary. The documentary was filmed by the boys themselves, who were given video cameras for the project. Directed and produced by Ivan O'Mahoney and Laura Winter of Renegade Pictures and StoryLabTV, for the United Kingdom's BBC, HBO in the United States, and the Franco-German network Arte, The Boys from Baghdad High was produced by Alan Hayling and Karen O'Connor for the BBC, Hans Robert Eisenhauer for Arte, and Sheila Nevins for HBO. The Boys from Baghdad High received high viewership when it initially aired in the UK, and was reviewed favourably in the media. Cosmic Zoom is a 1968 short film directed by Eva Szasz and produced by the National Film Board of Canada. It depicts the relative size of everything in the universe in an 8-minute sequence using animation and animation camera shots. The ground-breaking scientist Percy Julian broke many barriers. The grandson of slaves, he rose up from discrimination and job-loss on the very doorstep of the Depression, and through numerous obstacles from all sides, to become a world-class chemist. His discoveries and innovations led to products that so many use even today, like the drug cortisone. Though it seems his story is not that well-known, it is retold here in a reenactments based on family archives and interviews with colleagues and relatives. Approximately 112 minutes in length. Co-Exist is a 2010 drama film directed by Adam Mazo. Going Blind is a feature-length documentary about vision loss in the United States. Directed by Joseph Lovett, produced by Joseph Lovett and Hilary Klotz Steinman and edited by Jason Szabo and Jamie Hogan. Going Blind premiered at the World Ophthalmology Congress in Berlin in June 2010 and opened in New York at the Quad Cinema in October 2010. The film interweaves Lovett's struggle to keep his glaucoma at bay with the stories of six people he meets who are dealing with different levels of sight loss. The film shows that losing vision is not death but a different perspective and shows how much is available in terms of vision enhancement techniques, low vision therapy such as at Lighthouse International, and new technology to keep people with sight loss engaged in their lives. Going Blind is in educational distribution. An evaluation report of the film's effectiveness and an outreach toolkit on how organizations can best use the film can be downloaded from the homepage of the website as well. Going Blind is also available for streaming and downloading at Amazon.com. 12 Angry Lebanese: The Documentary is a 2009 film written and directed by Zeina Daccache. I Want Your Money is a 2010 American documentary film by filmmaker Ray Griggs. It contrasts Barack Obama to Ronald Reagan. The Right to Win is a 2004 documentary film. Hoover Street Revival is a 2002 documentary directed by Sophie Fiennes. Pretty Old is a documentary film directed by Walter Matteson. Sweet Dreams is a 2012 documentary film about the Rwandan women's drumming troupe Ingoma Nshya, which was founded in 2005 by playwright Odile "Kiki" Katese with women from both sides of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide. The drumming troupe's success then led to the opening of an ice cream store in 2010, which also brings together people from both sides of the genocide. The documentary was co-directed by siblings Lisa Fruchtman and Rob Fruchtman; Lisa Fruchtman had learned of the troupe and the plans for the shop from Katese in 2009. The film has been shown at many film festivals. In late 2013, the film was released to theaters in New York City, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Miriam Bale wrote in her New York Times review, "When viewers are facing the aftermath of genocide in Rwanda, in which hundreds of thousands of Tutsis were slaughtered in 1994, it’s easy to think that ice cream is a comparatively petty concern. But, thankfully, the sibling directors Lisa and Rob Fruchtman have made a nuanced and deftly edited film about a complex issue." The German Who Came to Tea is a 2013 documentary, biography, family, war, short film directed by Kerry Kolbe. The Inuit - The People at the Navel of the Earth is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Staffan Julén and Ylva Julén. Barok u Hrvatskoj is a 1942 documentary short directed by Oktavijan Miletić about the life of Janko Drašković. Music for the film was produced by Croatian composer Boris Papandopulo. Hell's Angel is a 1994 Channel 4 television documentary about Mother Teresa by Christopher Hitchens, a precursor to his book, The Missionary Position. The film claims that she urged the poor to accept their fate, while the rich are portrayed as being favored by God. Hitchens and Tariq Ali wrote the show's script. Hommage à Dürer is a 1984 documentary, short film directed by Gérard Samson. Dead Youth is a 2010 documentary film directed and written by Leandro Listorti. Anger Me is a 2006 documentary film written by Elio Gelmini and Varlo Vitali and directed by Elio Gelmini. The Shape Of Quality is a film that received the 1965 Australian Film Institute Award for Best Public Relations Film. Living in the Overlap is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mary Dalton. Some Babies Die is a documentary film produced by Martyn Down. 1991: A Year to Remember is a documentary film. The Second Game is a 2014 Romanian documentary film directed by Corneliu Porumboiu. The film integrally depicts the Dinamo — Steaua footbal derby played on December 3, 1988; the game is commented on by Porumboiu and his father, Adrian, the referee of that match. It was selected for the Forum section at the 64th Berlin International Film Festival. First Invasion: The War of 1812 is a documentary produced by the History Channel which aired on September 11, 2004. As the name suggests the documentary was about the American War of 1812 when the American's fought the British for the first time since the American Revolutionary War. Coming Attractions: The History of the Movie Trailer is a 2005 documentary film written by Frederick L. Greene and Scott McIsaac and directed by Michael J. Shapiro and Jeff Werner. A Cantor's Tale is a 2005 documentary by Erik Greenberg Anjou. The film profiles Jacob Mendelson, a practitioner of Jewish liturgical music who has dedicated his life to preserving the form's traditional vocal stylings. Anjou follows Mendelson around Borough Park, his old neighborhood in Brooklyn. Mendelson, who carries a tuning fork with him at all times, is prone to burst into song. During their journey through Borough Park, Anjou finds that the neighborhood has a fair number of bakers with vocal talents as good as their knishes. Mendelson also recalls when cantors were as popular as baseball players. "They had groupies," he tells Anjou, a strong incentive for a chubby teenager in high school. Mendelson's mother, who had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, was almost obsessed that her son become a cantor. The film reveals an interesting link to celebrity on the part of Mendelson's father: the older Mendelson once co-owned a truck with the father of Steven Spielberg. The movie's original title was Chazz'n, after the profiled cantor's sobriquet "Chazzan Jack Mendelson." It has also been titled A Cantor's Story. Bay of All Saints is a documentary film by Annie Eastman about the conditions of families who live in a community of palafitas in Salvador, Bahia. Palafitas are shacks built on stilts in the ocean bay inhabited by generations of poor families. The families of this community confront forced relocation as a government program works to reclaim the bay to restore the ecology of the bay. Britten Nocturne is a documentary film directed by Tony Palmer. Facing the Music: The Return of Torvill and Dean is a 1994 TV documentary movie directed by Edward Mirzoeff. It’s The Italian Job so obviously, I head to Kent in England for the race of a lifetime. But first I have to get ready. So, it’s the Fiorano test track in Italy where I spend a while not getting ready at all. I try the gym but it’s all rubbish so instead, I decide to compare Ferrari’s 458 Italia and the limited edition 599 GTO. On paper, that doesn’t seem fair. But in reality…. Next stop is the infamous Imola race circuit. The Stig joins me to get the most out of the Porsche GT3 and its stripped out cousin the GT3 RS. Also present are the Lamborghini Gallardo LP570-4 Superleggera and the jaw-dropping Mercedes SLS AMG with its gullwing doors. My face gets a workout too, thanks to an Ariel Atom. With a V8 engine. Then, for some reason, The Stig does something terrible to the face of Rubens Barrichello. My final Italian shake-down comes from the £1.3 million, Nurburgring lap record holder – the Zonda R with its 750 horsepower V12 and slick tyres. Finally, I’m ready. So it’s back to England for my first ever Classic Touring Car Race...I don’t know the car, I don’t know the circuit and I’m up against 20 experienced rivals...What could possibly go wrong? Miss Senior Sweetheart is a 2009 documentary film written by and directed by Sabine Steyer. The Exile and Death of Andrei Tarkovsky is a 1987 biographical documentary film directed by Ebbo Demant. Tradition Is a Temple is an American documentary film about New Orleans jazz culture and modernization’s effect on American traditions. The Shutdown is a short film. Dadaab Stories is a 2013 documentary film directed by K. Ryan Jones. Pat XO is a 2013 sports documentary film directed by Lisa Lax and Nancy Stern Winters. The camera follows Justin Bieber (1994- ) during the ten days leading up to his August, 2010, sold-out show at Madison Square Garden. Footage of these ten days of concerts, rehearsals, and down time with boyhood friends, his mom, and his entourage is inter-cut with home movies, old photos, and interviews showing a musical prodigy who loves to perform, comes to the attention of an Atlanta agent via YouTube, impresses Usher, and rockets to international stardom soon after his 15th birthday. His manager emphasizes the importance of social media and of Justin's work ethic and personality in making him a star; the camera emphasizes Bieber's look. His mom and grandparents shine. Released into theaters in the U.S. and Canada for a limited run just a few weeks after the original film debuted at the box office, Justin Bieber: Never Say Never -- Director's Fan Cut features 40 minutes of new footage, which was added after director Jon M. Chu trimmed the running time of the initial cut by 30 minutes. Tzedek / The Righteous is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Marek Halter. Sleepless Nights Stories is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jonas Mekas. McLibel is a documentary film directed by Franny Armstrong and Ken Loach for Spanner Films about the McLibel case. The film was first completed, as a 52-minute television version, in 1997, after the conclusion of the original McLibel trial. It was then extended with new footage to 85-minute feature length in 2005, after the McLibel defendants took their case to the European Court of Human Rights. A Queen's World Tour is a 1954 documentary film directed by Oxley Hughan. Pavel i Lyalya is a 1999 film directed by Victor Kossakovsky. Aletta Jacobs: Het Hoogste Streven is a 1995 Dutch documentary film directed by Nouchka van Brakel. The Movie Orgy is a 1968 film directed by Joe Dante and produced by Jon Davison. It is a seven-hour-long compilation of film clips, commercials, and film trailers assembled by Dante when he was a college student. The film, assembled without permission of the clips' owners, toured colleges and repertory cinemas with support from Schlitz beer. A digital video version, transferred from original 16mm film and trimmed to approximately 4.5 hours, was eventually produced by Dante. Swandown is a 2012 film directed by Andrew Kötting. To make the film, Andrew Kötting and Iain Sinclair pedaled a swan pedalo over 160 miles down the River Thames from the seaside in Hastings to Hackney in East London, occasionally joined by guests including Alan Moore, Stewart Lee, Dudley Sutton, Dr Mark Lythgoe and Marcia Farquhar. A Long Haul is a 2010 documentary film about Montauk, NY charter boat captain Bart Ritchie and his struggles with the effects of a declining economy and governmental regulations on the fishing industry. The film was produced and directed by Nathaniel Kramer, who, in addition to being a filmmaker, is a photographer and recreational fisherman. The film has been well received, screening as an official selection in numerous festivals including: the Astoria/LIC International Film Festival, DocMiami International Film Festival, Connecticut Film Festival, EdinDocs, Lighthouse Film Festival, New Filmmakers New York, Philadelphia Independent Film Festival, The IndieFest, Accolade Festival, and won Best Documentary Short Film, Best Director, and Best Cinematography for a Short Documentary at the Los Angeles Movie Awards. Homework is a 1989 Iranian narrative documentary film written, directed and edited by Abbas Kiarostami. The film was shot—on 16mm—in late January and/or early February 1988 at Tehran's Shahid Masumi primary school. Lacrau is a 2013 historical documentary adventure drama film written and directed by João Vladimiro. The Special Need is a documentary drama adventure family film directed by Carlo Zoratti. A Preface to Red is a 2011 short experimental documentary film directed by Jonathan Schwartz. Ana Ana is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Corinne van Egeraat, Sarah Ibrahim, Nadine Salib, Wafaa Samir, Sondos Shabayek and Petr Lom. Anne Braden: Southern Patriot is a 2012 biographical historical documentary film directed by Anne Lewis and Mimi Pickering. Maman et Eve is a 1996 documentary film directed by Paul Carrière. Vai viegli būt jaunam? is a Soviet-era Latvian documentary film directed by Juris Podnieks. It was filmed in 1986 with dialog in both Latvian and Russian, and is considered to be among the most controversial movies of its era. It was one of the five winners of the 1987 International Documentary Association awards. The movie speaks about young people who perished as a result of growing up in Soviet society - their conflicts with parents and society, the patronizing attitudes of their teachers and the authorities, the fear that there is no meaning to their lives. Among the young people portrayed are high-schoolers looking for their place in life, a young mother worried about the future of her daughter after the Chernobyl catastrophe, a young man follower of the Hare Krishna movement, as well young adults returning from compulsory military service in the Soviet war in Afghanistan and having become ones of 'the lost generation'. The film's opening scene documents a concert by the banned Latvian rock band, Pērkons. The movie had a major impact in the Soviet Union. It was seen by at least 28 million people during its first year. In all, 85 countries bought the rights to show the movie. The DeVilles is a 2009 documentary film directed by Nicole Nielsen Horanyi and co-written with Anders Frithiof August. Talhotblond is a 2009 documentary, detailing an Internet love triangle which resulted in a real life homicide, in a case called the "Internet Chatroom Murder." Adventures in Wild California is a 70mm American documentary film showcasing the scenery and extreme sports found in California. It is narrated by Golden Globe-winning actor Jimmy Smits and was released to IMAX theaters in 2000. The film is directed by Academy Award-nominated director and cinematographer Greg MacGillivray. California's geography and culture - which the film asserts inspires people to take chances, is the focus of the documentary. Extreme sports such as sky diving and surfing are captured with dramatic aerial free-fall and underwater photography, while examples such as Walt Disney's creation of an entertainment empire based on a "little mouse", the construction of the Golden Gate bridge during the Great Depression, and the establishment of high-tech Silicon Valley showcase the risk-taking California inspires. A Letter to Freddy Buache is a 1982 French short documentary film directed by Jean-Luc Godard and addressed to the Swiss film critic Freddy Buache. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival. Profit Motive and the Whispering Wind is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by John Gianvito. A Year in Burgundy is a 2012 documentary drama family history film directed by David Kennard. Magic Trip is a documentary film directed by Alison Ellwood and Alex Gibney, about Ken Kesey, Neal Cassady, and the Merry Pranksters. The documentary uses the 16 mm color footage shot by Kesey and the Merry Pranksters during their 1964 cross-country bus trip in the "Further" bus. The hyperkinetic Cassady is frequently seen driving the bus, jabbering, and sitting next to a sign that boasts, "Neal gets things done". The film was released in the US on August 5, 2011 by Magnolia Pictures. Tackling Peace is a 2009 documentary film directed by Marc Radomsky. The Knights of the Lagoon is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Walter Bencini. Dark Side of the Moon is a French mockumentary by director William Karel which originally aired on Arte in 2002 with the title Opération Lune. The basic premise for the film is the theory that the television footage from the Apollo 11 Moon landing was faked and recorded in a studio by the CIA with help from director Stanley Kubrick. It features some surprising guest appearances, most notably by Donald Rumsfeld, Dr. Henry Kissinger, Alexander Haig, Vernon Walters, Buzz Aldrin and Stanley Kubrick's widow, Christiane Kubrick. The official presentation of the film says: "Filmmaker William Karel pursues his reflection on the relation of the United States with image, cinema and their capacity to produce "show". What other story can lend itself to such a examination but the space conquest, a war of image and show more than anything else. What if it was just a huge hoax initiated by the two great powers? Between lies and truths, this film mixes actual facts and others, completely trumped-up. Playing with irony and lie, its purpose is to entertain and raise the question of the use of archive, which can be made to tell whatever you want". Imagining Indians is a 1992 documentary film produced and directed by Native American filmmaker, Victor Masayesva, Jr.. The documentary attempts to reveal the misrepresentation of Indigenous Native American culture and tradition in Classical Hollywood films by interviews with different Indigenous Native American actors and extras from various tribes throughout the United States. Documentary about Dame Joan Sutherland, one of the greatest operatic performers of the late twentieth century, who died in October 2010. Shy and lacking in confidence, she had sung unnoticed at Covent Garden for seven years after arriving from Australia, but over the course of twelve months was transformed into La Stupenda. With a focus on the two roles - Lucia di Lammamoor and Alcina - that launched her, the film features interviews with Dame Joan, Richard Bonynge, Franco Zeffirelli, Placido Domingo and Luciano Pavarotti. Cannubi: A Vineyard Kissed By God is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by James Orr. A Message To The World is a film directed by Caroline Catz. Livin' Reel is a documentary film directed by Mark Cowart, Carolyn McDonald, Shelley Justiss, and K. Davis Jackson. The falcon is a sacred animal in Dubai and a symbol of power and richness. Every tradition-minded family owns at least one falcon for their favourite activity : hunting. In order to take care about the falcons, Dr. Rempel decided to build « The Dubai Falcon Hospital » in the middle of the desert. It is personally owned by the royal family. Equipped with an X-ray room, a surgery department, three ambulances for emergencies and a large laboratory, this eccentric hospital is on the cutting edge of technological progress. Includes two programs on one of Hollywood's hottest stars. "THE KID WHO TOOK HOLLYWOOD" tells the rags to riches story of one of today's hottest stars, Leonardo DiCaprio. Includes biographical information, footage from the independent film "Don's Plum" which has been unreleased, and interviews with Hollywood stars such as Arnold Schwarzenegger and James Cameron. Also includes "IN HIS OWN WORDS", a compilation of interviews with Leo covering his career, his personal life, and growing up under the spotlight. Hollywood between Paranoia and Sci-Fi. The Power of Myth is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Clara Kuperberg and Julia Kuperberg. Rosita, The Favorite Of Third Reich is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Pablo Berthelon. Concerning Violence is a 2014 Swedish documentary film written and directed by Göran Olsson. American singer and actress Lauryn Hill served as the narrator of the film. The film premiered in-competition in the World Cinema Documentary Competition at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. In May 2013, Films Boutique acquired the world-wide distribution rights of the film. The film also premiered at 64th Berlin International Film Festival in Panorama Dokumente section, in February 2014. It won a prize at the festival. The film also premiered in competition at 2014 Göteborg International Film Festival on January 30, 2014. John Cassavetes career as an independent filmmaker is told through his own words and from interviews with twenty artists and friends. The first half thoroughly examines Cassavetes' unique approach to character and performance. The second half brings to life Cassavetes' deep humanity in chapters about family filmmaking, storytelling, and the tools of transformation. Life, a Long Way Away is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Marc Weymuller. This incredible film features the full story of Elvis and Sun Records. A fascinating 90-minute documentary film telling the story of Elvis Presley's first recording sessions - and featuring rare footage, seldom seen photos and exclusive interviews with those who were there at the time. Died Young, Stayed Pretty is a 2008 documentary movie on underground indie-rock poster art and its subculture. The film was written, directed and produced by Eileen Yaghoobian who filmed on location in 30 different states from 2004 to 2007. It features posters for Radiohead, White Stripes, Arcade Fire, The Flaming Lips, The Melvins, Nick Cave, Broken Social Scene, Black Keys, Sonic Youth, Pearl Jam, Queens of the Stone Age, Bob Dylan and Marianne Faithfull. The Lost Bird Project is a documentary film directed by Deborah Dickson. With a running time of over 5 hours, this extensive, in-depth documentary has been released to coincide with the Stones 40th anniversary. A vast array of friends, family, fellow musicians, biographers, and managers recollect the amazing career of the band in old and new interview footage. ROLLING STONES - JUST FOR THE RECORD is neither endorsed nor authorized by The Rolling Stones. Tom Jobim: No More Blues is a 2005 biographical, music documentary. Lumpinee is a 2010 documentary film directed by Chira Wichaisuthikul. Back to the Fatherland is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Václav Reischl. Sound of Heimat - Deutschland singt is a 2012 documentary written and directed by Arne Birkenstock and Jan Tengeler. American Radical: The Trials of Norman Finkelstein is a 2009 documentary film about the life of the American academic Norman Finkelstein, directed and produced by David Ridgen and Nicolas Rossier. The documentary features Finkelstein and several of his supporters and opponents, including Noam Chomsky and Alan Dershowitz. Maria And I is a 2010 documentary drama film written and directed by Félix Fernández de Castro, with writing credits by Miguel Gallardo and Ibon Olaskoaga. Berlin-Stettin is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Volker Koepp. A Rubberband Is an Unlikely Instrument is a 2011 documentary musical drama directed by Matt Boyd. Seymour: An Introduction is an American documentary film, released in 2014. Directed by Ethan Hawke, the film documents the career of Seymour Bernstein, a classical pianist who abandoned his rising career as a concert pianist at age 50 to retreat to a more modest, private life as a music educator and composer. The film debuted on August 30, 2014 at the Telluride Film Festival. At the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival, the film was second runner-up for the People's Choice Award for Best Documentary, behind Do I Sound Gay? and the winner, Beats of the Antonov. Where the Trail Ends is a 2013 documentary, adventure, drama, and sports film directed by Jeremy Grant. Torre Bela is a 1975 documentary reality television film written and directed by Thomas Harlan. Girls Like Us is a 1997 documentary film directed byTina Di Feliciantonio and Jane C. Wagner. It follows the lives of four teenage girls of Philadelphia for four years. Elia Kazan: Outsider is a 1982 documentary film directed by Annie Tresgot and Michel Ciment. Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe is a short documentary film directed by Les Blank in 1980 which depicts director Werner Herzog living up to his promise that he would eat his shoe if Errol Morris ever completed the film Gates of Heaven. The film includes clips from both Gates of Heaven and Herzog's 1970 feature Even Dwarfs Started Small. Comic song "Old Whisky Shoes", played by the Walt Solek Band, is the signature tune over the opening and closing credits. The film features Herzog cooking his shoes at the Berkeley, California restaurant Chez Panisse, with the help of chef Alice Waters. He is shown eating one of the shoes before an audience at the premiere of Gates of Heaven at the nearby UC Theater. He did not eat the sole of the shoe, however, explaining that one does not eat the bones of the chicken. There are also clips of a short interview where Herzog discusses the destructive capitalistic effects of television and mankind's lack of adequate imagery. Blank went on to direct Burden of Dreams, a feature-length documentary about Herzog and the making of Fitzcarraldo. Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe is included as an extra on the Criterion Collection edition of the Burden of Dreams DVD. Blue Moon Rising is a British sport documentary film released on 17 September 2010. The film title is a play on words referring to Manchester City's fan anthem, Blue Moon and chronicles the fortunes of Manchester City Football Club through the 2009-2010 football season with insight from Manchester City supporters. Shot and produced by Endemol in conjunction with the club, and features exclusive interviews with staff, players, board members and fans throughout the season. The first trailer was unveiled in August 2010 and the film is set for gradual theatrical release on a weekly basis at different cinemas across the United Kingdom commencing the week beginning the 17 September 2010. The film was received mixed reactions from critics, with some citing very strong production values and realistic and humorous portrayal of football supporters and viewing accessibility for all football fans regardless of allegiance. Milk: Hollywood Comes to San Francisco is a 2009 Short Documentary film. Reading Between The Lines is a 1989 short documentary film directed by Martha Davis. Die Stiere des Hidalgo is an East German film. It was released in 1959. The Basic income, a cultural impulse is a German-Swiss documentary that promotes the idea of a Basic income. The film, directed by Daniel Häni and Enno Schmidt, was released in 2008. Since then, it has been translated into several languages among which are Bulgarian, Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Slovak, Slovenian, and Spanish. The documentary has been mainly broadcast on the internet and has reached more than 500,000 views by 2012 according to the official website. Versions with subtitles in many languages as well as dubbed versions in French and Slovak can be viewed on YouTube. "The video was used as a basis for discussion in numerous groups during the time the Swiss petition for a Basic Income to be included in the Constitution was under way." The Rich Have Their Own Photographers is a documentary film directed by Ezra Bookstein. Humanoids is a 2011 short sci-fi film directed by Mariana Oliva. Rock Prophecies is a 2009 documentary film concerning rock photographer Robert M. Knight. It was directed by John Chester and produced by Tim Kaiser. The Royal Wedding is a tv program special on BBC that presents live coverage of the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton. How do you make your mall stand out? By building one of the world's largest indoor ski resorts--in the deserts of Dubai! Ski Dubai features snow-making machines and slopes ranging in difficulty from easy to "black diamond." Freedom Fighters is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jamie Meltzer. 444 Days to Freedom: What Really Happened in Iran is a TV program. Cinemafia is a 1980 documentary film directed by Roger Busschots and Dirk Nijland. Caine's Arcade is a short documentary film by Nirvan Mullick released in April 2012 that featured an eponymous arcade created by then 9-year-old Caine Monroy out of cardboard boxes and everyday objects. The boy ran his arcade from his father's auto parts store in Los Angeles during mid-2011. Mullick was inspired to make the documentary after unexpectedly coming across the arcade while getting a part for his car, discovering the level of commitment, work, and thought Caine had put into the arcade, and becoming Caine's first customer. In the course of filming the documentary, Mullick arranged for a flash mob from social media sites to come by the arcade, increasing the awareness of the arcade. The film, on its release to Vimeo, soon became a viral video. Numerous people donated money towards Caine's college fund. Subsequently, schools around the world have recreated similar cardboard arcades, and from the positive response, inspired Mullick and the team behind the film to start the Imagination Foundation, a non-profit group aimed to find and foster creativity and entrepreneurship in children across the world. La Commune (Paris, 1871) is a 2000 historical drama film directed by Peter Watkins about the Paris Commune. It is a historical re-enactment in the style of a documentary, and was shot in just 13 days in an abandoned factory on the outskirts of Paris. The large cast is mainly non-professional, including many immigrants from North Africa, and they did much of their own research for the project. As Watkins says, "The Paris Commune has always been severely marginalized by the French education system, despite - or perhaps because - it is a key event in the history of the European working class, and when we first met, most of the cast admitted that they knew little or nothing about the subject. It was very important that the people become directly involved in our research on the Paris Commune, thereby gaining an experiential process in analyzing those aspects of the current French system which are failing in their responsibility to provide citizens with a truly democratic and participatory process." Like many of Watkins' later films, it is quite lengthy - a long cut runs 5 hours and 45 minutes, though the more common version is 3 and a half hours long. The Emerald Diamond is a documentary following the history of Baseball Ireland and the Irish National Baseball team. It was released in 2006. Director John Fitzgerald financed the film almost entirely on credit cards while working freelance at various jobs in the TV and film industries. The film crew was made up of professionals from in and around Fitzgerald's hometown of Valhalla, NY, with each crew member coincidentally living in towns along the Metro North Railroad's Harlem Line - leading to the creation of Harlem Line Pictures. Telos: The Fantastic World of Eugene Tssui is a documentary film directed by Kyung Lee. "As focused as this superbly conceived examination of New York Times reporter Nicholas D. Kristof is on its subject, filmmaker Eric Daniel Metzgar has a much greater arena in mind in this multilayered exploration of journalism than just the work and impact of the Pulitzer Prize–winning columnist. That journalism, at least as we have known it, is undergoing a massive transformation is certainly no secret, but Metzgar amplifies this limited insight with a fully fleshed-out portrait of the importance of real news gathering in enabling democratic nations to function and illuminating a world in chaos. Tracking Kristof as he traveled during the summer of 2007 to the Congo to report on the conflict and desperate poverty besieging that African republic in an attempt to put this crisis on the international radar, as he did with his articles on Darfur, the film immerses us in a discussion of the ways this kind of reportage reaches the public, effects change, and creates a humanitarian response.It is far too simple minded to see virulently opinionated blogging and brainless infotainment overtaking and defining the future of knowledge and understanding, but the crisis in journalism is real, and this sophisticated, analytical, and lyrically heartbreaking account should become required viewing for anyone who cares about the future of ideas." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Je sais que j'ai tort mais demandez à mes copains ils disent la même chose is a 1983 documentary, short film directed by Pierre Levy. Songs is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Eduardo Coutinho. It’s Everybody’s Ocean is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Atsuko Quirk. Fat, Sick & Nearly Dead 2 is a documentary film directed by Kurt Engfehr. The Last Round: Chuvalo vs. Ali is a 2003 documentary film written by Stephan Brunt and directed by Joseph Blasioli. Weisse Raben - Alptraum Tschetschenien is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Johann Feindt and Tamara Trampe. Bam 6.6 is a documentary about the 2003 Bam earthquake in Iran. The film, subtitled "Humanity has no Borders", was produced and directed by Jahangir Golestanparast. The film documents the plight of American tourists Tobb Dell'Oro and his Jewish fiancée, Adele Freedman, after they are buried under the quake's rubble. Particular attention is paid to the ways in which grief-stricken Iranians make efforts to treat the couple's injuries and comfort Adele afterwards. The film's format combines footage of the earthquake with interviews of survivors and people who coordinated humanitarian efforts. Tango Tango is a 1993 film directed by Frans Buyens. B.B. King "Into the Night" is a 1985 documentary film directed by Jeff Okun and co - directed by John Landis for the Universal and it was produced by Leslie Belzberg, John Landis and George Folsey Jr. Vakha and Magomed is a short documentary film directed by Marta Prus. Isa Kremer: The People's Diva, is a documentary produced in 2000 and directed by Nina Baker Feinberg and Ted Schillinger. It focuses on Isa Kremer, an international singing sensation. Du und mancher Kamerad is an East German film. It was released in 1956. An Honest Liar is a 2014 biographical feature film documentary, written by Tyler Measom and Greg O'Toole, directed and produced by Measom and Justin Weinstein through Pure Mutt Productions, and distributed by Part2 Pictures. The film documents on the life of former magician, escape artist, and skeptical educator James Randi, in particular the investigations through which Randi publicly exposed psychics, faith healers, and con-artists, as well as his relationship with his boyfriend of 25 years, José Alvarez, who at the time of filming, had been discovered to be living under a false identity, calling into question "whether Randi was the deceiver or the deceived." Girls Aloud: Ten Years at the Top is a documentary released to coincide with the tenth anniversary of British all-female pop group Girls Aloud. The documentary follows Girls Aloud from their formation on the ITV reality television programme Popstars: The Rivals to their reunion after a three-year hiatus. To Be Alive! is a 1964 American short documentary film co-directed by Francis Thompson and Alexander Hammid. The film is notable for its use of a multi-screen format and for winning the Academy Award in 1966 for Documentary Short Subject. Before We Forget is a 2011 observational documentary film about two women with dementia who live in an Asian society where terminal illnesses and dying remain taboo. It is directed by Singaporean first-time filmmakers Jeremy Boo and Lee Xian Jie, who have also started an online platform that encourages people in Asia to share their experiences about dementia. Katt Williams: 9 Live is a 2010 comedy documentary directed and written by Phillip Andrew Morton. Yippee, also known as Yippee: A Journey to Jewish Joy, is a 2006 documentary film directed by Paul Mazursky. 2012: Time for Change is a 2010 feature-length documentary film based in part on the books of Daniel Pinchbeck, directed by João G. Amorim, and premiered on April 9, 2010 at the Lumiere Theater in San Francisco. The film presents a positive alternative to apocalyptic doom and gloom, and features, among others, David Lynch, Sting, Ellen Page, Gilberto Gil, Barbara Marx Hubbard, and Paul Stamets. The Sweeney: The Life and Work of Jim Sweeney is a 2010 documentary film directed by Seeta Indrani. An Avenue Called Brazil is a 1989 film directed by Octavio Bezerra. Behind The Mask is a 2012 short documentary film written by Mariam Anwari and directed by Mariam Anwari and Evan Zhang. Invisible Picture Show is a 2013 documentary film directed by Tim Travers Hawkins. The City Dark is a documentary film by filmmaker Ian Cheney about light pollution. It won the Best Score/Music Award at the 2011 SXSW Film Festival and was nominated for at the 34th News & Documentary Emmy Awards. Muscle Shoals is a 2013 documentary film about FAME Studios and Muscle Shoals Sound Studio in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. The film was released by Magnolia Pictures on September 27, 2013. Trekkies 2 is the 2004 sequel to the 1997 documentary film Trekkies. This documentary film travels throughout the world, mainly Europe, to show fans of Star Trek commonly known as Trekkies. It also profiles people from the first film, notably Barbara Adams and Gabriel Köerner. Also featured are Star Trek-themed punk bands from Sacramento, California most notably the "No Kill I" franchise. This includes "No Kill I", "No Kill I: The Next Generation" and "No Kill I: Deep Space Nine". Bugs Bunny: Superstar is a 1975 Looney Tunes documentary film, narrated by Orson Welles and produced and directed by Larry Jackson. It was the first documentary to examine the history of the Warner Bros. cartoons, and includes nine Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies cartoons which were previously released during the 1940s: What's Cookin' Doc?, directed by Bob Clampett The Wild Hare, directed by Tex Avery A Corny Concerto, directed by Bob Clampett I Taw a Putty Tat, directed by Friz Freleng Rhapsody Rabbit, directed by Friz Freleng Walky Talky Hawky, directed by Robert McKimson My Favorite Duck, directed by Chuck Jones Hair-Raising Hare, directed by Chuck Jones The Old Grey Hare, directed by Bob Clampett Bugs Bunny: Superstar also includes interviews with some legendary Warner Bros. animation directors of that period: Friz Freleng, Tex Avery and especially Bob Clampett, who has the most screen time. Some contemporary critics pointed out that Clampett's important role, as one of the primary developers of the early Warner cartoons, was slanted to some degree, due to his prominent presence in this film. El Gusto is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Safinez Bousbia. A Winter of Cyclists is a 2013 documentary film by Mike Prendergast. The film chronicles a group of Colorado participants as they attempt to complete a 52 day winter bicycle commuting challenge created by Scot Stucky. The challenge, known as “The Icy Bike Winter Commuting Challenge”, was created to encourage people to cycle to work from October to March, during the darker, colder and the snowier months of the year. The film captures the wide diversity in which riders adapt to new commuting logistics, adverse weather conditions and riding in the dark. And when the Colorado riders encounter an unexpected solidarity across the American continent and into Europe via Facebook, the film provides glimpses into a broader global winter cycling community that is just becoming aware of each other. Facebook Group members encourage each other, share weather reports, gear tips, and inspirational and touching personal stories. The film concludes with the results of the challenge and the riders reflection on their winter of cycling. Eyes of the Detective is a 2001 documentary film directed by Teresa Hunt. Cardboard Titanics is a 2011 short documentary comedy film directed by Sam Frazier Jr.. Koyaanisqatsi, also known as Koyaanisqatsi: Life Out of Balance, is a 1982 film directed by Godfrey Reggio with music composed by Philip Glass and cinematography by Ron Fricke. The film consists primarily of slow motion and time-lapse footage of cities and many natural landscapes across the United States. The visual tone poem contains neither dialogue nor a vocalized narration: its tone is set by the juxtaposition of images and music. Reggio explained the lack of dialogue by stating "it's not for lack of love of the language that these films have no words. It's because, from my point of view, our language is in a state of vast humiliation. It no longer describes the world in which we live." In the Hopi language, the word Koyaanisqatsi means "unbalanced life". The film is the first in the Qatsi trilogy of films: it is followed by Powaqqatsi and Naqoyqatsi. The trilogy depicts different aspects of the relationship between humans, nature, and technology. Koyaanisqatsi is the best known of the trilogy and is considered a cult film. However, because of copyright issues, the film was out of print for most of the 1990s. The Garden is a 2008 American documentary film directed by Scott Hamilton Kennedy. It tells the story of the now demolished South Central Farm; a community garden and urban farm located in Los Angeles, California. The Garden details the plight of the farmers who organized and worked on the farm. The owner of the lot decided he didn't want to allow the farmers to use it anymore, and had the garden bulldozed. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature on 22 January 2009. The Garden includes appearances by Danny Glover, Daryl Hannah, and Antonio Villaraigosa. Acting My Age is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Robin Toyne. Searching for Sugar Man is a 2012 Swedish–British documentary film directed and written by Malik Bendjelloul, which details the efforts of two Cape Town fans in the late 1990s, Stephen 'Sugar' Segerman and Craig Bartholomew Strydom, to find out whether the rumoured death of American musician Sixto Rodriguez was true, and, if not, to discover what had become of him. Rodriguez's music, which never took off in the United States, had become wildly popular in South Africa, but little was known about him there. On 10 February 2013, the film won the BAFTA Award for Best Documentary at the 66th British Academy Film Awards in London, and two weeks later it won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 85th Academy Awards in Hollywood. Bendjelloul committed suicide a year later. I'm British But... is a 1990 short documentary film written and directed by Gurinder Chadha. The Year 1939 is a film written and directed by Peter von Bagh. Influences: From Yesterday to Today is a 1999 TV movie written by Charles A. Duncombe Jr. and Craig Hoffman, and directed by Stacy Peralta. Heart to Heart is a 1949 American short documentary film about heart disease directed by Gunther von Fritsch. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Hard to be God is a 2012 documentary film written by Antoine Cattin and directed by Pavel Kostomarov and Antoine Cattin. Private File is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Saad Hendawi. Dead End Kids is a 1986 documentary written and directed by JoAnne Akalaitis. 942 Dakar, historia de una familia is a Spanish 2008 documentary film. Independence in Sight is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Lauren Lindberg and Sidney Matterson. The Lumberfros is a documentary film written and directed by Stéphanie Lanthier. Winter Nomads is a 2012 documentary film written by Claude Muret and Manuel von Stürler, and directed by Manuel von Stürler. My Dear Gay Teacher is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Saraswati Kavula. G: Methamphetamine on the Navajo Nation, known simply as G is a 2004 independent documentary film directed and produced by Shonie De La Rosa and Larry Blackhorse Lowe. It explores the effect that methamphetamine has had on the Navajo Nation and interviews the people whose lives have been affected by the highly addictive drug. Of Confucius, S-Spots and Toyguns is a 1999 film directed by Deep Prakash. Making the Boys is a 2010 film directed by Crayton Robey. "A documentary about one of the most famous gay films of the 1960s. The Boys in the Band was originally an off-Broadway play about a gay birthday party, by a young Mart Crowley. Overnight success in 1968 led to the making of a faithful adaptation of the play by William Friedkin with the original cast in 1969. Featuring a wealth of archive footage and a fantastic range of interview subjects including a few surviving cast members, at the centre of the film is a very detailed portrait of Mart Crowley himself. Set designers, critics, playwrights and others recall the extraordinary impact of the play and Friedkin gives a powerful interview. Crowley gives an insight into the making of this ground-breaking work. No other dramatic work has ever quite so faithfully and savagely created a world of bitchy, insecure gay men as The Boys in the Band, nor so many memorable one-liners." Quoting Brian Robinson from the 2011 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival site. Descenso is a 2000 short documentary film written and directed by Antonino Isordia. TV's 50 Greatest Stars was a one-off British television awards show which invited the viewing public to vote for their favourite on-screen stars from a list compiled by the broadcaster ITV. Fifty actors, actresses, presenters and comedians, both alive and dead, were featured on the list, the number 50 being chosen to coincide with ITV's fiftieth birthday celebrations. The two-hour show, directed by Mark Robinson, was hosted by Coronation Street actor Bradley Walsh, who ran through the stars in reverse order – the order was determined by the public, who could vote, either online or in the TV Times, for five of their favourite celebrities. Members of the public could also nominate other television celebrities who had not been included on the list. Actor David Jason won with Morecambe and Wise and John Thaw coming in second and third place respectively; the majority of nominees were comedians, a fifth were deceased and men outnumbered women by almost five to one. Walsh was quoted as saying "I'm delighted to be involved in this show. It will be a great celebration of some of the most fantastic stars from the last 50 years. Bugarach is a 2014 documentary drama film written and directed by Ventura Durall, Salvador Sunyer and Sergi Cameron. Shameless: The ART of Disability is a documentary film by Bonnie Sherr Klein about persons with disabilities. Produced in 2006 by the National Film Board of Canada, it is Klein's first film since a catastrophic stroke in 1987 left her a quadriplegic. The film explores disability culture and the transformational power art has for persons with disabilities. Klein is featured in the film, along with fellow artists with disabilities Catherine Frazee, a poet and writer; humourist David Roche; dancer and choreographer Geoff McMurchy; and writer and artist Persimmon Blackbridge. Vancouver musician Veda Hille contributed music for the film. Klein gathers these artists for a pyjama party where they explore Hollywood stereotypes of people with disabilities. The artists decide to meet a year later at Vancouver's Kickstart Festival with the intent of creating their own images of disability. The film is set mainly in British Columbia, in Vancouver, Roberts Creek and Hornby Island, with brief sequences in San Francisco and Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley. Extended Family is a 2012 short, documentary, biography and family film written by Jill Hodges and directed by J Baab and Jill Hodges. David Beckham: Life of an Icon is a 2007 documentary film. Jefferson's Secret Bible is a 2013 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Lighting Direction & Scenic Design nominated tv movie aired on 20 February 2012 in USA. Mother Superior is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Alex Mack and Diana Montero. Autour du Borinage is a 1936 documentary film directed by Jean Fonteyne. The Confessions of Kateryna K. is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Miroslav Janek. Elbert Hubbard: An American Original is a 2010 News & Documentary Emmy Award nominated work for Outstanding Lighting Direction and Scenic Design. Islam: Empire of Faith is a documentary series, made in 2000, that details the history of Islam, from the birth of the Islamic Prophet, Muhammad to the Ottoman Empire. It is narrated by Ben Kingsley and is available as three DVDs or two video volumes in NTSC format. The first episode deals with the life of Muhammad, the second with the early Caliphates, Crusades, and Mongol invasion, and the third with the Ottoman Empire and Safavid dynasty. The Dud Effect is a 2008 film directed by Deimantas Narkevicius. Living the Dance is a 2011 documentary drama biography film written and directed by Marijke Jongbloed. A documentary covering the neo-burlesque scene in Seattle, Washington. It primarily follows a class of 10 women who are taking a striptease course at the Academy of Burlesque under the tutelage of Miss Indigo Blue with the intent to graduate on stage in front of a live appreciative audience. Many additional performances by notable Seattle artists are also included in this film. Guided Tour is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by René Frölke. Soshite Akiko wa...: Aru dansâ no shouzou is a documentary film directed by Sumiko Haneda. Mein kleines Kind is a 2001 German documentary film written and directed by Katja Baumgarten. Victory in the Ukraine and the Expulsion of the Germans from the Boundaries of the Ukrainian Soviet Earth is a 1945/2005 documentary film directed by Aleksandr Dovzhenko and Yuliya Solntseva. The Look of Silence is a 2014 Danish documentary film directed by Joshua Oppenheimer and executive produced by Werner Herzog, Errol Morris, and Andre Singer, about the Indonesian killings of 1965–66. It was screened in the official competition at the 71st Venice International Film Festival, where it won the Grand Jury Prize, the International Film Critics Award, the Italian online critics award, the European Film Critics Award, as well as the Human Rights Nights Award. The Look of Silence is a sequel to Oppenheimer's 2012 film The Act of Killing. Italianamerican is a 1974 documentary directed by Martin Scorsese and featuring Scorsese's parents, Catherine and Charles. The Scorseses talk about their experiences as Italian immigrants in New York among other things, while having dinner at their flat on Elizabeth Street. Scorsese's mother also instructs how to cook her meatballs, a recipe later featured in the credits of the film. Among the subjects discussed in the film are family, religion, their origins, Italian ancestors, life in Italy after the war and the hardships of poor Sicilian immigrants in America striving to make ends meet. Andrei is a 2006 documentary short film written and directed by Arsen Azatyan and Narine Mkrtchyan. Que Caramba es la Vida is a 2014 documentary film directed by Doris Dörrie. Hammer & Tickle: The Communist Joke Book is a 2006 documentary film about nature of Russian political jokes under the powerful and socially restrictive Communist regime of the Soviet Union and her satellite nations. The film's name exemplifies the kind of mockery or criticism of the regime that the Soviet government would have found to be disagreeable by playing on the symbol of communism itself, the hammer and sickle. The film tells the story of the power that jokes had to enable social and political change and advance personal freedoms from within the USSR - the film's opening scene takes quote from George Orwell's 1984: "Every joke is a tiny revolution." Die Standing Up is a 2011 documentary film written by Jacaranda Correa, Martha Orozco and Rodolfo Santa Maria and directed by Jacaranda Correa. Handsworth Songs is a 1986 documentary film directed by John Akomfrah. Hécuba, un sueño de pasión is a 2006 documentary film written by Arantxa Aguirre and directed by Arantxa Aguirre and José Luis López-Linares. Don't Say No Until I Finish Talking: The Story of Richard D. Zanuck is a 2013 documentary/biography film written and directed by Laurent Bouzereau. Dove's Cry is a documentary film directed by Ganit Ilouz. Decasia is a 2002 American found footage film by Bill Morrison, featuring an original score by Michael Gordon. The film is a meditation on old, decaying silent films. It begins and ends with scenes of a dervish and is bookended with old footage showing how film is processed. Nothing was done to accelerate the decomposition of the actual film prints, some of which were copied from the University of South Carolina's Moving Image Research Collections. The film's musical soundtrack features several detuned pianos and an orchestra playing out of phase with itself, adding to the fractured and decomposing nature of the film. Two films have been positively identified: J. Farrell MacDonald's The Last Egyptian, written, produced, and based on the novel by L. Frank Baum, and William S. Hart's Truthful Tulliver. In 2013, Decasia was selected for preservation by the National Film Registry. It was the first film from the 21st century to be selected and to date is the youngest film to be preserved. Decasia was included in the September 2014 box set release of Bill Morrison's collected works, from Icarus Films. Streifzug - Geschichten aus dem täglichen Leben is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Horst Herz. JuJu Music is a 1987 documentary music film directed by Jacques Holender. The Battle Over Citizen Kane is a 1996 documentary about the clash between newspaper mogul William Randolph Hearst and actor/writer/director Orson Welles over Welles' 1941 motion picture Citizen Kane, which is widely regarded as one of the greatest films of all time. The Battle Over Citizen Kane aired January 29, 1996, as an episode of the Public Broadcast System's The American Experience series. The documentary was narrated by Richard Ben Cramer, who co-wrote the program with Thomas Lennon. How to Live Forever, written by director Mark Wexler and Robert DeMaio, is a documentary that follows Mark on a three-year pilgrimage to discover the best practices and philosophies to help mitigate "the uncool trappings of old age." With the death of his mother and the arrival of an AARP card, Wexler begins to wonder if one can truly achieve immortality. He interviews an eclectic group of celebrities, health care professionals, centenarians, followers of Laughter Yoga, and scientists contemplating technology’s impact on the average lifespan in an attempt to conquer death. Wexler ventures into the home of fitness legend Jack LaLanne and his wife Elaine for a personal training session and a raw food smoothie. Often called the "godfather of fitness", Jack LaLanne was among the first to publicly preach the health benefits of regular exercise and a good diet. In 1936, when LaLanne was 21-years-old, he opened one of the nation’s first fitness gyms, and in the 1950s he filmed a series of television exercise programs. LaLanne invented several exercise machines, was inducted to the California Hall of Fame in 2008, and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. White & Black, Crime And Colour is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jean-François Méan. "The farmer’s dog is completely useless. She is unable to perform her duties as a sheep dog and what is worse, she has passed the hopeless traits on to her puppy. However, she is still a part of the family. This is a tender and humorous depiction of the relationship between a man and his best friend." Quoting the description from the 2010 Uppsala International Short Film Festival site. Ballets Russes is an American 2005 feature documentary about the dancers of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. It was directed by Dayna Goldfine and Dan Geller, and featured Irina Baronova, Alicia Markova, George Zoritch, and Tatiana Riabouchinska, among others. It was narrated by Marian Seldes. It is distributed by Zeitgeist Films. Bull Runners of Pamplona is a 2011 documentary film directed by Aubrey Powell. Untitle In Time is a 2012 experimental short film directed by Ardian Isufi. A coup de couteau denté is a 2012 music, documentary and short film written and directed by Clément Decaudin. Valentino: The Last Emperor is a 2008 documentary film about the life of Valentino Garavani. It was produced and directed by Matt Tyrnauer, Special Correspondent for Vanity Fair magazine. The film is an exploration of the singular world of one of Italy's most famous men, Valentino Garavani. The film documents the colorful and dramatic closing act of Valentino's celebrated career, tells the story of his life, and explores the larger themes affecting the fashion business today. At the heart of the film is the unique relationship between Valentino and his business partner and companion of 50 years, Giancarlo Giammetti. Within Every Woman is a documentary film depicting war crimes committed by the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II in Asia. It documents the systematic rape of over 200,000 young girls between the ages of nine and twenty-years-old during World War II in Asia. These atrocities and war crimes occurred between 1931 and 1945; however, to this day, the Japanese government has not offered an official apology and many survivors still hide their shame. This project was started in 2008, with a trip to rural China, the Philippines and South Korea to meet and document the survivors of the largest institutionalized rape system in world history, the comfort women system. Today, the survivors are referred to as "the Grandmothers", all above the age of 80. This documentary will show the complex healing processes of the women who have had to live their lives without acknowledgement of the atrocities they suffered. Road Scholar is a 1993 documentary film directed by Roger Weisberg. The Yes Men, is a 2003 documentary film about the early culture jamming exploits of The Yes Men. The film revolves around "The Yes Men"—two anti-globalization activists, under the aliases Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno—who impersonate spokespeople for the WTO and affiliated corporations, in order to secretly lampoon and satirize these organizations with elaborate ruses and fraudulent announcements of ridiculous corporate decisions, in front of live, unsuspecting audiences. The film details the two activists' involvement in hoaxes targeting SimCopter, the 2000 G. W. Bush presidential campaign, McDonald's, and, most prominently, the WTO. The film also includes brief interviews with Michael Moore and Greg Palast. The film premiered at the 28th Toronto International Film Festival in 2003. It was also shown as part of a special screening at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival. The film received a score of 85% on Rotten Tomatoes. It is followed by a sequel, The Yes Men Fix the World. The Director: An Evolution in Three Acts is a 2013 documentary film directed by Christina Voros. Margarita No Es Una Flor is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Cecilia Fiel. Robyn Hitchcock: I Often Dream of Trains is a 2009 documentary music film directed by John Edginton. Blind Loves is a 2008 film directed by Juraj Lehotský. "Blind Loves is a film about love between blind people. Love can be soft, love can be silly, love can be blind at times... To find one´s place in this world is not an easy thing to do for people with good sight, but how much more difficult it can get for somebody who is blind? The "view" of blind persons is often pure and essential, and very often witty. It uncovers new dimensions of meaning of happiness." Quoting the program notes from the 2008 Directors' Fortnight site. That Man: Peter Berlin, secondary title Artist, Model, Porn Star, Legend; He Was His Own Work of Art is a 2005 documentary directed by Jim Tushinski about the popular gay icon Peter Berlin. In the documentary, Berlin narrates his own life in various candid interviews. Many other artists comment on his legacy in gay culture. Greenlit is a 2009 documentary film directed by Miranda Bailey. A Species Odyssey is a French documentary film directed by Jacques Malaterre, first broadcast on January 7, 2003 on France 3. Heritage Fight is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Eugénie Dumont. Bone is a 48-minute 2005 documentary about the first modern dance co-production between Canada and China, directed and choreographed by Nadine Thouin in collaboration with the Beijing Modern Dance Company. The film was directed by Mila Aung-Thwin of EyeSteelFilm production company and produced by EyeSteelFilm. It had its premier at Bravo! specialty television channel. China Times had a favorable review, saying, "In the performance of Chinese and Canadian artists, we witness a sort of artistic pulling force, which may well become the future direction of art." Walter Peralta is a 1993 documentary, short film written and directed by Jordi Mollà. Haiti. Untitled is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Jørgen Leth. Beyond Silence is a 1960 American short documentary film directed by Edmond Levy. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Jam Jar is a 1995 documentary film written by Simon Everson and Donna Williams and directed by Simon Everson. The Japan Project: Made in Japan is a 52 minute documentary film by Terry Sanders that covers the story of the entry of Sony, Honda, Benihana, and Sega into the American market. Grinders is a documentary film written by Matt Gallagher, Cornelia Principe and Michael Allcock and directed by Matt Gallagher. Step right up and come on the inside – beyond the banners and into the morbid curiosity that is the American Sideshow. Join Carnival Maestro Todd Robbins and award-winning filmmaker Nick Basile on a journey into a world of circus freaks, fire eaters, human blockheads, contortionists, professional lunatics and much, much more. Ageing in the New Age is a 1983 documentary film directed by Stephen Ramsay, Cynthia Connor, and James Ricketson. The Art of Movement is a 2008 documentary film directed by David Levitt Waxman. The People of the Big Lake is a 2013 documentary film directed by Rick Anderson. Ghost Syndrome is a 2013 documentary short biographical film written and directed by Rita Piffer. Employees Only is a 1958 American short documentary film produced by Kenneth G. Brown. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Long Bike Back is a documentary film directed by Julia Wrona. You Weren’t There: A History of Chicago Punk, 1977–1984 is a 2007 documentary film about punk subculture in Chicago from 1977 through 1984. The film was written and directed by Joe Losurdo and Christina Tillman, and profiles the punk bars and local bands that gave rise to the city's punk rock scene in the late '70s and early '80s. Losurdo was the one-time bass player for the Chicago-based '80s hardcore band Life Sentence, although his group is not profiled in the movie. Reviewer Max Goldberg of the San Francisco Bay Guardian called the film "a thrillingly exhaustive survey of early Chicago punk." You Weren't There was released on DVD in 2009. A limited edition white vinyl LP of the soundtrack was also issued and came packaged with copies of the DVD. Stade 81 is a 1981 documentary short film written and directed by Jaco Van Dormael. The short film was shot in 1981 in Sweden, Canada and United Kingdom. Stade 81 is a documentary about the first Special Olympics. The film received various awards, including the Caducee d'Or at the 1982 Rennes International Film Festival. In 2011, it appeared at the Sottodiciotto Filmfestival held in Turin in the retrospective dedicated to Van Dormael. The Sinking of the Princess Sophia is a 2003 documentary film directed by Alain Vezina. Fairytale is a 2008 documentary film directed by Ai Weiwei. It Don't Cost Nothin' to Say Good Morning 1994 is an award winning documentary film directed by Kenny Hotz and Spencer Rice. The film is about the life of a homeless man, known only as "'Shorty' Gordy", who was a beloved but drunken, potty-mouthed panhandler, which was filmed over three years, covering Gordy's life and death. The movie premiered at Palm Springs Film Festival, Cinéfest, the Worldwide Short Film Festival and won best short at the Hot Docs Film Festival. Oírse is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by David Arratibel. Gnosis, the Secret of Solomon's Temple Revealed is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Philip Gardiner. Nous ne sommes plus morts is a 2000 film directed by Francois L. Woukoache. Severn, la voix de nos enfants is a documentary film directed by Jean-Paul Jaud. The Black List: Volume Two is a 2009 documentary film directed by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders. Yelhou Jagoi is 1995 documentary film directed by Aribam Syam Sharma. Yelhou Jagoi is re-enactment of creation also known as Lai-Haraoba, a dance-form of Manipur. The myth of creation, re­ creation, reflections of flora and fauna and the synergy of mankind and its endeavour are beautifully encoded in these celebrative enactments. From the story of creation and re-creation it manifests living within the nature expressed through 364 hand gestures (khutheks) used in the dance sequences called Laibou. The documentation also highlights Panthoibi Jagoi, which celebrates romantic love of Lord Nongpok and Goddess Panthoibi. Iran, Veiled Appearances is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Thierry Michel. The Ghosts in Our Machine is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Liz Marshall. Indigenous Games of Manipur is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Aribam Syam Sharma. Scars Of Freedom is a 2012 short adventure documentary film written and directed by Celine Cousteau. Washingtonia is a 2014 short documentary film directed and written by Konstantina Kotzamani. Buenos Aires Zero Degree is a 1999 film directed by Amos Lee and Kwan Pun Leung. If Not You is a 2012 documentary film directed by Olga Susteriove. George Michael - A Different Story is a 2004 film written by George Michael and Southan Morris and directed by Southan Morris. The First Stop is a 2007 documentary film written by Roza Mergenbaeva and directed by Shukhrat Makhmudov. Hand of God is a 2006 independent documentary that was acquired for national airing in the United States by Frontline. The film was directed and edited by Joe Cultrera and tells the story of how his brother Paul was molested in the 1960s by their parish priest, Father Joseph Birmingham, who allegedly abused nearly 100 other children. Cultrera tells the story of faith betrayed and how his brother Paul and the rest of the Cultrera family fought back against a scandal that continues to afflict churches across the country. The Cultrera brothers were raised in an Italian-Catholic family in Salem, Massachusetts, and attended Catholic school from kindergarten through high school. From an early age they were immersed in the beliefs and teachings of the Catholic Church. At 14, Paul, an altar boy at St. James Parish, came under the guidance of Fr. Birmingham. Birmingham was young and friendly, often taking the boys on trips and inviting them to the rectory for Friday and Saturday night pizza parties. It was during confession that Paul's relationship with Fr. Birmingham changed. Confessing to masturbation led to private "counseling" sessions at the rectory, where Paul was sexually abused. Right2Love is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Adaia Teruel. Leeds, UK – the birthplace of funk? Not quite, but the hometown of the rising funk-jazz phenomenon, The New Mastersounds. By offering the first Jazz degree in Europe, Leeds College of Music attracted scores of talented musicians to this Northern former industrial hub to master forms of music that had been carried by cargo ships from across the Atlantic for decades. A thriving live music scene soon developed in Leeds, and many of these young musicians embraced American funk and soul from the 60’s and 70’s. 
Now, like bringing coal to Newcastle, England's finest funk-jazz band journeys to the birthplace of funk for 3 performances that coincide with the 2007 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival.
 With sit-ins and commentary from several New Orleans master musicians, “Coals to Newcastle,” offers viewers a look into the lives of 5 Britons that have been influenced by a uniquely American art form, and a glimpse at the city that started it all as it struggles to retain its culture after Katrina’s devastation. Heavy Metal in Baghdad is a 2007 rockumentary film following filmmakers Eddy Moretti and Suroosh Alvi as they track down the Iraqi heavy metal band Acrassicauda amidst the Iraq War. First Impressions is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Mark Cousins. Three of Us is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Umesh Vinayak Kulkarni. The New China is a 1950 Soviet documentary film directed by Sergei Gerasimov. It was entered into the 1951 Cannes Film Festival. The Unseen Sequence is a documentary biographical film directed by Sumantra Ghosal. Mechanical Love is a 2007 documentary by Danish filmmaker Phie Ambo about Hiroshi Ishiguro and his work on robots that resemble humans. Joy of Madness is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Hana Makhmalbaf. Cocaine Cowboys 2 – formally titled Cocaine Cowboys II: Hustlin' With the Godmother – is a 2008 documentary film sequel to Cocaine Cowboys. Directed by Billy Corben and Lisa M. Perry and produced by Rakontur, the film "stars" Charles Cosby, Nelson Andreu, and Jorge "Rivi" Ayala and features the Colombian-born "Cocaine Godmother", drug lord Griselda Blanco. Set in 1991, the film is largely narrated by Cosby, a small-time cocaine dealer from a broken home located in Oakland's inner-city. As described in the film summary published in The New York Times, the film "follows Charles Cosby, a small time coke dealer in Oakland whose life is changed forever when he writes a fan letter to the "Cocaine Godmother" Griselda Blanco, who is serving time at a nearby federal prison. Six months later, Cosby is a multi-millionaire, Blanco's lover, and the head of her $40 million a year cocaine business." The documentary also explains why Blanco has earned another sobriquet – "The Black Widow" – and the steps she takes to ensure Cosby's loyalty. Cunning Stunts is a concert video by heavy metal band Metallica released in 1998. It was released in DVD and VHS formats. The title is a spoonerism of the term Stunning Cunts. The DVD features concert footage, band interviews, a documentary, behind the scenes footage and a photo gallery consisting of approximately 1,000 photos. Three of the performances feature multiple angles. During the performance of the song "Enter Sandman," the entire stage is set to appear to collapse and explode, with pyrotechnics and a technician who runs across the stage while on fire, as another technician swings overhead. This is also one of the few Metallica concerts that didn't feature "Ecstasy of Gold" as an intro. Comedy Warriors: Healing Through Humor is a 2013 comedy drama documentary war film directed by John Wager. Saga of Darkness is a 1998 short documentary film directed by Gautam Sen. Yoga For Indie Rockers is a fitness video that matches a traditional yoga workout with contemporary indie rock music and attitude. The DVD features certified yoga instructor Chaos running a hardbody yoga workout with three students: Rage Burner, Karri Langlois, and Kristina Sefeldt. The DVD also features a Beginner's Session and three audio "channels" of musical soundscapes: indie, pop-punk, and electro. The DVD was released on October 30, 2007 by HALO 8 Entertainment. Its sister release Pilates For Indie Rockers was released on November 13, 2007. And Everything Is Going Fine is a 2010 documentary film directed by Steven Soderbergh about the life of the late monologuist Spalding Gray. It premiered at the 2010 Slamdance Film Festival and was screened at the 2010 SXSW Film Festival and the 2010 Maryland Film Festival. Soderbergh had earlier directed Gray's filmed monologue, Gray's Anatomy. Soderbergh decided against recording narration and new interviews in the manner of, for instance, Errol Morris. The film instead consists entirely of archival footage, principally numerous excerpts from monologues by and interviews with Gray, spanning some 20 years, as well as home movies of Spalding as an infant. Music for the film was composed by Gray's son Forrest. Terra Incognita is a 2005 short documentary film written and directed by Peter Volkart. The Battle of Russia is the fifth film of Frank Capra's Why We Fight documentary series, and the longest film of the series, consisting of two parts. The film was made in collaboration with Russian-born Anatole Litvak as primary director under Capra's supervision. Litvak gave the film its "shape and orientation," and the film had seven writers with voice narration by Walter Huston. The score was done by Russian-born Hollywood composer, Dimitri Tiomkin, and drew heavily on Tchaikovsky along with traditional Russian folk songs and ballads. Film historian Christopher Meir notes that the film's popularity "extended beyond the military audience for it was initially intended, and was the second in the series to be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. La Ghriba is a picturesque documentary about the 2,500-year-old Jewish community on the Tunisian island of Jerba, where Jews and Muslims live side-by-side peacefully. Heart of Stone is a 2009 documentary film about Weequahic High School in Newark, New Jersey, the United States, directed by Beth Toni Kruvant, with Zach Braff serving as executive producer. The film relates the struggles of Principal Ron Stone and the rest of the school's administration, plus students and alumni to return the school, working with African American and Jewish alumni, to its previous glory in the years before the 1967 Newark riots. The China Experience: Beyond the Wall is a documentary directed by Jody Eldred. Manzanas, Pollos Y Quimeras is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Inés París. Mugabe: Villain or Hero? is a documentary directed by Roy Agyemang. The Bass Player is a 2013 documentary short film, directed by Tonje Phongam Kårvik and Marthe Westby. Water from the Sun: The Coober Pedy Solar Still is a 1967 short documentary film directed by Nicholas Alexander. Chemia is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Pawel Lozinski. The Making of Raiders of the Lost Ark is a 1981 television film written by Lee Knight, Phillip Schuman and directed by Phillip Schuman. How I Learned To Overcome My Fear And Love Arik Sharon is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Avi Mograbi. Santos 100 Anos de Futebol Arte is a documentary film directed by Lina Chamie. Der Schmetterlingsjäger - 37 Karteikarten Zu Nabokov is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Harald Bergmann. Acera or The Witches’ Dance is a 1972 short documentary film directed by Geneviève Hamon and Jean Painlevé. Good Copy Bad Copy, A documentary about the current state of copyright and culture, is a documentary about copyright and culture in the context of Internet, peer-to-peer file sharing and other technological advances, directed by Andreas Johnsen, Ralf Christensen, and Henrik Moltke. It features interviews with many people with various perspectives on copyright, including copyright lawyers, producers, artists and filesharing service providers. A central point of the documentary is the thesis that "creativity itself is on the line" and that a balance needs to be struck, or that there is a conflict, between protecting the right of those who own intellectual property and the rights of future generations to create. Wrestling with Angels: Playwright Tony Kushner is a 2006 documentary film that follows the personal and political life of Tony Kushner, leading American playwright and author of the epochal Angels in America. The film begins in 2001 and ends in 2004, tracing the production of his play Homebody/Kabul, his marriage to Mark Harris, and his work on John Kerry's presidential campaign. Wrestling with Angels was written, produced, and directed by the award-winning filmmaker Freida Lee Mock and aired on PBS in 2007 as part of the P.O.V. series. The film was met with critical praise and received a 72% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes. The Role of a Lifetime is a 2003 short and documentary film directed by Deimantas Narkevičius. Sequestro is a 2009 documentary film written by Jorge W. Atalla and Caio Cavechini and directed by Jorge W. Atalla. Notes On An American Film Director At Work: Martin Scorsese is a 2005 documentary film directed by Jonas Mekas. I'll Find a Way is a 1977 Canadian short documentary film directed by Beverly Shaffer about nine-year-old Nadia DeFranco, who has spina bifida. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, the film won an Academy Award in 1978 for Best Short Subject. Wings Up is a short propaganda film film produced by the US Air Force during World War II. Narrated by Clark Gable the short informed the youth of America about the Officers Candidate School of the Army Air Forces. It emphasized that while usually these courses would take years, the country was at war now and needed all the pilots it could get and fast. The curriculum is briefly outlined as well as the kind of life a cadets would lead at one of these facilities. One Who Set Forth: Wim Wenders' Early Years is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Marcel Wehn. Women in the Dirt: Landscape Architects Shaping Our World is a 2011 documentary and biographical film directed by Carolann Stoney. Rivers of Sand is a 1973 documentary film by Robert Gardner that portrays the Hamar people of southwestern Ethiopia. Originally produced for IFC, this four-part mini-series exploring sex in independent cinema features the stimulating insight of such acclaimed filmmakers and actors as Atom Egoyan, Catherine Breillat, Larry Clark, Greg Araki, Rosanna Arquette, and John Cameron Mitchell. Ever since that first onscreen Kiss send moviegoers into an uproar back in 1896, the powers that be have been working overtime in order to ensure that the silver screen remain free of smut -- but whose shoulders does this sizeable responsibility ultimately fall upon? In this documentary, filmmaker Lesli Klainberg takes a closer look at censorship in the movie industry, and the special interest groups fighting on both sides of the battle. El Niño Miguel is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Nacho Martín. Gureombi: The Wind Is Blowing is a 2013 documentary film directed by Sung-bong Cho. The Moon Valley is a 1993 documentary film directed by Artemio Benki, Julia Szederkenyi, Mira Erdevički, Petr Nikolajev, Natalia Koryncka-Gruz and Mikael Dovlatian. Butte, Montana - The Abandoned Town is a 1992 documentary history film directed by Thomas Schadt. The Mysterious Monsters is a 1976 documentary film written and directed by Robert Guenette about Bigfoot and other cryptids as the Loch Ness Monster. The film was later featured in an episode of Cinema Insomnia. The Mysterious Monsters was one of the first theatrical releases produced by Sunn Classic Pictures. It was narrated by actor Peter Graves. The film investigated not only the possibility of Bigfoot's existence but also of the Loch Ness Monster and the Yeti. It featured dramatic reenactments of various reported Bigfoot sightings. The film showed one witness being given a lie detector test, another being placed under hypnosis. The Mysterious Monsters was the first movie to feature the home movie taken by Roger Patterson in 1967 reported to show a Bigfoot. Anthropologist Grover Krantz was interviewed and said he believed the film to be authentic. Famed Bigfoot hunter Peter Byrne was also featured and gave insights on the hunt. In discussing the Loch Ness Monster, the film showed a 1934 photograph that was said to be of the creature. In 1994, however, this photo was proven to be a hoax. 'M*A*S*H': 30th Anniversary Reunion is a 2002 documentary film. A powerful, emotional and relevant reminder of the heartbreaking toll war takes on the innocent, NANKING tells the story of the Japanese invasion of Nanking, China, in the early days of World War II. As part of a campaign to conquer all of China, the Japanese subjected Nanking - which was then China's capital - to months of aerial bombardment, and when the city fell, the Japanese army unleashed murder and rape on a horrifying scale. In the midst of the rampage, a small group of Westerners banded together to establish a Safety Zone where over 200,000 Chinese found refuge. Unarmed, these missionaries, university professors, doctors and businessmen - including a Nazi named John Rabe - bore witness to the events, while risking their own lives to protect civilians from slaughter.The story is told through deeply moving interviews with Chinese survivors, chilling archival footage and photos of the events, and testimonies of former Japanese soldiers. At the heart of NANKING is a filmed stage reading of the Westerners' letters and diaries, featuring Woody Harrelson, Mariel Hemingway and Jurgen Prochnow. Through its interweave of archival images, testimonies of survivors, and readings of first hand accounts, the film puts the viewer on the streets of Nanking and brings the forgotten past to startling life.NANKING is a testament to the courage and conviction of individuals who were determined to act in the face of evil and a powerful tribute to the resilience of the Chinese people - a gripping account of light in the darkest of times. "Fed up with a lack of queer visibility, twenty two young people challenge the hetero-normative values of their polished Seattle suburbs with new definitions, insights, and expertise for reteaching gender and sexuality." Quoting the synopsis form the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Río Negro is a 1977 Cuban documentary film directed by Manuel Pérez. It was entered into the 10th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Special Prize. Kodachrome is a 2012 adventure/documentary film. Lady Urmia is an Iranian documentary film by Mohammad Ehsani. It was released in 2012 in Iran, distributed by EhsaniPictures. Towncraft is a feature documentary on the independent music scene in Little Rock, Arkansas from 1986 to 2006. Produced by Matson Films, Towncraft investigates the music that emerges from smaller cities and the importance of these local scenes, as well as their relationship to the larger music world. Towncraft was released in theaters, on DVD and online on May 22, 2007. Towncraft was the first film to be released simultaneously on these three platforms. The film features interviews and performances by many Little Rock bands including Soophie Nun Squad, Ho-Hum, and The American Princes. Almanach 1999-2000 is a 1999 Canadian documentary film by Quebec film director Denys Desjardins produced by the National Film Board of Canada. 400 Years of the Telescope: A Journey of Science, Technology and Thought is a 2009 American documentary film that was created to coincide with the International Year of Astronomy in 2009. The film chronicles the history of the telescope from the time of Galileo and features interviews with leading astrophysicists and cosmologists from around the world, who explain concepts ranging from Galileo's first use of the telescope to view the moons of Jupiter, to the latest discoveries in space, including new ideas about life on other planets and dark energy, a mysterious vacuum energy that is accelerating the expansion of the universe. Red Lines and Deadlines is a documentary film directed by Taghi Amirani. Children with Special Abilities is a 1984 short documentary film written by Maree Teychenne and directed by Ivan Gaal. In 1714, following a maritime disaster, British Parliament offers £20,000 for the first reliable method of determining longitude on a ship at sea. It's known that longitude can be found by comparing a ship's local time to the time at the port of origin. The challenge is finding a clock—a chronometer—that can keep time at sea, where temperature changes, humidity, gravity and a ship's movement affect accuracy. NOVA chronicles the seventeenth-century journey to determine longitude. Not Fourteen Again is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Gillian Armstrong. Nana Benz is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Böltken. New York Street Games is a 2010 documentary film directed by Matt Levy about children's games played by kids in New York City for centuries. The games are fondly remembered by people who grew up in the city. Current and historical documentary footage shows children playing these games, interspersed with scenes of celebrities discussing their own childhood experiences playing these games on the streets of New York. The story is brought to the present with discussions of the current role of street games and opinions as to what kids lose by not having the freedom to play without adult supervision, most importantly the social skills developed when kids could play in the streets. Fall Out Boy: Solid Gold Uncertainty is a film tracing the rise and rise of this incredible group, from their early days playing with local acts, to their current MTV tinged mega-success. With the help of some of FOB's close friends and other insiders, this program is a must for all fans. Clear Glasses is a 2008 documentary short film directed by Sam Green. Walt: The Man Behind The Myth narrated by Dick van Dyke, star of Disney's ""MaryPoppins,""offers a new and revealing look at Walt Disney both inside and outside thestudio. To present Walt's life and legacy as accurately as possible, the producers shotmore than 70 new interviews with colleagues, friends and family of Walt Disney, includinganimation legends Joe Grant, Ward Kimball, John Hench, Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston andMarc Davis. Diane Disney Miller and Roy E. Disney, Vice-Chairman of Walt Disney Studios,are also featured. The film also draws on leading historians including Leonard Maltin, BobThomas, John Canemaker, Charles Solomon, Brian Sibley and J.B. Kaufman, as well ascelebrities including Art Linkletter, Dick van Dyke, Chuck Jones, Ray Bradbury, JohnLasseter, Dean Jones, Robert Stack and Buddy Ebsen. Returned: Child Soldiers of Nepal's Maoist Army is a 2008 documentary film directed by American filmmaker Robert Koenig, and written by Robert Koenig and Brandon Kohrt. The documentary premiered in Hollywood, CA at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre in 2008 at the 5th Annual Artivist Film Festival, where it won the Artivist Award for Children's Advocacy. Returned also won the award for Best Documentary Short at the Atlanta Underground Film Festival that same year. The Hidden Pearl: The Syrian Orthodox Church And Its Ancient Aramaic Heritage is a 2001 documentary published by TransWorld Film Italia commissioned by the Syriac Orthodox Church. The documentary was published in the form of three videos together with three printed volumes. Volume 1, The Ancient Aramaic Heritage, deals with the Syriac heritage as the cradle of civilization. It covers the pre-Christian Old Aramaic period, covering the Aramaean city states, the Neo-Assyrian, Achaemenid and Seleucid periods, including the kingdoms of Palmyra, Petra, Edessa and Hatra. Volume 2, The Heirs of the Ancient Aramaic Heritage, addresses Middle Aramaic tradition and literature, the Aramaic of Jesus and classical Syriac literature. Volume 3, At the Turn of the Third Millennium: the Syrian Orthodox Witness, focuses on and describes the current situation of the Syriac people, the Syriac Orthodox Church and its history in Tur Abdin, the Syriac genocide, Seyfo, and the Syriac diaspora. The Marvelous is a 2013 documentary, biographical, sports film written and directed by Juan Cadaveira. Past Their Prime is a 2012 short biography comedy documentary drama film directed by Becca Friedman. Rosakinder is a 2012 documentary film directed by Julia von Heinz, Robert Thalheim, Axel Ranisch, Tom Tykwer and also Chris Kraus. Moondog is a 2012 documentary drama film written by Khairy Beshara and Robert Beshara and directed by Khairy Beshara. 18 Ius Soli: il diritto di essere italiani is a documentary film directed by Fred Kudjo Kuwornu. For Daniel is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Ernie Gehr. Stop Killing Our Sons is a 2014 documentary film, directed by YCM. Star of Bethlehem is a documentary film directed by Tim Walker. Mizhavu is a 1997 documentary film directed by K. R. Subhash. Sandgrains is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jordie Montevecchi and Gabriel Manrique. Die Narbe Westberlin West is a 2009 documentary, historical, music and war film directed by Burkhard von Harder. Cinderella Man: The Real Jim Braddock Story is a 2005 documentary written by Brennan Huntington and directed by Brian Gillogly and John Preston. Jews & Money is a 2013 historical documentary film written and directed by Lewis Cohen. Circus Stars is 1958 documentary film written and directed by Leonid Kristi. In the Tracks of is a 52 minute documentary series about the greatest international film score composers, written and directed by Pascale Cuenot, and produced by Prelight Films. The series aims to restore the importance of film scores in the music history, to explore the relations between music and cinema and also to propose a deeper reflection upon the creative process. A Woman Is a Risky Bet: Six Orchestra Conductors is a 1987 Swedish documentary film about women orchestra conductors directed by Christina Olofson. Journey to the West is a 2014 French-Taiwanese film directed by Tsai Ming-liang. It had its world premiere at the Panorama section of the 64th Berlin International Film Festival on February 2014. Getting Nowhere Faster is a 2004 American documentary about female skateboarders. The documentary features skateboarding footage of the world's best female skateboarders, as well as a fiction film called The Skatepark Hauntings of Debbie Escalante. The skateboarding footage is interwoven with scenes from the film. The DVD features an option to watch only the skateboarding footage, or the storyline sections of the feature. Y2K – A World in Crisis is a 1999 documentary television series produced by Studio W and Warren Chaney Productions for network and cable broadcast. The series was written and directed by Warren Chaney and starred Hugh O'Brian, Dick Van Patten, Richard Anderson, Richard Roundtree and Deborah Winters. It was filmed in Los Angeles, Houston, Washington, D.C. and on location in many areas of the United States. The series was widely broadcast during the 1999 television season and for the first quarter of year 2000. It received favorable reviews for its impact on the millennium bug or Y2K computer software problems occurring at the turn of the 20th century. In keeping with the high tech theme of the programs, the series became one of the first network productions to position its hosts and narrators in digitally created sets. A popular book based on the series was written by Dr. Warren Chaney, the series' writer and director. The book carried the same title and appeared in two published editions. Each edition reflected the evolving systems changes occurring in computer networks as they were repaired. The Education of Shelby Knox is 2005 documentary film that tells the coming-of-age story of public speaker and feminist Shelby Knox, a teenager who joins a campaign for comprehensive sex education in the high schools of Lubbock, Texas. TEOSK was an official selection of the Sundance Film Festival in 2005 and aired on PBS’ P.O.V. series that same year. It was directed and produced by Marion Lipschutz and Rose Rosenblatt. 13 lat 13 minut is a Polish historical film. It was released in 2006. Romek Strzałkowski and Peter Mansfeld were young boys during the Poznań 1956 protests and Budapest 1956. Romek was the youngest victim. In New York, there are five criminal organizations created by, and still dominated by, men of Italian-American descent. The Silence of Pelesjan is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Pietro Marcello. Gorgona, Stories on the Run is a 2013 documentary film directed by Camilo Botero. Entre la coupe et l'élection is a 2008 documentary film co-directed by Monique Mbeka Phoba and Guy Kabeya Muya. It tells of Zaire's football team at the 1974 FIFA World Cup and what happened to the players afterwards. Muhammad and Larry is a documentary film directed by Alberts Maysles and Bradley Kaplan for ESPN's documentary film series 30 for 30. The Search for Mengele is a 1985 documentary written by James Bellini and William Bemister and directed by Brian Moser. Inside Deep Throat is a 2005 American documentary film about the 1972 pornographic film Deep Throat and its effects on American society. Beyond Elections: Redefining Democracy in the Americas is a 2008 documentary directed by Silvia Leindecker and Michael Fox. Little Miss Piggy is a 2013 short, family and documentary film written and directed by Ellen Vloet. A Temporary Area in Athens is a 2010 music, documentary film directed by Vincent Moon. José Barrientos is a 1997 short documentary film written and directed by Juan Carlos Carrasco. To Be a B-Girl is a 2013 short, documentary film directed by Yasmin Angel. Uigwe, the 8-Day Festival is a 2014 documentary film directed by Choi Pil-gon. Gambling, Gods and LSD is a 2002 Canadian/Swiss experimental documentary film by Canadian film director Peter Mettler. It was shot between 1997 and 1999 in Canada, the United States, Switzerland and India, and is a "fragmented narrative" that shows what people do to discover themselves and find happiness. The film was screened at film festivals in a number of countries across the world, including Canada, Switzerland, the United States, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan, Australia and South Africa. It won several awards, including the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television's 2003 Genie Award for "Best Documentary". Toxic Hot Seat is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kirby Walker and James Redford. Coup D'Etat: The Week That Changed The World is a documentary of deep background on events in the former Soviet Union that was previously impossible to access and use. Immigration: The Unpardonable Sin is a 2013 documentary film directed by Andrew Mwangi. An all-access, backstage pass to the hottest gathering in the world, (WIRED Magazine) THE FUTURE WE WILL CREATE is an exhilarating behind-the-scenes tour of this stimulating and paradigm-shifting meeting of the minds, an annual conference where theoretical physicists, 11-year-old violin prodigies, and venture capitalists present and exchange bold new ideas that will change everything. A veritable Cirque du Soleil of the psyche, TED (Technology Entertainment Design) brings the talent, energy, and collective spirit of the planet s top doers and thinkers together to plot a better future.Directed and narrated by actress Daphne Zuniga, this intellectually-charged film captures the best of TED 2006, including mind-blowing appearances by former Vice President Al Gore, Dr. Larry Brilliant, the man who led the successful campaign to eradicate smallpox, Nicholas Negroponte, a computer scientist with plans to put a $100 laptop into the hands of students in the developing world, the founders of Google, and many more inspired and inspiring TEDsters.The future is now in THE FUTURE WE WILL CREATE: INSIDE THE WORLD OF TED. This entertaining and thought-provoking film will change the way you look at yourself and at the world. There is No Authority But Yourself is a Dutch film directed by Alexander Oey documenting the history of anarchist punk band Crass. The film features archive footage of the band and interviews with former members Steve Ignorant, Penny Rimbaud and Gee Vaucher. As well as reflecting on the band's past the film focusses on their current activities, and includes footage of Rimbaud performing with Last Amendment at the Vortex jazz club in Hackney, a compost toilet building workshop and a permaculture course held at Dial House in the spring of 2006. The title of the film is derived from the final lines of the Crass album Yes Sir, I Will; "You must learn to live with your own conscience, your own morality, your own decision, your own self. You alone can do it. There is no authority but yourself." There is No Authority But Yourself premiered at the Raindance Film Festival at the Piccadilly Circus, London Trocadero in October 2006 and was part of the Official Selection film programme at the Flipside film festival in May 2008 Sea of Butterfly is a 2011 documentary film directed by Bae-il Park. Insitu is a 2011 documentary film written by Aurélie Florent and Antoine Viviani and directed by Antoine Viviani. Letters from Palestine is a 2003 film directed by Kollektiv. The Trials of Henry Kissinger, is a documentary film inspired by Christopher Hitchens' 2001 book The Trial of Henry Kissinger, examining war crimes allegedly committed by Henry Kissinger, the National Security Advisor and later Secretary of State under Presidents Nixon and Ford. The film was directed by Eugene Jarecki and narrated by Brian Cox. The shocking and revealing documentation of a homeless boy's life over a two and a half year period. Naf (Naftali), is an ultra-orthodox boy thrown out of his parents' home for being a "bad apple." From the age of 14 he wanders the Jerusalem streets, and is exposed to crime, violence, and sexual assault. Only fighting keeps him alive; fighting the city council as a representative of homeless youth; fighting the man who sexually abused him through the court system, fighting the radio stations to convince them to play his music. This is a child not only fighting for life, but for self respect and a future. This is the struggle for survival experienced by all our homeless children – as seen through the eyes of NAF – A STREET KID. Two Who Dared: The Sharps' War is a 2013 documentary film Artemis Joukowsky. Don't Breathe is a 2014 French drama film directed by Nino Kirtadze. It was selected to be screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival. Diario di un curato di montagna is a 2009 documentary film written by Pietro Albino Di Pasquale and Stefano Saverioni and directed by Stefano Saverioni. San Siro is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Yuri Ancarani. RR is a 2007 film by American, James Benning. Shot in 16 mm film, as most of Benning's films are, RR is another in Benning's series of American experimental landscape films; this one focusing on trains and their surrounding environs. In Railroad, Benning explores themes of American consumerism and overconsumption in what Benning calls a "collaboration" with the trains themselves. The film is an exercise in minimalist restraint. Basically it is a series of static shots of trains. There is an empty frame, the train enters, then it passes and leaves. The obsessive gaze of Benning's fixed static frame causes the viewer to wait and watch, obsessing like train fanatic Benning does, on the imagery of the locomotive and the exploration of the random colors of its cars, the machinery and the various American landscapes the trains are surrounded by. The Pictures That Moved: Australian Cinema 1896-1920 is a 1968 historical documentary film written by Joan Long and directed by Alan Anderson. The Last Journey of Ninoy is a documentary film directed by Jun Reyes that premiered on 21 August 2009 in commemoration of Ninoy Aquino Day and on 23 August at ABS-CBN. The film includes the final interview given by Aquino's wife who then became the first woman to Philippine presidency, Corazon Aquino. It was produced by Unitel Productions, Inc. and the Benigno Aquino Jr. Foundation. Spectacular footage ad findings of the probe's huge success on Mars, and implications for future Martian missions. The Human Experience is a 90-minute documentary produced by Grassroots Films and directed by Charles Kinnane. The film tells the story of brothers Clifford and Jeffrey Azize and their travels as they search for answers to the question, "What does it mean to be human?". Their friends Michael Campo and Matthew Sanchez participate in some of the travels. The film is divided into three sections, covering the experiences of Jeffrey and his friends in New York, Peru, and Ghana. The Human Experience is rated PG-13. Sophisticated Lady is a 1989 film directed by David Mingay and David Robinson. Bad Girls. Cell 77 is a 2010 film directed by Janusz Mrozowski. As I Am is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Alan Spearman and written by Chris Dean and Alan Spearman. Kz is a 2006 documentary film directed by Rex Bloomstein. My Perestroika is an intimate look at the last generation of Soviet children. Five classmates go from living sheltered childhoods to experiencing the hopes of Gorbachev’s reforms and the confusion of the USSR’s dissolution, to searching for their places in today’s Moscow. With candor and humor, the punk rocker, single mother, entrepreneur and married teachers paint a picture of the challenges, dreams and disappointments of those raised behind the Iron Curtain. Through first-person testimony, vérité footage and vintage home movies, this beautifully crafted documentary reveals a Russia rarely seen on film. A co-production of Red Square Productions/Bungalow Town Productions and ITVS International in association with American Documentary | POV. An Official Selection of the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. (90:00) 78 Days is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jason Nardella. The Poem Home is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Tara Evonne Trudell. Take a tour of the world's greatest art gallery with this video, which explores the history and the holdings of the Louvre in Paris. The Louvre: The Visit explores the remarkable architecture and design of the museum and its facilities, as well as the irreplaceable artworks and artifacts within, ranging from medieval castles and ancient Greek statuary to the Mona Lisa. The Water and the Wall is a 2014 short documentary film by Alice Fargier. Warner Bros. 75th Anniversary: No Guts, No Glory is a 1998 film directed by Keith R. Clarke, Richard Goldstone, Frank Martin, Kyra Thompson. Banned from Television, also known as Banned from TV, is a 1998 direct-to-video, shockumentary film, that consists of various scenes of stock footage, depicting death and real scenes of violence. It is mainly about riots, car chases, crime, accidents and much much more from around the world. Despite its title with the word "Banned" in, it has been shown on Reality TV, as well as many European/Asian TV news channels when most of the things happened. It is banned in the United Kingdom by the BBFC. Since its release, Banned from Television has been followed by two sequels, both of which were also released in 1998 and were direct-to-video. Combining all three films together, the total length is 144 minutes. Each clip used is accompanied by very stoic commentary from a narrator, who sometimes provides extra detail explaining whether the person survived or not. For most of the clips however, no extra information is given, other than where the incident occurred. The most graphic part of each clip is usually repeated again in slow motion. Banned from Television was originally released on VHS in 1998, and was later released on DVD, on April 2, 2002. What Is Green? is a 2009 short documentary film written by Andre Black Hines, Marysol Navarro and Francis Sudaria directed by Jose-Luis Mejia. Meditate and Destroy is a 2007 documentary film written by Noah Levine and directed by Sarah Fisher. Gilberto Owen, un poeta olvidado is a 1985 short documentary film directed by Óscar Blancarte. Compañero: Victor Jara of Chile is 1975 documentary written and directed by Stanley Morgan and Martin Smith. Kenji Mizoguchi: The Life of a Film Director is a 1975 Japanese documentary film on the life and works of director Kenji Mizoguchi, directed by Kaneto Shindo. It runs 150 minutes and can be found on the second disc of the Region 1 Criterion Collection release of Ugetsu. La Gasolina: Reggaeton Explosion is a 2012 documentary film written by Jacqui Knapp and directed by Jonathan Winfrey. Public Solitude is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Daniel Aragão. Eye on the 60s: The Iconic Photography of Rowland Scherman is a documentary, biography and history film directed by Chris Szwedo. Children of Ibdaa: To Create Something Out of Nothing is a 2003 documentary short film written and directed by S. Smith Patrick. Aliens to Themselves is a 2000 documentary film directed by José Luis López Linares and Javier Rioyo. Beneath the Borqa in Afghanistan is a 2002 short documentary film directed by Iara Lee. Martha & Ethel is a 1994 documentary film directed by Jyll Johnstone. It premiered at the 1994 Sundance Film Festival and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize. It was subsequently nominated for a Directors Guild of America award, losing to Steve James for Hoop Dreams. The film was distributed in theaters by Sony Pictures Classics and on home video by Columbia TriStar Home Video. THE THINKING CAR takes viewers behind closed doors into the secret and controversial world of brain caps, eye-trackers, heat-sensing cameras, and sophisticated sensors - the tools of the automotive visionaries who dare to dream of a world in which cars are smarter than the driver. A car that monitors the driver - is he paying attention or on the verge of falling asleep? With the exponential growth of computer and vision technology, the thinking car can see in the dark, around corners and 360 degrees around itself. Friends of Mine is a drama documentary film directed by Matthew Palmer. Universe is a black-and-white short documentary made in 1960 by the National Film Board of Canada. It dramatizes the nightly work of an astronomer at the David Dunlap Observatory in Richmond Hill, Ontario, a facility formerly owned and operated by the University of Toronto, Canada, now operated by the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. The film was a nominee at the 33rd Academy Awards in the category of Best Documentary Short Subject in 1961. In the film, the astronomer prepares his equipment and then photographs by long exposure one star, using the technology of his era. The short film then presents special effects which show an exploding nebula. Douglas Rain did the narration for the English version; the French version was titled Notre univers with narration by Gilles Pelletier. Eldon Rathburn composed the musical score. Spend an Evening with Saddle Creek is a documentary focusing on the first ten years of the Saddle Creek scene in Omaha, Nebraska. It was released in 2005 by Plexifilm. It was directed by Jason Kulbel and Rob Walters. Interviews for the film were conducted in December 2003 and January 2004 with the active bands on the Saddle Creek roster at that time. Since the "cast" is limited to these current members, bands such as Beep Beep, Criteria, and Two Gallants do not make an appearance. Nick Darke, who comes from a long line of beachcombers ("wreckers", to use the Cornish term), traces the origins of all the items that he has discovered during one stormy winter while beachcombing along the coast of Cornwall near his home. Some of the objects have come from as far away as Labrador or the Amazon Basin. Hungary 2011 is a 2012 film directed and written by Benedek Fliegauf, Peter Forgacs, Miklós Jancsó, András Jeles, Ágnes Kocsis, Márta Mészáros, György Pálfi, András Salamon, Simon Szabó, Ferenc Török and László Siroki. The Reckoning: The Battle for the International Criminal Court is a 2009 documentary film about the International Criminal Court produced by Skylight Pictures and directed by Pamela Yates. It was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival and won Best Documentary at the Politics on Film Festival. The film aired on P.O.V. on July 14, 2009. According to Dom is a 2009 short documentary family film written and directed by Deren Abram. The Inner Jungle is a drama documentary film directed by Juan Barrero. Jazz in Turkey is a 2013 documentary directed by Batu Akyol. The film explores the condition, evolution and interaction of Turkish jazz music and its musicians, in parallel to Turkish history. Filming for the documentary commenced in 2011, featuring interviews with more than 50 musicians, producers and academians including Terence Blanchard, İlhan Erşahin, Herbie Hancock and Cüneyt Sermet. The film premiered in Turkey on July 14, 2013. "Paparazzi might be the norm in our celebrity-infested times, haphazardly snapping every movement of the rich and famous. Ron Galella, though, is the original paparazzo. He elevated the celebrity snapshot into art and, at 78, remains a stalwart in the business. Dogged in his quest to photograph celebrities in unguarded moments, he defines his passion for his work by the ups and downs of his career—documenting the parade of stars at a thriving Studio 54 and having the dubious honor of being sued by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis (his favorite subject) and having his jaw broken by Marlon Brando. Leon Gast (When We Were Kings) masterfully profiles Galella and places him at the center of the debate about the First Amendment right to privacy. Galella’s work and tactics have their critics, but his influence is undeniable. In a career defined by perseverance, he has created some of the most lasting, iconic photographs of our times." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film festival site. Murdered by My Boyfriend is a 2014 documentary directed by Paul Andrew Williams. The Alpha Diaries is a 2007 documentary film directed by Yaniv Berman. Bob Wilson's Life & Death of Marina Abramovic is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Giada Colagrande. Liberty Weekend is a television special celebrating the hundredth anniversary of the Statue of Liberty. Brewed in Austin is a 2014 documentary film by Chris Erlon and Larry McIntosh. Bel Borba Is Here is 2012 documentary, biographical film written and directed by Burt Sun and Andre Costantini . Skunked is a 2012 documentary drama family sports short film directed by Laura Wagner, Merri Lisa Trigilio and Chris Portal. Là-bas is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Chantal Akerman. Life & Times of Pope John Paul II is a 2003 biographical documentary film directed by Terence McKenna. The Soul of Money is a 1987 film directed by Peter Krieg. To Let The World In: Volume 1 is a 2013 Documentary Film written by Chaitanya Sambrani and directed by Avijit Mukul Kishore. In Arctic Son, the clash of tradition and modernity puts a Native father and son at odds in the village of Old Crow, 80 miles above the Arctic Circle. Stanley, Jr., raised in Seattle, is drifting deeper into drinking and partying. Stanley, Sr., a remote, philosophical figure to his son, keeps the ways of his Gwitchin ancestors alive by hunting, fishing and living by his wits in the harsh arctic environment. After a lifetime apart, the two are reunited in the raw, quiet beauty of the Canadian Yukon in a story that captures the dialogue between a father and son from vastly different worlds. (packaged to 86:46) I Know I'm Not Alone is a 2005 documentary film directed by Michael Franti Lebensläufe II - Brigitte is a 1998 documentary directed by Barbara Junge and Winfried Junge. Martin Frič, A Classic of Czech Film is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Zdeněk Zelenka. A Soldier's Peace is a 2008 documentary war film written and directed by Kristen Thompson and Marshall Thompson. The Ballad of Mott The Hoople is a 2010 documentary film directed by Chris Hall and Mike Kerry. No Way to Heaven is a 2008 documentary feature about people allegedly living on light, directed and produced by Swiss filmmakers Janos Tedeschi and Christof Schaefer. It is the world’s very first full-length film on this topic. No Way to Heaven premiered in Switzerland in January 2008. The film had theatrical release in Switzerland in January 2009 and went on to screen in Estonia and the Netherlands. Girls Rock! is a 2007 documentary film that follows four 8-18-year-old girls at the Rock and Roll Camp for Girls in Portland, Oregon, United States. At Rock and Roll Camp, girls ranging in age from eight to 18 are taught that "it is 100% okay to be exactly who you are." The girls have a week to select a band, an instrument they may have never played before, and write a song. In between, they are taught by indie rock stars such as Carrie Brownstein from Sleater-Kinney various lessons of empowerment from self-defense to anger management. At the end of the week, all the bands perform a concert for over 700 people. The film follows several campers: Laura, a Korean adoptee obsessed with death metal; Misty, who is emerging from a life of meth addiction, homelessness and gang activity; and Amelia, an eight-year old who writes experimental rock songs about her dog Pipi. The film ultimately explores what happens to the girls as they are given a temporary reprieve from being sexualized, analyzed, and pressured to conform. Desert Seas is 2011 film written by Mark Fletcher and directed by Mark Wheeler, Simon Nash and Dominic Weston. Journey Through the Past is a 1972 film by Neil Young. Originally shot in 16mm format and then transferred for theatrical release the experimental film is a self-directed combination of concert footage from 1966 onward, backstage footage and semi-fantastic art film-like sequences. Young's directorial debut, it was received poorly by critics. The film was released on DVD in 2009 with the Neil Young Archives. Private Practices: The Story of a Sex Surrogate is a 1985 American documentary film directed by Kirby Dick about the interaction between a sex surrogate and her clients. It is Dick's first documentary film. AKA Cheese is a 2012 documentary film directed by Nandy Santos and Makisha Rodriqquez. Elie Wiesel Goes Home is a 1996 documentary film directed by Judit Elek. Derailroaded: Inside The Mind Of Wild Man Fischer is a 2005 documentary film, directed by Josh Rubin and Jeremy Lubin, aka The Ubin Twinz about outsider artist Wild Man Fischer. Jean Lewis is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Pascui Rivas. Unnecessary Fuss is a film produced by Ingrid Newkirk and Alex Pacheco of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, showing footage shot inside the University of Pennsylvania's Head Injury Clinic in Philadelphia. The footage was shot in 1983–1984 by the researchers themselves as they inflicted brain damage on baboons with a hydraulic device. The experiments were conducted as part of a research project into head injuries caused by vehicle and sports accidents. The footage shows the researchers laughing at the baboons as the brain damage is inflicted. Sixty hours of audio- and videotape were removed from the laboratory during a raid in May 1984 by the Animal Liberation Front, who handed it over to PETA. It was subsequently edited down to 26 minutes with a voice-over commentary by Newkirk, before being distributed to the media and Congress. Charles McCarthy, director of the Office for Protection from Research Risks wrote that the film had overstated the deficiencies in the clinic, but that the OPRR had found serious violations of the Guide for Care and Use of Laboratory Animals. Tamashiino realism Hiroshi Noda is a documentary film directed by Taro Hyugaji. The Mad Trapper is a 1972 drama documentary film directed by David Cobham. Feed Your Head is a 1997 short documentary film directed by Bob Sarles. Material Success is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jesse Mann. Fritz: The Walter Mondale Story is a television documentary film detailing the life of former American Vice President Walter "Fritz" Mondale. It is narrated by his daughter, Eleanor Mondale. Cafe de los maestros is a 2008 musical documentary written by Miguel Kohan and Gustavo Santaolalla and directed by Miguel Kohan. Paulo Coelho - Mein Leben is a 2011 documentary film directed by Dorothee Binding and Benedict Mirow. Mysterious Castles of Clay is a 1978 film about a termite colony; filmed in Kenya by film-makers Joan and Alan Root, and narrated by Orson Welles. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Nation is a 2011 documentary drama film written by Homer Etminani. In the thirteen years since the USSR withdrew its troops from Afghanistan, the countries neighboring it have fueled its civil war by backing different factions in the battle for power in Kabul. For the last seven years, since 1994, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have backed the Taliban. Sonata for Hitler is a 1989 documentary short film directed by Aleksandr Sokurov. "The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye is a film about Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, well-known for his work with Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV, and his life and work partner Lady Jaye (née Jacqueline Breyer). One would expect the film to be about the history of industrial music, about Genesis as a link between the pre- and post-punk era, about the underground scene since the 1970s. And it is, but it tells the story from the perspective of a great romantic love that began in the 1990s. Genesis and Lady Jaye start to undergo surgical procedures to merge into a third being, a pandrogynous being. The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye is also a film by Marie Losier, a filmmaker whose trademark is to playfully build up a very personal relationship with her underground role models. Kitchen and garden shots alternate with home-movie performances, magic tricks and archival footage. The film maintains its dynamic rhythm – with the help of Genesis’s cut-up narratives – even when Lady Jaye’s unexpected death turns it into a film about mourning. From that point it revolves around the question of how to die when two have merged into one – and how to go on living." Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Off the Edge is a 1976 New Zealand documentary film directed by Michael Firth. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film features backcountry skiing, extreme skiing and hang gliding in the Southern Alps. Despite being classed as a documentary, it does have some semblance of a fictionalised storyline. A Story of Healing is a short documentary film in which Donna Dewey follows a team of five nurses, four anesthesiologists, and three plastic surgeons from Interplast in the United States for two weeks of volunteer work in the Mekong delta of Vietnam. The film shows not only how this changes the lives of the 110 patients who undergo surgery, but also the lives of the volunteers themselves. The epilogue, which runs after the credits, follows-up on two patients helped by Interplast, 16 months after their surgery. "A Story of Healing" won the 1997 Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject, and in 2007, became the first Academy Award winning film to be licensed under a Creative Commons license when it was licensed under the Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License. Please God is a 1995 documentary film directed by Jean Bojko. Marvellous Melbourne: Queen City of the South is a 1910 documentary film about the city of Melbourne. It is the oldest surviving documentary about Melbourne. A Precious Ensemble is a 2010 short documentary film written by Cliff Stephenson. In the Shadow of a Saint: The Ken Wiwa Story is a 2000 documentary TV series written by Ken Wiwa and directed by Richard Meech. The Target Shoots First is a 1999 documentary film written by and directed by Christopher Wilcha. Big Dreamers is a 55-minute documentary film showcasing the Big Things of Australia. Directed by Camille hardman, and produced by Camille Hardman and John Fink, Big Dreamers features the construction of The Biggest Gumboot in world in Tully, in far North Queensland. Caracol púrpura is a 1986 documentary short film directed by Luis Vélez. Palazzo Delle Aquile is a documentary film written and directed by Alessia Porto, Stefano Savona and Ester Sparatore. Dear Chelsey is a sports drama documentary film directed by Everett Marshall. Knocking is a 2006 documentary film directed by Joel Engardio and Tom Shepard that focuses on the civil liberties fought for by Jehovah's Witnesses. It focuses primarily on the stories of three Jehovah's Witnesses, and how their lives demonstrate three fundamental Witness teachings that have affected society in general: Conscientious objection, and rejection of blood transfusions and saluting the flag. Knocking won the jury award for best documentary at the 2006 USA Film Festival in Dallas and the audience award for best documentary at the 2006 Indianapolis International Film Festival. It has been shown at film festivals in Trenton, New Jersey; Flint, Michigan; Cleveland, Ohio; Reno, Nevada; East Lansing, Michigan. Knocking was first televised on the PBS series Independent Lens on May 22, 2007. It was also broadcast on the Australian television program Compass on May 18, 2008. The documentary is also available on DVD. The New Environmentalists from Chicago to the Karoo is a 2013 short documentary biographical film written and directed by Will Parrinello, John Antonelli and Tom Dusenbery. "As the British anti-apartheid movement celebrates it 50th birthday, a look at how grass roots movements mobilised during the 80s to enforce economic sanctions on South Africa. 2009 marks the 50th anniversary of the British anti-apartheid movement, and in timely fashion documentary maker Connie Field (who directed the memorable The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter and Freedom on My Mind) is working on a series of films which tell the story of the global anti-apartheid activity. The Bottom Line explores the role of money, specifically how grass-roots organisations mobilised to cut the South African government off from their financial allies in the West. Through a widely-sourced collection of archive material, Field charts the history of the power of collective action, which culminated in a number of major companies withdrawing from South Africa during the 1980s. From the employees of Polaroid and General Motors in the USA to the massed ranks of British protestors boycotting Shell and withdrawing their money from Barclays Bank, all refuse to let it be business as usual with the repressive regime. Interviews with the key players, including British activists and senior figures in UK-based banks, add fascinating insights into just how effective the economic isolation of South Africa was." Quoting Sandra Hebron Winter Soldier is a 1972 documentary film chronicling the Winter Soldier Investigation which took place in Detroit, Michigan, from January 31 to February 2, 1971. The film documents the accounts of United States soldiers who returned from Vietnam, and participated in this war crimes hearing. The Winterfilm Collective consisted of: Rusty Sachs, Barbara Kopple, Fred Aranow, Nancy Baker, Joe Bangert, Rhetta Barron, Robert Fiore, David Gillis, David Grubin, Jeff Holstein, Barbara Jarvis, Al Kaupas, Mark Lenix, Michael Lesser, Nancy Miller, Lee Osborne, Lucy Massie Phenix, Roger Phenix, Benay Rubenstein, and Michael Weil. Le Rapport Karski is a 2010 Documentary film written and directed by Claude Lanzmann. Stranger: Bernie Worrell on Earth is a 2005 music documentary film directed by Philip Di Fiore. They Call It Pro Football is a 1966 sports documentary film about American football. The first full-length film from NFL Films, its visual style helped to define future presentations of the sport on film and TV. In 2012, the film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. Ordos 100 is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ai Weiwei. The legendary W.C. Fields is featured in rare behind-the-scenes footage and home movies at work and at play, along with hilarious scenes from some of his greatest films. Live at the Royal Albert Hall is The Corrs first home video, released on DVD on November 21, 2000. The Show was recorded live on St. Patricks Day. While the band were on their Talk on Corners World Tour in the UK the concert was Broadcast live over the nation by the BBC. Mick Fleetwood join The Corrs on Stage For Dreams, Haste To The Wedding and Toss The Feathers. "For rapper-turned-filmmaker Ice Cube, the emergence of gangster rap will be forever linked to the Oakland Raiders' move to Los Angeles in 1982. Ice Cube turns the camera on himself to tell how his genre-defining group NWA forged an unlikely relationship with the Raiders, a team whose swagger and style captivated LA during their troubled 13-season stay." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Live Forever: The Rise and Fall of Brit Pop is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by John Dower. The documentary is a study of popular culture in the United Kingdom during the mid to late 1990s. The focus of the piece is British popular music, which underwent a resurgence during the mid-1990s and then seemingly retreated with similar haste towards the end of that decade. The political landscape of the time also features. Much is made of Tony Blair and New Labour's efforts to align themselves with the distinctly British cultural resurgence that was underway. The documentary features a number of prominent UK musical and artistic figures, but relies heavily on contributions from Noel & Liam Gallagher of Oasis, Damon Albarn of Blur and Jarvis Cocker of Pulp. Other contributors include 3D from Massive Attack, Louise Wener from Sleeper, fashion designer Ozwald Boateng and modern artist Damien Hirst. "World premiere of a new documentary all about the Stonewall riots featuring unique testimony from participants, using a wide range of archive footage to tell the story of what it meant to be gay in the 1960s and how Stonewall changed things for ever. On 28 June 1969 when the Stonewall Inn erupted, its tremors were felt around the world with the birth of Gay Liberation. This new documentary gives us more than any other film to date, using a wealth of archive photographs and film. More importantly the film-makers tell the story through key eyewitnesses: a drag queen, a street kid, a Village Voice journalist, the policeman who led the arresting party - this is direct historical testimony, put brilliantly in context by a treasure trove of materials. The film-makers take great care to build up a complex picture of the state of gay politics before Stonewall and the terrible legal and medical constraints that generations had suffered under. The impact of Stonewall's revolution is still with us today and this inspiring historical investigation should be required viewing for any student of gay history. BR" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. Stone Corrals is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Alberto Gauna. An Albanian proverb says, "Our home is our guest's house, then our house, but above all it is God's House." When the Nazis occupied Albania, not a single Jew was betrayed by its citizens - mostly Muslims. God's House is a documentary that follows American photograher Norman H. Gershman as he travels to Albania, interviewing and photographing families who rescued Jews during WWII. Along the way he meets a Muslim shopkeeper, Rexhep Hoxha, whose father rescued a Jewish family during the Nazi occupation. With Norman's help, Rexhep embarks on a journey across cultural and religious divides to return a mysterious set of books written in Hebrew to the original owners. On his quest, Rexhep discovers the unknown story of his father’s astonishing act of bravery and selflessness. Filmed in Albania, Bulgaria, Israel, and the United States, more than twenty in-depth interviews were conducted with survivors, rescuers and other witnesses to this untold history that resonates today. Rodgers & Hammerstein: The Sound of Movies is a 1996 television movie directed by Kevin Burns. Calling Dr. Kevorkian: A Date with Dr. Death is a 1997 documentary film. To Fly! is a documentary film shot in the IMAX format. It follows the history of flight, from the first hot air balloons in the 19th century to 20th century manned space missions. It was created for performance at the National Air and Space Museum's IMAX Theater in Washington, D.C. Revolutions' Factory is a 2013 documentary film written by Franco Fracassi and Giorgia Petropaoli, and directed by Franco Fracassi. Dzieci Jarocina is the 2000 documentary film directed by Petro Aleksowski. Bataille de boules de neige is an 1896 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Louis Lumière. Throwing Curves : Eva Zeisel is a 2002 documentary film directed by Jyll Johnstone. The film follows and interviews then-97-year-old Hungarian industrial designer and ceramic artist Eva Zeisel. It examines how her upbringing, fame, and personality have influenced her work and reputation to the present day. Zeisel narrates her own history, including her escape from both the Soviet Union and Nazi-annexed Austria, as family members, friends, and relevant experts offer insights into her character. Alternating between archival footage and video interviews, the film explores how Zeisel's personal life has shaped the development of her work, which is on display in the Museum of Modern Art and other museums around the world. Zeisel's age is a key theme of the film, and several interviewees comment on her unusual industriousness and innovation for an elderly woman. The film is the first in a series of three films by Directors Guild of America Award-nominated director Jyll Johnstone that "explores the lives of three 85-plus women still actively engaged in creative lives." Throwing Curves screened at the 2002 Mill Valley Film Festival and the Rocky Mountain Women's Festival. A Union in Wait is a 2001 documentary film about same-sex marriage, directed by Ryan Butler. It was the first documentary about same-sex marriage to air on national television in the United States. Building From Below is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Vishram Revankar. 180 Degrees South: Conquerors of the Useless, or simply 180° South, is a 2010 documentary directed by Chris Malloy that covers the journey of Jeff Johnson as he travels from Ventura, California to Patagonia, Chile retracing the 1968 trip that Yvon Chouinard and Doug Tompkins took in their Ford E-Series Econoline Van. After finding footage of the 1968 expedition, Johnson decided to make climbing the Corcovado Volcano in Patagonia as his life goal and, after speaking to Chouinard and Tompkins, planned his own journey. The subtitle of the film comes from Lionel Terray's mountaineering autobiography, Les Conquérants de l'inutile. What do you want? is a 2011 animated short film directed by Ac Moesker. Atomic Sublime is a 2010 film directed by Jesse Lerner. Eleanor Ambos Interiors is a 2013 year short documentary film written and directed by Andrew Ellis. Eyes of Stone is a 1990 documentary film directed and produced by Nilita Vachani. The Final Hours: Amelia Earhart's Last Flight is a 2000 documentary film written by David Kennard and directed by David Kennard and Joan Saffa. Pray the Devil Back to Hell is a documentary film directed by Gini Reticker and produced by Abigail Disney. The film premiered at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival, where it won the award for Best Documentary. The film had its theatrical release in New York City on November 7, 2008. The film documents a peace movement called Women of Liberia Mass Action for Peace. Organized by social worker Leymah Gbowee, the movement started with praying and singing in a fish market. Leymah Gbowee organized the Christian and Muslim women of Monrovia, Liberia to pray for peace and to organize nonviolent protests. Dressed in white to symbolize peace, and numbering in the thousands, the women became a political force against violence and against their government. Their movement led to the election of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf in Liberia, the first African nation with a female president. The film has been used as an advocacy tool in post-conflict zones like Sudan, mobilizing African women to petition for peace and security. Danyel Waro, fyer bâtard is a 2002 documentary film. Macintyre's Underworld: Gangster is a 2004 TV documentary film directed by Kirsty Cunningham and Donal MacIntyre. The Howlin' Wolf Story – The Secret History of Rock & Roll is a 2003 documentary about the life of blues legend Howlin' Wolf. It features much new and rare material, including Howlin' Wolf performing How Many More Years? on the TV musical show Shindig!, introduced by the Rolling Stones, drummer Sam Lay's home movies of stars of the Chicago Blues from the early 1960s, interviews with Howlin' Wolf's family, Hubert Sumlin, Billy Boy Arnold, Marshall Chess and many others, photographs of Howlin' Wolf and his band through their careers, and much else. The film was directed by video biographer Don McGlynn, and produced by Joe Lauro, whose company, Historic Films Inc., supplied much of the footage for Martin Scorsese's PBS documentary series on the blues. Das Aquarium is a 1984 film directed by Adolf Härtl and Renate Härtl. All I Wanna Do is an 2011 Moroccan documentary film produced by La Prod and directed by Michelle Medina starring Omar Sayed Nass El Ghiwane and Don Bigg, Simohamed, a parking guard and his 17 year old son, Ayoub. The documentary was shot on location in Casablanca, Morocco from 2009 to 2010 and has won a documentary prize at the 2011 Athens International Film Festival and was nominated at the 2011 Aljazeera International Documentary Film Festival for "Best Film" and "Best Director" at the 2011 World Music and Independent Film Festival in Washington, DC. An Urban Story is a 2013 short, documentary film directed by Sebastien Simon. The Somme – From Defeat to Victory is a 2006 BBC documentary film made to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the Battle of the Somme. Blue Eyed is a 1996 documentary film by Bertram Verhaag in which Jane Elliott is teaching a workshop on racism. She separates people regarding their eye color. The brown or green eye color people are considered to be superior to the blue eye color people. Through this division she creates a whole environment where educated adults, many times in position of power, even though being aware of taking part in a workshop, disagree, argue with each other and cry, not being able to cope or stand the situation in which they are put. Jane Elliott argues that despite people considering themselves open and caring, they never know how deep is the repression and outcasting which they help to create by doing nothing against it and conforming with the current situation. The documentary received the 1996 IDFA Audience Award. A spectacular documentary on the history of lighthouses, filmed on location in France, Great Britain, Canada and the United States. The War Photographers is a 2013 short biographical documentary film directed by Steven Kochones. Bouncing Cats is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Australian director and photographer Nabil Elderkin. The film follows the efforts of Abraham "Abramz" Tekya and Breakdance Project Uganda to use dance to empower youth in war-torn Uganda. The film is a testimony of Crazy Legs of Rock Steady Crew and his experiences in the BPU program. The film features narration by Common and additional interviews with Mos Def, will.i.am and K'Naan. Also appearing in the film is Okot Jolly Grace, whose guidance enabled the filmmakers to see and understand the plight of children in northern Uganda. Geoff - The Gravedigger is a 2012 documentary short film directed by David Beazley. American Feud: A History of Conservatives and Liberals is a 2008 documentary DVD by Richard Hall and Simone Fary. The documentary takes a non partisan look at the history of liberalism and conservatism in the United States since the 1890s progressive era. My New Song is Coming Along Great is a 2010 short documentary directed by Omar Zúñiga Hidalgo. Wonders Are Many is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Jon Else. The Lala Road is a 2012 short family and documentary film written and directed by Letitia Lamb Thursday's Children is a 1954 British short documentary film directed by Lindsay Anderson about The Royal School for the Deaf in Margate, Kent, UK. It won an Academy Award in 1955 for Documentary Short Subject. Milagros concedidos is a short documentary film written by Andrea Alvarez and directed by Luciana Kaplan. Jimmy "the Gent" Burke is a 2013 documentary film directed by Dan Ramos. Harlan County, USA is a 1976 Oscar-winning documentary film covering the "Brookside Strike", an effort of 180 coal miners and their wives against the Duke Power Company-owned Eastover Coal Company's Brookside Mine and Prep Plant in Harlan County, southeast Kentucky in 1973. Directed and produced by Barbara Kopple, who has long been an advocate of workers' rights, Harlan County, U.S.A. is less ambivalent in its attitude toward unions than her later American Dream, the account of the Hormel Foods strike in Austin, Minnesota in 1985-86. Before You Know It is a 2013 documentary directed by PJ Raval following the lives of three gay seniors as they navigate the adventures, challenges and surprises of life and love in their golden years. Formerly known lovingly as "Untitled Gay Retiree Documentary." 100: Head/Heart/Feet is a sports documentary directed by Michael Mooney and William Peters. Lay Down Your Hearts is a documentary film directed by John Simpson. Although powerful now, at the start Greenpeace was just a small group of hippies, motivated by their vision of a green and peaceful world. Through unpublished archive footage and interviews with Greenpeace's founders, this extraordinary documentary takes an in-depth, first hand look into the organization that has become synonymous with the ecological movement. The Hilltops is a documentary film written and directed by Igal Hecht. No Entry No Exit is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mareille Klein and Julie Kreuzer. Of Insects and Men is a 2011 documentary film directed by Helgi Piccinin. Imprescriptible is a 2013 documentary film written by Shula Erenberg and directed by Alejandro Ester. Aimless Walk - Alexander Hammid ios a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Martina Kudlácek. This Child of Mine is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jennifer Finocchio. This is the story of a colony of seals at the edge of Europe and the very edge of survival. After decades of decline, tough laws in many countries ensured their survival and their numbers seemed to be rising. Today, grey seals are supposed to be one of the world's best protected mammals. However, an act of shocking brutality has called this into question. With unparalleled access to a major seal breeding colony on the Blasket Islands, off the west coast of Ireland, this revealing documentary follows the investigation into a random seal attack and the lives of the seals who survived. A Day and an Eternity is a 2009 short/documentary/comedy/biographical film written and directed by Anna Hepp. Sympathy for the Lobster is a 2007 Italian mockumentary film written, directed and starred by Sabina Guzzanti. The film premiered out of competition at the 64th Venice International Film Festival. Julio Solis: A MoveShake Story is a 2012 documentary short biographical drama film directed by Alexandria Bombach. Challenger: The Untold Story is a film directed by Stuart Everett released on Feb 2, 2006. Broke* is a feature length documentary film written and directed by Will Gray. The film is an autobiographical account of Gray's attempt to break into the music business. Broke* features appearances by Kelly Clarkson, Seth Godin, John Legend, Buddy Miller, Isaac Slade of The Fray, and Don Was. Ashura is a 2010 documentary drama short film written and directed by Roxana Pope. WALL (Mur) is a cinematic meditation on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in which the filmmaker blurs the lines of hatred by asserting her double identity as Jew and Arab. In an original documentary approach, the film follows the separation fence that is destroying one of the most historically significant landscapes in the world, while imprisoning one people and enclosing the other. On the building site of this mad wall, daily utterances and holy chants, in Hebrew and in Arabic, defy the discourses of war, passing through the deafening noise of bulldozers. MUR offers its spectators a last glimpse of the beauty of this land and the humanity of its inhabitants a moment before they disappear behind the wall. CircusTime is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by René Hazekamp. The Arson of History is a short documentary film directed by Kristen Zelenka. Curse of the Axe is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Robin Bicknell. Le Fil vert is a 2010 documentary film. I Never Forget a Face is a 1956 documentary short film produced by famed silent comedy enthusiast and filmmaker Robert Youngson. Frantz Fanon, une vie, un combat, une œuvre is a 2001 documentary film. Olympic and Western: A Primer on the Typographic Order and an Argument for its Proper Usage in the Built Environment is a 2012 short documentary and experimental film directed by Evan Mather. Lapse: Confessions of a Slot Machine Junkie is a 13-minute short documentary by filmmaker Jonathan VanBallenberghe. It will premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in April 2013. STOKED: the Rise and Fall of Gator, is a feature documentary film by the American filmmaker Helen Stickler about 1980s professional skateboarding champion Mark “Gator” Rogowski, who is now serving life in prison for rape and murder. Rogowski had one of the most popular signature skateboards in the 1980s, and the most coverage in skateboarding magazines and videos for a period of time in that era. STOKED follows Gator's life in skateboarding and highlights his rise to fame and problem with alcohol and depression which, through various events in his life, led him to brutally rape and murder an acquaintance, Jessica Bergsten, his ex-girlfriend's former best friend. Interviews in the movie include Tony Hawk, Jason Jessee, Stacy Peralta, Lance Mountain, Steve Caballero and Brandi McClain. The film features music from some of the most influential bands of the era and culture, including the Butthole Surfers, Dead Kennedys, Black Flag and Naked Raygun, and an original score by American composer David Reid. The film had a world premiere at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival and it was released theatrically in more than 70 US cities, as well as in the UK, New Zealand, Australia and Japan. Theresienstadt Looks Like a Spa Resort is a 1997 documentary film directed by Nadja Seelich. Objective Stories is a 2010 documentary film directed by Ophira Eisenberg and Micha Wertheim. The Forbidden Team is a 2003 Danish documentary film directed by Rasmus Dinesen and Arnold Krøjgaard. The leading cast consists of association football trainers Jens Espensen and Michael Nybrandt, the Tibet national football team and at the conclusion the Greenland national football team. Star-part is being played by the 14th Dalai Lama. The film was rewarded as the Best Feature Film on the Krasnogorski International Filmfestival in Moskow, Special Mention on the FID in Marseilles and the Audience Award on the International Sport Movies & TV Festival in Milan. The final match against Greenland was broadcast live by the radio station Free Tibet. Redlight is a documentary film about human trafficking in Cambodia that premiered on October 4, 2009 at the Woodstock Film Festival. Lucy Liu was the film's executive producer and narrator. The film is produced by Kerry Girvin and directed by Guy Jacobson and Adi Ezroni. Redlight documents four years of the lives of several Cambodian children who are kidnapped for the purpose of child prostitution. These children are both boys and girls, and some are only 3 or 4 years old. Some of the film's footage was recorded secretly in brothels and then smuggled out. Liu promoted the film at the 2009 Cairo International Film Festival. Showtime televised the film as part of Human Trafficking Awareness Month in 2010. The first screening in Connecticut took place in Westport that November. Sound or Treatise on Harmony is a 1984 documentary film directed by Arthur Omar. Manhood is a 2012 short biographical, comedy, documentary film directed by Shawna Steele. Give Us Our Skeletons! is a 1999 documentary film directed by Paul-Anders Simma about Niillas Somby, a Sami man who retraces his family ancestry as he searches for the head of his ancestor, Mons Somby. Mons Aslaksen Somby and Aslak Jakobsen Hætta were executed by decapitation on 14 October 1854 for murder, following a rebellion against the Norwegian government in which two people were murdered. Their heads were claimed by the government for scientific research, and were held as part of a collection of 900 skulls at the Anatomical Institute, in Oslo. The movie describes three parallel plots; the first is Niillas Somby's story on how he became one of the most celebrated protesters during the Alta Dam Protests between 1979-1981 near Kautokeino, Norway. In the years that followed, he traveled in exile to Canada where he was given sanctuary by the Iroquois First Nation, and later returned to Norway. The second plot was the disturbing examination of the scientific racism and racial classification movement that was considered an accepted fact by Scandinavian scientists from the early 19th century until the 1950s. Vietnam, Vietnam was a United States Information Agency film about the Vietnam War. The film, narrated by Charlton Heston, was shot on location in Vietnam in October–December 1968 but not released until 1971. Though John Ford, the executive producer, went to Vietnam, he did not participate in production work there. Ford later did supervise the editing and rewrote the film scenario. Bruce Herschensohn, the producer, remarked that the purpose of the film was to provide a "balance" to the view which critics of the war were providing. Due to the changing political situation in Vietnam, the film went through numerous cuts and script alterations over a three-year period and, when finally released, managed to offend almost everyone. Critical reviews were unfavorable. USIA Director Frank Shakespeare left the decision on whether or not to order a copy of the film up to individual US Embassies abroad, and only a few did. Drones in My Backyard is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Alan Snitow. How to Save a Fish from Drowning is a 2007 documentary short film directed by Kelly Neal. Overture is a 1958 Canadian short documentary film directed by Gian Luigi Polidoro. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The film depicts the peacekeeping efforts of the United Nations, set against the music of Beethoven's Egmont Overture, performed by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. Insurance Man is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Klaus Stern. Goff in the Desert - Photography and beyond - Part 7 is a 2003 film directed by Heinz Emigholz. I, Curmudgeon is a 2004 documentary film by Alan Zweig about curmudgeons, himself included. Self-declared curmudgeons interviewed in the film also include Harvey Pekar, Fran Lebowitz, Mark Eitzel, Cintra Wilson, Bruce La Bruce, Andy Rooney and Scott Thompson. The film was shot with a camcorder, with Zweig using a mirror to record his own experiences. The Human Face of Big Data is a documentary film directed by Sandy Smolan. On The Verge is a 90-minute independent film documentary made by SchNEWS SchMovies that was supposed to have its premiere screening at the Duke of York's Cinema, Brighton, UK, on 17 March 2008. The film covers the history of the Smash EDO anti-war campaign in Brighton, protesting the arms manufacturer EDO MBM Technology Ltd located in the town from 2004 to 2008. The film is critical of the Sussex Police, arguing that they colluded with the company to intimidate protesters and bolster the case for a High Court harassment injunction. This would have banned anti-war protests outside the factory, but a judge found the company had abused the legal process. The film showing was cancelled at the last moment as a result of an intervention by Sussex Police who worked with Brighton and Hove Council to threaten the cinema with legal action if the showing went ahead. The film had not been certificated by the local authority and the council claimed it would have breached local health and safety laws if shown. Incendiary: The Willingham Case is a 2011 documentary film by Steve Mims and Joe Bailey, Jr. that explores the conviction and execution of Cameron Todd Willingham for arson murder. Equal parts murder mystery, forensic investigation and political drama, the film meticulously reviews the arson evidence used to convict Willingham, and immerses audiences in contemporary struggles over the case. Incendiary won the Louis Black Special Jury Award in its debut at the 2011 South By Southwest Film Festival. It also screened in the Sterling US Feature Competition at the 2011 American Film Institute / Discovery Channel Silverdocs Festival. It was released in United States cinemas in fall 2011 to good reviews, in iTunes Movies in 2012, and continues to screen in U.S. theaters via Tugg. Afghan Massacre: The Convoy of Death is a 2002 documentary by Irish filmmaker Jamie Doran and Afghan journalist Najibullah Quraishi about alleged war crimes committed by the Junbish-i Milli faction of the Afghan Northern Alliance under General Abdul Rashid Dostum against Taliban fighters. The Taliban fighters, who had surrendered to Dostum's troops after the November 2001 siege of Kunduz, were transported to Sheberghan prison in sealed containers. Human rights groups estimate that hundreds or thousands of them died during and after transit. Afghan Massacre: The Convoy of Death presents testimony from interviewees stating that American military personnel were present at and complicit in some of the mass killings, known as the Dasht-i-Leili massacre. A short early version of the documentary was shown to the European and German Parliaments in June 2002, causing widespread concern in Europe. Against protests from the United States government, the completed documentary was shown later that year on many countries' national television channels, including German, British, Italian and Australian television. The programme was not screened in the U.S. and received no U.S. media coverage. Inhabitants is a 1970 short documentary film written and directed by Artavazd Peleshian. Hello?! Orchestra is a 2013 documentary film directed by Cheol-ha Lee. Digging Up the Marrow is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Adam Green. In the Beginning There Was Light is a documentary film by Austrian director P. A. Straubinger on the subject of inedia. Straubinger visits several people who supposedly nourish themselves with "light" and tries to find possible explanations on how inedia might work. P. A. Straubinger worked on inedia for ten years. This led to the film’s production, which took five years. The film premiered on September 17, 2010, in Austria and Switzerland. The Reach of Resonance is a 2010 documentary history music film directed by Steve Elkins. The Burning Times is a 1990 Canadian documentary, presenting a feminist account of the Early Modern European witchcraft trials. It was directed by Donna Read and written by Erna Buffie, and features interviews with feminist and Neopagan notables, such as Starhawk, Margot Adler, and Matthew Fox. The Burning Times is the second film in the National Film Board of Canada's Women and Spirituality series, following Goddess Remembered. The opening and closing theme music, composed by Loreena McKennitt, was released as the track titled "Tango to Evora" on her album "The Visit". Coast of Death is a 2013 Documentary, Drama and family film directed by Lois Patiño. Day at the Circus is a 1901 American silent film produced and distributed by Edison Manufacturing Company and directed by Edwin S. Porter. It depicts a parade of the Great Forepaugh and Sells Bros. Combined Circus followed by a horse race in the tent. It was one of many early silent film documentaries depicting circuses, which historian Katherine H. Adams said, "The circus' emphasis on movement and quick transition, as well as its lack of dialogue, made it a perfect subject matter for silent film." En la cuna del aire is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Rodolfo Montero de Palacio. Forever Activists: Stories from the Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade is a 1990 documentary film by Connie Field and Judith Montell that shares interviews with seven American veterans of the Spanish Civil War who fought for the Loyalist cause during the war and went on to live lives of activism. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Dating Sucks: A Genderqueer Misadventure is a 2013 short animated documentary film written and directed by Sam Berliner. Where I Am is a 2013 documentary, biographical film directed by Pamela Drynan. Indochina, Traces of a Mother is a 2011 documentary war film directed by Idrissou Mora Kpai. Harry Dean Stanton Partly Fiction is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Sophie Huber. The Possibility of Hope is a 2007 documentary short film directed by Alfonso Cuarón included as an extra in the Special Edition DVD of Cuarón's 2006 film Children of Men. A Story for the Modlins is a 2012 short documentary and drama film written by Carlos Muguiro, Sergio Oksman and Emilio Tomé and directed by Sergio Oksman. Bring ‘Em Back Alive is a 1932 jungle adventure documentary filmed in Malaya starring Frank Buck. Bernadette Lafont, Exactement is a 2007 documentary film directed by Estelle Frédet and Andréc S. Labarthe. Broken Noses is a 1987 documentary and sports film directed by Bruce Weber. Horgasm: A Love Story is a 2012 documentary adventure biographical film directed by Tobias Froystad. Sex and Cloister is a 2005 documentary short film written by Claudia Priscilla and Kiko Goifman directed by Claudia Priscilla. The Poker Movie is a 2006 documentary film directed by Jessica Landaw. Flight Of The Windhorse is a documentary film produced by Richard Dennison. Debtocracy is a 2011 left-wing documentary film by Katerina Kitidi and Aris Hatzistefanou. The documentary examines the causes of the Greek debt crisis in 2010 and advocates for the default of "odious debt". The documentary has been distributed online under a Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 license since 6 April 2011, and the production said that it has no interest in any kind of commercial exploitation of the project. The documentary is available in Greek and English and is subtitled in French, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese. According to The Nation, half a million people watched the film in the first five days of its release. The film was followed by a Greek-language book with the same title. Cabale des oursins is a 1992 documentary short film written and directed by Luc Moullet. Backbone of America is a 2013 documentary film. Chaplinesque, My Life and Hard Times aka The Eternal Tramp is a 1972 documentary film directed by Harry Hurwitz. The film was frequently shown on American Public Television. Frat House is a documentary film exploring the darker side of fraternity life. The film was directed by Todd Phillips and Andrew Gurland, and largely filmed at Allentown, Pennsylvania's Muhlenberg College; the majority of the film was shot in the house of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, whose charter was revoked in 2000. The opening fraternity, that drove the filmmakers out of the college and the town, is the Beta Chi fraternity on the State University of New York College at Oneonta campus in Oneonta New York. Beta Chi is an unrecognized fraternity in Oneonta, and was kicked off the Oneonta campus after reports of severe hazing. It continues to operate as a rogue, unrecognized chapter in the town to this day. Other unrecognized fraternities from SUNY Oneonta shown in the film include Sigma Alpha Mu, also known as "Sammy", and Tau Kappa Epsilon, which was recognized in the spring of 2007 but shortly thereafter lost their recognition from the campus. Frat House won two Sundance Film Festival awards in 1998, but has been attacked for containing sequences that were staged for the cameras. Chris Brown's Journey DVD contains videos for Brown's first single "Run It!" featuring Juelz Santana, "Yo" and "Gimme That" featuring Lil Wayne, while the CD boasts an international version of "Run It!" and the track "So Glad", which is previously unreleased in the United States. Also included on the DVD are dance demos and a half-hour documentary featuring highlights from Brown's promo tours in the United Kingdom and Japan, Grammy Week in Los Angeles and rehearsals for his ongoing tour, which plays Detroit. Brown's self-titled debut bowed at No. 2 on The Billboard 200 and has sold 1.27 million copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Lead single "Run It!" topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart for five straight weeks. Afghantsi is a 1988 documentary film directed by Peter Kosminsky for Yorkshire Television. It is based on numerous interviews with Soviet soldiers and officers filmed in Kabul at the end of the Soviet war in Afghanistan. Kosminsky visited several units of the 103rd Airborne Division, including an outpost on a mountain side overlooking Tajbeg Palace, the headquarters of the 40th Army. The soldiers in the film speak about the hardships of service in Afghanistan, combat experience and the loss of close friends. Another part of the film is devoted to interviews with veterans of the war that have already returned home, and parents of those who died. Bye Bye Shanghai is a 2008 film directed by Jana Bokov. Miracle on Everest is a 2008 adventure and documentary film written by Chris Thorburn and directed by Jennifer Peedom. Walking Troubles of Organic Hemiplegy is the first documentary film in the world, created by Romanian neurologist Gheorghe Marinescu. The film depicts several patients walking in four directions against a black background before and after the treatment. Marinescu came to the idea of making the film after having used the chronophotography under the influence of Étienne-Jules Marey. Marinescu praised the use of the cinematographic techniques in the scientifically investigation. Ebba the Movie is a documentary film of Swedish punk band Ebba Grön from 1982, by director and writer Johan Donner. The film includes a lot of live music and interviews with the band’s members. It starts in Rågsved, a working class suburb of Stockholm, and follows Ebba Grön on tour around Sweden until the band returns to Rågsved. The Swedish reggaeband Dag Vag also participates in a part of the movie when Ebba is on tour. There are two versions of the film. When released in 1982, the movie was originally 78 minutes long. Johan Donner later cut down the film to a 52 minutes version which he called the Hardcore version. Both versions are included in the DVD-release. The title of the film is a reference to the 1977 documentary film ABBA: The Movie, featuring fellow Swedes ABBA. The reference is intended to be ironic, since Ebba Grön's style is very different from that of ABBA. The Pull is a 2007 short biographical documentary film directed by Andy Blubaugh. Hot Flash Havoc is a 2012 film directed by Marc Bennett. Lords of the Mafia: Raymond Lee Washington takes a look at how the famous Los Angeles Crips gang was formed. Gangster king Raymond Lee Washington put a group of neighborhood friends together as community watchmen to protect their block. Watch how this community gang quickly spirals out of control to violence, crime and homicide. The New Medicine is 2006 documentary film written by Ronald Blumer and directed by Muffie Meyer. Ruben Salazar: Man in the Middle is a documentary film directed by Phillip Rodriguez. Heinrich Himmler: Anatomy of a Mass Murderer is a 2008 historical documentary film directed by Michael Kloft. The "Stone Sentinel" is one of the nicknames of Mount Aconcagua in Argentina and part of the Andean Cordillera. To 6,962 meters high, it’s the highest mountain on the continent. The film documents the physical and psychological feats confronted by Katia, a young woman. The inhabitants who live in the valleys or the villages perched high above are Katia's ephemeral companions along the way. An adventure on a human scale with astonishing larger than life characters who reveal the varying degrees to which the lives of those who live close to the "Stone Sentinel" are influenced by the mountain. Uspomene 677 is a 2011 documentary film written by Mirko Pincelli, Enrico Tessarin and directed by Mirko Pincelli. The Worst of the Worst: Portrait of a Supermax Prison is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Jane Cooper, Valarie Kaur, Allyssa Lamb, Aseem Mehta, Eric Parrie, Sharat Raju and Ivy Wang. John Paul II Vol 2: 1988-1991: The Fall of Berlin Wall is a 2006 biographical documentary film. Anthem to Beauty is a music documentary about the making of the Grateful Dead albums Anthem of the Sun and American Beauty. It originally aired in a somewhat shortened version in 1997 as part of the television series Classic Albums. It was released on VHS video tape in 1998 and on DVD in 1999, with a running time of 1 hour 15 minutes. The Valley of a Missing City is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Emilija Škarnulytė. Mardik: Baghdad to Hollywood is a 2008 documentary film written by Mardik Martin and directed by Ramy Katrib and Evan York. Via PanAm is a 2011 multimedia documentary written by Erwin Koopman and directed by Kadir van Lohuizen. Paperboys is a 2001 documentary film by American director Mike Mills. The 41-minute film, produced by Jack Spade, profiles six paperboys from Stillwater, Minnesota. They invite Mills into their homes, show him their personal effects, and answer questions about their lives and the future of paperboys. Parents weigh in on the benefits of their children's job and share thoughts on how the city has changed over the years. Mills's camera follows the boys on their routes, and the elegiac footage is accented with contemporary music. Glimpse of the Garden is a five-minute short experimental film made by Marie Menken, showing film clips of a garden, with birds chirping for the soundtrack. In 1958, the film won an award at the Exposition Universelle et Internationale at Brussels. In 2007, the film was nominated for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress. Peace Is Every Step is a 1998 documentary film directed by Gaetano Kazuo Maida and written by George Paul Csicsery and Leslie Asako Gladsjo. The Fourth Brother is a 2013 documentary film directed by Xu Tong. Liv till varje pris is a 1998 documentary film directed by Stefan Jarl. The 5000 Days Project is an ongoing documentary film directed by Rick Stevenson, that has several presentations and extensions in various festivals, TV stations, and more. The documentary chronicles the transition from child to adult, through footage of their everyday lives and thoughts. Wer Ist Thomas Müller? is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Christian Heynen. Koch Brothers Exposed is a 2012 US documentary, compiled by Robert Greenwald from a viral video campaign produced by Brave New Films, about the political activities of the Koch brothers. The Redemption of General Butt Naked is a 2010 documentary drama film directed by Daniele Anastasion and Eric Strauss. "Joshua Milton Blahyi, aka General Butt Naked, murdered thousands during Liberia’s horrific 14-year civil war. Today this once-brutal warlord has renounced his sadistic past and reinvented himself as evangelist Joshua Milton Blahyi. In a riveting cinema vérité journey that unfolds over the course of five years, filmmakers Eric Strauss and Daniele Anastasion follow Blahyi’s unrelenting crusade to redeem his life. Facing those he once terrorized, preaching where he once murdered, Blahyi is on a quest to save his soul. Can a man really change? Should we be judged by what we have done, or by who we are now? Whatever you make of him—liar or madman, charlatan or genuine repentant— General Butt Naked is certainly a mesmerizing character. Challenging our preconceived notions of evil, justice, and faith, this shocking story of one man’s remarkable journey will resonate with anyone who has ever questioned his or her capacity to forgive." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Wings of Evolution is a 2007 documentary film about the revolutionary educational system of the Siragu Montessori School, a school for homeless and underprivileged children, located in the outskirts of Chennai in Tamil Nadu, India. For a long time, the focus of education in India has been one of compulsory learning procedures, rote learning and examination-based evaluation with no emphasis on children's understanding of concepts, critical thinking and implications in their life outside school. Siragu Montessori School, in spite of limited resources and great obstacles has maintained a quality program, free for those who attend. The Documentary film focuses on bringing together children from around the world, through a world-wide postcard sharing workshop in which the children share thoughts, exchange ideas and promote cultural diversity, global peace and understanding towards building a better tomorrow. Fund raising for the Wings Of Evolution - Siragu Montessori School is undertaken by Positive People Today which is a 501 non-profit organization, which aims to unite human beings all over the Earth on the simple principle of "Positive Thinking". The Ballad of Ramblin' Jack is a 2000 documentary film directed by Aiyana Elliot. The River Wanganui is a 1913 documentary shot in New Zealand in 1912 on his 1912-13 South Pacific film-making voyage by French director Gaston Méliès. Like many of his films shot on that trip it is now lost. The film was released in the USA in 1913, and was described then as a trip up New Zealand’s most picturesque river known as the Rhine of that country. The river is now called the Whanganui River. In September 1912 press reports said that: There will be a big Maori gathering shortly at Paranui, a place some 15 miles above Pipiriki, on the Wanganui River, to open a new native meeting-house. Several hundreds of Maoris from all parts of the district are expected to attend. Among the visitors will be the Melies Picture Company, who anticipate finding excellent materials for the kinematograph in the typical Maori scenes. A later press report in October 1912 said that: Mr Edmund Mitchell, a well-known novelist and journalist arrived at Wellington from San Francisco by the Aorangi last week with Mr Gaston Melies a moving-picture manufacturer with a full dramatic company on a tour of the Pacific for film-making purposes .... Herr Wichmann von der CDU is a 2002 film directed by Andreas Dresen. Following Sean is a 2005 documentary film directed by Ralph Arlyck, and a follow-up to his 1969 student short "Sean," which features four-year-old Sean's thoughts on marijuana, police presence, and freewheeling lifestyles. The film's notoriety landed a screening in the White House and a variety of predictions regarding the outcome of Sean's life - whether he could grow up to embody the hippy philosophy, or whether he would turn out a drug dealer or stock broker. Following Sean picks up in the mid-1990s and turns Sean's story into a meditation on generational changes and legacies that are handed down as a result of choices made in heated political climates. The film was met with high critical praise, receiving an 86% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a 64 on Metacritic. WE ARE THE CHILDREN is a documentary film that dives deep inside the world of a group of Michael Jackson fans during the 2004-05 trial. The story delves beyond the tabloidesque media coverage of the crazy fan to uncover the human faces of the dedicated supporter. Following a group of California fans from dance parties on Hollywood Blvd to court proceedings in Santa Maria, and vigils at Neverland, WE ARE THE CHILDREN brings some three-dimensionality to people often written off as humorous freaks. The nonjudgmental, unflinching eye of the camera documents fan club gatherings, music collections and impersonators, as fans tell personal tales of inspiration about the King of Pop. Desert Dreams: Celebrating Five Seasons In The Sonoran Desert s a 2012 documentary film directed by Thomas A. Wiewandt. François Simon: La présence is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Ana Simon and Louis Mouchet. B V Karanth:Baba Kannada:, is a biographical Kannada language feature length documentary film on the life and times of BV Karanth, the man whose influenced Post Independence Modern Indian theater, the most. The film is directed Ramchandra P. N. and the producer is Films Division, an organisation under the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. The film bases itself on B V Karanth's autobiography Illiralaare, Allige Hogalaare in Kannada language compiled by well known Kannada writer Vaidehi. The City That Rocked the World is a 2013 documentary film directed by Roger Appleton. Une histoire de ballon is a 1976 documentary, short film directed by Joris Ivens and Marceline Loridan Ivens. The Prophecies of Nostradamus is a 1979 TV movie based on the writings of Nostradamus. It was also known as The Man Who Saw Tomorrow. Get ready for a wild ride as we journey through that provocative period in cinema, the 70’s and 80’s, a time of no-holds-barred moviemaking featuring unparalleled quantities of sex and nudity on-screen. Travel back in time through our retrospective series of documentaries that trace the roots of sex and nudity in cinema, uncovering groundbreaking films and the stars that disrobed in them. Narrated by our own in-house film historian, we highlight the series of events that led to the breaking down of the ratings system, the actresses and directors that challenged censorship and the controversial films that revolutionized the period and broke down long-standing barriers. Our in-depth expose is packed with revealing bios and facts, unveiling the most famous and sexiest actresses of the 70's and 80's and their contributions to skin on the screen. In many cases it was their first and only nude appearance on film, making this a must-have reference guide to nudity in cinema. Scenes with Kim Basinger, Morgan Fairchild, Darlyn Hannah, and hundreds more of Hollywood’s Hottest Actress. Glenn Close, Richard Gere, Edie Falco and other stars celebrate the bonds they share with their canine companions in this uplifting documentary about our furry best friends. Dream Land is a 2004 short documentary written by Laila Pakalnina and Maris Maskalans and directed by Laila Pakalnina. The Talking Muse is a 2003 biographical film written and directed by Torben Skjødt Jensen. Women's Viewpoint is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Ivana Sarah Marques Ferreira, Jandayra Alves Santos Clementino, Romilda Máxima Vilela de Lima, and Viviane Moreira Moraes. F*** Off, I'm Ginger was a BBC Three documentary about the body image and contrasting stereotypes surrounding ginger hair. It aired on 29 April 2007 as part of BBC's Body Image series including F*** Off, I'm Fat and F*** Off, I'm a Hairy Woman. It was presented by ginger haired comedian Daniel Wright, and followed his attempts to get a date with any woman despite his hair colour. Wright's comedy partner Stephen Marsh also appeared. The documentary is about the life of a ginger haired person and how hard they, especially men, have it amongst the world around them. It aims to persuade people who discriminate against ginger hair to change their ways and respect ginger haired people just like any other person. It contained interviews with ginger haired actors Charlie Clements, in which he spoke about becoming typecast as a ginger actor, and about Bradley's portrayal as a geek in the show and Jennie McAlpine, who said she had never been bullied for being ginger. Bridges to Babylon Tour '97–98 by The Rolling Stones is a concert DVD released in December 1998. It was filmed in the TWA Dome in St. Louis, Missouri on 12 December 1997 during the Bridges to Babylon Tour 1997-1998. Featuring performances by Dave Matthews and Joshua Redman. The concert was broadcast as a pay-per-view special. Of the 23 songs played, 4 songs were left off the DVD. "Anybody Seen My Baby?", "Corinna" with Taj Mahal, "All About You" and "The Last Time" were also played. "Waiting On A Friend", "Corinna" and "The Last Time" from this concert were released on the live album No Security. The Hyperwomen is a 2012 Brazilian documentary film, directed by Fausto Carlos, Leonardo Sette and Takuma Kuikuro. The film was shot in the Xingu National Park, Mato Grosso, Brazil. Fengming, a Chinese Memoir, also known as Chronicle of a Chinese Woman, is a 2007 Chinese documentary film directed by Wang Bing. The film consists almost entirely of an interview with the elderly He Fengming, recounting her experiences in post-1949 China. Beyond Wiseguys: Italian Americans & the Movies is a 2008 Documentary Film directed by Steven Fischler. I Never Promised You a Rose Garden: A Portrait of David Toop Through His Records Collection is a 2008 Documentary-Rockumentary-Drama Fantasy film directed by Dominique Lohlé and Guy Marc Hinant. The Seeds: Pushin' Too Hard is a documentary film directed by Neil Norman. American Teacher is a 2011 documentary film directed by Vanessa Roth and Brian McGinn. "As the debate over the state of America’s public school system rages on, one thing everyone (including President Obama) agrees on is the need for great teachers. Yet, while research proves that teachers are the most important school factor in a child’s future success, America’s teachers are so woefully underpaid that almost a third must divide their time between a second job in order to make a living. Chronicling the stories of four teachers in different areas of the country, American Teacher reveals the frustrating realities of today’s educators, the difficulty of attracting talented new teachers and why so many of our best teachers choose to leave the profession altogether. One of the very few black teachers at Leadership High School in San Francisco, Jonathan Dearman, loved his job, and his students adored him. But his inability to support his family led him to pursue a new career and left his students devastated by his departure. An elementary school teacher in New Jersey, Rhena is fresh out of Harvard and personifies the smart, young teacher anyone would want for their kids. But even her strong commitment to her students ultimately gets pushed aside when weighed against her own financial needs. Their stories are disheartening, but this wake-up call to our system’s failings also looks at possibilities for reform. Can we re-value teaching in the United States and turn it into a prestigious, financially attractive and competitive profession? With almost half of American teachers leaving the field in the next five years, now is the time to find out." Quoting Joanne Parsont from the 2011 San Francisco International Film Festival site. Lecumberri is a 1977 documentary film written by Miguel Necoechea, José Emilio Pacheco, Tomás Pérez Turrent, Arturo Ripstein and Margarita Suzan and directed by Arturo Ripstein. "Nearly about 1600 square kilometers of the North Eastern region of Bangladesh are wetlands locally known as "Cholon Beel." They are inundated by water eight to nine months a year making the inhabitants of this area are completely dependent on the mercy of the environment for survival. The only way locals can move around and communicate in the wet season is by boat. The short dry season allows for only one crop, so people have turned to fishing as their only source of income. Naturally, with such meager resources to be had, inhabitants live well below the poverty line. The children suffer the most with limited access to education. In 2002 the nonprofit organization Shidhulai Swanirvar Sangstha came forward with the innovative idea to educate the children of the impoverished area by using the natural events of these regions to create "Education on the Boat." Every day boats go to each house in the village to collect students and teach them on the boat. At the end of classes, the boats again go to every house to drop off the students." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Leonard Cohen: Bird on a Wire is a 1974 music documentary film written and directed by Tony Palmer. On 18 April 1983 a truck drove into the entrance of the US embassy in downtown Beirut killing 63 people, including six CIA officers. Never before had the CIA lost so many officers in a single attack. In the weeks and months after the bombing top investigators from the CIA and FBI failed to solve the mystery of who was responsible. For Robert Baer, the CIA s top operative in the Middle East, it became a lifelong obsession.His investigation and the answers he found became the Emmy Award-nominated motion picture, The Cult of the Suicide Bomber. In the first film Bob uncovered the history and evolution of suicide bombing as a weapon of radical Islam. Now in this vital new film he discovers how the phenomenon has spread to the West and changed the role of women in the Middle East, and crucially tells us how this threat can be defeated.With shocking footage of actual suicide bombings and interviews with failed suicide bombers, The Cult of the Suicide Bomber is the most definitive documentary on suicide bombers ever produced.Baer himself says: I almost look at the Cult of the Suicide Bomber films as a CIA briefing. In the CIA, we were taught to go to policy makers and tell them what we believe is the absolute truth. For me, the Cult films are the absolute truth. Gli Undici moschettieri is a 1952 Italian documentary film directed by Ennio De Concini and Fausto Saraceni.. Justin Bieber's Believe is a 2013 concert film biopic and the sequel to Never Say Never, both centering on Canadian singer Justin Bieber. It was released through Open Road Films in the United States and Canada on December 25, 2013. The film has received negative reviews from film critics and has grossed $6.2 million in the United States as of mid-January 2014. Four Wings and a Prayer is a 2007 documentary film directed by Nick de Pencier. Martha Hill is a 2013 documentary film directed by Greg Vander Veer. Concrete Pharaohs, directed by Jordan Todorov, is a Bulgarian documentary film exploring the lifestyle of the Kalderash Roma – a closed community of no more than 1 million people all over the world. Drag: Not Just Men In High Heels is a 2007 documentary film directed by Amir Jaffer. "Pip Chodorov brings us on a personal journey into the world of avant-garde and experimental cinema. The artists and poets of cinema since before WWI have always been free radicals, crazy about filmmaking and pushing the artform in unexpected new directions. Pip shares with us the films he loves and introduces us to some of the unforgettable artists who made them. An enjoyable, energetic foray in to the beginnings of an untamed and essential artform." Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. Vincent Scully: An Art Historian among Architects is a documentary film directed by Edgar B. Howard and Tom Piper. Witness to Apartheid is a 1986 American documentary film directed by Sharon I. Sopher. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Written by Sharon I. Sopher and Peter Kinoy, the film also won a Cine Golden Eagle. The filmmaker, Sharon I. Sopher, also won an Emmy Award for its direction. James May on the Moon is a British documentary in which James May commemorates the 40th anniversary of the Apollo moon landings. It was first aired on BBC Two on 21 June 2009 and on 10 November 2009 on BBC America in the United States. The show saw May interviewing Apollo moonwalkers Harrison Schmitt, Alan Bean, and Charlie Duke, before himself experiencing weightlessness and G-forces similar to that of a Saturn V rocket launch. As a passenger in a Lockheed U-2 spy plane, May flies to the stratosphere with his instructor pilot, Major John "Cabi" Cabigas, where they are able to view the curvature of the Earth and the atmosphere. His training for this was shown in the BBC Four documentary James May at the Edge of Space. Addicted To Fame is a 2012 documentary biographical comedy film written and directed by David Giancola. Screaming Queens is a 2005 documentary film directed by Victor Silverman and Susan Stryker. Aux portes du monde saharien is a 1947 documentary short film directed by Robert Vernay. Aristide and the Endless Revolution is a 2005 feature documentary directed and produced by Nicolas Rossier about former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and the coup d'etat that ousted him from the country in 2004. Rossier was the first media professional to get exclusive access to Aristide while in exile and the resultant interview is featured in the film, as well as interviews with many experts on Haiti, including U.S. Representative Maxine Waters, noted economist Jeffrey Sachs and Aristide's lawyer Ira J. Kurzban. Hungry for Change is a 2012 documentary film directed by James Colquhoun, Laurentine Ten Bosch and Carlo Ledesma. At the Death House Door is a 2008 documentary film about Carroll Pickett, who served as the death house chaplain to the infamous "Walls" prison unit in Huntsville, Texas. It was produced and directed by the team of Steve James and Peter Gilbert, co-produced by Zak Piper and Aaron Wickenden. James and Gilbert had previously worked together on the well-received Kartemquin Films documentary Hoop Dreams, on which James was the producer and director and Gilbert served as producer and director of photography. The film was produced by Kartemquin Films in association with the Chicago Tribune, which provided partial funding. The Real Badlands is a 2009 documentary film produced by Current TV and Rockwood Pictures, by British filmmakers Tim Clark and Craig Ford. The film tells the story of a Newark on Trent couple, who fed up with modern day life, quit their jobs, sell all of their possessions, and move into the woods. See What I Say is a 1981 American short documentary film produced by Linda Chapman, Pam LeBlanc and Freddi Stevens. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The subjects of the film are hearing-impaired women who discuss their use of sign language. Infinite Visions is a live DVD by Finnish power metal band Stratovarius. The album isn't technically a live album, but more just a collection of home videos by the band from 1988 to 2000. It chronicles the change of the band through those 12 years, from Fright Night up to Infinite. The DVD contains live footage from shows and tours, backstage with the band, the recording of Episode and Infinite and just some random messing around. This DVD also contains the 30 second clip of Sonata Arctica playing Black Diamond live. There is over 2 hours of home footage from the band, along with 6 music videos at the end. Unsalted: A Great Lakes Experience is a 2005 56-minute film documenting four decades of lake surfing on the Great Lakes, directed by Vince Deur. The film begins with videotape footage Deur recorded in November 1990, when he nearly drowned while surfing Lake Superior near Whitefish Point. Deur had been caught in a rip current for about an hour, trying futilely to swim to shore, before being suddenly released by the current. Back on dry land, he pledged on camera that he would one day make a film about surfing the great lakes. Unsalted combines home movies of lake surfing going as far back as the 1960s with contemporary footage culled from 150 hours of filming, often with surfing professionals brought in from California. Principal photography wrapped on Jan. 22, 2005, when the director and several pro-surfers from the Ocean Pacific surf team reached the tip of Lake Superior, 24 kilometers northeast of Duluth, Minnesota, to encounter the "biggest, cleanest ... most ocean like wave" Deur had ever seen on a lake. The conditions that day became the climax of the film. Unsalted premiered on June 10, 2005 in Newport Beach. It debuted in Canada on June 26 at the Fox Theatre in Toronto. Tracing Amy: The Chasing Amy Doc is a 2009 documentary film directed by Joey Figueroa and Zak Knutson. Between the Two is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Tanvi Talwar. Erasing Hate is a 2011 American TV documentary chronicling the efforts of reformed white power skinhead Bryon Widner to remove his numerous racist facial tattoos. Written, produced, and directed by Bill Brummel, it first aired on June 6, 2011 on MSNBC. This is a film the U.S. government does not want you to see.Press 1 For English exposes how the government has betrayed you, as it explores the unenforced immigration policies of the United States of America. Take a ride with two adventurous filmmakers (The Wright Brothers) as they trek along our southern border to investigate the lawlessness that has ravaged this part of the country. Witness how the devastating effects of crime, murder, trafficking, narco-terrorism, smuggling, lax border enforcement, and violence have turned the communities of the southwest into the Wild West again. This is a political documentary made by concerned citizens aiming to provide an in depth exploration behind the complex issues of U.S. border enforcement and the nation’s policies toward legal and illegal immigration. All in all, the documentary’s purpose is to entertain, educate, and serve the interests of the American people. Mortified Nation is a documentary film directed by Michael Mayer. The Barefoot Artist is a documentary, biographical and family film directed by Glenn Holsten and Daniel Traub. Salim Baba is a 2007 American short documentary film directed by Tim Sternberg. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The film follows Salim Muhammad, a 55-year-old man who lives in Kolkata with his wife and children. Since the age of ten he's supported himself by screening discarded film scraps for area children using a hand-cranked projector that he inherited from his father. A businessman as well as a cinephile, Salim runs his projector with his sons hoping that they will carry on this tradition. Salim Baba was co-produced by Ropa Vieja Films and Paradox Smoke Productions, with a grant from the Urban Arts Initiative and financial support from the Independent Feature Project. The film was presented as part of Maryland Film Festival's Opening Night shorts program on the evening of May 1, 2008. Incident at Restigouche is a 1984 documentary film by Alanis Obomsawin, chronicling a series of two raids on the Listuguj Mi'gmaq First Nation by the Sûreté du Québec in 1981, as part of the efforts of the Quebec government to impose new restrictions on Native salmon fishermen. Seat 26d is a 2014 documentary, animation and Short film directed by Karolina Brobäck. Georges Demeny is a 1979 documentary, short film directed by Joël Farges. Picture and Sound Rushes is a 1973 short documentary film directed by Morgan Fisher. Dún Chaoin is a 2010 short documentary biography film written and directed by Lanka Haouche Perren. Da habt ihr mein Leben - Marieluise, Kind von Golzow is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Barbara and Winfried Junge. High Schools is a 1984 American documentary film produced and directed by Charles Guggenheim. It is based on Ernest L. Boyer's book, High School, and was filmed on location in seven American high schools. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Father's Birth is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Delphine Lanson. The Green Wave is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Ali Samadi Ahadi. Death By Instalments is a 2010 film directed by Ilona Ziok. Totally Bill Hicks is a video released in 1994, re-released on DVD in 2002, documenting the life and comedy of Bill Hicks. It consists of two parts; Revelations, a recording of his last live performance in the United Kingdom made at the Dominion Theatre, and It's Just A Ride, a documentary about Hicks' life which featured interviews with friends, admirers, and family. In 2002 Totally Bill Hicks became the first of Hicks' videos to be released on DVD, prompting one critic to comment on how topical the comedian's material had remained. His joke about the Bush administration learning about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction "by looking at the receipt" was made in the context of the First Gulf War, but was equally relevant in the run up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq. House/Grandparent is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Azharr Rudin. Tex Avery, the King of Cartoons is a 1988 television documentary written by Joseph Adamson and directed by John Needham and Tex Avery. The Continuation is a 2004 short documentary film written and directed by Galina Adamovich. Boundary is a 2009 documentary, drama, short film directed by Devin Horan. "A short video capturing the mood of the second annual LGBT pride parade in New Delhi, just before the historic High Court judgment decriminalizing homosexuality. Its shows individual opinions and activism in New Delhi." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Công Binh - The Lost Fighters of Vietnam is a documentary film directed by Lê Lâm. Kopfkino is a 2012 documentary film directed by Lene Berg. I've Seen the Unicorn is a 2014 historical biographical drama documentray film written and directed by Vincent Toi. Fad Gadget is a 2006 documentary written by Frank Tovey and directed by Frank Tovey and Morgan Tovey Frost. Dharti Ki Jhankar is a 1957 documentary film directed by Bhaskar Rao. Last Chapter is a 2010 documentary film directed by Peter Torbiörnsson. Celinas Story is a short documentary film directed by Celina Chudwick. De Beeldenstorm is a 1982 film directed by Johan van der Keuken. Gap-Toothed Women is a 1987 documentary film directed by Les Blank. Looking Out is a 2012 short drama film directed by Moa Geistrand and Marcus Harrling. Jacques Mesrine: profession ennemi public is 1984 crime documentary biographical film written by Hervé Palud and Gilles Millet and directed by Hervé Palud. Design Is One: The Vignellis is a 2012 documentary directed by Kathy Brew and Roberto Guerra. Til Infinity: The Souls of Mischief is a documentary film directed by Shomari Smith. Family Name is a 1997 documentary film directed by Macky Alston. Humano is a 2013 mystery documentary written and directed by Alan Stivelman. Solartaxi: Around the World with the Sun is a 2010 adventure documentary film written and directed by Erik Schmitt. Cary Silverman, a former lawyer, embarks upon on of this year's most important feature length documentaries. The film will expose the injustice system in America and will uncover the truth relative to the imbalances infested in our decaying criminal justice system. Passages is a 2004 Chinese drama film directed by Yang Chao. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival where it won the Caméra d'Or Mention Spéciale prize. The Koolama, pride of Western Australia's shipping fleet, lay crippled in the shallows on a remote beach hundreds of miles from civilisation. Its 200 passengers and crew, some with horrific injuries sought refuge in a nearby cove. Ten days earlier their voyage was brought to an abrupt end, as Japanese Zeros attacked from the north and pounded Koolama's decks with bombs and machine gun fire. What followed is a story of survival and heroic achievement. It's also a tale of conflict, jealously and powerful personalities. Many say it's the story of Australia's forgotten mutiny. Pasta nera is a 2011 documentary film directed by Alessandro Piva. "This documentary follows two couples who are involved, in various ways, in being a family. Filmed in part by the kids themselves, The Wolf in Shorts takes a decidedly personal perspective on the issue of same-sex parenthood." - Quoting from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. A critically acclaimed, award-winning documentary that examines the impact of the notorious Willowbrook State Institution for the developmentally disabled on the survivors and their families, Unforgotten features eloquent testimonials of family members and focuses on the lives of survivors, 25 years after Geraldo Rivera's historic television expose. Aicha è tornata is a 2011 Italian documentary film by Juan Martin Baigorria, Lisa Tormena and Gaia Vianello. Pawtucket Rising is a 2008 documentary film directed and produced by Jason Caminiti. The film tells the decade-long story of how the city of Pawtucket, Rhode Island revitalized itself and became known as "Rhode Island's Creative Community." Momenta is a short documentary film directed by Andy Miller and Robin Moore. Inquiry is a 1966 animated documentary film directed by C. T. Baptista. Groundswell is a 2013 short documentary film produced by Chris Darimont, Tim Lynch and Tieneke Pavesic. The Piano: An Odyssey is a documentary music film directed by Michelle Cameron. Grande Hotel is a 2011 history documentary film directed by Lotte Stoops. Blindganger is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Fosco Dubini and Dietrich Leder. " A documentary made in colloboration with health education group GMFA which interrogates a cast of gay Black Londoners about they live and love, how they feel about their lives, from Gay Lib veteran Ted Brown to more recent arrivals on the scene. Presented in association with gay men's health charity GMFA, Jaime Sylla's new film explores Black gay male experience in London, from Gay Lib pioneer Ted Walker Brown to more recent arrivals on the scene. Tales of friendship and support underly an investigation into the creation of a sense of community. Sylla's last film No Magic Bullet premiered at the LLGFF in 2007. This film aims to explore how racism, homophobia, HIV and issues around immigration all have an impact on the construction of a healthy identity for Black gay men. The film offers inspiringly diverse voices who share their alternatives to the invisibility or stigmatization which many have experienced within their own communities and families. This world premiere screening will be followed by a discussion with the director and some of the film's participants as well as representatives from Big Up. BR" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. The Mail is a 1996 short documentary film written and directed by Laila Pakalniņa. Film ist. 7-12 is a 2002 documentary film directed by Gustav Deutsch. Pyongyang Diaries is a 1997 directed by Solun Hoaas. El Medico: The Cubaton Story is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Daniel Fridell. Valle sagrado de Urubamba is a 1979 short documentary film written by Demetrio Bilbatua and directed by Demetrio Bilbatua and Fernando Martínez. The D.C. Sniper's Wife is a 2008 mystery television documentary film written and directed by Barbara Kopple. Into the Dark: Exploring the Horror Film is a 2011 documentary film directed by Johanna Wartio McEvoy. The Weight of Chains is a 2010 Canadian documentary film directed by Boris Malagurski. The film argues that the breakup of Yugoslavia was "orchestrated by Western powers in furtherance of imperial ambitions." It was released on December 17, 2010. Since 2012, the film has been distributed by Journeyman Pictures. He is one of the most successful recording artists of the 21st century. From the Mickey Mouse Club to NSYNC, Justin Timberlake is a truly remarkable iconic superstar....This is the story of Justin Timberlake. Slacker Uprising is a movie of Michael Moore's tour of colleges in swing states during the 2004 election, with a goal to encourage 18–29 year olds to vote, and the response it received. The film is a re-edited version of Captain Mike Across America, which played at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2007. It is one of the first feature length films made by a known director to be released as a free and legal download online. The free download is only available to those residing in the United States and Canada. The film was also made available free for online viewing and download on the Lycos Cinema platform as well as iTunes and blip.tv. It had a one-night-only run at the Michigan Theater, where Michael Moore spoke briefly. The film is available in DVD format. Slacker Uprising features live performances or appearances by Eddie Vedder, Roseanne Barr, Joan Baez, Tom Morello, R.E.M., Steve Earle, and Viggo Mortensen. The original score is by Anti-Flag. Friendship Beyond the Fence is a 2009 short documentary film. The Battle of Tsushima is a 1975 documentary film written and directed by Nagisa Oshima. Neither rain, nor snow, nor gloom of night...can keep these hoops junkies off the asphalt courts. MORE THAN A GAME is a rollicking and oft-times heartbreaking account of Chicago playground basketball. Featuring NBA stars, local legends and everyday players, MTAG makes for a fascinating companion to Hoop Dreams, which was released that same year.Over the course of three years, filmmakers Joe Angio and Joel Cohen traversed Chicago's playgrounds to find out why so many people - primarily black inner-city dwellers - devoted their lives to basketball. At the time of the film's release, more NBA players came from Chicago than anywhere else; here, we hear from three of the best. Phoenix Suns all-star forward Eddie Johnson recalls how the playground helped him to steer clear of the notorious street gangs that seduced his older brother, a far superior basketball player. Former Utah Jazz all-star guard Rickey Green returns with two childhood friends to the South Side court where they competed against Arthur "the Magician" Sybills, who they all agree is the greatest player they ever saw. Future Atlanta Hawks all-star Glenn "Doc" Rivers - who would go on to coach the Boston Celtics to an NBA title - recounts a particularly transcendent playground game that he still considers the best he's ever played in.Of course, only a select few graduate from the playgrounds to the NBA. More than a Game also reveals the stories of those who didn't make it. To this day, Bernard Harden believes "no one man can stop me," but his NBA dream ended in the minor leagues of Argentina. His bravado barely masks a lingering bitterness. As a high school sophomore in Chicago's highly competitive Public School League, Terry Rucker averaged 40 points a game. He never finished high school. Lamaar "Money" Mondane's NBA dream never came true either, but he at least achieved a modicum of fame when Reebok selected him to appear in a popular advertising campaign on "playground legends." All three continue to compete on the tiny West Side play lot of their youth.And then there are the games themselves, hard-fought and competitive. One player crashes recklessly, headfirst, into a steel support to save a loose ball. A skinny teen soars to slam home a spectacular dunk, a play worthy of any SportsCenter highlight reel. An argument threatens to erupt into chaos when two players refuse to give ground on a foul call (the instant replay proves inconclusive). Witnessing this passion and intensity we begin to understand why the game is so important to countless players, young and old. Why, in fact, it is MORE THAN A GAME. Ending In 6 Minutes is a 2012 short drama documentary film directed by Peter Slee. Tom McPhee's An American Opera: The Greatest Pet Rescue Ever! is a multi-award winning documentary film chronicling the events following Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Louisiana when pet owners were forced to evacuate without their pets. An American Opera follows the pets, vets, owners, officials, rescuers, and adopters of animals as they try to remedy the situation, revealing that not everyone had the same goal of saving animals. Tom McPhee directed, narrated, and produced the film with the production companies Man Smiling Moving Pictures and Cave Studio. Jorge Mautner - O Filho do Holocausto is a 2012 Brazilian documentary film directed by Pedro Bial and Heitor D’Alincourt. The film follows the birth of Jorge Mautner up to his 17 years. He was born in Brazil shortly after his parents fled the Holocaust. Raised by a nanny who introduced him to Candomblé, Mautner became a precursor of the Tropicália, contributing to the construction of the identity of Brazilian music. Breaking the Silence: Truth and Lies in the War on Terror is a 2003 Carlton Television documentary written and directed by John Pilger, produced by Christopher Martin and co-directed by Steve Connelly. In the film, Pilger presents a personal view of "the truth and lies in the 'war on terror'." Yo soy Boricua, pa'que tu lo sepas! is a documentary film co-directed by Liz Garbus and Rosie Perez, in which Perez explores Puerto Rican culture and history, from New York City's Puerto Rican Day Parade to a broader examination of Puerto Rico's past. InJustice is a 2011 documentary film produced and directed by Brian Kelly. The film features the impact of tort reform on the United States judicial system. The documentary focuses on how the class action lawsuit, born from the Civil Rights Act of 1964, was skillfully managed by a small group of trial attorneys who manipulated legal rules, procedures — and even their own clients — to become an international enterprise that rivals the scope and profits of Fortune 500 corporations. How lawyers managed to maneuver their way into millions and billions by scamming the judicial system via class action lawsuits. Iván Z is a 2004 short documentary directed by Andrés Duque. Escher's Universe is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ernesto Páramo. Man in Search of Man is a 1974 short and documentary film directed by Prem Vaidya. Koch is a 2012 documentary film directed by Neil Barsky about former New York City Mayor Ed Koch. Koch premiered at the Hamptons International Film Festival on October 8, 2012 and is distributed by Zeitgeist Films. It opened theatrically in the United States on February 1, 2013. Beyond Forgiving is a 2013 documentary film directed by Imad Karam. Sister Mercy is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Laura Hadden. Our Century is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Artavazd Peleshian. Follow Me: The Yoni Netanyahu Story is a 2012 documentary film written by Jonathan Gruber and directed by Jonathan Gruber and Ari Daniel Pinchot. Sexy Night Report is a 1977 documentary film written by Bruno Mattei and directed by Joe D'Amato and Bruno Mattei. Touring Band 2000 is the second DVD release by the American alternative rock band Pearl Jam, culled from performances from the North American legs of the band's 2000 Binaural Tour. It was released on VHS and DVD on May 1, 2001. A Beautiful Mind: Meeting John Nash is a 2002 short documentary film. Anita's Africa is a 2007 film written and directed by Beverley Reid. The Painter's Voice is a 2007 short documentary film directed by William Friedkin. When the Zombies Come is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Jon Hurst. The Naturalized is a 2010 documentary film directed by Aaron Lubarsky. Ansel Adams: A Documentary Film is a 2002 documentary and biographical film that traces the life of the American photographer Ansel Adams. He is most noted for his landscape images of the American West. The film is narrated by David Ogden Stiers and features the voices of Josh Hamilton, Barbara Feldon and Eli Wallach. This unauthorized look at John Lennon's life and career is a fascinating artifact on the former Beatle. Interviews with those closest to Lennon are featured, including family members, and footage of the man himself. In-depth and revealing, INSIDE JOHN LENNON provides a welter of detail on the now sadly deceased rock legend. Vampiro: Angel, Devil, Hero is a 2008 Canadian documentary film about Ian Hodgkinson aka Vampiro, a professional wrestler who currently lives in Guadalajara, Jalisco. The film revolves around his biggest international tour and talks to him about life outside the ring. Dakota 38 is a 2012 documentary film directed by Silas Hagerty. Lessons from the Night is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Adrian Francis. 1000 Journals is a 2007 indie documentary film directed by Andrea Kreuzhage. Running Blind is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Ryan Suffern. A Star Named Ayrton Senna is a 1998 sports documentary biographical film. Pussy Riot: A Punk Prayer is a 2013 Russian-British documentary film by Mike Lerner and Maxim Pozdorovkin. The film follows the court cases on the Russian feminist/anti-Putinist punk-rock protest group Pussy Riot. Directed by Lerner and Pozdorovkin, the film featured publicly available footage of the court proceedings and interviews with the families of the band members, but no interviews with the band members themselves. The HBO network subsequently bought the U.S. television rights to the film The film aired on HBO on 10 June 2013. The BBC showed the film on 21 October 2013 in its Storyville series of documentaries. Reviews have generally been favorable; on IMDB it has a weighted average rating of 7/10, and on Rotten Tomatoes 28 out of 34 reviewers gave it a positive review, with an average rating of 6.9. The film was one of 15 feature-length documentaries short listed for a 2014 Academy Award, however it was not included in the final list of nominees. Itsembatsemba: Rwanda One Genocide Later is a 1997 documentary short film directed by Alexis Cordesse and Eyal Sivan. Crossing the Bridge: The Sound of Istanbul is a 2005 film/documentary directed by Fatih Akın. The film is a journey through the music scene in modern Istanbul, Turkey as well as portraying its cultural life. It was screened out of competition at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival. It features German musician Alexander Hacke as the narrator. Hacke and Akın travelled around Istanbul with a mobile recording studio and a microphone, assembling an inspired portrait of Turkish music — from arabesque to indie rock and rap. Among the featured artists in the film are: Baba Zula Orient Expressions Duman Replikas Erkin Koray Ceza Ayben Istanbul Style Breakers Mercan Dede Selcuk Brenna MacCrimmon Selim Sesler Siyasiyabend Nur Ceylan Aynur Orhan Gencebay Müzeyyen Senar Sezen Aksu Sertab Erener When the Road Bends: Tales of a Gypsy Caravan is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Jasmine Dellal. The Relationship Doctrine of Don Blanquito is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Roger Nygard. The Birth of Big Air is a documentary film directed by Jeff Tremaine that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. Undying Love is a 2002 documentary, romance, drama film written and directed by Helene Klodawsky. The Homestretch is a 2014 documentary film written by Anne De Mare, Kirsten Kelly and Leslie Simmer and directed by Anne De Mare and Kirsten Kelly. Storm Surfers 3D is a 2012 documentary adventure film written and directed by Justin McMillan and Christopher Nelius. Sunday Driver is a 2005 documentary film, directed by Carol Strong, that chronicles The Majestics, California's oldest black lowrider car club, which was originally founded in Compton. With up close and candid interviews that were recorded while hanging out with the club, the movie delivers an upfront look at the lowriding lifestyle of Southern California. Stop Genocide is a 1971 documentary film by eminent Bangladeshi filmmaker Zahir Raihan. It is a 20-minute film that documents the killings and atrocities carried out by the Pakistan Army on the people of the then East Pakistan. It also depicts the plight of the refugees and the activities of the Government in exile. Raihan made his debut in making of documentary films by Stop Genocide. Raihan started planning for this documentary around April–May in 1971 and soon started making it. Film Director Alamgir Kabir helped him. It was June and the film was produced in less than a month. Similarity of this documentary with some of those by Cuban filmmaker Santiago Álvarez indicates Álvarez’s influence over Zahir Raihan. Raihan adopted a new technique of film-making of using found video clips and photographs while he was working for this documentary. The film was created using whatever it was found in the newsreel clips and footage. Raihan made this documentary with an aim to create world opinion against the brutal acts committed by Pakistan Army. Raihan was a Refugee staying in Kolkata when he made this film. The Cure in Orange is a concert film by British rock group The Cure. It is viewed as being as an essential document of the Cure at their mid-late 1980s peak by fans of the group. Sometimes City is a documentary historical fiction music film directed by Tom Jarmusch. Meanders is a 2010 documentary film written by Manuel Ruiz Montealegre and directed by Manuel Ruiz Montealegre and Hector Ulloque Franco. On Tour with Pina Bausch is a 1983 documentary music film written by Alain Plagne and directed by Chantal Akerman. They Call it Myanmar - Lifting the Curtain is a 2012 documentary film directed by Robert H. Lieberman. Bloody Cartoons is a 2007 documentary film directed by Karsten Kjaer. Two Thirds Sky: Artists in Desert Country is a 2002 documentary film. Painting John is a 2011 documentary directed by Audrey Hall. Bombhunters is a 2006 documentary film produced and directed by Skye Fitzgerald, that documents the effects of unexploded ordnance on Cambodian people, both within their homeland and in the US. Kisangani Diary/Loin du Rwanda is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Hubert Sauper. 119 Bullets + Three is a 1996 documentary film written by Aryeh Krishek and directed by Yeud Levanon. A Shtetl That‘s No Longer There is a 2006 documentary film directed by Heddy Honigmann. Elliott Erwitt: I Bark at Dogs is a 2011 short biographical historical fiction documentary film written by Jeffrey M. Brooks and directed by Douglas J. Sloan. At Night, They Dance is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Isabelle Lavigne. "At Night, They Dance is one family’s story. The film takes us into the heart of a clan of women, in which the art of belly dancing has been passed down from mother to daughter since time immemorial. Filmed in Cairo, At Night, They Dance takes an unsentimental yet lyrical look at a hidden world full of surprise and fascination. The viewer is allowed in as a privileged witness. A gritty film in which raw beauty triumphs over the harshest realities." Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Directors' Fortnight site. Sunday. The Gospel According to lift-man Albertas is a 2003 documentary film directed by Arūnas Matelis. Our Feathered Friends is a 1961 documentary film directed by Gopal Datt. We Don't Die, We Multiply: The Robin Harris Story is a 2006 documentary film directed by Topper Carew. Looking for North Koreans is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jéro Yun. A dramatic tale of microbes, medicine and money, this eye-opening new film investigates the untold story of Lyme disease, an emerging epidemic larger than AIDS. Each year thousands go undiagnosed or misdiagnosed, told that their symptoms are "all in their head." Following the stories of patients and physicians as they battle for their lives and livelihoods, the film brings into focus a haunting picture of our health care system and its ability to cope with a silent terror under our skin. Der Reichseinsatz is a 1993 film directed by Wolfgang Bergmann. Lanfranchi's Memorial Discotheque is a 2010 documentary and the first film directed and produced by Bitter Man Films' Richard Baron. The film chronicles the last sixty days of the eponymous artist-run initiative which ran from 2002 - 2007 in Sydney, Australia. The film premiered at Popcorn Taxi, was nominated for an Independent Spirit award at the Inside Film Awards, won the Director's Choice Award at the Sydney Underground Film Festival and Best Documentary at the Melbourne Underground Film Festival. One year after its premiere screening, the film was digitally distributed as a free, legal BitTorrent download via VODO. In 1933, a young Indiana native set out to make his mark in the fledgling sport of the Automobile Thrill Show. From his early beginnings in Worster Ohio with single car rollovers to commanding performances with his ""Rocker Car Leap"" in front of tens of thousands of fans Lucky Teter would form the greatest touring group of daredevils and stuntman the world had yet seen. This feature documentary includes rare archive footage, photos, and radio interviews. In addition includes spectacular stunts automobile stunts performed by Lucky Teter and the modern day versions by Toni Peterson's Hell Drivers. My Japan is a 1945 American anti-Japanese propaganda short film produced to spur sale of American war bonds. The film takes the form of a mock travelogue of Japan, presented by an impersonated Japanese narrator. Children, Cadres, Commanders is a 1991 film directed by Wolfgang Kissel. The Problem, Testimony Of The Saharawi People is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jordi Ferrer and Pablo Vidal. A Program About Unusual Buildings & Other Roadside Stuff is a 2004 documentary film written by Rick Sebak. Medici con l'Africa is a 2012 documentary film directed by Carlo Mazzacurati. Cheryl Larsen is doing a documentary on stand-up comedy. Her subject, Rich Burns, is a likable up and coming young comedian. Erinnerungen - oder Der vergebliche Versuch zu entkommen is a 1982 film directed by Giesela Weimann. The Six Day Fight In Myong Dong Cathedral is a 1997 documentary film directed by Kim Dong-won. Macho like Me is a documentary film directed and performed by Helie Lee. She performs a social experiment where she by cutting her hair and changing her wardrobe to men’s clothes transforming her appearance from an established woman into a “man”, and takes a step into the masculine world. The documentary is a mix of raw documentary footage and a live presentation, and was presented at SDAFF and DC APA in 2010. Sunrise Over Tiananmen Square is a 1998 National Film Board of Canada short animated documentary directed by Shui-Bo Wang. It is an autobiography about the director's life, career and ultimate disillusionment with The People's Republic of China. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, losing to The Personals. Other honours for the film included the Gemini Award for Best History/Biography Documentary program and the award for Best Short Documentary at Hot Docs. Galapagos: IMAX is a short documentary film directed by David Clark and Al Giddings. Hold Up the Sun is a 1993 film directed by L. Lawson, B. Tilley and Laurence Dworkin. Below the Fold: The Pulitzer That Defined Latino Journalism is a 2007 American documentary film written and directed by Roberto Gudiño to chronicle the story of the Mexican American journalists of the Los Angeles Times who responded to negative portrayals of Latinos in the newspaper by publishing Latinos. Filmed on locations in Arizona, California and New York, the project debuted at the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival in October, 2007. Friends After 3.11 is a 2011 documentary film directed by Shunji Iwai. Socotra. The hidden land. is a documentary film directed by Carles Cardelús. When I Walk is a 2013 documentary film written by Jason DaSilva and Alice Cook, and directed by Jason DaSilva. Spinning Plates is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Joseph Levy. Death on the Job is a 1991 documentary film directed by Bill Guttentag. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Running from Crazy is a 2013 documentary film by director Barbara Kopple about the family of Nobel Prize-winning author Ernest Hemingway. It was shown at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. Through the eyes of Mariel Hemingway, who received an Oscar nomination for her role in Woody Allen's 1979 film Manhattan and who has spoken for American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, it chronicles the story of three of the author's grandchildren, Mariel, Margaux Hemingway and Muffet Hemingway, daughters of Jack Hemingway, and their struggles with the family history of substance abuse, mental illness and suicide. The film, focusing on suicide and mental health issues, was promoted on the Oprah Winfrey Network, which had the television premiere of the film on April 27, 2014. Stealing a Nation is a 2004 Granada Television documentary written and directed by John Pilger, produced and directed by Christopher Martin and with reconstruction footage directed by Sean Crotty. The documentary is about the expulsion of Chagossians from the Chagos Archipelago, chiefly from Diego Garcia Island, forcibly removed by the British government between 1967 and 1973 to Mauritius, 1,000 miles away, so that the island could be used as an American and British airbase. The Ruin Machine is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Bruno Vianna. Wokabaut Bilong Tonten is a 1974 documentary adventure drama film directed by Oliver Howes. National Geographic: Journey to Shark Eden is a 2010 documentary film. The Muslims I Know is a 2008 documentary film directed by Pakistani-American producer/director Mara Ahmed. The film tries to answer the clichéd question “Where are the moderate Muslims?” by focusing on a small American Muslim community. The Muslims I Know was fiscally sponsored by New York Women in Film and Television En Dag Med Ingo is a 1960 film directed by Ragnar Frisk. Road to the Big Leagues is a 2007 independent documentary film. This film follows children from the Dominican Republic who rely on baseball as a way out of poverty and struggle. The young boys on this journey are glorified for their persistence, perseverance, and humor throughout their fight for freedom and a better life. This footage focuses on the triumphs and tribulations from young boys to grown men. "Sound the global alarm. Scientists predict that if we continue fishing at the current rate, the planet will run out of seafood by 2048 with catastrophic consequences. Based on the book by Charles Clover, The End of the Line explores the devastating effect that overfishing is having on fish stocks and the health of our oceans.With Clover as his guide, Sundance veteran Rupert Murray (Unknown White Male) crisscrosses the globe, examining what is causing the dilemma and what can be done to solve it. Industrial fishing began in the 1950s. High-tech fisheries now trawl the oceans with nets the size of football fields. Species cannot survive at the rate they are being removed from the sea. Add in cofactors of decades of bad science, corporate greed, small-minded governments, and escalating consumer demand, and we’re left with a crisis of epic proportions. Ninety percent of the big fish in our oceans are now gone.Murray interweaves glorious footage from both underwater and above with shocking scientific testimony to paint a vivid and alarming profile of the state of the sea. The ultimate power of The End of the Line is that it moves beyond doomsday rhetoric to proffer real solutions. Chillingly topical, The End of the Line drives home the message: the clock is ticking, and the time to act is now." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. An Act of Conscience is a 1997 documentary film by Robbie Leppzer about the war tax resistance of Randy Kehler and Betsy Corner and years-long struggle that ensues after the IRS seizes their home in Colrain, Massachusetts in 1989, to recover $27,000 in unpaid taxes, penalties, and interest. The film premiered at Sundance Film Festival and was shown on Cinemax and the Sundance Channel. It is narrated by Martin Sheen and features cameo appearances by activist-priest Daniel Berrigan and political folksinger Pete Seeger. Remembering Spokane is a documentary film by KSPS Public Television Spokane. Mt. Hakkoda is a 2014 film based on the documentary novel Tragedy in a Blizzard by Koshu Ogasawara. Silvestre Pantaleón is a 2012 documentary, biographical film written and directed by Roberto Olivares and Jonathan D. Amith. Environmental Lawyers And The Protection Of Sharks is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Jeff Litton. Amazonia is a 2013 Brazilian-French documentary film directed by Thierry Ragobert. It was screened out of competition at the 70th Venice International Film Festival and closed the festival. Housing Project Cohab is a 2012 documentary, short and experimental film written and directed by Lincoln Péricles. La Casa del Ritmo: A Film About Los Amigos Invisibles is a documentary biographical music film directed by Javier Andrade. Trumpets’ Republic is a documentary film directed by Stefano Missio. Ma Petite Pinotte is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Marie-France Laval. Fryderik Chopin is a 2010 documentary film directed by Angelo Bozzolini. A Face of War is a 1968 documentary about the Vietnam War, by Eugene S. Jones. The New York Times called it "one of the great Vietnam documentaries." Roger Ebert called it a "heart-wrenching masterpiece". Chladni Scheme is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Peter Miller. Lucky People Center International is a 1998 music documentary film. Changement is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Chiara Cavallazi. Wild Reverence: The Wild Steelheads Last Stand is a documentary film directed by Shane Anderson. Little Tibet 2 is a documentary film directed by Nawang N. Anja-Tsang. 0567 - Appunti per un documentario su pozzuoli is a 1987 film directed by Giuseppe M. Gaudino. Documentary feature film that follows the personal stories of families struggling in the aftermath of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. Filmed over the course of one winter in one American city, the film presents an intimate snapshot of the state of the nation's economy as it is playing out in millions of American families, and highlights the human consequences of the decline of the middle class and the fracturing of the American Dream. We, the Children of the 20th Century is a 1993 film directed by Vitali Kanevsky. Children of Ice is a documentary film directed by Justinas Lingys. 99%: The Occupy Wall Street Collaborative Film is a 2013 documentary film about the Occupy Wall Street movement directed by Audrey Ewell, Aaron Aites, Lucian Read, Nina Krstic, and co-directed by Katie Teague, Peter Leeman, Aric Gutnick, Doree Simon, and Abby Martin. The project features the work of more than 100 collaborators who contributed approximately 18 terabytes of film footage from dozens of American cities. Commentators include Naomi Wolf, Matt Taibbi, and Micah White. Symphony of a City is a 1947 Swedish documentary short film about Stockholm, directed by Arne Sucksdorff. It won an Academy Award in 1949 for Best Short Subject. Rehearsing a Dream is a short documentary directed and produced by four time Academy Award nominees Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon. Cinematography by Buddy Squires and Steve McCarthy, edited by Nancy Baker and a Production of Simon & Goodman Picture Company. The film premiered on HBO in August 2007 and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The film follows a group of gifted 17-year-old performing and visual artists at the YoungArts program of the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts in Miami. The young artists as spend a week learning from mentors like Mikhail Baryshnikov, Vanessa L. Williams, Jacques d'Amboise and Michael Tilson Thomas. The NFAA has for the past 27 years been helping the country's best high-school senior art students with their annual YoungArts Week in Miami and by scholarships. Over 7500 students apply for about 150 spots in all arts disciplines. Zora Neale Hurston: Jump at the Sun is a 2008 documentary film directed by Samuel D. Pollard. Spirit of the Marathon II is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jon Dunham, and the sequel to the 2008 film, Spirit of the Marathon. The film chronicles the journey seven marathon runners experience leading up to competing in the 2012 Rome Marathon. It received a one-night limited release on over 600 screens in the United States on June 12, 2013. An Organic Life is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Paul Shapiro. The Boy Who Flies is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Benjamin Jordan. 7 Girls is a documentary film about female surfers: Layne Beachley, Serena Brooke, Heather Clark, Megan Abubo, Rochelle Ballard, Keala Kennelly, and Sofia Mulanovich. This road trip film follows a group of surfers around the Pacific Ocean as they surf Hawaii, Fiji, Tahiti, and Indonesia. The film conveys their enthusiasm for the sport, sense of humor, and their respect for nature. The Incredible Machine is a 1975 American documentary film directed by Irwin Rosten and Ed Spiegel. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. E. G. Marshall narrated the film, which was produced by Rosten, together with Dennis B. Kane and Alex Pomansanof. The Incredible Machine, which included some of the first pictures taken inside the human body and presented on film, using some of the earliest film that medical researchers had taken inside the human digestive tract and bloodstream. It ranked as the most-watched program in Public Broadcasting Service until 1982, when it was overtaken by The Sharks. Rosten's collaborator Nicholas Noxon described the "extraordinary impact" that the film had as a National Geographic special, noting that it was "groundbreaking for its time" and "opened people's eyes to what could be done with a documentary". The New York Times reviewer John J. El Cafeteria is a 1975 documentary film written and directed by Paul Geday. "Oscar®-winning filmmaker Chuck Workman brings alive the vibrant history of the avant-garde cinema. Through interviews with filmmakers and critics including Jonas Mekas, Kenneth Anger, Su Friedrich, and Amy Taubin, he reveals how this artistic movement highlights subjective vision, sensory experience, and dreams over plot and storyline. Workman couples these conversations with a dazzling array of diverse extracts from experimental films that illuminate for the general audience a qualitatively different kind of moviegoing experience." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Terra Incognita: The Perils and Promise of Stem Cell Research, also known as Terra Incognita: Mapping Stem Cell Research, is a documentary film released by Kartemquin Films in 2007. The film follows Dr. Jack Kessler of Northwestern University in his search for a cure for spinal cord injuries using embryonic stem cells. When Kessler was invited to head up the Neurology Department at Northwestern, his focus was on using stem cells to help cure diabetes. However, soon after his move to Chicago, his daughter Allison – then age 15, was injured in a skiing accident and paralyzed from the waist down. In the moments following the accident, Dr. Kessler made the decision to change the focus of his research to begin looking for a cure for spinal cord injuries using embryonic stem cells. Through Kessler's story, we bring the stem cell debate to the public for discussion. The film follows the constantly evolving interplay between the promise of new discoveries, the controversy of modern science and the resilience and courage of people living every day with devastating disease and injury. Defiance: Return to the Forest is a 2009 short documentary. Houses For All is a 2014 documentary film directed by Gereon Wetzel. A.K. is a 1985 French documentary film directed by Chris Marker about the Japanese director Akira Kurosawa. Though it was filmed while Kurosawa was working on Ran, the film focuses more on Kurosawa's remote but polite personality than on the making of the film. The film is sometimes seen as being reflective of Marker's fascination with Japanese culture, which he also drew on for one of his best-known films, Sans Soleil. The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival. MPG: Motion Picture Genocide is a 1997 film by Robert Banks. It is an examination of 100 years of African Americans being murdered in movies. Bearing Witness is a 2005 documentary film written by Maryam d'Abo and directed by Bob Eisenhardt, Barbara Kopple and Marijana Wotton. Because We Were Born (Puisque nous sommes nés) is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jean-Pierre Duret and Andrea Santana. Push: Madison Versus Madison is a 2010 documentary film written by Rudy Hypolite, Ian McFarland and Chris O'Coin and directed by Rudy Hypolite. Gimme Shelter is a 1970 documentary film directed by Albert and David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin chronicling the last weeks of The Rolling Stones' 1969 US tour which culminated in the disastrous Altamont Free Concert. The film is named after "Gimme Shelter", the lead track from the group's 1969 album Let It Bleed. The film was screened at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival, but was not entered into the main competition. MicroPlanet 3D is a documentary film directed by Michael Watchulonis. Supervention is a sports documentary film directed by Filip Christensen and Even Sigstad. The Grey Area is a feature length documentary film by Noga Ashkenazi about the lives of inmates at the Iowa Correctional Institution for Women in Mitchellville, Iowa. The film documents an eight-week Feminism class taught by student volunteers from Grinnell College. The Grey Area explores women's issues in the criminal justice system, including gender, sexuality, class and race. A small group of female inmates share their experiences with motherhood, drug addiction, sexual abuse and domestic violence. Red Rubber Roots is a 2000 film directed by Jasmila Žbanić. Hayabusa: Back to the Earth is a film directed by Hiromitsu Kosaka. Papapapá is a 1995 documentary by Alex Rivera about immigration. The film stars Augusto Rivera, the director’s father, and Alex Rivera himself. It calls attention to ideas of transculturation, national belonging, cultural imperialism, and cultural globalization, as Rivera chronicles his father’s journey from his native Perú to his life in the United States and parallels it with the journey of the potato. Cavedigger is a documentary and biographical film directed by Jeffrey Karoff. "A uniquely constructed portrait of the Polish Colonel Ryszard Kuklinski, who provided the CIA with more than 40,000 strategic documents from the Warsaw Pact during the Cold War. Was he a traitor, or the savior of Poland? The Polish documentary filmmaker Dariusz Jablonski begins his story of the colonel in 2004, when he was supposed to interview him for the very first time. It turns out that Kuklinski has just died, and at the request of the colonel's wheelchair-bound wife, Jablonski agrees to take care of his ashes. He talks with a considerable number of closely involved ex-servicemen -- from the U.S. head of espionage General William E. Odom to the Warsaw Pact Commander-in-Chief Viktor Kulikov, the Polish General Wojciech Jaruzelski, and former Polish President Lech Walesa. These interviews paint a picture of an idealistic man who saved Europe from a Third World War, but who also led a tragic life. In addition to the extensive archive footage, Jablonski expounds on the initial meetings in voice-over, which he films with a small, often half-hidden camera. Subsequently, we see the official, tightly-framed interviews, over which he invariably employs an effect that suggests the shadow of Venetian blinds. Photos of Kuklinski come to life with 3D motion effects, and the recurring theme of a war game calls on the viewer to actively pass judgment on Kuklinski's choice." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. The Queen at 80 is a 2006 documentary film written by Andrew Marr and Sally Norris and directed by Sally Norris. Gli Anni Delle Immagini Perdute is a 2012 documentary film directed by Adolfo Conti. Humpbacks: From Fire to Ice is a 2008 nature documentary narrated by David Attenborough and directed by Ross Isaacs. The subject of the film is a newborn humpback whale and its first year of life. The film was produced by ABC1, and premiered on 16 November 2008. The documentary explores the mating, courting, and feeding behaviours of the whales. Rush: Snakes & Arrows - Live is a 2008 music documentary film directed by Pierre Lamoureux & François Lamoureux. Primavera in Kurdistan is a 2006 documentary film directed by Stefano Savona. L'été perdu is a 1987 documentary, short film directed by Dominique Théron. Terry Pratchett: Living with Alzheimer's is a 2009 biographical documentary film directed by Charlie Russell. City of God – 10 Years Later is a 2013 Brazilian documentary film directed by Cavi Borges and Luciano Vidigal. The documentary shows what has changed in the lives of the actors from the 2002 feature film, City of God. The actors who portrayed Dadinho, Bené, and Li'l Zé, as well as the actress Alice Braga and musician and actor Seu Jorge participated in this documentary ten years after starring in the earlier film, directed by Fernando Meirelles. Sticky is a 2014 documentary animation short film written by Nicholas Carlile, Jilli Rose and directed by Jilli Rose. Following on from his hugely successful BBC2 documentary, Operation Mincemeat, based on his book of the same name, writer and presenter Ben MacIntyre returns to the small screen to bring to life his other bestselling book - Agent Zigzag. As part of the Timewatch series, MacIntyre reveals the gripping true story of Britain's most extraordinary wartime double agent, Eddie Chapman. A notorious safe-breaker before the war, Chapman duped the Germans so successfully that he was awarded their highest decoration, the Iron Cross. He remains the only British citizen ever to win one. Including remarkable and newly discovered footage from an interview Chapman gave three years before his death in 1997, the programme goes on the trail of one of Britain's most unlikely heroes - a story of adventure, love, intrigue and astonishing courage. William Yang : My Generation is a 2013 Documentary film written by William Yang and directed by Martin Fox. The Outcasts is a documentary film directed by Giorgos Georgopoulos. Grace, Milly, Lucy ... Child Soldiers is a 2010 documentary film directed by Raymonde Provencher. The Revenge of the Sons of the Desert is a documentary film. On Mother's Head is a film written and directed by Putu Kusuma Widjaya. Men, Heroes and Gay Nazis is a 2005 German documentary film directed, written and produced by Rosa von Praunheim. The film focuses on gay men who align themselves with hard-core right wing views, skinheads and Nazis. Rosa von Praunheim stated of the subjects featured in the documentary, “Some may be shocked that I do not take a stand in my film and do not portray gay neo-Nazis as monsters, but as people living their lives in dramatic contradiction.” The Prep School Negro is a 2012 documentary film directed by Andre Robert Lee. The Wholesome Sick Beloved Brodský is a 1999 film from the Czech Republic directed by Ondřej Havelka. An Arctic Space Odyssey is a documentary, biography, and history film directed by Lars Einar Skageberg. Next Door Letter is a 2011 short animation documentary drama and romance film written by Vanja Alexandersson and directed by Sascha Fülscher. Zoe Rising is a 2014 short documentary biography family music film written and directed by Paul Rachman. Borders is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jacqueline van Vugt. Max on Set: Wanted is a 2008 documentary written by Jesse Gordon. Ivetka and the Mountain is 2008 documentary film written and directed by Vit Janecek. Happy Birthday Emily is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Marcelo Kiwi Beiger. A Respectable Life is a 1979 Swedish documentary film directed by Stefan Jarl. The film is the second of the Mods Trilogy by Jarl. At the 15th Guldbagge Awards the film won the awards for Best Film and Best Director. It was also selected as the Swedish entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 52nd Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker is 2013 Bosnian drama film directed by Danis Tanović. The film premiered in competition at the 63rd Berlin International Film Festival where it won the Jury Grand Prix and Nazif Mujić won the Silver Bear for Best Actor. It was screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. The film has been selected as the Bosnian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards, making the January shortlist. Premiere: Inside the Summer Blockbusters is a 1989 documentary written by Michael Meadows and directed by Peter Segal. Sun Kissed is a 2012 documentary film directed by Adi Lavy and Maya Stark. Image Makers is a short documentary film directed by Ursula Kolbe. We Are Water Spirit is a 2013 documentary film written by Lewis Walker and directed by Dove Joans. Wünül: Concierto de pájaros is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Javiera Gallardo and Boris Muoz. Barbershop Punk is a 2010 documentary film written by Georgia Sugimura Archer and directed by Georgia C. Archer. The Hunger Games has become one of the world's most popular series in the last few years, with millions of copies of the novels being sold worldwide. Lewis & Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery is a 1997 documentary film directed by Ken Burns. Its subject is the Lewis and Clark Expedition. This VHS was on December 9, 1997. Rebels with a Cause is a 2012 documentary historical drama film written and directed by Nancy Kelly. My Big Break is a 2009 documentary film directed by Tony Zierra starring Wes Bentley, Tony Zierra, Brad Rowe, Chad Lindberg and Greg Fawcett. The film was produced by MBB Group, Elizabeth Yoffe and Tony Zierra. Lawinen der Erinnerung is a 2012 documentary film directed by Dominik Graf. Health Care in All the Wrong Places is a documentary film directed by Susan Parenti. The Pink Floyd and Syd Barrett Story is a documentary released on DVD on 24 March 2003, produced by Otmoor Productions in 2001 as part of the BBC's Omnibus series and originally called Syd Barrett: Crazy Diamond. Directed by John Edginton, the film includes interviews with all the Pink Floyd members - Roger Waters, David Gilmour, Nick Mason and Richard Wright - plus the "fifth Pink Floyd", Bob Klose, who left the band in 1965, getting their points of view on the original band founder Syd Barrett. The film includes rare early television appearances of Pink Floyd, and home movies. In 2006 a new "definitive edition DVD" was produced in the UK and Europe in which the full unedited interviews conducted by the director with Pink Floyd are now made available, alongside the original documentary. Where She Stood in the First Place. is a 2011 adventure documentary short film directed by Lindsay McIntyre. Optimista is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Kryspin Pluta. The Publican, the Pub and the Public Party is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Gisela Tuchtenhagen and Margot Neubert-Maric. Fahrenhype 9/11 is a 2004 documentary film that examines and challenges Michael Moore's documentary Fahrenheit 9/11. Part of a large group of documentaries that began appearing in the mid-2000s as technology improved, the film was narrated by Ron Silver. Dick Morris, appears frequently, and features exclusive interviews with various political figures of the time, including David Frum, Georgia Democratic Senator Zell Miller, social and political commentator Ann Coulter, and former Democratic New York City mayor Ed Koch. The movie was released on October 5, 2004, the same day that Fahrenheit 9/11 was released on home video. It was released with a companion book. Gravity Hill Newsreel No. 5 is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Jem Cohen. Ocean Odyssey is a two-part, two-hour television programme produced for the BBC by the production company Impossible Pictures. It follows the life of a bull sperm whale from his first deep dive until his death, stranded on a beach. Unlike most Impossible Pictures productions, it uses CGI to recreate currently living rather than extinct creatures. Also, most of the backgrounds are CG as well. Visit to Picasso is a Belgian documentary film from 1949 directed by Belgian filmmaker Paul Haesaerts. In an effort to capture the nature of Picasso's creative process, Paul Haesaerts asked the Spanish painter to apply his magical brushstrokes to large glass plates as Haesaerts filmed from the other side. This actually predates the more famous art film The Mystery of Picasso by Henri-Georges Clouzot in which Picasso also paints to large transparent canvases as the director films from the other side. The filming took place in Picasso's studio in Vallauris. In 1951 Visit to Picasso was nominated for best documentary by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. On-Line: An Inside View Of Korean Independent Film is a 1997documentary film directed by Hong Hyung-sook. Dare Not Walk Alone is a 2006 documentary directed by Jeremy Dean. The film played the festival circuit in 2006 and in 2007 received the audience award at the Deep Focus Film Festival in Columbus, Ohio. It was signed by Indican Pictures for theatrical, DVD, and TV release. The film was released on DVD on November 11, 2008. In January 2009 the film was nominated for an NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Documentary. The Reading Room is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Stephen Connolly. Switch: A Community In Transition is a 2009 documentary film directed by Brooks Nelson. Tobby is a 1961 German documentary drama film written and directed by Hans Jürgen Pohland; with writing credits by Siegfried Hofbauer. The most enigmatic UFO incident in history exposed. Join Philip Coppens, star of History Channel's Ancient Aliens series in this unprecedented expose on the Roswell Incident revealing that there is much more to this case than previously believed. A Gay Family is a 2013 documentary LGBT film written and directed by Maximiliano Pelosi. Blood Ties: The Life and Work of Sally Mann is a 1994 American short documentary film directed by Steven Cantor and Peter Spirer. It was premiered at the 1994 Sundance Film Festival and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The documentary looks at some of the controversy surrounding Sally Mann's book Immediate Family, which contains non-sexual photographs of her pre-adolescent children in various states of dress. Some religious groups had accused her of making child pornography, and the film focuses on Mann's defense of her art. Filmmaker Cantor followed up this short with a full-length documentary about Mann in 2005: What Remains: The Life and Work of Sally Mann. Blood Ties was released in New York City and Los Angeles on March 4, 1994 as part of the program Oscar Shorts 1993. It was also shown at the San Francisco International Film Festival, the Atlanta Film and Video Festival, and the USA Film Festival in Dallas, Texas, at which it won a Special Jury Award. Listening To The Judge is a 2011 documentary world cinema film directed by Isabel Coixet. Under the Influence is a short, documentary, action, adventure and sport film directed by Corey Gavitt, Steve Jones, Todd Jones. Boasting that "no genitals were harmed in the making of this film," director David Blyth's Bound for Pleasure ventures into the dungeons of several bona fide, whip-carrying S & M mistresses. It turns out that the bondage and discipline industry in New Zealand is thriving with pain fetishists, dominatrixes, willing slaves, and wildly enthusiastic aficionados of latex clothing. In addition to bringing the dank recesses of working torture chambers to light, Blyth gets the down and dirty truth from mistresses Sabrina Blasé, Jasmyn, Caroline, Sandy, and Dee the Transformer. A Conversation With Gregory Peck is a 1999 film directed by documentary filmmaker Barbara Kopple. Kopple followed the actor as he embarked on a live speaking tour throughout the United States reflecting on his life and career. The film also looks at Peck's home life with his family, as well as his public appearances where he meets such notable individuals as then President of the United States Bill Clinton, then French President Jacques Chirac, and filmmaker Martin Scorsese. A Conversation With Gregory Peck was part of the PBS documentary series American Masters, and was screened out of competition at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival. It is featured on a 2005 2-disc collector's edition of To Kill a Mockingbird. The Goose With The Golden Eggs: Tourism On Costa Rica's Pacific Coast is a 2014 documentary film directed by Charlene Music and Peter Jordan. With California and the rest of the country going bankrupt, one business is booming. How Weed Won the West is the story of the growing Medical Marijuana industry, focusing on Los Angeles with over 700 legal dispensaries doling out the buds. Nice Guys Finish First is a 1986 documentary by Richard Dawkins which discusses selfishness and cooperation, arguing that evolution often favors co-operative behaviour, and focusing especially on the tit for tat strategy of the prisoner's dilemma game. The film is approximately 45 minutes long and was produced by Jeremy Taylor. The twelfth chapter in Dawkins' book The Selfish Gene is also named Nice Guys Finish First and explores similar material. Rose and Jasmine is a 2011 film directed by Michael Pilz. Following patients and providers through a broken health care system, filmmaker Bobby Sheehan makes the case that there are unseen "influencers" whose job it is to hook you on drug-based care and steer you away from alternative therapies. Halber Mensch is a 1986 film by Japanese director Sogo Ishii with German band Einstürzende Neubauten. It was originally released on VHS, and re-released on DVD in 2005. The film's title comes from the album of the same name. The one-hour film documents Einstürzende Neubauten's visit to Japan in 1985. It includes concert footage along with scenes of the band performing in an industrial building. Several songs from the "Halber Mensch" album are presented as music videos, some with accompanying Butoh dancers. According to DVDManiacs, the DVD was originally mastered from a VHS tape, and the quality is therefore not as high as a usual DVD. The band, due to disputes with the manager of the label involved, have since released a remastered DVD on their own label. Assatsu no mori is a documentary film directed by Shinsuke Ogawa. The Dust on Our Feet is a drama short documentary film directed by J.J. Starr. My Name Is Feker is a 2011 short biographical documentary film directed by Orlando von Einsiedel. At the End of the Day: The Sue Rodriguez Story is a 1998 Canadian documentary/drama film about the life of Canadian right to die advocate Sue Rodriguez. The film was written by Linda Svendsen based on the book by Lisa Hobbs Birnie, and directed by Sheldon Larry. Leadership is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Christian Rouaud. "One day of October 1971, Michel Debré, the Minister of Defence, decides to enlarge the military camp of the Larzac.With no prior dialogue with the farmers, he intends to extend the military camp from 3.000 to 14.000 hectares. From his office in Paris, he states: « We choose the Larzac as it is a deprived land. » He had no idea then that he sets an unanimous wave of protestations. An amazing struggle starts, that will last for ten years until the elections for Presidency in 1981, when France has chosen, for the first time in this regime, a left wing president, François Mitterrand. " Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Cannes Film Festival site. Louis Theroux: Behind Bars is a television documentary written and presented by Louis Theroux about one of America's most notorious prisons, San Quentin. There, he meets and speaks to serial murderers, gang members, at-risk inmates and guards. The film was produced and directed by Stuart Cabb, and was first aired on BBC Two on 13 January 2008. "My Mom always says that my military service is to blame for everything that has happened to her little girl."Seven years after completing an IDF course for female combat soldiers, the director returns to the place where, for the first time, she fell in love with a woman - her commanding officer. Over the course of 66 days and nights, the film follows the girls in one of the IDF's most rigorous combat courses and looks at the relationships that develop between girls in an environment subject to strict military code. The film reveals the mechanism that enables the transformation of 18-year-old girls from daddy's little girls into fierce disciplined soldiers. Through the intimate relationship that develops between the director and one of the characters, questions about identity, sexuality and the discovery of femininity surface. Up for Grabs is a 2004 comedic documentary about two men who fought over custody of a baseball. It was directed and produced by Michael Wranovics, co-produced by Michael Lindenberger and Josh Keppel, co-edited by Dave Ciaccio; the executive producers were Dr. Roger Petrie, Helen Woo, and Christopher Parry. Annie Leibovitz: So, There You Go is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Douglas J. Sloan. "This distinctive documentary, shot through with charm and humour, has a deceptively simple conceit that manages to deliver an honest and revealing insight into life in Ireland. The creator of a number of acclaimed documentary shorts, Ken Wardrop has been feted as one of Ireland's most promising filmmaking talents. His distinctive first feature, shot through with charm and humour, has a deceptively simple conceit that manages to deliver an honest and revealing insight into life in the country. Inspired by the story of his mother's life, Wardrop presents interviews with women from across the midlands of Ireland. Starting with some in their nappies and ending in a nursing home, the women of gradually increasing ages welcome viewers into their own homes, and from these living rooms, kitchens and hallways, they talk about their experiences, about their relationships and attitudes towards men. These daughters, wives and mammies are, by turns, frank, funny, gracious, perceptive and moving, and collectively, the interviews form the narrative of life, from cradle to grave, in an inventive and original way. Wardrop's gift for observation is impeccable; each scene is beautifully composed, the women and the interiors all intriguingly framed through a static camera lens." Quoting Michael Hayden El Corazón De Los Hombres is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Milton Roly Quispe and Gustavo Paye. Fighter is a documentary film about Arnošt Lustig and Jan Wiener, two Jews who return to Europe to revisit the past. A survivor of Theresienstadt, Auschwitz, and Buchenwald, Lustig was a Prague-based journalist and author. The German-born Wiener escaped from Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia, and joined the Royal Air Force in Italy. The film retraces Weiner's escape route, and visits Theresienstadt, Auschwitz, and Buchenwald. It received a Special Jury Citation in the 2000 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, Best Documentary at the Newport International Film Festival, and the audience award at the Hamptons International Film Festival. Flight from Death is a documentary film that investigates the relationship of human violence to fear of death, as related to subconscious influences. The film describes death anxiety as a possible root cause of many human behaviors on a psychological, spiritual, and cultural level. It was directed by Patrick Shen and produced by Greg Bennick. The film's narration was done by Gabriel Byrne. Flight from Death is a seven-time Best Documentary award-winning film. The Trout That Saved Mono Lake is a 2011 documentary short history sports film written and directed by C.R.Bell. Into America - The Ancestors Land is a 2013 documentary film directed by Nadine Zacharias. Por Los Senderos Del Libertador is a 1971 documentary film written by Miguel Briante, Juan Gelman and Tomás Sánchez de Bustamante and directed by Jorge Cedron. La Badil is an undercover documentary film produced and directed by British filmmaker Dominic Brown, about the struggle of the indigenous Sahrawi people of Western Sahara. De Stichter is a 1947 documentary short film written by Jos Jacobs and Carlo Bronne and directed by Charles Dekeukeleire. In Tales of the Grassland, meet Gus van Dyk, handsome, charismatic, dedicated head ranger at Pilanesberg National Park in South Africa. In this first episode, Gus tries to learn the language of lions — what they mean when they roar — so, ironically, he can use the top predators to help protect endangered species. Aired on Discovery, Animal Planet, PBS and 15 international networks. The Voice of Bergman is a 1997 documentary film directed by Gunnar Bergdahl. Keeper of the Mountains is a 2013 documentary film by Allison Otto and Carole Snow. Feiern is a 2006 documentary film about the electronic dance music scene. Maja Classen wrote and directed the film. Provision Shop is a 2013 historical documentary film written and directed by Jeremy Pang. El Rati Horror Show is a 2010 Argentine film directed by Enrique Piñeyro and written by Piñeyro and Pablo Galfre. Growing Up in America is a 1988 documentary film directed by Morley Markson. Ladies and Gentlemen... Mr. Leonard Cohen is a 1965 documentary about Leonard Cohen, co-directed by Don Owen and Donald Brittain, and written by Brittain. Produced by John Kemeny for the National Film Board of Canada, the film received the Genie Award in the TV-Information category. The original idea for the film had involved documenting a tour of Canadians poets, including Irving Layton and Earle Birney; however, that idea was abandoned when the filmmakers decided the other poets would not serve as charismatic film subjects. Woody Before Allen is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Masha Vasyukova. Unknown Peter Sellers is a 2000 documentary biography film written by David Leaf, John Scheinfeld and directed by David Leaf, John Scheinfeld. Marley is a 2012 documentary-biographical film directed by Kevin Macdonald documenting the life of Bob Marley. It was released in theatres on April 20, 2012. "Three Songs About Motherland depicts a dramatic collision between the past, the present, and the future in contemporary Russia by focusing on three different cities in this vast land. In the far eastern city of Komsomolsk-on-Amur, a still living symbol of Soviet industrialization in the 1930s, older Russian citizens speak about their youth when they felt part of something bigger than themselves––building "a city of communist dreams" in the middle of nowhere. Some cling to the promise of those glory days while others express regret and disappointment at its ultimate failure. Then, the cosmopolitan city of Moscow bids farewell to Anna Politkovskaya, the fearless journalist and human rights activist who was assassinated for her political activity amid the chaotic power struggles of the post-Soviet nation, fighting to her death for a young Russian democracy. Finally, residents of Khanty-Mansijsk, one of the main centers of Siberia's budding oil industry, speak about their beloved fairy-tale-like town, where the communist dream has been swept away by new aspirations for a prosperous future. And what are they, today's aspirations? What is behind the fairy tale? Will the new "capitalist dream" come true or will it turn out to be another illusion, another myth?" Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Racing Dreams is a 2009 documentary film directed by Marshall Curry. It follows two boys and one girl through a season of World Karting Association racing. All three dream of becoming professional NASCAR drivers. Racing Dreams was produced by Bristol Baughan and Marshall Curry, and executive produced by Dwayne Johnson, Jack Turner, Dany Garcia and Ben Goldhirsh. The film opened in theaters in select cities May 2010, distributed by Hannover House with marketing support by NASCAR Entertainment. Racing Dreams is also being developed into a feature film by DreamWorks Producers Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci. Álbum de familia is a 1984 documentary short film directed by Enrique Trigo. Based on the Thomas Frank's best-seller, What's the Matter with Kansas? shows how Kansas transformed from an outpost of radicalism to a bastion of hard-core conservatism. Unforgettable characters and their stories shed new light on our nation's political divide. Light at the Edge of the World is a documentary film written by Wade Davis. From Concrete To Movement is a 2012 short film written by Caroline Dutra Cagnatto Leopoldo and directed by Marilha Gonçalves Freire, Roberta Bastianini, Ana Clara Souza Marins, Silvana Bezerra, Rosyane Maria Silva and Caroline Dutra Cagnatto Leopoldo. The Red String is a 2004 documentary film about four adopted Chinese girls and their single mother parents. Ironically, changes to Chinese adoption law to take effect in May 2006 will no longer allow single parent foreigners to adopt Chinese children. Breathe Life is a 2012 short family documentary film directed by Matt Jekowsky. Five percent of the world's population have had the experience of awaking paralyzed while a supernatural entity climbs onto their chest suffocating them, inducing a level of fear that is beyond imagination. These attacks have been known to erupt in epidemics, resulting in mass panic, post-traumatic stress disorder, and sudden unexplainable death. Even the baffled scientific community is divided between psychological and metaphysical explanations. In Roman times the entity was called The Succubus. In Russia it was known as The Vampyr. In Newfoundland it is called The Hag. The Vikings simply called it Night Mara, meaning "The crusher that comes in the night". Its face and name may change but it has always been with us...lurking in the shadows, waiting for us to fall asleep. Haunted by his own encounter with THE NIGHTMARE, documentary filmmaker Adam Gray sets out on a journey to understand this terrifying phenomenon. From the foggy shores of Newfoundland to the steaming jungles of Zanzibar we will see where the Nightmare has left its mark. Hear from those who have survived the experience, and the families of those that did not. Meet the scientists, psychologists, and folklorists on the front lines of the battle for understanding how something without material form can traumatize and even kill those that encounter it. THE NIGHTMARE is a fascinating exploration of a phenomenon that suggests that the only difference between hallucination and the supernatural...is belief. Intonation. Arsen Kanokov is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Alexander Sokurov. Happy is a 2011 feature documentary film is directed, written, and co-produced by Academy Award nominated film-maker Roko Belic. It explores human happiness through interviews with people from all walks of life in 14 different countries, weaving in the newest is findings of positive psychology. Director Roko Belic was originally inspired to create the film after producer/director Tom Shadyac showed him an article in the New York Times entitled "A New Measure of Well Being From a Happy Little Kingdom". The article ranks the United States as the 23rd happiest country in the world. Shadyac then suggested that Belic make a documentary about happiness. Belic spent several years interviewing hundreds of people, ranging from leading happiness researchers to a rickshaw driver in Kolkatta, a family living in a cohousing community in Denmark, a woman who was run over by a truck, a Cajun fisherman, and more. La fabbrica del duomo is a 1949 short documentary film directed by Dino Risi. "Computers, software, and even mobile phones have radically altered our relationship to mass culture and technology—providing consumers with the tools to become producers (or “remixers”) of their media environments. Long before everyday people began posting their video mash-ups on the Web, hip-hop musicians perfected the art of audio montage through a sport they called “sampling.” While it is true that, for instance, most people can hear Rick James’ “Superfreak” in MC Hammer’s “U Can’t Touch This,” this simplified example does little justice to the complex rhythms, references, and nuanced layers of sound created by Public Enemy, De La Soul, the Beastie Boys, and others in the 1980s. By the early 1990s, the practice of sampling collided headfirst with copyright law—fundamentally altering the nature of this musical genre, and provoking debates about copyright, compensation, and creativity in the age of intellectual property. Copyright Criminals: This Is a Sampling Sport examines the creative and commercial value of musical sampling, including the related debates over artistic expression, copyright law, and (of course) money. This documentary traces the rise of hip-hop from the urban streets of New York to its current status as a multibillion-dollar industry. For more than thirty years, innovative hip-hop performers and producers have been re-using portions of previously recorded music in new, otherwise original compositions. When lawyers and record companies got involved, what was once referred to as a “borrowed melody” became a “copyright infringement.” The film showcases many of hip-hop music’s founding figures like Public Enemy, De La Soul, and Digital Underground—while also featuring emerging artists such as audiovisual remixers Eclectic Method. It also provides an in-depth look at artists who have been sampled, such as Clyde Stubblefield (James Brown's drummer and the world's most sampled musician), as well as commentary by another highly sampled musician, funk legend George Clinton. Using first-person interviews with artists and music industry insiders, Copyright Criminals explains how some traditional musicians view sampling as a lazy creative technique that relied on pillaging the music of others. However, the practice of musical borrowing is by no means unique to hip-hop, and the film discusses what it means to make new compositions out of old melodies, lyrics, and sounds. “Sampling itself is an embodiment of this active process of engaging with history,” hip-hop insider Jeff Chang argues. Sampling artists drew on entire histories and biographies connected to certain sounds, whether they were referencing a specific figure like James Brown or evoking the sounds of a decade like the 1970s, more generally. “That’s what’s cool about sampling,” says Drew Daniel, of the sound collage group Matmos. “It transports the listener, if they’re willing, to move in that pathway, back to a specific moment in time.”" Quoting the synopsis on the 2009 TIFF site Happiness Is is a 2009 documentary film that the examines the different interpretations of the "pursuit of happiness" in America. The film features interviews with notable personalities such as His Holiness The Dalai Lama, Willie Nelson and John Mellencamp as well has happiness authors Daniel Gilbert, Gretchen Rubin and Darrin McMahon. It's the second film from director and writer Andrew Shapter. Native Land is a 1942 documentary film directed by Leo Hurwitz and Paul Strand. A combination of a documentary format and staged reenactments, the film depicted the struggle of trade unions against union-busting corporations, their spies and contractors. It was based on the 1938 report of the La Follette Committee's investigation of the repression of labor organizing. Famous African-American singer, actor and activist Paul Robeson participated as an off-screen narrator and vocalist. Nigeokureru hitobito: Higashinihon daishinsai to shougaisha is a documentary film directed by Motoharu Iida. A New Romance of Celluloid: The Miracle of Sound is a 1940 short documentary film, presented and directed by MGM sound engineer Douglas Shearer and narrated by Frank Whitbeck, which goes behind the scenes to look at how the sound portion of a talking picture is created. The film, which was produced as part of the studio's Romance of Celluloid series, is available as a bonus on the Warner DVD of The Shop Around the Corner. From Marcy to Madison Square: The Story Behind 'Fade to Black' is a 2004 documentary film. The Courageous, the Forgotten is a 2007 documentary film directed by Cynthia Underwood CSNY/Déjà Vu is a 2008 documentary film directed by Bernard Shakey, a pseudonym for Neil Young. It focuses on the career of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, its musical connection to its audience and the turbulent times with which its music is associated as the band goes on their 2006 Freedom of Speech tour. It was shown as the closing film of the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. Metrodome Distribution released CSNY/Déjà Vu on DVD in the UK on September 29, 2008. The DVD also features an exclusive interview with Neil Young and all ten Living with War music videos. Ongoing Smile is a 2013 documentary film directed by Mohsen Makhmalbaf. "Too often an oversimplified mythology has been applied to discussions about Tibet and its history, which makes this compelling and erudite documentary especially welcome. Filmmaker Ngawang Choephel is the personification of the struggle to preserve Tibetan cultural identity, and his voyage and attempted documentation of Tibetan folk music and musicians represents an exploration of the realities of contemporary Tibet that is both dramatic and daring. Tibetans call their land “an ocean of music and dance,” yet despite centuries of history, there are only a handful of musicians and teachers left who can recount the meaning and importance of this identity. Decades of occupation, and the institution of Chinese policies and law designed to silence the traditional voices of Tibet, have resulted in an insidious cooptation of this national heart and soul by Chinese-sponsored pop culture. In his efforts to preserve the authentic music of his land, filmmaker Choephel himself becomes a victim of this repression, which transforms this saga from merely a professional quest to an especially potent and impactful statement. Bringing this story to life, including presenting the beauty of Tibetan song, makes this work both resonant and irresistible. Choephel is both an artist and a voice of resistance who deserves our undying respect." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Claymation is a 1978 documentary short film written by Susan Shadburne and directed by Will Vinton. Black is... Black Ain't A 1994 award-winning feature-length documentary by Marlon Riggs. It explores the multiplicity of expressions of African American identity. Life in Stills is a 2011 dramatic documentary written and directed by Tamar Tal. No Condition is Permanent is a 1990 film written and directed by Nana Bediako. After 25 years the untold human side of the Apollo 16 moon mission is now made available to the public, as the crew members finally reveal their riveting experience. An engaging and definitive documentary looking at this historic mission through the eyes of those who participated in it. Included in this program are interviews with all three astronauts, Commander John Young, Lunar Module Pilot Charles Duke, and Command Module Pilot Thomas Mattingly. The Hand of Fatima is a 2009 documentry film directed by Augusta Palmer. Water on the Table is a Canadian documentary film directed, produced and written by filmmaker Liz Marshall. The film explores Canada’s relationship to its freshwater resources and features Canadian activist Maude Barlow in her pursuit to protect water from privatization. Counterbalancing Barlow’s views are those of policy and economic experts who assert that water is a resource and a commodity like any other. Land der Vernichtung is a 2003 film directed by Romuald Karmakar. Tupamaros is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Rainer Hoffmann and Heidi Specogna. Return to El Salvador is a 2010 documentary film directed by Philadelphia filmmaker Jamie Moffett and narrated by Martin Sheen. It chronicles the rebuilding of El Salvador in the years after the Salvadoran Civil War and explores the impact a lasting legacy of violence and unrest has had on those who survived, fled, and are now seeking to return. ShowBusiness: The Road to Broadway is an American documentary film, the first feature film directed by Dori Berinstein, a Broadway Producer, Writer and Filmmaker. Berinstein completed the film in 2005. The film premiered at the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival. The film was named one of the top 5 films of 2006 by the IDA and received the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the 2006 Florida Film Festival. The film was released commercially in 2007, with the first such showings on 11 May 2007 in New York City. Berinstein filmed each principal musical on Broadway for her project during the 2003-2004 season, for about 600 hours of initial film footage. She focused the film on four musicals, through the difficulties of pre-production, their openings, attendant publicity around the shows, and their reviews, through the 2004 Tony Award competition. The four musicals, three of which were nominated for Best Musical in the Tony Awards that season, were: Wicked Taboo Caroline, or Change Avenue Q The film climaxes with the 2004 Tony Awards ceremony. Silverlake Life: The View from Here is a 1993 documentary film by director Peter Friedman and Tom Joslin. Shot with a hand-held video camera, the film documents the final months of a relationship between two gay men as they both struggle to deal with AIDS. The film won several awards including a 1994 Peabody Award. It shared the 1993 Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival with the film Children of Fate: Life and Death in a Sicilian Family. Beyond 9/11: Portraits of Resilience is a 2011 documentary film directed by Kira Pollack. Letters From Sweden is a 1987 film directed by Jörn Donner. Return Of Dé Bile is a documentary film directed by Lenka Kabankova. Cairo Drive is a 2013 Egyptian documentary film by Sherief Elkatsha. The film explores Cairo's chaotic traffic and illustrates the ways in which individuals navigate its hectic roads, unspoken rules, and 14 million vehicles. The film was shot over three years, from 2009 to 2012, and depicts scenes from before, during, and after the 2011 revolution. The film debuted on October 27, 2013 at the Abu Dhabi Film Festival and received the Best Film From the Arab World - Documentary Competition award. It is Elkatsha's fourth feature film and his first to appear in an international film festival. Plani di giardini ideali is a 2008 film directed by Radek Tůma. In just seven years, Mark Zuckerberg has gone from his Harvard college dorm to running a business with 800 million users, and a possible value of $100 billion. His idea to 'make the world more open and connected' has sparked a revolution in communication, and now looks set to have a huge impact on business too. Emily Maitlis reports on life inside Facebook. Featuring a rare interview with Zuckerberg himself, the film tells the story of Facebook's creation, looks at the accuracy of The Social Network movie, and examines Facebook's plans to use the personal information it has collected to power a new kind of online advertising. On the Edge of Light and Shadow is a 2009 film directed and written by Luciana Burlamaqui. Polluting Paradise is a 2012 German documentary film directed by Fatih Akın. The film was screened in the Special Screenings section at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival. It focuses on the Turkish village of Çamburnu in Sürmene, which has been turned into a rubbish dump by the government. God Provides is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Brian M. Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky. A Letter from Home is a 1941 short documentary film directed by Carol Reed. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Searching for Bill is a 2012 documentary drama film written by Jonas Poher Rasmussen and David B. Sørensen, and directed by Jonas Poher Rasmussen. The Work of Director Chris Cunningham is a 2003 documentary film directed by Chris Cunningham and Lance Bangs. Pêche aux poissons rouges is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Louis Lumière. It was filmed in Lyon, Rhône, Rhône-Alpes, France. Given its age, this short film is available to freely download from the Internet. The film formed part of the first commercial presentation of the Lumière Cinématographe on December 28, 1895 at the Salon Indien, Grand Café, 14 Boulevard des Capuchins, Paris. Mit starrem Blick aufs Geld is a 1982 film directed by Helga Reidemeister and written by Karlheinz Gschwind, Holger Petersen, Helga Reidemeister and Klaus Volkenborn. The Greatest Ears in Town: The Arif Mardin Story is a 2010 documentary about the Grammy winning music producer Arif Mardin. The documentary was produced by his son Joe Mardin and was directed by Doug Biro. It was made in the years prior to Arif's death in 2006 from pancreatic cancer. Istanbul United is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Farid Eslam and Oliver Waldhauer. The Legend of Jimmy the Greek is the 6th episode of ESPN's documentary film series, 30 for 30. The documentary, directed by Fritz Mitchell, examines the rise and fall of Jimmy the Greek, the legendary sports handicapper who rose to fame as part of CBS' NFL studio show The NFL Today. Illness Magnified is a 2011 short, experimental and documentary film directed by Julia Fuller. Constitución is a 2013 documentary experimental short film directed by Melisa Brito Aller. Armenian Echoes III is a 2012 music documentary film directed by Hagop Goudouzian. Gekaufte Wahrheit – Gentechnik im Magnetfeld des Geldes is a German documentary film by Bertram Verhaag made in 2010. It describes the influence of the industry on science and research on gene technology. Several examples are shown how scientific criticism is suppressed: Biochemist Árpád Pusztai who was fired from a British research institution after revealing his research findings to the media about an alarming influence of genetically transformed nutrition on rats. Andrew Kimbrell of the Center for Food Safety. Ignacio Chapela, professor at the University of Berkeley who had to sue his university several times to be able to continue his critical teaching. Details about a contract of the university with British Petroleum are described that give influence to the company regarding teaching and research. Part of the campus was sold for construction of a new building. Students who protested by climbing century old tries who were to be cut were cut off their food supplies with several fences and flashlights were set up to prevent them from sleeping. Rats in the Ranks is an Australian documentary film released in 1996. The film detailed the last weeks of the 1994 Leichhardt Council Mayoral elections. The filmmakers, Bob Connolly and Robin Anderson were allowed access to the innermost meetings of participants including the serving mayor Larry Hand and his Labor Party opponents. Larry Hand's exposure to a wider audience spawned the character Col Dunkley in the successful Australian TV series Grass Roots, and Rats in the Ranks is regarded as a classic in its portrayal of local politics in Australia. The Burning House is a 2011 documentary film directed by Foster Huntington. Das Leben des Jürgen von Golzow is a 1993 film directed by Barbara Junge and Winfried Junge. Captain Thomas Sankara is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Christophe Cupelin. The Winter Of Zeljka is a 2013 short film directed by Gustavo Beck. Begging for Billionaires is a 2009 American documentary film exposing abuses of eminent domain. The film is directed by Philip Klein. The music for the film was written and performed by Tom Goodkind of the Washington Squares. Helen's War is a tv movie. Something Ventured is a 2011 documentary film investigating the emergence of American venture capitalism in the mid-20th Century. Something Ventured follows the stories of the venture capitalists who worked with entrepreneurs to start and build companies like Apple, Intel, Genentech, Cisco, Atari, Tandem, and others. Something Ventured is a full-length independent film which includes interviews with prominent American venture capitalists and entrepreneurs of the 1960s, 70s and 80s, as well as archival photography and footage. The film has aired across the US on local PBS stations as well as on public television in Norway. The film is available on iTunes, Netflix, Amazon.com and from Zeitgeist Films. Something Ventured features the venture capitalists Arthur Rock, Tom Perkins, Don Valentine, Dick Kramlich, Reid Dennis, Bill Draper, Pitch Johnson, Bill Bowes, Bill Edwards, and Jim Gaither. The entrepreneurs featured in Something Ventured are Gordon Moore, Jimmy Treybig, Nolan Bushnell, Dr. Herbert Boyer, Mike Markkula, Sandy Lerner, John Morgridge, and Robert Campbell. Karamoja was a 1954 film produced by exploitation filmmaker Kroger Babb. A documentary of a native tribe from Uganda, the film was marketed by Babb to focus on the imagery that would be shocking to an American audience, including advertising which claimed that the tribe wore "only the wind and live[d] on blood and beer." Scenes in the film included "the bleeding of cattle and drinking of the warm blood, and self-mutilation as a form of ornamentation," as well as a full-color circumcision scene. Karamoja proved to be less controversial than many of Babb's other films, grossing less in box office revenue as a result. Resistance: Untold Stories of Jewish Partisans is a documentary film. Homo faber (trois femmes) is a 2014 documentary film directed by Richard Dindo. The Virtual Haydn was nominated for Music DVD of the Year in Juno Awards of 2011. Being Caribou is a 2005 documentary film that chronicles the travels of husband and wife Karsten Heuer and Leanne Allison following the migration of the Porcupine caribou Herd, in order to explore the Arctic Refuge drilling controversy. The journey lasted 5 months, starting from the community of Old Crow, Yukon on April 8, 2003 and ending September 8. The film is produced by the National Film Board of Canada. Same Sex America is a 2005 documentary directed by Henry Corra. Il Cammino di una grande amica is a 1951 Italian documentary film directed by Lino Lionello Ghirardini. We Spin Around the Night Consumed by the Fire is a 1978 documentary film written and directed by Guy Debord. Entry Denied is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Machu Latorre. Encounter Point is an award-winning film directed by Ronit Avni and Julia Bacha. It depicts different families that have been affected by the violence in Israel between Israelis and Palestinians. In this film, Just Vision, a non-profit organization, follows these families for 16 months. It begins this journey by documenting the ongoing troubles between the Israelis and Palestinians. The team conducted 475 preliminary interviews and did two years of research before embarking on this 16 month journey. The crew traveled throughout Israel, from Tel Mond, Tulkarem, Hebron, and Haifa. These parents and loved ones have been attempting to end the violence by joining, or beginning their own peace organizations and awareness campaigns. Tribute This! is a 2008 documentary film directed by Mick McCleery and produced by Gary Joseph and Mike Nicholson. The subject of the film is British singer/songwriter Billy Franks. The film follows the real life, 5 country trek that McCleery, Joseph and Nicholson took, along with Franks as they tried to track down 10 famous singers and ask them if they each would be willing to record 1 track for a tribute album to the mostly unknown Franks, a fellow songwriter who has given his life to his craft but is still an unknown. All proceeds from the album being earmarked for the UK music charity 'Youth Music'. Although the film is mostly a comedy road trip it also explores the deeper issues of the arbitrary nature of celebrity, the lifelong pursuit of dreams and just how important friendships can be. One Zero One—The Story of Cybersissy & BayBjane is a 2013 documentary, biographical, fantasy experimental film written and directed by Tim Lienhard Salviamo la montagna muore is a 1952 Italian film. The Inverted River is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Sophie Valero. The Prison Choir is a nominee in the 2007 International Emmy Award for Non-Scripted Entertainment. Meredith Monk is a composer, singer, director, choreographer and creator of new opera, music theater, films and installations. She has been proclaimed as a ‘magician of the voice' and ‘one of America's coolest composers. Remake, Remix, RipOff is 2014 documentary film written and directed by Cem Kaya. Hometown Boy is a 2011 drama film directed by Yao Hung-i. Reality 2.0 is a 2012 animated documentary short film written and directed by Víctor Orozco Ramírez. Clark: A Gonzomentary is an American 2013 gonzo journalism-styled mockumentary written, directed and produced by Daniel D.W. Around 5000 B.C., the Aryans, a nomadic tribe from the Steppes of Central Asia entered India through the Punjab and brought with them the Hindu religion based on the 4 great texts called The Vedas. Blackout 2008: The Bench Denim & Underwear Show is a 2008 documentary film. Graceland Girls is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jordan Salvatoriello. Mulberry Child is a 2011 documentary film that was written and directed by Susan Morgan Cooper, based on the book by the same name by Jian Ping. It had its world premiere on October 16, 2011 at the Heartland Film Festival and features Jacqueline Bisset as the movie's narrator. MTV Unplugged es el segundo álbum en directo de Alejandro Sanz grabado en el famoso teatro Gusman Center for the Perfoming Arts de Miami, Estados Unidos. Lanzado por Warner Music en 2001, precedido por el Básico en 1994. Alejandro Sanz hizo historia siendo el primer español en hacer un MTV Unplugged, también se editó un DVD del concierto. En este trabajo Sanz muestra su versatilidad para acoplarse a un sonido más clásico y natural. Destacándose el cambio de ritmo y el liderazgo en guitarra o piano. En Cuando nadie me ve y Cómo te echo de menos hay acompañamiento solo de piano y cuerdas. Y en Amiga mía y Quiero morir en tu veneno se nota un cambio drástico de lo eléctrico algo fuerte a lo acústico permanente. A Shockumentary view on London in the 60s, with interviews with Rockers, Beatniks and more. Begrijpt U Nu Waarom Ik Huil? is a 1969 documentary film by Dutch director Louis van Gasteren. In the late 1960s Van Gasteren was drawn to the work of the Leiden professor Jan Bastiaans to trauma of war victims. He was concerned about the psychotherapeutic treatment with LSD on a former concentration camp prisoner in Bastiaans' clinic. The patient focused on was named Joop. Joop was arrested by the Nazis in September 1941 and underwent a long journey through hell among different camps until he was liberated by the Russians. Joop returned home to his wife a different man. He had nightmares and was incapable of ordinary human contact. With two cameras From Gasteren shot about six and a half hours solid of the first treatment Joop underwent at Bastiaans. Particular attention is paid to details: Joop's hands, the sweat on his forehead, a tear running down his cheek slowly. From this Gasteren edited more than one hour of film that made a big impression at release and even led to questions in Parliament. 16 mm, b/w, 62 minutes. Field Report: Migratory Bird Trapping In South China is a 2013 short documentary film. Sexwork & Me is a 2012 documentary film directed by Clare Sturges. Hue: A Matter Of Colour is a 2013 Documentary film written and directed by Vic Sarin "There's a part of Washington, DC never seen by the tourists and ignored by the mass media. At least three percent of DC is HIV positive, a staggering rate higher than parts of Africa, but the city is also full of encouraging stories of grassroots movements to extend education, combat stigmas, and spread hope. TFF alum Susan Koch's (Kicking It) eye-opening documentary tells the unheard stories behind the growing epidemic in our nation's capital." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. No Place Like Home is a 2006 documentary about a man's experiences in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina directed by Courtney Fathom Sell and co-produced by Jac Currie. Anton's Right Here is a 2012 documentary film directed by Lyubov Arkus. Klangbad: Avant-garde in the meadows is a 2009 feature length documentary film about the famous open air music festival "Klangbad" curated by Hans Joachim Irmler, one of the founding members of Faust. The film was produced and directed by the award-winning filmmakers Dietmar Post and Lucia Palacios. The film was shot on location in August 2005 in the small village of Scheer. Negative: Nothing - Step by Step for Japan is a documentary film directed by Jan Knuesel and Stephan Knuesel. Faces After the Storm is a 1981 documentary film directed by Prakash Jha. Iranian Taboo is a 2011 documentary film by Iranian filmmaker Reza Allamehzadeh about the Bahai community of Iran. It was selected for the 2012 Dawn Breakers International Film Festival as well as New Port Beach and Uninvited Film Festivals. Not Bad for a Girl is a rockumentary on women musicians of the 90s from the indie rock music genre grunge and riot grrrl and celebrates madness, creativity, and gender play. Tina Silvey was the executive producer. Silvey Co. producing MTV music videos for most of the well known indie grunge/indie bands including: Nirvana, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Jane's Addiction, Sonic Youth, Soundgarden, Alice in Chains, Mudhoney, Stone Temple Pilots, The Smashing Pumpkins, Liquid Jesus, Concrete Blonde, and The Replacements. Not Bad for a Girl was written, directed, produced and shot by rock phenomenologist feminist Lisa Rose Apramian, edited, shot and co-produced by Kyle C. Kyle, drummer for Venus and the Razorblades, the Motels, Wafflebutt, and the Wild Stares and co-produced by Courtney Love and Kurt Cobain. A DVD, with a booklet, is available for purchase at the official website and a release date for the sequel book is in the works. Awarded Best Documentary at the New York Underground Film Festival 1996, Nominated: Best Director, 19th Atlanta Film and Video Festival 1995. Etched In Skin is a 2013 short, biographical, documentary film written and directed by Anne Kmetyko. Woman by Woman: New Hope for the Villages of India is a 2001 documentary film by filmmaker, Dorothy Fadiman. People of the Po Valley is a 1947 documentary short film written and directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. A Whole Lott More is a 2013 documentary film directed by Victor Buhler. Teenage Dwarf is a 2002 documentary film directed by Jamie O'leary. The Russians: People of the Cities is a 1978 documentary film directed by Arch Nicholson. A.k.a. Cassius Clay is a 1970 boxing documentary film about the former heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali. Directed by Jimmy Jacobs, the film was made during Ali's exile from the sport for refusing to be inducted into the US Army on religious grounds. Narrated by Richard Kiley, the film gives an overview of Ali's career to that point. The film features archival footage of people associated with Ali, such as Angelo Dundee, Malcolm X, and Drew Bundini Brown, and clips of his fights with Sonny Liston, Henry Cooper, George Chuvalo and Floyd Patterson. These are intercut with scenes featuring Ali and veteran boxing trainer Cus D'Amato discussing his career and how he would have fared against past champions such as Joe Louis. Amsterdam Stories USA is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Rob Rombout and Rogier Van Eck. Humbert Balsan producteur rebelle is a 2006 documentary film directed by Anne Andreu. TV Junkie is a documentary that chronicles Rick Kirkham's drug addiction. Its filmmakers, Michael Cain and Matt Radecki, sifted through the video-diary footage to piece together the story of Kirkham's life, focusing on the seven years in which he and his family struggled with his addiction to crack cocaine. It was shown at Sundance in 2006. The film was the subject of a lawsuit by his ex-wife Tammie. Variety gave the film a middling review, finding the central figure unpleasant and unsympathetic and the production values inevitably low. Film Threat found it "an unbelievably candid glimpse into the contradictions of cocaine addiction", and praised Kirkham's articulate and authentic self-portrait. OutNow.CH found it had a certain fascination beyond what would be expected. The Last Airbender: Siege of the North is a 2010 short documentary film. A Diary for Timothy is a British documentary film directed by Humphrey Jennings. It was produced by Basil Wright for the Crown Film Unit. The narration was written by the British author E. M. Forster and is an account of the progress of the war during the first six months of the life of a baby named Timothy. The recoveries of a pilot with a broken leg and a miner with a broken arm are also featured. Dame Myra Hess is featured giving a concert at the National Gallery in London, several years after her appearance in Listen to Britain, and John Gielgud performs as the Prince in the gravediggers scene from Hamlet. In a documentary on Jennings made for Channel 4 television by Kevin MacDonald in 2000, it was revealed that the baby who was the subject of the film later moved to Brighton in the 1960s and became a mod before settling down to become a teacher; he died in November 2000. Shot in Germany, The Netherlands, USA and Israel, this documentary deals with the situation of the Holocaust survivors in Israel and around the world. The Filmmakers follow the billions of dollars transferred from the German governments and other European governments as compensation for those who managed to live through the Nazi Terror. Their journey begins with the payment agreement signed in 1953 and ends with the exposure of enormous monetary sources such as real estate and bank accounts of Jewish victims. All of those are accumulated at many Israeli companies, who drag their answers in order to avoid giving the property back to its rightful owners. When the Filmmakers began their Journey, 280,000 Holocaust survivors lived in Israel. Nowadays there are only 270,000, 25% of which suffer from poverty and distress. In an attempt to end their life with dignity, some of them migrate back to Germany, where they can receive financial support and formal recognition as Holocaust survivors. "Paying for justice", is not an ordinary film about the Holocaust – it is an active documentary asking you to spare a minute before the last of living witnesses disappears; asking you to scream for justice. Maswife: Life in Camp Pinchinat is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Joelle Pierre Louis, Yrvelt Lamour, Pierre Lucson Bellegarde, Enette Gregoire, Sergo Pierre, Massena Bougon Cesar and Jean Rony Cesar. Hollywood at Your Feet: The Story of the Chinese Theatre Footprints is a 2000 documentary film written by Ed Singer and directed by Michele Farinola. Moonwalk One is a feature-length documentary film about the flight of Apollo 11, which landed the first humans on the moon. Besides portraying the massive technological achievement of that event, the film places it in some historical context, and tries to capture the mood and feel of the people on Earth at the time when man first walked on another world. Regarding Susan Sontag is a 2014 documentary film about the American intellectual Susan Sontag directed by Nancy Kates. It premiered at Tribeca Film Festival on April 19, 2014. Patricia Clarkson does voiceover for quotes from Sontag in the film. The Marx Brothers in a Nutshell is a 1982 Comedy Documentary film written by Joseph Adamson and Robert B. Weide and directed by Richard Patterson. Below New York is A 2011 documentary film directed by Matt Finlin. September 11: The New Pearl Harbor is a documentary film directed by Massimo Mazzucco. This film looks again at every album and standout track Queen ever recoded, and in doing so tells their fascinating story via their musical output. It contains re-edits of previously available programs 'Queen - Under Review 74 - 80' and 'Queen - Under Review 81 - 91'. Project 10 - Real Stories From a Free South Africa: Sollys Story is a 2003 film directed by Asivhanzhi Mathaba. Geral is a 2010 short sports documentary film directed by Anna Azevedo. Home Page was a 1999 documentary by Doug Block on the genesis of weblogs and the lives of early independent content producers on the Internet. It was filmed between 1996 and 1998. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, and was released in limited theaters in New York City, while being made available on home video and on iFilm, simultaneously. Voices of Sarafina! is a 1988 American documentary film directed by Nigel Noble about the anti-apartheid musical stage play Sarafina! It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1989 Cannes Film Festival. Life with the Dice Bag is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Mason Booker. Rhymers and Rivals is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Marion Hütter. Silver Jew is a 2007 documentary film by Michael Tully and Matthew Robison about the musician David Berman and his band Silver Jews. Shot in just three days with no production budget, the film chronicles the band's stop in Israel to play two shows in Tel Aviv and visit Jerusalem during their first ever world tour in the summer of 2006. It was released on DVD by Drag City on September 23, 2008. Bonus features include an annotated slideshow, along with music videos for the songs "I'm Getting Back Into Getting Back Into You" and "Let's Not And Say We Did". This is the story of two Albanian men, Hil and Nok, tied together by bloody vendetta. This is one of the norms of Kanun, the Albanian customary law. Both are forced to hide in their homes with their families for fear of being killed for vengeance. This story intersect the telling of Adem Isufi and Kol Tom Kola who are mediators in feuds and through endless negotiations seek to bring peace between the parts. Their stories are tied together by the Kanun, the oral and traditional Albanian law, from its origin up to its relations with the state laws. Sons of the Clouds is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Alvaro Longoria. This compelling documentary brings to light the political and human rights issues facing the people of the Western Sahara and the responsibility of Western powers in the effort to restore peace to the region. The film examines the current political turmoil and the failed policies, namely realpolitik, which have generated tremendous instabilities. A personal journey for Bardem, the film focuses on the bleak reality of the Western Sahara, a former Spanish colony that is now occupied, in part, by Morocco and has resulted in almost 200,000 refugees living in camps in the desert. Air Strike is a 2002 action film directed by David Worth. The Claustrum is a 2014 documentary drama family film written by Susanne Chassey and directed by Jay Rosenblatt. Isto É Pelé is a 1974 sports documentary film written by Paulo Mendes Campos and directed by Luiz Carlos Barreto. The Rest (Georghe and Mendel) is a 1993 documentary film directed by Miklós Jancsó. Coast Modern is 2012 documentary history film directed by Mike Bernard and Gavin Froome. Fires Were Started is a 1943 British film written and directed by Humphrey Jennings, filmed in documentary style, showing the lives of firefighters through the Blitz during the Second World War. The film uses actual firemen rather than professional actors. La Sereníssima is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Gonzalo Ballester. That Should Not Be: Our Children Will Accuse Us is a 2008 French documentary film directed by Jean-Paul Jaud. The documentary is about food poisoning by toxins from agricultural chemicals such as pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers, etc. You Only Live Twice - The Incredibly True Story Of The Hughes Family is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Brendan Young. RAPublic is a 2008 documentary film directed by Pavel Abrahám and co-written with Tomas Bojar. Netz über Bord – Heringsfang auf der Nordsee, is a 1955 German documentary about the herring fishing industry written and directed by Jürgen Roland. Jürgen Roland and Carsten Diercks accompany fisherman at their hard work on the waters of the North Sea at the end of traditional fishing methods, just before the coming of the big trawlers. Hooly Bible is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Li Hongqi. In Motion: Amiri Baraka is a documentary film directed by St. Clair Bourne. Punk in Africa is a 2011 music historical documentary written and directed by Keith Jones and Deon Maas. The Joseph Szabo Project is a 2011 short documentary historical drama film directed by David Khachatorian and George P. Pozderec. Das Medium ist die Botschaft is a 1996 film written and directed by Dietmar Hochmuth. Punishment in Capitals is a live CD and DVD-release by the band Napalm Death. It was recorded at the London ULU on 12 April 2002 at an animal rights benefit gig. Two Islands is a 2013 film directed by Jan Ijäs. Bad Blue Boys is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Branko Schmidt. Reject is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ruth Thomas-Suh. The Kids Of 5114 is a 2013 short documentary biographical film directed by Michael Rothman. Helmut Newton: Frames from the Edge is a 1989 biographical documentary film directed by Adrian Maben. In an effort to help the poor, Muhammad Yunus started lending small amounts of money, also known as microcredit. That effort turned into a bank, which is currently helping 8 million women. As he saw the other problems they faced including a lack of healthcare, education and energy, he created other business solutions, which he calls social business. When he set out to help others, he never imagined the impact he'd have. Directed by Holly Mosher. El eterno retorno is a 1985 documentary film written by Jose Raul Velasco and directed by Rafael Montero. Far from Havana is a documentary film directed by Aleyda Valdeza. 100 Doors is a 2003 documentary film directed by Kerri Davenport-Burton. Ballroom Rules is a 2012 LGBT documentary film directed by Nickolas Bird and Eleanor Sharpe. Culture Jam: Hijacking Commercial Culture is a 2001 film written and directed by Jill Sharpe. WWE: The Big Show: A Giant's World is a 2011 film directed by Kevin Dunn. a/k/a Tommy Chong, written, produced, and directed by Josh Gilbert, is a documentary film that chronicles the Drug Enforcement Administration raid on comedian Tommy Chong's house and his subsequent jail sentence for trafficking in illegal drug paraphernalia. He was sentenced to nine months in federal prison. DEA agents raided Chong's Pacific Palisades, California home on the morning of February 24, 2003. The raid was part of Operation Pipe Dreams and "Operation Headhunter," which resulted in raids on 100 homes and businesses nationwide that day and indictments of 55 individuals. The film was shown at film festivals in 2005 and 2006 and had its first, art-house theatrical release on June 14, 2006 at the Film Forum in New York City. The movie features appearances by Bill Maher and Jay Leno, who express support for Chong and outrage over federal handling of the incident. Eric Schlosser, author of Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs, and Cheap Labor in the American Black Market, provides "a much needed dollop of historical and political context". The film was presented on the Showtime cable network on November 9, 2008. Dylan Thomas is a 1962 short documentary film directed by Jack Howells. It won an Academy Award at the 35th Academy Awards in 1963 for Documentary Short Subject. We Just Tellin’ Stories is a 2000 documentary film directed by Lawrence Andrews. The Last Night of the Barbary Coast was an early example of the exploitation film, showing what was purported to be the last night of the Barbary Coast red-light section of San Francisco. In reality, the Barbary Coast wasn't shut down until 1917. The film, directed by Hal Mohr and Sol Lesser, is now considered a lost film. Mohr, later an Academy Award winner, did the cinematography, and Lesser went on to become a Hollywood producer. Techqua Ikachi, Land—My Life is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Agnes Barmettler, James Danaqyumtewa and Anka Schmid. The Devotion Project: Listen from the Heart is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Tony Osso. Des Anderen Last is a 1959 short documentary film written by Frank Leberecht and directed by Heribert Fischer. The Koumiko Mystery is a 1967 documentary film directed by Chris Marker. Several Guantanamo captives are alleged to have produced, or played a role in the production of a jihadist training video, or training videos. During Ali Hamza al-Bahlul's Guantanamo military commission the video he was charged with producing was reported to have been 2 hours long. In addition to material specifically focused around the bombing it was reported to have contained images and sequences of suffering Muslims, as justification. Gay Sex in the 70s is a 2005 American documentary film about gay sexual culture in New York City in the 1970s. The film was directed by Joseph Lovett and encompasses the twelve years of sexual freedom bookended by the Stonewall riots of 1969 and the recognition of AIDS in 1981, and features interviews with Larry Kramer, Tom Bianchi, Barton Lidice Beneš, Rodger McFarlane, and many others. The film uses archival footage and interviews to describe the world of gay anonymous and casual sex in the settings of discotheques, bathhouses, bars and dark rooms, Fire Island and more. Photo-eddy is a 2013 documentary film directed by David de Jongh. The God Makers II is a documentary-styled film produced by Ed Decker and Jeremiah Films in 1993. The film attempts to be an exposé of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The film is a sequel to Decker’s earlier film The God Makers. Paruchizan Zenshi is a documentary film directed by Noriaki Tsuchimoto. The Institute is a 2013 documentary film directed by Spencer McCall reconstructing the story of the "Jejune Institute", an alternate reality game set in San Francisco, through interviews with the participants and the creators. The game was produced in 2008 by Oakland-based artist Jeff Hull. Over the course of three years, it enrolled more than 10,000 players who, responding to eccentric flyers plastered all over the city, started the game by receiving their "induction" at the fake headquarters of the Institute, located in an office building in San Francisco's Financial District. Urbanized is a documentary film directed by Gary Hustwit and released on 26 October 2011 and considered the third of a three-part series on design known as the Design Trilogy, the first being Helvetica about the typeface and the second being Objectified about industrial design. The documentary discusses the design of cities, looking at the issues and strategies behind urban design and features some of the world's foremost architects, planners, policymakers, builders, and thinkers. To promote the documentary film 'Urbanized' Build screen-printed a set of four limited edition prints based on four themes. A Profile In Courage: Linda L. Smith is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Reginald Brown. Life Somewhere Else is a 1995 short documentary film directed by Walter Salles. It tells the story of Socorro Nobre, a Brazilian woman who, while serving a 20-year prison sentence, becomes inspired by the story of Polish artist Frans Krajcberg, and becomes pen pals with him. Krajcberg himself co-wrote the film with director Walter Salles. After Armageddon is a 2010 History Channel docudrama that first aired on December 21, 2010. Better This World is a 2011 documentary film directed by Kelly Duane and Katie Galloway. "Two boyhood friends from Midland, Texas – David McKay and Bradley Crowder – fall under the sway of a charismatic revolutionary ten years their senior. At the volatile 2008 Republican Convention the "Texas Two" cross a line that radically changes their lives. The result: eight homemade bombs, multiple domestic terrorism charges and a high stakes entrapment defense hinging on the actions of a controversial FBI informant. A dramatic story of idealism, loyalty, crime and betrayal, BETTER THIS WORLD goes to the heart of the War on Terror and its impact on civil liberties and political dissent in post-9/11 America." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. The Misfortunes of Some is a 1982 documentary film directed by Omar Amiralay. Michelangelo: The Last Giant is a 1966 Documentary film directed by Tom Priestley. President is a 2009 Documentary film directed by Milon Henry Levine. America Goes Over was a silent documentary propaganda film produced by the US Army Signal Corp in 1918, documenting the activities of the American Expeditionary Forces in World War I under General John J. Pershing. The movie was a product of the Division of Films of the Committee on Public Information, the Washington, DC-based federal agency in charge of wartime propaganda in the United States. When the Garden Was Eden is a 2014 documentary film directed by Michael Rapaport. I Was A Girl, When I Was A Boy is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ivana Todorovic. High Stakes in the East is a 1942 short, documentary film directed by John Ferno. How to Make Glass Manually is one of the films pertaining to the series "Biographies of Objects" directed by Peter and Zsóka Nestler. A Thirsty World is a 2012 documentary film directed by Yann Arthus-Bertrand. Notebook on Cities and Clothes is a documentary film about Yohji Yamamoto directed by Wim Wenders. Leaving Mandela Park is a 2010 documentary film directed by Saskia Vredeveld. Muster is a documentary film recipient of Special Award for Sound at 1973 Australian Film Institute Award Best Documentary. Play for Keeps is a 2011 documentary film directed by Arnold van Bruggen. Bà nôi is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Khoa Lê. Island of the Sharks is a short documentary film directed by Howard Hall. The 59th Annual Golden Globe Awards is a 2002 documentary TV film directed by Chris Donovan. I Killed John Lennon is a 2005 documentary film directed by Chris Wilson. "Nick Sonderup used to see a lot of live music. Then he wasn’t seeing as much anymore. He used to write about music. Then he wasn’t doing that much anymore, either. His band had just fallen apart. His girlfriend was living in London. Perhaps he was a bit lost. Perhaps he was a bit bored. He was most certainly a bit crazy when Nick embarked on a journey to see 100 consecutive days of live music, between January 23rd and May 2nd, 2009…and somehow managed to keep his day job." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. Party Monster: The Shockumentary is a 1998 documentary film detailing the rise of the club kid phenomenon in New York City, the life of club kid and party promoter Michael Alig and Alig's murder of fellow club kid and drug dealer Angel Melendez. Produced by World of Wonder and based in part on the James St. James book on the memoir, Disco Bloodbath, the film combines interview footage of Alig from prison, St. James, scene watchers like Michael Musto and a number of other former club kids with archive footage from various parties and dramatic re-enactments. The book and this film also served as the basis for the 2003 film, also called Party Monster. Party Monster: The Shockumentary played a number of film festivals, including the 1999 Sundance Film Festival. NCR: Not Criminally Responsible is a 2013 documentary film by John Kastner exploring the personal impact of the mental disorder defence in Canada, following the stories of Sean Clifton, a man who stabbed and badly injured a woman in a shopping mall while in a delusional state, and his traumatized victim. It is produced by the National Film Board of Canada. The victim was stabbed several times outside a shopping mall in Cornwall, Ontario on October 7, 1999 by Clifton, who had waited in the parking lot for the next attractive young woman to walk by. Clifton had been bullied at school and found it hard to meet girls. He would later diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic with obsessive compulsive disorder. The film includes scenes inside the Brockville Mental Health Centre, during Clifton's therapy, as well as his life after release, on medication and back in society. An American in Madras is a 2013 documentary film written by Teesha Cherian and directed by Karan Bali. Heroes All is a documentary film released by the American Red Cross. The film examines returning wounded World War I veterans and their treatment at Walter Reed Hospital, along with visits to iconic Washington, D.C., landmarks. The Red Cross Bureau of Pictures produced more than 100 films, including Heroes All, from 1917-1921, which are invaluable historical and visual records of the era with footage from World War I and its aftermath. Several Red Cross cinematographers achieved notable film careers, including Ernest Schoedsack, later producer of Grass, Chang, and King Kong, and A. Farciot Edouart, the latter becoming a special effects cinematographer for Paramount Pictures from the 1920s to the 1950s. According to Internet Movie Database, a sound version was prepared in 1931. In 2009, it was named to the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress for being "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant and will be preserved for all time. The Coconut Revolution is a 2001 multi-award winning documentary film about the struggle of the indigenous peoples of Bougainville Island. The movement is described as the "world's first successful eco-revolution" and has drawn parallels with the conflict depicted in the 2009 film, Avatar. Follow Me Down: Portraits of Louisiana Prison Musicians is a music documentary film directed by Benjamin J. Harbert. The Legions of Rome: Gallic Wars is a 2001 documentary historical fiction war film. Domina - The Burden of Lust is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Klaus Tuschen. Tea or Electricity is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jérôme Le Maire. Una Ciudad En Una Ciudad is a documentary short film directed by Cylixe. Joy Division is a 2007 British documentary film on the British post-punk band Joy Division, directed by Grant Gee. The film assembles TV clips, newsreel, pictures of modern Manchester and Manchester in the late 1970s, and interviews. The interviewees include the three surviving members of the group, Tony Wilson, Peter Saville, Pete Shelley, Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, Alan Hempsall, Paul Morley, Terry Mason, Richard Boon, Anton Corbijn, and Belgian journalist Annik Honoré, with whom Curtis was having an affair. Film critic Philip French: "Someone says in the film that the revolutionary step they made was to progress from the usual punk group's angry statement: 'Fuck you.' Joy Division were the first to say: 'We're fucked.' There is a particularly impressive sequence in which dark, despairing tracks of urban alienation and angst from the 1979 album Unknown Pleasures are accompanied by a speeded-up nocturnal journey around Manchester. It has the hallucinatory sci-fi feeling of Jean-Luc Godard's Alphaville." The person being quoted was Tony Wilson. Genesis is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Claude Nuridsany and Marie Pérennou that explores the origins of earth and its inhabitants. The film focuses on the life of many animals. It is narrated by Sotigui Kouyaté. The film credits also list the natural events, animals and their situations as part of the "cast list." Not Evil Just Wrong is a 2009 documentary film by Ann McElhinney and Phelim McAleer that challenges Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth by suggesting that the evidence of global warming is inconclusive and that the impact global warming legislation will have on industry is much more harmful to humans than beneficial. The movie was filmed in 2008 and was screened at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam and at the Right Online conference in 2009. Despite earlier screenings at conservative political conferences, filmmakers promoted a "premiere" on October 18, 2009. The film attempted to break a World Record for largest simultaneous premiere, which is currently held by the documentary The Age of Stupid, another global warming documentary. The film's website claims that there were 6,500 U.S. screenings and 1,500 foreign screenings and reached 400,000 people. Reborn: New Orleans Schools is a 2008 documentary directed by Drea Cooper. N.Y.H.C. is a documentary film directed by Frank Pavich about the mid-90s New York hardcore scene. The documentary was acquired for distribution by HALO 8 Entertainment in December 2007. On March 25, 2008, Halo-8 released a two disc Special Edition for the documentary's first time on DVD. Disc 2 features previously unreleased footage including "Where Are They Now?" interviews shot ten years after the original documentary, live performances of complete songs by Vision of Disorder, Madball, 25 ta Life, 108, No Redeeming Social Value, District 9, and more, as well as new interviews with Lou Koller and Toby Morse. Global Warming: What You Need to Know is a 2006 documentary film written by Kathy Abbott, Izhar Harpaz, Tim Sandler and directed by Nicolas Brown. Le Fleuve Niger se meurt is a 2006 documentary film. The mourning period MOHARRAM presents the religious highlight for SHIITE Muslims. This film follows four different groups of people in today's TEHERAN:
- For non-orthodox youngsters, the Moharram is mainly an opportunity to meet members of the opposite sex.
- A middle-aged woman and her female friends put their energy into the preparation of an enormous feast.
- Young religious men come closer to each other during this major event,
ending in the DAY OF ASHURA - known for its traditional flagellation ritual
- The tragic background of Moharram: The death of Imam Hossein and his 72 companions comes alive through the vivid storytelling of an old Dervish Resight is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Sama Waham. My Family, My Films, and My Nation is a 1998 Indonesian political essay film directed and written by Garin Nugroho. The film is a montage of footage from some of his documentary films from the Orde Baru age under Suharto Regime. Nugroho's intent behind the film is to raise awareness of the social issues in Indonesia during the Suharto Regime. Nugroho added his own voice-over in order to display his opinion on certain social issues. Freeing Bernie Baran is an independent documentary feature film produced by Daniel Alexander and Tom Opferman. The film chronicles the 25 year span from 1984 to 2009 in the criminal court case of “The Commonwealth of Massachusetts versus Bernard F. Baran, Jr.” Bernard Baran was the first person convicted in the day care sex abuse hysteria of the 1980s and 1990s in the United States. The film uses interviews and court documents to show the consequences of homophobia and political ambition. Homophobia played such a significant role in the Baran case that the judge freeing him two decades later equated it with the other dominant aspects of day care panic cases: hysteria and suggestion. Freeing Bernie Baran made its world premiere on September 11, 2010 at the Austin Gay & Lesbian International Film Festival with Bernie Baran and director Daniel Alexander in attendance. The aGLIFF23 festival guide described the film as “achingly beautiful” and said “if you can only see one film at the festival, this is the one to see” concluding “it will make you angry but leave you with hope. Passage is a 2008 documentary film partly based on the book Fatal Passage about Sir John Franklin's lost expedition through the Northwest Passage. The film explores the fate of the doomed mission, including John Rae's efforts to uncover the truth, and Lady Franklin's campaign to defend her late husband's reputation. The film also features Inuit statesman Tagak Curley, who challenges claims made by Lady Franklin supported by her powerful friend, the story teller and "famous author Charles Dickens", widely reported at the time, that Aboriginal people were responsible for the signs of cannibalism among the remains of the doomed crew. It premiered at the Hot Docs film festival in Toronto, Canada in April 2008. Passage has two main storylines. The first shows John Walker and crew, making an historical fiction film; it includes script readings, discussions and scenes from the film they are making. The second story line is completely non-fiction. It includes paintings with narratives, cast and crew visiting the places Rae knew and Inuit culture and experts. The film was written, directed and narrated by John Walker. The Virgin Wildsides is a 2007 documentary film directed by Tetsuaki Matsue. Sympathy for the Devil is a 1968 film shot mostly in color by director Jean-Luc Godard. Woubi Chéri is a 1998 French/Ivorian documentary that shows a few days in the life of various members of the gay and transgender community in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire. It is one of a very few films from Africa to deal with LGBT issues. The title comes from the term "woubi", meaning a man who plays the role of a wife in a homosexual relationship. Also featured in the documentary are "yossis", men who act as husbands to woubis, who are often bisexual and also in conventional marriages. The film won Best Documentary awards at the New York Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, & Transgender Film Festival, the Turin International Lesbian & Gay Film Festival, and the Transgender Festival in London. "Imposed under British colonial rule in 1860, Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code criminalized any sexual acts between adults of the same sex, stigmatizing them as "against the order of nature". On 2nd July 2009 the Delhi High Court passed a landmark judgment scrapping this legacy of colonialism, thus fulfilling the demands of the GLBT Indian community, which had been fighting this law for the past 10 years. Three characters, Beena, Pallav and Abheena travel through the city of Bombay in order to celebrate the first anniversary of that freedom event. A documentary produced by Ivan Cotroneo." Quoting the description from the 2011 Torino GLBT Film Festival site. With One Voice is a 2009 documentary directed by Eric Temple and written by Carol and Matthew Flickstein exploring the unity of humanity, featuring mystics from around the world, whose lives have been dedicated to answering the mysteries of existence. Endless Abilities is an action adventure drama documentary film directed by Tripp Clemens and Harvey Burrell. Hollywood contra Franco is a 2008 documentary, biography and history film written by Isabel Andrés, Oriol Porta and Llorenç Soler and directed by Oriol Porta. Amargosa is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Todd Robinson. Yes, It’s On is a 1972 short documentary film directed by S.N.S. Sastry. I'm No Dummy is a 2009 documentary film about ventriloquism directed by Bryan W. Simon, produced by Marjorie Engesser through Montivagus Productions. It premiered at the 2009 Seattle International Film Festival before being released theatrically in the United States by Salient Media and NBCUniversal in 2010. The comic documentary examines and deconstructs this now obscure art form through clips, photos and interviews with many of the greatest “vents” from today and yesterday as well as their puppets. The idea came to Simon while on a bike ride in Los Angeles, as he kicked around ideas for a new project and decided to focus on a documentary about something he loved as a child. The film stars Jeff Dunham, Jay Johnson and Lynn Trefzger and features Kelly Asbury, Tom Ladshaw, Jimmy Nelson and Willie Tyler. Archival footage of Edgar Bergen, Paul Winchell and Senor Wences is also included in the feature. Aquadettes is a 2011 short, biography, documentary film directed by Drea Cooper and Zackary Canepari. Born to Be Blind is a 2003 documentary film written by Mauricio Livvovski and directed by Roberto Berliner. Isadora Duncan, the Biggest Dancer in the World is a BBC TV film based on the life of the American dancer Isadora Duncan first broadcast on 22 September 1966. The film was written by Sewell Stokes and the director Ken Russell and starred Vivian Pickles and Peter Bowles. Sewell Stokes became friendly with the dancer towards the very end of her life when she was penniless and alone. In 1928 he wrote a memoir of his conversations with her, shortly after her death, entitled Isadora, an Intimate Portrait. Two years after the first broadcast of the TV film, Vanessa Redgrave played the role of Isadora Duncan in the big-screen biopic Isadora. Russell's biographer Joseph Lanza believes that "of all his television work, Isadora is his most accomplished". It explores his "ongoing theme of art being a thing of both glory and vulgarity" Project 10 - Real Stories From a Free South Africa: The Devil Breaks My Heart Ten Years Later is a 2003 film directed by Lederle Bosch. Project 10 - Real Stories From a Free South Africa: The Meaning of the Buffalo is a 2003 film directed by Karin Slater. Bruce Springsteen: The Complete Video Anthology 1978-2000 is a 2001 documentary film directed by Meiert Avis, Adam Bernstein, Peter Care, Brian De Palma, Jonathan Demme, Ted Demme, Carol Dodds, Danny Goldberg, Arnold Levine, Sean Penn, Anthony Potenza, Tim Robbins, Arthur Rosato, John Sayles and Julian Schlossberg. Toehold in History is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Dahl 'Dulcie' Collings. Invisible Moustache of Raoul Dufy is a 1955 short animated documentary film written by Sidney Peterson and directed by Aurelius Battaglia. Father's Garden - The Love of My Parents is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Peter Liechti. Les raquetteurs is a 1958 Direct Cinema documentary film co-directed by Michel Brault and Gilles Groulx. The film explores life in rural Quebec, at a convention of snowshoers in Sherbrooke, Quebec in February 1958. The film is notable for helping to establish the then-nascent French language production unit at the National Film Board of Canada, and more importantly, the development of a uniquely Quebec style of direct cinema. The film incorporates agile camera work and a largely synchronous soundtrack, uninterrupted by any narration, in keeping with the ethos of direct cinema to avoid any imposed "truth" on events onscreen. Happy Mother's Day is a 1963 short documentary film directed by Richard Leacock and Joyce Chopra. The Last Angel of History is a 45 minute 1996 documentary that deals with concepts of Afrofuturism as a metaphor for the displacement of black culture and roots. The film is a hybrid documentary and fictional narrative. Documentary segments include traditional talking head clips from musicians, writers, and social critics, as well as archival video footage and photographs. The fictional story follows the journey of the “data thief” who must travel across time and space in search of a crossroads where he makes archaeological digs for fragments of history and technology in search of the code that holds the key to his future. The structure of the film makes it a meta-narrative commenting on while also becoming part of the genre of Afrofuturism. The film bases its concepts around George Clinton's Mothership Connection and features interviews with George Clinton, Derrick May, Samuel R. Delany, Nichelle Nichols, Juan Atkins, DJ Spooky, Goldie and others to explore the link between black music as a way of exploring the future. The film makes mention to Sun Ra, whose work centers around the return of blacks to outer space in his own Mothership. Explosion 1812 is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mick Grogan. Despite record salmon runs in the state of Alaska, wild salmon fisherman struggle to stay afloat in the flooded salmon markets of the world. This documentary is a journey aboard an alaskan salmon seining vessel, exploring the lifestye and adventure of a dying breed of men, the last of hunters and gatherers who dare to take on monther nature to earn a living. Journey abord The Viking Maid, atop the erratic seas of southeast Alaska and find out why you should always ask, "Is this salmon farmed or wild?" Jihad is a 1986 documentary film produced and directed by Jeff B. Harmon about the Soviet war in Afghanistan as seen through the eyes of Haji Latif, 'The Lion of Kandahar’, and his group of Islamic holy warriors. Harmon made six illegal, clandestine trips into Afghanistan in order to film the Mujahideen in Kandahar and other provinces. When Harmon and his cameraman, Alexander Lindsay, were with Haji Latif's fighter, the Soviet and Afghan forces found out about and launched an unsuccessful operation to stop the making of the film, resulting in the deaths of 27 mujahideen. The film won the Royal Television Society Journalism Award, the ACE Award, the Blue Ribbon at the American Film and Video Festival, and CINE's Golden Eagle. His film was a Duce Films International Ltd. Production for the BBC and National Geographic Explorer. It runs 52 mins. Jihad is part of Harmon's "Afghan Trilogy", which also included the documentaries Afgan and Warlord of Kayan. Chesty: A Tribute to a Legend is a 1976 documentary film written by Jay Simms and directed by John Ford. It is a tribute documentary on the most decorated U.S. Marine, General Lewis B. 'Chesty' Puller. The Silence’s Echo is a 2010 Moroccan documentary film. The Red Carpet is a 2012 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Manuel Fernandez and Iosu Lopez. Laughing Matters... More! is a 2006 documentary film directed by Andrea Meyerson. Shield of Solomon is a documentary by Igal Hecht and Chutzpa Productions about the story of four War in Darfur refugees who have found sanctuary in the Jewish state of Israel. Mrs. Birk's Sunday Roast is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Kyoko Miyake. Linha de montagem is a 1982 film directed by Renato Tapajos. A Quest For Peace: Nonviolence Among Religions is a 2012 documentary film directed by Matthew J. Evans. The Bubbleologist is a 2012 short biographical documentary directed by Jan Bednarz. You Are Free is a 1983 West German short documentary film directed by Dea Brokman, in which five former U.S. Servicemen and a prison camp survivor give accounts of the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps in 1945. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Through the Time of Memory is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Zerina Kapo, Adnan Sahdan and Adis Hukanović. The Story of Poogy is a documentary film directed by Ofer Naim. Tashi and the Monk is a documentary biographical family film directed by Johnny Burke and Andrew Hinton. Kottonmouth Kings: Dopeumentary is a 2001 documentary DVD starring the Kottonmouth Kings distributed by Suburban Noize Records which was directed and produced by Bill Wadsworth and Kevin Zinger released on May 8, 2001. The DVD documents the making of the songs and albums by generally on the albums Royal Highness and Hidden Stash. Other than the videos viewed on this the Kottonmouth Kings are followed while on tour across California. The DVD was re-packaged with the Hidden Stash II: The Kream of the Krop CD as Double Dose V3, the third and final Double Dose set. Rehearsal is a 2013 short documentary biographical Film written and directed by Jacqueline Christy. Little Nemo, also known as Winsor McCay, the Famous Cartoonist of the N.Y. Herald and His Moving Comics, is a 1911 silent animated short film by American cartoonist Winsor McCay. One of the earliest animated films, it was McCay's first, and featured characters from McCay's comic strip Little Nemo in Slumberland. Its expressive character animation distinguished the film from the experiments of earlier animators. Inspired by flip books his son brought home, McCay came to see the potential of the animated film medium. He claimed to be the first to make such films, though James Stuart Blackton and Émile Cohl were among those who preceded him. The short's four thousand drawings on rice paper were shot at Vitagraph Studios under Blackton's supervision. Most of the film's running time is made up of a live-action sequence in which McCay bets his colleagues that he can make drawings that move. He wins the bet with four minutes of animation in which the Little Nemo characters perform, interact, and metamorphose to McCay's whim. Little Nemo debuted in movie theaters on April 8, 1911, and four days later McCay began using it as part of his vaudeville act. Darjeeling is a 1954 documentary film directed by K. L. Khandpur. B-52 is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Hartmut Bitomsky. The Vivian Maier Mystery is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jill Nicholls. Self Made is a 2011 documentary film written by Leo Butler and Gillian Wearing and directed by Gillian Wearing. The air is heavy with anticipation as an entire country awaits their lifeblood – the Monsoon. After months of sweltering heat it arrives with lightening, thunder, storm-force winds, and heavy, warm rain. The WORLD OF DISCOVERY series takes you to the far corners of the globe to explore the secrets of nature and wildlife, the frontiers of science and technology, and the compelling questions of history and the world we live in. Still Our Country - Reflections On A Culture is a 2014 film directed by Molly Reynolds. Overnight Stay (Übernachtung) is a 2009 short animated film directed by Daniela Sherer. Trata de Mujeres: De Tenancingo a Nueva York is a nominated work in the 2014 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Investigative Journalism in Spanish. Dolls: A Woman from Damascus is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Diana El Jeiroudi. 50 Years of Action is a 1987 film directed by Douglass M. Stewart Jr.. The Time Is... Now is a 2012 documentary, animation, crime, and war film directed by Vishal Hiraskar. Un Animale utile is a 1951 Italian film written by Attilio Bertolucci and Giulio Bollati, and directed by Antonio Marchi. 'Harry Clarke – Darkness In Light is a documentary film originally released in 2003. Hit & Stay is a 2013 documentary directed by Joe Tropea and Skizz Cyzyk. It looks at the actions of the The Catonsville Nine and The Baltimore Four taken in protest of The Vietnam War, and the influence of these actions and the activists behind them on subsequent progressive political protests. The press labeled this group "the Catholic Left." The film contains interviews with many of the activists who took part in these actions, as well some of the F.B.I. agents who monitored them. It also contains contemporary commentary on the influence of these actions from such names as Bill Ayers, Noam Chomsky, Ramsey Clark, Amy Goodman, Howard Zinn, and Laura Whitehorn. Hit & Stay premiered at The 2013 Chicago Underground Film Festival, where it won the Audience Award. It made its Baltimore premiere at the Maryland Film Festival. The documentary made its premiere in the South at the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival where it won the Best Documentary Feature award. Paper Dolls is a 2006 documentary by Israeli director Tomer Heymann, which follows the lives of transgender migrant workers from the Philippines who work as health care providers for elderly Orthodox Jewish men and perform as drag queens during their spare time. It also delves into the lives of societal outcasts who search for freedom and acceptance. In 2013, the story was adapted as a musical and produced at the Tricycle Theatre in London. Reagan is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Eugene Jarecki. "Ronald Reagan as a man, as compared to his legacy, is rich territory for exploration, and a line from Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar is just one of the many things that springs to mind after viewing filmmaker Eugene Jarecki’s latest opus, Reagan (Jarecki’s Why We Fight won the 2005 Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize: Documentary). Speaking at his funeral, Mark Antony said of Caesar, "The evil that men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their bones." With a firm grasp of Reagan’s story, Jarecki avoids the predictable and takes the long view on Reagan’s life and influence, while staying centered on him as a man of deep contradiction; an American whose patriotism paradoxically led him to impeachable acts, a liberal Democrat who came to define the modern conservative movement. Rendered to play the big screen, but unlike the B-movies that fill Reagan’s resume, this may be the best movie Ronald Reagan ever starred in. Through extraordinary visual material, interviews, and research, Jarecki creates a definitive portrait of a man solidly in and of his times, whose policies and beliefs, for better and worse, continue to shape the world we live in." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Chiva is a 2012 documentary short and biographical film directed by Julian Jimenez-Madiedo. Kitezh­-Vladimirskoe is a 2013 documentary/short/biography directed by Pieter Ten Hoopen. White Thunder is a 2002 documentary film written by Victoria King, Terre Nash and directed by Victoria King. Fahimeh's Story is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Faramarz K. Rahber. Olivia's Birds and the Oil Spill is a 2013 short documentary directed by Lynne Cherry. Bay Area Girls Rock Camp is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Jeremiah Mellor, Judy Lee and Lily Yu. Illegal Love is a 2011 documentary, family and history film directed and written by Julie Gali. ZIPPER: Coney Island's Last Wild Ride is a history documentary film directed by Amy Nicholson. The Robinsons of Mantsinsaari is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Victor Asliuk. Dix mille ans de cinéma is a 1991 short documentary film. Unfinished is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Law Wan Ling Hun. Where in the World Is Osama Bin Laden? is a 2008 documentary film, conceived by Adam Dell and co-written, produced, directed by and starring Morgan Spurlock, an American independent filmmaker. The title of the film is a play on the title of the television game show and computer game series, Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?, and other “Where in the World is” themes. Stalin Is with Us is a 1990 documentary film written by Tofik Shakhverdiev and Anatoly Strelyany and directed by Tofik Shakhverdiev. The Orphans Of Nkandla is a 2005 documentary film directed by Deborah Shipley and Brian Woods. Defilada is a Polish 1989 documentary by Andrzej Fidyk. It focused on the cult of personality in North Korea, and was shot in 1988 on the 40th anniversary of the state's founding by Kim Il-sung. Despite its anti-totalitarian message, it has received praise from North Korea itself. A Simple Adventure Story: Sam Peckinpah, Mexico and 'The Wild Bunch' is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Nick Redman. Moon Rider is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Daniel Dencik. The Fight: Science Against Cancer is a 1950 Canadian short documentary film directed by Morten Parker. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Bear Country is a 1953 American short documentary film directed by James Algar. It won an Academy Award at the 26th Academy Awards in 1954 for Best Short Subject. The film was produced by Walt Disney as part of the True-Life Adventures series of nature documentaries. Picture is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Stephen French. Beats of the Antonov is a documentary film, released in 2014. A Sudanese-South African coproduction directed by Hajooj Kuka, the film documents the Sudan–SRF conflict in the Blue Nile and Nuba Mountains regions, focusing in particular on the role of music in helping the affected communities to sustain themselves culturally and spiritually in the face of the ongoing conflict. The film won the People's Choice Award for Best Documentary at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival and was well-reviewed by Indiewire, POV Magazine and Africa is a Country among others. Dirtbusters is a 2013 short documentary film directed by René Odgaard. Altars Of The World is a 1976 documentary film directed by Lew Ayres. Mannheim Steamroller's music is incredibly moving by itself, but add an enthusiastic live performance by some very animated musicians and an intense multimedia presentation and the result is even more powerful. This 56-minute Christmas concert features many favorite numbers from the album Christmas in the Aire, but "Joy to the World" perhaps best epitomizes that distinctive Mannheim Steamroller sound: powerful synthesized melodies and harmonies, an intense drive and pathos, and skillful ornamentation. Letters to Ali is a 2004 documentary film about the story of an asylum seeker, a family and a filmmaker. The movie pictures the hardship of the asylum seekers, and pays attention to the fact that Australia remains the only western country that keep children in detention centres. Cousteau: Alaska: Outrage at Valdez is a 1989 film written by Paula Diperna and directed by Jean-Michel Cousteau. A Batalha do Passinho is a 2012 Brazilian documentary film directed by Emílio Domingos. The film follows a dance known as "passinho", which emerged from the funk carioca scene, and became a viral internet sensation after a video was posted on YouTube. Sicko is a 2007 documentary film by American filmmaker Michael Moore. The film investigates health care in the United States, focusing on its health insurance and the pharmaceutical industry. The movie compares the for-profit, non-universal U.S. system with the non-profit universal health care systems of Canada, the United Kingdom, France and Cuba. Sicko was made on a budget of approximately $9 million, and grossed $24.5 million theatrically in the United States. This box office take exceeded the official expectation of The Weinstein Company, which had hoped for a gross in line with Bowling for Columbine's $21.5 million US box office gross. Lil Bub & Friendz is a 2013 documentary directed by Andy Capper and Juliette Eisner. It stars "perma-kitten" Lil Bub and her owner Mike Bridavsky and looks at cats on the Internet, Internet memes and viral videos. Lil Bub & Friendz premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 18, 2013 and won the Tribeca Online Festival Best Feature Film. Hollywood's Amazing Animal Actors is a 1996 documentary directed by Daniel Helfgott. Where Mountains Float is a 1955 documentary film directed by Bjarne Henning-Jensen. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. A Regular Frankie Fan is a 2000 documentary film on the fans of The Rocky Horror Picture Show. It was narrated by Paul Williams and written and directed by Scott Mabbutt. The majority of the documentary was filmed at theaters screening The Rocky Horror Picture Show in and around Southern California. It was released on DVD by Liberty International in 2001. The Future of Energy: Lateral Power to the People is a documentary adventure film directed by Brett Mazurek. Keys is a 2011 short music film written by Ned Hurley and directed by Ethan Holbrook and Ned Hurley. Lovesoup is a 2012 short romantic documentary written and directed by Ryker Allen. La chasse à la girafe en Ouganda is a 1910 short and documentary film written and directed by Alfred Machin. A Second Knock at the Door is a documentary on friendly fire in Iraq and Afghanistan. The film follows military families after they are told their family member died in a "fratricide" incident. All the families profiled in the film only learned their family member was killed by a comrade, not an enemy, months after they first learned of their death. Director Christopher Grimes has described being inspired by the official coverup that former sport star Pat Tillman was killed by his comrades. The film was screened at the Flyway Film Festival in 2011, and the East Lansing Film Festival in 2012. The Child Of Silent Winter is a 2012 biography documentary short film written and directed by Iiris Härmä. Waterfall is a 1967 experimental, documentary, short film directed by Chick Strand. Goddess Remembered is a 1989 Canadian documentary on the Goddess movement and feminist theories surrounding Goddess worship in Old European culture according to Marija Gimbutas, and Merlin Stone's When God Was a Woman. This poetic documentary is a salute to 35 000 years of "pre-history," to the values of ancestors only recently remembered, and to the goddess-worshipping religions of the ancient past. Goddess Remembered features Merlin Stone, Carol Christ, Luisah Teish, Starhawk, Charlene Spretnak, and Jean Bolen, who link the loss of goddess-centred societies with today's environmental crisis. They propose a return to the belief in an interconnected life system, with respect for the earth and the female, as fundamental to our survival. Goddess Remembered is the first film in the National Film Board of Canada's Women and Spirituality series, followed by The Burning Times. The main theme of the film, composed by Loreena McKennitt, was released as the track "Ancient Pines" on her album 'Parallel Dreams'. The Last Party is a documentary film co-written by and starring Robert Downey, Jr. Interviews and commentary cover moments of history during the 1992 presidential campaigns and investigate the issues of the day with Downey's particular brand of off-beat humor and satire. Although Downey's political sympathies are clear in the film, he lampoons both Democrats and Republicans equally, and provides elements of general social commentary, as well. The film also provides a snap-shot of Robert Downey, Jr., at a point in his life where he was falling into drug addiction that later led to an interruption in his career. Prominent persons who appeared in the documentary include: George H. W. Bush, Barbara Bush, Pat Buchanan, Bill Clinton, Patti Davis, Spike Lee, Jerry Brown, Roger Clinton, Oliver Stone, Al Sharpton, Dave Mustaine, Suzanne Soderberg, G. Gordon Liddy, Marc Levin, Sean Penn, John Kerry, Peter Jennings, Jerry Falwell, Oliver North, Chelsea Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Mario Cuomo, John Dean, John Ehrlichman, Betty Friedan, Al Gore, Tipper Gore, H.R. Some Rainbows Never Grey is a 2013 short biographical documentary and historical film written and directed by Peter Jacobsen. Fire From the Heartland: the Awakening of the Conservative Woman is a 2010 American documentary film written and directed by Stephen K. Bannon, and produced by David N. Bossie for Citizens United Productions. The documentary stars Michele Bachmann, Deneen Borelli, and Ann Coulter, and focuses on female participation in conservative politics. Maya Deren's Sink is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Barbara Hammer. Amor Fati is a 1996 documentary film directed by Sophie Kotanyi and Zsolt Kotányi. We Should Have Coffee Sometime is a 2013 short animated documentary film written and directed by Lane Stroud and Maile Martinez "Jan Němec's 'auto-documentary' recounts the story of how he filmed the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia and smuggled the footage out of the country. Following on from his Late Night Talks With Mother, veteran Czech New Wave director Jan Nĕmec (The Party and the Guests) contributes another film to a genre that has been called auto-documentary. In 1968, he filmed the first footage of the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia to be smuggled out of the country. It subsequently appeared in television coverage throughout the world as well as in his own film Oratorio for Prague and the Hollywood adaptation of The Unbearable Lightness of Being. Here he recounts how he filmed the material and smuggled it to Austria with the help of a girl called Jana, 'the Ferrari Dino girl'. The 16 minutes of unedited film form the centrepiece of the film, framed by semi-abstract images of buildings and city streets, with 'guest appearances' by Karel Roden as Nĕmec and Tammy Sundquist as Jana. Despite being a film 'on the edge of experiment', The Ferrari Dino Girl provides a strangely direct and authentic document on one of the century's key events. Shown without commentary or editorial intervention, the footage itself attains something of its original traumatic impact." Quoting Peter Hames Private conversations is a documentary that goes behind the scenes to examine the making of the film version of Arthur Miller's play Death of a Salesman. Playwright Miller, stars Dustin Hoffman and John Malkovich, and director Volker Schlondorff discuss the production and the original play and are seen working on the set. Biggie Smalls: Rap Phenomenon is a 2009 documentary film written by Damion Butler and directed by April Maiya. Art War is a documentary adventure historical war film directed by Marco Wilms. COMMUNITY BUILDER: THE LIFE & LEGACY OF J.C. NICHOLS is an hour-long historical documentary about the life and work of visionary Kansas City land developer, Jesse Clyde Nichols, 1880-1950.Nichols' greatest achievement is Kansas City's Country Club District, in which Nichols constructed the largest contiguous planned community in the U.S. The crown jewel of the district is the Country Club Plaza, built in 1922. That area, with its multiple parking lots, was the first modern shopping center in America.The methods and philosophies Nichols championed are now being used by architects, planners, and developers to build towns and combat sprawl. These "New Urbanists" have found a godfather in J.C. Nichols.This film was nominated for an Emmy Award, and has aired more than 100 times on PBS stations in 75 cities. Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht is the third documentary directed by Leni Riefenstahl, following Victory of Faith and Triumph of the Will. Her third film recounts the Seventh Party Rally of the Nazi Party, which occurred in Nuremberg in 1935, and focuses on the German army. Tag der Freiheit was considered lost at the end of World War II, but an incomplete print of the film was discovered in the 1970s—the extant footage reveals Riefenstahl mainly reprising the approach she used in Triumph of the Will, though certain more expressionistic sequences clearly presage the more audacious style she would adopt for Olympia. The Sarajevo Tunnel is a 2009 documentary film directed by Michael Moeller and Slavica Vlahovic. My Sexuality Is An Art Creation is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Lucía Egaña Rojas. 10 Santimetrov Zhizni is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Anna Yanovskaya. Larry David: Curb Your Enthusiasm is a 1999 film written by Larry David and directed by Robert B. Weide. For nearly a century, people have turned to this prophetic dessert for advice, inspiration and even winning lottery combinations. While the fortune cookie has been a source of fascination and a Chinese cuisine staple in North America, it remains nearly non-existent in China. THE KILLING OF A CHINESE COOKIE examines the heated debate over the true origin of the fortune cookie, the mixing of eastern and western cultures that produced it, and the cookie's rise from a simple pastry to a pop culture phenomenon. Maria the Korean Bride is 2013 documentary, adventure, biography and romance film directed by Maria Yoon. For decades, film and TV audiences have watched their favorite stars with little thought for the people standing behind them. "Strictly Background" explores the charm and determination of some of Hollywood's hardest working actors, professional "extras." Siddeshwari is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Mani Kaul. Beyond Clueless is 2014 documentary, horror, romance film written and directed by Charlie Lyne. Rikugun Noborito Kenkyujo is a documentary film directed by Tadayuki Kusuyama. Pleasure At Her Majesty's was the name given to the filmed release of A Poke In The Eye, the first of the Amnesty International comedy benefit galas. The title is a play on the phrase at Her Majesty's pleasure. In America, the film was originally called Monty Python Meets Beyond the Fringe. This show came to be considered part of the Secret Policeman's Ball series of shows that it inspired, although it pre-dated the first show in the series by three years. The event was organized by a team of three: Monty Python member John Cleese, Amnesty's Assistant Director Peter Luff and Transatlantic Records executive Martin Lewis. It featured the cream of Britain's comedic talent of the era, setting a precedent that would inspire many subsequent Amnesty galas, as well as Comic Relief. The concept was also the inspiration of similar events in aid of Amnesty International in countries around the world. The film consists of both on-stage and back-stage footage, taken from all three nights of the run. Luff and Lewis collaborated on producing the successor show - video-taped in 1977 as The Mermaid Frolics. Konitz is a 1988 film directed by Robert Daudelin. Through The Heart Of Tango is a 2013 short, family and documentary film directed by Raymond Martino. Eloquent Nude: The Love and Legacy of Edward Weston & Charis Wilson documents the life of Charis Wilson, one of the most famous nude models in the annals of photography. She was the primary muse and wife of famed photographer Edward Weston. Leni Riefenstahl: Her Dream of Africa is a 2000 documentary-film by Ray Müller. The film follows Leni Riefenstahl's return to Sudan to visit the Nuba tribe whom she published photographs of in best-sellers such as The Last of the Nuba and The People of Kau. It is the second collaboration between Riefenstahl and Müller. She was the subject of his acclaimed 1993 documentary The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl, which followed her life and reflected on her Nuba activities. Fear of a Satanic Planet is a 2005 documentary film. It's never anyone's fault is a 2012 film directed by Andrea Prandstraller. Scared Sacred is an independent film produced in 2004 and released in 2006 by director Velcrow Ripper. Scared Sacred is an award winning feature length documentary that takes viewers to many of the places in the world that have experienced great suffering in recent years including Bhopal, Hiroshima, Israel and Palestine. The film portrays Ripper's own search for meaning, and communicates stories of hope in spite of oppression. Co-produced by the National Film Board of Canada and Producers on Davie Pictures, Scared Sacred received a Genie Award for Best Documentary. A second film by Velcrow Ripper, Fierce Light builds on where Scared Sacred ends. Fierce Light is about spiritual activists. Free at Last: the Movie is the first DVD released by DC Talk. It is a documentary that follows the band after the release of their groundbreaking album, Free at Last. Free at Last: the Movie was released in honor of the tenth anniversary of the release of Free at Last. The Other Dave is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Pasquale Anthony Greco. Inshallah, Football is a documentary film by Ashvin Kumar about an aspiring footballer who was denied the right to travel abroad on the pretext that father was a militant in the 1990s. The film was completed in 2010, and has faced difficulties getting released in India. The film's first screening in India at the India Habitat Center received this review from Tehelka magazine, 'Kumar’s camera catches the irony of Kashmir’s physical beauty, the claustrophobia of militarisation, the dread and hopelessness of children born into war and the nuances of relationships. It also filters the inherent joie-de-vivre of youth, even if that flows uneasily with Kashmir’s collective memory of unmitigated grief...There is no better way to understand Kashmir right now.'. The film was shot by Kumar himself using five different camera formats "There is a rough, almost unpolished, feel to Inshallah, Football. The narrative runs unfettered, with an energy of its own." says Tehelka, "We shot with five different cameras, from DSLRs to the best equipment. The idea was to watch life unfold and get under the skin of the audience.” adds Kumar. The Children Who Cheated the Nazis is a documentary about the Kindertransport, by the director Sue Read and producer Jim Goulding. This documentary film was broadcast by Channel 4 on 28 September 2000, and has since been broadcast in America, Israel, France, Australia, Spain and worldwide. The film is narrated by Lord Richard Attenborough, Academy Award winning film actor and director, who features in the film, talking about the two Kindertransport children his family gave a home to. Also featured is Warren Mitchell, whose family also took in a Kindertransport child. Burying the Past: Legacy of the Mountain Meadows Massacre is a 2004 documentary film about the Mountain Meadows massacre. It was directed by Brian Patrick and has won 11 awards, but the producers were unable to obtain theatrical release for the film. Ellen: A Tribute to Hollywood is a 1998 TV Movie. Reminiscences of a Journey to Lithuania is a 1971–72 documentary film by Jonas Mekas. It revolves around Mekas' trip back to Semeniškiai, the village of his birth. In 2006, the film was selected to the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress, for its "cultural, aesthetic, or historical significance". The Battle of the Bulge... The Brave Rifles is a 1965 documentary film produced by Laurence E. Mascott. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Blue Planet is an IMAX film directed by Ben Burtt, and produced by the IMAX Space Technology corporation for the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, as well as Lockheed Corporation. Filmed with the cooperation of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, it was written, edited, and narrated by Toni Myers. Partially filmed from orbit during space shuttle missions, the film is about the planet Earth. The changes and constants are highlighted, and the film attempts to show how fragile and unique Earth is. Origins of the planet, how it has changed, what man's role in change is, and other issues are discussed. The film features footage that was filmed from space, underwater, computer animations based on satellite data, and a variety of views from the surface to illustrate the topics. Correspondence is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Robert Fenz. American Inquisition is a 1983 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in a Craft in News and Documentary Programming - Cinematography nominated tv program. This installment of AE's "America's Castles" series heads west to tour two of the nation's most fascinating mansions. The Winchester Mystery House -- the architectural product of a widow's fear of ghosts -- is laden with stairs to nowhere, secret passages and elements built around the number 13. Scotty's Castle, built by the eccentric Walter Scott, is less bizarre but equally as impressive, with an elaborate pipe organ and a Moorish bell tower. Running Guns - A Journey Into the Small Arms Trade is a 2008 documentary film directed by Shelley Saywell. Sophiatown is a 2003 documentary film. Sophiatown in the 1950s was a suburb of Johannesburg South Africa where all races mixed in defiance of apartheid. Sophiatown was famous for jazz and black gangsters heavily influenced by American film who spoke a slang called Tsotsitaal. This era is revisited by some of the artists who lived there and they call back the past in two concerts. Bible Storyland is a 2012 documentary, comedy, family and history film directed by Stephanie Hubbard. "T’Ain’t Nobody’s Bizness exposes the triply oppressed (black, female, queer) pioneers of blues through interviews with cultural historians, vintage photos, footage, and recordings, all narrated by Jewelle Gomez." - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Mário Lago is a 2013 biographical documentary film written by Marco Abujamra and directed by Marco Abujamra and Markao Oliveira. Fahrenheit 7-Eleven is a short documentary film directed by Walter Forsberg. Shadows of Memory is a 2000 documentary by Claudia von Alemann that describes the rise and fall of Hitler from the perspective of a Nazi supporter—Alemann's 84-year-old mother. Robinson in Ruins is a 2010 British documentary film by Patrick Keiller and narrated by Vanessa Redgrave. It is a sequel to Keiller's previous films, London and Robinson in Space. It documents the journey of the fictional titular character around the south of England. It premiered at the 67th Venice International Film Festival in September 2010. Nirvana – A Classic Album Under Review – In Utero is a 2006 music documentary released exclusively to DVD dealing with grunge band Nirvana's third studio album, In Utero. The film purports to offer a "rare insight" into the influential music group, and consists of live and studio performances by Nirvana, interspersed with interviews with the band and with music industry notables and experts. It was released on November 21, 2006, and has a running time of 70 minutes. The film is narrated by Tony Ponfret and produced by Thomas Walker. Those interviewed include Nirvana's original drummer Chad Channing, Kurt Cobain's biographer Charles R. Cross, and music producer Jack Endino. The DVD also include biographies of the contributors, an interactive Nirvana quiz, and a two minute bonus discussion of the Unplugged in New York album. The DVD received generally negative reviews. Popmatters.com said, "That the album warrants a focused discussion on its creation and impact, both at the time and ongoing, is without debate," but felt that it was "surprising and disappointing" that the collected critics and writers found "so little new to say about the band and their work". The Debutante Hunters is a 2011 biographical documentary short film directed by Maria White. 24 Hours on Craigslist is a 2005 American feature-length documentary that captures the people and stories behind a single day's posts on the classified ad website Craigslist. The film, made with the approval of Craigslist's founder Craig Newmark, is woven from interviews with the site's users, all of whom opted in to be contacted by the production when they submitted their posts on August 4, 2003. The documentary screened in nine film festivals during 2004 and 2005, winning a 'best feature documentary', and played in a limited, self-distributed, theatrical release in 2005 and 2006. The film was released on DVD on April 25, 2006. The Last Straw is a film documenting the very last live poetry reading given by Charles Bukowski, even though he lived and wrote for another 14 years. The reading was given at The Sweetwater, a music club in Redondo Beach, California on March 31, 1980. It is produced and directed by Jon Monday for mondayMEDIA. Chasing Rhinos With Billy Bush is a 2013 documentary film directed by Tony Gerber. Camilo, el cura guerrillero is a 1974 documentary film written and directed by Francisco Norden. The Finishing Line is a short film produced in 1977 by British Transport Films, warning about the dangers children face on railway lines. Although it is not strictly a public information film, it is often considered to be so by fans of the genre. It was broadcast in its entirety several times on television, but was so controversial that it was replaced less than two years later by the slightly less graphic Robbie. It won at least two creative awards: Certificate of Appreciation and Oberhausen Mention at the Festival of Youth Paris. The film was also shown in several schools by invitation. The film was directed by John Krish, written by Krish and Michael Gilmour, and produced by James Ritchie. It was filmed in the vicinity of the then-closed Watton-at-Stone railway station, Hertfordshire. Zelal is a documentary film directed by Marianne Khoury and Mustapha Hasnaoui. Chile, no invoco tu nombre en vano is a 1983 film directed by Colectivo Cine-Ojo-Chile. "Chantal is the manager, hostess and stage-hogging frontwoman of ‘House of Shame – Party’. In this documentary, filmmaker Johanna Jackie Baier tells her story. It begins with Chantal’s escape to Berlin from the confines of a small country town in southwest Germany in the autumn of 1980. Interweaving interviews and portraits, but also on- and off-stage stories, backstage gossip, copious amounts of music and excerpts from her shows, the film allows Chantal’s story to unfold before a backdrop of recent and very recent history. HOUSE OF SHAME takes us to the squats of Oranienstrasse of the early 1980s; to Martin Kippenberger’s newly founded club ‘SO36’; to the studios of the artists of the ‘Neuen Wilden’ movement (Salomé et al), and the epicentre of gay emancipation. The film also takes a look at the lives and deaths of transsexuals. No amount of colourful parades and riotous parties can conceal the fault lines in a personality: a body can thwart everything and lead to apartheid among sex workers, in bars and even in everyday professional life. The eponymous party is always the film’s focus. It’s been eleven years since this weekly party slot premiered. An instant hit, within a year, Chantal’s get-together had become the Thursday night floor-filler par excellence. The event is now a must for any self-respecting visitor to Berlin game for encounters of the transgressive kind – regardless of whether this involves inter-, trans- or other queer gender transgressions or simply the line between good taste and burlesque … Masculine types, queens, courageous heterosexuals – they all queue up gladly to catch a glimpse of Chantal and her weird and wacky entourage." Quoting the production notes from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. The Tiniest Place is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Tatiana Huezo. The Sound of Mumbai: A Musical tells the story of a slum school choir in Mumbai who performed a concert of songs from The Sound of Music with a full orchestra, before an audience of over 1,000 people. At the centre of the story is 11-year-old Ashish, whose wide smile and optimism defy his family's constricted slum shelter. He admits to lacking confidence as he copies out in his notebook 'I will not be self-conscious'. His natural charisma suggests that he could go far if given the right opportunity. Now he's tasked to perform a solo piece from The Sound of Music at Mumbai's National Centre for the Performing Arts, a venue that's normally inaccessible to the poor. He can't help but attach dreams to the event; he hopes to win the affections of an upper-class girl and inspire a patron to sponsor his education. With so many hopes riding on this single performance, the stakes are high for everyone. True Stories commissions and showcases the best feature documentaries from around the world. Dice Rules is a 1991 comedy documentary directed by Jay Dubin. Colombianos is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Tora Martens. Foam is a short documentary film directed by Reem Ali. In Front of the Wall is a 1988 documentary, short film directed by Daisy Lamothe. Places Other People Have Lived is a 2011 documentary,animation, short, drama film directed by Laura Emel Yilmaz. It Felt Like a Kiss is an immersive theatre production, first performed between 2 and 19 July 2009 as part of the second Manchester International Festival, co-produced with the BBC. Themed on "how power really works in the world", it is a collaboration between film-maker Adam Curtis and theatre company Punchdrunk, with original music composed by Damon Albarn and performed by the Kronos Quartet. The visitor is immersed in sets based on archive footage from Baghdad, 1963; New York, 1964; Moscow, 1959; in the Amygdala, 1959–1969; and Kinshasa, 1960. The title is taken from The Crystals' 1962 song "He Hit Me", written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King. Walt & El Grupo is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Theodore Thomas. A presentation of the Walt Disney Family Foundation Films, the film tells the story of Walt Disney's 1941 U.S. Government sponsored trip to South America where he and a group of artists gathered material which would be used to create two of Disney's animated feature films: Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros. JFK: The Day That Changed America is a documentary film. Songs from the North is a 2014 documentary film directed by Soon-Mi Yoo. Priory, The Only Home I've Got is a 1979 documentary short film. The One Week Job project was launched in February 2007 when 25-year old college graduate Sean Aiken worked 52 jobs in 52 weeks to find his passion. The idea to try out a new job each week came to Aiken when he realized he was unsure of what career to pursue after completing a business degree. Sean Aiken was originally funded by his parents, but soon the project quickly garnered a public following as word of his quest spread through the media. In lieu of wages, Aiken asked his “employers” to donate to Make Poverty History, and raised $20,401.60 for the campaign. To support his travels and basic living expenses during the project, Aiken was sponsored by NiceJob.ca, a Canadian job search engine. Sean Aiken has privilege that allows him to work for fun. Many of the people that he lectures to through TED Talk and other venues have the same privilege. Unlike the majority of the workers who need to pay for rent, electricity and food, Sean Aiken doesn't need to work for a living. In this aspect, he shares an audience with the authors of The Secret. The Root of All Evil?, later retitled The God Delusion, is a television documentary written and presented by Richard Dawkins in which he argues that humanity would be better off without religion or belief in God. The documentary was first broadcast in January 2006, in the form of two 45-minute episodes, on Channel 4 in the UK. Dawkins has said that the title The Root of All Evil? was not his preferred choice, but that Channel 4 had insisted on it to create controversy. The sole concession from the producers on the title was the addition of the question mark. Dawkins has stated that the notion of anything being the root of all evil is ridiculous. Dawkins' book The God Delusion, released in September 2006, goes on to examine the topics raised in the documentary in greater detail. The documentary was rebroadcast on the More4 channel on 25 August 2010 under the title of The God Delusion. London: The Greatest City is a 2004 documentary directed by Mary Crisp. On Hallowed Ground: Streetball Champions of Rucker Park is a 2000 documentary sport TV movie. Living Architecture - The Work of Tadao Ando is a 2003 documentary TV movie. Waking Up Dead is a 2005 documentary film directed by Fabio Jafet. Beer is Cheaper than Therapy is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Simone de Vries Mobile Homestead is a 2011 documentary film directed by Mike Kelley. Roman Polanski: Odd Man Out is a 2013 documentary film written by P.G. Morgan, Marina Zenovich and Chris A. Peterson and directed by Marina Zenovich. Guy Maddin: Waiting For Twilight is a documentary film written by Noam Gonick, Geoff Pevere and Caelum Vatnsdal and directed by Noam Gonick. Iraq War veteran Herold Noel suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and lives out of his car in Brooklyn. Using Noel's story as a fulcrum, this doc examines the wider issue of homeless U.S. military veterans-from Vietnam to Iraq-who have to fight tooth-and-nail to receive the benefits promised to them by their government. Anderman is a 2006 documentary short written and directed by Jaap van Heusden. Don't Tell My Booker!!! is a 2007 documentary film directed by Dave Cote. Raising Hell is a concert video by the heavy metal band Iron Maiden, filmed on 28 August 1993 at the Pinewood Studios in London, England and broadcast live on pay-per-view television in the United Kingdom and on MTV in North America. The video was originally distributed on VHS and Laserdisc by BMG Special Products in the US and EMI in the rest of the world. It was subsequently released on DVD several years later in the US. The concert was the last to feature vocalist Bruce Dickinson. The band played on stage in conjunction with horror magician Simon Drake, who ended up "killing" Dickinson in an Iron Maiden torture device, "amputated" Dave Murray's hands on a table saw and "killed" members of the crew and audience. The Broadcast Tapes of Dr. Peter is a 1993 Canadian documentary film produced by Arthur Ginsberg. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film is based upon the video diary of Peter Jepson-Young, better known as "Dr. Peter", which documented his life as a person with AIDS. When researchers began looking into just how much the Soviet government knew about UFOs and extraterrestrial visitation, they were not surprised to learn that the Russians took the subject very seriously. What they didn't expect was evidence of ancient alien visitation, paranormal properties associated with related artifacts, and most shocking of all, of a mass abduction in 1985! Among the piles of materials obtained from former Soviet spies, some extremely puzzling and disturbing documents and film footage surfaced confirming rumors, which had been circulating for decades. In the late 1950s and 60s, the Russians became very interested in a number of unusual and newly discovered archaeological sites in Egypt. By interpreting ancient symbols, one of those sites was believed to contain the remains of a life form not from earth. Startling top-secret film footage, never before seen outside the Kremlin confirms the Soviet mission to recover and analyze these remains. Last Letters Home: Voices of American Troops from the Battlefields of Iraq is a 2004 hour-long HBO documentary by Bill Couturié about U.S. soldiers killed in the Iraq War. The soldiers featured are: Capt. Josh Byers Sgt. Frank Carvill 2nd Lt. Leonard M. Cowherd PFC. Jesse Givens PFC. Raheen Heighter Capt. Pierre Piché PFC. Francisco Martinez-Flores Specialist Robert Wise Specialist Michelle Witmer PFC. Holly McGeogh Slaying the Badger is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by John Dower. Let Us Be Golden is a 2011 documentary film directed by Colin OToole. Moseka is a 1971 documentary film. Torre David: The World's Tallest Squat is a 2013 documentary short film written by Alfredo Brillembourg and directed by Daniel Schwartz. Scratch is a 2001 documentary film, directed and edited by Doug Pray. The film explores the world of the hip-hop DJ from the birth of hip-hop when pioneering DJs began extending breaks on records, to the invention of scratching and beat juggling, to the more recent explosion of turntablism. Throughout the documentary, many artists explain how they were introduced to hip-hop while providing stories of their personal experiences. This film by David Bickerstaff and Phil Grabsky uses Mario Petrucci's award-winning poem Heavy Water, to tell the story of the Chernobyl nuclear explosion and its catastrophic aftermath. On April 26th, 1986, reactor four at Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant explodes, sending an enormous radioactive cloud over northern Ukraine and neighboring Belarus. The danger is not immediately communicated and the local population and they go about their business as usual. May Day celebrations begin, children play, and the residents of Pripyat, the town built to house the workers at Chernobyl, marvel at the spectacular fire raging at the reactor. After three days, an area the size of England becomes contaminated with radioactive dust, creating a 'zone' of contaminated land. This is the story of the people who dealt with the world's worst nuclear disaster at ground level: the fire fighters, the soldiers, the 'liquidators' and their families. A Great Day in Harlem is a 1994 American documentary film directed by Jean Bach about the photograph of the same name. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Director Jean Bach acquired an original, home movie showing the 1958 photo shoot from musician Milt Hinton on the day the photograph was taken in 1958. She used Hinton's home video as the basis for her hour-long documentary. In a piece published in The New Yorker, jazz critic Whitney Balliet praised Bach's film as "a brilliant, funny, moving, altogether miraculous documentary." Confessions Of A Self-hating Jew is a 2012 comedy history documentary film written and directed by Phillip B. Roth. Two brave Indian families whose religions originated in the Middle East have risen above fear and strife and celebrated life with all its joy. Fayaz Ahmed, who left Kashmir in search of a better life in Delhi, has bravely returned to his homeland to celebrate the marriage of his daughter with full traditions without fear.. For Ezra Moses and his ancestors, Bombay was only meant to be an interim halt after their flight from Jerusalem in the aftermath of the destruction of the Second Temple. But over millennia, India has become their motherland who has given the Bene Israel a peace that history has rarely bestowed on the Jewish Diaspora anywhere in the world; a peace that cannot be shattered by any terrorist. This is a story of how Ezra Moses and Fayaz Ahmad, both Indians and yet both descendents of the Biblical Abraham, one a Jew and the other a Muslim, shrugged off their fear and raised their heads in bravery to brush aside the machinations of the Pakistan based terrorist mafia so as to celebrate their own freedom in an expression of joy and happiness by marrying off their children. Ezra’s son Yuval married Celina on January 25th 2009 in Bombay and Fayaz’s daughter Maina married Hussain on 25th June, 2009 in Srinagar. Ali Rap is a 2006 sports and documentary film directed by Joseph Maar. An Inconsistent Truth is a 2012 documentary film written, produced, and featuring, nationally syndicated conservative talk radio host Phil Valentine and directed by Shayne Edwards. Valentine, a skeptic of global warming theory, interviewed scientists about the validity of Al Gore's film An Inconvenient Truth and the facts presented within. What he is told by the scientists he interviews is that there is no consensus on the issue of global warming or climate change. The film argues that global warming proponents keep changing its label, basing their argument on what Valentine says is shaky scientific ground. Reportero is a 2012 documentary film directed by Bernardo Ruiz. The Future of Food is a 2004 American documentary film which describes an investigation into unlabeled, patented, genetically engineered foods that have been sold in grocery stores in the United States for the past decade. In addition to the US, there is a focus on Canada and Mexico. It voices the opinions of farmers in disagreement with the food industry, and details the impacts on their lives and livelihoods from this new technology, and the market and political forces that are changing what people eat. The farmers state that they are held legally responsible for their crops being invaded by "company-owned" genes. The film generally opposes the patenting of living organisms, and describes the disappearance of traditional cultural practices. The film criticizes the cost of a globalised food industry on human lives around the world. It states that international companies are gradually driving farmers off their land in many countries, that monoculture farming might lead to global dependence of the human race on food corporations, and that there is an increased risk of ecological disasters caused by a reduction of biological diversity. Work It Like a Wizard! is a 2009 short documentary film starring Jake T. Austin and Selena Gomez. Sea Fever is a 2009 documentary film directed by Ken O'Sulivan. G'olé! is the official documentary film of the 1982 FIFA World Cup held in Spain. The film is narrated by Sean Connery and the score was written by Rick Wakeman. It tells the story of the 1982 FIFA World Cup which was won by Italy who beat West Germany in the final. It also highlights New Zealand - who played the most games in order to qualify - and Cameroon - a rising African force. Penton: The John Penton Story is a documentary film directed by Todd Huffman. Making War Horse is the story of how Michael Morpurgo's children's novel became one of the most popular and acclaimed productions in the National Theatre's history. From its early development in the National Theatre Studio, see how Handspring Puppet Company created the groundbreaking techniques that brought a lifelike horse to the stage. Behind the scenes and into the rehearsal room, featuring interviews with the cast and creative team, Making War Horse documents this unique theatrical collaboration and the creation of a stage classic. Out of the Present is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Andrei Ujica. Bedtime Stories from the Axis of Evil is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Vibeke Bryld. Party Monster is a 2003 American factually based drama directed by Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, and starring Macaulay Culkin as the drug-addled "king of the Club Kids". The film tells the story of the rise and fall of the infamous New York party promoter Michael Alig. This was Macaulay Culkin's first film in over nine years since his starring role in 1994's Richie Rich. The film is based on Disco Bloodbath, the memoir of James St. James which details his friendship with Alig, that later fell apart as Alig's drug addiction worsened, and ended after he murdered Angel Melendez and went to prison. A 1998 documentary on the murder, also called Party Monster: The Shockumentary, was used for certain elements of the film. Despite negative reviews, Party Monster is now considered a cult film. All In: The Poker Movie is a 2009 documentary film directed by Douglas Tirola. Energy Lithuania is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Deimantas Narkevicius. Power to Win is a 1942 short Australian documentary directed by Charles Chauvel about the Australian coal industry during World War II. Oh Mitternacht, oh Sonnenschein is a 1996 documentary film directed by Imma Harms and Thomas Winkelkotte The Reason Why I Step is a 2011 documentary film directed by Cheol-min Kim. Fathers of Plaza de Mayo - 10 Possible Ways is a 2009 documentary film written by Joaquín Daglio and Maximiliano Cerda and directed by Joaquín Daglio. My Toxic Backyard is a documentary film directed by Katie Damien. Gaza Strip is a 2002 documentary film by James Longley which records events taking place in 2001 during the Second Intifada. The film focuses on 13-year-old Mohammed Hejazi, a second-grade dropout the filmmaker encountered at the Karni crossing in the Gaza Strip, where Palestinian children often gather to throw stones. The director has made this film available for free online streaming on the official site, below. Otter 501 is a 2012 documentary film written by Josh Rosen and directed by Bob Talbot. A superb guide through the rooms and gardens of Chartwell, the home of one of the greatest statesman of the twentieth century, Sir Winston Churchill. Churchill adored Chartwell, a Victorian house with stunning views over the Weald of Kent which he bought in 1922, and which was to remain his cherished home for 40 years. Churchill's youngest daughter, Mary, presents this intimate souvenir. Babe Ruth is a 1998 Documentary written by Steven Stern. ABBA: The Winner Takes It All is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by Steve Cole and Chris Hunt. The Ballad of Crowfoot is a 1969 musical documentary short film directed by Willie Dunn. For many, the bicycle is an expensive toy... a lifestyle choice. For Bharati, the bicycle is much more. It is a means to an education... a means to a better future.. .a tool to achieve what women in her mother's generation could not. Bharati wants to change her world... with a little help from her own two wheels. Sports Illustrated: 50 Years of Great Stories is a nominated work in the 26th Sports Emmy Award for Outstanding Sports Documentary. Rick Steves' Iran is a 2009 TV documentary directed by Simon Griffith. Garbage! The Revolution Starts at Home is a 2007 documentary, comedy and family film directed and written by Andrew Nisker. The film traces how the most wanted man on the planet managed to slip through the US Military net and how his allies are still operating openly across Pakistan. In this incredible film the filmmakers were able to obtain astounding information and footage through filmed interviews with Pakistani government and religious figures and with the use of footage filmed with a hidden camera. The Space Movie is a documentary film produced in 1979 by Tony Palmer at the request of NASA, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing. The 78 minute film was released theatrically in 1980, on VHS in 1983 and on DVD in 2007. Richard Branson and Simon Draper's Virgin Films produced the film. Ed Bishop provided some narration for the film. Trace of the Bears is a 2009 film directed by Hans-Christoph Blumenberg, Alfred Holighaus. Borsch, A Russian Recipe is a 2013 Documentry film written and directed by Marina Quintanilha. Shaahiparin vierailu is a 1970 documentary film written by Hannu Karpo and Leena Vihtonen. Natascha Kampusch - 3096 Tage Gefangenschaft is a 2010 documentary film written by Peter Reichard and directed by Alina Teodorescu. Tegan and Sara: It's Not Fun. Don't Do It! is a 2006 music documentary film directed by Alex Coletti, Brittany Hellec, Angela Kendall and Tegan Quin. In the Land of the Head Hunters is a 1914 silent film fictionalizing the world of the Kwakwaka'wakw peoples of the Queen Charlotte Strait region of the Central Coast of British Columbia, Canada, written and directed by Edward S. Curtis and acted entirely by Kwakwaka'wakw natives. It was selected in 1999 for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, and aesthetically significant." It was the first feature-length film whose cast was composed entirely of Native North Americans; the second, eight years later, was Robert Flaherty's Nanook of the North. The Race To Save Pennsylvania's Bats is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Gina Catanzarite. Middle of the Moment is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Nicolas Humbert and Werner Penzel. Der Westwall is a 1939 film about the Siegfried Line directed by Fritz Hippler, the head of the film division within the Propagandaministerium. The Siegfried Line, called the West Wall by the Germans, was a large series of fortifications around the German borders with France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands. Balkan Melody is a 2012 documentary, biography, history film written and directed by Stefan Schwietert. The current economic crisis is not a failure of capitalism, but a failure of culture. GENERATION ZERO explores the cultural roots of the global financial meltdown - beginning with the narcissism of the 1960's, spreading like a virus through the self-indulgent 1990's, and exploding across the world in the present economic cataclysm.GENERATION ZERO goes beneath the shallow media headlines and talking head sound bites to get to the source of today's economic nightmare. With a cutting edge style and haunting imagery, this must-see documentary will change everything you thought you knew about Wall Street and Washington.Featuring experts, authors, and pundits from across the political spectrum, GENERATION ZERO exposes the little-told story of how the mindset of the baby boomers sowed the seeds of economic disaster that will be reaped by coming generations. Too Colourful for the League is a 52-minutes 2001 Canadian documentary film made for CBC-TV, directed by Daniel Cross and Mila Aung-Thwin and produced by Diversus Productions. The film was produced by Evan Beloff, Ari Cohen and Max Wallace, who were nominated for a Gemini Award for best documentary. It was written by Max Wallace and co-produced by Daniel Cross. This documentary examines the struggle of blacks in hockey in Canada from the 1930s to the present day telling the story of black players' courage and determination to play in a white-dominated sport. It focuses on an effort by former Montreal citizenship judge Richard Lord to nominate legendary black hockey player Herb Carnegie into the Hockey Hall of Fame. During the 1940s, Carnegie was widely acknowledged as one of the best hockey players in the world, playing alongside Jean Beliveau for the Quebec Aces. Yet he never was allowed to play in the NHL because of a long-time color barrier, which was only broken a decade later by Willie O'Ree of the Boston Bruins. In the film, veteran Hockey Hall of Fame referee Red Storey recalls watching Carnegie try out for Toronto Maple Leafs owner Conn Smythe. The New Gladiators is a documentary movie by Elvis Presley and Ed Parker centered on the fights of the United States Karate team in London, England and Brussels, Belgium. Narrated by Chuck Sullivan, it was filmed between 1973 and 1974 but finally remastered and later released in 2002. The movie was financed by American singer and actor Elvis Presley, who began to practice karate during his duty years in the United States Army. We Cause Scenes is a 2013 documentary film directed by Matt Adams. Flying Padre is a 1951 short subject black-and-white documentary film. It is the second picture directed by Stanley Kubrick, after Day of the Fight. The film is nine minutes long. The Dinosaur Hunters is a 2002 biographical drama film written by Steven Clarke, Andrew Piddington and J.C. Wilsher and direected by Andrew Piddington. 16 Days in Afghanistan is a 2007 documentary about the journey of Afghan-American Anwar Hajher traveling to his homeland Afghanistan after 25 years to rediscover his country. The film is produced by Mithaq Kazimi and is the first documentary since the fall of Taliban to be shot in those provinces which remain under the heavy influence of the Taliban. It is also the first professionally produced documentary about Afghanistan by a team of Afghan filmmakers and has become a reference film used by many, including Penguin Books's study guides about Afghan-related books. It is perhaps one of the earliest and most prominent documentaries to date that has been made in and about Afghanistan and shows in many top lists, including IMDb's Most Popular Titles by country and on Amazon's bestselling movies and TV on Afghanistan right after the Oscar nominee, Restrepo. It was selected as part of the first Afghan art exhibit show in the British Museum opened by president Hamid Karzai. You Got to Move is a documentary by Lucie Massie Phenix and Veronica Selver that follows people from communities in the Southern United States in their various processes of becoming involved in social change. The film’s centerpiece is the Highlander Folk School, a 75-year-old center for education and social action that was somehow involved in each of the lives chronicled in the documentary. You Got to Move features folk, country and gospel music from the Southern United States and in fact takes its name from an old spiritual. Featured People in You Got to Move: Bernice Robinson A black beautician who became the first teacher of a literacy program on Johns Island, off the coast of South Carolina, talks about teaching adults to read and write in order to pass voter registration requirements during the mid-1950s and 1960s throughout the Southern states. “I will never forget Anna Vastine. She couldn’t read or write and it was the greatest reward when I had all the names up on the board one night, in jungle fashion, you know and I’d asked them could they pick their names out. Mrs. Jamie Marks Is Dead is a 2014 American drama film directed by Carter Smith and based on Christopher Barzak's 2007 novel One for Sorrow. The film stars Cameron Monaghan, Liv Tyler, Judy Greer, Morgan Saylor, Noah Silver, and Madisen Beaty. The film premiered in-competition in the US Dramatic Category at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2014. My Vote is a 2011 documentary film directed by Monica Lazurean-Gorgan and Andrei Gorgan. Music from the Big House is a 2010 documentary musical written by Tony Burgess and Erin Faith Young and directed by Bruce McDonald. Keep the River on Your Right: A Modern Cannibal Tale is a 2000 film directed by Laurie Gwen Shapiro and David S. Shapiro. At Home with the Jedi is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Richard Simpson. The Collector of Bedford Street is a 2002 documentary film about director Alice Elliott's neighbor, Larry Selman, a community activist and fundraiser who had an intellectual disability. Dissent Is Not A Crime is a 2014 short documentary film directed by YCM (Youth CineMedia). Bestiaire is a 2012 Canadian-French avant-garde nature documentary film directed by Denis Côté. The film centers on how humans and animals observe each other. It has received mostly positive critical reception. It was filmed at Parc Safari in Hemmingford, Quebec, and had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. It was also shown at the Berlin Film Festival. 50 Years! Of Love? is a South African 2008 documentary film. La verifica incerta is a 1965 short, documentary film directed by Gianfranco Baruchello and Alberto Grifi. The Italians is a 1996 documentary film written by Jeanne Rawlings. Berliner Stadtbahnbilder is a 1982 film directed by Alfred Behrens. Mookie is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Neske Beks. Great White Shark is a short documentary film directed by Luke Cresswell and Steve McNicholas. The Kid Who Couldn't Miss is a 1982 docudrama directed by Paul Cowan. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, it combines fact and fiction to question fighter pilot Billy Bishop's accomplishments during World War I, featuring excerpts from John MacLachlan Gray's play Billy Bishop Goes to War. The film specifically questions accounts of Bishop's solo mission to attack a German aerodrome on June 2, 1917, for which he was awarded a Victoria Cross, and suggests the event was imaginary and that Bishop exaggerated his own accomplishments. In one particularly contentious scene, his mechanic claims that the damage to his fighter was confined to a small circle in a non-critical area, implying that Bishop had landed his aircraft off-field, shot the holes in it, and then flown home with claims of combat damage. In reality, his mechanic was his biggest supporter in this issue and the scene was entirely fictitious. The mechanic insisted that Bishop had not fabricated the damage. Marcello: A Sweet Life is a 2006 Italian documentary film about actor Marcello Mastroianni. Flag Mountain is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by John Smith. El impenetrable is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Danièle Incalcaterra and Fausta Quattrini. Thirteen Years and Ten Months is a 2007 documentary, family short film directed by Jenifer Malmqvist. Franco Cristaldi e il suo cinema Paradiso is a 2009 documentary film directed by Massimo Spano and written by Francesco Asioli and Anna Maria Carli. "Mr. Mojo Risin': The Story of L.A. Woman'" is the story of the making of the Doors' last album with Jim Morrison "L.A. Woman". 2011 is the 40th anniversary of the album's release and this program goes into detail of how the album came about, its recording and what was happening to the band at the time. The story is told through new interviews with the three surviving Doors: Ray Manzarek, Robbie Krieger and John Densmore plus contributions from Jac Holzman, founder of their label Elektra Records, Bill Siddons, who was their manager, Bruce Botnick, engineer and co-producer of the album and others associated with the Doors at this time. The show includes archive footage of the Doors performing both live and in the studio, classic photographs and new musical demonstrations from the Doors. Janine is a 2010 documentary film directed by Paul Cohen. MIS -Human Secret Weapon is a 2012 historical documentary war film written and directed by Junichi Suzuki. Cheat You Fair: The Story of Maxwell Street is a 90 minute documentary film, narrated by actor Joe Mantegna, which details the rise and fall of Chicago's Maxwell Street. Created by veteran documentary filmmaker, Phil Ranstrom, this film is presented in 3 acts—part history, part blues and part expose' about the fight to save the market from being destroyed by the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC). During the summer of 1994, over a period of several months, filmmaker, Phil Ranstrom, began filming the final days of the Maxwell Street market, along with Assistant Producer, Bill Griffith and Principal Videographer, Tony Medici. Focusing on the struggle by concerned citizens to save the market, Ranstrom followed the fight to prevent the city's sale of the land to UIC, and, later, the unsuccessful attempt by the Maxwell Street Coalition (MSC) to preserve the area as an historic district. Ranstrom was helped extensively by MSC member, Prof. Steve Balkin, as well as Big Shoulders Digital... Find more at the website: www.MaxwellStreetDocumentary.com Spoils: Extraordinary Harvest is a 2012 short, adventure and documentary film directed by Alex Mallis. Milk War is a 2011 JBF Awards Special/Documentary (Television or Video Webcast) winning TV program aired on May 7, 2011 in Canada. Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus is a 2003 documentary film starring Jim White. The film is about the American South. Commissioned by the BBC, it documents the intersection of country music and Christianity in the United States. It was inspired by White's similarly titled album The Mysterious Tale of How I Shouted Wrong-Eyed Jesus. The film was directed and photographed by Andrew Douglas, written by Steve Haisman, and edited by Michael Elliot. It was executive-produced by Steve Golin and Anthony Wall. It features the music of Jim White, Johnny Dowd, The Handsome Family, David Eugene Edwards of 16 Horsepower, Rev. Gary Howlington, The Singing Hall Sisters, David Johansen, Melissa Swingle and Lee Sexton. It also features the author Harry Crews. Shunka is a 2011 independent documentary film directed by C.J. Gardella. Francesco und der Papst is a 2011 film directed by Ciro Cappellari. Snow Capers is a short documentary film that is directed by Arthur Cohen. The film was nominated for an Oscar for Short Subjects, Two-Reel in the 21st Annual Academy Awards. The film is about winter sports in the Rocky Mountains. Mommy Mommy is a 2007 documentary film directed by Sylvie Rosenthal about a Montreal lesbian couple's five-year-long struggle to have a child. The Dream of Perfection is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by John Weiley. He Was a Giant with Brown Eyes is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Eileen Hofer. Super High Me is a 2007 documentary film about the effects of smoking cannabis for 30 days. The documentary stars comedian Doug Benson. The documentary's name and its poster are plays on the 2004 documentary Super Size Me. Angels of War is a 1981 film directed by Andrew Pike, Hank Nelson and Gavan Daws. Yusniel is a 2013 documentry short film directed by Juan Pablo Daranas Molina. This Day is a 2003 documentary film by Akram Zataari. Congo River, beyond darkness is a 2005 film by Thierry Michel examining the Congo River in Africa. Listen to a City is a 1966 documentary film directed by Eric Fullilove. King Cool: Ah! History of Donnie Iris and the Cruisers is a 2004 documentary of American rock singer Donnie Iris and his backing band, the Cruisers. The documentary was released on DVD to coincide with the 25th anniversary of Iris' solo career. Lección de cine is a short film directed by Rodolfo Montero. In the Footsteps of Ambedkar is a 1989 documentary film directed by Robert Mullan. Persecution Blues: The Battle For The Tote is a 2011 documentary directed by Natalie van den Dungen. Knuckle is a 2012 film about the secretive world of Irish Traveller bare-knuckle boxing. The film was made in stages over 12 years. O salão azul is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Luciana Hees. Schuss! is a 2005 documentary film directed by Nicolas Rey. Blueprint for Accountability: Working the Dark Side is a 2009 documentary film directed by Steve Lawrence. Durazno is an documentary film directed by Yashira Jordan. The film utilized crowd-funding and ecological production, and is one of the first of its type to be made in Bolivia and Argentina. The documentary was filmed during 2012 in the Argentinian cities of Santa Fe and La Plata, as well as in Cochabamba, Bolivia. Colours of the Islands is a 2012 music documentary film written and directed by Madli Lääne. "Blood and Fire paints a portrait of the Salvation Army from the point of view of some of its more prominent senior members. Featuring open air sermons, band rehearsals and candid moments between a pastor and his flock, this doc is a great example of the kind of social filmmaking that earned the NFB and Candid Eye its international cult status." Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Hot Docs site. Song of Road is a documentary, music film directed by Neulsaem Choi. The Real Sound of the Nation's Rebirth 1989-1993 is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Domantas Vildžiūnas. Out of the Clear Blue Sky is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Danielle Gardner. I Need That Record! is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Brendan Toller. The Aristocrats is a 2005 documentary film about the famous dirty joke of the same name. It was conceived and produced by comedians Penn Jillette and Paul Provenza, edited by Emery Emery, and released to theaters by TH!NKFilm. The film is dedicated to Johnny Carson, as "The Aristocrats" was said to be his favorite joke. The Money Masters is a 1996 documentary film written by William T. Still and Patrick S.J. Carmack and directed by William T. Still. The Best Medicine is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Martin Morrison and Gary Thomas. Las Viudas de Ifni is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Pedro Palacios and Pacheco Iborra. Coffea Arábiga is a 1968 short documentary film written and directed by Nicolás Guillén Landrián. Rock in the Red Zone is an upcoming documentary film about the many rock and roll bands that have come out of Sderot, a town in southern Israel that has been under almost daily attack for many years by Qassam rockets fired from Gaza by Hamas and Islamic Jihad. Young musicians use one of the town's bomb shelters as a rock and roll club. The director/producer is Laura Bialis. Yadorigi: A Village in Portraits is a 2011 short documentary film produced and directed by Eiji Iwakawa. Polish Illusions is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jacob Dammas and Helge Renner. The Rise and Fall of the Great Lakes is a 1968 Canadian short film featuring a humorous geography lesson in which a canoeist travels abruptly through time as he crosses the Great Lakes, experiencing cataclysmic changes in different eras. The film is narrated in ballad form. Some animation is employed in the film to show the coming and going of the Ice Age when the lakes were born, but most of the other episodes of lake history are suggested by camera tricks that affect the canoeman and so emphasize the change. There is, for instance, a scene where open water suddenly turns to ice, freezing the canoe in mid-paddle. Then, the canoe is left in mid air high above the water, illustrating the melting of the ice, and causing the intrepid canoeist to crash to the water below. At another juncture, he is almost run over by a huge freighter, illustrating the befouling of the waters by shipping. Such slapstick effects are employed to mark all the major changes in this history of the Great Lakes. Sudden changes of level leave the canoe stranded, or submerge the traveller’s tent. Abde's War is a 2013 film directed by Nagieb Khaja. Un dragon dans les eaux pures du Caucase is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Nino Kirtadze. Journey to the End of Coal is a French web documentary directed by Samuel Bollendorff and Abel Segretin. Based on the choose your own adventure principle, the interactive documentary tells the story of millions of Chinese coal miners who are risking their lives to satisfy their country’s appetite for economic growth. Eisenstein in Alma-Ata is a 1998 documentary film from Kazakhstan, directed by Igor Gonopolsky. Steve Jobs' Message to the Next Generation is a 2012 documentary film. Journey for Survival is a 1981 American short documentary film directed by Dick Young. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Blindsight is a 2006 documentary film directed by Lucy Walker and produced by Sybil Robson Orr for Robson Entertainment. It premiered at 2006 Toronto International Film Festival in the category Real to Reel. Set against the breathtaking backdrop of the Himalayas, Blindsight follows six Tibetan teenagers on their journey to climb the 23,000 foot Lhakpa Ri mountain in the shadow of Mount Everest. A dangerous journey soon becomes a seemingly impossible challenge made all the more remarkable by the fact that the teenagers are blind. The children are at times feared by their parents, scorned by villagers and deemed sinners by devout followers of Buddhism, and believed to be cursed. Helped by Sabriye Tenberken — a blind German social worker who established the first school for the blind in Lhasa — the students invite the famous blind mountain climber Erik Weihenmayer to visit their school after learning about his climb to the summit of Everest. Erik arrives in Lhasa and helps the students and their educators climb higher than they have ever been before. Feeling unhappy at work and experiencing a midlife crisis, the film's subject quits his job and tries to become nationally recognizable in a month's time. John Gerard, abandons his job, cashes in everything he has, hops into his car (decorated with enormous lettering that advertises his goal-and the film's title) and goes on a 31-day, cross-country trip, hoping to create so much publicity along the way that he'll end up a guest of Jay Leno and become an instant celebrity. Does Gerard achieve his dream? Well, it's so fascinating to watch him try in this professionally made and occasionally poignant film that the end result hardly matters. BART: Building Art, Redefining Tolerance is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Jordan Green, Scott Jarvis, Catherine Ragazzi and Irene Tu. The Queens of Comedy is both a sequel and spin-off film of The Original Kings of Comedy both created and produced by Walter Latham. The film, which is rated "R" for sexually-oriented content, follows four black female stand-up comedians at Memphis's Orpheum Theatre. Laura Hayes opens the show and serves as MC. She tells family stories about grandkids, her mom, and her sisters. Adele Givens urges her audience to celebrate their flaws; she comments on this crazy world, her 92-year-old grandmother, and the need to take care when naming a baby. Sommore, recently released from jail, talks about kids, men, marriage, and why moms give their eight-year-old daughters a hula-hoop. Lastly, Mo'Nique celebrates big women, contrasts Blacks and Whites, Mo'Nique tried to give big women hope that it is ok to a big women and it is ok to dislike skinny women. The film also cuts away to footage of the Queens on the town having fun. For one night only, eight years later, The ladies returned to Mo'Nique for a comeback The Mo'Nique Show which aired on October 29, 2009. The Beach Boys: Nashville Sounds is documentary film that features studio footage of the making of American rock band the Beach Boys' twenty-eighth studio album Stars and Stripes Vol. 1. The film features interviews with participants of the project. "The outbreak of the AIDS epidemic was an unprecedented event for LGBT communities: our lovers and friends got sick and died, and our sexual identity was vilified like never before. When the gay community was at its most vulnerable, educators, activists and artists stepped up to protect their community and loved ones. At a time when sex was fraught with fear and confusion, methods to make it “safer” were urgently needed. Sex in an Epidemic is the story of the safer sex movement in the United States, with a clear and vivid history of the epidemic and the community’s response to halt the spread of the misunderstood disease. Through interviews with many of the leaders who championed safer sex, it’s evident that saving lives depended on two vital questions: How could they get gay men to change their behavior, even if it curtailed the sexual freedom they’d fought so hard for? And how could they retain their sexual identities in the face of a frightening and deadly epidemic? To tackle the over-whelming cultural stigmas around sexuality in the social and political establishment turned out to be the biggest barrier in defeating the disease. Sex in an Epidemic is a profound look at the mobilization that started the ongoing effort to save lives. Preceding the feature is Last Address, a simple, touching reflection on the many wonderful artists we’ve lost to the disease." Quoting PHILIPPE GOSSELIN from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Your Day Is My Night is a 2013 historical documentary film directed by Lynne Sachs. Something from Nothing: The Art of Rap is a 2012 American documentary directed and executive produced by Ice-T and co-directed by Andy Baybutt. It focuses on the craft of writing and performing rap verses, and all the interviewees are musicians of the genre and friends of Ice-T. Producer Paul Toogood states on the DVD release that the genesis of the project stemmed from a conversation he had with Ice-T in which he asked him how he wrote "seminal tracks" such as "6 in the Mornin'" and "Colors". Ice-T replied that in his thirty year hip-hop career, no one had ever asked him that. Grandmaster Caz features more than any other interviewee, and the movie returns to his home on multiple occasions throughout showing his creative process as he writes "The Art Of Rap" rap, which he then delivers. It was shot on location, but mainly in New York, Los Angeles and Detroit. The film was an official selection for the Sundance Film Festival where it was screened as a premiere on January 2, 2012. The film was released in the theaters on June 15, 2012 and in the UK it was released on July 20, 2012. Roseboy is a 2011 short documentary film produced by Billie JD Porter, Jamie Lee Curtis Taete, Andy Capper. Portrait of Imogen is a 1988 American short documentary film about American photographer Imogen Cunningham, directed by Meg Partridge. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. 1848 is a 1949 French short documentary film directed by Marguerite de la Mure and Victoria Mercanton. Back to Bosnia is a documentary that shows the uphill battle that refugees face when trying to return to Bosnia, or even just to reclaim their properties. It shows not only the problems that Bosniaks face, but also the problems of Bosnian Serb refugees that moved to other parts of Bosnia. In addition it takes viewers to the sites of some of the worst atrocities in the second half of the 20th century and the investigations of these crimes. The film marked the debut of writer and director Sabina Vajrača. Ladies and Gentlemen: Phatima Rude is a 2014 short film written by Greg Sirota and directed by Paul R. King. Glamourpuss: The Lady Gaga Story is a 2010 documentary film. Sister Crazy is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Stephane Kaas. DSKNECTD is a 2013 documentary film directed by Dominic H. White. Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired is a 2008 documentary film directed by Marina Zenovich. It concerns film director Roman Polanski and his sexual abuse case. It examines the events that led to Polanski fleeing the United States after being embroiled in a controversial trial, and his unstable reunion with his adopted country. A follow-up to the film, also directed by Zenovich, titled Roman Polanski: Odd Man Out was released on 26 March 2013, detailing Polanski's successful legal battle to avoid extradition to the US, a battle that took place after Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired came out. The Great American Songbook is a 2003 music/drama/documentary film written by Joe Gilford and Mary Cleere Haran and directed by Andrew J. Kuehn. Poison City is a 2011 documentary and short film written and directed by Sergio Martínez García. Coffee, Cake & Crematorium is a 2011 documentary film directed by Sergej Kreso. The True Story Of Black Hawk Down is a 2003 documentary drama movie made for television. War Don Don is a 2010 documentary film directed by Rebecca Richman Cohen. "In the heart of Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, United Nations soldiers guard a heavily fortified building known as the "special court." Inside, Issa Sesay awaits his trial. Prosecutors say Sesay is a war criminal, guilty of heinous crimes against humanity. His defenders say he is a reluctant fighter who protected civilians and played a crucial role in bringing peace to Sierra Leone. With unprecedented access to prosecutors, defense attorneys, victims and, from behind bars, Sesay himself, War Don Don puts international justice on trial for the world to see––finding that in some cases the past is not just painful, it is also opaque." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. The Voice of Ljudmila is a 2001 documentary film directed by Gunnar Bergdahl. Jay-Z in Concert is a 2003 documentary film directed by Hamish Hamilton. The Man Who Crossed the Sahara is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Korbett Matthews. The Last of the Blue Devils, subtitled The Kansas City Jazz Story, is a 1979 film documentary with notable figures from the history of Kansas City jazz starring Count Basie and Big Joe Turner. The film was produced and directed by Bruce Ricker. The film was made at a two musical gatherings of old Kansas City hands in 1974 at the Mutual Musicians Foundation, the Kansas City African-American Musician's Union, and consists largely of impromptu musical performances by Turner, Basie, Jay McShann, Jimmy Forrest, and Ernie Williams in various combinations, as well as film from a concert by the full Count Basie Orchestra at the University of Kansas in Lawrence. The Blue Devils of the title were the Oklahoma City Blue Devils a travelling band of the 1930s founded by bassist Walter Page that included Basie, Lester Young, Buster Smith and Oran "Hot Lips" Page. Many of the same musicians ended up in the Bennie Moten Orchestra which ultimately became the Count Basie band. Kids for Cash is a 2013 documentary film about the "kids for cash" scandal which unfolded in 2008 over judicial kickbacks in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Interviewees include Mark Ciavarella, Michael Conahan, Justin Bodner, Hillary Transue, Amanda Lorah, Sandy Fonzo, Charlie Balasavage, and Terrie Morgan-Besecker. The Rocker: Thin Lizzy's Phil Lynott is a 1996 documentary directed by Shay Healy. Hillbilly: The Real Story is a 2008 documentary film written by Melissa Martin, Julie Pryor and Jenette Restivo. Celibidache is a 1992 documentary music film directed by Jan Schmidt-Garre. The Frog Princes is a 2011 documentary film directed by Omar Majeed and Ryan Mullins. This film follows the story of a Montreal based theater troupe training for a play adaptation of the fairytale The Princess and the Frog. All twenty actors in the troupe have intellectual and developmental disabilities. The film is shot as a play within a play. The film centers on the lead actor in the play, Ray-Man, a young adult with Down syndrome. The film follows the personal struggles of the cast as they prepare for the play, working with the director, Dr. Stephen Snow. Snow is a trained theatre director at The Centre for the Arts in Human Development at Concordia University. The documentary is distributed by EyeSteelFilm Productions. The film was shown on Canadian Broadcasting Corporation on 6 August 2011 during prime time. It was also shown at the Hot Docs, the Toronto International Documentary film Festival. This film was also screened at the Abilities Arts Festival in Toronto. This film is rated PG or parental guidance suggested. The Unbearable Whiteness of Being is a 2007 documentary short film directed by Faisal Aziz. Endless Corridor is a 2013 war documentary film written by Darius Sajjadini, Servanto DeHadi and directed by Mindaugas Urbonavičius and Andrius Brokas. The Congress is a 1988 documentary film directed by Emmy Award-winning director Ken Burns. The Florentine Films production, which focuses on the United States Congress, aired on PBS in 1989. Narrated by David McCullough, the documentary features use of photographs, paintings, and film from sessions of Congress, in its implementation of the Ken Burns Effect. Scenes from the Academy Award-winning James Stewart film Mr. Smith Goes to Washington are also used. The work features numerous interviews from writers and historians including Charles McDowell, David McCullough, Cokie Roberts, George Tames, David Broder, James MacGregor Burns, Barbara Fields, and Alistair Cooke. Many congressmen are specifically referenced, including Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun, Jefferson Davis, Thomas Brackett Reed, Joseph Gurney Cannon, George William Norris, Jeannette Rankin, and Everett Dirksen. The film also includes focus on the Congress' work during pivotal periods in United States history, including the Civil War, African-American Civil Rights Movement, and Women's suffrage. The documentary was released by PBS, on DVD in 2004. Come Walk in my Shoes is a documentary film directed by Robin Smith. I Am a Woman Now is a 2011 documentary film directed by Michiel van Erp. OLO, The Boy From Tibet is a 2012 documentary film directed by Hisaya Iwasa. The Power of the Game is a 2007 documentary directed by Michael Apted. The film shows several stories across the world highlighting the social impact of soccer. The film premiered at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival. Self Referential Traverse: Zeitgeist and Engagement is 2011 film directed by Kim Sun. My Amityville Horror is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Eric Walter. Beyond Recognition: The Incredible Story Of A Face Transplant is a 2013 short, biography, documentary film directed by Sam Thonis. Since 1950, tornadoes have struck every state in the union, killing thousands. On one day in 1978, 147 deadly twisters swept through Ohio, Kentucky, and Alabama, killing 307 people in the US and 8 in Canada. This is the story of these deadly "killer" tornadoes, and the heavy toll in loss of life and property damage these storms have actually caused. This program also includes interviews and impressions of survivors as well as emergency drills and civil defense techniques now being used to prepare for such natural disasters. Arctic Passage is the U. S. title of a two-hour TV documentary on the Arctic explorers Sir John Franklin and Roald Amundsen, co-produced by ITN Factual in Britain and NOVA/WGBH in the U.S. ITN Factual handled the production and filming; the film was directed by Louise Osmond, and Harald Gunnar Paalgard was the director of photography. The documentary aired in the UK in March 2005 under the title Search for the Northwest Passage, and in February 2006 in the U. S. under a two-part title, Arctic Passage: Prisoners of the Ice/Ice Survivor. Mafrouza – Oh la nuit! is a 2007 documentary film directed by Emmanuelle Demoris. Rock Hudson - Dark And Handsome Stranger is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Andrew Davies and André Schäfer. Drowning in Dreams is a 1997 documentary film directed by Tim Southam. Dear Mom, Love Cher is a 2013 American television documentary about Georgia Holt, the mother of singer and actress Cher. The film recounts Cher's family history and features in-depth interviews with her, Holt, Holt's other daughter Georganne LaPiere, and Holt's grandchildren, from Cher, Chaz Bono and Elijah Blue Allman. It premiered on Lifetime on May 6, 2013. The worldwide VOD/DVD release was on September 24, 2013, the same release date as Cher's 26th studio album, Closer to the Truth. Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage is a 2010 documentary film directed by Scot McFadyen and Sam Dunn. The film offers an in-depth look at the Canadian progressive rock band Rush, chronicling the band's musical evolution from their progressive rock sound of the 1970s to their current heavy rock style. The film made its debut at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival, where it earned the 2010 Audience Award. The film was also nominated for Best Long Form Music Video at 53rd Grammy Awards, losing to When You're Strange, a documentary about The Doors. A limited theatrical run began on June 10, 2010 and the film was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the US and Canada on June 29 of that year. John Rutsey, the band's original drummer, died in 2008; tape-recorded comments from him are incorporated into the film. "On the night of February 27, 1973, a caravan of cars carrying 200 armed Oglala Lakota—led by American Indian Movement (AIM) activists—entered Wounded Knee on the Pine Ridge Reservation and quickly occupied buildings, cut off access, and took up defensive positions. When federal agents arrived, they declared, “The Indians are in charge of the town,” and a 71-day standoff ensued. Compiling an astonishing amount of archival film footage (notable for the key moments it captures) and firsthand accounts from participants, Stanley Nelson creates an immersive, comprehensive account of the occupation and its fascinating complexity. The Oglala Lakota sought redress of old grievances and broken treaties (just miles from the massacre of 1890) but also demanded the ouster of Pine Ridge tribal leader Dick Wilson, who governed through corruption and intimidation as he pursued deeply divisive policies of assimilation. Nelson also explores the climate of racism in border towns; the broad political context that shaped the AIM—its tactics, organization and ability to exploit the national media; and ultimately the role armed protest played in Native American self-conception. With its iconic images of Indians holding the government at bay, Wounded Knee not only brought national attention to an invisible community and its desperate conditions but contributed to the tribe's awakened sense of dignity and connection with their proud heritage." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Open the Door to Him Who Comes is a 1989 documentary and short film directed by Audrius Stonys. Spilled Water is a 2014 documentary drama film written and directed by May May Tchao. We're with the Band is a 2005 film written by Brian Blondell, James Grace, Alanis Morissette, Jeff Rosenthal, Johanna Stein and directed by Johanna Stein. And Still We Dance is 1985 a documentary short film directed by Ashley James. China In Three Words is a 2013 documentary/short/comedy film written and directed by Vanessa Hope. The Forgotten Children of Congo is a 2007 British documentary film written, produced and directed by Alex Tweddle for Angry Man Pictures Ltd. The documentary ‘The Forgotten Children of Congo’ was filmed over four weeks in the Democratic Republic of Congo. From the remoteness of the Congo Basin, to the capital Kinshasa and the volatile Ituri Province in the East, this documentary focuses on the plight of the country's street children. Alias is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Michelle Latimer. Two At The Border is a 2013 short documentary drama film writen and directed by Tuna Kaptan and Felicitas Sonvilla. Controlling and Punishment is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Ayten Mutlu Saray and Ridha Tlili. Charlie Is My Darling, directed by Peter Whitehead and produced by the Rolling Stones' manager Andrew Loog Oldham, was the first documentary film about the Rolling Stones. The film was shot during the band's second tour of Ireland that year, on 3 and 4 September 1965, and was finished in the spring of 1966. It was given its premiere at the Mannheim Film Festival in October 1966, but was never released officially in its full length, due to the legal fights between the Rolling Stones and Allen Klein and a burglary in Andrew Loog Oldham's office, which saw all prints disappear. Shorter versions have circulated since then, however. In 2012, a restored and extended version was finally released by Allen Klein's ABKCO Records, which owns the rights to all older Stones material. The 64 minutes documentary follows the group from their car trip out of London to Heathrow Airport, and from there to Dublin where they had two concerts at the Adelphi Theatre on 3 September. The next day they take a train up to Belfast for two concerts at the ABC Theatre, before returning to London by plane the following day. Forward 13: Waking Up the American Dream is a 2014 documentary film directed by Patrick Lovell. Blessed Is the Match: The Life and Death of Hannah Senesh is a 2008 documentary film written by Sophie Sartain, Roberta Grossman and directed by Roberta Grossman. 12 O'Clock Boys is a 2013 documentary directed by Lotfy Nathan. The documentary focuses on urban dirt-bike riders in Baltimore, Maryland. The film was premiered at South by Southwest 2013, and had its Baltimore premiere within Maryland Film Festival 2013. The film has been acquired for U.S. distribution by Oscilloscope Laboratories. Team 3D and Complexity are the top two professional counterstrike teams in the United States. They leave their girlfriends and travel the world to compete for thousands of dollars. I See I See is a documentary film directed by Michael Pearce. Huey is a 1968 short documentary film directed by Agnès Varda. Bill Hicks: Sane Man is a 1989 documentary written by Bill Hicks and directed by Kevin Booth and David Johndrow. I Am a Jerusalemite! is a 1971 musical documentary film written by Yoram Kaniuk and Yehoram Gaon and directed by Yehoram Gaon. The James Dean Story is a 1957 American documentary. Released two years after Dean's death, the Warner Bros. Pictures release chronicles his short life and career via black-and-white still photographs, interviews with the aunt and uncle who raised him, his paternal grandparents, a New York City cabdriver friend, and the owner of his favorite Los Angeles restaurant, and outtakes from East of Eden, footage of the opening night of Giant, and Dean's ironic PSA for safe driving. Martin Gabel's narration was written by Stewart Stern, who scripted Dean's Rebel Without a Cause, and a directing credit was shared by Robert Altman and George W. George. The music accompanying the film The James Dean Story was composed and conducted by Leith Stevens. An eponymous album containing this music was released by Capitol Records in 1957. The film is available on DVD. Carmen Rupe is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Lucy Hayes. All American High: Revisited is a 2014 documentary film directed by Keva Rosenfeld. Until the Light Takes Us is a 2008 American documentary film about Norwegian black metal, from directors Aaron Aites and Audrey Ewell. It was released on December 4, 2009. Jennifer Lopez in Concert is a 2001 music and documentary film directed by Hamish Hamilton. El tren blanco is a 2003 film directed by Nahuel García, Sheila Perez Giménez and Ramiro García. Notes on Marie Menken is a 2006 biographical historical documentary film written and directed by Martina Kudlacek. Mika, mi guerra de España is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Javier Olivera and Rodolfo Pochat. Vinylmania - When Life Runs at 33 Revolutions per Minute is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Paolo Campana. Adieu Istanbul is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Dieter Sauter. Letters from Karelia is a 2004 documentary film written by Robert Lower and directed by Kelly Saxberg. Avec les Hommes de l'eau is a Belgian 1938 short documentary film. Damenwahl - Szenen aus dem Abendland is a 1998 documentary film directed by Viola Stephan. WAAhnsinn - Der Wackersdorf-Film is a 1986 documentary film directed by Helge Cramer, Uwe Heitkamp, Michael Herl and Christian Wagner. Murde is a 1976 documentary film directed by Saeed Akhtar Mirza. The Vanishing Lady is an 1896 French short black-and-white silent film directed by French magician Georges Méliès. It is number 70 on the Star Films catalog. Field Trip is a 2011 documentary film directed by Christian Illner and André Nier. Lost In Woonsocket is a documentary feature film directed by John Chester. It stars Chester and Andre Miller, co-creators of the A&E Network documentary series Random 1, from which the film draws much of its content. It concerns Mark and Normand, characters featured in episodes 4 and 10 of Random 1's single season, and their attempts to stay sober after being brought out of destitution by Chester, Miller, and the Random 1 organization. Though Random 1 was not renewed after its season finale, Chester and Miller continued filming Mark and Normand in their hometown of Woonsocket, RI, and this new footage makes up the final third of the film. It premiered at the South by Southwest film festival in 2007. Crazy Love is a 2007 American documentary film directed by Dan Klores and Fisher Stevens. The screenplay by Klores, who also wrote Boys of 2nd Street Park explores the troubled relationship between New York City attorney Burt Pugach and his ten-years-younger girlfriend Linda Riss, who was blinded and permanently scarred when thugs hired by Pugach threw lye in her face. Meanwhile in Memphis: The Sound of A Revolution is a 2013 documentary musical history film written and directed by Nan Hackman and Robert Allen Parker. Tar Creek is a feature-length environmental documentary about the Tar Creek Superfund Site, which at one time was considered the worst environmental disaster in the United States. The land within the perimeters of this environmental disaster was bad enough that the federal government bought out the homes of citizens living there and moved them away. This documentary chronicles the long term effects of mining, tribal relations, United States Environmental Protection Agency management, and ultimately concludes that environmental problems are human problems. Maverick Mother is a 2008 documentary film directed by Janet Merewether. Sounds of Silence is a 2006 documentary by Amir Hamz and Mark Lazarz about music in Iran. It was featured at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival, including music from O-Hum, Barobax, and Hich-Kas. Ballet is a 1995 American documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. It portrays rehearsals, choreography, performances, business transactions, and other day-to-day life of the American Ballet Theatre. Much of the footage dates from the 1992 season. It also includes scenes from the company's European tour, namely in Greece and Copenhagen. Appearances are made by Susan Jaffe, Julie Kent, Julio Bocca, Angel Corella, Amanda McKerrow, Alessandra Ferri and others. Various ballet masters and choreographers also appear, including Kevin McKenzie, ABT's artistic director, Ulysses Dove, Irina Kolpakova, Natalia Makarova and Agnes de Mille. Business transactions by then-director Jane Hermann are also included. The film is currently released to the public by Wiseman's distribution company, Zipporah Films Estilo Hip Hop is a 2009 documentary film directed by Loira Limbal and Vee Bravo and distributed by IndiePix Films. It chronicles the lives of three rappers/political activists - Eli Efi of Brazil, Guerrillero Okulto of Chile and Magia of Cuba - and how they attempt to use their music to reach out to the youth of their respective countries. Estilo Hip Hop is currently being aired as part of the PBS series Global Voices, and has had live screenings in select theaters in California and New York. The documentary will be released on DVD on June 22, 2010, and is currently available on both Amazon and iTunes. Modern Times Forever (Stora Enso Building, Helsinki) is a 2011 film by Danish artists' group Superflex. It is currently the longest film ever made, lasting 240 hours. The film shows centuries of decay, compressed into the span of the film, marking Helsinki's Stora Enso headquarters building. The film was originally screened in front of the building itself on a 40 square metres screen so people could see the original building simultaneously to the one on the screen. The Alps is a 2007 American documentary film about the climbing of the north face of the Eiger in the Bernese Alps by John Harlin III, son of John Harlin who died on the same ascent 40 years earlier. It was shot in 70mm IMAX. The Lord of the Flies is a 1990 film written and directed by Vladimir Tyulkin. What Is This Film Called Love? is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mark Cousins. Moment of Impact: Stories of the Pulitzer Prize Photographs is a 1999 documentary film written by Ann Derry and directed by Cyma Rubin. Videobänder der Korean.Studentenbewegung is a 1988 film. Dark Lullabies is a 1985 film written by Irene L. Angelico and Gloria Demers and directed by Irene Lilienheim Angelico and Abby Jack Neidik. Meat is a 1976 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. Making It Handmade! is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Anna Brownfield. Veil of Silence is a 2014 documentary short film written and directed by Habeeb Lawal. Return of the Poet is a 2006 documentary film directed by Harutyun Khachatryan and co-written with Mikayel Stamboltsyan. Kartemquin Films completes its chronicle of the work and times of the American artist, Leon Golub. Begun in 1985, the film ends with Golub's death in 2004, taking us from searing images of interrogations and torture to the ironies and dark humor of old-age.Jonathan Rosenbaum described an earlier, shorter version of the film as "virtually perfect, conveying the exhilarating sense that art is inseparable from the world that engenders it and the world that receives it." Over-sized canvasses with screaming mercenaries and rioters urinating on a corpse; photographic fragments used as information and inspiration; the making of one of Golub's death-squad series from start to finish and to its exhibition in Derry, Northern Ireland; news footage from around the world; museum-goers' responses; disturbing music: out of these disparate elements the film creates a dialogue between image and audience that reflects what Golub calls the "disjunctiveness" of modern life. We are horrified, detached, and at the same time strangely complicit. In the aftermath of September 11, and now with the photos from Abu Ghraib prison scandal, Golub's ferocious, monumental work of the 70's and 80's (used to this day by human rights groups such as Amnesty International) remain prophetic and essential, even as they give way to the snarling dogs, erotica, and wise-cracking meditations on mortality which began to appear in his paintings in the 1990's.When we revisit Golub in 2001, the aging artist tells us "my work these days is sort of political, sort of metaphysical, and sort of smart-ass. I'm playful and hostile. Let's see if you can keep up with my slipping around." So we make our way through half empty canvasses dotted with birds of prey, smoking skulls, neon chorus girls, pierced hearts, and snickering text: "Bite your tongue. Save your ass."The film captures an historic artistic journey, shared with his wife and studio partner of 50 years, the prominent anti-war and feminist artist, Nancy Spero. In some wonderfully comic and touching scenes we see them as each other's most valued critic and most ardent supporter. Golub continued in his later paintings to "report" on what's going on in the world, but he does it with the kind of dissonances and discontinuities that led Theodor Adorno in his essay on Beethoven to proclaim, "In the history of art, late works are the catastrophes." Hôtel Terminus: The Life and Times of Klaus Barbie is a 1988 documentary film directed by Marcel Ophüls about the life of Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie. The film covers Barbie's relatively innocent childhood, his time with the Gestapo in Lyon, through to the forty years between the end of World War II and his eventual deportation from Bolivia to stand trial for crimes against humanity in France. The film explores a number of themes, including the nature of evil and the diffusion of responsibility in hierarchical situations. The film features interviews from both supporters and opponents of Barbie's trial, from journalists to former U.S. Counter Intelligence Corps agents to independent investigators of Nazi war crimes to Barbie's defense attorney. Much of the testimony presented is contradictory: for example, some interviewees allege that Barbie was brought to trial as a figurehead while others allege that he was allowed to go free for forty years as a result of the protection of various governments, because Barbie knew secret agents and a public trial could potentially jeopardize various intelligence operations. The National Geographic produced a documentary entitled Inside Guantanamo, first broadcast in early April 2009. The Director, Jon Else, wrote: "So much of what defines us as a nation in the last decade is crystallized at Guantanamo. If National Geographic Channel had not sent us down there to do this film, there would be no definitive documentary. I think that that history has to somehow be preserved and I hope that this film can have a hand in doing that." Neil Genzlinger, reporting for New York Times, wrote: Everything in the program, of course, has to be taken with a grain of salt: the soldiers all do and say the right things; the former prisoners are nonthreatening as can be; and, under the restrictions imposed on the film crew by the military, the current prisoners are not heard from in direct interviews or even seen. The film interviewed some key players who played a role in the controversial camp. Colonel Bruce Vargo called the camps: "an integral part of the war on terror." Lieutenant Commander Charles Swift, the Navy lawyer assigned to defend Salim Ahmed Hamdan, said: "Guantanamo Bay was the legal equivalent of outer space -- a place with no law." Circumcise Me is a 2008 film about the American-born Israeli comedian Yisrael Campbell. It was produced by Matthew Kalman, foreign news correspondent in Jerusalem for USA Today, Canada's Globe & Mail and other newspapers, and David Blumenfeld, an Israel-based photographer who has photographed for Time, Newsweek and other publications. The film, originally screened under the title It's Not in Heaven: The Comedy of Yisrael Campbell, is about a Catholic convert to Judaism who has become a stand-up comedy star in Israel. Campbell's routine riffs on the fact that he converted to Judaism three times, once Reform, once Conservative and once Orthodox. The Economist calls the film "hilarious and moving". The film has been screened in Toronto and Jerusalem, and is scheduled to be released in the United States autumn 2008. Bigger, Stronger, Faster* is a 2008 documentary film directed by Christopher Bell, about the use of anabolic steroids as performance-enhancing drugs in the United States and how this practice relates to the American Dream. The film had its world premiere on January 19, 2008 at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. The film was shown at the Tribeca Film Festival in April 2008, and opened in limited release in the United States on May 30, 2008. Water Problem is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Students at the American India Foundation Escape from Suburbia: Beyond the American Dream is a 2007 Canadian documentary film written and directed by Gregory Greene, as a sequel to Greene's film The End of Suburbia, and set to address what is termed "the upcoming energy crisis". Through interviews with individuals, Gregory Greene outlines potential solutions to the coming energy crisis. DANCING IN AMDO takes you further inside the Tibet story than ever before. Interviews from both sides of this super-charged issue meet for the first time in DANCING IN AMDO, the most important and urgent documentary ever made on the subject. Sounds Like Teen Spirit is a 2008 documentary and debut feature film of Bafta-Award nominated director Jamie Jay Johnson. It follows the lives of the participants of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2007, specifically the entrants from Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus and Georgia. The film sees them proceed from the national finals that saw them crowned the representatives of their country through to the international song festival itself held in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, where they each compete against 16 other acts. Morning in the Streets is a BBC television documentary directed by Denis Mitchell and Roy Harris in 1959, for the BBC Northern Film Unit. It was broadcast on 25 March 1959. The documentary was described simply as "an impression of life and opinion in the back streets of a northern city in the morning". It is an impressionistic slice-of-life documentary, featuring footage of working-class people and street scenes, accompanied by a montage soundtrack of voices conveying opinions and philosophies on life. The film was researched by a well-known writer on Liverpool life and dialect Frank Shaw. It is one of the few televisual documents to reflect the post-war austerity felt by areas such as Liverpool in the 1950s, puncturing the myth of post-war cross-class affluence. The music was specially composed by Thomas Henderson and Liverpool songwriter Stan Kelly, and featured the harmonica of classical musician Tommy Reilly. Money as Debt is a 2006 animated documentary film by Canadian artist and filmmaker Paul Grignon about the monetary systems practised through modern banking. The film presents Grignon's view of the process of money creation by banks and its historical background, and warns of his belief in its subsequent unsustainability. Subsequent Money as Debt videos include Money as Debt II and Money as Debt III: Evolution Beyond Money. Christo's Valley Curtain is a 1974 American short documentary film directed by Albert and David Maysles, about Christo and Jeanne-Claudes Valley Curtain project. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. This program looks at the people, history, culture and geography of China. Can the soul of a killer linger forever? Filmmaker Dan T. Hall explores macabre shadows of the past as he documents the haunting of the infamous Fox Hollow Farm estate, former home of alleged serial killer Herb Baumeister. The paranormal documentary The Haunting of Fox Hollow Farm. In the early 1990s, Baumeister, a local business owner and family man, bought a quiet estate just north of Indianapolis on contract. Although never brought to trial, he was the prime suspect in the disappearance and murder of a number of individuals from the Midwest spanning two decades. In 1996, authorities recovered more than 5,000 human bone fragments on the property from as many as 17 victims. Only five were positively identified. It's believed that most of the victims were murdered in and around the home's indoor pool. Current residents and visitors to the property have reported unsettling feelings, unexplainable noises, and even seeing apparitions inside the house and around the grounds. Hoping to document some of what they've been experiencing, team, including psychics, a demonologist, EVP and visual specialists, as they investigated the 18-acre estate over a six-month period. Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell is a documentary film about musician Arthur Russell. Released theatrically in 2008, the film was generally well received by critics, winning various awards at international film festivals. Its world premiere was at the Berlin International Film Festival, and its theatrical premieres were at the IFC Center in New York and the ICA in London. The Guantanamo Trap is a documentary film about four individuals whose lives were changed by their association with the Guantanamo Bay detention camps. The film was directed by Thomas Wallner and won the special jury prize at the 2011 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival. The four individuals profiled in the film are Murat Kurnaz, a Turkish citizen raised in Germany, who was arrested in Pakistan and sold for a bounty to the US army. He spent five years as a detainee in the Kandahar Internment Facility and the Guantanamo camps despite the FBI and the US and German intelligence thought he was innocent. Kurnaz says he is innocent and has been tortured during his detention. Diane Beaver, a military lawyer known for drafting a memo widely described as "the torture memo"; Matthew Diaz, a navy lawyer who was sentenced to 6 month of imprisonment for leaking the names of Guantanamo captives to human rights organizations; Gonzalo Boye, a Spanish lawyer who tried to charge those he thought responsible for war crimes committed at Guantanamo. Legend of Miryang is a 2013 documentary film directed by Bae-il Park. I'm Yours is a 2013 experimental short film written by Chase Joynt and Nina Arsenault and directed by Chase Joynt. The Cove is a 2009 documentary film that analyzes and questions dolphin hunting practices in Japan. It was awarded the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2010. The film is a call to action to halt mass dolphin kills, change Japanese fishing practices, and to inform and educate the public about the risks, and increasing hazard, of mercury poisoning from dolphin meat. The film is told from an ocean conservationist's point of view. The film highlights the fact that the number of dolphins killed in the Taiji dolphin drive hunting is several times greater than the number of whales killed in the Antarctic, and claims that 23,000 dolphins and porpoises are killed in Japan every year by the country's whaling industry. The migrating dolphins are herded into a cove where they are netted and killed by means of spears and knives over the side of small fishing boats. The film argues that dolphin hunting as practiced in Japan is unnecessary and cruel. Since the film's release, The Cove has drawn controversy over neutrality, secret filming, and its portrayal of the Japanese people. The film was directed by former National Geographic photographer Louie Psihoyos. August & Marie is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Gabriel Vanderpas. Being in the World is a 2010 documentary film directed by Tao Ruspoli. The film is based on Martin Heidegger's philosophy and is inspired by Hubert Dreyfus. It features a number of prominent philosophers. Get Coached by Rex Ryan is 2010 documentary film written by Kim Shiff and directed by John Hilton. Rhythms Of Resistance is a 2013 short documentary, crime fiction,music and war film written by Jason O'Hara and directed by Jason O'Hara. Silver into Gold is a 1987 American short documentary film produced by Lynn Mueller. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Greetings from Tim Buckley is a 2012 American film directed by Daniel Algrant starring Penn Badgley and Imogen Poots. The film follows the journey Jeff Buckley took in grappling with the legacy of his late musician father, Tim, leading up to and culminating with his legendary 1991 performance of his father's songs. The film premiered at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival on September 9, 2012 to generally positive reviews. Noisefold is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Bobby Lewis. The Year of Living Vicariously is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Amir Muhammad. Dusty’s Trail: Summit of Borneo is a 2013 documentary film by Director Catherine Jayasuriya. It is the story of Dusty, a 20-year-old young man with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie is a 1995 American documentary film directed by Peter Kuran and narrated by William Shatner. Using restored archive footage, the film traces the development of nuclear weapons and their testing, from America's Trinity test of 1945 to the first Chinese atomic bomb test in 1964. Kuran's commentary on the DVD version claims that the DVD replaces some of the original footage with better-quality versions. There are some short special effects sequences too. The film has also since been released on Blu-ray. Included is footage of nuclear tests starting with the May 1945 trial run to Trinity, a 100 ton TNT blast used to scale and calibrate the Trinity device, and ending with the last U.S. atmospheric nuclear detonation of the Nike Hercules air defense missile in 1963. Also included are test series in the South Pacific, and footage of the firing of the U.S. Army's atomic cannon at the Nevada Test Site in 1953, and color images of multi-megaton high altitude air bursts over Johnston Island just before the limited test ban treaty went into effect in 1963. Godfathers and Sons is a 2003 documentary film directed by Marc Levin. American Masters: Leonard Bernstein: Reaching for the Note is a 1998 Documentary film written and directed by Susan Lacy. Peleas de tigres is a 1987 documentary film directed by Alfredo Portilla A. and Alberto Becerril. I Am an Animal: The Story of Ingrid Newkirk and PETA is a November 2007 HBO documentary about Ingrid Newkirk, co-founder of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, and her struggle for animal rights. Chariots of the Gods is a 1970 West German documentary film directed by Harald Reinl. It is based on Erich von Däniken's book Chariots of the Gods?, a book that theorizes extraterrestrials impacted early human life. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz is a 2014 American documentary film written, directed and produced by Brian Knappenberger. The film premiered in the US Documentary Competition program category at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. After its premiere at Sundance Film Festival, Participant Media and FilmBuff acquired distribution rights of the film. The film was released to theatres and VOD on June 27, 2014, in United States. It will be followed by a broadcast television premiere on Participant's network Pivot in late 2014. The film also played at the 2014 SXSW on March 15, 2014. It served as the opening film at the 2014 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival on April 24, 2014. The film's UK premiere took place at Sheffield Doc/Fest in June 2014. In August 2014 the film was screened at the Barbican Centre in London as part of Wikimania 2014. Village B. is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Filip Remunda. The Great Liberty is a 2011 documentary written by Åsa Blanck and Petter Brundell and directed by Åsa Blanck and Klas Ehnemark. Yearning to Belong is a documentary about the Abayudaya Jews in Uganda and their struggle to be recognized by the international Jewish community. Brown is the New Green: George Lopez and the American Dream is a 2007 documentary directed and produced by Phillip Rodriguez. Starring George Lopez life and his behind-the-scenes career as a Latino in the U.S. mainstream media . It is the first hour of a four-hour PBS documentary series. This film explores how the U.S. media and markers are shaping America’s perception of Latinos and the ideals of the "American Dream." Northland is a brief 1942 Canadian documentary film on the life of miners, most notable for its having been directed by the expatriate German crime writer, jazz critic, jazz musician, and sexologist Ernest Borneman. It is a production of the National Film Board of Canada. The Opiate Effect is a documentary film directed by Derek Hallquist. Hildegard of Bingen is a 1994 documentary drama film written by James Runcie and Nigel Williams and directed by James Runcie. How's Work On The High Rise Block Ion is a 1983 short film written and directed by Sabrina Pop. Federico Fellini - Through the Eyes of the Others is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Eckhart Schmidt. The Exquisite Corpse Project is a 2012 crossover comedy/documentary from director Ben Popik and the comedy group Olde English. In the film, Popik challenges five comedy writers to each write a fifth of a film, with the constraint that each writer can only read the previous five pages of the script before writing their section. The final film is a combination of the movie written by the writers, and a documentary about the argument-provoking writing process. Dated to the late Stone Age, Stonehenge may be the best-known and most mysterious relic of prehistory. Every year, a million visitors are drawn to England to gaze upon the famous circle of stones, but the monument's meaning has continued to elude us. Now investigations inside and around Stonehenge have kicked off a dramatic new era of discovery and debate over who built Stonehenge and for what purpose. How did prehistoric people quarry, transport, sculpt, and erect these giant stones? Granted exclusive access to the dig site at Bluestonehenge, a prehistoric stone-circle monument recently discovered about a mile from Stonehenge, NOVA cameras join a new generation of researchers finding important clues to this enduring mystery. Killer Poet is a 2008 film directed by Susan Gray. A gripping tale of the tiny seed that can help people in chronic pain – yet is so easily perceived as a truly evil weed. Is cannabis a bad seed? Or have its extraordinary health benefits been suppressed by government fear-mongering and corporate greed? Shayne Metcalfe’s film BAD SEED follows stories of medical marijuana users, activists and the tale of a tiny little seed; a seed that has the power to change the world of all those who are courageous enough to nurture its growth. Kingdom of Shadows is a documentary film directed by Fiona Tan. East Side Story is a 1997 documentary directed by Dana Ranga. The film documents the Soviet Bloc musical genre, which first appeared under Stalin and spread to Soviet-occupied Eastern Europe. The film features interviews with actors, film historians, and audience members who reminisce on these unlikely films and their impact on Soviet Bloc life. Pablo & Poëzie is a 2012 film directed by Leo Verheul. A look at the difficulties of raising parrots. The intelligent birds have a life span of 80-90 years, which means they often live longer than their owners—when their owners don't give them up after a few years, that is. They also form strong bonds with caregivers, which can result in odd behavior if a caregiver leaves for an extended period of time, as Liz and Russ Hartman learned: their bird became so upset while Russ was away on a business trip that it plucked all the feathers from its chest. One is a poet. Another a musician. One has a dad who was murdered. One has a mother in jail. These 11-year-olds from Denver's inner city have found a hint of salvation in a most unlikely sport. From the moment the kids discover what a lacrosse stick is to the heart stopping finale at the State Championships, CITY LAX: AN URBAN LACROSSE STORY takes us on an unforgettable journey, where the undeniable spirit of a group of kids, carries them to places unexpected and unbelievable. The Fading Valley is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Irit Gal. Mon père, la révolution et moi is a 2013 film written and directed by Ufuk Emiroglu. "A Galileo High School graduate comes out in Everybody Knows “Bam Bam” (or do they)." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Marx Reloaded is a 2011 German documentary film written and directed by the British writer and theorist Jason Barker. Featuring interviews with several well-known philosophers, the film aims to examine the relevance of Karl Marx's ideas in relation to the effects of the Great Recession. In Search of Blind Joe Death, The Saga of John Fahey is a 2012 biographical documentary historical music film written and directed by James Cullingham. On Track: Scott Reardon is a short documentary film written and directed by Benjamin Murphy. Willing To Sacrifice is a 1998 short documentary film directed by B. V. Rao. Three by Three is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Calogero Salvo. Castle in the Sky: The World of Laputa is a 2010 short documentary film starring Cloris Leachman, Anna Paquin and James Van Der Beek. "A student documentary film dealing with the trauma of child sexual abuse through stories of two survivors who have chosen to Speak Up! about it. The documentary voices the concerns for safeguarding children from such incidents. " Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Poetry in Motion is a 1982 documentary directed by Ron Mann featuring contemporary North American poetry and music. Featured are some of the Black Mountain poets, Beats, minimalist poets, and avant-garde poets. Hair India is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Raffaele Brunetti and Marco Leopardi. The Other F Word is a 2011 American documentary film directed by independent filmmaker Andrea Blaugrund Nevins. The film explores the world of aging punk rock musicians, as they transition into parents and try to maintain the contrast between their anti-authoritarian lifestyle with the responsibilities of fatherhood, the titular "other F word". In addition to interviewing over twenty musicians from across the spectrum of the punk genre, from Mark Hoppus of Blink 182 to Fat Mike of NOFX, the film also includes other emblematic figures of subculture such as professional skateboarder Tony Hawk, in a chronicle of the struggles and rewards that accompany raising their children. It was released in the U.S. by Oscilloscope Laboratories in 2011. May Tomorrow Shine the Brightest of All Your Many Days As It Will Be Your Last is a 2009 experimental short film directed by Ben Rivers and Paul Harnden. American Beer is a 2002 feature-length documentary directed by Paul Kermizian that chronicles and documents the American craft brewing industry. The film was shot in the spring of 2002. Kermizian and a group of four left New York City and traveled by minivan across the United States visiting 38 craft and independent breweries in 40 days. Breweries featured in the film include Dogfish Head Brewery, Shipyard Brewing, Victory Brewing Company, McNeill's Brewery, Climax Brewing, Sierra Nevada Brewing Company, Anchor Brewing Company, New Glarus Brewing Company, New Belgium Brewing Company, Bell's Brewery and others. The film screened at various film festivals throughout 2004 and 2005 and was released on DVD towards the end of 2005. A special edition of the DVD released shortly afterward contains more than 80 minutes of deleted scenes from breweries featured in the film along with other scenes deleted from the original cut. As a result from their experiences from the film, Paul Kermizian ended up opening Barcade, a chain of hybrid arcade and craft beer bars in New York, New Jersey and Philadelphia, and Jeremy Goldberg started a brewery called Cape Ann Brewing in Gloucester, Massachusetts. The Battle of Gettysburg is a 1955 American documentary film about the Battle of Gettysburg during the American Civil War. The film was nominated for two Academy Awards. The documentary was filmed in Eastmancolor entirely on location at the Gettysburg National Military Park in south-central Pennsylvania. Leslie Nielsen provides narration, while songs from the Civil War era are played in the background with the sound effects of battle. At the end of the film, Nielsen reads the Gettysburg Address. No actors appear onscreen. Schary photographed memorial statues and bas-reliefs already present on battlefield from various angles and distances, then juxtaposed the footage to suggest that the static images were actual characters taking part in a dramatic re-enactment of the battle. In some scenes, the turbulence created by an off-screen helicopter is used to press down tall grasses, suggesting the passage of invisible soldiers. In 1956, the film was nominated for Oscars for Best Documentary, Short Subject and Best Short Subject, Two-reel. Hello, Kids! is a documentary film directed by Mariko Miyagi. Point A is a 2013 short sports documentary film directed by Charlie Thomas and Tim Warburton-Roberts. Riding Giants is a 2004 documentary film directed and narrated by Stacy Peralta, a famous skater/surfer. The movie traces the origins of surfing and specifically focuses on the art of big wave riding. Some of the featured surfers are Greg Noll, Laird Hamilton, and Jeff Clark, and surfing pioneers such as Mickey Munoz. United Gates of America is a 2006 BBC television documentary directed by Alex Cooke, featuring journalist Charlie LeDuff. He lived for a month within the gated community of Canyon Lake in Riverside County, California, to try and discover why people wanted to lock themselves behind gates and fences, and what effect it had on the residents. The documentary also explored the issues of immigration from Mexico and Central America, and highlighted the issues of segregation and racism that exist in the United States. The one-hour made-for-TV documentary premiered on British TV channel BBC Four in 2006, with ongoing repeat showings. The film also appeared at the 2007 Ann Arbor Film Festival, the USA Film Festival, and the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. The film met with positive reviews. Ian Johns of The Times found LeDuff to be "an acute interviewer and astute observer in this entertaining documentary." TV Scoop found it "hilarious", emphasizing LeDuff's style: "He just ambles along, asking simple questions before pouncing Columbo-like with a killer last line. 'Oh look, there's a Mexican over there....gardening.' Bidder 70 is a 2012 documentary film written by Beth Gage and directed by Beth Gage and George Gage. Diller Scofidio + Renfro: Reimagining Lincoln Center and the High Line is a documentary, biographical and historical flm directed by Muffie Dunn and Tom Piper. Graphic Sexual Horror is a 2009 independent film written and directed by Anna Lorentzon and Barbara Bell in their directorial debut. The film is a documentary about Insex, a bondage website. Graphic Sexual Horror premiered to programmer, critic and audience acclaim at Slamdance Film Festival in January 2009 and has been selected by IMDB's Arno Kazarian as the only Slamdance 2009's film to review in the Sundance festival's selection. The film won Best Documentary at the 2009 CineKink Film Festival, Official Selection at the 2009 Calgary Underground Film Festival, Official Selection at the HotDocs Film Festival, Official Selection at the 2009 Buenos Aires Film Festival, Official Selection at the 2009 Fantasia International Film Festival in Montreal and Official Selection at the 2009 Athens International Film Festival in Greece]. Synapse Films announced the August 2010 release of the Special Edition DVD of Graphic Sexual Horror on June 30, 2010. There Is Nothing Wrong With My Uncle is a 2011 documentary film directed by Dul Johnson. Echoes Of The Tongass is a 2010 documentary,drama,adventure film written by Ben Hamilton,Daniel Salinas and directed by Ben Hamilton. Is This Fate? is a 1979 film directed and written by Helga Reidemeister. "In the year that the International Maritime Organization has designated "The Year of the Seafarer," a new film by the Environmental Justice Foundation (EJF) All At Sea reveals extensive human rights abuses on board illegal fishing vessels. Worth up to $23.5 billion annually and accounting for up to 31% of the global catch, Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing vessels are the seas' modern day pirates. Plundering fish stocks, devastating marine habitats, and depleting vital food sources for coastal communities to supply European and world markets, these vessels steal fish with impunity, exploiting legal loopholes that allow them to avoid adhering to global fisheries laws. On board, crew members face some of the worst working conditions on the planet. This film documents investigations into life on board these "pirate" fishing vessels, uncovering evidence of appalling working conditions, including retention of pay, a lack of proper employment contracts if any, poor to non-existent safety equipment, atrocious hygiene conditions, and inadequate food and accommodation standards, with crews working under the constant threat of physical violence, and in extreme cases murder. The "pirate" fishing industry is supplying world fish markets with catches that hold untold stories of suffering and devastation." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Wings for this Man is a propaganda film produced in 1945 by the U.S. Army Air Forces First Motion Picture Unit about the Tuskegee Airmen, the first unit of African-American pilots in the US military. The film begins with dramatic footage of aerial combat over Italy, showing an outnumbered American squadron successfully dogfighting a Luftwaffe formation. When the pilots land they step out and are revealed to be black. The picture then tells the story of the Tuskegee Airmen, starting with the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama and the founding of the airstrip near it. The narrator, future President Ronald Reagan notes that the airmen had to overcome exceeding odds to get the unit created and notes that "there was misunderstanding, distrust and prejudice that had to be cleared away" before the unit could form. A rather standard training/combat/casualty sequence then follows, culminating in the third anniversary celebration of the unit followed by a parade. A Lawyer Walks Into a Bar... is a 2007 independent film about lawyers, law school, the California Bar exam, and the obsession America has with its legal system. The film has garnered many positive reviews including coverage from The Wall Street Journal, The Dallas Morning News, Premiere.com and on nationally syndicated television show At the Movies with Ebert & Roeper. Roșia Montană, Town on the brink is a 2012 News and documentary film directed by Fabian Daub. Siberia - Soul in a Museum is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Martin Ryšavý. Color Me Obsessed, which made its film festival debut in April, 2011, is a rockumentary by Gorman Bechard about the legendary American alternative rock band The Replacements. Live in San Diego is a DVD of a concert by the band Switchfoot. It was released in 2004, between the band's albums The Beautiful Letdown and Nothing Is Sound. With the exception of "Learning to Breathe", all of the songs performed at this concert were from their 2003 double-platinum selling album The Beautiful Letdown. The concert was played at SOMA, in San Diego, California. The DVD was certified platinum by the RIAA selling over 100,000 copies. Wild Cargo was a 1934 jungle adventure documentary starring Frank Buck. Buck depicts the ingenious methods by which he traps wild birds, mammals and reptiles. Many scenes were photographed on the vast Malayan estates of Buck's friend, Sultan Ibrahim of Johor, who appears in person in the film. Exile Shanghai is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Ulrike Ottinger. Like Rats Leaving A Sinking Ship is a 2012 short documentary and biographical film directed and written by Vika Kirchenbauer. The Punk Singer is a 2013 documentary film directed by filmmaker Sini Anderson and produced by Anderson and Tamra Davis. The film is about feminist singer Kathleen Hanna who fronted the bands Bikini Kill and Le Tigre, and who was a central figure in the riot grrrl movement. The title of the film is taken from Julie Ruin song "The Punk Singer", from Hanna's 1998 solo effort. Using a combination of interviews and archival footage including live band performances, the film traces the life and career of Hanna from her troubled upbringing and her start in spoken word performance poetry, through her riot grrrl zines, her prominent punk and dance-punk bands, her coining of the phrase "Smells Like Teen Spirit" for Kurt Cobain, her solo career as Julie Ruin, her feminist activism, her marriage to Beastie Boys member Adam Horovitz, and ending with Hanna's 2010 diagnosis of late-stage Lyme disease and the severe treatments she endures to combat it. Anderson filmed Hanna off and on for a year starting in July 2010. Hanna had already amassed a collection of archival footage and ephemera; these and further finds were worked into the documentary. A Story of Triumph is a 1991 documentary film directed by Vishram Revankar. Beatrice Wood: Mama of Dada is a 1993 documentary film written and directed by Tom Neff about the avant-garde artist Beatrice Wood. Antarctica-Project is a 1988 documentary film directed by Axel Engstfeld. Filmed inside their home studios, BEAT MAKERS charts the never ending hustle of up and coming as well as seasoned producers who aspire to further build their studios, sell their hot tracks and of course make a name for themselves in the competitive music industry. The film provides a behind the scenes forum for composers to discuss their unbridled passion for making music all with a steadfast belief that their next track will be the one to take them to the next level. Krieger is a 2013 documentary, short, history film directed by Patrick Meury. A Frozen Dream is a documentary film released in 1997 as a followup to the 1982 Swedish movie Flight of the Eagle, both directed by Jan Troell. The documentary describes the ill-fated attempt to fly over the North Pole in a hydrogen balloon by Salomon August Andrée in 1897. J'irai dormir à Hollywood is a 2008 documentary film directed by Antoine de Maximy. Bruce Lee: The Curse of the Dragon is a 1993 documentary film about Bruce Lee. The film includes interviews from some of his fellow students and opponents who worked alongside him in his movies. The film is directed by Tom Kuhn and Fred Weintraub and written by Davis Miller, author of the books "My Dinner with Ali", and "The Tao of Bruce Lee". The Testament of LZ is a 1994 documentary film directed by Lordan Zafranović. The Inner or Deep Part of an Animal or Plant Structure is an official DVD released by Björk on August 31, 2004. It is a 45 minute film about the making of the Medúlla album. The DVD features clips of the studio performances by Dokaka, Shlomo, Rahzel and Mike Patton that formed the beats for many of the songs on the album. It was originally issued as a bonus feature on the multichannel DVD-A of 'Medulla' and then later reissued by itself as a separate disc. The title of the DVD is the actual definition of the word "Medúlla". The Trouble Weve Seen is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Marcel Ophüls. Love During Wartime is a 2010 documentary film directed by Gabriella Bier. "Jasmin and Assi are newlyweds, but building a life together seems impossible: She’s an Israeli, he’s a Palestinian. When their homelands turn their backs on them, they choose to live in exile. This tender tale of a love infiltrated by politics follows a real-life Romeo and Juliet on their odyssey from the Middle East through an inhospitable Europe. As their hopes rise and then fade with each bureaucratic hurdle, will their love survive? In Hebrew, Arabic, English, German with English subtitles." Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. Whitney Elizabeth Houston showed the vocal range and star quality that would soon make her a legend in the music world. We talk to those who knew her as "Nippy", retrace her steps to stardom and revisit some of her most stunning performances. Halloween is a Drag is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Adar Rossman and Marla Rossman. Dinner with the President is a 2007 documentary film directed by Sachithanandam Sathananthan and Sabiha Sumar Botín de guerra is a 2000 Argentine documentary film directed and written by David Blaustein with Luis Alberto Asurey. The film premiered on 11 April 2000 in Buenos Aires. David Blaustein won two awards for Best Director and a 2nd and 3rd. The Sun In The Head is a 2012 experimental documentary film directed by Melisa Brito Aller. Return with Honor is a 1999 documentary film about American prisoners of war in the Vietnam War. Among those profiled is Senator John McCain. It is narrated by Tom Hanks. Directors Freida Lee Mock and Terry Sanders won the Best Film award at the 1999 Cleveland International Film Festival. Annie Oakley is an 1894 short film, most notable for being Annie Oakley's first appearance on film. The man assisting her is likely her husband, Frank E. Butler. The film shows Annie shooting at several flying disks with a rifle. "When precocious 13-year-old paparazzo Austin Visschedyk snapped a photo of celebrity Adrian Grenier (HBO's Entourage), little did he know his life was about to change. Turning the tables on the juvenile paparazzo, Grenier stepped on the other side of the lens in an attempt to mentor a teenager obsessed with the lure of the Hollywood lifestyle. Grenier develops a meaningful relationship with his camera-clicking young friend as he attempts to reconcile their mutual exploitation. Indeed, Grenier puts himself on the line here, trying to make sense of his own recently acquired fame. Given the success of Entourage and its place in the Zeitgeist, Adrian Grenier is the perfect person to explore our preoccupation with celebrity and the adolescent desire for fame. Exquisitely layered, Teenage Paparazzo moves beyond personal documentary, charting a cultural revolution of celebrity obsession that may have been born in the United States but stretches across the globe." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Tlacuilo is a 1987 documentary film directed by Enrique Escalona. Leave Them Laughing: A Musical Comedy About Dying is a 2010 documentary film directed by Academy-Award-winning director John Zaritsky. It follows the life of singer and comedian Carla Zilber-Smith, after she is diagnosed with Lou Gehrig's Disease, as she blogs and jokes her way through a disease that spells a certain death sentence. The film premiered at Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival on May 6, 2010, winning the Special Jury Prize for best Canadian Documentary. It is nominated for Best Documentary in the 31st annual Genie Awards. Aimless Walk is a 1930 documentary short film directed by Alexandr Hackenschmied. Lost Rivers is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Caroline Bacle. The Zapruder film is a silent, color motion picture sequence shot by private citizen Abraham Zapruder with a home-movie camera, as U.S. President John F. Kennedy's motorcade passed through Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963, thereby inadvertently capturing the President's assassination. Though not the only film of the shooting, it has been called the most complete, giving a relatively clear view from a somewhat elevated position on the side from which the president's head wound is visible. It was an important part of the Warren Commission hearings and all subsequent investigations of the assassination, and is one of the most studied pieces of film in history. Of greatest notoriety is the film's capture of the fatal shot to President Kennedy's head when his limousine was almost exactly in front of, and slightly below, Zapruder's position. Le monde extérieur is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Stephane Breton. The King – Jari Litmanen is a 2012 Finnish documentary film about the football player Jari Litmanen. He is considered to be Finland's greatest footballer of all time. The film was shot in Finland, Amsterdam, Barcelona and Liverpool. It features comments of Litmanen's former teammates like Danny Blind, Edwin van der Sar, Marc Overmars, Carles Puyol and Xavi Hernández as well as Louis van Gaal, the former Ajax Amsterdam manager. Title of the film refers to Litmanen's nickname, "The King", used by Finnish football fans. The Dutch premier of The King – Jari Litmanen was at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam in November 2012. Mediacare is a 2013 Documentary, short film and family film directed by Gene Pina. The Making of Last Year at Marienbad is a documentary film by Volker Schlöndorff. For Love of Liberty: The Story of America's Black Patriots is a 2010 documentary film written by Frank Martin and Jeff Stetson and directed by Frank Martin. Theirs is the Glory, is a 1946 British war film about the British 1st Airborne Division's involvement in the Battle of Arnhem during Operation Market Garden in World War II. It was the first film to be made about this battle, and the biggest grossing war movie for nearly a decade. The later film A Bridge Too Far depicts the operation as a whole and includes the American, British and Polish Airborne forces, while Theirs is the Glory focuses solely on the British forces, and their fight at Oosterbeek and Arnhem. The film was directed by Ulsterman, Brian Desmond Hurst who, himself, was a veteran of the first world war, having survived Gallipoli where he had served with the Royal Irish Rifles. Hurst was an accomplished film director having been mentored by John Ford in Hollywood and directing more than 30 films including Malta Story, Scrooge and Tom Brown's Schooldays. Hurst was also Ireland's most prolific film director of the 20th Century. The producer was Leonard Castleton Knight, Head of Gaumont British News. The script was written primarily by Louis Golding but honed by Hurst's protege Terence Young. Secrets of the Dead: D-Day: The Ultimate Conflict is a television documentary film. Boys of Bonneville: Racing on a Ribbon of Salt is a 2011 documentary directed by Curt Wallin. For All Mankind is a 1989 documentary film documenting the Apollo missions of NASA. It was directed by Al Reinert with music by Brian Eno. The film provides 80 minutes of real NASA footage, mostly taken on the Apollo missions of the 1960s and 1970s. The focus of the documentary is on the human views of the space flights, and the original mission footage is provided along with the voices of the astronauts, from interviews and from the actual mission recordings. Among those providing narration are Jim Lovell, Michael Collins, Charles Conrad, Jack Swigert, and Ken Mattingly. The film concentrates on the beauty of the earth as seen from space. For All Mankind was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1990. Night Replay is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Patricia Allio and Éléonore Weber. Hospital Borda: Un llamado a la razon is a 1985 documentary film written by Marcelo Cespedes and Carmen Guarini and directed by Marcelo Céspedes. Freetime Machos is a Finnish documentary film about the world's most northerly rugby club called OYUS Rugby based in Oulu, Finland. The film is directed by Mika Ronkainen and it was premiered at IDFA in November 2009. The film got its North American premiere at Tribeca Film Festival in April 2010. It was also part of the Edinburgh International Film Festival in June 2010. Collum Calling Canberra is a 1981 documentary film directed by David MacDougall and Judith MacDougall. No Maps on My Taps is a 1979 documentary film written by Lynn Rogoff and directed by George T. Nierenberg. Dancemaker is a 1998 American documentary film directed by Matthew Diamond about the career of choreographer Paul Taylor. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Coming of Age: Adult Bat Mitzvah, is a documentary produced in 1989 and directed by Bonnie Burt Holding on to Jah is a historical documentary biographical music film directed by Roger Landon Hall. The Young Girls Turn 25 is a 1993 French documentary film directed by Agnès Varda, about Jacques Demy's 1967 film The Young Girls of Rochefort. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1993 Cannes Film Festival. Year Zero: The Silent Death of Cambodia is a 1979 British television documentary written and presented by the Australian journalist John Pilger, which was produced and directed by David Munro. The film recounts the bombing of Cambodia by the United States in 1970 during the Vietnam War, the subsequent brutality and genocide that occurred when Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge militia took over, the poverty and suffering of the people, and the limited aid since given by the West. Viewers were so moved by the plight of the people that they donated ₤45 million to the station in aid. The Forgotten Refugees is a 2005 documentary film produced by The David Project and IsraTV that recounts the rich history of the ancient Jewish communities of the Middle East and North Africa and their rapid demise in the face of persecution in the decades following the creation of the modern State of Israel in 1948. The film was directed by Michael Grynszpan with Ralph Avi Goldwasser serving as the executive producer. Roland Klick - The Heart Is a Hungry Hunter is a 2013 biographical documentary film written and directed by Sandra Prechtel. Owned Operated is a documentary film directed by Relic. Effetto Puglia is a 1987 short film directed by Annabella Miscuglio. Harga is a 2010 documentary film. Safari is an action-packed adventure through exotic Africa. Hosted by Hunter Ellis. Justice For Sale is a 2011 documentary, crime and drama film written and directed by Femke van Velzen and Ilse van Velzen. Jamel Shabazz Street Photographer is a 2013 documentary film directed by Charlie Ahearn. The First Greek Woman Painter is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Kleoni Flessa. Wampler's Ascent is a 2013 documentary family adventure and drama directed by Elizabeth Wampler. Amazing Journeys is a 1999 short documentary film directed by George Casey. Erroll Garner: No One Can Hear You Read is a 2012 documentary film directed by Atticus Brady. Hosted by twice Oscar nominated actor and activist Woody Harrelson, Ethos lifts the lid on a Pandora’s box of systemic issues that guarantee failure in almost every aspect of our lives; from the environment to democracy and our own personal liberty: From terrifying conflicts of interests in politics to unregulated corporate power, to a media in the hands of massive conglomerates, and a military industrial complex that virtually owns our representatives. With interviews from some of today’s leading thinkers and source material from the finest documentary film makers of our times Ethos examines and unravels these complex relationships, and offers a solution, a simple but powerful way for you to change this system. Ethos is a 2011 documentary film directed and written by Pete McGrain and hosted by Woody Harrelson. The main point of the film is to encourage people to engage in ethical consumerism. A Cross Burning in Willacoochee 2009 is a documentary crime drama film written by Roy Kirkland and directed by Doug Sebastian. Tracking Down Maggie is a 1994 documentary film by Nick Broomfield about former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. What begins as a genuine attempt to get an interview with the so-called 'Iron Lady' quickly turns into a game of cat-and-mouse in the United States, with the filmmaker snubbed at every turn. Aside from the comedy of Broomfield's repeatedly failing attempts to gain access, the film discusses the accusations that Thatcher's son, Mark, used his mother's connections to effect arms deals in Saudi Arabia. ONE: The Movie is an independent documentary that surveys beliefs on the meaning of life, culminating with the view that we are all one. The movie was created and directed by Michigan filmmakers Scott Carter, Ward M. Powers and Diane Powers, starring Deepak Chopra, Robert Thurman, Thich Nhat Hanh, Jaggi Vasudev, et al. It was originally released in movie theaters and throughout North America via hundreds of community events in late 2005 through 2007. An was released on DVD in 2007. The documentary was a focus of discussion in the Global Spirit episode Oneness: The Big Picture on LinkTV. Lord of the Universe is a 1974 American documentary film about Prem Rawat at an event in November 1973 at the Houston Astrodome called "Millennium '73". Lord of the Universe was first broadcast on PBS on February 2, 1974, and released in VHS format on November 1, 1991. The documentary chronicles Maharaj Ji, his followers and anti-Vietnam War activist Rennie Davis who was a spokesperson of the Divine Light Mission at the time. A counterpoint is presented by Abbie Hoffman, who appears as a commentator. It includes interviews with several individuals, including followers, ex-followers, a mahatma, a born-again Christian, and a follower of Hare Krishna. The production team of Top Value Television produced the documentary, using Portapak video cameras. The TVTV team followed Maharaj Ji across the United States over a period of six weeks, and edited a large amount of tape down to the fifty-eight minute piece. It was the first documentary made on ¹⁄₂ in video tape broadcast nationally, and also the first independent video documentary shown on national public television. Uprooted is a short documentary film directed by Andrew Moir. Benefit of the Doubt is a 1967 documentary on Peter Brook's anti-Vietnam protest play, with the Royal Shakespeare Company, known under the title US. It was filmed at London's Aldwych Theatre and features Peter Brook, Michael Kustow, Michael Williams and Glenda Jackson. It was directed by Peter Whitehead. Typecast Dragon is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Cassidy Dimon, Morgan Dusatko, Shauna Hargrove and Katie Killeen. The Way Out is a 2003 documentary short film directed by Kosten Koper and Luke Fowler. The Secret Life of Uri Geller is a 2013 documentary film directed by Vikram Jayanti. Beyond Baklava: The Fairy Tale Story of Sylvia's Baklava is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Silvana Vienne. Queer Beograd Border Fuckers Cabaret is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Jet Moon. Mirage Men is a 2013 documentary film directed by John Lundberg, written by Mark Pilkington and co-directed by Roland Denning and Kypros Kyprianou. The film had its world premiere at the 2013 Sheffield Doc/Fest in the UK on 13 June 2013, its North American premiere at the 2013 Fantastic Fest in Austin, Texas on 22 September 2013, its Australian premiere at the Canberra International Film Festival on 31 October 2013 and its Nordic premiere at the Stockholm Film Festival in Sweden on 10 November 2013. Mirage Men is about how the US government used mythology to cover up their advanced technology. It prominently features Richard Doty, a retired Special Agent who worked for AFOSI, the United States Air Force Office of Special Investigation. Mark Pilkington's book about the project, also called Mirage Men, was published in 2010 by Constable & Robinson. Scatter My Ashes at Bergdorf's is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Matthew Miele. Circle of the Sun is a 1960 short documentary film on Kainai Nation, or Blood Tribe, of Southern Alberta, which captured their Sun Dance ritual on film for the first time. Tribal leaders, who worried the traditional ceremony might be dying out, had permitted filming as a visual record. The film was directed by Colin Low, who was from the area. Low's father had been a foreman of the Cochrane Church Ranch in the area, southern Alberta and had known many Blood Tribe people since childhood. Colin Low had first witnessed the Sun Dance in 1953, the year he shot Corral. Footage of the Sun Dance was shot in 1956 and 1957, with the film completed in 1959. The film also included modern aspects of Blood Tribe life by shooting on an oil well on the reserve. Completely Christ's: Mother Teresa is a 2007 documentary film. Occupy Sandy is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Josh Fox. In The Shadows is a 2013 documentary film directed by Dan Glynn. Cherry Pop: The Story Of The World's Fanciest Cat is a 2014 documentary film directed by Kareem Tabsch. A Polite Bribe is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Robert Orlando. The true story of the rise and fall of Death Row Records. Partly Private is a 2009 film directed by Danae Elon. Controversies is a 2014 short, documentary comedy film written and directed by Ryan McKenna. Way Beyond Weight is a documentary film directed by Estela Renner. Among the Grasses is a 2012 documentary short film written and directed by Ramune Rakauskaite. The Chocolate Farmer is a 2010 documentary film directed and written by Rohan Fernando. Writing and Silence is a 2010 documentary film written by Georg Janett and Carmen Tartarotti and directed by Carmen Tartarotti. Foster Child is a 1987 documentary film by Gil Cardinal, exploring the filmmaker's search, at age thirty-five, for biological family. Cardinal often meets with frustration during his search, but eventually finds his natural family and discovers his Métis roots. This National Film Board of Canada production received over 10 awards, including four Golden Sheaf Awards, a Special Jury Prize at the Banff Television Festival and a Gemini Award for best direction for a documentary program. It was broadcast on CBC's Man Alive series. Wia die Zeit vergeht is a 1995 Documentary film directed by Joseph Vilsmaier and Dana Vávrová. The Decent One is a 2014 documentary film written by Vanessa Lapa and Ori Weisbrod and directed by Vanessa Lapa. Shelter Dogs is a 2003 documentary film directed and produced by Cynthia Wade about animal welfare in the United States and the ethics of animal euthanasia. Following a particular New York animal shelter and its staff over a three-year time span, Wade gives her audience a complex, honest look at the situations that arise when it comes to homeless animals and some of the difficult, controversial decisions that must be made within them In the Works is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Minze Tummescheit and Arne Hector. 1963 #1 La Boulangère de Monceau — short, not released theatrically 1963 #2 La Carrière de Suzanne — short, not released theatrically 1967 #4 La Collectionneuse 1969 #3 Ma nuit chez Maud — although planned as the third moral tale, its production was delayed due to the unavailability of actor Jean-Louis Trintignant. It was released after the fourth tale. 1970 #5 Le Genou de Claire 1972 #6 L'Amour l'après-midi 1981 La Femme de l'aviateur — "It is impossible to think about nothing." 1982 Le Beau mariage — "Can anyone refrain from building castles in Spain?" 1983 Pauline à la plage — "He who talks too much will hurt himself." 1984 Les Nuits de la pleine lune — "He who has two women loses his soul, he who has two houses loses his mind." 1986 Le Rayon vert — "Ah, for the days/that set our hearts ablaze," 1987 L'Ami de mon amie — "My friends' friends are my friends." 1990 Conte de printemps Through the remarkable eye of first-time film director Greg Reitman, we embark on an armchair adventure through time and nature in this captivating exploration of the romantic history of Santa Catalina Island, Hollywood’s private playground for the better part of a century. The audience experiences the island’s golden era beginning with William Wrigley Jr.’s acquisition of the Santa Catalina Island Company in 1919. Jeremy Clarkson takes driving lessons to new and uncharted heights. You'll learn how to stay in control when going sideways with smoke pouring off the tyres. How to stop faster than you ever thought possible. How to get in the G-zone while you're cornering. To demonstrate Jeremy uses the Lamborghini Murcielago, the new TVR Tuscan R, the Mitsubishi Evoll, the Bentley Arnage and many more "Passing Through Like Water bonds three generations of Iranian women through history and memory." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Raw Faith is a 2010 biographical documentary film directed by Wm. Peter Wiedensmith. Who's Afraid of Kathy Acker? is a 2008 film directed by Barbara Caspar. Behind the Threshold is a 1996 short documentary film written and directed by Diana Matuzeviciené and Kornelijus Matuzevicius. On Barking and Running is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Ana Irga. Wild Man Blues is a 1997 documentary film directed by Barbara Kopple, about the musical avocation of actor/director/comic Woody Allen. The film takes its name from a jazz composition sometimes attributed to Jelly Roll Morton and sometimes to Louis Armstrong and recorded by both. Allen's love of early 20th century New Orleans music is depicted through his 1996 tour of Europe with his New Orleans Jazz Band. Allen has played clarinet with this band for over 25 years. Although Allen's European tour is the film's primary focus, it was also notable as the first major public showcase for Allen's relationship with Soon-Yi Previn. What are your limits? Everyday heroes put this question to the test as they embark on an epic journey to the tropical rain forest and beaches of Costa Rica in pursuit of adventure and surf.  Meet Christiaan, Patrick and Jake – three larger-than-life personalities who triumph over their physical disabilities in life with a wheelchair view. Watch as they smash through the mental and physical barriers that come as the result of being a quadriplegic and paraplegic. These men symbolize hope to their peers as they dare to go where wheelchairs are not welcome – the ocean, the jungle and the skate park.From the US Open of Surfing in Huntington Beach, the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood, Venice Beach and Malibu to the coast of Central America you will be astonished by the bravery of these injured athletes. Enjoy a heartwarming and uplifting account of these extraordinary men, their families and the volunteers of Oceans Healing Group who fight to conquer the stereotypes of spinal cord injuries. You will be amazed at the courage and strength of Christiaan, Patrick, Jake and friends in this emotional and inspiring documentary. Handicapped? We don’t think so - the only obstacle is in the mind! Moyl: The Story of a Traveling Jewish Ritual Circumciser, is a documentary made in 2004 by Emmy Award-winning director Moti Krauthamer. It profiles David Bolnick, a man thousands of Jewish parents have trusted to make the cut that welcomes their child into the Jewish community. Twisted Sisters was a 2010 MSNBC documentary focused on professional female bodybuilding. The primary focuses of the documentary is on two International Federation of BodyBuilders pro bodybuilder Kim Buck, along with amateur bodybuilders Brenda Smith and Lauren Powers. The documentary primary focuses on Brenda Smith and her early life growing up in Louisiana, and then moving to California to become a bodybuilder. Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism is a 2004 documentary film by filmmaker Robert Greenwald that criticises the Fox News Channel, and its owner, Rupert Murdoch, claiming that the channel is used to promote and advocate right-wing views. The film says this pervasive bias contradicts the channel's claim of being "Fair and Balanced". The documentary enjoyed a limited theatrical release, was distributed in DVD format by the Political action committee MoveOn.org, and was sold online through Internet retailers such as Amazon.com, where it was a top-seller in July 2004. MoveOn.org had helped promote the DVD release by taking out a full-page advertisement in The New York Times. Following the release of Outfoxed, Greenwald and Brave New Films produced a related series of anti-Fox viral videos, collectively entitled Fox Attacks. Salmon is a 2012 a short documentary drama film directed by Alfredo Covelli. Unclaimed is a 2013 Canadian documentary film about a man who claims to be former Special Forces Green Beret Master Sgt. John Hartley Robertson, who was declared dead after being shot down over Laos on a classified mission on 20 May 1968. The documentary is written, directed, and produced by Michael Jorgensen. It follows Tom Faunce, a veteran of the Vietnam War, in tracking down the man who claimed to be Robertson. Faunce was skeptical of Robertson's identity but eventually became convinced. He convinced Jorgensen to make a documentary about Robertson's story as a way to unite the man with his American family. Leading up to the film's release, the validity of Robertson's identity was challenged by groups of Vietnam War veterans and groups that advocate the Vietnam War POW/MIA issue. Jean Robertson-Holley, Robertson's surviving sister, was convinced the man was her brother but initially declined DNA testing as unnecessary. Eventually she and her daughter Gail Metcalf expressed openness to going through with testing. The documentary was screened at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival on April 30, 2013. Einheit SPD-KPD is an East German film, directed by Kurt Maetzig. It was released in 1946. Crackheads Gone Wild is a 2006 documentary produced by Jarrod Donoman about cocaine users in Atlanta. From Award-Winning Filmmakers, Hunter Weeks and Josh Caldwell (10 MPH, 2007) comes the hilarious, offbeat, and all-encompassing portrayal of fantasy football. 10 YARDS captures the phenomenon of fantasy football in our society with specific focus on wacked-out j.fred's INTERGALACTIC CHAMPIONSHIP League, where the top prize is a box of Twinkies®. As the season progresses, filmmakers Hunter & Josh (both members of j.fred's league) travel the country interviewing a variety of diverse fantasy football leagues, NFL players, commentators, and the guys who started it all in 1963. From all women's tackle football to Mexican mariachi bands, get ready for some of the best camaraderie ever in this 90-minute fantasyland. My Mother, a War and Me is a 2014 documentary film directed by Johann Feindt and Tamara Trampe. Paradiso, an Amsterdam Stage Affair is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jeroen Berkvens. Breath of the Gods – A Journey to the Origins of Modern Yoga is a 2012 German documentary about the origins of modern Hatha yoga. Little Dieter Needs to Fly is a 1997 documentary film made for German television, written and directed by Werner Herzog, produced by Werner Herzog Filmproduktion. The film was released to DVD in 1998 by Anchor Bay. This program looks at the history of the Russian Space Program from its tremendous accomplishment of being the first to send a satellite into space, to its spiraling path downward and ultimate extinction when communism died, when the Russian economy went to pieces and the once great Soviet Union broke apart. Hans is a 2013 short documentary biographical film written and directed by Harris Cohen. The Five Elements is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Mohan Kumar Valasala. Fred is a 2014 American documentary film that chronicles the 2012 presidential campaign of the first openly gay candidate, Fred Karger. Fred premiered at the Monadnock International Film Festival on April 4, 2014. Climbing the Matterhorn is a 1947 American short documentary film directed by Irving Allen. It won an Academy Award at the 20th Academy Awards in 1948 for Best Short Subject. Five Days to Change the World is a documentary film directed by Robert Richter. Who is Harry Nilsson... is a documentary about the musician Harry Nilsson that premiered at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival in 2006. It was released to theatres and on DVD in the Fall of 2010. The Poseidon Project is a 2013 documentary film about the search for a lost British submarine called HMS Poseidon. The submarine sank after a collision off the coast of China in 1931. It was widely assumed to be still present in the Bohai Sea, 20 miles off the city of Weihai in China's Shandong Province until American author and scuba diver Steven Schwankert discovered that it had been salvaged by a Chinese salvage team in 1972. Schwankert's work and the history of the submarine and its crew is the subject of The Poseidon Project. The film was directed by British brothers Arthur Jones and Luther Jones. Two Days in April is a 2007 documentary film by director Don Argott that follows four NFL prospects through the process of preparing for and participating in the 2006 NFL Draft. The film received its name in reference to the NFL Draft Weekend, and focuses on the intense training leading up to the NFL Draft and the emotional roller coaster of draft day. Three of the players were selected within six picks of each other in the third round. Other individuals in the documentary include Bruce Allen, Tom Condon, Chuck Cook, Jon Gruden, Steve Hale, Michael Johnson, Mel Kiper, Andy Reid, Marty Schottenheimer, Dick Selcer, Rob Stone, Lionel Taylor, Travis Wilson, and Wendy Wilson. Vida Diferida is a 2013 short documentary drama film directed by Brenda Avila. Go Grandriders is a 2012 documentary and adventure family film written by and directed by Tien-Hao Hua. Reassemblage: From the Firelight to the Screen is a documentary film directed by T. Minh-ha Trinh. BEYOND POLLUTION is a firsthand investigation of the catastrophic Deepwater Horizon oil spill that devastated thousands of miles of coastline along the Gulf of Mexico. People of Honor Tioga County Pennsylvania is a 2001 documentary film directed by Gale Largey. The Big Fix is a 2011 documentary film written by Johnny O'Hara and directed by Josh Tickell and Rebecca Harrell. "On April 22, 2010 the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig run by BP sunk into the Gulf of Mexico creating the worst oil spill in history. Until the oil well was killed on September 19, 779,037,744 liters of crude oil and over 7,000,000 liters of chemical dispersant spread into the sea. By exposing the root causes of the spill filmmakers Josh and Rebecca Tickell uncover a vast network of corruption. The Big Fix is a damning indictment of a system of government led by a powerful and secretive oligarchy that puts the pursuit of profit over all other human and environmental needs." Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Cannes Film Festival site. A Reality Tour is a DVD released in 2004 of David Bowie's performance at Point Theatre in Dublin, Ireland in 2003 during the Reality Tour. The Mysterious Journey of Federico Fellini is a 2003 film directed by Maite Carpio. Ma Che Storia is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Gianfranco Pannone. Max Ernst is a 1991 documentary biographical film written and directed by Peter Schamoni. Sink or Swim is a documentary film directed by Su Friedrich. Dawn at Midnight is a feature-length documentary film, directed by Cetywa Powell. 74 (The Reconstitution of a Struggle) is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Rania Rafei and Raed Rafei. Unmistaken Child is a 2008 independent documentary film, which follows a Tibetan Buddhist monk's search for the reincarnation of his beloved teacher, the world-renowned lama Geshe Lama Konchog. The filming, which began in October 2001, spans a time frame of five and a half years. It follows the deceased lama's closest disciple — a modest young monk named Tenzin Zopa, who speaks English well — as he seeks to find the child who is his master's reincarnation. Because Tenzin is only a humble monk, he questions his ability to accurately find and recognize the reincarnation of an enlightened master. He is daunted by the difficulty of the task, for which he alone seems responsible. Following a combination of prayer, intuition, and various forms of divination, Tenzin travels to the tiny villages of the remote Tsum Valley on the Nepal–China border, and checks many families and many children. He seeks to find a young boy of the right age who responds emotionally to one of his former master's possessions. Still many questions would remain, and many tests and trials must be met before the existence of a Rinpoche — a reincarnated Tibetan master — could be confirmed. Aardvark'd: 12 Weeks with Geeks is a 2005 documentary film about the development of Fog Creek Copilot, a remote assistance software tool. Conceptualization of the film began when Fog Creek Software CEO Joel Spolsky announced on his blog that he was seeking a filmmaker to document the development of the product, then called Project Aardvark. On May 3, 2005 it was announced that Lerone D. Wilson of Boondoggle Films would direct the film, and principal photography commenced shortly afterward. The film was released November 7, 2005 on DVD, and sold over 2,500 copies within the first few days of release. Later, Aardvark'd became a launch title for Google Videos Google Video Store paid download service. It is now available on YouTube. The Front Show is a series of World War II era German military training films shown to German soldiers before being shipped off to the Eastern Front. They were directed by the veteran propagandist Fritz Hippler, best known for Der Ewige Jude. The installments in the series are: FS 11 Terrain Difficulties in the East, Winter and Spring FS 9/10 Construction of Positions FS 8 Defensive Battle in Winter FS 7 Attack by Infantry and Armor Against a Village FS 5/6 Mountains Troops Battle for a Town FS 4 Infantry on the Attack FS 3 Advance FS 2 Russian Construction of Positions FS 13 Traveling Across Ice Surfaces and Waters with Drifting Ice The Beales of Grey Gardens is a documentary film by Albert Maysles, David Maysles and Ian Markiewicz, released in 2006. This film is a follow-up to the celebrated 1975 documentary Grey Gardens about Jackie Kennedy's aunt and cousin, "Big" Edie and "Little" Edie Beale. This film is composed entirely of footage not used in the original documentary that was shot at the Beale estate in East Hampton. The Beales of Grey Gardens gives greater insight into the simultaneously contentious and loving relationship between the mother and daughter, as well as their relationship with the young caretaker, Jerry, their multitude of cats, and Lois Wright, a friend who briefly appeared in Grey Gardens at the celebration of "Big" Edie's birthday. It includes a dramatic scene of a small fire in the second floor hallway of the mansion, which explains the large hole in the wall shown in the first film. In an interview filmed on the front porch, "Little" Edie claims that a newspaper in East Hampton claimed that she was schizophrenic, which she denied, saying "No Beales are schizophrenic!" Iron Dog Volunteers Search For Drinking Water is a 2013 short documentary film that was directed by Thomas Abraham. Shoot The Sun By Lyric is a 1999 film directed by Cho Jai-Hong. Tibetan Refugee is a 2004 documentary film directed by Richard Martini. The Man in the Silk Hat is a 1983 French documentary film about the films of the French silent film star Max Linder, directed by his daughter, Maud Linder. The film was screened out of competition at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival. A slightly longer version was presented in New York City in 1988, and released by Kino International. Witness to War: Dr. Charlie Clements is a 1985 American short documentary film produced by David H. Goodman and directed by Deborah Shaffer. It won an Academy Award in 1986 for Documentary Short Subject. Glamour Gal is a 1945 propaganda film documentary film about the eponymous large artillery gun and the ten Marines who work her, "a team of eleven". World War II Behind Closed Doors: Stalin, the Nazis and the West is a 2008 6-episoded BBC/PBS documentary series on the role of Joseph Stalin and German-Soviet relations before, during, and after World War II, created by Laurence Rees and Andrew Williams. It carriers new controversial material which only became available to the public after the fall of communism from the Soviet archives, following the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Each episode last approximately one hour and features reenactments of the situations subject. Glass is a 1958 Dutch short documentary film by director and producer Bert Haanstra. The film won the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject in 1959. The film is about the glass industry in the Netherlands. It contrasts the hand made crystal from the Royal Leerdam Glass Factory with automated bottle making machines. Kukan is a documentary film by Rey Scott about the Chinese resistance to Japanese aggression during the early part of World War II. The film, subtitled The Battle Cry of China, was given an Honorary Academy Award. Considered lost for many years, an extant print was located and is in the process of being restored at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Robin Lung is producing a documentary about finding the copy, named "Finding Kukan". Brand New Day is a music documentary film directed by Amos Gitai. Super Chief: The Life and Legacy of Earl Warren is a 1989 American documentary film directed by Bill Jersey and Judith Leonard about Chief Justice Earl Warren. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The cast included Gregory Peck, Robert Bork, William Brennan, Thurgood Marshall, and Arthur Miller. Louise Bourgeois: The Spider, the Mistress and the Tangerine is a 2008 documentary film about artist and sculptor Louise Bourgeois directed by Marion Cajori and Amei Wallach and distributed by Zeitgeist Films. First Picture is a documentary film by Akram Al-Ashqar. If follows the story of a Palestinian child from Tulkarm Camp for the Palestinian refugees. Born in one of the Israeli prisons, he spent more than two and a half years there. Then, he was separated from his mother who is still remaining arrested in prison by the Israeli Authorities, the moment when the child starts an adventure of discovering the natural life under the protection of his father and family and the companions of the released prisoner mates of his mother, being still very affected by the memories of his experience in prison. Earth and the American Dream is a 1992 documentary directed by Bill Couturié. Our Nazi is a 1984 documentary film directed by Robert Kramer. Cowboy del Amor is a 2005 documentary film directed by Michèle Ohayon. The Green Rush is a 2008 documentary film written by Geoff Bunch, Casey Casseday and Ryan Wise and directed by Jason S. Edwards. Im Schatten der Weltstadt is a 1930 short documentary film directed by Albrecht Viktor Blum. Arthur Rubinstein – The Love of Life is a 1969 documentary about Polish-American pianist Arthur Rubinstein. The film won the 1969 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It was also screened at the 1969 Cannes Film Festival, but outside of the main competition. Charles Bukowski: Bukowski at Bellevue is a 1995 biography, documentary film written by Charles Bukowski. The Power of Two is a 2011 documentary film directed by Marc Smolowitz. Inspired by their 2007 memoir, “The Power Of Two” offers an intimate portrayal of the bond between half-Japanese twin sisters Anabel Stenzel and Isabel Stenzel Byrnes, their battle with the fatal genetic disease cystic fibrosis (CF) and miraculous survival through double lung transplants. Defying all odds, Ana and Isa have emerged as authors, athletes and global advocates for organ donation, and their connection to the CF and transplant communities provides rare insight into the struggles — and overlooked joys — of chronic illness. The twins’ receiving new lungs would have been unlikely in their mother’s native country, Japan, where organ donation rates are strikingly low. At the crux of a rising movement to change laws and stigmas, Ana and Isa embark on a tour of Japan to inspire change in the hearts and minds of a culture resistant to transplantation. American Herro is a biographical documentary film about Herro Mustafa, and American diplomat and senior adviser on the Middle East to Vice President Joe Biden. The documentary covers Herro's early childhood as a Kurdish-Muslim refugee from Iraq as she fled with her family from Iraqi Kurdistan while under Saddam Hussein's regime to Minot, North Dakota, as well as her academic success and successful career as a diplomat stationed in Bosnia, Turkey, Iraq, and elsewhere. The documentary features home video footage of Mustafa's family in Iraq, photography from her childhood, and modern interviews with family, coworkers, and her trip back to Iraq. I Grew Up in Princeton is an independent documentary film directed by Brad Mays, and produced by Lorenda Starfelt at LightSong Films in North Hollywood, California. The film had its festival debut at the New Jersey International Film Festival on June 14, 2014 and was followed by another screening at the Philadelphia Independent Film Festival on June 28, 2014. A Story of Children and Film is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mark Cousins. Atlantic Rhapsody is a 1989 Faroese documentary film by Katrin Ottarsdóttir. The original Faroese title is Atlantic Rhapsody - 52 myndir úr Tórshavn, where the second part means "52 pictures from Tórshavn". The film presents a day in the life of some inhabitants of Tórshavn, the capital of the Faroe Islands. The narrative is structured as a relay race, in which a person, a thing or something out of a scene brings the audience into another scene with new people and events. It is the first ever Faroese feature-length film. The Bed Is Broken is a 2013 documentary, short film directed by Raluca Racean Gorgos. Comic-Con Episode IV: A Fan's Hope is a 2011 documentary film on the San Diego Comic-Con International, directed by Morgan Spurlock. The film follows five subjects: aspiring comics artists Skip Harvey and Eric Henson; comic book dealer Chuck Rozanski, who attempts to sell a high-priced comic book; a group of costume designers led by Holly Conrad who enter the convention's cosplay competition; and fan James Darling, who plans to propose marriage to his girlfriend during one of the many events at the convention. The documentary also conducts brief interviews with comic book and Hollywood figures who share their experiences as fans and their feelings toward the event. "The life and death of Sergio Vieira de Mello, one time UN special representative in Iraq, described as 'a cross between James Bond and Bobby Kennedy'. Sergio Vieira de Mello has been described by director Greg Barker as the 'the most important guy you've never heard of'. A Brazilian diplomat, he had a 33-year career at the UN, mostly working for the High Commissioner for Refugees office in Geneva, serving time in Bangladesh, Sudan, Cyprus, Mozambique, Peru and Yugoslavia. Perceived as Kofi Annan's right-hand man, Vieira de Mello was given the often controversial job as head of the UN's Human Rights Commission in 2002, and then, in the fallout from America and Britain's military campaign in Iraq, was given the key and delicate role of the organisation's special representative there. He was killed, along with at least 20 others, when the Canal Hotel in Baghdad was bombed in 2003. Barker's revealing portrait, based on the biography Chasing the Flame by Samantha Power, presents Vieira de Mello as 'a cross between James Bond and Bobby Kennedy', a man willing to confront, and frequently charm, heads of state and war criminals, winning respect from the likes of Condoleezza Rice and Tony Blair, who both appear here. Vieira de Mello refused to let his complex private life compromise his position, and the film explores it, while also, through testimonies of eye witnesses, including the military paramedics who tried to save his life, recreating the fateful day he died." Quotimg Michael Hayden Mom and the Red Bean Cake is a documentary film. Double Headed Eagle: Hitler's Rise to Power is a 1973 documentary film written by Lutz Becker and Philippe Mora and directed by Lutz Becker. Run And Return is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Michael Thelin and Jose Luis Rios. Rosenblatt - The Final Inning is a 2011 sports documentary directed by Sue Maryott. Our Cells is a 2002 documentary film directed by Tamás Almási. Into Oblivion is a documentary history film directed by Šimon Špidla. Lewis Clark - Corps of Discovery in Missouri is a documentary film about the Lewis and Clark Expedition produced by the Missouri Department of Conservation. Dante Ferreti- Production Designer is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Gianfranco Giagni. Belo Monte: Announcement of a War is a documentary film directed by André D'Elia. Garden Roll Bounce Parking Lot is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Melissa Friedling. Special Forces: Untold Stories: Vol. 1 is a 2008 documentary film directed by Tom Naughton. "Dr. Nakamats himself is our guide as, without comment from the Danish filmmakers, he shows us his many inventions. The 81-year-old Japanese has 3,300 patents to his name, including the first floppy disk, the aphrodisiac Love Jet spray, and Dr. Nakamats's Brain Drink. He always gets his best ideas -- as he demonstrates -- underwater and "0.5 seconds before death." (He invented an underwater memo pad to make immediate note of these ideas.) A moment later, we see Nakamats bouncing past on springs intended to make jogging less strenuous. He seems remarkably sprightly for a man born in 1928, and he intends to live to the age of 144. With this in mind, he has carried out a daily examination of the effect of his meal (of which he takes a photograph) on his blood since 1971. This work received the Ig Nobel Prize in 2005, for achievements that "first make people laugh, and then make them think." Nakamats is proud of the award, just as he is of a letter from George Bush, Sr. He is also vain (he sings a song in praise of his own tenacity) and unwilling to be contradicted. Nakamats gives a severe lecture, Japanese-style, to a noncompliant staff member at the hotel where he is intending to celebrate his 80th birthday -- it is an elaborate display of great honor, respect, shame, and apologies. Nonetheless, Nakamats jokingly predicts that the filmmakers will "edit out all the good stuff and only show the weird scenes."" Quoting the synopsis form the 2009 IDFA site. Und vor mir die Sterne: Das Leben der Schlagersängerin..... is a 1997 film directed by Ulrike Franke and Michael Loeken. Les larmes de l’émigration is a 2010 documentary film directed by Alassane Diago. Pluck is a 2006 documentary film directed by Richard Atkinson and Dore Hammond. Music For Montserrat was a concert held on 15 September 1997 at the Royal Albert Hall. Musicians came together to raise funds for the Caribbean island of Montserrat after a major volcanic eruption by the Soufrière Hills volcano earlier that year left the island, including its capital of Plymouth, devastated. The concert starred musicians such as Phil Collins, Ray Cooper, Carl Perkins, Jimmy Buffett, Mark Knopfler, Sting, Elton John, Eric Clapton, Paul McCartney, Midge Ure, Arrow and many more, all of whom had once recorded at the island's famous AIR Studios. A DVD was released with the most famous songs from the concert, such as Your Song, Layla, Brothers In Arms, Blue Suede Shoes, take me home, Yesterday, Hey Jude, and Message In A Bottle. The concert was arranged and produced by George Martin; proceeds from the show and DVD were used for immediate relief and also helped fund the building of a new cultural centre in Montserrat. On its completion in 2006, George Martin gifted the centre to the islanders. For Carl Perkins, this was his last major live performance; he died just over four months later on 19 January 1998. 140 is a 2009 documentary film starring Kiele Sanchez, Kevin Sussman and Emily Schooley. One Beach is a 2011 short documentary news film written by Erin Butner and Melanie Simonich, and directed by Jason Baffa. Las Hurdes: Tierra Sin Pan, is a 27-minute-long documentary film directed by Luis Buñuel and co-produced by Buñuel and Ramon Acin. The narration was written by Buñuel, Rafael Sanchez Ventura, and Pierre Unik, with cinematography by Eli Lotar. Maori Boy Genius is a 2011 documentary, biography, drama, family film written and directed by Pietra Brettkelly. Free Angela & All Political Prisoners is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Shola Lynch. Looking for Mr. Miyagi is a biographical documentary film directed by David Liban. Breaking the Huddle: The Integration of College Football is a sports documentary on HBO. The Link and the Chain is a 1963 French documentary film about life in the Loyalty Islands, directed by Jacques Ertaud. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Natacha Atlas, la rose pop du Caire is a 2007 documentary film. Unchained Memories is a 2003 documentary film about the stories of former slaves interviewed during the 1930s as part of the Federal Writers' Project and preserved in the WPA Slave Narrative Collection. This HBO film interpretation directed by Ed Bell and Thomas Lennon is a compilation of slave narratives, narrated by actors, emulating the original conversation with the interviewer. The slave narratives may be the most accurate in terms of the everyday activities of the enslaved, serving as personal memoirs of more than two thousand former slaves. The documentary depicts the emotions of the slaves and what they endured. The "Master" had the opportunity to sell, trade, or kill the enslaved, for retribution should one slave not obey. In the Shadow of a Man is a 2012 documentary directed by Hanan Abdalla. Eurovision: Your Country Needs Blue is a documentary that aired on BBC One on 16 April 2011. It was narrated by Graham Norton. The documentary focused on Blue and how they managed to represent the UK in the 2011 Eurovision Song Contest. Archive clips from Eurovision were included and contributions came from: Cliff Richard, Lulu, John Barrowman, Aston Merrygold, Marvin Humes, Arlene Phillips, Scott Mills, Robin Gibb, David Arnold and Bucks Fizz Every Little Step is a 2008 American documentary film produced and directed by James D. Stern and Adam Del Deo. It follows the process of casting the 2006 Broadway revival of A Chorus Line and explores the history of the award-winning musical, beginning with the informal interviews with Broadway dancers conducted by Michael Bennett that served as its basis. Their personal observations and feelings were captured on audiotape, many of which are heard in this film. 3,000 dancers arrived to audition for the revival on the first day. Some of their stories are interwoven with recollections of members of the original cast, including Donna McKechnie and Baayork Lee; composer Marvin Hamlisch; and Bob Avian, who co-choreographed the original 1975 production and directed the 2006 revival The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2008 and went into theatrical release with the title Broadway Broadway in Japan the following month. It was shown at the Berlin International Film Festival, the Thessaloniki Documentary Festival, and the Sarasota Film Festival before going into limited release in the US on April 17, 2009. My Brother Hughie is a documentary film written and directed by Senara Wilson Hodges. The Places I Can Never Go Back To is a 2014 short biography documentary film written and directed by Craig Love. Santo, Santo... Nunca Fui is a 2013 documentary short film written by Juan Pablo Ocampo and Karen Galicia and directed by Juan Pablo Ocampo Funes. Jennifer Lopez: Feelin' So Good is the first long-form video by American singer Jennifer Lopez. It was released in the United States on DVD and VHS on November 7, 2000 by SMV Enterprises, the home media division of Sony's music and entertainment label. With a running time of 60 minutes, the video provides a documentary-style look at the launch of Lopez's music career, through a mixture of interviews, behind-the-scenes footage, music videos and live performances. The interview segments were conducted by Lopez's sister Lynda, who interviews not only Lopez, but also their mother, Benny Medina and Marc Anthony. Beginning her career in musical theater, Lopez re-entered the music scene upon her portrayal of the title role in the Selena biopic of the same name. The role inspired her to launch a career in music; critics deemed it risky, noting that if she was unsuccessful in doing so, it would be an embarrassment and could damage her career. Waste is a 2012 short documentary directed by Valentin Thurn. Extravíos is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Adrià Campmany Buisán. Welfare is a 1975 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. Rogalik is a 2012 short documentary film written by Ireneusz Grzyb and Pawel Ziemilski and directed by Pawel Ziemilski. Who Killed the Electric Car? is a 2006 documentary film that explores the creation, limited commercialization, and subsequent destruction of the battery electric vehicle in the United States, specifically the General Motors EV1 of the mid-1990s. The film explores the roles of automobile manufacturers, the oil industry, the US government, the California government, batteries, hydrogen vehicles, and consumers in limiting the development and adoption of this technology. After a premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, it was released theatrically by Sony Pictures Classics in June, 2006 and then on DVD by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment on November 14, 2006. During an interview with CBS News, director Chris Paine announced that he had started a new documentary about electric cars with a working title of Who Saved the Electric Car?, later renamed Revenge of the Electric Car, which had its world premiere at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival on Earth Day, April 22, 2011. Helen Keller in Her Story is an American biographical documentary about Helen Keller made in 1954. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1955. It starred Helen Keller and used extensive footage of her visits/remembrances of Dwight Eisenhower, Martha Graham and others. The film was narrated by her friend, actress Katharine Cornell, and was shot mostly in Pittsburgh. Der Aronstab is a 1985 short documentary film directed by Karlheinz Baumann. Systerskapets år is a nine-hour-long film by Åsa Elzén and Sonia Hedstrand documenting events in the feminist movement in Sweden for a period of one year: August, 2003, through the end of July, 2004. Le Mouton Noir is a Quebec documentary produced in 1992 by the National Film Board of Canada. Jacques Godbout directed and starred in the film. Its style belongs to the Quebec cinéma direct school of filmmaking. Six hundred million people on the planet live on the water or just around it. The documentary looks at these people and their particular cultures. Despite this common denominator of water, each culture has developed different solutions to the same problems. We will discover how they live, their methods of transport and what diseases they suffer from. We will travel to markets on the Mekong, through the river towns of the Amazon and to Ganvie, the Venice of Africa. The Holy Gathering is a biographical documentary film directed by Nahum Grinberg and Naamit Mor Haim. Next Year in Argentina is a 2005 documentary about diaspora Jews, who have either decided to remain in Argentina or move to Israel. Jorge Gurvich and Shlomo Slutzky, Argentine-Israeli filmmakers, travel back to Argentina—exploring questions of identity and the meaning of a homeland as they speak with friends and family who have stayed behind. ReGeneration is a 2010 American documentary film written and directed by Phillip Montgomery that looks at the issues facing today's youth and young adults, and the influences that contribute to America's current culture of apathy toward to political and social causes. Reality Shock is a 2005 documentary written and directed by Stanislaw Mucha. Martial Arts Master: The Life of Bruce Lee is a 1994 documentary film directed by Guy Scutter. Blues Highway is a 1994 American short documentary film directed by Bill Guttentag and Vince DiPersio. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Plow That Broke the Plains is a 1936 short documentary film which shows what happened to the Great Plains region of the United States and Canada when uncontrolled agricultural farming led to the Dust Bowl. It was written and directed by Pare Lorentz. The film was narrated by the American actor and baritone Thomas Hardie Chalmers. In 1999, The Plow That Broke the Plains was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Dust to Glory is a documentary about the famous Baja 1000 off-road race. Filming occurred throughout the 2003 event. The film is directed by Dana Brown of Step Into Liquid fame. The film was edited in Adobe Premiere Pro. The film score was by Nathan Furst. The Rape of Europa: The Fate of Europe's Treasures in the Third Reich and the Second World War is a book and a subsequent documentary film of somewhat related material. The book, by Lynn H. Nicholas, explores the Nazi plunder of looted art treasures from occupied countries and the consequences. It covers a range of associated activities: Nazi appropriation and storage, patriotic concealment and smuggling during World War II, discoveries by the Allies, and the extraordinary tasks of preserving, tracking and returning by the American Monuments officers and their colleagues. Nicholas was awarded the Légion d'Honneur by France. Despite the regular accounts of impending destruction of art works, Nicholas also recounts a veneration for art on the part of people of all sides of the conflict, and what amounts to desperate and sometimes heroic activity. The villains, unsurprisingly, are often the Nazis, particularly Adolf Hitler and Hermann Göring; however, the activities of Western art dealers are often questionable as well. The book is chronological starting with scattered events in the decade before World War II. Jung Sung San is one out of nine people who have escape North Korea's concentration camps and managed to flee to "safety" in Seoul. Here he organizes a controversial theatre play about his experiences as prisoner in a concentration camp called Yodok. He inspires eight other refugees to recreate the past, and together they work to develop a musical about the concentration camps.The film follows the characters through this difficult process. There are many who would like to stop them, and Jung receives several death threats. The film leads us close to the refugees, we participate in their private lives, and we listen to their dramatic stories. Their lives in Seoul are affected by financial difficulties and hostile South Koreans with a negative view on North Korea after years of propaganda. Yodok Story is their only chance to get their story told. Drowned Out is a 2002 documentary by Franny Armstrong about the Sardar Sarovar Project. Shot over three years, Drowned Out follows one family’s stand against a government dam project which is set to destroy their home and their village. In Mexico City, five real-life "social wrestlers" have capitalized on the popularity of Mexico's larger than life Lucha Libre wrestlers to fight for social justice rather than trophies. Wearing custom masks, costumes and capes like the wrestlers who inspired them, these anonymous grassroots superheroes protect their metropolis against injustice.Super Animal challenges bullfighters to leave the bulls alone and fight him instead. After a savage beating kills his boyfriend, Super Gay becomes a champion of gay rights, fighting rampant homophobia. Ecologista Universal battles environmental destruction of every kind, all on foot. Super Barrio is the defender of poor tenants, helping them resist evictions by slumlords cashing in on gentrification.With a mixture of live action, comic book-style animation and a surf guitar soundtrack inspired equally by mariachi music and Batman, Super Amigos shows that with a little imagination, a good heart and the right mask, anyone can activate their communities to triumph over evil. Play Better Hockey is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Shanti S. Verma. We Are the People We've Been Waiting For is a 2009 documentary film directed by Daryl Goodrich and produced by Caroline Rowland. It explores the education system in the UK and asks whether the current system provides young people with the opportunity to develop their talents. "It's been nearly 40 years since the Rolling Stones recorded their critically acclaimed double album Exile on Main Street. Fleeing the UK as tax exiles and taking up residence in a villa on the French Riviera rented by guitarist Keith Richards, the Stones laid to tape the music that would come to define their careers. Through extensive archival footage and the band’s own words, this great moment in rock ’n’ roll history is brought back to life with an immediacy and intimacy rarely seen. We are offered an extraordinary view into the recording of an album that, as saxophonist Bobby Keys describes it, is "about as unrehearsed as a hiccup." We see a working schedule dictated by the irregular hours kept by the group's wayward guitarist, and some tracks recorded in a single take when Richards woke and gathered up the only other people who were awake. But in the end, Richards offers what is perhaps the film’s most intimate revelation: "Mick needs to know what he's going to do tomorrow. Me, I'm just happy to wake up and see who's hanging around. Mick's rock, I'm roll."" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Silverdocs site. Race to the Bottom of the Earth is a 2011 historical documentary adventure film directed by Nancy Glass and Michele Loschiavo. Healers of the Dead Sea, produced by John Marco Allegro and Douglas Edwards, is a 30-minute CBS documentary regarding Dead Sea Scrolls and the Essenes. Allegro narrated and had begun work on the film for the BBC in 1980, under the alternative title "The Mystery of the Dead Sea Scrolls". The film charted the discovery of the scrolls, showed how they had survived and emphasized their importance, guiding the viewer around the first century landscape of Qumran. Allegro aimed to increase public interest in the discovery by letting them imagine their way around the various features, showing its orientation towards Jerusalem where the expected river of life-giving waters were assumed to have come from in some prophesied time in the future. It guided the viewer around the banquet hall, scriptorium, watercourses and baptizmal cisterns to give a feeling of reality to the times. Allegro also starts to discuss how to do Essene healing magic. My Mother's Daughter is a 2007 documentary short film directed by Saleyha Ahsan. American Alley is a 2008 documentary film directed by Dong-ryung Kim. The Sword And The Flute is a 1959 short documentary film written and directed by James Ivory. Three months before elections the president of the Republic of Belarus Alexander Lukashenko claimed: "You have no other choice, you will vote for me!" This is exactly how it happened in March 2006. We started to film in January 2006, two months before elections, and continued through the whole year. We were trying to figure out how did it happen that 83% of population voted for Lukashenko? The film tracks the opposition struggle during few post-election days. Using a lot of archive material imprinted in the course of Lukashenko's governing author draws a parallel between history and recent days. The movie shows the falsehood of the official propaganda and the ambiguous, sometimes polar, attitude of simple people. Assembling together all the debris of the opinions, comparing different historical events, jeering at dictator's arrogance and manners, admiring courage and dedication of the young generation, the feature approaches the understanding of what is really going on in the center of Europe.Authorities persecuted director Yury Khashchavatski already since his first movie on Lukashenko - "An Ordinary President" (1996). They still watch him. All production was done underground. "Enemies of the People takes a peek at "the project" of Thet Sambath, whose parents were among the approximately two million who perished under the Khmer Rouge regime in the late 1970s. In an attempt to win their trust so they will admit to their deeds on camera, Sambath now spends more time and money on the erstwhile murderers than on his wife and children. We watch as Sambath contacts the culprits and confronts them with their past; one of them even demonstrates how he cut people's throats. The filmmakers allow the horrific stories to speak for themselves, in contrast to the propaganda newscasts from back then, full of happily singing farmers. The only commentary is a recurring image of water in a rice field that flows so slowly, it is agonizing to watch. As the film progresses, it gradually reveals the scope and importance of Sambath's hard work. The biggest fish in Sambath's net turns out to be "Brother Number 2" Nuon Chea, Pol Pot's right-hand man. When he gets arrested and tried by a Cambodian court in 2007, we see a series of ghastly images of the torture chambers that were his own creation. Meanwhile, Sambath has put an end to his project so he can concentrate on his own future." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. American Jesus is a documentary film directed by Aram Garriga. Five Days in September: The Rebirth of an Orchestra is a 2005 documentary film directed by Barbara Willis Sweete. The Man Behind the Throne is a biographical music documentary film directed by Kersti Grunditz. Verbotene Zone is a 1975 film directed by Herz Frank. Spacemen is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Georg Nonnenmacher. Come Voglio Che Sia Il Mio Futuro is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Maurizio Zaccaro. Ping'an Yueqing is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Ai Weiwei. My Gift: Piolo Pascual First Time in Concert is the 2004 documentary musical film directed by Johnny Manahan. Burning is a 2012 documentary and biographical film written by Miroslav Janek and Daniela Gébová an directed by Miroslav Janek. I am 20 is a 1967 short documentary film directed by S.N.S. Sastry. A Mexican Sound is a 2013 documentary, music, and short film written and directed by Roy Germano. El árbol de España is a 1957 short documentary film written by José María Forqué, Jesus Franco, Rafael García Serrano and Luis Patac, and directed by Jesus Franco. My Grandparents Had a Hotel is a 1991 documentary film by Karen Shopsowitz that takes a nostalgic look at the Montieth Inn, a popular Jewish resort operated in the Canadian Catskills from 1935-1949. Although it is Canadian, the inn is similar to Grossinger's and the Concord Hotel in the Catskills of New York, which also saw their heyday in the mid-20th century. With playful 16mm home video footage, interviews with people who once worked and vacationed at the family-run inn, and the filmmaker's father's own memories of the family's prized hotel, the film recreates the magic of this spot while telling the history of how the phenomenon came to be, how it flourished, and, finally, why it declined. The documentary shows this unique time period through numerous vacationer's anecdotes. For example, one old man laughs at his young self, recalling the time he and his teenage friends once stirred up trouble by showing up to a formal dining hall wearing dress shirts, ties, and suit jackets — but no pants. Criminals Gone Wild is a documentary film directed and produced by Ousala "FD" Aleem through his Brooklyn-based media studio FD Entertainment. Children of the Amazon is a documentary film directed by Denise Zmekhol. Estudios para un retrato is a 1977 short documentary film written by Rafael Castanedo and Paul Leduc and directed by Paul Leduc. Basic Math: The Standard Deviants is a 1999 documentary film directed by Rob Deege. Chief! is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by Jean-Marie Téno. Semangat insan - Masters of Tradition is a 2000 documentary film written by Bernice Chauly and directed by Bernard Chauly and Yuhang Ho. My Kid Could Paint That is a 2007 documentary film by director Amir Bar-Lev. The movie follows the early artistic career of Marla Olmstead, a young girl from Binghamton, New York who gains fame first as a child prodigy painter of abstract art, and then becomes the subject of controversy concerning whether she truly completed the paintings herself or did so with her parents' assistance and/or direction. The film was bought by Sony Pictures Classics in 2007 after premiering at the Sundance Film Festival. American Fugitive: The Truth About Hassan is a film, directed by Jean-Daniel Lafond, about an exiled American political activist named Dawud Salahuddin. Belfield has confessed to assassinating a former Iranian diplomat, who supported the Shah of Iran, in 1980. Belfield unexpectedly appeared playing an exiled American political activist in the 2001 film Kandahar. Lafond then traveled to Iran to film the documentary about him. Panache is a 2007 documentary film directed by André-Line Beauparlant. Prisoners of Conscience is a 1978 documentary film directed by Anand Patwardhan. The Korean Airlines 747 shot down in 1983 is investigated using 21st century technology and science. The Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes is a 1971 American experimental film by Stan Brakhage. It was filmed on 16mm without synchronized sound in a Pittsburgh morgue. The title is based on a literal translation of the term autopsy. The film is part of Brakhage's "Pittsburgh trilogy", a trio of "documentary" films Brakhage made about the city's various institutions in 1971; the other two are Eyes, about the city police, and Deus Ex, filmed in a hospital. Writing about the film, American critic Jonathan Rosenbaum referred to The Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes as "one of the most direct confrontations with death ever recorded on film." Brakhage shot The Act of Seeing with One's Own Eyes during a visit to a morgue. The film documented highly graphic typical autopsy procedures such as the removing of organs and embalming. True to its title, The Act of Seeing With One’s Own Eyes is a study in observation and immersion. Brakhage’s films are all about the visual and this film is no exception. He can be described as a 'documentarian of subjectivity' as the film techniques he used are partly about 'giving form to his eyesight'. Unfinished Spaces is a 2011 documentary film about the revolutionary design of the National Art Schools. The film tells the dramatic story of the art schools from their founding by Fidel Castro and Che Guevara to their eventual abandonment and fall into ruin and recent efforts to restore them. The three visionary architects Ricardo Porro, Roberto Gottardi, and Vittorio Garatti are interviewed on camera. They talk about the intense atmosphere of revolutionary Cuba and how they strove to create an entirely new language of architecture, one without precedent. They also speak about why their design fell into disfavor and how the complex was mostly abandoned, uncompleted. As the film shows, parts of the schools are in ruins while other parts are used today by young dancers and artists. These schools are on the watch list of the World Monuments Fund, and efforts to restore the abandoned buildings are being explored. Unfinished Spaces was produced by Alysa Nahmias and Benjamin Murray, young filmmakers who became obsessed with the story of the schools' rise and downfall. The film received several important grants and had its World Premiere at the Los Angeles Film Festival in June 2011. U.F.O.s: Past, Present and Future is a 1974 documentary film written by Robert Emenegger. The Moo Man is a 2012 British documentary film, directed by Andy Heathcote, about an organic dairy farm in Sussex, England. The film had its premiere at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, where it is competing in the World Cinema Documentary category. The film focusses on a small dairy farm run by Steve Hook, which produces and sells raw, unpasteurised organic milk. Near Hailsham, Sussex, Longleys Farm is situated on the Pevensey Levels. The farm was started by Steve's father Phil, who is still involved in the business, and who also features in the film, along with Steve's wife and four children. The film covers Steve's struggles to keep the 55-head-herd farm afloat in the face of the power of the supermarkets, and shows his close relationship with his cows, especially Ida, a 12-year-old Friesian. The documentary was filmed over four years. The film was selected as one of the twelve competitors in the World Cinema Documentary category at the Sundance Film Festival, held in Utah, US in January 2013. "Iraq, War, Love, God & Madness is the companion documentary to Al-Daradji’s first fiction feature film, Dreams, and it records the grueling conditions under which the latter was shot in Baghdad in 2005. It provides an account of the ordeals that the director, his cast and crew had to overcome to complete the film, such as bombings, imprisonment, interrogation, and injuries. As the camera rolls, a whole world unravels; an authentic image of occupied Baghdad emerges and the struggle of the filmmakers reflects the struggle of a whole nation and its people." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Thessaloniki International Film Festival site. MILLIONS (A LOTTERY STORY) follows the lives of six different big money lottery winners to show in detail just how dramatically a life-changing experience can deeply affect ordinary people, and provides portraits of life in very different Americas. From the farms of the Midwest and the heart of the Bible belt to the hurricane riddled retirement communities of South Florida, MILLIONS documents the true stories of people as rich in personality as they are - or once were - in material wealth, and tells a poignant story of luck, loss and redemption. Dealing Dogs is a 2006 documentary film created by animal rights group Last Chance for Animals about animal welfare in the United States, specifically about the marketing and sale of dogs to veterinarian schools and research labs. The film was a 2007 Emmy Nominee for Best Cable Documentary and for Outstanding Investigative Journalism - Long Form, and won a 2007 Genesis Award for Outstanding Cable Documentary. The Roots is a documentary film directed by Kaoru Ikeya. Light Horizon is a 2012 documentary film directed by Randa Maddah. Dutch Masters in the 21st Century is a 2011 short documentary film series directed by Barbara Makkinga, Frans Weisz, Robert Oey and Rudolf van den Berg. Beauty Day is a 2011 Canadian documentary film written and directed by Jay Cheel. It features the life and work of Ralph Zavadil whose Cap'n Video series on a community cable channel consisted of outlandish stunts which resembled those seen in the later Jackass series. Zavadil also discusses aspects of his personal life, such as working at the local GM plant, and his family which were affected by his drinking problem. Types of Bakuvian Bazaars is a 1907 Azerbaijani short documentary film directed by Vasili Amaşukeli. The film shot on 35mm captures the market scene in Baku, Azerbaijan in the early twentieth century. It was produced by the Qısametralı Sənədli Filmlər and Ağ-Qara Filmlər film companies. "The spunky Queer Spawning immerses us into the Trans Francisco Gay Area’s “Gayby Boom” - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Crude Impact is a 2006 film written and directed by James Jandak Wood. It is a documentary about the effect of fossil fuels on issues such as global warming, the environmental crisis, society and the questionable practices of oil companies. Crude Impact was an official selection at over thirty film festivals around the world. The film had a limited theatrical release in the United States and Canada. It has been broadcast on television in several countries. Crude Impact has been translated into French, Spanish, Czech, Turkish and Finnish. Born This Way is a 2013 documentary and drama film directed by Shaun Kadlec and Deb Tullmann. Warlord of Kayan is a 1989 documentary film produced and directed by Jeff B. Harmon. The film tells the story of Sayed Jafar Naderi, the son of an Afghan Ismaili leader, who used to be a member of a hippie motorcycle gang in Allentown, Pennsylvania and later became a provincial governor and chief of a 12,000 man private army in Afghanistan. Sayed Jaffar returned to his native country during the Soviet war in Afghanistan in the 1980s after studying and living in the United Kingdom and the United States to become a key power broker between the Soviets, the Afghan Government and the mujahideen. The film won the Golden Gate Award at the San Francisco International Film Festival. It was a Duce Films International Ltd. Production for Channel 4. The film is part of Harmon's "Afghan Trilogy", which also included the documentaries Jihad and Afgan. Pirate for the Sea is a 2008 documentary written by Ron Colby and directed by Ronald Colby. The Motocross of Nations is the oldest, most prestigious race in the sport's organized history. Created shortly after the dark storm clouds of WWII, this great event has pitted nation against nation on a single Sunday afternoon since 1947. Each nation battling for national pride and the coveted Peter Chamberlain Trophy. On Sunday, September 23, 2007, the 60th annual Motocross of Nations took place in Budds Creek, Maryland. Only the second time this storied event had been held in the USA. With over 40,000 fans from all over the globe converging on the circuit to see if Team USA could beat back the world and win the race on their home soil. The producers of the "The Great Outdoors" series were present to capture and record it all. They were granted unprecedented access by the event organizers, giving you the most up-close images imaginable. "Motocross of Nations: 60 Years and a Day" is packed with race action and countless interviews with this sport's greatest heroes. Watch and listen to commentary from greats such as DeCoster, Everts, Smets, Emig and more. Listen in on Ricky Carmichael as he runs the last race of his career. Witness young Ryan Villopoto put on a performance that will be talked about for generations. Go behind the lines with Team Belgium, France, South Africa, and others as these great nations try to win the most storied race on earth. Witness new World Champion Antonio Cairoli's struggle with heat, humidity and the American way of motocross life. This is an epic film that offers up the drama, pageantry and patriotism that is the legendary Motocross of Nations. Iran Is My Home is a 2003 documentary film written by Arash Ayrom and directed by David Diaan. The Einstein Theory of Relativity is a silent film directed by Max and Dave Fleischer and released by Fleischer Studios. In August 1922, Scientific American published an article explaining their position that a silent film would be unsuccessful in presenting Albert Einstein's theory of relativity to the general public. They argued that only as part of a broader educational package including lecture and text would such a film be successful. Scientific American then went on to review frames from an unnamed German film reported to be financially successful. Six months later, on February 11, 1923, the Fleischers released their relativity film, produced in collaboration with popular science journalist Garrett P. Serviss to accompany his book on the same topic. Two versions of the Fleischer film are reported to exist - a shorter two-reel edit intended for general theater audiences, and a longer five-reel version intended for educational use. The Fleischers lifted footage from the German predecessor, Die Grundlagen der Einsteinschen Relativitäts-Theorie, directed by Hanns-Walter Kornblum, for inclusion into their film. Presented here are images from the Fleischer film and German film. The Refugees of Shangri-La is a 2013 documentary film directed by Doria Bramante and Markus Weinfurter. The Last of the unjust is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Claude Lanzmann. The Execution of Wanda Jean is a 2002 documentary film directed by Liz Garbus. Letter to Myself is a 2007 film directed by Beth Miller. Drifters is silent documentary film by John Grierson, his first and only personal film. It tells the story of Britain's North Sea herring fishery. The film's style has been described as being a "response to avant-garde, Modernist films, adopting formal techniques such as montage – constructive editing emphasising the rhythmic juxtaposition of images – but also aimed to make a socially directed commentary on its subject". The film was successful both critically and commercially and helped kick off Grierson's documentary film movement. This film also showed that Grierson was not afraid to alter reality slightly in order to have his vision shown. For example when the boat he was on returned without a catch he bought another boats catch and tried to fake it. He ended up scrapping that film as it was not authentic enough. Gaza Ghetto: Portrait of a Family, 1948 – 1984 is a documentary film about the life of a Palestinian family living in the Jabalia refugee camp. The film, created by Joan Mandell, Pea Holmquist, and Pierre Bjorklund in 1984 is believed to be the first documentary ever made in Gaza. The film features Ariel Sharon, Binyamin Ben-Eliezer and soldiers on patrol "candidly discuss[ing] their responsibilities." In his book, An Accented Cinema: Exilic and Diasporic Filmmaking, Hamid Naficy describes the film as an "early important film" on the Palestinian refugee situation. The film follows a refugee family from the Gaza Strip who visit the site of their former village, now a Jewish town in Israel. As the grandfather and great-grandfather point out an orchard and sycamore fig that belonged to Muhammed Ayyub and Uncle Khalil, an Israeli resident appears and tells them to leave, claiming they need a permit to be there. The mother tells him that, "We work in Jaffa and Tel Aviv and that's not forbidden," to which he replies, "Here it's forbidden." The Devil at Your Heels is a 1981 documentary that chronicles the attempt of the stuntman and daredevil Ken Carter to jump a rocket-powered car over the Saint Lawrence River, a distance of one mile, which would break all existing records for jumping cars. The documentary opens with some quick framing of the task, including footage of the ramp and the car to be used for the jump, and then chronicles how Carter became a daredevil, including footage of some early jumps. It then follows the ups and downs he experienced in his five-year journey to jump the river. He has a series of financial and technical obstacles. Technical problems include difficulties with the car and the ramp he was planning to jump off. The financial problems are simpler; he kept running out of money and his backers were unhappy. In the fifth year, everything was ready, but two attempts were called off — one because of a short strike by the ground crew, and one because of weather. The backers, desperate to finish, believed that Carter had lost his nerve and called him to a meeting in another city, and then brought in another driver, Kenny Powers, to attempt the jump. Asesinato en febrero is a 2001 documentary film written by Elías Querejeta and directed by Eterio Ortega. Playboy Video Playmate Calendar 1988 is a documentary film directed by Stephen C. Confer, David Kellogg and Arnold Milo. La langue à terre is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jean-Pierre Roy and Michel Breton. The Convict Patient is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Alejandro Solar Luna. The Voice Of Berlinguer is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mario Sesti and Teho Teardo. De nye sjove is a 1997 Danish documentary film written and directed by Peter Bay. Flamenco, A Way Of Life is a 2010 documentary film directed and written by Marcos de Aguilar. Casting is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Koen Suidgeest. Here Comes the Wolf: The Pandemic Hoax is an upcoming documentary film directed by J.J. Rendon which investigates the 2009 flu pandemic and the events leading up to it. The documentary examines how public opinion can be manipulated by larger organizations through the use of fear. The Savage Voyage is a 1971 documentary film written and directed by Eric Marquis. Track Two is a 1982 film directed by Harry Sutherland. Hanasaari A is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Hannes Vartiainen and Pekka Veikkolainen. Blue Vinyl is a 2002 documentary film directed by Daniel B. Gold and Judith Helfand. With a lighthearted tone, the film follows one woman's quest for an environmentally sound cladding for her parents' house in Merrick, Long Island, New York. It also investigates the many negative health effects of polyvinyl chloride in its production, use and disposal, focusing on the communities of Lake Charles and Mossville, Louisiana, and Venice, Italy. Filming for Blue Vinyl began in 1994. Blue Vinyl teamed up with Working Films to create the My House is Your House Campaign to turn the film into an organizing tool by increasing deliberate consumer advocacy and influencing industry change. The film received scrutiny when the DVD was released with portions missing from the original broadcast. Lori Sanzone, a woman diagnosed with angiosarcoma of liver, a type of cancer associated with vinyl exposure, had her diagnosis changed to a different disease. Also, after an out-of-court settlement, an Italian court ended a talked about in Blue Vinyl. Ramin is a 2011 Lithuanian documentary film directed by Audrius Stonys about the Georgian wrestler Ramin Lomsadze, who once won seven matches in 55 seconds. The film was selected as the Lithuanian entry for the Best Foreign Language Oscar at the 85th Academy Awards, but it did not make the final shortlist. Marmadrid is a 2002 short film written and directed by Rafael Rodríguez Tranche. Africa: The Beat is a 2011 docudrama film written and directed by Samaki Wanne. Twinset is a 2010 short documentary and family film directed by Amy Rose. Sunrise / Sunset is a 2008 film written and directed by Vitali Mansky. La Caravana del manuscrito andalusí is a 2007 documentary film directed by Lidia Peralta García. The Murder Workers is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jessica Versluys. "Saving the Boom tells the story of how the gay community of Laguna Beach was galvanised when a sixty year old gay bar was threatened with closure. Its attached memorial garden and the social space for gay life are both under threat." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival site. Nach dem spiel is a 1997 film directed by Aysun Bademsoy. Carl Th. Dreyer: My Metier is a 1995 Danish documentary film directed by Torben Skjødt Jensen, about the film career of Carl Theodor Dreyer. Speed: In Search of Lost Time is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Florian Opitz. Be Known is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Dwayne Johnson-Cochran. Off Castro is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Kay O. Anderson, Rudy Lona and Ashmita Nair. The Identity Theft Of Mitch Mustain is a 2013 film directed by Matthew Wolfe. Jeevan Smriti is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Rituparno Ghosh. Viola Chilensis is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Luis R. Vera. Sunflower Seeds is a 2013 short, documentary, drama film written and directed by Antonis Tolakis. Iraq War Veterans: Soldiers into Students is a film directed by Douglas Foote, Marissa Maren and Louis Marshall. Poison Dust is an American documentary film starring Ramsey Clark, Juan Gonzalez, Rosalie Bertell, Helen Caldicott, Michio Kaku and directed by Sue Harris. NWF Kids Pro Wrestling: The Untold Story is a professional wrestling documentary that tells the story of a youth based professional wrestling league that existed in the mid-1980s. It was released in the USA by NWF Films. Speed Sailors is a 1976 documentary short film directed by John Spencer. Mozart Decoded is a 2008 documentary about the life of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart produced by Sullivan Entertainment. The film was made as a follow up to Sullivan Entertainment’s Magic Flute Diaries and uses a lot of the same visual material. The program premiered on December 20, 2008 on A-Channel in Canada. The Age of Stupid is a 2009 British film by Franny Armstrong, director of McLibel and Drowned Out, and founder of 10:10, and first-time producer Lizzie Gillett. The Executive Producer is John Battsek, producer of One Day in September. The film is a drama-documentary-animation hybrid which stars Pete Postlethwaite as a man living alone in the devastated world of 2055, watching archive footage from the mid-to-late 2000s and asking "Why didn't we stop climate change when we had the chance?" The makers of The Age of Stupid were among the first to use the crowdfunding model and pioneered a new distribution system, Indie Screenings, which allows anyone, anywhere, to hold a screening of the film and keep the profits for themselves. A Test of Violence is a 1969 BAFTA nominated British short film directed by Stuart Cooper. Stuart Cooper's short about the work of Spanish artist Juan Genovés is an inspired introduction to the works of this extraordinary artist, exploring its minimalist aesthetic and storytelling qualities through a variety of cinematic techniques, including rostrum, animation, news footage and live action recreations. The film went on to win awards at the Berlin, Cork, Edinburgh and Melbourne film festivals. Classic Game Room: The Rise and Fall of the Internet's Greatest Video Game Review Show is a 2007 comedy documentary film directed by Mark Bussler. Crazy Wisdom: The Life & Times of Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche is a 2011 documentary film and directed by Johanna Demetrakas. Starring Adam West is a biographical documentary film directed by James E. Tooley. Love Shines is a documentary film about Canadian songwriter Ron Sexsmith by filmmaker Douglas Arrowsmith. The film is produced by Paperny Entertainment and commissioned by The Movie Network and Movie Central with funding from Astral Media's Harold Greenberg Fund and the Rogers Documentary Fund. It was nominated for three Canadian Screen Awards in 2013 for Best Performing Arts Program or Series or Arts Documentary Program or Series, Best Direction in a Performing Arts Program or Series, and Best Picture Editing in a Documentary Program or Series. By the People: The Election of Barack Obama is a 2009 documentary film produced by Edward Norton broadcast in November 2009 on HBO, which follows Barack Obama and various members of his campaign team, including David Axelrod, through the two years leading up to the United States presidential election on November 4, 2008. Proceeds from the sale of the soundtrack of this film went to United Way and Enterprise Community Partners. Both organizations will put the funds toward rebuilding efforts in the Gulf Coast region. In Theaters is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Fernanda Teixeira. Eiskalte Pracht - Auf Patagoniens gefährdeten Gletschern is a 2006 documentary film directed by Thomas Hoepker and Christine Kruchen. Pintubi Revisit Yaru Yaru is a 1972 documentary film directed by Roger Sandall. In September 2009, documentary filmmaker Peter Gilbert joined more than 40 observers - including musicians Laurie Anderson, Jarvis Cocker, Robyn Hitchcock, Ryuichi Sakamoto and writer Suzan-Lori Parks - on an ice-breaking ship for a nine-day voyage off the coast of Greenland with artist-led climate change project, Cape Farewell.Their goal was to see, experience and contemplate the effects of climate change first-hand - and to begin a creative conversation with the rest of the world about one of the most important and pressing issues facing the future of humanity. Im Zauber der Kordilleren is a 1956 documentary film directed by Martin Schließler. Dejalo ser is a 1993 short documentary film written by Jaime Pontones and Ricardo Pérez Monfort, and directed by Busi Cortés. Allentsteig is a 2010 documentary film directed by Nikolaus Geyrhalter. "A film portrait of the Allentsteig military training area, the last blank spot on the Austrian map. The Nazis evacuated 42 villages - driving more than 7,000 people from their homes - to set it up in 1938. Allied occupying forces and the Austrian state continued to use the facility after the Second World War. Director Nikolaus Geyrhalter observes the military exercises carried out there - everything from small arms training to huge tank maneuvers - without comment but with a keen eye for humorous details. He also highlights other aspects of Allentsteig, such as the way the residents of the adjoining village of the same name live happily alongside the soldiers, so long as no shells land nearby. And we accompany a group of now-elderly evicted residents on a visit to their birthplace. The film also contrasts the tightly organized military operations with the way the natural environment is left to its own devices on this piece of land. While it is true that 80% of the terrain could contain unexploded shells and that the animal population grows up to the sound of gunfire, on the Allentsteig nature reserve, flora and fauna are undisturbed by everyday human activity, electricity pylons or construction work. There, nature is gradually eradicating human influences from the landscape" Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site. As an extension of the Up series, 21 Up Japan follows thirteen children living in different parts of Japan by visiting them every seven years. In the third production of the "Up Japan" series they are asked to talk about their lives, families and future as on the previous two visits. Their circumstances are vastly different from each other. Some live in politically sensitive areas like Eri and Maki in Okinawa near a US military base, Sanae near the disputed Kuril Islands, while others like Yoshio and Mitsukatsu live with two different ancestral cultures in a strongly homogeneous country. Some still live with their parents, while others live independent of their family, by or not by choice. Mugaritz BSO is a 2011 documentary film directed by Felipe Ugarte and Juantxo Sardon. First Dance is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jeong So-hee. A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon is a 2001 film written, produced and directed by Nashville-based filmmaker Bart Sibrel. Sibrel is a critic of the Apollo program and proponent of the conspiracy theory that the six Apollo Moon landing missions between 1969 and 1972 were elaborate hoaxes perpetrated by the United States government, including NASA. Sibrel presents assertions of an alleged hoax, including: Supposed photographic anomalies, disasters such as the destruction of Apollo 1 in which crew members Roger Chaffee, Virgil "Gus" Grissom and Edward White died, technical difficulties experienced in the 1950s and 1960s, and the problems of traversing the Van Allen radiation belts. Sibrel proposes that the most condemning evidence is a piece of footage that was inadvertently sent to him by NASA when requesting photographs and video of the Apollo 11 mission. Sibrel believes that the footage shows Apollo astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins attempting to create the illusion that they were 130,000 miles from Earth when, he claims, they were only in a low Earth orbit. Sibrel views this clip as "smoking gun" proof that the Moon landings were staged. Eco de la montana is 2014 biographical documentary film written and directed by Nicolás Echevarría. Do You Remember Laurie Zimmer? is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by French filmmaker Charlotte Szlovak. It was released in France under the alternate titles, Laura, disparue, recherchée and Qui se souvient de Laurie Zimmer? Does Humor Belong in Music? is a one-hour Frank Zappa concert video composed of live performances at The Pier in New York City along with a few interview segments. It was released on VHS by MPI Home Video in 1985 and reissued on DVD in 2003 by EMI. The video has no recorded material in common with the album of the same name, but some of the tracks were released on Volumes One, Three and Six of the You Can't Do That On Stage Anymore series. A laserdisc version was also released in Japan, complete with Japanese subtitles for all spoken and sung material and featuring a slightly different audio mix than the VHS and DVD versions. This laserdisc version was available as a bootleg DVD from both the "Digital Underground" label and the "Room 101" bootleg label, released a year or so before the official EMI DVD. Natural Life is a 2013 documentary film directed by Tirtza Even . The Boys of Buchenwald is a 2002 documentary film produced by Paperny Films that examines how the child survivors of the Buchenwald concentration camp had to assimilate themselves back into normal society after having experienced the brutality of the Holocaust. The documentary features interviews with the survivors, including Elie Wiesel. Bosteri Beneath the Wheel is a 2013 short documentary adventure film written by and directed by Levin Hübner. Wall to Wall is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Patric Jean. Möglichkeitsraum IV - Access : Diamond, Enter, Fin... Archival Viewing Acts is a 2012 documentary film directed by Constanze Ruhm and Angela Melitopoulos. Democratic Locations (German Version) is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Thomas Kutschker. First Person Singular: I.M. Pei is a 1997 documentary film directed by Peter Rosen. Jochen: A Golzower from Philadelphia is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Barbara Junge and Winfried Junge. Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll is a 1991 American film directed by John McNaughton. St Kilda, Britain's Loneliest Isle is a short, silent film about St Kilda and the final period of its habitation. In the 1920s, the steamship company running a service between Glasgow and St Kilda commissioned the 18 minute silent movie, directed by Paul Robello and Bobbie Mann. It was released in 1928 and shows some scenes in the lives of the island’s inhabitants. In May 2010, the film was inscribed in UNESCO's UK Memory of the World Register. Red Lines is a 2014 documentary drama film written and directed by Andrea Kalin and Oliver Lukacs. My Dreamhack is a documentary film by Abbi Moreno. A Balkan Journey: Fragments From the Other Side of War is a 1996 short documentary film directed by Brenda Longfellow. Bridging the Gap is a 2008 documentary and action film directed by Katja Draaijer and Corinne van Egeraat. Rabbi Firer: A Reason to Question is a 2008 documentary film. Ringbalin Breaking the Drought is a 2013 documentary film written by Ben Pederick and Jocelyn Pederick and directed by Ben Pederick. Gracious Curves is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Kiti Luostarinen. Creativity in Context is a 2008 documentary and short film directed by Cheryl Slean. Solovki Power is a 1988 documentary film written by Dmitri Chukovsky, Marina Goldovskaya and Viktor Listov and directed by Marina Goldovskaya. Monte's Baggage Men is a 2013 documentary film written by Nilton Ferreira, Júlio Lucena, and Cassio Santos and directed by Cassio Santos and Julio Lucena. Sou is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Tatsuto Kimura. 100% NYC: Tribeca Film Festival is a 2003 documentary film directed by Liz Patrick. Store Wars: When Wal-Mart Comes to Town is a 2001 documentary film directed by Micha X. Peled. De brug is a 1928 Dutch documentary short film directed by Joris Ivens. This silent film explores the then-newly constructed Rotterdam vertical-lift railroad bridge: its structure, mechanisms, complex actions, and the steam-powered trains and ships making use of it. Every Tuesday: A Portrait of The New Yorker Cartoonists is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Rachel Gordon Loube. "Don Letts - DJ, filmmaker, Clash videographer, and member of Big Audio Dynamite - is an unsung hero of British music. Superstonic Sound: The Rebel Dread is a documentary about Letts' family legacy, which mirrors the history of bass in the UK from Dub, Reggae and Punk to 80s pop, Hip Hop and Dubstep - a musical, cultural and personal link between past and present. Over his long film career, Letts has told the story of countless lives, and now this film spotlights his own history. " Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. Minustah Steals Goats is a 2010 documentary film directed by Rachel Smith. Happy 100th Birthday, Hollywood is a 1987 documentary film written by William Moritz and Hildy Parks, directed by Jeff Margolis. Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang is a 1980 political documentary film produced and directed by Jack Willis and Saul Landau, written by Jack Willis and Penny Bernstein, narrated by Penny Bernstein with cinematography by Zack Krieger and Haskell Wexler. The focus of the film is the government cover-up of the health hazards related to the 1950s atomic bomb testing in Nevada. Paul Jacobs, a journalist, activist and co-founder of the magazine Mother Jones, investigated the results of the tests on unknowing civilians and soldiers used as guinea pigs. Jacobs died of lung cancer before the film was completed; his doctors believed he contracted cancer as a result of radiation exposure. The film was shown on PBS in the United States and widely distributed on television and theatrically in Europe. It was censored by Swedish Television during the time of a referendum on nuclear energy in Sweden. The film won an Emmy Award, George Polk Award for investigative journalism on TV, Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Award, and Best Documentary at the Mannheim Film Festival. Four Men In Prison is a 1950 British documentary film about prison conditions directed by Max Anderson. It was commissioned for the purpose of educating people involved in criminal justice. The film was criticized for being inaccurate and sensational, and was quickly withdrawn. Writing with Light: Vittorio Storaro is a 1992 documentary film directed by David Thompson. Pablo of Medellin is a 2007 documentary drama film written by Carlos J. Betancur and Guillermo Zafra and directed by Jorge Granier. Fujica Single-Date is a film directed by Kenji Murakami. Fool Cool Rock! One Ok Rock Documentary Film is a documentary film directed by Hiroyuki Nakano. Recollections is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Nathanael Carton. 24 x 24: Wide Open with Jeff Gordon is a 2007 documentary television film about the life of NASCAR driver Jeff Gordon. The film explores his life both on and off the track, and gives viewers a glimpse of Gordon the driver, the family man, the adventurer, the entrepreneur, and the philanthropist. The film is hosted by actor and racing driver Patrick Dempsey, and features interviews from other personalities in sports and entertainment. The documentary aired on the television network TNT twice before and after the airing of the 2007 Pepsi 400 held on July 7. The DVD, which includes an additional 30 minutes of footage not shown on the television broadcast, along with behind the scenes footage and deleted scenes, was released on July 10. Jerusalem's Old City is a tiny enclave where some of history's greatest dramas have been enacted. Busy and colorful, it is the fountainhead of three major religions, the site of many of the world's most venerated shrines, and home to 26,000 people of profoundly different cultures who live side by side in a fragile peace. Jerusalem: Within These Walls offers a kaleidoscopic view of the city and its people as they are today-the remarkable outcome of 3,000 years of history, hope, and faith. One Last Time Live in Concert is a home video documenting one of singer Tina Turner's final Wembley Stadium concert stops on her Twenty Four Seven Tour. The DVD was released nationally in 2001, a year after the tour, which was the highest-grossing tour of 2000, ended. The DVD was certified platinum by the RIAA and in the UK. What does the world think of The United States of America? This controversial question led to a global quest for four Americans, whose thought-provoking journey through fourteen countries is documented in the "The Listening Project." Emotional encounters with dozens of diverse and fascinating characters on all continents reveal the breadth of U.S. impact on ordinary people's lives around the world. The result is an emotional and inspiring examination of crumbling empires, human fellowship and the meaning of citizenship in a globalized world. We Came Home is a 2012 documentary/biographical/war/music film directed by Ariana Delawari. Zone is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jurga Naraškevičiūtė. John Peel's Record Box is a documentary film made by Elaine Shepherd, released on 14 November 2005 on Channel 4. It was nominated for Primetime Emmy Award. It is about a small private collection of the British radio DJ John Peel who died in 2004 at the age of 65. His archive contained more than 100,000 vinyl records and CDs. This collection contains 143 singles - some of them doublettes - stored in a private wooden box representing some of his own favourites. According to the documentary, there are no singles by Peel's favorite group, The Fall, because he kept them in an entirely separate box. The film features interviews with John's wife Sheila Ravenscroft, radio DJs and artists like Mary Anne Hobbs, Sir Elton John, Ronnie Wood, Roger Daltrey, Fergal Sharkey, Jack White, Michael Palin and Miki Berenyi. Highway Gospel is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jaret Belliveau. I Am My Own Woman is a 1992 German film directed by Rosa von Praunheim. The film, a documentary-drama, follows the life story of Charlotte von Mahlsdorf, an East German transsexual who survived the Nazis; the repression of the Communists and helped start the German gay liberation movement. The film is based on Mahlsdorf's autobiography: Ich bin meine eigene Frau, published in 1992, published in English as I Am My Own Woman and I Am My Own Wife. Atenco... Two Years After is a 2008 documentary film directed by Juan E. García. The Final Inch is a short documentary about the effort to eradicate polio. It was directed by Irene Taylor Brodsky and focuses on health workers who are on the front lines of the fight to eliminate the disease. It was filmed on location in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India, and received a nomination for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject at the 81st Academy Awards. The film debuted on HBO on April 1, 2009. The Final Inch is the first film project of Google.org, the philanthropic division of Google. This is Cinerama is a 1952 full-length film designed to introduce the widescreen process Cinerama, which broadens the aspect ratio so the viewer's peripheral vision is involved. This is Cinerama premiered on 30 September 1952 at the New York Broadway theatre, in New York City. Wariazone is a documentary film directed by Kiwa and Terje Toomistu. Haru - The Island Of The Solitary is a documentary and short TV movie directed by Kanerva Cederström and Riikka Tanner. Armenia, The Magic Of Writes is a 2013 documentary film written by Claude Mutafian and directed by Arto Pehlivanian. Film was produced in 2011. "In a world plagued by stolen elections, secret government agendas, and a renewed interest in the exploitation of African natural resources, what value does democracy offer, particularly in the tumultuous region of West Africa? For Ghana, a nation that has been Africa’s barometer of political stability, democracy may mean the difference between peace and prosperity—and murderous chaos under military coup. An African Election is a remarkable documentary that grants viewers unprecedented access to the anatomy of Ghana’s 2008 presidential elections. Capturing the intrigue of electioneering, the intensity of the vote-counting process, and the mood of the countrymen whose fate lies precariously in the balance, director Jarreth Merz’s coverage unfolds with all the tension of a political thriller, revealing the emotions, passions, and ethical decisions that both threaten—and maintain—the integrity of the democratic process. An African Election illuminates a beacon of hope for Africa and for the value and vitality of democracy today." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site Blood Sweat and Glitter is a 2005 documentary film directed by Sasha Aickin. Amplified Seattle is a 2010 documentary film directed by John Jeffcoat. The Making of a New Empire is a 95 minute documentary film by film director Jos de Putter and produced by Jura Films. The film portrays Khozh-Ahmed Noukhaev as the founder of a Moscow-based underground movement, which later became known as the Chechen mafia. The film explores Noukhaev's cultural background and his ideas about Chechenya's future. After its release in 1999, the film was nominated for the Golden Calf for best long documentary and was selected for the competition programs of several leading documentary film festivals across the globe, including Hot Docs and IDFA. The Wonder of It All is a 2007 documentary directed by Jeffrey Roth and distributed by Indican Pictures. It is composed of first-person interviews with six of the Apollo astronauts who walked on the moon. The astronauts explain their backgrounds, their moon missions, and how walking on the moon changed their lives. This is a documentary that examines the subject of Haterology: the study of envy and jealously. A "hater" is a term used in the urban community to describe someone that is extremely jealous of someone and their possessions. Haterology 101 is the Winner of the Silver Remi Award at WorldFest-the Houston International Film & Video Festival 2011. Loyalties is a 1999 Canadian documentary film directed by Lesley Ann Patten about two women—one white, one black—who discover that they are related due to the legacy of slavery in the United States. In 1995, Dr. Ruth Whitehead of the Nova Scotia Museum of Natural History in Halifax met Black Canadian graduate student Carmelita Robertson, who happened to mention that her relatives came to Nova Scotia from South Carolina as Black Loyalists in the late 18th century. Whitehead, whose own family also came from South Carolina, realized that she recognized some of the names of Robertson's ancestors, and together the two women journey to Charleston, South Carolina to explore their shared past. The film also exposes strains in the personal relationship between the two women, with Whitehead descended from wealthy slave owners, and Robertson the descendant of their slaves. Loyalties is co-produced by the National Film Board of Canada and ZIJI Film & Television Productions. The Staircase II: The Last Chance is a 2013 film written and directed by Jean-Xavier de Lestrade. Wyoming Triumph is a 2011 documentary/action/adventure/sport film written by Chris Kitchen and directed by Chris Kitchen and Sam Pope. World Traveller Adventures is a collection of four movies featuring the adventures of new age rave travellers - Spiral Tribe, Desert Storm, Sound Conspiracy, Teknokrates, Tomahawk and IOT. Including "23 Minute Warning", "Storming Sarajevo", "Mission to India", "Africa Expedisound", and bonus: "Reclaim the Streets". The DVD was released by Uncivilized World studio in October 2005. In line with this project, a new journey was made in 2006 named "Mongolian Expedisound", the new goal was to reach Ulaanbaatar, capital of Mongolia to help and entertain the inhabitants of the city. Those modern nomads set off from France across Europe, Russia, Siberia to Mongolia. "Indonesia Expedisound" was shared experiences of TetAar Wednesday and Cyberskum in 2005, who made several trips to Bali and seven largest islands of this archipelago. Another part of the serie called "China Expedisound" was released by IOT Records in September 2012. P4W: Prison For Women is a 1981 documentary film written and directed by Holly Dale and Janis Cole. Another World is a 2014 documentary, biographical, and drama film written by Mark Monroe and directed by Rebecca Chaiklin and Fisher Stevens. The Longest Hatred is a 1993 documentary crime war film directed by Rex Bloomstein. Black October is a 2000 documentary film written, directed and narrated by Terence McKenna and produced by Stephen Phizicky for CBC television on the October Crisis in Canada which aired in October 2000. It focuses on the autumn of 1970, following the kidnapping of British Trade Commissioner James Cross and Quebec Minister of Labour Pierre Laporte by the Front de libération du Québec in October. The War Measures Act was declared by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau a day before it was discovered Laporte was executed. The film includes interviews with Pierre Trudeau, his then Principal Secretary Marc Lalonde, Quebec Minister of Justice Jerome Choquette, then British Trade Commissioner James Cross, and former Le Devoir Editor Claude Ryan who became a key participant in the crisis. 80000 Shots is a German film directed by Manfred Walther. It was released in 2002 and had its premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival. 12 Tangos: Adios Buenos Aires is a German documentary film from the director and producer Arne Birkenstock, filmed in 2004 in the Argentinean capital Buenos Aires. The film music was arranged and composed by the guitarist and composer Luis Borda who gathered the most important Argentinean Tango musicians for the produccion of this movie. The movie was produced by the Cologne production companies Fruitmarket Kultur und Medien and Tradewind Picturesin colobaration with ZDF and ARTE. The development of the script was aided by the European Media-Programm. The movie was released by the Kinostar GmbH and sold worldwide by Medialuna Entertainment. As co-producers Dr. Peter Bach und Hans Georg Haakshorst supported its production. Fleetwood Mac: The Dance is a 1997 music documentary directed by Bruce Gowers. The Real Inglorious Bastards is a documentary film directed by Min Sook Lee. Der letzte Dreck is a 1958 documentary short film directed by Ulrich Wiedmann. A Brief History of John Baldessari is a 2012 documentary short film written by Gabriel Nussbaum, directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman. Stronger Since The War is a 1964 film directed by Brett Porter. Videograms of a Revolution is a 1992 documentary film compiled by Harun Farocki and Andrei Ujică from over 125 hours of amateur footage, news footage, and excerpts from the Bucharest TV studio overtaken by demonstrators as part of the December 1989 Romanian Revolution. In 2004 the Austrian Film Archive selected the documentary as part of its Die Utopie Film program for The Best 100 in Film History list. Fighting Fear is a 2011 Australian documentary film about professional surfing. In 2013, the film was honored by the Australian Film Institute with two Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts Awards, specifically for Best Cinematography in a Documentary and Best Direction in a Documentary. The film stars Richie Vaculik and Mark Matthews. It was filmed in and around Sydney, Australia, primarily in the South-Eastern Sydney suburbs. The Virgin Diaries is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Jessica Woodworth. Neither Allah, Nor Master! is a 2011 documentary film directed by Nadia El Fani. Looking for Gay Bollywood is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Nasha Gagnebin. No One But Me is a 2012 documentary film about Scottish jazz musician Annie Ross, directed by Brian Ross and produced by Gill Parry. Filmed over three years, the film focuses upon Ross' musical career, struggles with heroin addiction, and her relationships with both her family and contemporaries, Billie Holiday and Lenny Bruce. Regarding the film, Ross noted, "It's very blunt, it's very truthful. [...] It makes me a bit nervous, but one thing about the film – it’s honest." The film features contributions from musicians, Jon Hendricks, Peter King, James Wormworth, Tony Kinsey and Warren Vache. Chasing the Acids is the 2006 documentary film. Absolute Wilson is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Katharina Otto-Bernstein. Norway in Revolt is a 1941 American short documentary film that was an episode in the newsreel series The March of Time. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. In the Name of the Führer is a 1978 documentary film written by Frans Buyens and directed by Lydia Chagoll. Alive in the Deep is a 1941 American short documentary film directed by Stacy Woodard and Horace Woodard. It was nominated for an Academy Award at the 14th Academy Awards for Best Short Subject. Shadow Maker: Gwendolyn MacEwen, Poet is a 1998 documentary short film directed by Brenda Longfellow. De Droomfabriek is a 2007 Dutch documentary produced and directed by Netty van Hoorn about the students at the Havo voor Muziek en Dans in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. It was broadcast by Nederlandse Programma Stichting on the TV program Het Uur van de Wolf on 3 June 2007. Talking Architecture, City: Hall is a documentary film directed by Jeong Jae-eun. Pour la suite du monde is a 1963 Canadian documentary film directed by Michel Brault, Marcel Carrière and Pierre Perrault. It was entered into the 1963 Cannes Film Festival. A work of ethnofiction, the film follows residents of Île aux Coudres, an island in the Saint Lawrence River in Quebec, as they agree to re-enact their traditional Beluga whale hunt for the filmmakers, one last time. The film features local residents Léopold Tremblay, Alexis Tremblay, Abel Harvey, Louis Harvey and Joachim Harvey. The film is considered a milestone work in the history of Direct Cinema. It received a special award and was named film of the year at the 1964 Canadian Film Awards. In 1984 the Toronto International Film Festival ranked the film eighth in the Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time. The Hidden Gem is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Namratha Thomas. SaroyanLand is is a 2013 documentary drama biographical film written and directed by Lusin Dink. Hierba Originaria - Cultura Ancestral is a 2013 documentary film directed by Edgar H. González. Virtuoso is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Terry Stone. Aging Out is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Roger Weisberg. Reggae in Babylon is a film from 1978, directed by Wolfgang Büld. Secrets of Nature is an East German film. It was released in 1950. T-Bolan is a documentary film directed by Bochibochi Uchida. 1971 is a 2014 American documentary film and the directorial debut of producer Johanna Hamilton, who also co-wrote the film. The film had its world premiere on 18 April 2014 at the Tribeca Film Festival and focuses on the break-in of an FBI office in Media, Pennsylvania in 1971. Hamilton was inspired to create the film after learning that Betty Medsger was working on her book The Burglary: The Discovery of J. Edgar Hoover’s Secret FBI, which discussed the 1971 events and revealed the identities of many of the participants, who had remained anonymous up to that point. The Other Side of the Mirror: Bob Dylan at the Newport Folk Festival is a 2007 documentary film about Bob Dylan's appearances at the Newport Folk Festival in three successive years: 1963, 1964, and 1965, directed by Murray Lerner. The film adds to the footage previously seen in Lerner's Festival!, with full-length song performances. It includes Dylan's controversial electric set from 1965. This film features previously unseen footage, chronicling the changes in Dylan's style when he appeared at Newport in three successive years. This film was broadcast by BBC Four on October 14, 2007. Director Murray Lerner commented: "Over the course of three Newport gigs, Dylan becomes more conscious of his power. His charisma is startling. With electricity and radio, he did what Yeats, Lorca, T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound never achieved. He reached a mass audience with poetry." The Black Sea is a 1914 documentary and short film. One Direction: This Is Us is a 2013 British-American 3-D concert film centering on British group One Direction. It opened in the United Kingdom on 29 August 2013, followed a day later in the United States. The movie shows many clips and songs of One Direction. Naked Ambition: An R-Rated Look at an X-Rated Industry is a 2009 documentary film written by Charles Holland and directed by Michael Grecco. Island Nurse is a 2013 documentary film directed by Susan Hagedorn. Décryptage is a 2003 documentary written by Jacques Tarnero and directed by Philippe Bensoussan. The French film examines media coverage of the Arab–Israeli conflict in the media of France, and concludes that the media's presentation of the Arab–Israeli conflict in France is consistently skewed against Israel and may be responsible for exacerbating antisemitism. Mad Dog Prosecutors is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Russell Craig Richardson. Hacked Circuit is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Deborah Stratman. Escapade romaine is a 2010 documentary film by Jérémie Carboni during the tour of Daniel Pennac's reading. Daddy and the Muscle Academy is a 1991 documentary written and directed by Ilppo Pohjola. In Saint-Sauveur Neighborhood is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Helgi Piccinin and Hubert Fiasse. Inside: Coca Cola is a 2011 documentary TV movie. Shining Stars: The Official Story Of Earth, Wind & Fire is a 2001 biography of the band Earth, Wind & Fire. The film was released on August 21, 2001 and was directed by Kathryn Arnold and produced by Stephanie Bennett. It was made with the band's input and features both concert footage and interviews with the members of the group. Invasive is a 2013 short documentary film written by Ethan Oser, Paul Blake and Gabriel Felder and directed by Ethan Oser. The Mystery of the Three Kings is a 2002 spiritual documentary film directed by Giles Llewellyn-Thomas. Private Universe is a 2012 historical documentary film written and directed by Helena Trestíková. On The Edge, Antarctica 3D is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jon Bowermaster. I Always Said Yes: The Many Lives of Wakefield Poole is a historical and biographical documentary directed by Jim Tushinski. La nuit du hibou is a 1984 documentary, short film directed by François Dupeyron. Homegoings is a documentary film directed by Christine Turner. No End in Sight is a 2007 documentary film about the American occupation of Iraq. The film marks the directorial debut of Academy Award-winning documentary film producer Charles H. Ferguson. The film premiered January 22, 2007 at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. The film opened in limited release in the United States on July 27, 2007, playing in two theaters. As of December 2007, the film had grossed $1.4 million, and had been released on DVD. Slow Food is a documentary film directed by Mélanie Dalsace. Scared Straight! is a 1978 documentary directed by Arnold Shapiro. Narrated by Peter Falk, the subject of the documentary is a group of juvenile delinquents and their three-hour session with actual convicts. Filmed at Rahway State Prison, a group of inmates known as the "lifers" berate, scream at, and terrify the young offenders in an attempt to "scare them straight" so that those teenagers will avoid prison life. The documentary aired on television in the late 1970s, uncensored; it marked the first time that the words "fuck" and "shit" were broadcast on many networks. Some broadcasters added locally produced segments in which experts discussed both the content of the documentary, and the rationale behind airing it uncensored. The cast includes a drug dealer and counterfeit document manufacturer from Westchester County, a gang member from Jersey City, an arsonist and bomb builder from Bridgeport, the son of a Mafia informant, and a 17-year-old chop shop parts dealer and car thief from the Bronx. Mama C: Urban Warrior in the African Bush is a documentary film directed by Joanne Hershfield. Playboy: Jenny McCarthy, the Playboy Years is a 1997 documentary film directed by Scott Allen, Adam Friedman and Robert Kubilos. Stolen Kosovo is a Czech language documentary by director Václav Dvořák, about the Serbian–Albanian conflict in Kosovo. Atenco. The wound remains open is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Alberto Cortés. "This documentary provides an insider's look at Canada's Renaissance Man, anthropologist, author, philosopher and filmmaker Gregory Bateson, who developed 'systems thinking' and believed that “The major problems in the world are the result of the difference between the way nature works and the way people think.” Directed by his daughter Nora, the film explores his life and beliefs through many images, including the man’s own (taken from films dating back to the 1930s). As the filmmakers say, Nora Bateson's film "hopes to inspire its audience to see our lives within a larger system — glistening with symmetry, play and metaphor." Adult themes. Quoting the description from the 2011 Spokane International Film Festival site. Revue is a 2008 documentary film directed by Sergei Loznitsa. SilkAir 185: Pilot Suicide? is a documentary film by Hong Kong-based independent production company APV. Its subject is the crash of SilkAir Flight 185. The 60-minute documentary features interviews with air crash investigators who were involved in the case, relatives of those who were killed in the disaster, and lawyers who brought suit on behalf of the victims' families as well. The documentary features recreations of the events leading up to the crash, and computer simulations of the crash itself. SilkAir 185: Pilot Suicide? was commissioned by the National Geographic Channel Asia and the Singapore Economic Development Board Documentary Commissioning fund. The documentary, written and produced by APV’s Creative Director Mike Barrett, received a "Highly Commended" award in the category "Best Documentary Programme" at the 2006 Asian Television Awards. John Lennon was one of the most important musical talents of our time. His influence and impact not only on music, but on society is beyond measure, as is the tragedy that took him from us far, far too soon. Famed psychics from around the world gathered to reach out to John Lennon and contact him. Outside the Dakota Building in New York, in the shadow of the Capitol Records Building in Los Angeles, and in the town in India where Lennon pursued his spiritual retreat, these renowned psychics used their exceptional talents to for the first time to contact John Lennon after his death. And the results were nothing less than astonishing. Jackie Chan: My Stunts is a 1999 documentary about Jackie Chan's stunts, fights, and other related things and how he performs them. Throughout the film Jackie gives quick tutorials on how to execute various fight scenes under a budget. In Good Time: The Piano Jazz of Marian McPartland is a 2011 documentary film directed by Huey. Wadans World is a 2011 documentary film written by Dieter Schumann and Jochen Wisotzki and directed by Dieter Schumann. Still Kicking: Six Artistic Women of Project Arts & Longevity is a 2006 32-minute documentary film by Pacific Grove filmmaker Greg Young, featuring six six Bay Area women role models over 85 years old who remained artistically active. The catalyst for Young's film was Amy Gorman and Frances Kandl's Project Arts & Longevity through which they were exploring the link between longevity and artistic vitality. Along with the film the joint project resulted in a book entitled Aging Artfully. Still Kicking's first festival screening was at the 2006 Real to Reel Film Festival in North Carolina. The film was also selected for screening by the 2006 Independents' Film Festival, the 2006 Port Townsend Film Festival, the 2007 Missouri International Film Festival, and the 2007 Santa Barbara International Film Festival. In 2003 Young produced his first documentary called "Do You Know Yellowlegs is a Storytelling Museum?" on the Oakland storyteller Orunamamu, known for her flamboyant attire which included yellow "psychedelic spandex leggings" Gorman had interviewed Orunamamu as part of the Project and the film caught their attention. Last Hijack is a 2014 documentary animation film written and directed by Tommy Pallotta and Femke Wolting. Smoke Alarm: The Unfiltered Truth About Cigarettes is a 1996 documentary directed by Steve Oakes. Advanced Style is a 2014 documentary, biography and comedy film written by Ari Cohen and Lina Plioplyte, and directed by Lina Plioplyte. Ocho Pasos Adelante is a 2013 documentary family film directed by Selene Colombo. An Inconsolable Memory is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Aryan Kaganof. Plan for Destruction is a 1943 American short propaganda film directed by Edward Cahn. It looks at the Geopolitik ideas of the ex-World War I General Prof. Karl Haushofer, who is portrayed as the head of a huge organisation for gathering information of strategic value and the mastermind behind Hitler's wars and plans to enslave the world. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Food Patriots is a documentary, comedy and family film directed by Jeff Spitz. A monumental achievement Brothers On Holy Ground is the only documentary in existence made by a FDNY fireman and it spans the time period before, during and after 9-11. Fate called upon NY fireman Mike Lennon of Engine Co. 15 to make a documentary about his fellow NY firefighters before Sept. 2001. After 9-11, Mike continued filming. Featuring interviews with a fireman that perished on 9-11 as well as fellow survivors and family members during and after 9-11. The film also includes unique footage from ground zero. This historic film about the most tragic event of our times will leave no one untouched. Inside Fighting Russia is a 1942 documentary, war film. My Ancestors Were Rogues and Murderers is a 2005 National Film Board of Canada documentary film by Newfoundland filmmaker Anne Troake, which explores her own family's ties to the seal hunt and seeks to mount a defense for the now-controversial practice. Troake documents how the seal hunt began to attract international outrage in 1977 following opposition from the International Fund for Animal Welfare and a high-profile visit by French film star and animal rights activist Brigitte Bardot. Through interviews with family members in Twillingate, including cousin and sealing spokesperson Garry Troake who died at sea just before the start of production, the director advances the argument that sealing is a time-honoured and environmentally responsible industry, while debunking what she sees as misconceptions about the hunt, including how seals are actually killed. Troake had planned on making the film prior to the death of her cousin Garry in 2000, and decided to continue with it as a way to honour his memory and continue his fight. My Ancestors Were Rogues and Murderers makes ample use of his commentary including accusations of hypocrisy against the IFAW. Of Judges and Other Sympathizers is a 1982 film directed by Axel Engstfeld. Who Shot Rock & Roll: The Film is a 2012 short documentary music film directed by Steven Kochones. The film narrates the Greek immigration to America from 1890 to 1980. Interviews with prominent Greek Americans including Senator Paul Sarbanes, writers George Pelecanos and Elias Kulkundis, poet Olga Broumas, film critic/historian Dan Georgakas, Ellis Island Archivist George Tselos, Hellenic Studies professors Martha Klironomos and Artemis Leontis, researcher Gus Chatzidimitriou, Father Bob Stephanopoulos, and historian Alexander Kitroeff complement the photographic and filmic archival footage. Little Blue Nothing is a 2009 musical documentary film directed by Vincent Moon and Antoine Viviani. Fang and Claw is a 1935 jungle adventure documentary starring Frank Buck. Buck continues his demonstration of the ingenious methods by which he traps wild birds, mammals and reptiles in Johore. A search for the secrets behind the legendary porn movie Debbie Does Dallas, with the mysterious entrance and disappearance of the main star Bambi Woods. Featuring interviews with Robin Byrd, female actress in the movie and Bill Kelly, a former FBI agent once working on an undercover operation to bust porn producers. Twenty Years Later is a 1984 Brazilian documentary film directed by Eduardo Coutinho. One of the most known films by Coutinho, it started to be produced in 1964. However, due to the theme it dealt part of crew and cast were arrested and the police tried to take their footage. In 1984, Coutinho concluded the story of João Pedro Teixeira, a leader of the Peasant leagues from Paraíba, murdered by local landowners' order in 1962. Upon its release, it gained a cult following as well as received awards at film festivals and praise by film critics. Les Champs brûlants is a 2010 documentary directed by Catherine Libert. Campaign of Hate: Russia and Gay Propaganda is a 2013 documentary film written by Scott Stern and directed by Michael Lucas and Scott Stern. Henry Kissinger - Secrets of a Superpower is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Stephan Lamby. The Giant Buddhas is a documentary film by Swiss filmmaker Christian Frei about the destruction of the Buddhas of Bamyan in Afghanistan. It was released in March 2006. The movie film quotes local Afghans that the destruction was ordered by Osama Bin Laden and that initially, Mullah Omar and the Afghans in Bamyan had opposed the destruction. Ghost Town to Havana is a 2013 sports documentary film written by Eugene Corr and directed by Eugene Corr and Roberto Chile. Theater in Trance is a 1981 film directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder. "Timely, insightful, and downright funny, Why We Laugh: Black Comedians on Black Comedy is a sweeping account of the evolution of black comedy in America. Inspired by comedian Darryl Littleton’s book, directors Robert Townsend and Quincy Newell have crafted a no-holds-barred documentary that is both an insider’s take and a critical examination of the cultural influence of black comedy.Townsend and Newell enrich this hilarious and spectacularly archived film by including interviews with prominent scholars, politicians, cultural critics, and a host of notable comics, including Bill Cosby, Chris Rock, Keenan Ivory Wayans, and Eddie Griffin. Why We Laugh tracks the way black comedy has evolved from Stepin Fetchit and minstrels in blackface to the politically tinged humor of Dick Gregory, and from the television success of Good Times and The Jeffersons to the big-screen accomplishments of stars like Eddie Murphy and Whoopi Goldberg. Townsend and Newell turn a perceptive eye on the controversial career of Dave Chapelle and the implications of corporate efforts to capitalize on the massive successes of Russell Simmons’s Def Comedy Jam and Spike Lee’s The Original Kings of Comedy.A major historical contribution to American culture—and a hoot to watch—Why We Laugh is a tribute to the way individuals can change history, as well as a cautionary tale about how tenuous that change can be." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. "This feature film looks at five individuals who made a decisive change later in life—to come out as lesbian, gay, or transgender, after the age of 55. Why did they wait until their 50’s, 60’s, or 70’s to come out? And what was the turning point that caused each of these people finally to openly declare their sexuality? From Canada to Florida, to Kansas, we find out what ultimately led these dynamic individuals to make the liberating choice to pursue fully integrated lives." Quoting the description from the Official Site. Tinghir - Jerusalem, Echoes from the Mellah is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Kamal Hachkar. I'm Still Here is a 2010 mockumentary film directed by Casey Affleck, and written by Affleck and Joaquin Phoenix. The film purports to follow the life of Phoenix, from the announcement of his retirement from acting, through his transition into a career as a hip hop artist. Filming officially began on January 16, 2009 at a Las Vegas nightclub. Throughout the filming period, Phoenix remained in character for public appearances, giving many the impression that he was genuinely pursuing a new career. The film premiered at the 67th Venice International Film Festival on September 6, 2010. It had a limited release in the United States on September 10, 2010 before being expanded to a wide release a week later on September 17. Although widely suspected to be a "mockumentary", the fact that the events of the film had been deliberately staged was not disclosed until after the film had been released. Bomb Harvest is a 2007 documentary film directed by Australian filmmaker Kim Mordaunt, and produced by Sylvia Wilczynski. It explores the consequences of war in Laos as it follows an Australian bomb disposal specialist, training locals in the skill of detonating bombs while trying to stop villagers, particularly children, from finding them and using them for scrap metal. During the Vietnam War, Laos was the target of the heaviest US bombing campaign, making Laos the most bombed country in history: from 1964 until 1973 more than two million tonnes of bombs were dropped, including 260 million cluster munitions. An estimated 30 per cent of the bombs dropped did not detonate. Unexploded Ordnance continues to kill and injure people, and prevent them from using land, including growing food. UXO are a key factor in the poverty and stifling the development of the country. Bomb Harvest explores how three generations of people have been left to deal with the consequences of the air war, and depicts the bravery of those trying to clear up its remnants. Sotsgorod: Cities for Utopia is a 1996 Dutch documentary film about the Western European architects who were invited by the Soviet Union to construct “Socialist cities” in Siberia during the late 1920s and early 30s. The film draws on interviews of some of the last survivors of this time, including Jan Rutgers, Margarete Schutte-Lihotzky, and Philipp Tolziner, and on letters, articles, and lectures written by those who have already died, including Hans Schmidt, Mart Stam, Johannes van Loghem, and Ernst May. It also follows the daily lives of contemporary residents of Magnitogorsk, Orsk, Novokuznetsk, and Kemerov. Out of the Shadow is a grassroots documentary film by Susan Smiley concerning her mother, Mildred Smiley. Mildred Smiley is a middle-aged woman who has battled schizophrenia for over twenty years. The documentary chronicles her journey from psychiatric wards, nursing and group homes in Illinois, United States. Out of the Shadow often airs on PBS. Parajanov - A Requiem is a 1994 documentary film directed by Ron Holloway. FREAKOUT is a documentary film directed by Masaki Yaguchi. Idle Threat is a 2012 documentary, comedy film written and directed by George Pakehnham. A year in the life of City Springs, a failing Baltimore elementary school serving a poor African-American community. Given one year to upgrade test scores or be closed. City Springs decides to introduce a radical curriculum called Direct instruction. The Toxic Clouds of 9/11: A Looming Disaster is a documentary film that was produced by Alison Johnson, the chair of the Chemical Sensitivity Foundation. The film addresses the health concerns of first responders at the World Trade Center site. The Chemical Sensitivity Foundation is developing a registry of persons exposed to toxic dust from the collapsed buildings after the September 11, 2001 attacks. The film was debuted at SUNY at New Paltz on June 12, 2006. It has been presented in the United States and in Canada. Ruhr is a 2009 experimental, documentary film written and directed by James Benning. Remitente, Una Carta Visual is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Tiziana Panizza. Proud American is a 2008 biographical drama film released by Slowhand Cinema in both conventional 35mm and IMAX format. It features five stories that intend to capture the essence of the American spirit, two of them chronicling the founding of Wal-Mart and Coca-Cola. The film holds the distinction of having obtained additional funding through overt sponsorship of the two companies, as well as MasterCard and American Airlines, whose product placement can be observed throughout the film. Living with Lions is a documentary that was released on video that follows the 1997 British and Irish Lions tour to South Africa. The film concentrates on the backroom effort, with less attention paid to the on-field rugby. The film balances pain of various injuries to Rob Howley, Will Greenwood and Doddie Weir, the tensions within the camp, the humour of John Bentley's visit to the gym, and finally jubilation after victory in the second test. The documentary only goes to the end of the second test. Due to its success, a follow-up documentary Living With The Lions 2 - The Final Week was produced. Both films are included in the DVD. For the 2001 tour to Australia, another documentary was produced. However, the Lions lost that tour, and there were suggestions that it had been censored to edit out the fact that the players were displeased with the coach, Graham Henry. The Shakers: Hands to Work, Hearts to God is Ken Burns's second film, released in 1984. Narrated by David McCullough, this hour-long documentary features interviews with several living Shakers and with historians and philosophers. Ken Burns has said that he chose the topic of the Shakers in large part because his first project, Brooklyn Bridge, was devoted to urban American history; Shakerism offered him an opportunity to explore rural American history. Let the Record Show is a historical drama documentary film directed by Demetrea Dewald. A Sense of Place is a 2008 documentary and short film. "This documentary explores the filmmaker’s discussion about her identity as a German caused by the Berlin Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. Observations during the time of 2003-2007 from the installment of the first slabs until two years after the opening of the memorial to the public and many dialogs lead the filmmaker to a new reflection about her family’s role during Nazi time and about the significance of collective guilt. A German story of every day life." Quoting the description from the 2010 Ann Arbor Film Festival site. Drunk in Public is a documentary biographical film directed by David J. Sperling. Shoah is a 1985 French documentary film directed by Claude Lanzmann about the Holocaust. The film primarily consists of his interviews and visits to Holocaust sites across Poland, including three extermination camps. It presents testimonies by selected survivors, witnesses, and German perpetrators, often secretly recorded using hidden cameras. Critic Roger Ebert described it as "one of the noblest films ever made". As Claude Lanzmann does not speak Polish, Hebrew or Yiddish, he depended on translators to work with most of his interviewees. This process enlarged the scale of the documentary, which is nine hours and twenty-three minutes long. While winning notable awards, the film also aroused controversy and criticism, particularly in Poland, but also in the US. A number of historians criticized it for failing to show and discuss the many Poles who rescued Jews, or to recognize the millions of Poles who were killed by the Germans in an extermination campaign. Avril Lavigne began singing at the age of 2. By the time she was 17 she'd already become a pop sensation. Today she has sold over 30 million records, and was listed by Billboard Magazine as one of the top pop artists of the decade. However, her success hasn't come without trials and tribulations. Paper Heads is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Dusan Hanák. In The Same Boat is a 2011 documentary film directed by Rachel Bower. "A stylish documentary from Spanish filmmaker Manuel Huerga follows Oscar-winning Uruguayan singer-composer Jorge Drexler as he undertakes a short tour in late 2007. For many in the English-speaking world, the Uruguayan singer Jorge Drexler is best known for the Oscar-winning song he composed for Walter Salles' The Motorcycle Diaries, 'Al otro lado del rio' ('On the Other Side of the River'). In Spain and Latin America, however, Drexler is a major figure with an extensive following. Here filmmaker Manuel Huerga follows Drexler and his band as he embarks on a short Catalan tour in late 2007. Drexler is seen sharing his secrets on mending broken nails, creating music with a bicycle bell and preparing his numbers from the sounds that surround him as he makes his way through a series of towns around Barcelona. As well as introducing the viewer to songs both old and new, we are given a unique insight into how the 'showman' Drexler relates to his band, his crew and his audiences across the disorientating time-span of a tour. Shot almost entirely in black and white, This Very Instant is an elegant, stylish and always entertaining documentary on the hows and whys of music-making in a global world where music can be created from an array of different sources and sounds." Quoting Maria Delgado Die Leibstandarte SS-Adolf Hitler im Einsatz is a 1941 short documentary film. Whole is a documentary about people with body integrity identity disorder. It first was broadcast on the Sundance Channel in 2004. The 'Hidden Faith of Our Founding Fathers' is perhaps the first and only documentary to go where no film has ever gone before: into the hidden faith of America's founding fathers. Many founders were involved in secret societies, and yet it is often claimed these men were Christians who were trying to build a Christian nation. But was their faith the true faith of the Bible? And is it possible, as some claim, that the exact opposite is true? What did the founders believe about the Person of Jesus Christ? Were they fighting for Christianity, or against it? Moreover, is it possible that the events of the American Revolution have a much darker significance in the pages of Bible prophecy than most church leaders are aware? Charles Thomson was the Secretary of the Continental Congress, and the man responsible for the final design of the Great Seal of the United States. He was said to be more familiar with the events and people surrounding the American Revolution than any other man of his era. He spent years documenting the history of the War for Independence, knowing many details which had escaped others. Though encouraged to publish his remarkable history, he chose to destroy it. He said: "I shall not undeceive future generations." Since we are the 'future generation' of which Thompson referred how have we been deceived about our Founding Fathers? What was Thomson hiding? And how has it affected the Church and society in America today? Informant is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jamie Meltzer. Kenya 3D: Animal Kingdom is a short documentary film directed by Jean-Jacques Mantello. The Body Machine is a landmark special on the human body that shows us just how much, how many, how large, how strong, how fast – just how amazing the body really is. Utilizing impressive large-scale real-life stunts, CGI and strong character stories, the show makes the staggering scale of the inner workings of the body tangible. It will show you how far our blood travels in just one day – an astounding 19, 000 km – from Quebec City to Buenos Aires and back. You will see all the cranial fluid you produce in your lifetime laid out in front of you – all 26,280 pint glasses worth. And in just one day you will take 23,000 breaths – enough air to fill 7,714 helium balloons. You will see all this and much more. Lasting Rights is a 2011 short biography drama documentary film directed by Jon Gordon and Niko Alajoki. Jashn-E-Dawaat is a documentary film directed by Karan Asnani. This is Not A Dream is a 2011 Documentary film directed by Gavin Butt and Ben Walters. Afternoon of a Faun: Tanaquil Le Clercq is a biographical documentary film directed by Nancy Buirski. The Year of the Wildebeest is a nature documentary from the Survival series shot in 1975. This documentary recorded the migration of 1.5 million ungulates through Tanzania. The cameras used in the documentary were hidden inside tortoise shells to obtain images of the wildebeests thundering over them. After World War II almost 30,000 war criminals escaped from Europe. Was Dr. Mengele part of a Fourth Reich dedicated to evil plots to restore Nazi power? The truth is that Mengele, like many ex-Nazis, led a pathetic hunted animal existence after the war. Monarca adivinanzas para siempre is a 1988 short documentary film directed by Iván Trujillo. Quick - das Eichhörnchen is a 1953 documentary film directed by Heinz Sielmann. Hymn of the Nations, originally titled Arturo Toscanini: Hymn of the Nations, is a film directed by Alexander Hammid, which features the Inno delle nazioni, a patriotic work for tenor soloist, chorus, and orchestra, composed by Italian opera composer Giuseppe Verdi in the early-1860s. For this musical work, Verdi utilized the national anthems of several European nations. In December 1943, Arturo Toscanini filmed a performance of this music for inclusion in an Office of War Information documentary about the role of Italian-Americans in aiding the Allies during World War II. Toscanini added a bridge passage to include arrangements of The Star Spangled Banner for the United States and The Internationale for the Soviet Union and the Italian partisans. Joining Toscanini in the filmed performance in NBC Studio 8-H, were tenor Jan Peerce, the Westminster Choir, and the NBC Symphony Orchestra. The film also included the overture to Verdi's opera La Forza del Destino. The narration was written by May Sarton, film editing by Boris Kaufman, and narration read by actor Burgess Meredith. As Long As There's Breath is a 2010 documentary film directed by Stephanie Spray. Positive: A Journey Into AIDS is a 1995 documentary directed by Eamon Harrington and John Watkin. It was produced for the ABC Afterschool Special series. It followed actors Michael Sutton and Kimberly McCullough, who played Stone Cates and Robin Scorpio, respectively, as they researched HIV and AIDS for their roles as HIV+ teenagers on the long-running ABC daytime serial General Hospital. The Seasons is a 1975 short film written and directed by Artavazd Peleschjan. Olmecas is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Fernando Altamirano. Hidden Hands: Painting with the Enemy is a 1995 documentary film directed by Gary Johnstone. Chance Encounters is a 2011 short film written by Justin Colautti and Lauren Belanger and directed by Justin Colautti. To Those Who Found No Graves is a 1994 film directed by Wilhelm Hein. One Day in the Life of Andrei Arsenevich is a 1999 French documentary film directed by Chris Marker, about and an homage to the Russian filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky. The film was an episode of the French documentary film series Cinéastes de notre temps, which in over ninety episodes since 1966 concentrates on individual film directors, film people and film movements. The title of the film is a play on the title of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's novella One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. Brass Unbound is a 1993 documentary film written by Johan van der Keuken and Rob Boonzajer Flaes and directed by Johan van der Keuken. This is the story of the first six women astronauts in the American Space Program at NASA, who were chosen before the flight of the first Shuttle, and what effects they had on the future of women's participation in the space program. Re:Generation is a 2011 documentary music film written and directed by Amir Bar-Lev. Thy Kingdom Come... Thy Will Be Done is a 1988 documentary film directed by Antony Thomas. Sand Wars is an epic eco-thriller by director Denis Delestrac and produced by Rappi Productions, La Compagnie des Taxi-Brousse, InfomAction, Arte France, with the support of The Santa Aguila Foundation. The film premiered at the Cinéma Publicis on the Champs-Elysées in 2013 and was first broadcast in May in France and Germany, where it became the highest rated documentary for 2013. A Gold Panda Award winner, Sand Wars is distributed worldwide by PBS International. Among many other outreach victories, the film inspired the United Nations Environment Programme to publish a Global Environmental Alert in March 2014 titled "Sand, rarer than one thinks". The Bituminous Coal Queens of Pennsylvania is a 2005 documentary film directed by David Hunt and Jody Eldred about the fiftieth annual "Pennsylvania Bituminous Coal Queen" beauty pageant which took place on Sunday, August 17, 2003 at the State Theatre Center for the Arts. The film is produced by Hunt's wife Patricia Heaton, and prominently features actress Sarah Rush, who was herself a Coal Queen in her youth. Heaton describes the film as "an homage to small town America". The film follows the past and present contestants and winners of the annual beauty pageant sponsored by the bituminous coal industry of Greene County, Pennsylvania and was shot over a 10 day period in August 2003. The movie's budget swelled from $45,000 to $350,000 after the licensing for the various song snippets that appear in the contestants' acts. A memorable character is the pageant's stage manager, who is easily offended when the contestants make requests and suggestions. He has since been fired. Kill Your Idols is a documentary film about three decades of art punk bands in New York City, directed and produced by Scott Crary and executive produced by Dan Braun and Josh Braun. The film debuted at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival, where it won the award for Best Documentary. På jagt i de spanske bjerge. Vi følger to jægere på jagt efter de attraktive Ibex i den pragtfulde spanske natur. En sagnomspunden vildtart, der kan give mange jægere søvnløse nætter Land Of The Story is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Rashid Masharawi. There Once Was An Island is a 2010 documentary film written by Briar March and Lyn Collie and directed by Briar March. "What if your community had to decide whether to leave their homeland forever and there was no help available? This is the reality for the culturally unique Polynesian community of Takuu, a tiny low-lying atoll in the South Western Pacific. As a terrifying tidal flood rips through their already damaged home, the Takuu community experiences the devastating effects of climate change first hand. In this verité-style film, three intrepid characters Teloo, Endar, and Satty allow us into their lives and their culture and show us first-hand the human impact of an environmental crisis. Two scientists, oceanographer John Hunter and geomorphologist Scott Smithers investigate the situation with our characters and consider the impact of climate change on communities without access to resources or support. This film gives a human face to the direct impacts of climate change in the Pacific, challenging audiences everywhere to consider their own relationship to the earth and the other people on it." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Devils Gate is a 2011documentary short film directed by Laura Kraning. Amlan Ganguly, a lawyer-turned social entrepreneur, has sown hope in the poorest neighborhoods of Calcutta by empowering children to become leaders in improving health, health, transforming their communities for the better. Funky Katô My Voice is a documentary film directed by Hirohide Sumita. Ghost Adventures is a 2004 Documentary film directed by Zak Bagans and Nick Groff. The Storykeeper is a 2013 documentary film directed by Rogier Van Beeck Calkoen. Poster Girl is a 2010 documentary film about an American soldier's experience with posttraumatic stress disorder after returning from the Iraq War. The film showed at the 37th Telluride Film Festival on September 3, 2010. It was named as a nominee for the Academy Award for Best Documentary at the 83rd Academy Awards on January 25, 2011 but lost to Strangers No More. The documentary short film is a production of Portrayal Films and was conceived and produced by Mitchell Block and directed and photographed by Sara Nesson. Madonna: Truth or Dare is a 1991 American documentary film chronicling the life of American singer-songwriter Madonna during her 1990 Blond Ambition World Tour. The film was generally well received by critics and was successful at the box office, at that point becoming the highest-grossing documentary of all time with a worldwide gross of $29,012,935. It was screened out of competition at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival. In 2005, Madonna produced another documentary I'm Going to Tell You a Secret which followed her 2004 Re-Invention World Tour. It was filmed and narrated in the same style as Truth or Dare, with stage performances filmed in colour and behind-the-scenes in black and white. The film was nominated for a Razzie Award for Worst Actress for Madonna as herself. It holds an 80% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Explore a metaphorical musing of human presence on the blue planet as the performers share their experience and emotions at that quintessential moment of an act. Once upon a time, two brothers from a tiny town in the far north of England, set out to make fishing tackle. Their wares captured more than just fish. Soon they had won the hearts and minds of fishing maharajahs, film stars and royalty the world over. Their names were William and JJ Hardy.With their genius, devotion, and innovative marketing they would conquer the world. They grew an army of craftsmen and the family firm of Hardy's has been synonymous with the best in fishing ever since. That was more than 130 years ago and how the world has changed!Today “Mister Jim” is how the employees address Jim Hardy, last of the family to work for Hardy's and now retired. Take an incredible journey with Mr. Jim back over a golden era of angling, using unbelievable film from the Hardy archives over nearly a century, when rivers really did seem stuffed with salmon. Hear from the master craftsman and share their pride in a time and place when making handmade fishing tackle really was something special, something to celebrate. And then ponder the question, is this golden age really a lost world? Could it ever happen again... The Waiting Point is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Masa Drndic. War Department Report is a 1943 documentary film directed by Oliver Lundquist. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. That Summer Day is a one-hour docudrama directed by Jon East, written by Clive Bradley, produced by Hannah Pescod and executive produced by Jon East and Mark Redhead that provides a fictional account of the lives of six children on the day of the bombings of the London public transport system on 7 July 2005. The drama combines fictional elements and archive footage from television and radio to document the effect the events had on the children. The programme's creation is the result from the correspondence the CBBC website received following the events, from children struggling to come to terms with it. In the early development of the show, the creators visited schools and people from charities like ChildLine, who had talked to children about the subject, to find out which themes and issues the programme needed to address to properly respond to the questions raised by children. The programme was filmed on location in London and at Islington Green School. Several of its students were extras during filming. In the press release announcing the programme, executive producer Mark Redhead said: Capturing Avatar is a 2010 documentary film directed by Laurent Bouzereau. Dying to Tell the Story is a 1998 documentary, biographical film written and directed by Kyra Thompson. Facing Your Danger is a 1946 American short film directed by Edwin E. Olsen. It won an Academy Award at the 19th Academy Awards in 1947 for Best Short Subject. Ghosts of Door County is a documentary film directed by Marc Stevens. It's the summer of 1863, more than two years into our nation's devastating Civil War, and the stakes have never been higher. The Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, led by Robert E. Lee, crosses into Pennsylvania. Trailed by the Union's Army of the Potomac, Lee's 75,000-strong army heads toward Harrisburg, but the forces meet instead near Gettysburg, a quiet farm town that would become synonymous with the epic battle that all but decided the outcome of the American Civil War. For three long days, the two sides clashed in one of the war's bloodiest engagements to decide the ultimate question: Would the United States of America survive? Executive produced by Ridley and Tony Scott, GETTYSBURG strips away the romanticized veneer of the Civil War to present the pivotal Battle of Gettysburg in a new light--a visceral, terrifying and deeply personal experience, fought by men who put everything on the line in defense of their vision of the American future. Cinematic in scope, GETTYSBURG is an information-packed look at the turning points, strategic decisions, technology and little-known facts surrounding the battle. Developed in collaboration with highly esteemed Civil War historians, GETTYSBURG reflects hundreds of individual accounts of the battle--the unique voices of struggle, defeat and triumph that tell the larger story of a bitterly conflicted nation. Being Different is a 1981 documentary written and directed by Harry Rasky. Africa Speaks! is a 1930 American documentary film directed by Walter Futter and narrated by Lowell Thomas. The Tree That Grows on a Wall is a 2012 documentary film directed by Tomás Lipgot. Walking with the Dead examines some of the most haunted places in the state of Indiana. See evidence of unexplainable paranormal events like visits from turn-of-the-century celebrities at Tuckaway House, appearances of Lady Rivoli at the Rivoli Theater and the angry energy of past prisoners at Hartford City Jail. Sira - Songs of the Crescent Moon is a documentary film written and directed by Sandra Gysi and Ahmed Abdel Mohsen. The Pink Helmet Posse is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Kristelle Laroche and Ben Mullinkosson. The City Addicted to Crystal Meth is a British documentary by Louis Theroux. It was televised on 9 August 2009. Theroux filmed his documentary in Fresno, California which has one of the highest number of crystal meth users in the United States. The Road to Valhalla is a documentary film directed by Ken Spurgeon. The End of Eden is a 1986 environmental documentary in which the South African filmmaker Rick Lomba showed the rapid degradation of Africa’s ecosystems. The introduction of cattle ranching and the beef industry in the southern African landscape is featured prominently within the film as a primary source of devastation to the land. The film is severely critical of the policies of the World Bank and other international banks in advocating and funding African industrial agricultural and cattle breeding projects in an attempt to boost African economies. It portrays graphically the otherwise forbidden pesticides used to try to eradicate the tsetse fly, which he describes as the last bastion of defence the wilderness has against the encroachment of civilisation, and the erosion and overgrazing that results. Some of it is filmed from a microlight aircraft which he used to approach these areas. Numerous interviews with persons engaged in conservation, big-game hunting, hunger relief and agriculture are presented as well as some economically and environmentally sustainable alternatives such as wildlife farming. Scenes from the Big Chair is a documentary film about the British band Tears For Fears. Released on home video in 1985, the 75 minute documentary was made at the height of the band's global success following the release of their multi-platinum selling album Songs from the Big Chair. The documentary was made by renowned music video and film director Nigel Dick, who had already made several promo videos with the band including their hits "Shout", "Everybody Wants to Rule the World", and "Head Over Heels". It includes a variety of interviews with band members Roland Orzabal, Curt Smith, Ian Stanley and Manny Elias, footage from the band's 1985 "Big Chair" tour, a segment where the band filmed a promotional appearance for Japanese television at Blenheim Palace in England, and clips from the promotional videos for the five singles released from the album. Scenes from the Big Chair was also released on Laserdisc and the short-lived Video CD format. It was released on DVD in 2005, twenty years after its initial home video release. Vietnam Requiem was an ABC News Closeup Series television documentary directed by Bill Couturié and Jonas McCord. It was filmed in 1982, and transmitted in 1984 about the post-traumatic stress disorder suffered by veterans. It provided a substantial part of the sound samples used by Paul Hardcastle in his 1985 track "19". The film comprises interviews with five Vietnam War veterans then in prison for crimes committed after discharge, inter-cut with news footage from the time of the war, with narration by Peter Thomas. De heilige familie is a 1975 film directed by Roeland Kerbosch. Pequeñas Voces (Little Voices) is a 2010 animated documentary film based on Jairo Carrillo's short film 'Little Voices' (2003) which depicts the lives of displaced children in Colombia through the use of their voices and drawings. Garapa is a 2009 film directed by José Padilha. All the Notes is a 2003 documentary film directed by Christopher Felver. Nine Hundred Nights is a documentary film of the psychedelic band Big Brother and The Holding Company, directed by Michael Burlingame. The Cornerstone Festival: Twenty Years and Counting is a 2004 music documentary film directed by Jeremy Gudauskas. Travels in the Congo is a French documentary film, directed by Marc Allégret. It depicts his expedition in French Equatorial Africa. The film debuted on 8 July, 1927, opening at the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier. It was the first directorial effort by Allégret. About 80 minutes of this film survive. The Trials of Ted Haggard is a 2008 documentary TV film directed by Alexandra Pelosi. A Cell Phone Movie is a 2011 Bosnian documentary film directed by Nedžad Begović. The film was shot entirely on his mobile phone and won the Best Documentary Award at the 2011 Sarajevo Film Festival and the Jury Award for Best Documentary Film at 2012 Bosnian-Herzegovinian Film Festival in New York. George & Brad Live Long and Prosper is a 2012 short documentary comedy directed by Jessica Sanders. Bombay Calling is a 2006 feature documentary film directed by Ben Addelman and Samir Mallal. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, Bombay Calling chronicles the lives of young call center workers in Bombay India. Doctors of the Dark Side is a documentary about the role of physicians and psychologists in the torture of prisoners. The movie tells the story of four detainees, and how healthcare professionals working for the United States Army and the Central Intelligence Agency implemented enhanced interrogation techniques, and covered up signs of torture at the Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp and Abu Ghraib Prison. Interviews with medical, legal and intelligence experts and evidence from declassified government memos document how the torture of detainees could not continue without the assistance of doctors. Guitarist/composer Ry Cooder teams up with acclaimed director Wim Wenders (Paris, Texas) to bring to life the Grammy Award® winning smash hit album featuring the rediscovered talents of Cuba's foremost folk musicians. From the crumbling barrios of their native Havana to their triumphant, sold-out concerts in Amsterdam and New York City's Carnegie Hall, Buena Vista Social Club is an unforgettable journey into the vibrant personalities and unforgettable music of the artists who sparked a worldwide musical phenomenon. Corpus: A Home Movie about Selena is a film by filmmaker, Lourdes Portillo about Mexican American singer-songwriter Selena Quintanilla-Pérez. It places emphasis on the transformation of Selena from a popular entertainer into a modern-day saint and role model. This documentary uses authentic home videos, news stories, footage from concerts and a debate between intellectuals to analyze the effect of Selena and Selena’s murder at the hands of Yolanda Saldivar, the president of her fan club. Zero Degrees of Separation is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Elle Flanders. Le miroir de la terre is a 1980 short, documentary film directed by Paul de Roubaix and Daniel Absil. Tripping with Caveh is a 30-minute documentary in which independent filmmaker Caveh Zahedi takes hallucinogenic mushrooms with singer-songwriter Will Oldham. The film was originally intended as the first installment of a would-be television series, but no other episodes have been shot to date. This space available is a 2011 documentary film written by Chidem Alie, Elisa Bonora and Marc Gobe, and directed by Gwenaelle Gobe. "When two friends stage a bicycle race to determine who is the best racer of all time, Eddy Merckx or Lance Armstrong, a love triangle develops." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Down to the Bone: Anatomy of a Prequel is a 2007 documentary film directed by Jeffrey Schwarz Rain of the Children is a 2008 feature film written, directed and produced by Vincent Ward. In Rain of the Children, Ward further explores the subject of his earlier film, In Spring One Plants Alone when, as a young film student he travelled to the Ureweras and documented the lives of an elderly Māori woman and her schizophrenic son. DMX: The Dark Prince is a 2004 documentary film written by Theron K. Cal and directed by Theron K. Cal. Garth Live from Central Park is a 1997 music documentary directed by Marty Callner. Motodrom is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Jörg Wagner. Voces Vivas is a 2011 documentary film directed by Pedro Pablo Celedón. Stuart Ross, an inner city public high school teacher by day and a guerrilla artist by night has discovered the delicate balance of a nine to five and his passion, art. Avid dumpster diver and self proclaimed engineer and inventor, without even a day's worth of formal art training, he is nothing short of a phenomenon.The Survival of the Wildebeest is a compelling documentary about life, passion, curiosity and learning that depicts 8 months of intense "Ross-reality." A wildebeest in the jungle of Manhattan, Stuart Ross most show us what makes him different than the thousands of other emerging artists all around him and survive the treacherous elements that he will encounter on the creative journey of a lifetime.In just 80 days, he must prepare for the largest showcase of his artistic career. Bring The Sun Home is a 2013 documentary film directed by Chiara Andrich and Giovanni Pellegrini. Atomic Power is an American short documentary film produced by The March of Time and released to theaters August 9, 1946, one year after the end of World War II. Raymond Fielding, chronicler of The March of Time, cites Atomic Power as the only one of the series' postwar films to emerge as a classic. "It tells of the making of the atomic bomb, and is a quite remarkable example of film making in the March of Time tradition," Fielding wrote. Nearly every person involved in the invention of the atomic bomb performs as an actor in the film, recreating the events and conversations that led up to the Trinity test, which is also reenacted and intercut with government footage of the blast. Jack Glenn directed. Atomic Power was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. His Mother's Voice is a 1997 animation and documentary film directed by Dennis Tupicoff. The Faces of Death series has been a famous shock source for many people wanting to see actual footage of gruesome deaths. The Best of Banned From Television continues this trend with images of people meeting their demise in front of the camera. From a great white shark attack to a distracted woman stepping in front of a speeding train, this film is a non-stop barrage of death and mutilation. Most of these images were actually seen on television, but only to the point the subject being viewed was actually killed. This uncensored reel does not restrain itself, letting all the blood and guts be shown. In 1962, a trash fire ignited a seam of anthracite coal beneath Centralia, Pennsylvania, a once thriving mining town of over 1600 people. By the mid 1980's, giant plumes of smoke and deadly carbon monoxide gases billowed from fissures in the ground, the local highway cracked and collapsed, trees were bleached white and petrified, as the fire continued to rage unchecked.It wasn't until a young boy nearly died after falling into a smoldering mine subsidence that the government was pressed into action. After estimating the cost of extinguishing the fire at over a half a billion dollars, the government opted to raze the town and relocate its residents.Today, 11 die-hards remain. Filmed over a period of five years with interviews ranging from former residents to Congressmen, The Town That Was is an intimate portrait of John Lokitis, the youngest remaining Centralian, and his quixotic fight to keep alive a hometown that has literally disintegrated under his feet. His unbowed determination and steadfast refusal to acknowledge defeat reveal a man, a town, a region, and a way of life abandoned and forgotten We Choose Space! is a documentary film directed by Carolyn Sumners. American Mayor is a 2009 documentary film detailing Travis Irvine's 2007 campaign for mayor of Bexley, Ohio. Dance Dance Fire Dance is a short experimental documentary film directed by Pedro Ferreira. Black Fox: The Rise and Fall of Adolf Hitler is a 1962 documentary directed by Louis Clyde Stoumen, depicting the rise and fall of Nazi Germany. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1962. Junior is a 2008 documentary film chronicling a year in the life of Baie-Comeau Drakkar of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. Co-directed by Isabelle Lavigne and Stéphane Thibault and produced by the National Film Board of Canada, the film was named Best Documentary: Society at the Prix Gémeaux and Best Canadian Feature Documentary at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival. The film was shot in Direct Cinema style and follows players, managers, trainers, shareholders, agents and recruiters over the course of an entire season. Tokyo is Dreaming is a 2008 documentary film by Peter I. Chang which depicts life in the Japanese capital and is accompanied by a score from Calexico's John Convertino. As a non-narrative portrait of the bustling metropolis, the documentary is a modern-day take on the City Symphonies that flourished in early 20th Century cinema with films such as Man with a Movie Camera. In a review of the film for the U.K.'s Empire, critic David Parkinson noted, "As a street performer juggling knives is escorted out of a park by a combination of keepers and the police, Chang crosscuts between images of a nationalist rally and newsreels from the Tojo militarist era and draws some chilling similarities. He also makes striking contrasts between a variety of futurist objects and Tokyo's modernist architecture, with the segment seeming to conclude that the steel and glass structures in which citizens spend so much of their lives have reduced them to goldfish floating without much cognisance in an aimless existence." Gina Kim's Video Diary is a 2002 film directed by Gina Kim. The Cloud Mystery is a documentary by Danish director Lars Oxfeldt Mortensen. It explores a controversed theory by Danish scientist Henrik Svensmark on how galactic cosmic rays and solar activity may affect cloud cover, and how this might influence global warming. Also known as 'Klimamysteriet' in Danish. This documentary presents the viewpoint of scientists who do not consider global warming is caused by anthropogenic production of carbon dioxide. It argues that cloud cover change caused by variations in cosmic rays is a major contributor to global temperature increase, and it claims that human influence and the effect of greenhouse gases have been exaggerated. A Special Evening with Elton John is a 1995 music documentary. Hated: GG Allin and the Murder Junkies is a 1993 documentary film about the life of GG Allin, a punk rock musician who died from a heroin overdose, during post-production after being infamous for excessive behavior and his stage shows became confrontational events involving indecent exposure, onstage defecation and coprophagia, physical assault, and obscene language. The filmmakers shot additional material on his death for inclusion in the film. It is also the directorial debut of Todd Phillips who was a junior at NYU during production and has directed highly successful mainstream comedy films, such as Old School, Starsky & Hutch, and The Hangover trilogy. This feature documentary takes a look at the phenomenon that is "The Wizard of Oz" using clips and interviews with such celebrities as Tommy Tune, Joan Leslie, Mickey Rooney, Dom DeLuise, Joel Grey, as well as three of the original munchkins from the classic 1939 film and its producer Mervyn LeRoy. THE YELLOW BRICK ROAD AND BEYOND tells the complete history of THE WIZARD OF OZ story, highlighting some of the earliest stage and screen adaptations. From the quintessential 1939 film to the successful stage play "Wicked," THE YELLOW BRICK ROAD AND BEYOND covers the complete history of one of the most popular ad longest running franchises. Anija (La nave) is a 2012 Documentary film written and directed by Roland Sejko. Part of the America Undercover series on HBO, Showgirls: Glitz and Angst goes behind the scenes of a topless revue at the Rio Hotel in Las Vegas, NV. Four individual showgirls are given cameras to tell their story: Melania is the daughter of showbiz parents, Kat is a mother of two, Syn Syn is the only dancer of color, and Stephanie is the young innocent. Backstage footage provides a countdown to the opening night performance. Choreographer Mistinguett is responsible for the creative look of the show, but she must answer to her former boyfriend, producer Greg Thompson, whom she has worked with for the last 20 years. He has since married Sunny, a bubbly blonde with showgirl ambitions. Sunny is the also the vivacious host of the live show. As the countdown continues, the dancers deal with injuries and personal problems. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi Chaya is a 2008 documentary, short film written and directed by Luz Marquez, Dolores Montaño, and Carolina Mugetti. "A first-hand account of the Great Sichuan Earthquake that shows the human face of a massive tragedy. The statistics are mind-boggling: 70,000 dead, 375,000 casualties. In 1428 filmmaker Du Haibin captures the human face of the catastrophic Great Sichuan Earthquake, a monumental seismic event that measured a massive 8.0 on the Richter scale. Surveying the chaos 10 days after the earthquake Du Haibin’s team capture the minutiae of the disaster, as people salvage destroyed pig farms, lament the loss of loved ones, dig what scrap metal they can out of the wreckage and pillage the homes of their former neighbours. With a cinematic eye, eschewing voiceover and soundtrack, Du offers a barebones and very human depiction of one community’s response to an overwhelming tragedy. Winner of the Best Documentary award at the Venice Film Festival." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Melbourne International Film Festival site. The Hadza: The Last Of The First is a 2014 documentary film directed by Bill Benenson. Journey into Spring is a 1958 British short documentary film directed by Ralph Keene and made by British Transport Films. It was nominated for two Academy Awards, one for Best Documentary Short and the other for Best Live Action Short. Garlic Is As Good As Ten Mothers is a documentary film about garlic directed by Les Blank. In 2004, the film was selected for preservation in the United States’ National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” It was filmed at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Gilroy, California, as well as in other locations in Northern California. Its official premiere was at the 1980 Berlin Film Festival. The director recommends that, when the film is shown, a toaster oven containing several heads of garlic be turned on in the rear of the theater, unbeknownst to the audience, with the intended result that approximately halfway through the showing the entire theater will be filled with the smell of garlic. Wrong Side of the Road is a 1981 low-budget feature film made in South Australia in 1980. It is distinctive for being one of the first attempts to bring modern Australian Aboriginal music to a non-indigenous audience. The Film that Wasn't is a two-part documentary series about interrogations in Israel and the Occupied Territories, including the use of torture in those interrogations. It aired on Israeli television in 1993 and 1994. The film was directed by Ram Loevy. Phil Ochs: There but for Fortune is a documentary film on the life and times of folk singer-songwriter Phil Ochs. The film, released theatrically in January 2011, was written and directed by Kenneth Bowser. Its title is taken from one of Ochs' best known songs, "There but for Fortune". The film features extensive archival footage of Ochs, as well as scenes reflecting the turbulent political climate of the 1960s during which he emerged as a spokesperson on causes such as racial injustice, political oppression, the horrors of war, and labor issues. In addition, it includes interviews with family members and many of the artists and activists who knew him from his arrival in Greenwich Village in the early 1960s through his death in 1976. Also featured are comments from contemporary figures on Ochs' influence. This documentary was broadcast on January 23, 2012 on the PBS series American Masters. Three Days is a rock documentary about the 1997 Jane's Addiction Relapse Tour. It was written and directed by Kevin Ford and Carter B. Smith and debuted at the 1999 Slamdance International Film Festival and made rounds at small theaters in major cities in the United States. This DVD version took four years to come out. The movie's popularity among fans made bootlegs a highly desired item. The film on this DVD is slightly different from the version that premiered in 1999, although that version can still be found among traders. This DVD includes 40 minutes of extra footage from several stops on the tour as bonus features. The extras include footage of rehearsals, songs played in the dressing room, as well as interviews with fans and Jane's Addiction themselves. This film won the Best Music Documentary award at the New York International Independent Film & Video Festival in 1999 and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the 1999 Slamdance International Film Festival. The movie features a wide array of celebrities including Flea, Anthony Kiedis and John Frusciante of The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Marilyn Manson, Alyssa Milano, Christina Applegate and Val Kilmer. Cape Spin: An American Power Struggle is a 2011 documentary film directed by John Kirby and Robbie Gemmel Beckett on Film was a project aimed at making film versions of all nineteen of Samuel Beckett's stage plays, with the exception of the early and unperformed Eleutheria. This endeavour was successfully completed, with the first films being shown in 2001. The project was conceived by Michael Colgan, artistic director of Dublin's Gate Theatre. The films were produced by Colgan and Alan Moloney for the Irish broadcaster RTÉ, the British broadcaster Channel 4 and the Irish Film Board. Each had a different cast and director, drawn from theatre, film and other fields. Ten of the films were screened at the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival and some shown on Channel 4 television. On Wednesday, 6 February 2002, the series won the Best TV Drama award at the 6th The South Bank Show Award at the Savoy Theatre in London. The films never enjoyed a general cinematic release, but, in September 2001, all nineteen were screened at the Barbican Centre in London. They were also released in a number of videos and as a four-DVD box set, comprising a souvenir programme and numerous additional features. The Hungry Sea is a documentary film directed by Ben Cropp. Blood Brothers is a 1996 documentary film made by filmmaker Ernie Fritz, that chronicles a brief reunion of Bruce Springsteen with The E Street Band in 1995. The film was nominated in 1997 for a Grammy for "Best Music Video - Long Form" In 1989, Springsteen had decided that he wanted to explore working with a different set of musicians and he placed his long association with The E Street Band on indefinite hiatus. Between 1989 and 1995 - he recorded and toured with other musicians. In 1995, he decided to reconvene the E Street Band for a week of recording sessions as well as a couple of New York City promotional concert appearances. The recordings were to add a few new tracks to Springsteen's upcoming 1995 Greatest Hits release. After the brief reunion, Springsteen then went on his own way again. The next reunion was not until 1999's Reunion Tour and 2002's The Rising album. Fritz documented the entire period - capturing Springsteen and manager/producer Jon Landau deciding what songs to put on Greatest Hits album, working on arrangements of the new songs, the recording sessions themselves and performances at the promotional shows. Miraculous Tales is a 2013 documentary film written by Paul Dosaj and Daniel Vernon and directed by Daniel Vernon. Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1 is a documentary film directed by Ellen Goosenberg. Beyond Naked is an adventure documentary film directed by Dan McComb. The Snow Caveman is a 2010 documentary film directed by Fridtjof Kjaereng. Maria Walks is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Daniele Vitorino, Maria Neusa, and Sandra Regina. Acts of God is a 2005 documentary film directed by Michael Bouson. 911: In Plane Site: Director’s Cut is a 2004 documentary which promotes 9/11 conspiracy theories. Photographs and video footage from the September 11 attacks are presented and the documentary claims that the public was not given all of the facts surrounding the terrorist attack. The Portland Mercury said the documentary features an "exceedingly annoying crackpot theorist and outlandish, unsubstantiated allegations". The Ultra Zionists is a British documentary that was televised on 3 February 2011. Louis Theroux goes to East Jerusalem, Hebron and Nablus. The documentary follows Theroux as he investigates ultra-nationalist Jewish settlers. He follows and visits several Jewish settlers and also is shown around the Muslim quarter of Jerusalem by Daniel Luria of the Ateret Cohanim Zionist Movement. Theroux says: Silent Ghungroos is a 2006 Indian documentary film directed by Gauri Warudi. The film is about Tamasha, the folk musical theatre of Maharashtra, and traces its origins to the Peshwa era. Tamasha has been the source of entertainment and amusement for the rural Marathi audience for more than a century. It was made by a Pune-based journalist turned documentary film maker. The Man Who Couldn’t Feel and Other Tales is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Joram ten Brink. C'était hier is a 2010 film written and directed by Jacqueline Veuve. Ngangkari is a 2001 documentary short film written and directed by Erica Glynn. This harrowing documentary chronicles the decade long trials and emotional traumas incurred by a gay Michigan man, Stephen Matthews who was wrongfully accused, by his ex-girlfriend and her boyfriend, of molesting his son. Despite no physical evidence, Stephen was sentenced to 35 years in jail. A chlamydia test which swayed the jury, was later revealed by the CDC to give false positives. When released, Stephen remained a haunted man due to societies legal labyrinths and vendettas provoked by his sexual orientation. A field expedition to collect new fossil clues on Alaska's North Slope reveals details of the lives of polar dinosaurs. Bahrain, the Forbidden Country is a 2012 documentary film directed by Stephanie Lamorre. Basically, Johnny Moped is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Fred Burns. With Love & Gratitude is a 2009 documentary film written by Valery Gasparyan and directed by Arka Manukyan. Discovery Quest: Billy the Kid Unmasked is a 2004 documentary film written by Jesse Evans and directed by Dean Alioto. Brave Miss World is a 2013 documentary and biographical film written and directed by Cecilia Peck. K-Z is a 1972 Italian short documentary film directed by Giorgio Treves. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Embedded In Baghdad is a 2003 documentary created by Alexandre Trudeau for the CTV Television Program W-FIVE. It documents Trudeau's experience before, during, and after the US Bombing Campaign with the A-Saadi family, a middle-class family living in Baghdad. In 1969, Larry Hillblom founded his global courier company DHL. In 1995, the entrepreneur vanished in a plane crash off his Micronesian island home, leaving his billion-dollar estate to a university -- or so he thought. Directed by Alexis Manya Spraic, this engaging documentary tells Hillblom's story through the legal battle that ensued when would-be heirs began popping up all over the place to lay claim to the billionaire's bucks. "This portrait of Washington super lobbyist Jack Abramoff—from his early years as a gung-ho member of the GOP political machine to his final reckoning as a disgraced, imprisoned pariah—confirms the adage that truth is indeed stranger than fiction. A tale of international intrigue with Indian casinos, Russian spies, Chinese sweatshops, and a mob-style killing in Miami, this is the story of the way money corrupts our political process. Oscar-winning filmmaker Alex Gibney returns to Sundance, once again wielding the tools of his trade with the skill of a master. Following the ongoing indictments of federal officials and exposing favor trading in our nation's capital, Gibney illuminates the way our politicians' desperate need to get elected—and the millions of dollars it costs—may be undermining the basic principles of American democracy. Infuriating, yet undeniably fun to watch, CASINO JACK is a saga of greed and corruption with a cynical villain audiences will love to hate." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. It Takes A Garden is a short doccumentary biographical film written and directed by Matt Shouse. Tina Modotti is a 1981 film directed by Marie Bardischewski and A. Jeshel. Last Portrait is a 2011 short documentary mystery film directed by David Varela. The Ecstatic is a 2005 documentary short film written and directed by Till Passow. Yo Dual is a 2007 film directed by Alana Simoes. Kol Tales is a 1998 documentary film directed by Sehjo Singh. AIDS: Profile of an Epidemic is a 1985 Emmy News and Documentary Award for Outstanding Background/Analysis of a Single Current Story - Programs nominated tv program aired on August 29, 1984 in the United States of America. Egypt is a 1997 short documentary film written and directed by Kathrin Resetarits. 27 Miles is a 2005 documentary film directed by Stuart Acher and Nicole Barnette. Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory is a 2011 documentary film and sequel to the films Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills and Paradise Lost 2: Revelations. The three films chronicle the arrest, 18-year imprisonment, and eventual release of Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin, and Jessie Misskelley, otherwise known as the West Memphis Three. The films, directed by Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky, are considered to play a substantial role in generating publicity, awareness, and support for the innocence of the West Memphis 3. It aired on HBO on January 12, 2012. The film was also nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking, and for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. One For All, All For One is a sports documentary film directed by PARK Sa-yu. The Bielski Brothers: Jerusalem in the Woods is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Dean Ward. Ya Umer V Detstve... is a 2004 documentary film directed by Georgy Paradzhanov. Herbstgold is a 2010 German documentary film directed by Jan Tenhaven. The film is about senior athletes competing at the Worlds Masters Championships. 75 Watts is a 2010 documentary film written directed by John Cullen. "A young man’s body betrays him on a daily basis, until he picks up the one thing that can calm his mind and enliven his spirit." Quoting the description from the 2011 Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films site. Searching 4 Sandeep is a 2007 documentary film directed by Poppy Stockell. La Mer is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Louis Lumière. Given its age, this short film is available to freely download from the Internet. The film formed part of the first commercial presentation of the Lumière Cinématographe on December 28, 1895 at the Salon Indien, Grand Café, 14 Boulevard des Capuchins, Paris. From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China is a 1980 documentary film about Western culture breaking into China produced and directed by Murray Lerner. It portrays the famous violinist and music teacher Isaac Stern as the first American musician to collaborate with the China Central Symphony Society. The film documented Mr. Stern's rehearsals and performances of Mozart and Brahms violin concertos with the famous Chinese conductor Li Delun, who also acted as his guide and translator on his trip. The film also included footage of Mr. Stern's visit to the Central Conservatory of Music and Shanghai Conservatory of Music where he lectured to the Chinese music students on violin playing and the art of musical expression. Most of those musicians were playing mechanically, especially the String section, prior to the human improvements, concerning the qualities of the orchestras. One conductor was imprisoned in a closet for playing Beethoven, during the great Proletarian Cultural Revolution of the 1960s, when Western music was prohibited under Mao.Among many others talented players, young cellist Jian Wang is featured briefly. Jian Wang has gone on to international stardom. To Live is Better Than to Die is a documentary which records a year in the life of a family in the village of Wenlou in Henan province, chronicling their bleak day-to-day existence and struggle to cope under dire circumstances. It won a Peabody award in 2003. When the Storm Came is a 2004 Documentary Short War film directed and written by Shilpi Gupta. The State of Insanity is a 2013 documentary film written by Francesco Cordio, Leonardo Angelini and Diego Galli and directed by Francesco Cordio. "Arsenic-laced water has poisoned a 15-year-old boy from a small, rural village in Cambodia, who fashions dreams for karaoke stardom in spite of his illness." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Rocket Brothers is a 2004 documentary film directed by photographer Kasper Torsting, about the Danish rock band Kashmir. Torsting followed the band over a period of four years starting just after the release of their third album The Good Life. The documentary follows the band during the process of making their fourth album Zitilites. It also includes lead singer Kasper Eistrup's audition for Roger Waters' Pink Floyd tour. Eistrup auditioned as the lead singer and guitarist. True Fans is a 1999 documentary short film written and directed by Dan Austin. China Heavyweight is a 2012 documentary film by the Chinese-Canadian documentary film director Yung Chang and released by EyeSteelFilm. It is Yung Chang's second long feature documentary film after Up the Yangtze from 2007. Terrorists: The Kids They Sentenced is a Swedish 2003 documentary directed by Lukas Moodysson and Stefan Jarl. It is about the sentences given to rioters arrested during and after the Gothenburg Riots in conjunction with the European Union summit in Gothenburg 2001, many of whom were found guilty of various crimes in a large number of trials. The film is sympathetic to the rioters. It is 85 minutes in length, and was first shown on June 27, 2003. The film features people aged between 19 and 30 interviewed about their reasons to be at the demonstrations, the police actions, their arrests. The interviews are mixed with police footage shown in court, and in the beginning there is quite a shocking sequence of violent images, ranging from film material from Palestine, to hunger in Africa and vivisection. Although the film has never been officially released anywhere, Moodysson has become famous for distributing homemade copies himself, usually when he makes appearances at international film festivals. This is a Game, Ladies is a 2004 sports documentary film directed by Peter Schnall and Rob Kuhns. Waco: The Rules of Engagement is a 1997 documentary directed by Stanley Eugene Johnson from Detroit, Michigan, about the 1993 "Waco Siege", a 51 day standoff beginning with the February 28 Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms assault on the Branch Davidian church and home outside of Waco, Texas and ending with the April 19th Federal Bureau of Investigations assault on the building which killed most of the inhabitants. The film was spearheaded by Second Amendment activist turned filmmaker Michael McNulty who spent twenty-eight months and $400,000 developing the film. Later former CNN business news reporter Dan Gifford and his wife Amy Sommer Gifford came in as co-producers, supplying almost another one million dollars. Director William Gazecki joined McNulty in traveling the country to interview and film participants for the film. Gifford, Gazecki and McNulty wrote the script. The resultant film, with Dan Gifford narrating, combined FBI negotiation tapes, Davidian home videos, footage from Congressional hearings on Waco, and extensive interviews with Davidian survivors, representatives of law enforcement, independent investigators, scholars and scientists. Saving Africa's Witch Children is a documentary directed by Mags Gavan and Joost van der Valk. It features Gary Foxcroft and his organisation Stepping Stones Nigeria who campaign against the branding of children as witches in Nigeria, primarily by the evangelical "Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries", headed by Helen Ukpabio. In some of the poorest parts of Nigeria, Pentecostal evangelical religious fervour is combined with the old but persistent African belief in sorcery and black magic. Thousands of children are victimised, abused, abandoned or even killed as they are blamed for having brought about disease, misfortune, death and famine by their alleged witchcraft. The film was part of Channel 4's Dispatches Series and won numerous awards, including a BAFTA and an International Emmy for Best Current Affairs. Siki is a 1992 biographical documentary film written and directed by Niek Koppen. McEnroe/Borg: Fire & Ice is a 2011 documentary tv movie written by Aaron Cohen. Birds Of September is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Sarah Francis. Columbia Revolt is a 50 minute, black-and-white documentary film about the Columbia University protests of 1968. The film was made that year by a collective of independent filmmakers called Newsreel and mostly shot by Melvin Margolis. It features a number of off-camera interviews with unnamed students who were involved in the takeover of university buildings. According to Roz Payne, a member of the Newsreel collective who worked on the film: The students had taken over 5 buildings. We had a film team in each building. We were shooting from the inside while the rest of the press were outside. We participated in the political negotiations and discussions. Our cameras were used as weapons as well as recording the events. Melvin had a World War II cast iron steel Bell and Howell camera that could take the shock of breaking plate glass windows. The film is sympathetic to the students and is shot in a Cinéma vérité style. It is now in the public domain. The Aqua Diary is a 1998 music documentary film starring the members of the Danish dance music group Aqua. The Naked-Boy Business, Pt. 2 is a 2011 short, comedy documentary film directed by Andre Hereford. The Short Life of Anne Frank is a 2001 Dutch television documentary film about the life of diarist Anne Frank. It was directed by Gerrit Netten. The film was narrated by several actors, including Jeremy Irons, Joachim Krol, and Bram Bart. Thekla Reuten and Nicky Mark Morris provided voices for Anne Frank. The film includes the only known footage of Anne Frank, a video of Otto Frank in English, and some pages from the original diary of Anne are also videoed in the film. Movies Made from Home # 6 is a 2013 film written and directed by Robert Machoian. BoardHeads is a documentary film written by Anna Koo and Davo Weiss, and directed by Davo Weiss. Earth: The Operators' Manual - Energy Quest USA is a 2012 documentary film. The agonies of present-day Africa are deeply etched in the bodies of women. In eastern Congo on the Rwanda border, vying militias, armies and bandits use rape as a weapon of terror. Lumo Sinai was just over 20 when marauding soldiers attacked her. A fistula, common among victims of violent rape, rendered her incontinent and threatens her ability to bear children. Rejected by her fiancé and cast aside by her family, Lumo awaits reconstructive surgery. Lumo is her story, tragic for its cruelties but also inspiring for the struggle she wages and the dignity she displays, with the help of an extraordinary African hospital, to overcome shame, fear, and the affliction that robs her of a normal life. (packaged to 56:46) Pie Fight ’69 is a 2009 documentary short film directed by Sam Green and Christian Bruno. The Disquiet is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ali Cherri. Professional basketball fans need look no further in their search for the perfect woman. In this unconventional beauty pageant, a panel of celebrity judges -- including Farrah Franklin, Maxi, Harold Bell, The Nappy Roots and Seannita Palmer of King Magazine -- evaluate the beauty, style and sex appeal of a lovely group of contenders. But here's the rub: Their knowledge of pro basketball counts! Touching the Void is a 2003 documentary based on the book of the same name by Joe Simpson about Simpson's and Simon Yates' disastrous and near fatal attempt to climb Siula Grande in the Cordillera Huayhuash in the Peruvian Andes in 1985. Critically acclaimed, it was listed in the PBS' 100 "Greatest" Documentaries of All Time. The Guardian described it as "the most successful documentary in British cinema history". Violonconcerto is a 1974 short film directed and written by Hugo Niebeling. Richard Pryor: The Funniest Man Dead Or Alive is a 2005 television documentary film aired by the television network BET on the life and influence of Richard Pryor. The thirty minute special featured commentary from a wide range of actors, comedians, musicians, politicians, and Pryor's own family members, the special aired just 9 days after his death. If you were to create something big, the biggest in the world, what would that be? This is the story of a Guinness record-breaking plastic statue of Pope John Paul II. It was manufactured in a "dinosaur factory" and is now on display in a park of sacred miniatures. The accompanying paradoxes and surreal observations will tell us a bit about how religious dreams and nightmares come true at the same time. Lambert & Stamp is a 2014 American documentary film, produced and directed by James D. Cooper. The film had its world premiere at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. After its premiere at Sundance Film Festival, Sony Pictures Classics acquired the distribution rights of the film. The film later screened at 2014 Sundance London Film Festival on April 18, 2014. A Trip to the Country is a 1999 documentary written and directed by Jean-Marie Téno. Phantoms of the French Shore is the 2012 documentary written by Barbara Doran and Josh Freed and directed by Barbara Doran. "Man in Space" is an episode of Disneyland which originally aired on March 9, 1955. It was directed by Disney animator Ward Kimball. Later, it was edited into a featurette to play in theaters, accompanying Davy Crockett and the River Pirates. This Disneyland episode, was narrated partly by Kimball and also by such famed scientists as Dr. Willy Ley, Dr. Heinz Haber, Dr. Wernher von Braun and Dick Tufeld of Lost in Space fame. The show talks briefly about the lighthearted history of rockets and is followed by discussions of satellites, a practical look at what spacemen will have to face in a rocket and a rocket takeoff into space. An adaptation of the episode was published by Dell as Four Color #716 in 1956, scripted by Don R. Christensen with art by Tony Sgroi. It was actually a "novelization" in comic book form of two Walt Disney television programs, "Man in Space" and "Tomorrow the Moon". Also found as a 1956 UK reprint as "A World Distributors Movie Classic" and a 1959 combined reprint with the other 2 Dell Comics adaptations of "Man in Space" films as "Walt Disney's Man in Space". HouseQuake is a 2009 American documentary film written and directed by Karen Elizabeth Price. Deutschland. Ein Sommermärchen, or Germany. A summer's tale is a 2006 documentary film, written, filmed and directed by Sönke Wortmann. The film records German national football team's World Cup 2006 journey, all the way from boot camp in Sardinia to the 3rd-place play-off with Portugal. The title ironically refers to Heinrich Heine's poem "Germany. A winter's tale". As opposed to Heine's melancholic view on Germany this movie illustrates the sanguine and optimistic atmosphere during the World Cup 2006. The film premiered on 3 October 2006, the German Unity Day. As of end November 2006, circa 4 million people had seen the film in German cinema theaters, making it the most commercially successful German documentary film. The film was shown on December 6, 2006 on German public TV channel ARD and was viewed by more than 10 million people. The DVD was released on 8 February 2007. Parts of the proceeds of the film's merchandising are earmarked for SOS Children's Villages. Cinerama Adventure is a 2002 documentary about the history of the Cinerama widescreen film process. It tells the story of the widescreen process' evolution, from a primitive multi-screen pyramid process to a Vitarama format that played a big part in World War II, to the three-screen panoramic process it eventually became. The film includes interviews with surviving cast and crew who personally worked on the Cinerama films, plus vintage interviews with late creator Fred Waller. To simulate the Cinerama experience for The Cinerama Adventure, a special three-panel telecine process termed SmileBox, was developed by video and film expert Greg Kimble for use in this film; it was later utilized for TV broadcasts and Blu-ray releases of Cinerama-formatted films such as This is Cinerama and How the West Was Won. It was written, produced, directed, edited and narrated by David Strohmaier; produced by Randy Gitsch; executive produced by David's wife, Carin-Anne Strohmaier; and was presented in association with the American Society of Cinematographers. The running time is 97 minutes. Barbarous Mexico 2010 is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Luis Rincón. This heartwarming film focuses on Kandice, Alexa and Amanda, three young girls who are all experiencing hair loss due to illness. Their embarrassment and insecurity have been curtailed, however, because of Locks of Love--a non-profit organization where employees painstakingly create custom-molded wigs that allow the girls to feel like themselves once again. Emperor's Toys is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Tomasz Gotfryd, Jaroslaw Mozdziedz, Joanna Rusinek, Joanna Wojcik and Grzegorz Wierzchowski. Raising Shrimp is a 2013 documentary film written by Ted Caplow and Sarah Curry and directed by Joe Cunningham. El desempleo is a 1979 documentary film directed by María Elena Velasco. Finding Dawn is a 2006 documentary film by Métis filmmaker Christine Welsh looking into the fate of an estimated 500 Canadian Aboriginal women who have been murdered or have gone missing over the past 30 years. The film begins with the story of Dawn Crey: one of 60 women, a third of them Aboriginal, who have disappeared from Vancouver's Downtown Eastside over a 20-year period. Crey's remains were among those found on property of British Columbia serial killer Robert Pickton. However, not enough of Dawn's DNA was found to list her as one of the murder victims at the trial. The film introduces viewers to Dawn sister and brother, and their involvement in the annual Women’s Memorial March in Vancouver. The film then focuses on BC's Highway 16, known as the Highway of Tears, which runs between Prince Rupert, British Columbia and Prince George, British Columbia, looking at the fate of Ramona Wilson. Wilson was one of nine women - all but one of them Native - who have gone missing or been murdered on that stretch of road since the 1990s. Welsh also filmed in Saskatoon, where a woman named Daleen Kay Bosse disappeared in 2004. Cat Dancers is a 2008 HBO documentary film about Ron Holiday and his wife Joy Holiday and their jaguar, panther and tiger show. It is directed by Harris Fishman. The 75 minute documentary charts how Ron Holiday, Joy Holiday and Chuck Lizza, aka the "Cat Dancers", became one of the world's first exotic tiger entertainment acts. For years the trio shared a happy if unorthodox life as performers and lovers until a pair of bizarre cat-related deaths brought their story to a tragic end. A despedida de uma torcida do estádio onde viveu momentos históricos. Depois de 93 anos, o Palestra Itália, casa do time e da torcida Palmeirense, vai dar lugar a um novo estádio. A história é contada através de cenas do último jogo no local, intercaladas com depoimentos de torcedores, jogadores e ex-jogadores, sócios e funcionários do clube e moradores do entorno. A memória afetiva de pessoas que acompanharam, viveram e fizeram da história do Palestra Itália, a sua própria história. Entrevistados: Ademir da Guia, César Maluco, Oberdan Cattani, Valdir de Morais, Marcos, Evair, além de torcedores, historiadores, moradores do entorno do clube e funcionários. Swim is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Jordan Tannahill. Yardbirds is a 1992 documentary music film directed by Martin G. Baker. After the Fog is a war documentary film directed by Jay Craven and Sascha Stanton-Craven. Household: Four Stories of Kinship and Curiosity is a documentary film directed by Craig Saddlemire. One Mile Away is a 2012 documentary film directed by Penny Woolcock. The Trembling Giant is a 2013 documentary film written by Haven Anderson and directed by Jared Evans. Sea Series #10 is a 2011 Documentary, Short Film film directed by John Price Baghdad ER is a documentary released by HBO on May 21, 2006. It shows the Iraq war from the perspective of a military hospital in Baghdad and by that, illustrates what war really means. It has some relatively disturbing scenes in it, therefore the U.S. Army is officially warning that military personnel watching it could experience symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. After being given a Peabody Award, the show was featured in the April 13, 2007 broadcast of NPR's Fresh Air. 88 is a 2014 documentary film written by Michaela Perske & Adrian Russell Wills and directed by Adrian Russell Wills. The African continent still contains numerous unexplored regions. Recently, one of these lost worlds was discovered in Cameroon, by a British researcher from the Kew Royal Botanical Gardens. The Buddhas of Aynak is a documentary film written and directed by Brent E. Huffman. Dae is a 1979 Yugoslavian short documentary film directed by Stole Popov. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Newburgh Sting is a documentary film about the Federal Bureau of Investigation's sting operation on four Muslim men involved in the 2009 Bronx terrorism plot. Beginning in 2008, an FBI informant, Shaheed Hussain, recorded hours of conversations with the men who were ultimately arrested and convicted of planting three non-functional bombs next to two synagogues in Riverdale, Bronx and for planning to use Stinger missiles to shoot down United States military cargo planes near Newburgh, New York. The point of view of the documentary is that it was later brought to light that the plot with the four men who were coaxed into participating was created by the FBI. The men argue that this was a case of entrapment. In April, 2014, the film was shown at the Tribeca Film Festival. Majesty is a comedy documentary film directed by Ana Endara Mislov. "Set on the eve of the 2006 Gay Pride Parade in Jerusalem, one year after homophobic violence at the parade had put the future of the event in question, Gevald is set in Shushan, the only queer bar in the city. A woman is startled to see her closeted former lover enter, having come to warn her of impending violence at the parade planned for the next day." Quoting the description from the 2009 Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films site. A Place in the Land is a 1998 American short documentary film directed by Charles Guggenheim. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. A Place in the Land considers the history of conservation stewardship in America as reflected in the property of Billings Farm, an operating dairy farm first established in 1871, and the 555-acre Mount Tom, as well as through the work of George Perkins Marsh, Frederick Billings, and Laurance Rockefeller who were successive residents of the estate. The documentary is shown daily at the visitor center for the Billings Farm & Museum and the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park. The National Park Service and the American Memory project of the Library of Congress served as advisers to the Woodstock Foundation in the production of the film. La Turlute des années dures is a 1983 film written by Richard Boutet, Pascal Gelinas and Lucille Veilleux and directed by Richard Boutet and Pascal Gelinas. Lenny Bruce: Swear to Tell the Truth is a 1998 documentary film directed by Robert B. Weide about the comedian Lenny Bruce. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film was narrated by Robert De Niro. A Beautiful Fucking Experience is a music documentary film directed by Sage Seb. The Battle of Midway is a 1942 American documentary film short directed by John Ford. It is a montage of color footage of the Battle of Midway with voice overs of various narrators, including Johnny Governali, Donald Crisp, Henry Fonda, and Jane Darwell. Playboy Video Centerfold: Playmate of the Year Anna Nicole Smith is a 1993 documentary film directed by Scott Allen. Rash, written RASH, is a 2005 Australian documentary film, directed by Nicholas Hansen. Its subject is contemporary urban Australia and the artists who are making it a host for illegal street art. With the tagline 'Scratch it and it spreads', Rash explores the cultural value of unsanctioned public art and the ways that street art and graffiti contribute to public dialogue. Directed by Nicholas Hansen and Mutiny Media, Rash was three years in the making and includes interviews with many of Melbourne’s inspired street art and graffiti artists as well as visitors who came to Melbourne and leave their mark. Rash is the first feature length documentary in Australia to focus on the new art form of street art. Filming began in 2002 on this documentary, which conveys the commitment, ideals and beliefs demonstrated in Melbourne street art. Artists use a variety of approaches including bill posters, stencils, and performance art put the artwork right in the public eye. The film was made in the lead up to the Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games. De Nadie is a documentary by Mexican filmmaker Tin Dirdamal on the impoverished Central Americans who leave their countries in hope of a better life in the United States. It premiered in 2005 and was shown at different international film festivals, winning the Sundance Film Festival audience award for World Documentary in 2006. The film follows a number of refugees who have to cross Mexico, about 4,000 kilometers, before reaching the US border. On their way through Mexico they put their remaining money, dignity, health and life on the line. The soundtrack was written by Mexican composer Alfonso M. Sex Magic: Manifesting Maya is a 2010 film directed by Jonathan Schell and Eric Liebman. La Ultima Rumba de Papa Montero is a 1992 Cuban film directed by Octavio Cortázar. The film focuses on a contemporary documentary production company that is attempting to create a non-fiction feature on Papa Montero, a 1930s rumbero who was murdered during Havana’s Carnaval celebrations. The film uses flashback sequences to recreate Papa Montero's celebrated dancing and his disastrous involvement in a fatal love triangle. The film features rumba-inspired dance sequences performed on the streets of Havana by El Conjunto Folklorico Nacional de Cuba. La Ultima Rumba de Papa Montero had a U.S. theatrical and home video release in 2001. Kaiserkai is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Katharina Höcker and Claudia Willke. The Baluty Ghetto is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Pavel Stingl. Gaza Calling is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Nahed Awwad. Gone Too Soon is a documentary film about the final year of Michael Jackson's life and career, released on June 25, 2010, exactly one year after his death. It is produced and directed by author-filmmaker Ian Halperin, who wrote "Unmasked: The Final Years of Michael Jackson", which hit No. 1 the New York Times' bestsellers list in 2009, after he spent five years investigating Jackson. In an interview with Halperin in March 2010, he revealed that the film is culled from 300 hours of footage shot inside the singer's camp and includes video and audio of Jackson shot before his death. It also includes interviews with Jackson's personal manager, trainer, and attorney. According to the filmmakers, Jackson family members were not involved but are aware of the film. Former family attorney Brian Oxman is among the interviewees. The movie is claimed to depict the more scandalous aspects of Jackson's life. FUTURE BY DESIGN shares the life and far-reaching vision of Jacque Fresco, considered by many to be a modern day Da Vinci. Peer to Einstein and Buckminster Fuller, Jacque is a self-taught futurist who describes himself most often as a "generalist" or multi-disciplinarian -- a student of many inter-related fields. He is a prolific inventor, having spent his entire life (he is now 90 years old) conceiving of and devising inventions on various scales which entail the use of innovative technology. As a futurist, Jacque is not only a conceptualist and a theoretician, but he is also an engineer and a designer. Lindsay Lohan's Indian Journey is a 2010 British documentary film directed and produced by Maninderpal Sahota. It is presented and narrated by American actress and singer Lindsay Lohan. In the hour long documentary, Lohan talks to victims of human trafficking in Delhi, Kolkata and a village in West Bengal. She also talks to a former trafficker, parents of trafficked children and visits the Sanlaap women's and children's shelter in Kolkata. The documentary was filmed in India over a period of a week in December 2009. Lohan became involved in the project after meeting Sahota at a social event and expressing an interest in participating. Lindsay Lohan's Indian Journey received extensive negative media coverage since its inception. The BBC were heavily criticized for hiring Lohan despite her then recent widely publicized drink-driving conviction and "party lifestyle". BBC said they chose Lohan to attract an audience that might otherwise not watch. Indian non-governmental organization, Bachpan Bachao Andolan, criticized Lohan for a Twitter post where she appeared to take credit for one of their raids, something BBC said was a misinterpretation. Ring of Fire is a 1991 documentary film in IMAX format. It looks at some of the varieties of volcanism and earthquake activity in the Ring of Fire, around the Pacific Rim. The film runs 40 minutes. The film was jointly presented by the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History in Fort Worth, Texas, the Science Museum of Minnesota in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and the Reuben H. Fleet Space Theater and Science Center in San Diego, California. The film has eight main segments, corresponding to chapters in the DVD release: 1. Ring of Fire: an overview of the region using wireframe computer animation, and including footage of Hawaiian lava flows as an illustration of how early Earth might have looked. Footage of a new volcano in Chile is also shown. 2. The San Francisco Quake of '89: looks at the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake in San Francisco, California and its aftermath, including IMAX footage of the rescheduled game of the 1989 World Series, ten days after the quake. 3. Mount Saint Helens: includes IMAX footage from about 10 years after the 1980 eruption, and the famous time sequence of the eruption taken at the time. 4. A Date with FEAR is 2011 documentary short film. Ippodromi all'alba is a 1950 Italian short documentary film directed by Alessandro Blasetti. The Will to Power is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Pablo Sigg. The Growing Season is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sampsa Huttunen. The Wild and the Brave is a 1974 American documentary film directed by Eugene S. Jones. The film portrays the relationship between Iain Ross, the outgoing British Chief Warden of Kidepo Valley National Park and his Ugandan replacement Paul Ssali. It portrays the racial and cultural tensions and amity of the postcolonial handover from 1970 to 1972. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film also carried the alternative title, Two Men of Karamoja. The Fuse: Or How I Burned Simon Bolivar (also known as Kako sam Zapalio Simona Bolivara) is 2011 short film written and directed by Igor Drljaca. Adopted Id is a 2012 documentary, adventure, biography, drama and family film directed by Sonia Godding. Lions of the Kalahari is a short documentary family film directed by Tim Liversedge. Neustadt (New Town): The State of Things is a 2000 directed by Thomas Heise. Second Class is 2012 documentary film directed by Elisabeth Marjanovic Cronvall and Marta Dauliute. Hold Me Tight, Let Me Go is a 2007 documentary film directed by Kim Longinotto. The Love Epidemic is a 1975 Australian semi-documentary about venereal disease directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith. It incorporates clinical case studies and sex health instruction with comedy sketches. It was shot on 16mm for $33,000 and blown up to 35mm for theatrical release. Visions Of Vine Street is an award-winning, hour-long documentary by Laure Quinlivan and Rod Griola of WCPO's I-Team about the street Mayor Charlie Luken calls "the most important street in Cincinnati." It originally aired in December 2001. It won a Peabody award in 2001. Llik Your Idols is a 2007 documentary, adult, historical and musical film written and directed by Angélique Bosio. Final Cut: The Making and Unmaking of Heavens Gate is a 2004 documentary film written by Steven Bach and Michael Epstein and directed by Michael Epstein. The Complete Masterworks is a two-DVD set by Tenacious D, documenting their gig at the Brixton Academy on November 3, 2002. The DVD also contains the band's short lived HBO TV series, a collection of short films, two documentaries on the band, music videos, and live TV appearances. The video was a major success, going 6x platinum in the US and 2x platinum in Australia in the Video Longform category. The disc's cover features band members Jack Black and Kyle Gass in Baroque era costume, complete with powdered wigs, a violin and harpsichord. Galapagos is a 1955 travel and nature documentary film made by explorer Thor Heyerdahl, showing the flora and fauna of the Galapagos archipelago. Implied Harmonies is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Hal Hartley. “Women of the Holy Kingdom” provides a rare glimpse inside the nation of Saudi Arabia. Despite the recent decision to allow women to vote, Saudi Arabia has remained notorious for its political and social oppression of women within its monarchial society – for example, women are still not allowed to drive. Produced by New York Times Television, “Women of the Holy Kingdom” grants unique access to Saudi homes and workplaces, exploring the complexities and tensions that exist within the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The internal debate in Saudi society over the radical change in expectations and opportunities for women today is revealed through the experiences of real Saudi women. Thieves of Innocence is a 2005 drama and documentary film written and directed by Paul Arcand. Ufficio nuovi diritti is a 2013 short LGBT documentary film written and directed by Irene Dionisio and Vieri Brini. Supercharge Me! 30 Days Raw is a 2006 documentary film about raw foodism by Jenna Norwood. Norwood, inspired by Morgan Spurlock's Super Size Me, ate only raw vegan foods for thirty days and documented the changes to her health. The movie features interviews with raw foodists David Wolfe, Ben Vereen and Kathy Sledge. The film follows Norwood after she decides to trade her "junk food vegetarian" diet for a raw vegan diet. The Musical Brain is a 2009 documentary film. Escuchar A Dios is a 2013 documentary, biography and music film written and directed by Mariano Baez. When Bubbles Burst is a 2012 historical documentary film written by Petter Skavlan and directed by Hans Petter Moland. Programming the Nation? is a 2011 feature social documentary written, produced and directed by Jeff Warrick. The film revisits the alleged history, research, implementation, and potential effects of subliminal programming in American mass-media, including interviews with Noam Chomsky, Amy Goodman, Dennis Kucinich, Eldon Taylor, Wilson Bryan Key, and other authors and experts in the field of advertising, psychology, music, film, politics, and military weaponry. LA Times's Kevin Thomas reviewed Programming the Nation? noting that "Warrick is ... rightly concerned by the power of media conglomerates to manipulate the news." However, the film is only carrying a 38% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Welcome to Nollywood is a 2007 documentary film directed by Jamie Meltzer, which premiered at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, and also played at the Avignon Film Festival and the Melbourne International Film Festival in the summer of 2007. Rethink Afghanistan is a 2009 documentary by Robert Greenwald and Brave New Films, about the US military presence in Afghanistan following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Produced and released eight years into the war, at a time when Congress was considering sending tens of thousands of new troops to Afghanistan, the film asks the American public to reconsider basic questions about the conflict, such as how much will it cost, in lives and money? How long will Americans troops be there? How do we know if we’ve won? What is our exit strategy? The film was initially made available for free, online, in six consecutive chapters. This staggered release allowed the filmmakers to stay atop an ever-changing news cycle. Greenwald characterized it as “the first real-time documentary.” Father Figures is a 2013 documentary film directed by Gillian Hrankowski and April Maiya. God Created Everything but a Carpet is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mikas Žukauskas and Gintare Valeviciute. Live at the Showbox is the third DVD release by the American alternative rock band Pearl Jam, the first of a complete show. It was released on May 7, 2003. ITECHO is a 2014 documentary film directed by Yukio Tanaka. Love, Obsession, Desire is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Carmella Crissman. Use Your Illusion II: World Tour - 1992 in Tokyo is the 1992 video album by Guns N' Roses. Tornado Glory is an American documentary film that was released in 2006 by PBS. Produced by Angry Sky Entertainment, the program follows storm chasers Reed Timmer and Joel Taylor through Tornado Alley during the 2003 storm season. The film was produced and directed by Ken Cole. How to Boil a Frog is an 2010 Canadian eco-comedy documentary film written and directed by Jon Cooksey to show the consequences of too many people using up Earth resources and suggesting five ways that people can save habitability on the Earth while improving their own lives at the same time. Sisters and Twins is a 2004 documentary drama film written and directed by Oksana Buraja and Saulius Šaltenis. Hermeneutics is a 2012 short documentary, history, war film directed by Alexei Dmitriev. "Known as the “12/8/94 Incident,” a devastating fire broke out in the Karamay Friendship Theater in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, killing 323 people, 288 of whom were schoolchildren. Chinese director Xu Xin’s Karamay, which premiered at this year’s 34th Hong Kong International Film Festival, brings back these nearly erased memories of the past. With little knowledge of the incident at the time it happened, Xu Xin expected the fire to be just another unwanted accident when he first started the project. However, in the making of the documentary, where he interviewed over 60 people related to the victims, Xu gained a much deeper understanding of the underlying tragedy. He tries to convey this agony, shooting in black-and-white with no music or voice-over throughout the film’s somber six-hour running time." Quoting Isabella Tianzi Cai from dgenerateflms.com Stealing America: Vote by Vote is a 2008 documentary film directed by filmmaker, Dorothy Fadiman, which examines the state of election manipulation in the United States. The film focuses on voter disfranchisement, the use of electronic voting machines, and voting anomalies such as uncounted ballots, inaccurate final vote tallies, and vote-switching. The film is narrated by Peter Coyote and features film clips and interviews, including those from Greg Palast, Brad Friedman, Ion Sancho, Pete McCloskey, Paul Craig Roberts, Harvey Wasserman, Bob Hagan, Charles Traylor, Bob Fitrakis, Charles Lewis, Avi Rubin, John Zogby, Clint Curtis, and former employees from Diebold. The San Francisco Bay Guardian wrote, "The scariest movie of 2008 so far is, quite possibly, Dorothy Fadiman's 'Stealing America: Vote by Vote,' a stomach-turning look at election irregularities that stretch back as far as 1996, with a special emphasis on the über-fishy goings-on in Ohio circa 2004." The Seattle Times wrote, "The horror of 'Stealing America' arises from the evidence supporting Fadiman's suggestion that the '04 election was rigged. This is a special that celebrates the legacy on the silver screen of Hispanic entertainers, from the early "Latin Lover" exemplified by Valentino to modern celebrities such as Antonio Banderas and Jimmy Smits. With clips from famous and important films and interviews. Also includes "Fiesta", a look at a real Mexican fiesta from 1942 starring some of that era's top Mexican film stars. Club King is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jon Bush. From Channel 4 Television: A series of films paying tribute to the classic cars made between the 30s and 70s. Annual Autojumble at Beaulieu, classic American cars of the 50s and 60s, car production in Italy, classic cars collector's market, British car between the 50s and 60s, and an assessment which of today's models will become known as classics in years to come. Partition pour voix de femmes is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Sophie Bissonnette. Countdown to Doomsday is an American documentary television film that originally aired in 2006 on the Sci Fi Channel. The program features various risks to civilization, humans and planet Earth. Hosted by Matt Lauer, the documentary features 10 different scenarios that could bring an end to all life on Earth with interviews by Al Gore, Michio Kaku, Daniel H. Wilson, and others, and clips from various films and television programs. Michael Palin's Hemingway Adventure is a 1999 BBC television documentary presented by Michael Palin. It records Palin's travels as he visited many sites where Ernest Hemingway had been. The sites include Spain, Chicago, Paris, Italy, Africa, Key West, Cuba, and Idaho. After the trip was over Michael Palin wrote a book about the journey and his experiences. This book contains both Palin's text and many pictures by Basil Pao, the stills photographer who was on the team. Field Spotlight: Nan Hauser is a 2013 documentary film written by Peter Stonier and directed by Peter Stonier and John Martin. The Next Part is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Erin Sanger. About the End of the Time is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Christian Weisenborn and Michael Wulfes. Making 'Wake' is a 2010 short documentary film written by Naveen Singh. Perri is a 1957 film from Walt Disney Productions, based on Felix Salten's 1938 book of the same name. It was the company's fifth feature entry in their True Life Adventures series, and the only one to be labeled a True Life Fantasy. In doing so, the Disney team combined the documentary aspects of earlier efforts with fictional scenarios and characters. The story's title character is a young female squirrel who learns about forest life, and finds a mate in Porro, a male squirrel. In the film, there are seasons called the Time of Beauty, Time of Peace, and Together Time. Instead of the European forest in which Salten set his work, a nine-man camera crew led by Paul Kenworthy and Ralph Wright shot Perri in Utah's Uinta National Forest and Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Some 200,000 feet were shot during production; only 8,000 were used in the finished product. True Life regular Winston Hibler not only continued as the series narrator, but for this film also served as a screenwriter, songwriter and producer. Upon its release, Perri was generally well received by critics and audiences. DMZ is a 2007 short documentary film written by Jouni Hokkanen and co-directed with Simojukka Ruippo. China's Unnatural Disaster: The Tears of Sichuan Province is a 2009 documentary film co-directed by Jon Alpert and Matthew O'Neill of the Downtown Community Television Center, and produced by MZ Pictures for HBO Films. The documentary covers the aftermath of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake on May 12, which killed around 70,000 people—of which 10,000 were children, many of whom were killed when their schools collapsed. The film focuses on the grieving families and communities of the children, as they mourn their loss and question the government over the construction standard of the schools. Alpert and O'Neill sent the raw footage of the film by courier to the United States, before they were detained and questioned by local police for eight hours as they tried to leave the country themselves. In September 2009, the filmmakers were scheduled to present the film at the Shanghai International Film Festival, but were denied visas by the Chinese government. China's Unnatural Disaster was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary in 2009. American Jobs is a 2004 independent film, documentary, written, produced and directed by Greg Spotts. The film is about the loss of American jobs to low-wage foreign competition, covering the phenomenon of outsourcing in manufacturing and high-paying white-collar jobs. The filmmaker visited 19 cities and towns throughout the United States interviewing recently laid-off workers, focusing on three industries: textiles, commercial aircraft and information technology. It also contains interviews with a number of members of Congress, including: Sherrod Brown, Rosa DeLauro, Robin Hayes, Donald Manzullo, and Hilda Solis, and includes an extended section of clips from the 1993 congressional debate on NAFTA.. Spotts self-released the film on DVD via a website on Labor Day, 2004. The CNN program Lou Dobbs Tonight featured excerpts from American Jobs on seven consecutive weeknights in September 2004, exposure which attracted a distribution deal. The Disinformation Company, publisher of Robert Greenwald's series of documentary DVDs, released American Jobs on DVD in February 2005, along with a companion book penned by Spotts, CAFTA and Free Trade: What Every American Should Know. BB King: The Life of Riley is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jon Brewer. The Closest Thing to Heaven is a 2013 short biographical romance documentary film directed by Ryan Bruce Levey. La Revolución de los Pingüinos is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Jaime Díaz Lavanchy. Light year is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Mikael Kristersson. Come Hell or High Water is a documentary film directed by Keith Malloy. Exhaustibility is a 2012 short animation film directed by Eni Brandner. Singapore 1942 End of Empire is a documentary film written and directed by Don Featherstone. Via Dolorosa is a 2013 documentary, history and experimental film written and directed by Manno Otten. Ausgetraümt is a 2010 documentary film directed by Deimantas Narkevicius. Eer lelo rahamim is a 2003 film directed by Tsipi Reibenbach. Twos a Crowd is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jim Isler and Tom Isler. The Courage Of Neighbors: Stories From The Rwandan Genocide is a 2012 short, documentary, war film directed by Iara Lee. Eco-Pirate: The Story of Paul Watson is a 2011 documentary film directed by Trish Dolman and produced by Kevin Eastwood. It follows radical conservationist Paul Watson during anti-whaling campaigns in the Antarctic in 2009 and 2010, and recounts his history and controversial methods as an activist and media personality. Boob Tube: Sex, TV & Ugly George is a 2008 documentary film directed by Danny Schechter. Theatre Svoboda is a 2011 biographical documentary written by Jakub Hejna, Barbora Příhodová, Jan Gogola Jr., Pavel Kremen, Lucie Králová and directed by Jakub Hejna. Thrill to the pulsating sound of high powered motorcycles in the desert, on the road, and tracks around the world. On Any Sunday II features interviews and championship races with Brad Lackey, Bob Hannah, Kenny Roberts, and, of course, Penhall. Ben khong chong or is a 2000 Vietnamese film. The film won an award at the Berlin International Film Festival. It is directed by and featuring Trong Ninh Luu with Chau Minh and Ha Thuy . Let Our Rivers Flow is a 2012 documentary short biographical historical fiction film written by Tim Junkin and directed by Tim Junkin and Sandy Cannon-brown. Couscous Island is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Francesco Amato and Stefano Scarafia. The Boy Who Was a King is a Bulgarian documentary film from 2011. It was directed by Andrey Paounov. Pistol Pete: The Life and Times of Pete Maravich is an Emmy Award-winning documentary of "Pistol" Pete Maravich. It first aired on CBS during the Final Four Tournament on April 1, 2001. It was produced by George Roy, written by Steven Stern, and narrated by Harry Connick, Jr. It is considered the most comprehensive documentary about Maravich ever produced. It notched a 6.8 rating and a 12 share. Pistol Pete featured never-before-broadcast game footage, plus a host of rare interviews, including Julius Erving, Les Robinson, and the camera-shy Jackie Maravich. MARAVICH biographer Wayne Federman is interviewed throughout and also served as a film consultant. Drink the Moon is a 1980 documentary film directed by Mark Foster. The Sunnyboy is a 2013 film directed and written by Kaye Harrison. Saat el Fahrir Dakkat, Barra ya Isti Mar is a 1974 documentary film directed by Heiny Srour. The remarkable songs of America's best-known composer of music for the stage. Best Small Town is a 2013 short documentary film. The Powers of Ten films are two short American documentary films written and directed by Charles and Ray Eames. Both works depict the relative scale of the Universe according to an order of magnitude based on a factor of ten, first expanding out from the Earth until the entire universe is surveyed, then reducing inward until a single atom and its quarks are observed. The first film: A Rough Sketch for a Proposed Film Dealing with the Powers of Ten and the Relative Size of Things in the Universe — was a prototype and was completed in 1968; the second film: Powers of Ten: A Film Dealing with the Relative Size of Things in the Universe and the Effect of Adding Another Zero — was completed in 1977. The Powers of Ten films were adaptations of the book Cosmic View by Dutch educator Kees Boeke. Both films, and a book based on the second film, follow the form of the Boeke original, adding color and photography to the black and white drawings employed by Boeke in his seminal work. Night Mail is a 1936 documentary film about a London, Midland and Scottish Railway mail train from London to Scotland, produced by the GPO Film Unit. A poem by W. H. Auden was written for it, used in the closing few minutes, as was music by Benjamin Britten. The film was directed by Harry Watt and Basil Wright, and narrated by John Grierson and Stuart Legg. The Brazilian filmmaker Alberto Cavalcanti was sound director. The locomotive featured in the film was Royal Scot 6115 Scots Guardsman, built in 1927. The film has become a classic of its own kind, much imitated by adverts and modern film shorts. Beyond the Edge is a 2013 New Zealand 3D docudrama about Sir Edmund Hillary's historical ascent of Mount Everest in 1953. As well as featuring dramatised recreations shot on location on Everest and in New Zealand, the film includes original footage and photographs from what was then, the ninth British expedition to the mountain. The film premiered at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival on 6 September 2013, where it won positive reviews from fans and film critics. The Toronto Star, Canada's largest newspaper, gave it 3.5 out of 4 stars. It was second runner-up in competition for the People's Choice Award. It premiered in New Zealand on 22 October 2013. Meantime in Grez is a 2002 drama film written and directed by Ylva Floreman. Colossal Youth is a 2006 docufiction feature film directed by Portuguese director Pedro Costa. The film was shot on DV in long, static takes and mixes documentary and fiction storytelling. The third feature by Costa set in Lisbon's Fontainhas neighborhood, Colossal Youth is a meditation on the aftermath of the Carnation Revolution and its consequences for Portugal's poverty-stricken Cape Verdean immigrants. It was part of the Official Competition at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival. Playboy: 21 Playmates Centerfold Collection Volume II is a 1996 documentary film directed by Scott Allen, Jay Brown, Ada Fieldman and Jerry Kurtz. In That Land is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Lidia Bobrova. Home for the Golden Gays is a 2011 LGBT documentary short film directed by Nola Grace Gaardmand. One Recluse is a 2010 documentary film directed by Ai Weiwei. Eleven Minutes is a 2008 film directed by Michael Selditch and Rob Tate. Orange Mound, Tennessee: America's Community is a 2023 historical documentary film written and directed by Emmanuel Amido. Challatt Tunes is a 2012 film written and directed by Kaouther Ben Hania. Always a New Beginning is a 1974 American documentary film directed by John D. Goodell, about the founding and operation of The Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. This installment of the gritty documentary series hosted by Robert Stack travels to the island of Sicily to trace the evolution of organized crime, focusing on the rise and fall of legendary mob boss Toto Riina. Known throughout the country as "The Beast," Riina became a key player in Sicily's highly profitable drug trade. Many murders later, the ruthless gangster assumed command of La Casa Nostra. La Strada Di Raffael is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Alessandro Falco. The Price of Victory is a 1942 short propaganda film produced by Paramount Pictures and the U.S. Office of War Information. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1943. George Jones: Same Ole Me is a 2002 documentary music film. People Like Glass is a 1982 film directed and written by Lienhard Wawrzyn. Behind The Veil is a 1969 documentary film directed by Eve Arnold. The World of Charlie Company is a one-hour film documentary produced by CBS News in 1970 that shows what life was like in the jungles of South Viet Nam for a rifle company of American soldiers fighting regular units of the North Vietnamese Army. The film was made by John Laurence, correspondent in Vietnam for CBS from 1965-70, his American camera team and a producer in New York. They spent more than five months embedded with a military unit. The photographer was Keith Kay, the sound recordist James L. Clevenger and the producer in New York was Russ Bensley. The film was broadcast twice in July, 1970, and won every major award for broadcast journalism in the United States. Future Is Not What It Used To Be is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Mika Taanila. And Miles To Go is a 1964 short documentary film directed by S. Sukhdev. Michael Jackson: The Life of an Icon is a documentary film about pop singer Michael Jackson produced by his friend, David Gest. The film features footage of the beginning of The Jackson 5, Jackson's solo career and the child molestation accusations made against him. It also has interviews with Jackson's mother, Katherine, and siblings, Tito and Rebbie Jackson, as well as other artists - who were inspired by him and had met him before his death - including, Whitney Houston, Smokey Robinson and Dionne Warwick. The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray on November 2, 2011. Hoop Dreams is a 1994 documentary film directed by Steve James and written by Steven James and Frederick Marx, with Kartemquin Films. It follows the story of two African-American high school students in Chicago and their dream of becoming professional basketball players. Originally intended to be a 30-minute short produced for the Public Broadcasting Service, it eventually led to five years of filming and 250 hours of footage. It premiered at the 1994 Sundance Film Festival where it won the Audience Award for Best Documentary. Despite its length and unlikely commercial genre, it received high critical and popular acclaim. It ended its run in the box office with $11,830,611 worldwide. American Juggalo is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Sean Dunne. Fate La Storia Senza Di Me is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Mirko Capozzoli. Tercer Milenio is a 2005 documentary film directed by Wolf Gauer and Jorge Bodansky. Broad Channel is 2010 documentary short film directed by Sarah J. Christman. Men of Our Time: Mussolini is a 1970 documentary biography war film written by A.J.P. Taylor. Kandinsky is a 1958 documentary film. All Aboard! Rosie's Family Cruise is a 2006 American documentary film that follows Rosie O'Donnell and her family along with several other families on the first ever cruise specified for gay parents and their families, which was arranged and planned by Rosie O'Donnell and her life partner Kelli O'Donnell. The cruise ship set sail on July 11, 2004, and the film debuted on April 6, 2006 on the HBO network. The film was released on DVD-video on June 13, 2006. The film went on to be nominated for three Emmys. New World Disorder is the title of the first of the series of New World Disorder Mountain-biking films, released in 2000 the film has been a success and popular enough to allow for nine other following releases in the series. The Ballad of Shovels and Rope is a documentary music film directed by Jace Freeman. Our Stork is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Lívia Gyarmathy. The Hittites: A Civilization That Changed the World is a 2003 documentary written and directed by Tolga Örnek. Ropewalk: A Cordage Engineer's Journey Through History is a 2008 documentary film written by Bill Hagenbuch and Lyric Rillera and directed by Steve Fetsch. The Ascent of Money is a 2009 International Emmy Award nominated TV program in UK. The Beatles: The Lost Concert is a 2012 documentary film about the birth of Beatlemania in America directed by Steve Cole. Life Changing Moments is a 2013 short biographical documentary film directed by Sherry Thomas. Die Sieben vom Rhein is an East German film. It was released in 1954. William Eggleston in the Real World is a documentary film about the photographer William Eggleston, made by Michael Almereyda, released in 2005. "In the late 1990s, a hybrid form of graffiti began appearing in cities around the world. Enlisting stickers, stencils, posters, and sculpture and spread by the burgeoning Internet, it would be labeled “street art” and establish itself as the most significant counterculture movement of a generation. Los Angeles–based filmmaker Terry Guetta set out to record this secretive world in all its thrilling detail. For more than eight years, he traveled with the pack, roaming the streets of America and Europe, the stealthy witness of the world’s most infamous vandals. But after meeting the British stencil artist known only as “Banksy,” things took a bizarre turn. Sundance has shown films by unknown artists but never an anonymous one. Banksy turns the tables on the only man who has ever filmed him, creating a remarkable documentary that is part personal journey and part an exposé of the art world with its mind-altering mix of hot air and hype. In the end, Exit Through the Gift Shop is an amazing ride, a cautionary modern fairy tale . . . with bolt cutters." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. The Plus Factor is a 1970 short documentary film directed by Fred Schepisi. More about love than hate, Let's All Hate Toronto is the hilarious barn-burning adventure into Canada's other national pastime---bashing Toronto. The first film ever made on the subject, the filmmakers take the insane approach, sending a "Mister Toronto" across the nation holding "Toronto Appreciation Days" at his own peril. Canada basically goes berserk. But does Toronto really suck? Or is Canada just afraid of growing up?Mister Toronto hurdles through the divide to discover more than he could imagine about the "Center of the Universe" and the crazy country around it.From the team behind Stupidity and Escape to Canada comes a revolutionary new film that blows the lid off Canada's greatest taboo.Canada had never been so much fun. A Fragile Trust: Plagiarism, Power, and Jayson Blair at the New York Times is a biographical documentary thriller film directed by Samantha Grant. The Reality of Me is a 2011 documentary starring Carl Sagan as himself. Ai Weiwei The Fake Case is a 2013 documentary film about Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei, directed by Danish filmmaker Andreas Johnsen. The film won Best 2014 Documentary in Danish Film Critics' Association's 67th Bodil Awards, played in the official selection of 2014 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival in Toronto and International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam. The documentary explores Ai Weiwei's battle against the fake tax case thrust on him by the Chinese government in effort of political suppression and the consequences that the 81-day detention had on his art, politics and personal life. In the wild, the killer whale is dangerous to all prey. In captivity, however, it is the source of great wonder and joy to man. An Orca is often essential to the success of a marine park. The WORLD OF DISCOVERY series takes you to the far corners of the globe to explore the secrets of nature and wildlife, the frontiers of science and technology, and the compelling questions of history and the world we live in Without Breath is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Fabio Stoll. CatCam is a 2012 short family adventure biographical documentary film directed by Seth Keal. Wild Lilly is a 2011 drama, family, adventure and documentary short film directed by Sanne Rovers. Everything Is Possible is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Lidia Duda. Entre Temps is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Ana Vaz. Gerrit van Dijk Was Here is a 2010 documentary film directed by Gerrit van Dijk. The Alchemistress is a 2013 documentary short biographical film written and directed by Andrew Schoneberger. Tangier-Legend of a City is a 1997 film directed by Peter Goedel. Estas são as armas is a Mozambican 1978 documentary film. Darwin's Nightmare is a 2004 Austrian-French-Belgian documentary film written and directed by Hubert Sauper, dealing with the environmental and social effects of the fishing industry around Lake Victoria in Tanzania. It premiered at the 2004 Venice Film Festival, and was nominated for the 2006 Academy Award for Documentary Feature at the 78th Academy Awards. The Boston Globe called it "the year's best documentary about the animal world." Bachelor Mountain is a 2011 documentary film directed by Yu Guangyi. One Day Ahead of Democracy is a 2011 history documantary film directed by Amlan Datta. Folie à Deux: Madness Made of Two is a 2012 documentary drama family film directed by Kim Hopkins. The Statue of Liberty is a 1985 American documentary film on the history of the Statue of Liberty. It was produced and directed by Ken Burns. The film first aired on October 28, 1985. It was narrated by historian David McCullough. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. This is democracy — Japanese style. Campaign provides a startling insider's view of Japanese electoral politics in this portrait of a man plucked from obscurity by the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) to run for a critical seat on a suburban city council. Kazuhiko "Yama-san" Yamauchi's LDP handlers are unconcerned that he has zero political experience, no charisma, no supporters and no time to prepare. What he does have is the institutional power of Japan's modern version of Tammany Hall pushing him forward. Yama-san allows his life to be turned upside down as he pursues the rituals of Japanese electioneering — with both tragic and comic results. A co-presentation with the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM). (53 minutes) Leipzig in the Fall is a 1989 film directed by Andreas Voigt and Gerd Kroske. Locked Up Time is a 1990 documentary film directed by Sibylle Schönemann. Agile, Mobile, Hostile: A Year In The Life Of Andre Williams is a 2008 film directed by Tricia Todd and Eric Matthies. Barque sortant du port is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent film directed and produced by Louis Lumière. The film consists of a single shot of a boat leaving the port, being rowed into rough seas by three men. This scene is observed by two women and children who are standing on a nearby jetty. Obachan is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Tio. Art Gods is a 2013 documentary, biographical, historical and musical film written and directed by Strephon Taylor. Numbered is a 2012 documentary film written by Dana Doron and directed by Dana Doron and Uriel Sinai. Ciclo is a documentary adventure biographical family film directed by Andrea Martínez Crowther. Punches & Pedicures is a 2013 short documentary action drama sports film written and directed by Ashley Brandon and co-directed by Dennis Hohne. You Don't Like The Truth: Four Days Inside Guantanamo is an award winning 2010 documentary. The film focuses on the recorded interrogations of Canadian child soldier Omar Khadr, by Canadian intelligence personnel that took place over four days from February 13–16, 2003. It presents these with observations by his lawyers and former cell mates from the Bagram Theater Internment Facility and Guantanamo Bay detention camps. The film premièred at the Festival du nouveau cinéma, in Montreal in October 2010. The film was shown to Canadian parliamentarians in October 2010. Khadr's defence attorney's planned to show the film during their summation if Khadr's trial went forward. According to the Montreal Gazette the film-makers, Luc Côté and Patricio Henriquez, also produced a series of short YouTube videos as a companion to the feature length documentary. Shortly before the film's premiere Canada lost its bid for one of the rotating seats on the United Nations Security Council. Pope John Paul II: Builder of Bridges is a 2005 biographical documentary film written by Gordon Rothman. Arekara is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Momoko Seto. Super Champion Funzone is 2005 documentary film directed by Ty Evans. The Glow of White Women is a 2007 documentary film directed by Yunus Vally. This program presents evidence of accidents, haphazard safety precautions, and the deaths of hundreds of people in both the U.S. and former Soviet Union, all in the frenzied race to the Moon by these two superpowers. Hummus Curry is a 2006 documentary film directed by Noam Pinchas and Yoni Zigler. The Nuremberg Trials was a Soviet-made documentary film about the trials of the Nazi leadership. It was produced by Roman Karmen, and was an English-language version of the Russian language film Суд народов. Most of the film describes the Nazis' crimes in detail, particularly those committed in the Soviet Union. It claims that if not stopped, the Nazis would have "turned the whole world into a Majdanek". It also includes some elements of anti-capitalist propaganda, claiming that the real rulers of Germany were "armament kings" such as Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach. Of the Holocaust and the recovery of gold from its victims, the film states that the Nazis "even made death into a commercial enterprise", and this truly happened. It is noted in the film that the Soviet Union objected to the acquittal of Hans Fritzsche, Franz von Papen and Hjalmar Schacht, and to the fact that Rudolf Hess was given a sentence of life imprisonment, rather than a death sentence. The film shows the corpses of the executed Nazis, before ending with the words "Let the Nuremberg Trial be a stern warning to all warmongers. Bug People is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Paul Meyers. The Making of Jesus Christ is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Luke Gasser. Los Del Baile is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Nicolás Guillén Landrián. 25 Million Pounds is a 1996 British documentary film by filmmaker Adam Curtis. It details the collapse of Barings Bank in the mid-1990s due to the machinations of Nick Leeson, who lost £827 million primarily by speculating on futures contracts. The Word In The Woods is a 2011 historical documentary film written and directed by Jeffrey Gould and Carlos Henríquez Consalvi. The Invisible War is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Kirby Dick and produced by Amy Ziering and Tanner King Barklow about sexual assault in the United States military. It premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival, where it received the U.S. Documentary Audience Award. The film was nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the 85th Academy Awards. Agee is a 1980 documentary film directed by Ross Spears, about the writer James Agee. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Orientation: A Scientology Information Film is a 1996 short film shown by the Church of Scientology to people before they attend their first Scientology service. In some places, a confidentiality agreement must be signed before watching it. It was produced by the Church's Golden Era Productions, and like all Scientology instructional films, is based on a screenplay originally written by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. The film is hosted by Larry Anderson, and includes uncredited testimonials by Scientologists Kirstie Alley, Anne Archer, Chick Corea, Isaac Hayes, and John Travolta, identified only by their occupations. In the film's final scene, Anderson says, If you leave this room after seeing this film, and walk out and never mention Scientology again, you are perfectly free to do so. It would be stupid, but you can do it. You can also dive off a bridge or blow your brains out. That is your choice. But, if you don't walk out that way, if you continue with Scientology, we will be very happy with you. And, you will be very happy with you. You will have proven that you are a friend of yours. Raul - O Início, o Fim e o Meio is a documentary film directed by Walter Carvalho. Almonds and Raisins is a 1983 documentary film directed by Russ Karel. Nerds 2.0.1: A Brief History of the Internet - a.k.a. Glory of the Geeks - is a 1998 American PBS television documentary that explores the development of the Arpanet, the Internet, and the World Wide Web in from 1969 to 1998. It was created during the dot-com boom of the late 1990s. The documentary was hosted and co-written by Robert X. Cringely, and is the sequel to the 1996 documentary, Triumph of the Nerds. It was first broadcast as Glory of the Geeks in three weekly episodes between September 19 and October 3, 1998 on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom, and as Nerds 2.0.1 on consecutive days between November 9 and 11, 1998 by PBS in the United States. In Memory of the Day Passed By is a 1990 short documentary film written and directed by Šarūnas Bartas. Castanha is a documentary crime drama film written and directed by Davi Pretto. Fear Not the Path of Truth: A Verteran's Journey After Fallujah is a documentary film directed by Ross Caputi. Interviews with workers who took part in the 1979/1980 strikes in the metallurgic region called ABC, in the State of São Paulo, led by the man who was to become President of Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, but, unlike their leader, have remained anonymous along the way. They talk about their origins, the movement, and their lives. Aus der Ferne is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Arslan. House of Numbers is a 2009 film by Brent Leung espousing AIDS denialism. Leung describes the film as an objective examination of the idea that HIV causes AIDS, whereas the film's claims of impartiality have been widely rejected by scientists and dismissed as pseudo-science and conspiracy theory masquerading as even-handed examination. Leung has declined to discuss funding for the film except to state that funders came from "all over the world". In the film, Leung interviews a range of scientists and AIDS denialists, most notably Christine Maggiore. At the time of filming, Maggiore was HIV-positive and appeared healthy, despite her refusal to take anti-retroviral medication, which mainstream medicine uses to slow down the rate at which HIV destroys CD4+ T-cells. As she said in the film, she refused to take the medication, or provide it for her HIV-positive daughter, because she believed HIV did not cause AIDS. Rather, she believed that the medication itself caused AIDS. Maggiore's relative health, despite years of infection, is used by the film to support the idea that anti-retrovirals are unnecessary to combat, and may themselves cause, AIDS. The Black American Experience: Famous Men of Medical Science: Dr. Daniel Hale Williams & Charles Drew is a 2009 historical documentary film. Welcome to My Nightmare is a 1976 music concert film of Alice Cooper's show of the same name, produced, directed and choreographed by David Winters. The film accompanied the album, the stage show by the same name and the TV special Alice Cooper: The Nightmare, the first ever rock music video album, starring Cooper and Vincent Price in person. Though it failed at the box office, it later became a midnight movie favorite and a cult classic. In 1975, Alice Cooper released his first solo album, Welcome to My Nightmare, and a huge theatrical stage show was created and put together by Winters to 'tour the album'. Whilst in the past the Alice Cooper stage show was semi-improvisatory, with confrontational elements of violence and satire, the new production was purely horror-themed and professionally choreographed and performed to the split second. With the edginess removed, the Welcome to My Nightmare show was part a carefully planned move toward a more mainstream-friendly 'Alice'. Miles Electric: A Different Kind of Blue is a 2004 DVD presenting footage of Miles Davis' performance at the British Isle of Wight Festival on August 29, 1970. The film presents interview clips from a range of those involved, including Chick Corea, Dave Holland, Airto Moreira, and musicians who were in Davis' musical orbit at the time such as Carlos Santana. It includes interviews with some of the band's participants. This DVD was, for a long time, the only legitimately available recording of Miles' full Isle of Wight set. A few years after its release, a CD was issued in 2011 with this performance, Bitches Brew Live. "History has many unsung chroniclers, but perhaps none has been eyewitness to as many of the modern world's pivotal events as Ruth Gruber. Now ninety-seven, Gruber has been unswerving in her drive to capture her experiences in print and photos so that the public might grasp the meaning and repercussions of actions far from home. In Ahead of Time by renowned cinematographer-turned-director Bob Richman, she is still as sharp, vibrant and meticulously groomed as she must have been throughout years of global adventures. Born in 1911 in Brooklyn, Ruth Gruber was a feminist before she even knew the word. Driven by a relentless intellectual curiosity, she moved to Germany to study and became the world's youngest Ph.D. holder at the age of twenty. She also witnessed the rising tide of Nazism during those years, which drove her to become a foreign correspondent and photojournalist. In 1935, she was the first journalist to enter the Soviet Arctic, writing a bestselling book about her experience there. It was during and after the Second World War that Gruber's life became irretrievably enmeshed in world events. Despite years of grim news coming out of Europe, the American Congress had refused to lift the quota on Jewish immigration to the United States. Finally, President Roosevelt allowed a group of one thousand refugees to travel by ship to America in 1944. Gruber was asked to secretly escort the ship from Europe to America, and her record of the journey was later made into the television miniseries Haven, starring Natasha Richardson. The stories of the refugees had such a profound effect on Gruber that she dedicated the rest of her life, professional and personal, to assisting Jewish people in jeopardy. She covered the Nuremberg trials and reported the entire odyssey of the Exodus in 1947, as an embattled ship of Holocaust survivors headed for Palestine became hostage to further violence and global anti-Semitism. Of the hundreds of journalists present, Gruber was the only one allowed aboard the ship, and her seminal photo of the refugees hoisting a Union Jack with a swastika painted on it went around the world. Ruth Gruber defines the notion of a life well lived, and this incisive, articulate and moving portrait of her will have viewers running to the bookshelves for any one of the nineteen works she has written." Quoting Jane Schoettle on the 2009 TIFF site. Sukkah City is a documentary film directed by Jason Hutt. At Sea is a 2007 Documentary film directed by Peter B. Hutton. Water Like Stone is a 2012 documentary and drama film directed by Zack Godshall. Reggie Simmons and producer Mario Jackson created this documentary about the American Sex Industry. They interview sex workers like Divine Brown and Passionique. Ultimately they uncover what the lives of prostitutes are like, and how they feel about their work. A Spell to Ward Off the Darkness is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ben Rivers and Ben Russell. The Brandon Teena Story is a 1998 documentary film directed by Susan Muska and Gréta Olafsdóttir. Easy to Open is a 1999 short documentary film directed by François Hernandez and Pierre Excoffier. Machine Man is a 2012 short documentary news film written and directed by Alfonso Moral and Roser Corella. Legacy is a 2000 American documentary film directed by Tod Lending. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film tracks three different generations of a family in Chicago that lives in the Henry Horner Homes public housing. Their lives change, however, after a life-altering event - the murder of a family member - slowly changes them to have a more positive outlook on life. Genuine Nerd is a 2006 documentary comedy film directed by Wayne A. Harold. Untitled James Brown Documentary is a 2014 documentary and musical film written and directed by Alex Gibney. Martin Niemöller: What Would Jesus Say To That is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Hannes Karnick and Wolfgang Richter. On the Water is a 2010 animated short film written by Yi Zhao and directed by Tom Goudsmit and Yi Zhao. Seventeen is a documentary film directed by Joel DeMott and Jeff Kreines. It won the Grand Jury Prize: Documentary at the 1985 Sundance Film Festival. The War Tapes is the first documentary film of the 2003 invasion of Iraq to be produced by the soldiers themselves. The film follows three New Hampshire Army National Guard soldiers before, during, and after their deployment to Iraq about a year after the invasion. Their unit was Charlie Company, 3rd Battalion, 172nd Infantry Regiment, which deployed from March 2004 to February 2005. The three soldiers with cameras featured in the film are SPC Michael Moriarty who signed up in a burst of patriotism after 9/11 and asked to be shipped to Iraq. His colleagues are SGT Stephen Pink, who joined the National Guard to help pay for college, and SGT Zack Bazzi. Two other soldiers, SGT Duncan Domey and SPC Brandon Wilkins, also filmed their entire deployments for the film. In all, 17 soldiers were given cameras and recorded 800 hours of tape in Iraq. Stateside interviews with the soldiers and their families made up an additional 200 hours of tape. The "cast" was narrowed to three soldiers for the final feature length film. They were chosen in part because they were seen by the director and producers as the "main characters". Beach Boy is a 2013 short documentary drama film written and directed by Emil Langballe. Soaked in Bleach is an upcoming American docudrama directed by Benjamin Statler, who co-wrote and produced it with Richard Middelton and Donnie Eichar. The film details the events leading up to the death of Kurt Cobain, as seen through the perspective of Tom Grant. It also explores the concept that Cobain's death was not a suicide. The film stars Tyler Bryan as Cobain and Daniel Roebuck as Grant, with Sarah Scott portraying Courtney Love and August Emerson as Dylan Carlson. Fight Life is a feature length documentary on the sport of mixed martial arts. The film is directed by independent filmmaker James Z. Feng and produced by RiLL Films. The film focuses on the lives of professional mixed martial arts fighters outside the cage, primarily profiling Jake Shields, and Lyle Beerbohm. The film unveils the sport of Mixed martial arts and what it takes to be a modern day professional fighter. Many notables MMA stars and experts are featured in this film, including: Nick Diaz, Gilbert Melendez, Chuck Liddell, Frank Shamrock, Miesha Tate, John McCarthy, Julianna Pena, Michael Chiesa. In 2013, Fight Life went on to win the Best Documentary Award at the United Film Festival. Paul Robeson: Here I Stand is a documentary film released in 1999 that explores the life and career of Paul Robeson, the controversial African-American athlete-actor-singer-activist. It was directed by St. Clair Bourne for the PBS series American Masters. Running for 117 minutes, the documentary features extensive footage taken from numerous interviews with both those close to Robeson, including his son, Paul Robeson Jr., some celebrities, and several scholars on African-American film and Robeson himself. Additionally, it includes footage from interviews with Robeson, along with pieces from his movies and his musical recordings. It is a very detailed documentary, covering Robeson’s life from his birth until his death. La Rabbia is an Italian documentary film produced by Gastone Ferranti and directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini in the first half and by Giovannino Guareschi in the second half. Film producer Gastone Ferranti wanted to make a movie with the two most important Italian intellectuals of the 1960s: Giovannino Guareschi and Pier Paolo Pasolini, despite them being diametrically opposite - one a right-wing Monarchist, and the other a Communist militant, and yet branded as "heretics" by their own side. The producer's goal was to make a sort of "match" where Guareschi and Pasolini gave their own answers to a single question, i.e. what was the cause of the discontent, of the fear and of the conflicts shaking the society of the time. The movie, analyzing the social conflicts of the contemporary world in a strongly critical and controversial way, was made through the montage of old footage from Ferranti's Mondo Libero newsreels, archive material concerning different countries, pictures from art books and magazines. Electro Shaabi is a 2013 documentary musical film written and directed by Hind Meddeb. Going the Distance is a 1979 Canadian documentary film directed by Paul Cowan about the 1978 Commonwealth Games. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, it was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Cowan, who had been chosen for the project on the basis of his previous sports specials, shot part of the film himself, delegating other segments to Reevan Dolgoy, Georges Dufaux, Beverly Shaffer, Pierre Letarte and Tony Westman. Cowan chose to focus on eight athletes from four continents, including four Canadians: Toronto boxer John Raftery, thirteen-year-old Winnipeg gymnast Monica Goermann, and divers Linda Cuthbert and Janet Nutter. Also featured was New Zealand weightlifter Precious McKenzie. Athletes were filmed prior to the Games as well as in competition in Edmonton. The film had its broadcast premiere on August 4, 1979 on the CTV Television Network. The War of the Volcanoes is a 2012 documentary film written by Chiara Laudani and Francesco Patierno and directed by Francesco Patierno. Dying Green is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Ellen Tripler. China Connection: Jerry is a 2014 documentary short biography drama history film directed by Vanessa Hope. Pumping Iron is a 1977 docudrama about the world of bodybuilding, focusing on the 1975 IFBB Mr. Universe and Mr. Olympia competitions. Inspired by a book of the same name by Charles Gaines and George Butler, the film nominally focuses on the competition between Arnold Schwarzenegger and one of his primary competitors for the title of Mr. Olympia, Lou Ferrigno. The film also features brief segments focusing on bodybuilders Franco Columbu and Mike Katz, in addition to appearances by Ken Waller, Ed Corney, Serge Nubret, and other famous bodybuilders of the era. Shot during the 100 days leading up to the Mr. Universe and Mr. Olympia competitions and during the competitions themselves, the filmmakers ran out of funds to finish production, and it stalled for two years. Ultimately, Schwarzenegger and other bodybuilders featured in the film helped to raise funds to complete production, and it was released in 1977. The film became a box office success, making Schwarzenegger a household name. Titãs – A Vida Até Parece Uma Festa is a 2008 documentary featuring the career of the Brazilian rock band Titãs since its beginning. The documentary features the tapes recorded by Branco Mello when he earned his VHS camera in the early 1980s. The album was awarded the 2009 VMB Award of Musical Movie/Documentary of the Year. Whitewater: A Changing Tide is a 1995 News & Documentary Emmy Awards nominee. Lady Gaga Presents the Monster Ball Tour: At Madison Square Garden is a 2011 concert special which documents the February 21 and 22, 2011 shows of American pop singer Lady Gaga's worldwide concert, The Monster Ball Tour. Filmed at Madison Square Garden in Gaga's hometown of New York City, the two-hour special was directed by the singer's choreographer Laurieann Gibson and produced by HBO. It was first broadcast on the channel on May 7, 2011, a day after Gaga's last date of The Monster Ball Tour. The special was released on November 21, 2011, on DVD and Blu-ray by Media Blasters. Lady Gaga Presents the Monster Ball Tour: At Madison Square Garden features concert footage as well as pre-concert and backstage content. The special received critical acclaim; critics praised Gaga's performance and the onstage theatrics while expressing doubt in Gaga's sincerity during her monologues and in pre-concert scenes. When aired, the special was watched by 1.2 million viewers and was nominated for five awards at the 63rd Primetime Emmy Awards, winning one for Outstanding Picture Editing for a Special. Sharkula: Diarrhea of a Madman is a 2010 documentary film directed by Joshua Conro about Chicago-based MC Sharkula. The Story of Lovers Rock is a 2011 documentary, family and music film directed by Menelik Shabazz. "Indentured investigates the living conditions of South Asian laborers working on US military bases in Iraq. Thousands of nameless workers, called "Third Country Nationals" because they're neither American nor Iraqi, toil inside US bases in Iraq as food servers, custodians, construction workers and more. But unlike American contractors who often make six figure salaries in Iraq, these men typically make less than two dollars an hour. Nepalese custodians talk about the illegal broker's fees they had to pay to get their jobs on the base. Inside a company-run camp a Nepalese supervisor explains how they are brought into Iraq against Nepalese and Iraqi law." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. The Hits Collection is a collection of music videos released in 1993 to accompany the Prince's greatest hits collection, The Hits/The B-Sides. Being a single VHS cassette/DVD, the collection is only an hour long and excludes many tracks from the audio release. Many of his biggest hits like "When Doves Cry", "Batdance" and "U Got the Look" were left off the collection, while the karaoke-style video for "Sign o' the Times" was included. The collection included some of Prince's earliest videos, which are rarely seen on television. 23rd August 2008 is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Mark Lewis and Laura Mulvey. American Roots Music is a 2001 multi-part documentary film that explores the historical roots of American Roots music through footage and performances by the creators of the movement: Folk, Country, Blues, Gospel, Bluegrass, and many others. This PBS film series is available as an 'in-class' teaching tool. Notable musicians that appear in this documentary are: Kris Kristofferson Bonnie Raitt Robbie Robertson Bob Dylan Eddie Vedder Mike Seeger Ricky Skaggs Marty Stuart Rufus Thomas Doc Watson James Cotton Bela Fleck Douglas B. Green Arlo Guthrie Flaco Jiménez B.B. King Bruce Springsteen Steven Van Zandt Robert Mirabal Keb' Mo' Willie Nelson Sam Phillips Bernice Johnson Reagon Keith Richards Earl Scruggs Ralph Stanley Wisdomkeepers is a documentary film directed by Ora Abel-Russell. I Build the Tower is a feature-length documentary film depicting the life of Sabato Rodia, the Italian immigrant who created the Watts Towers in South Los Angeles. The film has been recognized by Robert Koehler in Variety as "the most complete visual account of Rodia and his masterpiece". Harumi: The Beauty of Spring is a 2010 documentary written, directed and produced by Ghislaine Heger. The film showed at the New York United Film Festival on 22 October 2010. This short documentary is a poetic portrait of jewelry designer Harumi Klossowska, daughter of the late painter Balthus and Japanese artist Setsuko. Set in and around the Grand Chalet in Rossiniere, Switzerland, it sketches Harumi's profile through her choices and the words of people close to her. Rio of Faith is a 2013 documentary film directed by Carlos Diegues. Pyongyang Robogirl is a 2001 documentary film written by Jouni Hokkanen and directed by Jouni Hokkanen and Simojukka Ruippo. Le Film Du Cinema Suisse is a 1991 documentary film directed by Jean-François Amiguet, Renato Berta, Augusta Forni, Jürg Hassler, Markus Imhoof, Federico Jolli, Alain Klarer, Thomas Koerfer, Michel Soutter and Jacqueline Veuve. New York in Motion is a 2011 documentary film directed by Graham Elliott. Filmmakers Josh Rizzo and Rob Baca trace the evolution of Apple computers from the Apple-1 to the iPhone in this documentary. They combine criticism and history with an unapologetic celebration of the company that helped revolutionize home computing. This historically important documentary narrated by Walter Cronkite, tells the story if the Parkinson family, farmers in rural Ohio, who electrified their farm with the help of a Rural Electrification Administration loan. Before the electrification of their farm, work was done in old-fashioned, manual-labor intensive ways – water was carried by hand from the outdoor pump, carts and plows were driven by horses. Aftershock: Beyond the Civil War is a TV documentary which premièred on The History Channel in 2006; DVD running time, 90 minutes. It was directed by David Padrusch who later directed other projects such as Journey to 10,000 BC and Last Stand of the 300 for the History Channel. In the Dark is a 2004 short documentary written by and directed by Sergey Dvortsevoy. Harraga is a 2009 documentary drama short film written and directed by Mario de la Torre Espinosa and Eva Patricia Fernández. Dust Breeding is an experimental documentary film directed by Sarah Vanagt. Home: News from House is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Amos Gitai. Nelson Mandela: The Myth & Me is a 2014 biographical historical documentary film written and directed by Khalo Matabane. In this classic 1969 documentary, the Man in Black is captured at his peak, the first of many in a looming roller-coaster career. Fresh on the heels of his Folsom Prison album, Cash reveals the dark intensity and raw talent that made him a country music star and cultural icon. Director Robert Elfstrom got closer than any other filmmaker to Cash, who is seen performing with his new bride June Carter Cash, in a rare duet with Bob Dylan, and behind the scenes with friends, family and aspiring young musicians. Johnny Cash: The Man, His World, His Music paints an unforgettable portrait that endures beyond the singer's 2003 death. Bitter Lemon is a 2010 documentary, short, adventure and family film directed by Nazmun Nakeb. Clan is a 2013 sports biographical romance documentary short film written and directed by Larissa Behrendt. Malala: A Girl From Paradise is a documentary film directed by Mohsim Abbas. Warming by the Devil's Fire is a 2003 music documentary film written and directed by Charles Burnett. Fiorenzo, il terzo uomo is a 1951 Italian comedy film directed by Stefano Canzio. The Settlers is a 2002 documentary film from Israel directed by Ruth Walk. Ten years in the making, KISS Loves You is a film that began back in 1994 when the band KISS was at a career low and KISS fans around the world were starting tribute bands, uniting at unofficial KISS Conventions and growing increasingly more nostalgic for the 70's era classic KISS line-up. The zeitgeist exhibited at these conventions was not lost on the band and in 1996 they responded, rising up like a grease painted phoenix into a new era of success. On the surface, KISS fans got exactly what they longed for, but for some the return of their idols brought unexpected consequences. KISS Loves You follows a few KISS fans along the way. Apology of an Economic Hit Man is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Stelios Kouloglou. White Belly is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jordi Lara. This moving documentary follows global superstar and Staying Alive Foundation ambassador Kelly Rowland as she travels across the world to meet young people affected by HIV and AIDS. Under Rich Earth is a 2008 documentary directed by Malcolm Rogge. The Botany Of Desire is a 2009 film directed by Michael Schwarz. The Finest is a 2013 short sports documentary family drama film directed by Tony Ahedo. Takeaway is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Yu-Hsueh Lin. A Fair to Remember is a documentary film about the State Fair of Texas that debuted in February 2007 at the Hall of State on the grounds of Fair Park in Dallas, Texas. Magical Death is a documentary film by anthropologist Napoleon Chagnon that explores the role of the shaman within the Yanomamo culture, as well as the close relationship shamanism shares with politics within their society. Chagnon and frequent collaborator Tim Asch allegedly disputed over the content of the film when Asch objected to its graphic depictions of the Yanomami engaging in symbolic death and cannibalism. The film was awarded the American Film Festival Blue Ribbon. Coal Rush is a 2012 documentary film directed by Lorena Luciano and Filippo Piscopo. Barbaric Land is a 2013 a documentary, historical fiction and political drama film directed by Yervant Gianikian and Angela Ricci Lucchi. Ghetto No. 1 is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Ivan Pokorný. Yellow Face is a 2010 independent documentary film directed by Han Tang about the big-budget feature film The Last Airbender and its use of Yellowface and casting of white actors in the Asian inspired lead roles of the film and the controversy that surrounds that issue. By now everyone has seen crisscrossing streaks of white clouds trailing behind jet aircraft, stretching from horizon to horizon, eventually turning the sky into a murky haze. Our innate intelligence tells us these are not mere vapor trails from jet engines, but no one yet has probed the questions: who is doing this and why. With the release of this video, all of that has changed. Here is the story of a rapidly developing industry called geo-engineering, driven by scientists, corporations, and governments intent on changing global climate, controlling the weather, and altering the chemical composition of soil and water — all supposedly for the betterment of mankind. Although officials insist that these programs are only in the discussion phase, evidence is abundant that they have been underway since about 1990 — and the effect has been devastating to crops, wildlife, and human health. We are being sprayed with toxic substances without our consent and, to add insult to injury, they are lying to us about it. Do not watch this documentary if you have high blood pressure. A video presentation of renowned author, newspaper and magazine reporter and investigator Ivan Sanderson's 1953 audio report (during a radio interview in New York) of what he discovered only one year earlier in 1952. The Braxton County (West Virginia) incident is world famous and continues to be evaluated with the top UFO investigators. The Gospel According to the Papuans is a 2000 documentary film directed by Thomas Balmès. A Land Of Silences is a 2013 short action family documentary biographical film written and directed by Paul Tom. The Last Song Before the War is a 2013 music documentary film directed by Kiley Kraskouskas. Orwell Rolls in His Grave is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Robert Kane Pappas. Covered topics include the Telecommunications Act of 1996, concentration of media ownership, political corruption, Federal Communications Commission, the controversy over the US presidential election of 2000, and the October surprise conspiracy theory. The film has previously aired on Free Speech TV, a non-profit TV station based in Denver, Colorado and Link TV. CK is a 2012 documentary TV movie written by Aifric Campbell and Barbara Visser, and directed by Barbara Visser. Montemor is a 2012 action film directed by Ignasi Duarte. Underwater Hockey is a 2012 Telly Award winning short documentary film. Policing the Pacific is a 2007 documentary, history, news film written by Alan D'Arcy Erson and Stephen Oliver and directed by Alan D'Arcy Erson and Andrew Merrifield. A Year on Ice is a documentary film directed by Jim and Yvonne Claypole. The American Hobo is a 2003 documentary film by writer and director Bobb Hopkins. Shablool is a 1971 drama, comedy, documentary film written and directed by Boaz Davidson. Pierrette's Escapades is a 1900 short film directed by Alice Guy. Trucker Kitty is a short documentary film written and directed by Alice Choe. Run for Life is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mladen Maticevic. The Olympics in Mexico is a 1969 Mexican documentary film directed by Alberto Isaac. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Fairly Happy is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Peter Scholten. True Wolf is a 2012 documentary film written by Rob Whitehair and Bruce Weide, and directed by Rob Whitehair. Bob Dylan: 1966-1978: After the Crash is a 2006 documentary film. Voices of the Gods is a 1985 documentary film directed by Al Santana. The official U.S. government film about the 1st Nuremberg trial (The Trial of the Major Nazi War Criminals) which lasted from November 20, 1945 to October 1, 1946. Never Give Up: The 20th Century Odyssey of Herbert Zipper is a 1995 short documentary film about Herbert Zipper. It was written, directed, and produced by Terry Sanders, with Freida Lee Mock co-producing. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short at the 68th Academy Awards in 1996. Cinematographer Style is a 2006 documentary by Jon Fauer, ASC, about the art of cinematography. In the film, he interviews 110 leading cinematographers from around the world, asking them about their influences and the origins of the style of their films. This is the first major English-language documentary on cinematography since Visions of Light. Happy Everyday: Park Life In China is a 2013 documentary film directed by Peter O'Donoghue. Tantric Yogi is a documentary film directed by Dorje Tsering Chenaktsang. The Embrace of the River is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Nicolás Rincón Gille. Brother, Can You Spare a Dime? is a 1975 documentary film produced by Image Entertainment. It consisted largely of newsreel footage and contemporary film clips to portray the era of the Great Depression. 1956 Was A Turbulent Year In Hungary; An Eastern Bloc Nation Which Came Under The Political Control Of The Soviet Union After Suffering Under Nazi Domination During World War II, Hungary Rose Up Against The U.S.S.R. In A Revolutionary Bid For Independence That Was Shut Down In Less Than Two Weeks When Soviet Troops Rolled Into The Country To Crush The Democratic Uprising.Later That Same Year, With The Memory Of The Violent Reprisals Of The Russian Invasion Clear In Everyone's Minds, The Soviets And The Hungarians Met On Another Field Of Battle--the Water Polo Semifinals At The 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games. Determined Not To Buckle Under To The Russians, The Hungarian Team Played An Aggressive Match That Was Described By Many As The Most Violent Water Polo Contest In Olympic History. Filmmaker Colin Keith Gray Looks Back At The Events Of This Crucial Year In Hungarian History With The Documentary Freedom's Fury, Which Tells The Stories Of Both The Hungarian Revolution And The Nation's Water Polo Team In Their Bid To Turn The Tables On The Soviet Union, If Only In Olympic Competition. Olympic Swimming Legend Mark Spitz Narrates The Film; Lucy Liu And Quentin Tarantino Served As Executive Producers On The Project. Are We Winning, Mommy? America and the Cold War is a 1986 documentary film written by John Crowley and L.S. Block and directed by Barbara Margolis. Color's Notes is an independent music documentary film about a music festival called "Mestival" which took place in Elx from 17 May to 6 June 2005. Filmed at the 10th Mestival Anniversary for six days, some of musicians from the different places of the World came to Spain to take place in a Cross Culture Music Festival, like Eliades Ochoa, Raimundo Amador, Ken Hensley, Sazed ul Alam, among others. The documentary film only uses footage shot during the events, and music recorded there, and includes interviews with the musicians, talking about different concepts like: Peace, Music and Cross Culture. It also includes Fatma el Medhi's participation and a Benefit Concert to the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund. The film was produced by Filmmaker Xavi Tello and Juanpe Gimeno, and was shot with small minidv cameras, by fourteen kinocs from Alicante, Elx, and Murcia who were joined in less than two days. One Track Heart: The Story of Krishna Das is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jeremy Frindel about Krishna Das, the U.S. vocalist best known for is performances of Indian devotional music called kirtan. One Track Heart premiered at the Maui Film Festival on June 17, 2012 and is distributed by Zeitgeist Films. It opened theatrically in the United States in the spring of 2013. Abortion, Corruption and Cops: The Bertram Wainer Story is a 2006 documentary biography film written and directed by John Moore. RawFaith is a documentary drama family film directed by Gregory Roscoe. The Titan: Story of Michelangelo is a 1950 German documentary film. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. In 1952 it became the first feature-length documentary to be shown on network television. The film was a re-edited version of a German/Swiss film of 1938 originally titled Michelangelo: Life of a Titan, directed by Curt Oertel. The re-edited version put a new English narration by Fredric March and a musical score onto a shorter edit of the existing film. The new credits include Robert J. Flaherty, Oertel and Richard Lyford as Directors and Ralph Alswang, Flaherty and Robert Snyder as Producers. The film was edited by Richard Lyford. Herr Zwiliing und Frau Zuckermann is a 1998 documentary film written by Barbara Frankenstein and Volker Koepp and directed by Volker Koepp. Life on the Line is a 2014 documentary film directed by Sally Rubin and Jen Gilomen. Plug & Pray is a 2010 documentary film about the promise, problems and ethics of artificial intelligence and robotics. The main protagonists are the former MIT professor Joseph Weizenbaum and the futurist Raymond Kurzweil. The title is a pun on the computer hardware phrase "Plug and Play". "The Woodmans are a family united in their belief that art-making is the highest form of expression and an essential way of life, but for photographer daughter Francesca, worldwide acclaim came only after a tragedy that would forever scar the family. With unrestricted access to all of Francesca's works and diaries, The Woodmans paints an incisive portrait of a family broken and then healed by its art. In English, Italian with English subtitles." Quoting the description from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Carmen Meets Borat is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Mercedes Stalenhoef. Matir Bhanr is a 1997 documentary film directed by Debananda Sengupta. Wolf Mountain is a 2012 short film written and directed by Dan Duran, Brendan Nahmias and Sam Price-Waldman. Rare lemurs and crocodiles with bizarre cave-dwelling behavior draw scientists to remote corner of Madagascar. Mission Blue is a 2014 documentary and drama film written by Mark Monroe and Jack Youngelson and directed by Robert Nixon and Fisher Stevens. Mountain in Shadow is a 2012 short drama film written and directed by Lois Patiño. Cliff 'Em All is a compilation of video footage by the American thrash metal band Metallica. It was released in 1987 as a tribute to Metallica's bassist Cliff Burton, who died in a tour bus accident on September 27, 1986, at the age of 24, near Ljungby, Sweden during the European leg of their Damage, Inc. Tour. Its title is derived from Metallica's debut album, Kill 'Em All. The home video also features a performance with former guitarist Dave Mustaine on March 19, 1983, shortly before his ouster from the band for heavy drug and alcohol abuse. The video is a retrospective on the 3 and a half years that Cliff Burton was in Metallica, presented as a collection of bootleg footage shot by fans, some professional filming and TV shots that were never used and some of his best bass solos, personal photos and live concerts. Photos and narrations by the band are placed between songs which focus on Burton before fading into a title card of a performance. The video ends with the melodic interlude of "Orion" as pictures of Burton are shown. With this video, the band tries to show the unique personality and style he had. The Last Ocean is a 2012 documentary film written by Richard Langston and Peter Young and directed by Peter Young. Saints and Spirits is a 1979 documentary religious short film directed by Melissa Llewelyn-Davies. Cheonggyecheon Medley: A Dream of Iron is a 2010 documentary history world cinema film directed by Kelvin Kyung Kun Park. Enemies of Happiness is a 2006 documentary about the controversial Afghan politician and member of the Afghan Parliament Malalai Joya filmed by Danish director Eva Mulvad. The film team travelled with the then 28 years old Malalai Joya during her campaign for the 2005 Afghan parliamentary election, which was the first democratic election in 30 years in Afghanistan. The film gives deep insight into the living conditions of the Afghan population. This look at the South's most lucrative artist to date (over 10 million albums sold), will give you a better understanding of the man behind the music.See how Christopher Bridges, A.K.A.LUDACRIS, made his way to the top and how he is continually utilizing every opportunity he gets to push himself forward to becoming a Hip Hop Icon and superstar in music and film. Sonicsgate: Requiem for a Team is a 2009 documentary film chronicling the history of the Seattle SuperSonics. The SuperSonics were a NBA franchise based in Seattle, Washington that played from 1967 until 2008, but relocated from Seattle to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and became known as the Thunder. A Good Man is a 2011 documentary film about Tony Award-winning dance choreographer, Bill T. Jones, and his efforts to create the dance-theatre piece, "Fondly Do We Hope...Fervently Do We Pray", a salute to Abraham Lincoln for Chicago's Ravinia Festival. A Good Man details Jones's personal struggles with race and coming to grips with the legacy of the Lincoln Presidency and the American Civil War. From the initial pre-production to the show's final performance, the documentary follows Jones as he attempts to connect with his dancers and convey the spirit of the civil rights movement that has inspired him as an artist. A Good Man was a co-production of American Masters, ITVS, Kartemquin Films, Media Process Group, The Ravinia Festival and was produced by Joanna Rudnick and directed by Gordon Quinn and Bob Herucles. The documentary aired on PBS's American Masters series in 2011. "An unconventional look at two conventional couples who swapped partners and lived in a group marriage in the early 1970s, hoping to pioneer an alternative to divorce and the way people live in the future." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Inqilab is a 2008 Indian documentary film directed by Gauhar Raza, about Indian freedom fighter, Bhagat Singh, co-produced by Nehru Memorial Museum and Library and Act Now for Harmony and Democracy in connection with birth centenary Bhagat Singh. Vaseline & Pepper is a 2010 short animated film directed by Fraser Munden and Neil Rathbone. Hot Tuna is a 2012 documentary film written by Jonathan Grupper and directed by Rick Rosenthal. Private Hungary: Father and His Three Sons—The Bartos Family is a 1988 documentary film directed by Péter Forgács. The Mystery of Mazo de la Roche is a 2012 biographical film written and directed by Maya Gallus. My Uncle Terry is a 2012 short drama documentary film written and directed by Paula McGlynn Forgotten Warriors is a 1997 documentary short film written and directed by Loretta Todd. "During their last few days at Cambridge University, a tight-knit group of friends prepare for life in the 'real world' as adults, and as lesbians." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Days At The Lennon Park is a 2013 historical documentary music film written and directed by Annelies Kruk. Set in the backdrop of mystical Sufi India, with unusual access to the world of shamans, sorcerers and exorcists within the folds of Islam. To some, Yiddish is a dead culture, but an increasing number of people feel that the richness of its heritage is something to be preserved. The film presents these dilemmas on the rehearsal stage of the Yiddish spiel Theater, where the performances themselves, filmed in Europe and Israel, allow audiences to identify with the stories and the emotions of this once vibrant culture. Paul Monette: The Brink of Summer's End is a 1996 documentary biographical film written and directed by Monte Bramer. Nero’s Guests is a 2009 documentary film directed by Deepa Bhatia. Attila '74: The Rape of Cyprus is a 1974 documentary film by Michael Cacoyannis about the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974. It was filmed on location in Cyprus and Greece in the immediate aftermath of the two Turkish invasions and subsequent occupation of approximately the northern third of the island. Cacoyannis chronicles the events of 1974 in Cyprus with rare interviews of President Makarios of the Republic, Nikos Sampson – the man the Greek junta imposed as leader after their attempted coup, and many Greek Cypriot victims of the Turkish invasion. Academy Award-nominated director Cacoyannis provides insight and analysis about events leading up to the invasion, and the subsequent events and ramifications of Turkey's occupation of Cyprus. Including interviews with pro-Makarios and pro-junta supporters, this documentary also explores the anti-American and British imperialist sentiment on the island and outrage at the lack of action taken by them and the United Nations to protect Cyprus as Turkey was effectively given carte blanche to invade and occupy despite numerous United Nations Security Council resolutions demanding their withdrawal. The Last Truck: Closing of a GM Plant is a film directed by Steven Bognar and Julia Reichert and released on 2009. Wagner & Me is a 2010 Documentary film written and directed by Patrick McGrady. Lacon De Catalonia is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Niels Windfeldt. The Road to Fallujah is a 2009 American documentary film directed by Mark Manning and written by Manning and Natalie Kalustian. "GOING VERTICAL dives into one of the most contentious battles in sports: the debate over who is responsible for the invention of the short board – American Dick Brewer or Australian Bob McTavish. This even-handed analysis of both camps narrated by Simon Baker is a careful study of not only the short board question but of surf culture in general from the sport’s humble beginnings as a fringe activity to its rise as an international cultural phenomenon by the end of the 1960’s. Killer footage from the period punctuated by interviews from the likes of Kelly Slater, Nat Young, Duke Kahahamoku, Stephanie Gilmore, and a host of other stars of surf both past and present make one thing very clear: No matter which side you may land on – McTavish or Brewer – passion is a prerequisite for the true devotees of this sport." Quoting Matt Bolish from the 2010 Anaheim International Film Festival site. Two Valentianos is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Gertrud Pinkus. D'où je viens is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Claude Demers. Cry Freetown is a 2000 documentary film directed by Sorious Samura. It is an account of the victims of the Sierra Leone Civil War and depicts the most brutal period with the Revolutionary United Front rebels capturing the capital city. It was broadcast on CNN International on February 3, 2000. The film was produced with the assistance of CNN Productions and Insight News Television. Awards for the film include the Emmy Award, BAFTA Award, Peabody Award and the 2001 silver award at the Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Awards. Goat Walker is a 2003 film directed by Bartosz Konopka. The Mulga Seed Ceremony is a 1967 documentary film directed by Roger Sandall. The Strange Demise of Jim Crow is a documentary film directed by David Berman. Little Bride is a 2010 documentary short film written and directed by Lesław Dobrucki. When Elvis Presley first set foot in Memphis' Sun Studios on July 5th, 1954, little did he know that he would be launching a 50-year legacy spanning television, film, and pop music. This nostalgic documentary celebrates Elvis' long and varied career in show business through interviews with Tom Jones, Glen Campbell, Kenny Rogers, ZZ Top, Suzi Quatro, Neil Sedaka, and many others. Javier Sicilia, In Solitude With Others is a documentary film directed by Luisa Riley. Kinshasa, Wicked Land is a 2013 film directed by Douglas Ntimasiemi. For five decades, American agencies have stockpiled information on UFOs. So did their counterparts behind the iron curtain. Soldiers, scientists and spies all paint a disturbing picture of the KGB's secret campaign of the UFO encounter that almost sparked a nuclear war. The pair of “Mig” fighters that tried to shoot down a UFO - both jets blown out of the sky! Stunning proof that the Soviets recovered something not from this earth! Amazing film footage smuggled out of Russia. This exclusive investigation into one of the most compelling events of our time is hosted by Roger Moore. Killing Hitler is a BBC docudrama that examines the Operation Foxley plot to kill Adolf Hitler. The Tasty Bust Reunion is a 2004 documentary film written by Esben Storm and Stephen MacLean and directed by Stephen MacLean. Fallujah, The Hidden Massacre is a documentary film by Sigfrido Ranucci and Maurizio Torrealta which first aired on Italy's RAI state television network on November 8, 2005. The film documents the use of weapons that the documentary asserts are chemical weapons, particularly the use of incendiary bombs, and alleges indiscriminate use of violence against civilians and children by military forces of the United States of America in the city of Fallujah in Iraq during the Fallujah Offensive of November 2004. The film's primary themes are: Establishing a case for war crimes against civilians committed by the United States. Documenting evidence for the use of chemical devices by the US military. Documenting other human rights abuses by American forces and their Iraqi counterparts. This article offers a synopsis of the material presented in the documentary. The Last Dispatch is a documentary film by Helmut Schleppi overviewing and giving greater insight into the final days of the indie rock band Dispatch, which culminated with two final live concerts. The first concert took place at the Somerville Theatre to a very exclusive crowd. Two days later, the band performed a free concert at the Hatch Shell in Boston. It was estimated that the turnout would only be between 10,000 and 30,000 people. In the end, the crowd grew to reach a reported 110,000 fans. A CD release, All Points Bulletin, features two discs of the two concerts and a DVD featuring selections from both shows. One Day You'll Understand is a 2013 biographical and documentary film directed by Renae Moore. La fille du juge is a 2006 documentary film directed by William Karel. Yaya/Ayat is a 2010 documentary, short, biographical film directed by Shimby Zegeye-Gebrehiwot. Mahadiga is a documentary film directed by Lelle Suresh. It was released in 2004. New Year Baby is a 2006 documentary film that tells the story of a family that survived the Cambodian genocide, and started a new life in the United States. The film was directed by Socheata Poeuv and produced by Charles Vogl. It won the 2007 IDFA "Movies That Matter" Award, an initiative of Amnesty International, as well as eight other international awards. It was aired on National PBS in 2008. Nocturnity is the 2013 short documentary drama film written and directed by Alexandra Liveris. Get Down Tonight: The Disco Explosion was a 2004 musical documentary special which aired on PBS. The special featured Irene Cara, KC & The Sunshine Band, Yvonne Elliman, The Hues Corporation, Peaches & Herb, Karen Lynn Gorney, A Taste of Honey, Rob Parissi of Wild Cherry, Leo Sayer, Deney Terrio, Frankie Valli, Martha Wash, Barry Williams, Norma Jean Wright and Felton Pilate. It was directed by T.J. Lubinsky, and produced by Jerry Blavat, Henry J. DeLuca, Cousin Brucie Morrow and Lubinsky. One of the associate producers was Marty Angelo. Library Of Dust is a 2011 documentary short film written by James Leche and directed by Ondi Timoner and Robert James. Jazz Mama is a documentary film. Other Voices is a 1970 documentary film directed by David H. Sawyer. The film follows Dr. Albert Honig, one of the most controversial Doctors of his era, as he demonstrates various techniques he has employed in his treatment of comatose and catatonic patients. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Desert Victory is a 1943 film produced by the British Ministry of Information, documenting the Allies' North African campaign against Field Marshal Erwin Rommel and the Afrika Korps. This documentary traces the struggle between General Erwin Rommel and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, from the German's defeat at El Alamein to Tripoli. Like the famous "Why We Fight" series of films by Frank Capra, Desert Victory relies heavily on captured German newsreel footage. Many of the most famous sequences in the film have been excerpted and appear with frequency in History Channel and A&E productions. The film was produced by David MacDonald, and directed by Roy Boulting who also directed Tunisian Victory and Burma Victory. This film won a special Academy Award in 1943. The 1951 film The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel relied heavily on this production for its battle footage. Libre te quiero is a documentary film directed by Basilio Martín Patino. Die Pamir - Untergang eines Großseglers is a 2006 documentary film written by Karsten Wohlrab and Andreas Vennewald, directed by Karsten Wohlrab. The Tale of Iya is a 2013 drama experimental film written by Tetsuichirô Tsuta, Masaya Kawamura, and Masayuki Ueda and directed by Tetsuichirô Tsuta. We Women Warriors is a 2012 documentary war drama film written and directed by Nicole Karsin. SUNCHASERS documents the journey of three disabled cyclists as they work to secure places on the U.S. Paralympic Cycling Team and, ultimately, compete in the 2008 Beijing Paralympics. The Paralympics is second only to the Olympics as the largest gathering of athletes in the world, bringing together cyclists who have lost limbs, others with degenerative diseases that affect motor function and muscle development, and others still who are legally blind. The film focuses on three women in different stages of their competitive careers, from a rookie seeking to attend the Paralympics for the first time to mid-level and seasoned veterans defending their world records. Fast, Cheap & Out of Control is a 1997 film by documentary filmmaker Errol Morris. It profiles four subjects with extraordinary careers: Dave Hoover, who is a lion tamer; George Mendonça, who created topiaries at Green Animals Topiary Garden in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, including giraffes made out of boxwood; Ray Mendez, a hairless mole-rats expert; and Rodney Brooks, an M.I.T. scientist who has designed bug-like robots. The film's musical score is by composer Caleb Sampson, and is performed by the Alloy Orchestra. It is characterized as circus-like, sometimes frenzied or haunting, and features percussion to give it a metallic, technological or futuristic flavor. In Fast, Cheap & Out of Control, Morris uses a camera technique he invented which allows the interview subject to face the interviewer directly while also looking directly into the camera, seemingly making eye contact with the audience. The invention is called the Interrotron. His four subjects narrate the film in their own words. The cinematographer, Robert Richardson, uses many of the same camera techniques he used in his other films, JFK and Natural Born Killers. 2012: Mayan Prophecy and the Shift of the Ages is a 2009 documentary film written by Geoff Stray and Philip Coppens, and directed by Philip Gardiner. Tehran Has No More Pomegranates! is a 2006 musical - Comedy Iranian Crystal Simorgh award winning film produced, directed and written by Massoud Bakhshi. Dying To Do Letterman is a 2010 documentary biographical comedy film written by Steve Mazan and directed by Biagio Messina and Joke Fincioen. Guitar #1711 is a 2013 short music documentary film directed by Guy Benoit. Seminole Moments: The Art Of Storytelling is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Carlos Leal. Revolution is a documentary film by Jack O'Connell made in San Francisco in 1967. It was subsequently revived with added reminiscences. Although most interviewees are not named some of them have been identified, such as Kurt Hirschhorn, Frank Jordan, Cecil Williams and Herb Caen Daria Halprin appears in the film as herself. The soundtrack features Ace of Cups, Country Joe and the Fish, Steve Miller Band, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Mother Earth, and Dan Hicks. So That You Can Live is a 1981 film directed by Diane Butts, Roy Butts and Royston Butts. Romy: Anatomy of a Face is a 1967 West German documentary film directed by Hans-Jürgen Syberberg, about the actress Romy Schneider. The film was shot at the ski resort Kitzbühel during three days in February 1966. It was made for television. The Greek Crisis Explained is a 2010 animated short film directed by Manos Gerogiannis, Yannis Konstantinidis, Christos Lefakis and Marilena Vatseri. Bordering on Treason is a biographical documentary film directed by Trish Dalton. Project Uganda Project Uganda is an independent documentary film initiative supported by the Canadian International Development Agency. It is helmed by two participants in the Concordia University Volunteer Abroad Program. The film's purpose will be to document the lives of 24 Concordia students on an aid initiative in the northern Uganda town of Gulu. It will incorporate interpretive narration, interviews with the Canadian subjects and the Ugandan orphans they've come to help, and a melee of evocative footage. In an attempt to lead the viewer through time and place, it will follow the students, from pre-departure angst, through two months of aid work, then back again to readjust to North American life. As the film navigates these contrasting landscapes, its purpose will be to expose the Canadian effort in sub-Saharan Africa, and the unique approach one Canadian University has taken to international development. Most importantly, Project Uganda will discover the harmony that crosses cultures and unites us all in a vision for a greater world community. The Prince of Fogo is a 1987 film directed by Inge Tenvik. Between Land and Sea is a short documentary drama directed by Sarah Berkovich and Christian Jensen. Married in Canada is a Canadian documentary about human rights and cross-border same-sex marriage. The documentary is produced and directed by Arianne Robinson, a Toronto-based filmmaker, her first feature-length documentary. Deep Crates 2 documents the history behind diggin for samples and creating beats. The 2nd Deep Crates DVD installment takes you back to the origins of sampling records with some of the culture's founding pioneers. Worldwide diggin spots are exposed from the USA to Canada to Japan. From first impressions, Deep Crates 2 appears to be a step up from the crude shooting and editing of the original Deep Crates. With a shorter list of featured producers, one can expect longer interviews with more potency. Features in studio footage and exclusive anecdotes from some of the most famous crate diggers on earth. Its Up To Us To Keep This Spirit Alive is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Irmgard von zur Mühlen. The Flight of the Gossamer Condor is a 1978 American short documentary film directed by Ben Shedd, about the development of the Gossamer Condor, the first human-powered aircraft. It won an Academy Award at the 51st Academy Awards in 1979 for Documentary Short Subject. Stranglehold: In The Shadow Of The Boston Strangler is a 2012 documentary historical fiction crime fiction family film directed by Myles David Jewell. Death Masks is a TV movie. Toscanini: The Maestro is a documentary produced and directed by Peter Rosen, about Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini, who is considered by many to be the greatest maestro of the twentieth century. It was originally created for the Bravo channel in 1985, and was also televised on PBS in January 1988. Toscanini: The Maestro is the last television program narrated by Alexander Scourby, is hosted by James Levine, and features interviews with former NBC Symphony Orchestra members, as well as reminiscences by opera stars Robert Merrill, Jarmila Novotná, Herva Nelli, Licia Albanese, as well as Bidu Sayão, all of whom worked with Toscanini, and rare color home-movies of the maestro with such musicians as Vladimir Horowitz and Andrés Segovia. Also included is color footage of Salzburg in 1937. Excerpts from several of Toscanini's television appearances, preserved on black-and-white kinescopes, which at that time were undergoing extensive restoration prior to their release on videocassette, are also featured, as well as an extensive clip from Hymn of the Nations, a short subject that Toscanini filmed to support the U.S. war effort in 1944. Nuba Conversations is a 2000 documentary and ethnographic film directed by Arthur Howes. Power Trip: Theatrically Berkeley is a documentary film directed by Emio Tomeoni and produced by Meo Productions. The film concerns Berkeley, California's attempt to green the city—partly by passing Measure G in Berkeley in 2007—and the various factions in the city arguing over the best way to achieve this. The film features mayor of Berkeley Tom Bates, former mayors Shirley Dean and Loni Hancock, and Berkeley City Council member Kriss Worthington. The film had its premiere on September 14, 2009 at Pacific Film Archive at UC Berkeley. Future My Love is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Maja Borg. Ernest is a 2013 year short documentary film directed by Frankie Chen. 1968-Betrayal is a 2008 documentary film written by Pavel Kosatík and directed by Viktor Polesný. BookWars is an award-winning independent film from New York City by Jason "Jack RO" Rosette produced by Camerado, about the life and times of New York City street booksellers. Made on an ultra-low budget in a jazzy, impressionistic style reminiscent of the films of Robert Frank and poetry of the Beat Generation, BookWars is the only first-person documentary made during then-New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's controversial "Quality of Life" campaign, which sought to limit and control individuals engaged in informal economic activities on the streets of New York City. BookWars was released in June 2000, winning the Best Documentary Award at the 2000 New York Underground Film Festival IndieWire and premiering theatrically at New York's Cinema Village. Despite its minuscule budget BookWars enjoyed numerous domestic and international TV sales and has to date generated revenue of several hundred thousand dollars. The movie is currently available on DVD, VOD, VCD, digital download, theatrical film prints, and other formats. Kathakali is a 1959 documentary film directed by Mohan Wadhwani. Housekeeper is 2006 documentary film written by Necati Sönmez, Emel Çelebi and directed by Emel Çelebi. Dive! is an American documentary film directed by Jeremy Seifert. Hamdi and Maria is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Timor Britva. Masks Carved Into Your Soul id a 2013 Documentary-Super Short film directed by Bryan Goodwin. Amandla!: A Revolution in Four-Part Harmony is a 2002 documentary film depicting the struggles of black South Africans against the injustices of Apartheid through the use of music. The film takes its name from the Zulu and Xhosa word amandla, which means power. The film was produced by Sherry Simpson Dean, Desiree Markgraaff and Lee Hirsch. Simpson Dean and Hirsch also produced the film's soundtrack of the same name. The collection of authentic South African "Freedom Songs" was Executive Produced by Dave Matthews and his label ATO Records. DeLorean: Living the Dream is a 2013 documentary biographical film written and directed by Jordan Livingston. Mississippi: I AM is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Harriet Hirshorn and Katherine Linton. Of Many is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Linda G. Mills. Phir Bolo Aaye Sant Kabir is a 1976 documentary bollywood film directed by Khwaja Ahmad Abbas. Caesar Must Die is a 2012 Italian drama film directed by Paolo and Vittorio Taviani. The film competed at the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival where it won the Golden Bear. After the Ballot is a documentary film by Manuel Foglia, produced by the National Film Board of Canada. The film was released in 2008. It follows the lives of two members of the National Assembly of Québec - Charlotte L'Écuyer, a Liberal back bencher, and Daniel Turp, a Parti Québécois Shadow Minister. The film follows L'Écuyer and her troubles with her own government. She wants to preserve her riding's lumbering jobs, although her government, insofar as it is presented in the film, is committed to preserving forests. Turp, on the hand, does not seem to have the same constituency problems. Here, the film focuses on his reaction to various political actions undertaken by the PQ, and his considering running for PQ leadership. Of these two MNAs only Charlotte L'Écuyer has held on to her seat in subsequent elections. Daniel Turp lost his seat to Québec solidaire member Amir Khadir. The filming took place during the Liberal Party's first majority government, under Premier Jean Charest. During the filming, Bernard Landry faced a leadership challenged, launched, in part, by Pauline Marois. Landry lost support of his party, and stepped down as leader. ESPN: Black Magic 2008 documentary film written by Dan Klores and Charles C. Stuart and directed by Dan Klores. Fringes is a 2012 documentary film directed by Paula Weiman-Kelman. On Grandma is a 2000 film directed by Michaela Pavlátová. Der Traum ist aus is a 2001 film directed by Christoph Schuch. None Less Than Heroes: The Honor Flight Story is a 43 minute film about the sponsored flight of Iowa World War II veterans to Washington, D.C. in August 2010 to view the National World War II Memorial. This was only one of many such flights provided to veterans over a period of more than two years. The documentary was written by Marshall Riggan, produced by Jeff Ballenger and Dean Nolan, produced and directed by Ken Heckman, with war footage from the National Archives, and narrated by actor Gary Sinise, it covers the August 15 through 18 trip to the Memorial, first showing them honored at a banquet hosted by Hy-Vee in Des Moines, Iowa, followed by their boarding a 747 Jumbo Jet, some in wheelchairs, others with oxygen tanks, then their arrival in D.C., greeted during their transport in buses from the airport by crowds waving flags and holding signs, their tour of the National World War II Memorial at the western end of the reflecting pool between the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial, with stops at Arlington National Cemetery, the Vietnam War Memorial, the Korean War Memorial, the United States Marine Corps Pacific Memorial, and finally the return home. Paradiso is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Alessandro Negrini. "Two years after Hurricane Katrina, many communities in New Orleans are still in disarray. In a courageous attempt to revitalize a community center while bringing local teenagers together through song and dance, a New York playwright and director travel to New Orleans to help them put on the musical “Once on This Island”. The dreams of the local teens, the future of the center, and a shot at Broadway are put to the test as the project struggles under pressure from the troubles of traumatized youth and the strains of a community recently torn apart." Quoting the description from the 2011 New York Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Film Festival site. America: The Story of Us is a 12-part, 9-hours documentary-drama television miniseries that premiered on April 25, 2010, on History channel. Produced by Nutopia, the program portrays more than 400 years of American history. It spans time from the successful English settlement of Jamestown beginning in 1607, through to the present day. Narrated by Liev Schreiber, the series recreates many historical events by using actors dressed in the style of the period and computer-generated special effects. The miniseries received mixed reviews by critics; but it attracted the largest audiences of any special aired by the channel to date. Men with Beards is a documentary, biographical and comedy film directed by Dylan Fries and Michael Sanders. A Well Spent Life is a short music documentary film from 1972 directed by Les Blank. Apollo 13: To the Edge and Back is a 1995 Emmy Awards nominated program aired on 20 July 1994 in USA. Lettera Al Presidente is a 2013 documentary film written by Teresa Bertilotti and Marco Santarelli and directed by Marco Santarelli. Letters to the President is a 2009 film directed by Petr Lom. You Can't Stop the Beat: The Long Journey of 'Hairspray' is a 2007 documentary film directed by Katy Leigh and Jeffrey Schwarz. Suggestion Box is a short propaganda film produced in 1943 by the Office of War Information. Its purpose was to encourage workers to send in suggestions for more effective war production. The film opens with a standard factory suggestion box and the many workers who slip pieces of paper in it as they walk by. The suggestions are then gathered and sent to Washington DC where a board of experts examines each one to find its merits for more efficient and speedy war production. A few examples are given: a worker who was working on iron tubes finds a way to increase his production by lining them up all together a black janitor suggest a way to save oil from being spilled and a woman uses her Grandmothers method of button making to make better rivets. Some of these people whose idea are taken up by the committee are given awards for helping war production. The films message to use suggestion boxes was also spread through propaganda posters at the time. Propaganda poster, 1942-43 Propaganda poster, 1942 Propaganda poster, 1943 Propaganda poster, 1942-43 "On January 11, 2008, Josh Cohen and his partners, attorneys for the City of Cleveland, sue the 21 banks that they deem responsible for the real estate foreclosures that have devastated the city. But the Wall Street banks that they attack oppose going to trial by every means possible. Cleveland vs Wall Street tells the story of a trial that should have taken place. A cinematic trial but one whose story, characters and testimony are real." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Directors' Fortnight site. Rise Above: The Tribe 8 Documentary is a feature film directed and produced by Tracy Flannigan that documents the all women queercore punk band Tribe 8. The film chronicles live performances, candid moments of their lives at work and on the road, and the controversy at the Michigan Womyn's Music Festival, an all women's music festival, that landed them in a quagmire of protest and praise from a fiercely divided crowd. It also captures the truly funny and warm people behind the music and the politics. The images presented on stage of blow jobs, sadomasochistic acts and mock castrations are not shocking the audience for shock's sake, but understood on a deeper level through the band members' intense personal disclosures. As Chuck Wilson writes in LA Weekly, "Filmmaker Tracy Flannigan gets it all in close-up, but also captures the rich and complex life stories of these women, whose lives take on political weight based on sheer authenticity...". These interviews inform an understanding and respect for why they do what they do. Especially insightful are the interviews with singer Lynn Breedlove and her mother. Ten9Eight: Shoot for the Moon is a 2009 documentary film written, directed, and produced by Mary Mazzio about inner NYC teens that compete in an annual business plan competition run by the Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship. City World is a 2012 documentary adventure drama film directed and written by Brent Chesanek. Welcome to Wonderland is a feature documentary film, by director James Short, about music and dance. Released on DVD in June 2006 after more than five years in the making, this film explores Australia's vibrant outdoor bush rave party scene through the thoughts of participants. The trance scene in Melbourne, Australia, is considered one of the best in the world, and sees the convergence of travellers from all parts of the globe, especially Japan and Israel. With party organisations like Rainbow Serpent and Earthcore there are as many as 10,000 people who come together to celebrate and dance. The film follows the party lives of characters: Matty, Krusty, Lauire, Margaret, Raff, and Holly. Diana: Last Days of a Princess is a television movie broadcast in the United States by TLC on August 12, 2007 and subsequent dates. It also has aired on Five, UKTV History, UKTV Drama in Great Britain, RTÉ in Ireland, ProSieben in Germany, TF1 in France, RTP in Portugal, Channel 7 Australia, Channel One in Russia, JIM in Finland and the History Channel in India. The film purports to be a fairly accurate account of the last two months in the life of Diana, Princess of Wales, leading up to her death on August 31, 1997. It is a mix of scripted scenes, actual news footage, and recent interviews with some of the principals present during the period portrayed, including Mohamed Al-Fayed and editors from The Sunday Mirror, giving it a hybrid drama-documentary feel. Much of Jenny Lecoat's teleplay is based on testimony found in the 800-page Paget Report, published in 2006 by the United Kingdom's Metropolitan Police Service following a four-year-long investigation. The Ginger Ninjas Ride Mexico is a 2011 documentary adventure film directed by Sergio Morkin. The Bridge at Aussig is a 1995 documentary film directed by Pavel Schnabel. Filmmaker Doug Block had every reason to believe his parent's 54-year marriage was a good one. So he isn't prepared when, just a few months after his mothers' unexpected death, his 83-year old father, Mike, phones to announce that he's moving to Florida to live with "Kitty", his secretary from 40 years before. Always close to his mother and equally distant from his father, he's stunned and suspicious. When Mike and Kitty marry and sell the longtime family home, Doug returns to suburban Long Island with camera in hand for one last visit. And there, among the lifetime of memories being packed away forever, he discovers 3 large boxes filled with his moms' daily diaries going back well over 35 years. Realizing he has only a few short weeks before the movers come and his dad will be gone for good, the veteran documentarian sticks around, determined to investigate the mystery of his parents' marriage. Through increasingly candid conversations with family members and friends, and constantly surprising diary revelations, Doug finally comes to peace with two parents who are far more complex and troubled than he ever imagined. Both unexpectedly funny and heartbreaking, 51 BIRCH STREET is the first-person account of Block's unpredictable journey through a whirlwind of dramatic life-changing events: the death of his mother, the uncovering of decades of family secrets, and the ensuing reconciliation with his father. What begins as his own intimate, autobiographical story, soon evolves into a broader meditation on the universal themes of love, marriage, fidelity and the mystery of family. 51 BIRCH STREET spans 60 years and 3 generations, and weaves together hundreds of faded snapshots, 8mm home movies and two decades of verité footage. The result is a timeless tale of what can happen when our most fundamental assumptions about family are suddenly called into question.Doug Block's new film, THE KIDS GROW UP, will have its theatrical premiere Oct 29th at the Angelika Film Center in New York, and Nov 12th at the Laemmle Sunset in LA.Watch the trailer here. Calling 3: Himalayan Schweitzer is a documentary film directed by Shin Hyeon-Won. Gestern und heute is a 1938 German Nazi propaganda short film directed by Hans Steinhoff. Dancing Colours is a 2012 documentary film directed by Kristin Olschewsk,Fabian Oswald,Alina Koschnike,Aurelia Natalini,Oliver Schwamb,Bastian Mittelbach and Marion Härtel. The Vanquishing of the Witch Baba Yaga is an animated historical documentary film directed by Jessica Oreck. Fanny Serrano: Touch is a 2006 documentary film. Return To The Forest is a 2012 short adventure drama documentary film written by Patricia Sims, Michael Zo Clark and directed by Patricia Sims. Viva Nelson Mandela: A Hero for All Seasons is a 2009 documentary film directed by Catherine Meyburgh. "2003, Song Du-yul, a philosophy professor, decided to go back to his homeland after spending thirty-seven years in Germany. Within a week after crossing the border, his reputation fell from a respected global political figure to an infamous communist spy. During a five-year-long trial, he was arrested and held in custody. This throws Korean society into turmoil and brings a big conflict between the Conservative and the Progressive. The filmmaker calmly contemplates this long period of the incident in detail and depicts a society with an indifferent manner. The story builds through an accretion of whimsical facts and it sometimes brings up uncomfortable truths which will irritate viewers. This film is a camera inside of us that evokes what viewers may have tried to forget." Quoting the synopsis from HanCinema. White Lines and the Fever: The Death of DJ Junebug is a documentary film directed by Travis Gutiérrez Senger in 2010. Grandad of Races is a 1950 American short documentary film about an annual horse race held in the Piazza del Campo in Siena, directed by André de la Varre. It won an Academy Award at the 23rd Academy Awards in 1951 for Best Short Subject. Hamburg Damals is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Christian Mangels. Minka is a 2010 documentary film directed by Davina Pardo. Get Bruce, sometimes stylized as Get Bruce!, is a 1999 documentary film starring Bruce Vilanch, Whoopi Goldberg, Robin Williams, Lily Tomlin, Shirley MacLaine, Steven Seagal, Carol Burnett and Michael Douglas. The film is directed by Andrew J. Kuehn. Traitor or Patriot is a Quebec documentary produced by the National Film Board of Canada in 2000. It is directed by and starring Jacques Godbout. Its style belongs to the Quebec cinéma direct school of filmmaking. The Gift is a 2003 documentary by filmmaker Louise Hogarth documenting the phenomenon of deliberate HIV infection; bugchasing. The film follows the stories of two "bug chasers" who are seeking "the gift" of HIV infection. Interviews are also conducted with AIDS activist and author, Walt Odets, PhD, and HIV positive and negative men. The film explores the normalization and glamorization of HIV/AIDS and discusses the isolation and division caused by HIV status in the gay community. Fahrenheit 9/11 is a 2004 documentary film by American filmmaker and director and political commentator Michael Moore. The film takes a critical look at the presidency of George W. Bush, the War on Terror, and its coverage in the news media. The film is the highest grossing documentary of all time. In the film, Moore contends that American corporate media were "cheerleaders" for the 2003 invasion of Iraq and did not provide an accurate or objective analysis of the rationale for the war or the resulting casualties there. The film generated intense controversy, including disputes over its accuracy. The film debuted at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival in the documentary film category and received a 20 minute standing ovation, among the longest standing ovations in the festival's history. The film was also awarded the Palme d'Or, the festival's highest award. The title of the film alludes to Ray Bradbury's 1953 novel Fahrenheit 451, a dystopian view of the future United States, drawing an analogy between the autoignition temperature of paper and the date of the September 11 attacks; the film's tagline is "The Temperature at Which Freedom Burns." Britain at Bay is a 1940 British propaganda film produced by the GPO Film Unit of the Ministry of Information to raise morale following the Fall of France in June 1940. It was released in other countries under the title Britain on Guard. Ronda revolucionaria is a 1976 documentary film written and directed by Carmen Toscano. We Were Children is a 2012 Canadian documentary film about the experiences of First Nations children in the Canadian Indian residential school system. Directed by Tim Wolochatiuk and written by Jason Sherman, the film recounts the experiences of two resident school survivors: Lyna Hart, who was sent to the Guy Hill Residential School in Manitoba at age four, and Glen Anaquod, who was sent to the Lebret Indian Residential School in Saskatchewan. We Were Children combines interviews with the two with dramatic recreations of their experiences. According to Hart, her participation in the film marked the first time she had shared the full story of her time in the school. She has stated she regards her involvement in We Were Children as a key step in her healing process. Anaquod died in 2011 before the film’s completion; a private screening of the film was held for his family. Elecciones generales is a 1985 short documentary film written and directed by César de Ferrari. Freestyle Live: 19th East is a 2007 music and documentary film. "This exposé chronicles the private dramas of irreverent, legendary comedian and pop icon Joan Rivers as she fights tooth and nail to keep her American dream alive. The film offers a rare glimpse of the comedic process and the crazy mixture of self-doubt and anger that often fuels it. A unique look inside America's obsession with fame and celebrity, Rivers's story is both an outrageously funny journey and brutally honest look at the ruthless entertainment industry, the trappings of success, and the ultimate vulnerability of the first queen of comedy. Being able to break through Rivers’s self-made façade is a tribute to filmmakers Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg. It is obvious the magic of this film is the inherent trust between filmmakers and subject. Shot over the course of a year, the film enlists a resilient cinema vérité style to craft a moving look at this iconic performer, stripping away her comedy masks and laying bare the truth of her life and inspiration." Quoting the description from 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Terror Nation was a 27-minute documentary, included on the 2007 DVD release of the Doctor Who series Destiny of the Daleks. The documentary focused on the career of writer Terry Nation, who created the Daleks, and his work on Doctor Who. The programme included interviews with a number of Nation's former colleagues, including Barry Letts and Philip Hinchcliffe, script editor Terrance Dicks, director Richard Martin, plus actor Nicholas Briggs, who provides the Dalek voices for the new Doctor Who series. The documentary was produced by Richard Molesworth of the Doctor Who Restoration Team. Los murmullos is a 1974 short documentary film written by Guy Danvert and directed by Rubén Gámez and Carlos Velo. How to Make a Book With Steidl is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jörg Adolph and Gereon Wetzel. Lifecycles: A Story of AIDS in Malawi is a 2003 documentary from directors Sierra Bellows and Doug Karr focusing on the AIDS epidemic in Malawi, Africa. Approaching Zero 000 is a 1987 film directed by Stefania Lopez-Svenstedt. Dusty Stacks of Mom is a 2013 animation music documentary film written and directed by Jodie Mack. Bowl of Dreams is a 2011 documentary film and directed by Stanley V. Henson Jr.. Doubletime is a documentary film about the sport of modern-day jump roping and Double Dutch. The film follows two disparate teams—one suburban white and one inner-city black—as they train to compete against each other for the very first time. Nivel 550 0 comunidades mineras is a short documentary film directed by Carlos Ortiz Tejeda. Indian Ocean Expedition is a 1963 short documentary film directed by Shanti S. Verma. One Big Holiday is a short documentary film about the band My Morning Jacket, and their relationship with their hometown of Louisville, Kentucky. Shot over a period of one week in October 2010, it chronicles the preparations of the band as they readied for a homecoming concert in the newly constructed downtown arena. Executive Producer Christopher Guetig was the band's drummer from 2000-2002. This program examines the six-day conflict 40 years ago that pitted the Israelis against the Arabs and the U.S. against the Soviet Union, setting up today's problems in the Middle East. Short-lived but revolutionary, the Six Day War transformed the map of the Middle East, forging many of the conflicts that continue to plague the region. Using firsthand accounts and recently declassified information, this documentary not only explores the war--waged between Israel and its Arab neighbors--but also the forces and individuals that led to it, and its far-reaching consequences. Six Days In June Reviews: 3.5 stars out of 4 -- "The apt subtitle of this absorbing documentary is 'The War That Redefined The Middle East,' and the sobering ramifications of what transpired are still being felt today."-- Mike Clark, USA Today Stalags is a 2008 documentary film produced by Barak Heymann and directed by Ari Libsker. The film examines the history of Stalags, pornography books that featured sexy female Nazi officers sexually abusing camp prisoners. The pocket books broke sales records and sold hundreds of thousands of copies in Israel in the 1960s during the trial of Adolf Eichmann. After the authors of the books were accused of distributing anti-Semitic pornography, the popularity of the books declined. The documentary opened in limited release on April 9, 2008. Suite Habana is a 2003 Cuban documentary directed by Fernando Pérez. The documentary was filmed with fictional cinema techniques depicting a day in a life of thirteen real people, from a ten-year-old child with Down Syndrome to a 79-year-old lady who sells peanuts in the street. The film has no dialogue, using sound and image to evoke emotional effect. Several stories are juxtaposed to convey the plot points, an unusual approach in Cuban cinema, where spoken words are often used extensively. Sergei Eisenstein: Autobiography is 1996 film directed by Oleg Kovalov. The Guerilla Son is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Zanyar Adami and David Herdies. Speak It! From the Heart of Black Nova Scotia is a 1992 documentary film by Sylvia Hamilton, focusing on a group of Black Nova Scotian students in a predominantly white high school in Halifax, Nova Scotia who face daily reminders of racism. These students work to build pride and self-esteem through educational and cultural programs, discovering their heritage and learning ways to effect change. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, this 28-minute documentary received the Canada Award at the 1994 Gemini Awards from the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, as well as the 1994 Maeda Prize from NHK. Homi Bhabha - A Scientist in Action is an experimental documentary film directed by K. Vishwanath. Good Morning, Miss Toliver follows middle school math teacher Kay Toliver and her students into the East Harlem community where they gain an appreciation of the history of their community while exploring mathematics in architecture, business and the environment. "In his new experimental documentary Reza Haeri deals with contemporary Iranian history, focusing on the evolution of clothes and fashion. The film is structured like a collage, interweaving archival footage from Iranian cinema, imagery from various stylistic epochs in the history of Persian painting, graphics from the period of the Islamic Revolution, and works provided by various artists." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Berlin Film Festival site. The stories of the weapons used in the Civil War are as colorful as the men who used them. From the fields and farms, from the factories and ships, came the men who would forge the bloodiest of conflicts, the war that would tear a nation apart. Satanis: The Devil's Mass is a 1970 American documentary film about Anton LaVey and the Church of Satan. It was directed and produced by Ray Laurent. The Battle of Tripoli is a documentary film. Der geflüsterte Film is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Nina Rippel. Manifestations of Shiva is a 1980 documentary film about the Hindu god Shiva's worship. It carries the performance aspects of Shiva-worship through dance, performing art, visual art and music. The movies is directed by Malcolm Leigh and main casting is done by the legendary Kutiyattam artist and authority of Abhinaya and Natya Shastra scholar - Nātyāchārya Guru Māni Mādhava Chākyār. Calling Quilombola is a 2012 short documentary film written by Gabriela Romeu and Renata Meirelles and directed by David Reeks. Mediterranean Holiday is a 1962 West German documentary film directed by Hermann Leitner and Rudolf Nussgruber. It was entered into the 3rd Moscow International Film Festival. Private Hungary: Either - Or is a 1989 documentary film directed by Péter Forgács. Father, Son and Holy War is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Anand Patwardhan. Cuban Story: The Truth about Fidel Castro Revolution is a 1959 film documentary narrated by Errol Flynn, and the last known performance work of his career. It was one of two films Flynn made about the Cuban Revolution during the early period when Castro was publicly denying his communist allegiance, the other being the drama-documentary Cuban Rebel Girls. "Suffering and redemption, destruction and self-destruction, love and hatred, pain and joy all go entwined and entangled in Sree Nandu, a F2M transgender living in Kerela determined to survive in a society where transgenders are still invisible and inaudible." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. "Twin daughters of lesbians collaborate to tell the story of what their mothers' legal marriage means to them. The 14-year-old girls served as 'documaidens,' carrying flip video cameras instead of bouquets to record the ceremony. Phranc, the All-American Jewish lesbian folk singer, wrote and performed an original song for the event. The story unfolds against the backdrop of the battle against California's Proposition 8. Not your typical home movie, this short documentary offers a glimpse into the life of an artistic lesbian family." Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Memoirs of a Plague is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Robert Nugent. How to Lose Your Virginity is an American documentary film directed by Therese Shechter and distributed by Women Make Movies. The film examines how the concept of virginity shapes the sexual lives of young women and men through the intersecting forces of history, politics, religion and popular culture. It is set to premiere at DOC NYC, a New York City documentary festival, on November 17, 2013. Huesos Que Hablan is a nominated work in the 2014 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Investigative Journalism in Spanish. The Silk Road Of Pop is a 2013 music documentary film directed by Sameer Farooq. Protagonist is a 2007 documentary film about the parallels between human life and Euripidean dramatic structure. The film was written and directed by Jessica Yu. It featured extensive interviews with German terrorist Hans-Joachim Klein, ex-gay Christian evangelist Mark Pierpont, Mexican bank-robber Joe Loya, and martial-arts enthusiast Mark Salzman. Interspersed with the interviews are scenes from ancient Greek drama performed by puppets. Marijas Own is a documentary film written and directed by Željka Suková. Real, The Movie is a movie about the Spanish football club Real Madrid Club de Fútbol, produced by the same club and directed by film director Borja Manso. The movie was launched for the first time at the club's stadium of the Santiago Bernabéu on 25 August 2005. Happy Hands is a short biographical documentary drama war film directed by Honey Lauren. Vomero Travel is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Guido Lombardi. In the summer of 2006, while the football world's attention was focused on Germany, thousands of players around the globe were training hard and competing to be part of another World Cup ... The Homeless World Cup.  It had been a wild idea by a Scot and an Austrian -- to give homeless people a chance to change their lives through an international street soccer competition.  Five years later, the annual Homeless World Cup had become an internationally recognized sports competition.  500 homeless players from 48 nations would ultimately be selected to represent their country in Cape Town, South Africa - coming from such disparate parts of the world as war torn Afghanistan, the slums of Kenya, the drug rehab clinics of Dublin, Ireland, the streets of Charlotte, North Carolina, the overflowing public shelters of Madrid, Spain, and the unforgiving city of St. Petersburg, Russia, where the homeless have no rights or identity.  Win or lose, for these players it would be the journey of a lifetime.Narrated by Colin Farrell. Letter to a Father is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Edgardo Cozarinsky. Hay un grupo que dice is a documentary film directed by Lourdes Prieto. Reconversão is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Thom Andersen. Harsh Euro Barge is a 2002 documentary film directed by Ty Evans. Dans la peau de Jacques Chirac is a 2006 film by Karl Zero and Michel Royer. It has been produced by the same team which produced March of the Penguins. It is a mockumentary which is a kind of unauthorized biography of Jacques Chirac, based on archival footage, and told at the first person. The main comic effect comes from the contradictions between the various speeches of the French President. The title comes from the title of the French-language version of Being John Malkovich. The Road to Fame is a 2013 documentary, music and musical film directed by Hao Wu. Ziętek is a 2008 short and documentary film directed by Bartosz Blaschke. "Jim Jennings’s Greenpoint (USA) is a rapturous and observant portrait of Greenpoint, Brooklyn, that pays tribute to a working-class neighbourhood on the verge of gentrification with a boogie-woogie collage of hot colours, pealing posters, graffiti art and neon signs." Quoting the 2009 TIFF site Cinema's Exiles: From Hitler to Hollywood is a 2009 documentary film directed by Karen Thomas. In this programme, David Attenborough asks three key questions: how, and why, did Darwin come up with his theory of evolution? Why do we think he was right? And why is it more important now than ever before? David starts his journey in Darwin's home at Down House in Kent, where Darwin worried and puzzled over the origins of life. David goes back to his roots in Leicestershire, where he hunted for fossils as a child, and where another schoolboy unearthed a significant find in the 1950s. And he revisits Cambridge University, where both he and Darwin studied, and where many years later the DNA double helix was discovered, providing the foundations for genetics. At the end of his journey in the Natural History Museum in London, David concludes that Darwin's great insight revolutionised the way in which we see the world. We now understand why there are so many different species, and why they are distributed in the way they are. But above all, Darwin has shown us that we are not set apart from the natural world, and do not have dominion over it. We are subject to its laws and processes, as are all other animals on earth to which, indeed, we are related. Indignados is a 2012 documentary film directed by Tony Gatlif. Glen Campbell...I'll Be Me is a 2014 documentary film directed by James Keach. Kemira: Diary of a Strike is a 1984 documentary film directed by Tom Zubrycki. The Michigan Beer Film is a documentary film directed by Kevin Romeo. Challenger: Go for Launch is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Philip Day. The Erroneous Earth Kitchen is a 2006 short documentary drama film written and directed by Anders Bramsen. Locked-In Syndrome is a 1997 documentary film directed by Jean-Jacques Beineix. The Day I Will Never Forget is a 2002 documentary film directed by Kim Longinotto. A Beautiful Mind is a 2001 American biographical drama film based on the life of John Nash, a Nobel Laureate in Economics. The film was directed by Ron Howard, from a screenplay written by Akiva Goldsman. It was inspired by a bestselling, Pulitzer Prize-nominated 1998 book of the same name by Sylvia Nasar. The film stars Russell Crowe, along with Ed Harris, Jennifer Connelly, Paul Bettany, Adam Goldberg, Judd Hirsch, Josh Lucas, Anthony Rapp, and Christopher Plummer in supporting roles. The story begins in the early years of a young prodigy named John Nash. Early in the film, Nash begins to develop paranoid schizophrenia and endures delusional episodes while painfully watching the loss and burden his condition brings on his wife and friends. The film opened in the United States cinemas on December 21, 2001. It went to gross over $313 million worldwide and won four Academy Awards, for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Supporting Actress. It was also nominated for Best Actor, Best Film Editing, Best Makeup, and Best Original Score. 9 Muses of Star Empire is a 2012 documentary directed by Lee Hark-joon. Museum of Government Waste is an upcoming documentary produced by American Film Renaissance that follows Florida resident Greg Knapp on his mission to obtain an earmark from Congress to construct a museum dedicated to careless government spending. The film aims to show citizens how “elected officials spend [their] money, as painful as the truth is.” La table aux chiens (KATHAKALI) is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Cédric Martinelli and Julien Touati. La Corona is a 2008 short American documentary film about a beauty pageant in a prison for women, directed by Amanda Micheli. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Life is full of roses? Yoko's two-year battle against cancer is a documentary film directed by Yumi Sasaki. Cedrón is a 2011 documentary film directed by Fernando Pérez. Happy People: A Year in the Taiga is a 2010 documentary film directed by Werner Herzog and Dmitry Vasyukov and produced by Herzog. The film depicts the life of the people in the village of Bakhtia along the Yenisei River in the Siberian taiga. In particular, it focuses on the trappers who hunt for fur animals like sable. It also briefly detours in to a look at the life of native Ket people. The footage in the documentary was edited from a previous television work by Vasuykov, with original production and voiceovers by Herzog. The film premiered in Germany in November 2010, had its United States premiere at the 2010 Telluride Film Festival, and the U.S. West Coast premiere on 6 March 2011 at the San Francisco Green Film Festival. Year at Danger is a 2007 independent documentary. Nine days after getting married, Steve Metze found out he was being deployed as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Metze, a West Point graduate, Desert Storm veteran, and documentary filmmaker, decided to pack a camera and document his year in Iraq. The film consists of footage shot by Metze during his deployment to Iraq and was edited by Don Swaynos. It won the Grand Jury Award at the 2008 DeadCENTER Film Festival and was an Official Selection of the 2007 Austin Film Festival and the 2008 GI Film Festival. Lessons of Darkness is a 1992 film by director Werner Herzog. Shot in documentary style on 16mm film from the perspective of an almost alien observer, the film is an exploration of the ravaged oil fields of post-Gulf War Kuwait, decontextualised and characterised in such a way as to emphasise the terrain's cataclysmic strangeness. An effective companion to his earlier film Fata Morgana, Herzog again perceives the desert as a landscape with its own voice. A co-production with Paul Berriff, the film was financed by the television studios Canal+ and Première. For All the World to See is a 1992 documentary film directed by Pat Fiske. Devour the Earth is a 1995 British short documentary film about the global consequences of meat consumption. The film was produced by the Vegetarian Society, written by Tony Wardle and narrated by Paul McCartney. The European Vegetarian Union distribute the DVD. On February 13, 2010, American-led coalition forces launched the biggest military operation since the beginning of the Afghanistan War. Their target was the town of Marjah, a Taliban stronghold in southern Afghanistan. There, the Marines had four tasks: remove the Taliban, hold all ground seized, build infrastructure and governance, and transfer control to Afghan security forces. In this powerful account, award-winning journalist Ben Anderson tells the story of Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 6th Marines, and its commanding officer, Captain Ryan Sparks. At the battle's outset, Sparks and the 272 men of Bravo are flown 12 miles and dropped into the center of Marjah, where the Taliban lie in wait. For the young Marines, their first task begins. The End of Time is a 2012 Swiss-Canadian documentary film written and directed by Peter Mettler on the loose subject of time. The One Man Beatles is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Cosimo Messeri. Morning of the Earth is a 1971 classic surf film by Alby Falzon and David Elfick. The film's soundtrack was produced by G. Wayne Thomas and included music and songs by noted Australian music acts Tamam Shud, John J. Francis, Brian Cadd and G. Wayne Thomas. The record became the first Australian Gold soundtrack album. In October 2010, the soundtrack for Morning of the Earth was listed in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums. The film portrays surfers living in spiritual harmony with nature, making their own boards as they travelled in search of the perfect wave across Australia’s north-east coast, Bali and Hawaii. All the Beautiful Things is a 2014 American documentary film written and directed by John D. Harkrider. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. Haiti:Dreams of Democracy is a 1987 film directed by Jonathan Demme and Jo Menell. Bajo Juarez, the City Devouring Its Daughters is a 2006 documentary film directed and written by José Antonio Cordero and Alejandra Sánchez. Buenos Aires En Relieve is a 1954 documentary film directed by Don Napy. Garden City and Me is a 2014 documentary film directed by Oh Hyun-jin. Ramo Trip is a documentary film directed by Takashi Imahashi, Kenta Matsuo, Akihiro Mima, and Hiroyuki Nakano. CNN Presents: Latino in America is a 2010 documentary film directed by Alberto Ferreras. My Reincarnation is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jennifer Fox. It is a drama between father and son, spanning two decades and three generations. The film addresses spirituality, cultural survival, identity, heritage, family, growing into maturity, aging, Buddhism, and past and future lives. The film follows the Tibetan spiritual master Namkhai Norbu, who struggles to save his spiritual tradition, and his son, Khyentse Yeshi Namkhai, who stubbornly refuses to follow in the footsteps of his father. Yeshi was recognized at birth as the reincarnation of his father's uncle, a spiritual teacher who was killed by the Chinese in Tibet. But though Yeshi craves a normal life, he cannot escape his fate. Dir En Grey Uroboros at Budokan the Movie is a 2010 documentary film centering on a Japanese rock band Dir En Grey. Uroboros is the seventh album by Dir En Grey. The film presents a two-day performance of the album at the Nippon Budokan on January 9 and 10, 2010. Double Agency is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Joe Fitz-Gerald. Shooting Blue is a 2009 documentary short film directed by Josh Mandel. È Stato Morto Un Ragazzo is a 2010 biography/ documentary film directed by Filippo Vendemmiati. 900 Days is a 2011 documentary written by Jessica Gorter, Marieke van der Winden and Beatrijs van Agt and directed by Jessica Gorter. Proving Ground is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Travis Wilkerson. Poets of Protest is a documentary film directed by Roxana Vilk and Yasmin Fedda. How The Light Gets In is a 2013 short documentary and biography film directed by Siobhán Costigan. A Brokedown Melody is a 2004 documentary surf film from Woodshed Films directed by singer/songwriter Jack Johnson and his film school friend Chris Malloy. Presented as a special screening to benefit the Kōkua Hawai'i Foundation at the Hawaii Theatre in Honolulu on August 11, 2004, the film had premieres during the fall of 2004 at the Malibu International Film Festival on September 16, 2004, at the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts during the 2nd annual Moonshine Festival on October 9, 2004, at the Arlington Theater in Santa Barbara in October, 2004, and at the Hawai'i International Film Festival in Honolulu in October, 2004. It is the fourth of the The Moonshine Conspiracy films. Combining a wide range of styles of guitar music for the soundtrack, the film captures award-winning cinematography from surfing footage of various locations worldwide: Chile, Hawaii, Mexico, Jamaica, Tahiti in French Polynesia, and Indonesia. Surfers in the film include Tom Curren, Gerry Lopez, C. J. Hobgood, Rob Machado, and Kelly Slater. Also, Jeff Johnson, Jack Johnson's father, and a very youthful John John Florence make special appearances. "FAG HAGS: Women Who Love Gay Men is as straightforward as the title implies. Matt and Cynthia live in Toronto and met in college. Over the course of their decades-long friendship, Matt had to walk away, finally too frustrated by her unrelenting crush on him. But when a crisis hits Cynthia, he returns to offer support. Kevin and Dodie live in San Francisco, and after years of platonic amour, they take their friendship to the next level and get married. While they’re living happily ever after, Kevin still wonders how this affects his strong identity as a gay man. Denis and Dana had to negotiate in the other direction: Dana turns down Denis’ romantic overtures because she doesn’t want a romance with her gay best friend, no matter how much she loves him. That hasn’t stopped them from considering co-parenting. FAG HAGS: Women Who Love Gay Men illustrates how close relationships and sexuality don’t always fit into neat categories." Quoting the description from the 2005 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Apaporis is a Colombian documentary film directed by Antonio Dorado. The movie was produced by Antonio Dorado, Juan Carlos Paredes and Omar Dorado. It opened theatrically in New York City on July 30, 2010 and opens in Los Angeles on August 6, 2010 at the 14th Annual DocuWeeks. The Last Trackers of the Outback is a 2007 documentary film about Aboriginal trackers in Australia. The documentary, co-directed by Eric Ellena and Vanessa Escalante, won the Public’s Choice Award 2008 FIFO - Pacific International Documentary Film Festival of Tahiti. The films tells the story of the last of the native Aboriginal trackers in Australia and documents their unique tracking capacities and the usefulness of their tracking skills, for example in cattle breeding and in police investigations. The film explores the unique skills of these trackers and the importance to understand and record this knowledge before the great trackers disappear and take their secrets and extraordinary skills with them. Featured in the documentary are some of the last great trackers of the outback such as Tommy George. Memory of my Face is a 2011 documentary short biographical drama film directed by Robert Lemelson. Zdroj is a 2005 Czech documentary directed by Martin Mareček and written by Martin Mareček and Martin Skalský. The film explores the civil rights abuses by the Ilham Aliyev regime of Azerbaijan during the construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, such as eminent domain violations in appropriating land for the pipeline's route, and criticism of the government leading to arrest. Correspondence: Jonas Mekas - Jl Guer’n is a 2011 documentary film directed by José Luis Guerín and Jonas Mekas. The Chicken of Tomorrow is a 1948 documentary short film about advances in chicken and egg farming. This mini-documentary was narrated by Lowell Thomas and is in the public domain. The film was mocked in a seventh-season episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000. Marathon Boy is a 2010 documentary film directed by Gemma Atwal. "When the little Indian Budhia Singh was only three years old, he had already run six half marathons. By four, he was making it the full 26 miles. In his own words, "One day I will run all the way to the Olympics." As you might suspect, he didn't come up with this all by himself. His adoptive father Biranchi Das, who self-funds an orphanage and a judo school, rescued him from the slums and goes to great lengths to generate attention for this special child. Budhia the wonder boy grows into a regional hero, and after he participates in the Limca Record Run (around 40 miles), he achieves nationwide stardom. Only the local child welfare office is less than enthusiastic, forbidding the young boy to participate in marathons - much to the dismay of the somewhat media-happy Biranchi and his protégé. A true political battle breaks out in the region, complete with talk show appearances, protests and street riots. Then, when Budhia's biological mother shows up to claim her son with help from the sinister slum mafia, things go from grim to grimmer." Quoting the description from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site. Criminal Revolution is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Stanislav Govorukhin. State of Denial is a 2003 documentary film about AIDS in Africa, produced and directed by Elaine Epstein. The film highlights the errors of President Mbeki's government, which insists that there isn't enough evidence to show that HIV causes AIDS and refuses vital life-saving drugs to their people because of unknown long-term risks. The film follows the stories of HIV positive Africans and activists as well as their careers, interspersed with the harrowing statistics of the AIDS epidemic in Africa. It features various HIV positive patients coping with the disease in times when the use of ARV medicine was strongly discouraged by the South African government. The movie captures the desperation and growing discontent of average South Africans infected and affected by the disease. Some of the subjects interviewed make heartbreaking but inspirational statements about AIDS and how living with it is like. After the death of his brother who also succumbed to the disease, a young man is filmed saying the following: For me, it was the most traumatic time in my life because I could see myself in him. You know, he didn’t really have to die as helplessly as he did. Mayday 3DNA is a 2011 Taiwanese film directed by Wen Yen Kung with additional work from Qu Quan-li. Within the pan-Chinese community it is the first 3D concert feature film. The film is about three fictional stories revolving around characters who wish to attend a concert in Shanghai from the band Mayday. Filming took two years and there was a production budget of $200 New Taiwan dollars. Post-production work took 17 months. One story is set in Guangzhou, one story is set in Taipei, and one story is set in Shanghai. Black and Blue is a live video by heavy metal bands Black Sabbath and Blue Öyster Cult filmed during their 1980 co-headlining tour. The video was released in 1980 on VHS and Betamax video format, with subsequent releases on laserdisc. It was due to be released on DVD in 2002. and was available for pre-order from online merchants but the release was set back several times before finally being cancelled. This was at the last minute, figuratively speaking, such that some shops in Scandinavia had put out their stock before the recall and some had illegally been sold slightly ahead of the intended release date. Most of the copies seen for sale on the internet are actually taken from the laserdisc releases: it has not been officially released on DVD, for reasons never made clear. On That Metal Show, Buck Dharma of Blue Oyster Cult, talked very minimally about the release and said to his knowledge the reason it has not been re-released is because the members of Black Sabbath don't want it being distributed, for reasons unknown to Buck. Sois belle et tais-toi is a documentary film by French actress and director Delphine Seyrig, shot in 1976 and released in 1981. It is available at the Centre audiovisuel Simone de Beauvoir in Paris. The film is a series of interviews with various well-known film actresses, including Jenny Agutter, Maria Schneider, and Jane Fonda. The title, which is borrowed from a 1958 film with the same name by Marc Allegret, refers to the sense the actresses have of what is expected of them by the film industry. Miss Betty's American History Tours: George Washington's Home Town is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Robert Rector. The Three Disappearances of Soad Hosni is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Rania Stephan. To Be Takei is a 2014 American documentary film produced and directed by Jennifer M. Kroot. The film had its world premiere at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. After its premiere at Sundance Film Festival, Starz Digital Media acquired the distribution rights of the film. The film will have a theatrical release in 2014. Platzwunder is a 1984 film written and directed by Reinhard Kahn and Michael Leiner. 3000 Miles is a 2007 documentary film, filmed during the 2006 Gumball 3000 rally. The film predominantly follows two cars; Bam Margera and Ryan Dunn in Bam's Lamborghini Gallardo, and Tony Hawk, Mike Vallely and Mike Escamilla in a Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8 on their 3000 mile journey from London to Los Angeles, via Europe and Asia. The film was directed and produced by rally founder Maximillion Cooper. A Musical Adventure in Siberia is a 2000 music documentary film directed by Richard Leacock and Valerie LaLonde. Banshees Over Canada is a 19-minute 1943 Canadian documentary film, made by the National Film Board of Canada. The film was produced by Sydney Newman and directed by James Beveridge. The film's Canadian French title was Vautours au-dessus du Canada. It was produced as part of the Canada Carries On series. The Secret of Goat is a 2011 short comedy fantasy film written by Ryan Cavan and directed by Park Bench. The Forgiven is a 2012 Documentary film written and directed by Jimmy Roura. JacK Waltzer: On the Craft of Acting is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Antoine Levannier, Christophe Dimitri Réveille, Juan Diego Solanas and Joëlle Séchaud. Men of the Cloth is a documentary and drama film directed by Vicki Vasilopoulos. Breaking the Language Barrier is a 1961 American short documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Image Before My Eyes is a 1981 documentary film written by Jerome Badanes, Lucjan Dobroszycki, and Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, and directed by Joshua Waletzky The Mud Hut is a film that received the 1969 Australian Film Institute Award Best Documentary. These Amazing Shadows is a 2011 documentary film which tells the history and importance of the National Film Registry, a roll call of American cinema treasures that reflects the diversity of film, and indeed the American experience itself. The documentary was directed by Paul Mariano and Kurt Norton and was an official selection of the 2011 Sundance Film Festival in the Documentary Premieres category. These Amazing Shadows is distributed under the Independent Film Channel brand, Sundance Selects, and was broadcast on the American television PBS series, Independent Lens, on December 29, 2011. "The Carbon Collective" is a 2013 short environmental documentary film written and directed by S.J. Main. Kings of the Turf is a 1941 American short documentary film about horse racing, directed by Del Frazier. It was nominated for an Academy Award at the 14th Academy Awards for Best Short Subject. Rings Of Life is a 2013 experimental, documentary film directed by Ida Lindgren. Player Hating: A Love Story is a 2010 documentary film about Brooklyn rapper Half-A-Mil, written and directed by Maggie Hadleigh-West. "The documentary film by Jiska Rickels comprises four chapters which depict human endeavour in the face of the four elements. The first part devoted to Fire sees a group of fire-fighters operating in the Siberian forests where extensive fires break out regularly during the summer months. In the part focusing on Water, we set off for Alaska in search of royal crab hunters forced to endure the claustrophobic environment of their fishing boat, tossed by stormy waters. To illustrate the Earth element, the director chose to depict miners working in a huge German mine where, along the endless corridors leading to the core of the mountain, they encounter signposts saying, eloquently, “To Hell”. The last chapter, Air, examines the extreme physical and psychological strain which astronauts face as they prepare for their journey into space. This striking film, with its refined camera in the role of observer, is enhanced by well chosen atmospheric sound." Quoting the synopsis from the 2007 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival site. Young King Bhambata leads the fight against an unfair local tax within the Natal Colony. This documentary focuses on the unfair conditions that lead Bhambatha and his people to fight back followed by the violent and the immoderate British reaction. Freakonomics: The Movie is a 2010 American documentary film based on the book Freakonomics by economist Steven D. Levitt and writer Stephen J. Dubner. The film had its premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival in April 2010, with a theatrical release planned for later in the year. Waiting for the Snow to Fall is a 2003 documentary film written by Warren Miller and directed by Gary Hines and Warren Miller. Sick As A Dog is a 2011 short documentary, drama, comedy and family film directed by Rebekah Meredith. Live at Wembley Stadium is a live video by the Foo Fighters, released on August 22, 2008, in Ireland and August 25, 2008, in the UK on DVD. It was also released in Australia on August 30, New Zealand on September 1, and Germany, Austria and Switzerland on September 5. It was released in the United States on November 18, 2008. It was filmed during the band's two sold out shows at Wembley Stadium on Friday June 6 and Saturday June 7, 2008. The video features a combination of footage from both nights, including the second night's collaboration with special guests, Led Zeppelin members John Paul Jones and Jimmy Page. The video was also broadcast via satellite across the UK at Vue Cinemas on June 24, 2008. The video was shown in high definition with 5.1 surround sound, and was the same cut as the video release. The release has been certified 3 times platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association and gold by the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand. The image on the artwork was shot by the aerial camera above the crowd on Friday 6 June. Karin's Face is a 14-minute film directed by Ingmar Bergman focusing on Bergman's mother, Karin. The film consists of still photos of Bergman's mother and other family members shown over a simple piano score by Bergman's former wife, Käbi Laretei, with no narration. It was photographed by Bergman's longtime collaborator and neighbour, Arne Carlsson. It was completed in 1983 but first publicly shown at Swedish Television 29 September 1986. Great Adventurers: Sir Francis Drake: Voyage Around the World is a 1999 documentary film directed by Chris Gormlie. The Armstrong Lie is a 2013 American documentary film directed by Alex Gibney about the cyclist Lance Armstrong. Originally titled The Road Back, the film takes its name from "Le Mensonge Armstrong", the headline of the August 23, 2005 issue of the French newspaper L'Équipe. The film was screened out of competition at the 70th Venice International Film Festival and in the Special Presentation section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. Good Girl is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Solveig Melkeraaen. The Evolution and Races of Man is a short documentary film directed by S. Sukhdev. The Test Tube with David Suzuki is a 2010 short documentary film project from the National Film Board of Canada. A Matter of Fat is a 1969 documentary film by William Weintraub chronicling the efforts of a 358-pound man, Gilles Lorrain, to lose half his body weight as part of a hospital supervised weight loss program. In the film, Lorrain recounts his life and experiences, often with humour. In one 21-second time lapse sequence, Weintraub shows Lorrain's 150-pound weight loss, filmed at two frames a day for seven months. The film also shows Lorrain's return to his family after the gruelling program, and his conviction that he will be one of one in four dieters who can keep the weight off. In addition to focusing on Lorrain's story, the film explores what other obese people are doing to lose weight, and hears from medical authorities on misconceptions and practices in the weight loss industry. A Matter of Fat also motivated the film's director to lose weight. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, A Matter of Fat features narration by Lorne Greene. The film received four awards, including the Etrog Award for best film over 30 minutes. The Incredible World of James Bond was a 1965 television special produced by David L. Wolper for United Artists Television to showcase the James Bond film series and promote the upcoming December 1965 release of the film Thunderball. In the United States, the show replaced The Man From U.N.C.L.E. on NBC on Friday, 26 November 1965; the day after American Thanksgiving that unofficially begins the shopping frenzy for Christmas. It was the highest rated American television show for the week. Songs for Alexis is the 2014 documentary film written by Maja Jul Larsen and directed by Elvira Lind. Bonhoeffer is a 2003 documentary biography history war film written and directed by Martin Doblmeier. Running Wild: The Life of Dayton O. Hyde is a 2012 documentary, biographical, historical fiction, and western film directed by Suzanne Mitchell. Imagine, the Sky is a 2011 documentary drama film written and directed by Brigitte Uttar Kornetzky. Do No Duplicate is a 2013 documentary biography short film directed by Jonathan Mann and Sean McGing. Elton John: The Red Piano is a 2005 musical documentary directed by David LaChapelle and David Mallet. Ulama is a 1986 documentary film written by José Manuel Pintado, Tomás Pérez Turrent and Roberto Rochín, and directed by Roberto Rochín. Professional is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Skylar Nielsen. Traces of Death is a 1993 direct-to-video, Z movie shockumentary that consists of various scenes of stock footage depicting death and real scenes of violence. Unlike the earlier Faces of Death which included fake deaths and reenactments, Traces consists mostly of actual footage depicting death and injury, and consists also of unlicensed and public domain footage from other films. It is banned in the United Kingdom by the BBFC for not having any "journalistic, educational, or other justifying context for the images shown." It was written and narrated by Damon Fox, who later added a lengthy and completely fraudulent bio on imdb.com, where he claimed to be a highly successful, professional filmmaker. Since its release, Traces of Death has been followed by four sequels. Among the footage seen on Traces of Death is the R. Dodoth Morning is a film by ethnographic filmmaker Tim Asch. A documentary film that follows a morning in the life of a family of the Dodoth people in northeast Uganda in 1961. This film features a time when too much rain threatened to rot the millet that is grown to supplement their diet, and the events that follow. It was completed in 1963. The film is distributed by Documentary Educational Resources. God Bless Ozzy Osbourne is a 2011 documentary film directed by Mike Fleiss and Mike Piscitelli. The Happy Sad Route (and A Comedian) is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Linda Hakeboom. Of Time and the City is a 2008 documentary collage film directed by Terence Davies. The film has Davies recalling his life growing up in Liverpool in the 1950s and 1960s, using newsreel and documentary footage supplemented by his own commentary voiceover and contemporaneous and classical music soundtracks. The film premiered at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival where it received rave reviews. Time Out said "The one truly great movie to emerge so far..... this film is as personal, as universal in its relevance, and as gloriously cinematic as anything he has done" and The Guardian called it "a British masterpiece, a brilliant assemblage of images that illuminate our past. Not only does it tug the heart-strings but it's also savagely funny." BBC TV film critic Mark Kermode nominated it as the best overall film of 2008 on his "Kermode Awards" section of The Culture Show, and Duane Byrge from The Hollywood Reporter lauded the film as "poetically composed" and a "masterwork". Of Time and the City won Best Documentary in the Australian Film Critics Association awards for 2009. In this hilarious, award-wining documentary, a 5th grade theater production becomes a real life coming-of-age drama. The kids in this school play are straight out of central casting. As the school's overachieving director's demands escalate, so does the tension. THE NAME MY MOTHER GAVE ME is a film about growth and self discovery. We follow Ethiopian and Russian Israelis who meet at a leadership training program in Israel. Their year of learning culminates in a journey to Ethiopia where the Ethiopian born participants return to their native villages and confront their roots. Though, back home in Israel, all the participants would consider themselves members of the fringes of Israeli society, in the highlands of the Ethiopian landscape they discover the universality of their experiences and their shared commitment to their new home in Israel. How will this journey transform them? Ayrton Senna Lifestyle in Brazil is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Francis Megahy. The Art of Marriage is a 1970 American white coater. It was the cinematic directorial debut of Sean S. Cunningham. Sacrificio: Who Betrayed Che Guevara? is a 2001 short documentary film directed by Erik Gandini and Tarik Saleh. Mussolini Visits Hitler is a 1937 short documentary film. This Mechanical Age is a 1954 American short documentary film about the early days of aviation, produced by Robert Youngson. It won an Academy Award in 1955 for Best Short Subject. Ultime grida dalla savana, also known as La Grande caccia and by its English title Savage Man Savage Beast, is a Mondo documentary directed by Antonio Climati and Mario Morra. Filmed all around the world, its central theme focuses on hunting and the interaction between man and animal. More specifically, the film documents various forms of hunting that can be found in the world and how humans and animals can both become the hunter or prey. Like many Mondo films, the filmmakers claim to document real, bizarre and violent behavior and customs, although some scenes were actually staged. It is narrated by Italian novelist Alberto Moravia. This was the first film of Climati's and Morra's Savage Trilogy, which also includes Savana violenta and Dolce e selvaggio. The best known film of the trilogy, Ultime grida dalla savana became influential in exploitation cinema by use of cinematographic techniques that were repeated in numerous subsequent Mondo films. Two scenes in particular, a lion attack on a tourist in Namibia and the murder of an indigenous man by a group of mercenaries in South America, have gained notoriety as genuine footage of human death. The Good Old Naughty Days, released in 2002, is a compilation from over 300 recently discovered film clips from silent hardcore pornographic films made between 1905 and 1930, re-edited by director Michel Reilhac, with a new soundtrack by Eric Le Guen. Most of the films were made in France and were intended to be shown in brothels. The collection also includes a pornographic animation from the United States, Eveready Harton in Buried Treasure, made by unknown artists in or around 1928 and never theatrically released before. Themes covered include pornographic adaptations of classics such as Madame Butterfly, precursors of pornography clichés such as the encounter between the "musketeer" and the milkmaid, stock characters such as lascivious nuns and priests, and footage showing bestiality, which according to the film-maker Michel Reilhac shows that "the modern porn industry did not invent anything – everything had already been filmed by our great-grandparents." At the time of its release it was the first R18 film to be rated for display in cinemas in the United Kingdom for over ten years, despite its contents, partly due to its 'classic' style and age and as "historical footage". In the face of a national child health crisis, Two Angry Moms asks: What are our children eating in school and how is it impacting their learning, behavior and health? Amy Kalafa chronicles the efforts of leaders in the fledgling better school food movement as they take on the system nationwide. The movie explores the roles the federal government, corporate interests, school administration and parents play in feeding our country's school kids. Dramatic changes in one Westchester, NY school district are followed over the course of a school year. See what happens when fed-up moms start a grass-roots revolution! The Measure of All Things is a 2014 documentary film co-directed by Sam Green and Ymusic. The film had its premiere at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. My Brother’s Vows is a 2013 documentary film directed by Stephanie Weimar. Sam & Dave: The Original Soul Men: 1967 - 1980 is a 2008 rockumentary documentary film. Red White Black & Blue is a 2012 documentary, sports and biographical-drama film directed by James Brown. Bury Me on the High Land is a documentary historical fiction film directed by Chris Aaron. Our Indians is a 1995 film directed by Sylvio Back. EDC 2013: Under the Electric Sky is an American musical documentary film co-directed by Dan Cutforth and Jane Lipsitz. The film also features Pasquale Rotella, producer of the Electric Daisy Carnival. The film had its world premiere at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. The film later screened at Sundance London Film Festival on April 25, 2014. Focus Features acquired the distribution rights of the film. Dongeng Kancil untuk Kemerdekaan is a 1995 Indonesian documentary film directed by Garin Nugroho. Filmmaker Julia Pimsleur used to make up elaborate lies about her brother Marc, rather than explain that he had dropped out of college, turned his back on his Jewish heritage and moved to a Christian commune in Alaska. She and her mother initially feared that Marc had joined a cult. This documentary traces Julia's efforts to understand his conversion and to revive their relationship. Lives That Changed the World: Nelson Mandela is a biographical television series. Against the Dying of the Light is a documentary film about the work of the National Screen and Sound Archive of Wales. Jeffries-Johnson World's Championship Boxing Contest is a 1910 documentary sports film. Stage Iv: Living With Cancer is a 2011 documentary family short film directed by Matt Walla. Trash Inc: The Secret Life of Garbage is a one-hour television documentary film that aired on CNBC on September 29, 2010 about trash/garbage, what happens to it when it's "thrown away", and its impact on the world. The film is hosted by CNBC Squawk Box co-anchor Carl Quintanilla as he reports from various landfills, business, and other locations in the United States and China. The idea for Trash, Inc was born of the 2008 recession and the relative stability of publicly traded waste management companies. Two Portraits is a 1982 short documentary film written and directed by Peter Thompson. The 16th Man is a documentary film directed by Al Szymanski that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. Ninha / Nous is a 2005 short documentary historical fiction film directed by Danielle Arbid. Bogowie sierpa i mlota is a 2000 film directed by Jury Chaščavacki. Fear of a Brown Planet Returns is a 2011 Australian concert film directed by Danielle Karalus featuring Australian comedy duo Fear of a Brown Planet. Mummy Funny...? is a 1984 film directed by Niki List. Bet Raise Fold is a 2013 documentary, drama and crime film written and directed by Ryan Firpo. Fados is a 2007 Spanish film directed by Carlos Saura. The film, a fusion of cinema, song, dance and instrumental numbers, explores Portugal's most emblematic musical genre, fado, and its spirit of saudade. Using Lisbon as its iconic backdrop, the film explores the intricate relationship between the music and the city, and Fado's evolution over the years from its African and Brazilian origins up to the new wave of modern Fadistas. Under the musical supervision of Carlos do Carmo, Fados completed Saura's musical trilogy form with Flamenco and Tango. Saura deploys mirrors, back projections, lighting effects, and lush colors to frame each song. Fados contains homages to Maria Severa, Alfredo Marceneiro, and Amália Rodrigues, as well as turns by modern stars like Mariza and Camané. Saura expands the songs with dance and encompasses other nationalities of Portugal’s former colonies and idioms. Raoul Wallenberg:The Angel of Budapest is a 2006 documentary film directed by Marcel Collet. Ban the Sadist Videos! is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by David Gregory. Masterpiece: Frank Miller's The Dark Knight Returns is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Alexander Gray and Jeff Maynard. When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts is a 2006 documentary film directed by Spike Lee about the devastation of New Orleans, Louisiana due to the failure of the levees during Hurricane Katrina. It was filmed in late August and early September 2005, and premiered at the New Orleans Arena on August 16, 2006 and was first aired on HBO the following week. The television premiere aired in two parts on August 21 and 22, 2006 on HBO. It has been described by Sheila Nevins, chief of HBO's documentary unit, as "one of the most important films HBO has ever made." The title is a reference to the blues tune, "When the Levee Breaks", by Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie, about the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927. The documentary was screened at the 63rd Venice International Film Festival on August 31 and September 1, 2006. It won the Orizzonti Documentary Prize and one of two FIPRESCI awards. In addition, it was shown at the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival on September 15 and September 16, 2006. It won three awards at the 59th Primetime Emmy Awards and received a Peabody Award. The Eye Above the Well is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Johan van der Keuken. The Ring Road is a 1985 documentary film written by Friðrik Þór Friðriksson and directed by Friðrik Þór Friðriksson. Bird of the Thunder Woman is a 1979 documentary film written by Paul Sillitoe & Renata Cochrane and directed by David Parer & Paul Sillitoe. Six films on the life, death and legacy of President John F. Kennedy for The Sixth Floor Museum at the former Texas School Book Depository in Dallas, TX. Naked Yoga is a short documentary released in 1974 and illustrates the practice of yoga in a natural setting and in the nude. The plot of this movie includes women practicing yoga in Cyprus and in a studio. These visuals are interspersed with images of Eastern art, processed for "psychedelic" effect. The narrator also relates the practice to Buddhist philosophy. It was shown on television in the UK, however it has not been released to video. This documentary/short was nominated for an Oscar in 1975, in the category Best Documentary, Short Subjects. It was written and directed by Paul Cordsen. The stars included Elizabeth Taylor-Mead and features the blues singer Alexis Korner as the narrator. Naked Yoga had been on the list of List of lost films. A search for it began in 2004 by the Academy Archive's Documentary Curator, Ed Carter. After a series of letters and dead ends, Carter received a print from the film's Director of Photography, Michael Elphick, who obtained the print from a television station. The print turned out to be a 35mm Technicolor print in pristine condition. The Academy Film Archive recently restored the film in 2012. The Light in Her Eyes is a 2011 documentary film directed by Julia Meltzer and Laura Nix. One Giant Leap 2: What About Me? is a 2008 documentary film directed by Duncan Bridgeman and Jamie Catto. Kond is a 1987 documentary short film written by S. Darbinyan and written and directed by Harutyun Khachatryan. Being Mick is a 2001 television film which chronicles the life of Mick Jagger for one year. Much of the film was filmed by Mick using a handheld camera. The film documents his recording of the Goddess in the Doorway album, as well as daily life including his family and friends. In the film, Mick attends a charity fundraiser hosted by Elton John as well as the premiere of the Kate Winslet film Enigma, which Jagger's company produced. The film was directed by Kevin Macdonald and Jim Gable and produced by Victoria Pearman. Following its television debut on ABC on Thanksgiving night 2001, the film was released on DVD on 21 May 2002 through Lionsgate Home Entertainment. I Want to Destroy America is a documentary film by Peter I. Chang which traces the life of the Japanese musician Hisao Shinagawa through his early years as a folk singer in Tokyo to his current occupation as a street performer in Los Angeles. The film was shot from 2004 to 2006, and provides a unique insight into the influence of Western popular music on the teenage youth culture of 1960s Japan, as well as an inside look at Shinagawa's struggle to survive as a songwriter after losing his recording contract in the 1980s. The title of the film comes from an off-hand comment Shinagawa makes about wanting to destroy the U.S. system. In his review of the DVD release, critic John Wallis notes, "I Want to Destroy America is formatted with Hisao speaking for himself. Interview audio and footage is placed over still and stock footage and the modern footage, some of it fly-on-the-wall, some of it atmospherically staged," and concludes that the film is an "interesting portrait of an outsider artist who has lead [sic] an amazing life. Hisao Shinagawa is strange, passionate, and one of those people who lives his life on his own offbeat terms." Lulu and the Girls of Americus, Georgia 1963 is a documentary film directed by Richard J. McCollough and Travis W. Lewis. Fragments of Kubelka is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Martina Kudlácek. Journey From Zanskar is a 2010 documentary film written, produced, and directed by Frederick Marx, for Warrior Films. It tells the emotional story of 17 small children who leave home and family, possibly forever, in order to save their dying Tibetan culture. Parting from one of the most remote and desolate places on Earth – Zanskar, in northwest India – the expedition must travel on foot over 17,000 foot Himalayan passes. The two monks serving as guides walked this same path 30 years ago when they were children. The 17 children with them may not return home for 10–15 years or more. Narrated by Richard Gere, featuring the Dalai Lama, the film tells the story of their incredible journey. Like Stone Lions at the Gateway into Night is a 2012 documentary film by Olivier Zuchuat. Nobelity is a feature documentary which looks at the world's most pressing problems through the eyes of Nobel laureates, including Desmond Tutu, Sir Joseph Rotblat, Ahmed Zewail and Wangari Maathai. The film was premiered at the 2006 SXSW Film Festival and was the first of several sold-out screenings at Austin's 1,200-seat Paramount Theatre. The film has continued to be shown in theaters, at universities and schools, and in community centers and churches, as well as being released on DVD. Nobelity was written and directed by writer, actor and filmmaker Turk Pipkin and produced by Christy Pipkin, in association with The Nobelity Project. The film interviews nine Nobel Prize winners discussing their vision for the world over the next 50 years. Cut, Good: The Making of 'Runaway' is a short documentary film directed by Justin Remer. Antarctic Crossing is a 1958 British documentary film directed by George Lowe. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film follows Sir Vivian Fuchs on his way back from Shackleton Base. Justin Bieber: Never Say Never is a 2011 3-D concert film centering on singer Justin Bieber. It was released in the United States and Canada on February 11, 2011. A sequel to Never Say Never was released on December 25, 2013 entitled Justin Bieber's Believe. The Maharaja of Jodhpur is an exclusive documentation of the life of one of India's most distinguished royals - His Highness The Maharaja Gaj Singh II of Marwar - Jodhpur. It's the story of his quest to reinvent his role and relevance in democratic, republican India and of his struggle to preserve a glorious way of life. Bette Bourne: It Goes with the Shoes is a 2013 documentary biographical film written by Mark Ravenhill and directed by Jeremy Jeffs and Mark Ravenhill. Rise Up is a 2007 documentary film by director and cinematographer Luciano Blotta. The film documents the world of underground music in Jamaica following the efforts of three musicians to break into the mainstream, and vicariously exploring a variety of socio-cultural issues relating to poverty, violence, and post-colonial corruption. Rise Up has screened at numerous film festivals including IDFA and Hot Docs, and it won the Best Music Documentary category at the AFI/Discovery Channel Silverdocs Festival. The film also aired on the BBC and enjoyed a well received theatrical debut in Jamaica, where it was reviewed by the Jamaican Observer as the "Rise of a new Classic". My Song Goes Forth, is the first documentary about South Africa as apartheid was being imposed. The film features singer, actor and civil rights activist Paul Robeson singing the title song and adding a prologue that asks the viewers to interpret the remainder of the film against the producer's intentions. Alternately entitled "Africa Sings", the initial purpose of the film was as a pro-white supremacy short-subject documentary which serves as an advertisement for the birth of apartheid in South Africa but with a conflicting message in the voice-over. Primarily the documentary has been associated with Robeson and early Anti-Apartheid activism due to his re-editing and rewriting of the films' narration. Minispectacles: Touché, Douche, Souche is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Maarit Suomi-Väänänen. Milking It is a 2013 documentary film directed by Stephanie Cowan. Daddy I do is a 2010 documentary film directed by Cassie Jaye. A Stravinsky Portrait is a 1966 documentary and musical film directed by Richard Leacock and Rolf Liebermann. La Voz del Cuerpo / The Body Speaks is a 2013 documentary, short, biographical film written and directed by Christine Dakin. Histoire du soldat inconnu is a 1932 documentary short film from Belgium, directed by Henri Storck. Part of the Change is a 2013 Telly Award winning film, created for Habitat for Humanity International. Freak Night Fever in São Paulo is a 2012 documentary film directed by Lufe Steffen. What is music? Today's top artists, actors, and scholars grapple with the question in this cinematic look at a uniquely human obsession. The Heart is a Drum Machine is a new feature documentary film project from the producers of Moog. Affengeil is a 1990 film directed by Rosa von Praunheim. Children of Internment is a documentary biography history film directed by Joe Crump and Kristina Wagner. Inner City Champions is a biographical documentary sports drama film directed by Kenneth Taylor. The Save is a 2011 short film directed by Amanda Micheli. Hippos and Rhinos is a 2003 documentary directed by Fred Casella. What It Takes is a documentary that follows four elite Ironman triathletes through a year of training and preparation in advance of the 2005 Ironman World Championship in Kona, Hawaii. The film was shot digitally in native 16:9 widescreen using Panasonic AJ-SDX900 camcorders in 24 frames per second. Filming began in November 2004 and completed in February 2006. Nov. 22 1963, the world was shocked by the assassination of John F. Kennedy. The mystery surrounding this history-changing event has led to many un-solved questions. With the collapse of the Iron Curtin, many KGB officials have surfaced with top-secret files posing the following questions: • Why couldn't Nakita Khrushchev be found for hours following the assassination? • Why did Lyndon Johnson scramble his entire arsenal of nuclear bombers within minutes of the assassination? • Why were there so many discrepancies with the Oswald as the lone gunman theory? • What of all the disputable autopsy evidence? Explore recently de-classified information, photos, and film, for the first time on TV, to find out the amazing answers. The Ashes of Pasolini is a 1994 film directed by Pasquale Misuraca. People & Plates is a 2013 short documentary biographical film written and directed by Miguel Calayan. Rwanda: Do Scars Ever Fade? is an in-depth journalistic report and historical examination of the bloody conflict in Rwanda. It also examines the use of propaganda to recruit amateur killers who would ultimately slaughter their countrymen. It won a Peabody award in 2004. Give a Damn Again is a 1995 documentary film directed by Adam Isidore. Speaking in Tongues is a 2009 documentary film written by Laurie Coyle and Marcia Jarmel, and directed by Ken Schneider and Marcia Jarmel. Tuna is a 1958 documentary film. George Carlin: Again! is American comedian George Carlin's second HBO stand-up television special. It was filmed in the round in 1978 at The Celebrity Theatre in Phoenix, Arizona. The show was first broadcast on July 23, 1978. The opening segment of the show contains pictures from Carlin's childhood which he narrates over: "I thought we might take a look at some of the pictures from the days when my show business career was just starting". The narration segues into Carlin waiting backstage to go on. He begins his routine by acknowledging the audience before diving into his "Goofy Shit" list which includes some new routines: Sandman on a rainy night, large craft warnings, Marine land fish sticks, centipedes, waiters in waiting rooms, evening gowns at night clubs, fluorescent lights, Kleenex targets, the hats that are not there, frogs legs, emptying the wishing wells, dream credits, why there is no blue food, skilled and unskilled workers, why we buy flowers, and cleaning the church. Carlin then performs a new long routine about time, who has the time, and words we use to describe time The Gay Marriage Thing is a 2005 documentary film directed by Stephanie Higgins, who is a product of the Emerson College film school graduate program. The film follows the heated debate over same-sex marriage in Massachusetts in 2004 through the perspective of a lesbian couple who wishes to legally marry, as that state became the first in the U.S. to grant same-sex marriages. In the Heat of the Power is a 2001documentary film directed by Jordi Niubo. Ahvan is a 1961 documentary film directed by Dhruva Kumar Pandya. Let My People Go: The Story of Israel is a 1965 documentary film directed by Marshall Flaum. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1965 and won the United Nations Award in 1961 from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Flaum also produced and wrote the documentary. With narration by Richard Basehart and an original score by Israeli composer Marc Lavry, Let My People Go depicts the story of the efforts to create a homeland for the Jewish people, interweaving archival footage of such individuals and events reaching back to Theodor Herzl in 1897 at the First Zionist Congress in Basel, Switzerland. The film shows World Zionist Organization president Chaim Weizmann meeting with Arthur Balfour, who authored the Balfour Declaration of 1917, which stated that "His Majesty's government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people". The Staircase: The Last Chance is the 2012 follow-up film to the 2004 documentary miniseries The Staircase. It is directed by Jean-Xavier de Lestrade. Waiting for "Superman" is a 2010 documentary film from director Davis Guggenheim and producer Lesley Chilcott. The film analyzes the failures of the American public education system by following several students as they strive to be accepted into a charter school. The film received the Audience Award for best documentary at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. The film also received the Best Documentary Feature at the Critics' Choice Movie Awards. The Immaculates is a 2013 short documentary drama film written and directed by Ronny Trocker. American Standoff is an American 2002 documentary film by Kristi Jacobson which documents much of a strike by the Teamsters against a package delivery company, Overnite Transportation. The film follows the strike from early 2000 to mid-2001. Zohre & Manouchehr is a 2003 film directed by Mitra Farahani. The Audacity of Democracy is a 2009 American independent documentary film produced by Lorenda Starfelt and directed by Brad Mays for LightSong Films in North Hollywood. The film, which was shot in New York City, Washington, D.C.; Chicago, Illinois; Dallas and Austin, Texas; and Denver, Colorado is an in-depth look at the P.U.M.A. movement in general and one of its most controversial leaders, Darragh Murphy, in particular. In August 2005, as well as the usual mix of Yorkshire county championship and one day fixtures, the Scarborough Cricket Festival included a charity match between a Lashings XI and an Old England XI. The game, in aid of The Dickie Bird Foundation, featured many of the world's best players, both past and present. Dickie once again donned the famous white coat and hat to take his place in the middle. Maestra is a 33-minute documentary film directed by Catherine Murphy, about the youngest women teachers of the 1961 Cuban Literacy Campaign. In 1961, Cuba aimed to eradicate illiteracy across the island in one year. It sent 250,000 volunteers across the island to teach reading and writing in rural communities for one year. 100,000 of the volunteers were under 18 and more than half of them were women. In 2004, Murphy discovered that she knew several women in Havana who had volunteered for the project, by this time in their 60s. Murphy was due to leave Havana and return to the United States, but before doing so, she decided to record three interviews with former Literacy Campaign volunteers. From 2004 to 2010, Murphy continued to track down stories of Literacy Campaign volunteers and the families that hosted them, eventually producing and directing MAESTRA and founding The Literacy Project. The film is narrated in English by Pulitzer Prize–winning author Alice Walker and features Spanish-language interviews with nine of the women who taught in the Campaign. Soft Vengeance: Albie Sachs and the New South is a documentary biography history film directed by Abby Ginzberg. "Listen to the Swiss air and a soundtrack will form. Captivated by a gentle and emotional tune, an audience is witness to the beautiful and unusual vocal instruction of an artist who took to music when he has no other way to communicate. A group whose fame reached great heights in the music world stirs a debate over the sounds and voices of a new era..." Quoting the synopsis from the 2008 Cinequest Film Festival site. Before I Sleep / The Healers of 400 Parnassus is a 1997 documentary directed by Laura Gabbert. Schuberth - L'Atelier della Dolce Vita is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Antonello Sarno. Hamsa, I am is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by Miroslav Janek; with writing credits by Ivan Arsenyev. Forgiving Dr. Mengele is a documentary film about Eva Mozes Kor, a victim of the Holocaust, and Dr. Josef Mengele and his staff, who experimented on her and her twin sister Miriam Mozes, as well as approximately 1,400 other twin pairs. The documentary was directed by Bob Hercules and Cheri Pugh, who also served as producers. They followed Eva for over four years, chronicling her story and her journey to Israel. Forgiving Dr. Mengele premiered at the Gene Siskel Film Center in Chicago, Illinois, on February 24, 2006. It was scheduled to play for a week, and then travel to other cities in the US. The film is distributed by First Run Features, which handles independent films and documentaries. Tricked: The Documentary is a 2013 documentary, action and crime film directed by John Keith Wasson and Jane Wells. Sath Kutch Na Jayega is a 1973 documentary film directed by Dhiru Mistry and Sureshwar Singh. Ayo Joy is a 2009 documentary film produced by the French company MK2 and directed by Raphaël Duroy about the singer Ayọ. The 90 minute film, which comes into the cinemas end of 2009 or early 2010, shows her life and the search for her roots during the preparations and execution of her first concert in Nigeria, the birth country of her father. A post 9/11 look at intercity firemen in and around the New York City area as they work daily, fighting fires, and saving fire victims as they and their families mourn the lost of their fire fighting brothers, husbands, sons, and daughters in the World Trade Center attack. "The Singularity is an era in which our intelligence will become increasingly nonbiological and trillions of times more powerful than it is today - the dawning of a new civilization that will enable us to transcend our biological limitations and amplify our creativity. The onset of the 21st Century will be an era in which the very nature of what it means to be human will be both enriched and challenged as our species breaks the shackles of its genetic legacy and achieves inconceivable heights of intelligence, material progress, and longevity. While the social and philosophical ramifications of these changes will be profound, and the threats they pose considerable, celebrated futurist Ray Kurzweil presents a view of the coming age that is both a dramatic culmination of centuries of technological ingenuity and a genuinely inspiring vision of our ultimate destiny." Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. Newtown Creek Digester Eggs: The Art of Human Waste is a 2012 short documentary and historical film directed and written by David W. Leitner. King of Punk is a documentary film directed and produced by Kenneth van Schooten and Julie van Schooten. The documentary film includes interviews with members of bands involved in the Punk scene between 1976 and 1982 including Ramones, Adicts, Exploited, Avengers, Dead Boys, UK Subs, Zeros, Wayne County & the Electric Chairs and many other artists. They talk about this music form and the music industry in general. It also profiles OBGYN, an all-girl Punk band based in Fayetteville, NC, and Patrick Clement, owner of Boston's FNS Publishing. The film's title, King of Punk, is based on one of OBGYN's song titles and doesn't refer to any one person. The King of Punk documentary was released on DVD in 2007. With a hyper-energizing urban tribal music soundtrack that explodes with electronic sounds and world rhythms, DELIRIUM is an experience which cannot be missed. Nico Icon is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Susanne Ofteringer. Looking for Johnny is a documentary film directed by Danny Garcia. If Only I Were an Indian… is a 1995 documentary film written by John Paskievich and David Scheffel and directed by John Paskievich. One Survivor Remembers is a 1995 documentary short film by Kary Antholis in which Holocaust survivor Gerda Weissmann Klein recounts her six-year ordeal as a victim of Nazi cruelty, including the loss of her parents, brother, friends, home, possessions, and community. A production of HBO and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, the film won the 1995 Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject and the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Informational Special. In 2005, the film was offered by the Southern Poverty Law Center as part of a Teaching Tolerance curriculum for high school teachers to teach their students about the realities of the Holocaust. In 2012, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". After Stonewall is a 1999 documentary film directed by John Scagliotti about the 30 years of gay rights activism since the 1969 Stonewall riots. It is the sequel to the Scagliotti-produced 1986 film Before Stonewall and is narrated by musician Melissa Etheridge. Participants include Dorothy Allison, Jewelle Gomez, Rita Mae Brown, Craig Lucas, Arnie Kantrowitz, Barbara Gittings, Barbara Smith, Larry Kramer and Barney Frank. The Land of Vanishing Lakes is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Ishani K. Dutta. Growin' a Beard is a 2003 documentary short film directed by Mike Woolf Un vagón a lado de la via is a 1991 short documentary film written by Rafael Illescas and Javier Patrón and directed by Rafael Illescas. Foreign Parts is a 2010 documentary drama film directed by Verena Paravel and J.P. Sniadecki. "A hidden enclave in the shadow of baseball’s new Mets Stadium, the neighborhood of Willets Point, Queens, is an industrial zone fated for demolition. Filled with scrapyards and auto salvage shops, lacking sidewalks or sewage lines, the area seems ripe for tourist development. But Foreign Parts discovers a strange community where wrecks, refuse and recycling form a thriving commerce. Cars are stripped, sorted and catalogued by brand and part, then resold to an endless parade of drive-thru customers. Joe, the last original resident, rages and rallies through the street like a lost King Lear, trying to contest his immanent eviction. Two lovers, Sara and Luis, struggle for food and safety through the winter while living in an abandoned van. Julia, the homeless queen of the junkyard, exalts in her beatific visions of daily life among the forgotten. The film observes and captures the struggle of a contested “eminent domain” neighborhood before its disappearance under the capitalization of New York’s urban ecology." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Locarno International Film Festival site. The Contemplator is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mattias Klum. A Film About Kids and Music. Sant Andreu Jazz Band is a music documentary film directed by Ramon Tort. A Jihad for Love is a 2007 documentary film on the coexistence of Islam and homosexuality. The film is directed by Parvez, and produced by Shama and Trembling Before G-d director Sandi DuBowski. Jack Smith: Beautiful Film Jewels is a film directed by Jack Smith. Occupied Minds is the story of two journalists, Jamal Dajani, a Palestinian-American and David Michaelis, an Israeli, who journey to Jerusalem, their mutual birthplace, to explore new solutions and offer unique insights into the divisive Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The film takes viewers on an emotional and intensely personal odyssey through the streets of one of the world's most volatile regions. Among the myriad of voices Dajani and Michaelis hear from are: a wanted Palestinian gunman, an Israeli soldier breaking the silence about his service, an Israeli surgeon who lost his eyesight in a suicide bombing, an Israeli mother who lost her son in the conflict, and a Palestinian activist. As Dajani and Michaelis make their way through the many worlds that make up contemporary Israel and Palestine, they struggle to find lasting solutions to what others believe may be a never-ending conflict. Mural Murals is a 1980 documentary film written and directed by Agnès Varda. Every Pixel Tells a Story is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Peter Hanson. Now for the first time Tupac: Hip Hop Genius takes you behind the scenes and reveals the truth behind the most controversial figure of rap music, a critically acclaimed actor and poet of the streets. Often contentious, yet never dull, welcome to the story of Tupac Shakur. "If old is the new new, then Frank Fairfield is a 20th century heart-throb. A 25 year-old, old-time musician from LA, Frank plays to the timeless beat of eccentricity. But this is NOT an act. His unique world-view on the natural state of things includes playing songs "that have existed forever" with complete authority and collecting old 78s from around the world. His encyclopedic mind and crate digging is on display in this short film. Frank Fairfield: a man-out-of-time. Just in time." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. Hablan los tarahumaras is a 1983 documentary film written by Humberto Caldera and Ramon Placencia, and directed by Óscar Menéndez. Radiant City is a 2006 Canadian film written and directed by Gary Burns and Jim Brown. It is about the suburban sprawl and the Moss family's life in the suburbs. The film is openly critical towards suburban sprawl and its negative effects, being ironic and amusing at the same time. It was revealed to be a mockumentary at the end of the film. The fictional part is about the five members of the Moss family who have just moved from the city into a new suburban development of Evergreen in Calgary, Alberta. The family discuss and portray the life in the suburbs and the various flaws and advantages of a modern suburban life, with a considerably greater emphasis on the flaws. While the characters and instances in the movie are fictional, the actors that play them all live in real suburban areas. Interspersed with this narrative, experts speak about their views of the suburbs. These include Ken Greenberg, Joseph Heath, Mark Kingwell, James Howard Kunstler, Marc Boutin, Andrés Duany and Beverly Sandalack. These portions are filmed in different suburban areas of North America, including Oakville, Ontario. Declaration of Immortality is a 2010 documentary, short film directed by Marcin Koszalka. Crash & Burn is a 2011 short documentary written and directed by Rick Rodgers. 30% (Women and Politics in Sierra Leone) is a 2012 short biographical documentary film written by Anna Cady, Em Cooper and Jenny Cuffe and directed by Anna Cady and Em Cooper. See The Dirt is a 2012 comedy, family, short documentary film directed by Chelsea Hernandez and Erik Mauck. Fala Tu is a 2003 documentary film directed by Guilherme Coelho and written by Nathaniel Leclery. My Friend Paul is a 1998 documentary drama-crime film written and directed by Jonathan Berman; with writing credits by David Tedeschi. Vietnam Symphony is a 2005 documentary, music and war film written and directed by Tom Zubrycki. A Newsreel History of the Third Reich is a 2008 documentary film. Jazz is my Native Language: A Portrait of Toshiko Akiyoshi is a documentary film by Renee Cho about the jazz pianist, composer, arranger and big band leader Toshiko Akiyoshi. Portraits Of A Poet is a 2013 short documentary film written by Mai Vallee and directed by Kendy Ty. Balagan is a 1994 film directed by Andres Veiel. Justin des martigues is a 1983 documentary film directed by Vincent Martorana. After the Fall is a 1999 documentary film directed by Eric Black and Frauke Sandig. Heaven On Earth is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Rick Minnich. Testimonio de un grupo is a 1971 short documentary film written by Sergio Gomez & Eduardo Maldonaldo and directed by Eduardo Maldonaldo. Kanehsatake: 270 Years of Resistance is a 1993 feature-length film documentary film by Alanis Obomsawin, chronicling the 1990 Oka Crisis. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, the film won 18 Canadian and international awards, including the Distinguished Documentary Achievement Award from the International Documentary Association and the CITY TV Award for Best Canadian Feature Film from the Toronto Festival of Festivals. Square Roots: The Story of SpongeBob SquarePants is a documentary film directed and co-written by Patrick Creadon. It originally aired on VH1 on July 14, 2009. The documentary chronicles the popular culture success of the animated television series SpongeBob SquarePants. It features commentaries from series creator Stephen Hillenburg and other celebrity fans. Slam from the Street: Battle Slams is a 2003 documentary film directed by Alastair Christopher. Without Bias is a documentary film directed by Kirk Fraser for the ESPN documentary series 30 for 30. It is the story of Len Bias, the University of Maryland basketball star, whose death by cocaine overdose days after being drafted by the Boston Celtics altered drug policy in the United States. The Dying Rooms is a 1995 television documentary film about Chinese state orphanages. It was directed by Kate Blewett and Brian Woods and produced by Lauderdale Productions. Thar She Blows! is a 1931 short Australian film, the first production from Cinesound Productions. It is a documentary on the West Australian whaling industry. The vast world of sexual fetishes gets a non-judgmental look with this independently produced documentary. Beyond Vanilla analyzes the history of various kinks and fetishes from the points-of-view of sex experts, porn stars, and the average folks who choose to indulge in them. Arranged in sections, fetish by fetish, Beyond Vanilla starts with sadomasochism and bondage, working its way through more taboo topics such as piercing, electric shock, and blood play. Among the adult-entertainment luminaries interviewed on their proclivities are Nina Hartley and Cole Tucker. Beyond Vanilla made the festival rounds in 2002, playing the Silverlake Film Festival, the London Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, and the New York S/M Film Festival before receiving a very limited release in May of 2003. Briars in the Cotton Patch: Story of Koinonia Farm is a 2003 documentary film written by Michael Booth and Faith Fuller and directed by Faith Fuller. Next Goal Wins is a 2014 British documentary film directed by Mike Brett and Steve Jamison. The film chronicles the national football team of American Samoa as they try to recover from the indignity of being known as one of the weakest football teams in the world, and to qualify for the 2014 FIFA World Cup. "The orange may not seem like the most obvious point of departure for an examination of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but during the last century, the disputed border area between Israel and the territories was one of the world's biggest exporters of this "orange gold." In Jaffa, The Orange's Clockwork, director Eyal Sivan reconstructs how Jaffa started out as a Palestinian place name before becoming an Israeli brand name, and how the orange harvest shifted from a joint undertaking into a symbol used by both parties in the escalating conflict. The filmmaker uses a great deal of archive footage, from the very earliest photography in 1840 right up to crisp, modern video. The images are accompanied by commentary from a range of experts, who watch them projected on the walls of their offices or on tablecloths hung up in their living rooms. From historians to art experts, poets to political analysts, each gives his or her perspective on the archive footage, which over the years has become increasingly laden with ideological significance. Orange eaters and pickers -- many of whom remember the more harmonious times when Jews and Arabs still worked side by side in the orchards -- also have their say." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. Venus and Serena is a documentary film that takes and inside look at Venus Williams and Serena Williams lives and careers. Venus and Serena was directed by Maiken Baird and Michelle Major. It was the official selection at the 2013 Miami International Film Festival, 2012 Toronto Film Festival, 2012 Tribeca Film Festival and 2012 Bermuda Docs Film Festival. Venus and Serena was released by Magnolia Pictures May 10, 2013. Doc Next: View from My Window, 1968-1979 Chronicles is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Jakub Piatek, Kamil Radziszewski, Katarzyna Nalewajka, Milosz Hermanowicz and Ula Klimek. Umoja: No Men Allowed is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Elizabeth Tadic. The Man Who Would Be Polka King is a 2009 music crime documentary film written and directed by Joshua Brown and John Mikulak. In Georgien is a 1987 film directed by Jürgen Böttcher. Going Back to 17 is a 2009 short documentary film starring Zac Efron, Jason Filardi and Jennifer Gibgot. Trojans is a 1990 documentary short film written and directed by Constantine Giannaris. Good Husband, Dear Son is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Heddy Honigmann. Anthrax War is a 2009 documentary film about the 2001 anthrax attacks and the rise of today's Bio- Military Industrial Complex that was co-produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and ARTE-France. Broadcast internationally, it was nominated for the 2009 'Prix Europa" for Outstanding Current Affairs Broadcast. It also screened at the Frontline Club in London,the IDFA Fest in Amsterdam, the Tri-Continental Film Fest in Johannesburg and the 9/11 Film Festival in Oakland, California, among other venues. Filmmakers Bob Coen and Eric Nadler also wrote the accompanying book Dead Silence that discusses, in greater detail, the investigation that the documentary examines. Shortly after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, anthrax-laced letters were mailed to offices of media outlets in New York City and Florida and to the U. S. Senate in Washington DC, creating an atmosphere of fear across the United States and beyond. The filmmakers question the official story surrounding the FBI investigation of this instance of biological terrorism. I Am a Girl! is a 2010 short documentary biographical film written and directed by Susan Koenen. Figures of Thought is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Arun Khopkar. Umurage is a Spanish 2002 documentary film. Roma Imago Urbis: Parte I - Il mito is a 1994 documentary film written by Franco Barbaresi and directed by Luigi Bazzoni. The :30 Second Candidate is a 1999 Emmy News and Documentary Award winner for Outstanding Background/Analysis of a Single Current Story - Programs. Die Feuerprobe - Novemberpogrom 1938 is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Erwin Leiser and Vera Leiser. Robot is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Liz Garbus. Venom in Vegas is a 2010 documentary directed by Scott Gurney and Donald Schultz. N - The Madness Of Reason is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Peter Krüger. A documentary film about Andreas Schneider's infamous "Schneider's Buero", the boutique electronic musical instrument shop in Berlin. TOTALLY WIRED explores one man's electric evangelism, and the interface he has built to connect analogue instrument inventors with their end-users. 130919 • A Portrait of Marina Abramovic is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Matthu Placek. She Said Boom: The Story of Fifth Column is a 2011 documentary film written by Kevin Hegge and Oliver Husain and directed by Kevin Hegge. Nobody Special is a 2013 documentary biographical short film written and directed by Juan Alejandro Ramirez. Blumen lieben oben is a 1999 film directed by Erwin Michelberger. Modern TV Dads: Father Doesn't Know Best is a 2010 TV documentary written by Heather Konkoli and Ken McGilvray. Fighting Gravity is a documentary produced by Virginia Madsen and directed by Alex Mar for Empire 8 productions and Screen Sirens. The documentary screened in 2009 and followed 15 passionate women athletes' fight for their sport's inclusion in the Olympic Games. These 15 ski jumping athletes fought for their right to compete in their sport in the Vancouver Winter Olympics in 2010. Starting in the Olympics in Chamonix in 1924, the Winter Olympics have always held ski jumping competitions but restricted to men. The documentary mainly follows the American ski jumper Lindsey Van who describes how she feels about the exclusion of women in the professional ski jumping world. The documentary follows the process of the girls' lawsuit against the International Olympic Committee for gender discrimination. Although Canadian courts ruled in June 2009 in favour of the IOC, the latter decided less than two years later to accept women in ski jumping competitions starting in 2014 at the Sochi Winter Olympics. A documentary was produced in 2012 touching the same subject called Ready to Fly. Another State of Mind is a documentary film made in the summer of 1982 chronicling the adventure of two punk bands – Social Distortion and Youth Brigade – as they embark on their first international tour. Along the way they meet up with another progressive punk band, Minor Threat, whom they hang out with at the Dischord house for about a week near the end of their ill-fated tour. La Maladie Blanche is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Christelle Lheureux. Lemmy is a 2010 documentary film profile of British rock musician Ian "Lemmy" Kilmister, bass guitarist and lead vocalist of the British heavy metal band Motörhead. Slice and Dice: The Slasher Film Forever is a 2012 documentary feature directed and produced by Calum Waddell and edited and produced by Naomi Holwill. The two had previously set up their High Rising Productions company to make documentary supplements for the DVD market. The film had its world premiere at the Sitges Film Festival in October, 2012. Revealing Mr Maugham is a 2012 documentary film written by Juliette Andrews and directed by Michael House. Vulva 3.0 is a 2014 documentary film directed by Claudia Richarz and Ulrike Zimmermann and written by Ulrike Zimmermann. Ten Pound Poms is a 2007 documentary produced by Nial Fulton and directed by Lisa Matthews. Filmmakers in Action is a 2005 documentary film directed by Carlos Benpar. Licuri Surf is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Guile Martins. Softening is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kelly O'Brien. Escaping the flood is a 2006 film directed by Frans Bromet. I Will Marry the Whole Village is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Zeljko Mirkovic. Plašitelj kormorana is a Croatian documentary film directed by Branko Ištvančić. It was released in 1998. Captured by the Americans in North Africa, Georg Gärtner was shipped to the USA as a German POW at Camp Deming, New Mexico. He escaped in 1945 and eluded the FBI for the next 40 years. Hitler's Lost Soldier is the story of an exile without a home - a man torn between nationalities and identities - the German Georg Gärtner and the American Dennis Whiles. Mothers of Bedford is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jenifer McShane. Let It Come Down: The Life of Paul Bowles is a 1998 film directed by Jennifer Baichwal. Something Rich and Strange: The Life and Work Of Iannis Xenakis is a documentary film directed by Mark Kidel. Terrorism is the main threat to the world’s order. The most dangerous weapon of terror is a suicide-attacker or a so-called ‘suicide bomber”. What makes young guys and girls do so? The authors of the film are looking for an answer to this question investigating the history of activities of religious sects, whose psychology has initiated mass suicides, as well as studying interviews with suicide-attackers, who have survived, and their parents. Our School is a 2011 documentary film directed by Mona Nicoara and Miruna Coca-Cozma. "Our School follows three Roma (commonly known as Gypsy) children in a rural Transylvanian village who are among the pioneer participants in an initiative to integrate the ethnically segregated Romanian schools. Touching on issues ranging from institutionalized prejudice, public education, and the intractability of poverty, but always firmly rooted in the hypnotic rhythms and profound reality of the Roma community, Our School is a deeply affecting, often infuriating, and ultimately bittersweet story of tradition and progress. In Romanian with English subtitles." Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. "A restruck and restored version of master filmmaker Allan King's classic cinema-verité film, one of the most influential and celebrated Canadian films ever made, A Married Couple records the collapse of a middle class couple's marriage. The film is being restruck in conjunction with Zoe Druick's monograph on the film, co-published by the University of Toronto Press and TIFF." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival site. Invisible Young is a documentary film directed by Steven Keller. Bhutan - Taking the Middle Path to Happiness is a 2007 documentary film written by John Wehrheim and directed by Tom Vendetti. Kids Like You & Me is a documentary film directed by Bill Cody. Planet of Snail is a 2011 documentary drama film directed by Yi Seung-jun. Kings of Pastry is a film by D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus that follows a group of world-class French pastry chefs as they compete for France's most prestigious craftsmen award: Meilleur Ouvrier de France, awarded by French President Nicolas Sarkozy. The competition, which takes place in Lyon, France, features a diverse range of creative trade professions, from carpentry to jewelry design to pastry making. The honor of wearing the blue, white and red striped collar given to the winners is considered to be the ultimate recognition of excellence in the pastry field. The film focuses primarily on Chef Jacquy Pfeiffer, co-founder of Chicago’s French Pastry School, and one of the sixteen finalist chefs competing — the sixteen finalists were selected from eighty semi-finalists during the semi-final rounds that took place in the months prior to the final competition. GAP: Grupo de Amigos Personales de Allende is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Claudia Serrano Navarro. Kiss, Cuddle and Celebrate is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Peter Kern. Lionel Richie: Collection is the 2003 Documentary film. Kapo is an Israeli documentary film about the Jewish kapos who collaborated with the Nazis in the concentration camps during World War II. The film was written, directed, and produced by Dan Setton, with Tor Ben Mayor and Danny Paran in conjunction with Spiegel TV of Germany and Rai 3 of Italy. It was the first Israeli film to win an International Emmy Award, which it received in the category of Best Documentary. Faces of Death VI is a 1996 direct-to-video compilation of the highlights of the earlier films in the Faces of Death series. It features many of the same scenes shown in Faces of Death 1 and 4, as well as the earlier compilation Faces of Death V. It begins without any opening credits, before recycling the sequence from Faces of Death involving the killing of a monkey which is then prepared and served to patrons of a gourmet restaurant. Also shown for the second time are the staged heart-ripping scene by African natives and the "head in a box" scene, both taken from Faces of Death IV. John Alan Schwartz's cameo as the leader of the flesh eating cult, as well as "The encapsulation of Samuel Berkowitz" are also featured again, and the final credits are those from Faces of Death. Faces of Death VI exists in 3 distinct versions: 1. The widest-known version is the one that was released "unofficially" by Gorgon Video in the U.S. It features the artwork from part four reversed. It contains clips mostly from parts one and four, and has the opening credits from part one. This is the version of Faces of Death 6 that was released to buy or rent on video in the U.S. 2. Norman McLaren: Boogie Doodler is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jenny MacLeod. Disaster (a personal geography) is a 2011 documentary short film written and directed by Laura Green. The Young Man Was, Part 1: United Red Army is a 2011 documentary written and directed by Naeem Mohaiemen. America Screams is a 1990 documentary film about the history of amusement parks and roller coasters, released by Rhino in 1990. The footage was filmed in 1978/79 and originally aired on U.S. television in 1979. It aired in the UK in late December 1981. It is hosted and narrated by Vincent Price. Special Flight is a 2012 documentary film directed by Fernand Melgar. "Many of the world’s finest Jewish singers return to Poland, the birthplace of cantorial music, for a series of exuberant, history-making concerts in this musical documentary that is both uplifting and deeply moving. "The subject of Poland for Jews brings up more questions than answers," says Cantor Nathan Lam. "Most American Jews came from Polish lands. Jewish life itself was defined in Poland." But the Holocaust was disproportionately carried out on Polish soil, and Jewish ties have been painfully attenuated ever since. "So how do you reconnect with a thousand years of history that’s been so eradicated?" Lam set out to try in 2009, organizing a tour by an assembly of cantors from around the world. 100 Voices, skillfully directed by Danny Gold and Matthew Asner (son of actor Ed Asner), is the fascinating chronicle of that trip, which included a concert at the majestic Warsaw Opera House and a second at Nozyk Synagogue, the only one to survive the war. The documentary not only captures an historic and moving goodwill mission but delves into the cultural history of Jewish Poland, with special regard for the versatility and crossover appeal of the prewar hazzan (cantor). Major stars like the broodingly handsome cantor and Yiddish theater actor Moishe Oysher—whose career came complete with groupies—are captured here in rare film footage and colorful anecdotes, as well as evoked in the jazzy stylings of the memorable American cantors Alberto Mizrahi and Jacob Mendelson, doing their rendition of "Chad Gadya." Impressive testimonials from the likes of composer Charles Fox (Killing Me Softly with His Song), returning to trace the footsteps of his Polish father, combine with eye-opening scenes of contemporary Poles’ renewed interest in Jewish culture to intone a stirring message of reconciliation and homecoming." Quoting Robert Avila from the 2011 San Francisco Jewish Film Festival site. Easy Riders, Raging Bulls is a 2003 documentary film written by Peter Biskind and directed by Kenneth Bowser. The Subconscious Art of Graffiti Removal is an experimental documentary directed by filmmaker Matt McCormick and narrated by Miranda July that makes the tongue-in-cheek argument that municipal efforts by Portland, Oregon to mask and erase graffiti is an important new movement in modern art stemming from the repressed artistic desires of city workers. The film screened at such venues as the Sundance Film Festival and the Museum of Modern Art and received both critical and popular acclaim. Pola Negri: Life is a Dream in Cinema is a feature-length biographical documentary film by Polish-American director Mariusz Kotowski released in 2006. The film chronicles the life of Polish silent film actress Pola Negri, as told by those who knew her and those who have studied her life and films. The documentary is the first directorial work of Polish-born director Mariusz Kotowski. Kotowski had previously worked as a dancer and dance choreographer, and invested three years of work and a considerable personal fortune into producing the Pola Negri: Life is a Dream in Cinema documentary. He has gone on to direct the Holocaust film Esther's Diary, which featured a lead character built strongly on Pola Negri, and the erotic psychological thriller Deeper and Deeper starring David Lago. Kotowski also went on to author a Polish-language Pola Negri biography entitled Pola Negri: Legenda Hollywood, which was released in Poland in 2011. Land Of Promise is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by René Roelofs and Paul Scheffer. Germania sette donne a testa is a 1970 documentary film directed by Paolo Cavallina and Stanis Nievo. We Jam Econo: The Story of the Minutemen, is a full-length documentary about the influential 1980s punk rock band Minutemen, created by director Tim Irwin and producer Keith Schieron in association with Rocket Fuel Films. The film premiered on February 25, 2005 at the historic Warner Grand Theatre in San Pedro, California, after two years in production. Poignant recent interviews with the band's two surviving members Mike Watt and George Hurley, as well as first-person anecdotes from notable musicians including Ian MacKaye, Flea, Henry Rollins and Thurston Moore, complement the archival concert and interview footage of the band, creating an informative and moving film for those interested in the band or punk rock in general. The title is a lyric from their song "The Politics of Time." It's also referred to in a comment made near the end of the film by Mike Watt, in a 1985 interview, when the band is asked if they have anything else to say. He answers for them: "We jam econo." Econo was local slang for economic and described the band's dedication to low-cost record production and touring. It also describes the band's do-it-yourself attitude and philosophy. Black Beach Spring Bling 2002 is a 2002 comedy film written by David Raibon and Mark St. Juste and directed by Mark St. Juste. Mr. Mergler's Gift is a 2005 documentary short film directed by Beverly Shaffer. John Lautner, The Desert Hot Springs Motel is a 2007 documentary and short film directed by Sasha Pirker. Sudden Summer is a 1966 documentary, short film directed by Richard Taylor. The Dignity of the Nobodies is a 2005 Argentine documentary film directed by Fernando Solanas. Music for the Movies: Bernard Herrmann is a 1992 documentary film directed by Joshua Waletzky. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. What A Way To Go: Life at the End of Empire is a 2007 documentary film about the current situation facing humanity and the world. It discusses issues such as peak oil, climate change and the effects of global warming, population overshoot and species extinction, as well as how this situation has developed. The documentary features supporting data and interviews of Daniel Quinn, environmental activist Derrick Jensen and academics such as Richard Heinberg and many others. The tagline of the documentary is, "A middle-class white guy comes to grips with Peak Oil, Climate Change, Mass Extinction, Population Overshoot and the demise of the American lifestyle." White Water Black Gold is a 2011 documentary film directed by David Lavallee. Armenian Legacy of Europe is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Valery Balayan. Nowhere Game is a 1972 short documentary film directed by John Hughes and Martyn Goddard. Pressure Cooker is a 2008 documentary film directed by Mark Becker and Jennifer Grausman. Friedensverhandlungen In Brest-litowsk is a 1918 short documentary film. American Pimp is a 1999 documentary that examines the pimp subculture in the United States. It was directed by the Hughes Brothers, the filmmakers behind Menace II Society and Dead Presidents. The documentary consists of first person interviews of people involved in the pimping lifestyle. The interviews are separated by short clips from 1970s blaxploitation films such as Willie Dynamite, The Mack, and Dolemite. The first portion of the documentary focuses on pimps working illegally. The illegal pimps that are interviewed are from all over the United States, e.g., Charm from Hawaii, Fillmore Slim from San Francisco, and Payroll from Las Vegas. These pimps, and many others discuss their theories on the history of prostitution. The pimps go on to talk about their philosophy on pimping, and how they live their daily life. The film also discusses the legal sector of prostitution. Dennis Hof, the owner of the Bunny Ranch in Nevada, is interviewed. He feels that Nevada is much smarter than the other states because they have imposed the proper health and background checks on prostitution, instead of trying to suppress prostitution by making it illegal. Ingmar Bergman Makes a Movie is a 1963 Swedish documentary film directed by Vilgot Sjöman which depicts the making of Ingmar Bergman's film Winter Light from screenwriting to the film's premiere and critical reaction. The film originally aired in five half-hour episodes on Swedish television. It has subsequently been included in a bonus disc of The Criterion Collection's box set of Bergman's "trilogy," Through a Glass Darkly, Winter Light, and The Silence. With My Heart in Yambo is a 2011 Ecuadorian documentary film written and directed by María Fernanda Restrepo. The film documents the abduction of Restrepo's two brothers in 1988. Beyond School is a 2012 documentary film written by Jang Sun-young and directed by Han-kook Kim. LEGENDS OF FLIGHT is a film that will not only delight and entertain the aviation enthusiast but also educate and inspired renewed interest in aviation by the traveling public, the media and young people who may ultimately aspire to a career in aviation. It dramatized the design challenged, the financial risks and the many lessons learned from a century of aviation trial and error, bringing us to the dawn of a new era of revolutionary aircraft, the 787 Dreamliner and the A380. The film will focus on the 787 to facilitate audience understanding of the dynamic design differences between the two latest aircraft technologies. Search aviation history for the ultimate flying experience with some of today's greatest pilots. See how the airplanes of the 20th century helped influence the radical new design of 21st century aircraft. See how high tech manufacturers around the world use modern technology to coordinate the design and construction of new aircraft... The Ultimate Pranx Case is a 2012 documentary film produced by Sylvain Guy and Claude Grégoire. Spirits of Havana is a 2001 documentary film directed by Luis O. Garcia and Bay Weyman. Paradise Later is a short film directed by Ascan Breuer. The King Of Size is a 2013 short action documentary film directed by Peter Dowd. "A nine-year-old girl reads the letter that she wrote to the parents of a fictional soldier killed in battle. Another student struggles to explain how his propensity for warfare has led to his realization that he is living in a world that Chinese philosopher Sun Tzu described 2500 years ago. World Peace and other 4th Grade Achievements documents these and other important insights as children participate in a program called the World Peace Game in a public school classroom in Charlottesville, Virginia. Their teacher John Hunter developed this exercise during the course of a three-decade teaching career. The film tracks one of his 4th grade classes over a two-month period as the students grapple with issues of war and peace, poverty and prosperity, economic vitality and environmental responsibility. Hunter's story is central to the film, which reveals how one man has utilized his role as a public school educator to make his contribution as a true peacemaker. An African-American educated in the segregated schools of rural Virginia, where his mother was his 4th grade teacher, he was selected by his community to be one of seven students to integrate a previously all-white middle school. After graduation, he traveled extensively to China, Japan and India, and his exposure to the Gandhian principles of non-violence led him to ask what he could do as a teacher to work toward a more peaceful world. Upon becoming an educator Hunter brought his depth of interest and understanding of other cultures to his students. His goal is to teach the students how to be comfortable with the unknown, and how to think and adapt in our ever-changing world. He teaches peace not as a utopian dream, but as an attainable goal worth striving for, and he provides the children with the tools of this work." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site God Gave Us the Leaf is a documentary film directed by Brian Moser. 39 Pounds of Love is a film written and directed by Dani Menkin, with co-writer, Ilan Heitner. It stars Ami Ankilewitz, a 34 year-old Israeli 3D animator who lived with Spinal Muscular Atrophy. The documentary centers on his journey across the United States by motorhome to find the doctor who told his mother when he was born that he would not live past the age of 6. The title refers to the fact that Ankilewitz weighed only 39 pounds during his cross-country trip due to the rare form of SMA/2 that he was born with. Even though he could not move any part of his body except for one finger, he was still determined to use that finger to create 3D animations and live his life as he would if he had not suffered from SMA. 39 Pounds of Love was officially released on April 5, 2005 and was re-released on DVD on October 6, 2009. Un Tigre De Papel is a 2008 film written and directed by Luis Ospina. Night Service Station is a 1999 documentary film directed by Samir Nasr. The Unreturned is a 2010 documentary film by Nathan Fisher. The film tells the story of five middle-class Iraqi refugees caught in an absurdist purgatory of endless bureaucracy, dwindling life savings, and forced idleness. The Unreturned was shot in verité style in Syria and Jordan, with unscripted narration by the refugees in the film. These Iraqis come from diverse ethnic and religious backgrounds. The film's world premiere was April 25, 2010 at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film Festival, where it was awarded "Best of Festival" honors. The film is also an official selection at the 2010 Marfa Film Festival and the 2010 Human Rights Watch International Film Festival in New York. Safeguarding Military Information was a short propaganda film produced by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1942. Pushwagner is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Even Benestad and August B. Hanssen. Sutro's: The Palace at Lands End is a documentary film directed by Tom Wyrsch. American Made Movie is a documentary drama history film directed by Nathaniel Thomas McGill and Vincent Vittorio. A Man's Story is a 2010 documentary film directed by Varon Bonicos. Arefi, the shepherd is a 2013 short film directed by Daniel Asadi Faezi. The Good, The Bad And The Beautiful is a 1996 documentary directed by Kyra Thompson. The Frontier Gandhi: Badshah Khan, a Torch for Peace, a documentary released in 2008, is the first full film account of Pashtun leader and non violent activist Abdul Ghaffar Khan, also known as Badshah Khan or Bacha Khan. The documentary is the work of filmmaker and writer T.C. McLuhan, daughter of the Canadian media theorist Marshall McLuhan, who spent 21 years to bring the story to the screen after an acquaintance gave her Nonviolent Soldier of Islam. The voice of Ghaffar Khan is played by Indian actor Om Puri and includes interviews with elderly activists of the Khudai Khidmatgar movement as well as major political figures in Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. The film had its Middle-Eastern premier at the 3rd Middle East International Film Festival in Abu Dhabi in October, 2009, where it won the top award for documentary films. The BBC quoted Afrasiab Khattak, head of the Awami National Party in North-West Frontier Province, as saying that "This film will help a lot in introducing Badshah Khan to the rest of the world." McLuhan has stated that she believes the film counters stereotypes. Hotel Ground Zero is an American television documentary special that premiered on September 11, 2009 on the History channel, marking the eighth anniversary of the event. The program features the overshadowed story of the Marriott World Trade Center on the day of the 2001 attacks, resulting in its destruction caused by the collapse of the adjacent South Tower followed by the North Tower, as told by people who had escaped from the hotel. Bullied is a 2010 written by Bill Brummel and directed by Geoffrey Sharp and Bill Brummel. Lionel is a 2008 documentary, biographical, sport film written and directed by Eddie Martin. It's Nice Up North is a 2006 comedy documentary made by comedian Graham Fellows as his alter ego John Shuttleworth. It was filmed by photographer Martin Parr and edited by Fellows on his laptop on a very low budget. In the film, Shuttleworth travels to the Shetland Islands to test his theory that the further north in Great Britain you go the nicer people are, Shetland being the most far north part of the UK. He meets various Shetland people in unrehearsed situations. Many assume him to be a real person and not a comic creation, though some scenes are acted, particularly parts with famous local tour guide Elma Johnson. It had a limited theatrical release in some art-house and community cinemas around the UK in 2006, including some screenings in Shetland, with Fellows answering questions after the showing. The film was released on DVD in the same year. The film has also been shown on Sky Arts. "A revealing portrait of Bill Withers, telling his story from being a child raised by his grandmother in Slab Fork, West Virginia, up to the celebrations surrounding his 70th birthday. After 17-year-old Shaun Smith sang 'Aint No Sunshine' on an episode of Britain's Got Talent earlier this year, the song went back into the UK Top 40. It's a song that has been covered by many artists, as diverse as Michael Jackson and Van Morrison, and there have been numerous country and reggae takes on it, yet it says something about the enduring appeal of the original, written and performed by Bill Withers and first released in 1971, that it was this definitive version that charted. 'Aint No Sunshine' was the kick-start to a career that would see Withers produce a string of hits, such as 'Lean On Me' and 'Just the Two of Us', that are justly revered as pop classics, and he toured and appeared on TV frequently throughout the 1970s. Yet he was in his 30s by the time fame found him, and he never appeared that comfortable with it. By 1985, he had turned his back on a music business that had left him jaded, to find life as a husband and father more fulfilling. Filmmakers Damani Baker and Alex Vlack spent years trying to gain access to a reclusive, yet profound and articulate man whose songs have become staples of popular culture. Their persistence has paid off; Still Bill is a revealing portrait of Withers, telling his story from being a child raised by his grandmother in Slab Fork, West Virginia, up to the celebrations surrounding his 70th birthday, which show him reconnecting with his legacy, music and the creative process." Quoting Michael Hayden Didn't Come is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by Henrikas Sablevicius. Memorial Land is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Bill Brown. I Am Trying to Break Your Heart: A Film About Wilco is a black-and-white documentary film by Sam Jones which follows the American alt-country rock band Wilco through the creation and distribution of their fourth studio album Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. The film provides a unique insight into the politics of bands and their record labels, as well as an inside look at Wilco during the creation of what many critics describe as a landmark album. The title of the film shares its name with the first track of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. Twenty-One Miles is a 1942 documentary film produced by the Minister of Information of the United Kingdom. Lumiere Brothers' First Films is a 1996 historical fiction documentary film. Platypus: World's Strangest Animal is a 2003 documentary film written by Jonathan Holmes. Columbia: The Tragic Loss is a 2004 documentary about the first Israeli astronaut, Ilan Ramon, who died when the Columbia spacecraft disintegrated upon reentry into the Earth's atmosphere. Two months after the disaster, Ramon's diary was found at one of the crash sites and was reconstructed by the Israel Museum along with Israeli police. Interviews with NASA officials and with Ilan's family offer both expert analysis of the flight and a personal look at the tragedy. The documentary received a special mention at the Houston International WorldFest Film Festival in 2004. Horst Buchholz...Mein Papa is a 2005 film directed by Christopher Buchholz and Sandra Hacker. Schicksal und Vermächtnis is a 1954 documentary war film written and directed by Alfred Ehrhardt. Loyalty & Betrayal: The Story of the American Mob is a TV documentary film. Children of Memory is a documentary film produced and directed by Kathryn Smith Pyle and Maria Teresa Rodriguez. From 1980–1992 about 75,000 women, men and children died and disappeared during El Salvador’s civil war. It was known fact that most adults would be assassinated, but no one knows exactly what happened to the children. The film follows Pro-Busqueda investigator, Margarita Zamora, as she searches the countryside asking eyewitnesses to recall what they remember from war times. As Pyle and Rodriguez tell the personal account of Zamora’s search for her 4 siblings, so do they also tell the story of American Jaime Harvey, who was adopted from El Salvador in 1980, and Salvador Garcia, a farmer who continues the search for his daughter Cristabel. Their efforts to find their family members are challenged by the lack of access to Salvadoran military war archives. Going to college is a rite of passage for many American high school students, but the process can be overwhelming: college fairs, tours, SATs, applications. And then there’s the personal essay. How does a 17-year old define herself to total strangers when she’s only beginning to discover who she really is? And how can she be expected to do it in a personal essay of 500 words or less? Point Made Films takes you on the journey to college with four very different young people as they spend their last year with their families trying to figure out who they are and who they want to be. Ride Molly’s emotional roller coaster as she tries to balance her parents’ expectations with her own dreams. Cheer Michael on as he steps out from behind his older sister’s Ivy League shadow to discover his own priorities. Encourage Leo to fulfill his mother’s American dream while trying to maintain ties to his Dominican heritage. And root for Lindsay as she searches for her next home while the one she’s known for 17 years gets turned upside down by illness and loss. "In 500 Words or Less" serves as a portrait of four of the nearly 1.5 million families who go through this process each year. While race, geography and socio-economic status affected how they got here, their stories converge as they all juggle acceptance, rejection, decision-making and letting go. Retour à Gorée is a 2007 musical documentary road movie directed by Pierre-Yves Borgeaud, featuring singer Youssou N'Dour's journey along the trail left by slaves and by the jazz music they invented. Youssou N'Dour's challenge is to bring back to Africa a jazz repertoire and to sing those tunes in Goree, the island that today symbolizes the slave trade and stands to commemorate its victims. Guided in his mission by the pianist Moncef Genoud, Youssou N'Dour travels across the United States of America and Europe. Accompanied by some of the world's most exceptional musicians, they meet peoples and well known figures, and create, through concerts, encounters and debates. Their music transcends cultural division. Comrades in Dreams is a 2006 documentary film directed by Uli Gaulke and co-written with Jeannette Eggert. I Am Eleven is a 2012 Australian documentary film by Geneviève Bailey, who travelled through 15 countries over a period of six years to explore the lives of 11-year-olds in different environments. The countries that the children are from include Thailand, England, Bulgaria, Japan and Czech Republic. The film has been compared with the 7 Up documentary series and won awards in the USA, Australia, Brazil, France and Spain. Sabbath in Paradise is a documentary film by Claudia Heuermann examining contemporary Jewish musical culture in New York's avant garde Jazz scene in the 1990s. It features concert footage and interviews with Anthony Coleman, Marc Ribot, Andy Statman, David Krakauer, Frank London, John Zorn and others. Blackstone's Equation is a documentary short crime film directed by Nicholas Bernhard. Agnes & Nancy is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Anne Milne. Baking Alaska is a 2013 Documentary short film written and directed by Kari Barber. The Gordon Sisters Boxing is an American short black-and-white silent film directed by Thomas A. Edison. It is one of the earliest female boxing movies. Edison’s film catalogue describes the film as follows: “Champion lady boxers of the world. Here we depict two female pugilists that are really clever. They are engaged in a hot and heavy one-round sparring exhibition, which is photographed against a very pleasing background, consisting of a park, with marble entrance and walk, and beautiful trees and shrubbery. The exhibition is very lively from start to finish; the blows fall thick and fast, and some very clever pugilistic generalship is exhibited.” In an analysis of boxing in the context of modernism, Irene Gammel argues that the scene’s “symmetry and beauty [gesture] towards the artfulness of boxing as a cultivated sport.” In addition, she argues that the women’s choreographed movement shows “their boldly modern female physicality and sportsmanship.” Palestine Is Still the Issue is a 2002 Carlton Television documentary, written and presented by John Pilger, and directed by Tony Stark, inspired by the book Drinking The Sea at Gaza by Amira Haas. Pilger visits the Middle East and tries to discover why peace is elusive. Kwaheri, also known as Kwaheri: Vanishing Africa or Kwaheri: The Forbidden, is a 1964 mondo film directed by David Chudnow and Thor Brooks. The film was a pseudo-documentary about vanishing native tribes in Africa. Kwaheri means Goodbye in Swahili. As the film focused more on the controversial aspects of the tribal societies, it gained the attention of exploitation filmmakers, including Kroger Babb, whose Hallmark Productions distribution company acquired the American rights. Shinema toraberu eigakan de miru seikaiisan no tabi is a 2014 documentary film. We've always wanted to control the weather. Now we may have to. Owning the Weather goes deep into the story of weather modification, including geoengineering schemes to fight global warming. A fascinating one-hour study of cat behavior and how people can recognize the different behavior patterns of pet cats. Peace Mission is a 2008 film written and directed by Dorothee Wenner. Fawlty Towers: Re-Opened is a 2009 documentary film directed by Lindsay Jex. Pipiteu is a 2013 short documentary film. Beyond Beauty: Taiwan from Above is a 2013 documentary film which documents Taiwan completely in aerial photography. It is directed by aerial photographer Chi Po-lin and produced by Hou Hsiao-hsien, with narration by Wu Nien-jen. The music is composed by Ricky Ho, with three songs written and performed by Nolay Piho. The film opened on November 1, 2013 at 44 theaters in Taiwan, with Chinese and English subtitles. The film broke the Taiwan box office records for the largest opening weekend and the highest total gross of a locally produced documentary. The film was nominated for Best Documentary and Best Original Film Score at the 50th Golden Horse Awards, winning the best documentary category. Still is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Michael Barth, Jose Tadeu Bijos, Pasqual Gutierrez and Ruby Stocking. Mondo Mod is a 1967 musical documentary film written by Sherman Greene and directed by Peter Perry Jr Mustafa's Sweet Dreams is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Angelos Abazoglou. Sister Rose's Passion is a 2004 American short documentary film directed by Oren Jacoby. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short and won the Best Documentary Short Award at the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival. Histoire de ma vie racontée par mes photographies is a 2002 documentary film from Belgium, directed by Boris Lehman. The Vetters: All We Need is a 2013 documentary, biographical, family, sports film directed by Anne Bruder and Nancy Pokorny. On Any Sunday is a 1971 American documentary feature about motorcycle sport, directed by Bruce Brown. It was nominated for a 1972 Academy Award for Documentary Feature. This documentary follows the lives of motorcycle racers and racing enthusiasts. Brown tried to show the unique talents needed for the different forms of racing. For instance, the motocross riders were typically free-spirited types, while desert racers were often loners. In Grand National racing, Brown showed the differing personalities, such as the business-like approach to racing displayed by Mert Lawwill versus the carefree approach that wild young rookie David Aldana became known for. Steve McQueen is featured in the film, along with Mert Lawwill, Malcolm Smith and many other motorcycle racers from the late 1960s and early 1970s. From a historical perspective, the motorcycles featured in the film include Triumph, Husqvarna, Harley Davidson, Honda, Yamaha, Suzuki, and other manufacturers that are still in business or gone by the wayside such as BSA, Bultaco, and Hodaka. The Distortion of Sound is a 2014 documentary film about the decline of sound quality for recorded music, narrated by various artists who explain the decline in the sound quality from the last two decades. It was directed by Jacob Rosenberg, written by Michael Abell and Kevin Gentile, and produced by Hana Lasber, Dennis McKinley, and Suzanne Hargrove. The film features interviews with vocalists, guitarists, producers, writers, rappers, film composers, mixing engineers, mixers, music journalists, acoustic researchers, loudspeaker engineers and chief engineers—including such artists as Mike Shinoda of Linkin Park, Slash, Quincy Jones, Snoop Dogg and Steve Aoki. The movie was presented by Harman International Industries and is available on YouTube on the channel with the same name of the film. The trailer of the film was also available on YouTube. The film, as well as the trailer, was available on the official website of the film. The film is also available for purchase on Google Play. The film was premiered in Los Angeles on July 10, 2014. Google and the World Brain is a 2013 documentary and drama film directed by Ben Lewis. Without Lying Down: Frances Marion and the Power of Women in Hollywood is a 2000 biographical documentary TV Movie written by and directed by Bridget Terry. Mr. Pullum's Class is a 2014 short documentary music film directed by Leslie Dektor. Waco: A New Revelation is a 1999 documentary directed by Jason Van Vleet about the conflict in 1993 between the Branch Davidians, a religious apocalyptic group, and the FBI. It is based on further research by the roll behind Waco: The Rules of Engagement. In this documentary, interviews with new people are conducted and more evidence is presented, one of which is a hole in the roof of "the bunker", allegedly made with an explosive charge. Another analysis is made of images allegedly showing an FBI helicopter killing a Branch Davidian in the Mt. Carmel courtyard. A retired army officer and a CIA agent both reveal how they have spoken to several Combat Applications Group soldiers, who all confirm that they were present on April 19 and that they were "involved in a firefight with the Branch Davidians". JFK: The Lost Bullet is a documentary by National Geographic first shown on Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's News Network in early 2013. It tries to answer who killed John F Kennedy. It re-evaluates the famous Zapruder film that shows the murder of JFK and states that Zapruder stopped filming and missed the first shot fired which changes the timeline of the bullets fired making it possible that Lee Harvey Oswald could have fired three shots. It argues that the magic bullet that hit JFK and Governor John Connally was in fact possible. The documentary also features other home movies taken on the day. The Education of Mohammad Hussein is a 2013 film directed by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady. Long Live The King is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Cory Luoma. Djarama Boe is a 1991 film directed by Sophie Kotanyi. Dead Whisper is a 2006 documentary film directed by Ron James. Passion, Prejudice and South Pacific: Creating an American Masterpiece is a documentary directed by Stephen Smith. A Swan Song of Rare and Vanishing Beauty is a 1982 documentary film written and directed by Christopher Nupen. Christine in the Cutting Room is a 2012 documentary film directed by Susan Stryker. Pieces of Lives, Pieces of Dreams is a documentary film directed by Hamid Benamra. Radio Takeover is a 2004 short documentary film directed by Serena Down and Mike Seely. The Dream Fulfilled - Memories of the Engineering Challenges is a film directed by Satish Pande. The Last Mermaids is a 2008 documentary, short, adventure, drama, family, history and music film directed by Liz Chae. The Day After Peace is a 2008 film directed by Jeremy Gilley. Mind the Addiction: The Adrenaline Series is a 2002 sports film directed by Dirk Collins, Corey Gavitt, Steve Jones, Todd Jones and Tom Jones. Dreamscapes is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Wolfram Hissen. Where They Raced is a documentary film directed by Harry Pallenberg. This extraordinary documentary chronicles Hollywood's Top Secret Film Studio that for over twenty years photographed hundreds of nuclear weapons tests and other classified projects. Their work is among the most spectacular even captured on film. From the Nevada desert to remote Pacific atolls to outer space, these top secret Filmmakers developed advanced techniques and methods to create their fantastic movies. They made 6,500 films and many were locked away as soon as they were viewed by a handful of government officials. With the end of the Cold War, the story of the secret film studio can be told. It is a story of dedication to country and outstanding filmmaking that resulted in some of the most stunning images ever recorded. Many of their most amazing images are featured in this fascinating production. The Atomic Filmmakers created a visual legacy that will be studied for years to come and will serve as an important reference for one of the most dangerous times in world history. Agueda Martinez: Our People, Our Country is a 1977 American short documentary film produced by Moctesuma Esparza. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Mir wam: Sholom is a 1989 film directed by Vladimir Dvinsky and Irmgard von zur Mühlen. The Humiliated is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Jesper Jargil. 100 years of flight is a 2004 documentary film. In This World is a 2002 British docudrama directed by Michael Winterbottom. The film follows two young Afghan refugees, Jamal Udin Torabi and Enayatullah, as they leave a refugee camp in Pakistan for a better life in London. Since their journey is illegal, it is fraught with danger, and they must use back-channels, bribes, and smugglers to achieve their goal. The film won the Golden Bear prize at the 2003 Berlin International Film Festival. Fabled Enemies is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Jason Bermas. Remembering Nokutela is a documentary film directed by Chérif Keita. Valkirias is a 2007 short documentary film written by Javier Hugo Ercilla Stagnaro and Eduardo Soler and directed by Eduardo Soler. In this comedy, inspired by Oh, God! and designed as a pilot for a TV series, an ambitious young angel persuades the Almighty to allow seven days to find six good people in Las Vegas. If he cannot, God will destroy the whole town. Taxi to the Dark Side is a 2007 documentary film directed by American filmmaker Alex Gibney, and produced by Eva Orner and Susannah Shipman, which won the 2007 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It focuses on the killing of an Afghan taxi driver named Dilawar, beaten to death by American soldiers while being held in extrajudicial detention at the Parwan Detention Facility. Taxi to the Dark Side examines the USA's policy on torture and interrogation in general, specifically the CIA's use of torture and their research into sensory deprivation. The film includes opposition to the use of torture from its political and military opponents, as well as the defense of such methods; attempts by Congress to uphold the standards of the Geneva Convention forbidding torture; and popularization of the use of torture techniques in shows such as 24. It is part of the Why Democracy? series, which consists of ten documentary films from around the world questioning and examining contemporary democracy. As part of the series, Taxi to the Dark Side was broadcast in over 30 different countries around the world from October 8–18, 2007. The BBC cut the film to 79 minutes for broadcast. The Executioner's Tear + Truth Has Fallen is a 2013 documentary film directed by Layth Abdulamir and Sheila M. Sofian. As Seen on TV: The K-Tel Story is a TV program. Hands on a Hard Body: The Documentary is a 1997 film directed by S. R. Bindler documenting an endurance competition that took place in Longview, Texas. The yearly competition pits twenty-four contestants against each other to see who can keep their hand on a pickup truck for the longest amount of time. Whoever endures the longest without leaning on the truck or squatting wins the truck. Five minute breaks are issued every hour and fifteen minute breaks every six hours. The documentary follows the 1995 competition which lasted for seventy-seven continuous hours. The film garnered the audience award for best documentary at the 1997 Los Angeles Film Festival. Large portions of the film's audio were included on the "Something for Nothing" episode of the public radio show This American Life in 1997. At the time of his death film director Robert Altman was developing a feature film based on the documentary. In 2013, the film was digitally re-mastered and released for sale on-line. Across India is a 1965 documentary film directed by Gopal Datt. Shoji & Takao is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Ide Yoko. Naked Opera is a 2013 documentary film written by Patricia Fürst, Philipp Reimer, Angela Christlieb, Bady Minck, and directed by Angela Christlieb. Thumb Candy was a British Channel 4 television documentary about the history of computer games which was made by Talkback in 2000. It was hosted by Iain Lee who interviewed the people who were involved in creating the first big video games. It was produced and directed by James Bobin The programme features interviews with: Steve Russell - creator of Spacewar! Nolan Bushnell of Atari Al Alcorn - creator of Pong Toshihiro Nishikado - creator of Space Invaders Ed Logg - creator of Asteroids Tōru Iwatani - creator of Pac-Man Clive Sinclair discussing the ZX Spectrum Matthew Smith on Manic Miner and Jet Set Willy Shigeru Miyamoto on Donkey Kong Alexey Pazhitnov on Tetris Toby Gard on the Tomb Raider video game series Steven Poole, author of Trigger Happy Stoichkov is a 2012 documentary, biography and sports film written and directed by Borislav Kolev. Kepler und sein Werk is a 1958 documentary film directed by Rudolf Stölting. Sacred Poet is a feature length documentary film on Italian poet, filmmaker and intellectual, Pier Paolo Pasolini. The film explores, through a series of dialogues and reminiscences, the work of this controversial Italian cultural figure and focuses on his relationship to power and to the state in the Italy of the 1970s, just before his murder. The film is part of the permanent collection at the Pier Paolo Pasolini Archives in Bologna, Italy. Produced and directed by Tala Hadid and Amy Killoren. Community of Praise is a 1982 film directed by Richard Leacock and Marisa Silver. Dogtown and Z-Boys is an award winning 2001 documentary film directed by Stacy Peralta. The documentary explores the pioneering of the Zephyr skateboard team in the 1970s and the evolving sport of skateboarding. Using a mix of film that the Zephyr skateboard team shot in the 1970s by Craig Stecyk along with contemporary interviews, the documentary tells the story of a group of teenage surfer/skateboarders and their influence on the history of skateboarding culture. Ici, là-bas, et Lisboa is a 2012 experimental short documentary film written and directed by João Vieira Torres. At sixteen years old Peter Czerwinski was hospitalized and nearly died as a result of anorexia. Seven years later, not only has he won that battle, he is one the greatest competitive eaters in the world. Ezequiel Martínez Estrada, profeta desdichado is a 2010 documentary film written by Marcelo Daniel May and Maite Laborde and directed by Marcelo Daniel May. The Ballad of Lucky Fonz III is a 2011 music/documentary film directed by David Kleijwegt In God We Trust, Inc.: The Lost Tapes is VHS/DVD of the Dead Kennedys' first recording session of their EP, In God We Trust Inc.. It was released in July 2003. The session was filmed in June 1981 by Eric Goodfield for a part of a punk documentary he was making. When the DKs went to master the tape it started to peel and deteriorate, so they had to record it again. The tape was in Goodfield's collection until the DKs asked him if he would release the video as part of their 25th anniversary. It includes live versions of all the songs except "Hyperactive Child", for which no live footage could be found. Mr. Smith's Peach Seeds is a 2012 short biography documentary film directed by Stewart Copeland. Prisoner of Her Past is a 2010 documentary film, produced by Kartemquin Films, that follows the journey of Chicago Tribune music critic Howard Reich as he travels to Europe to discover why his elderly mother, Sonia Reich, believes people are trying to kill her. Inspired by conversations with young trauma survivors in post-Katrina New Orleans, Howard Reich begins to discover a secret that his mother, Sonia, had kept hidden for over 60 years. For most of her adult life, Sonia Reich was a well adjusted and self-sufficient woman, but now in her eighties, Sonia is suffering from late-onset Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. In order to understand his mother's past, Howard Reich travels to Eastern Europe to discover that Sonia spent her adolescence fleeing the Nazis during World War II. Meeting some of Sonia's distant relatives and childhood friends, Howard begins to unravel what his mother has always refused to speak about. Having lost most of her family to the Holocaust, Sonia spent five years as a "jungle child", starving and constantly on the run. Now as Sonia tries to forget her past, Howard attempts to ease her pain and confront the horrors that haunted her. Cuban Memories: Fidel Reveals Che is a 1987 documentary film directed by Gianni Minà. Summer 82 When Zappa Came To Sicily is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Salvo Cuccia. Caucus is a 2013 documentary film directed by AJ Schnack. Bruce Lee: A Warrior's Journey is a documentary on the martial artist Bruce Lee and Jeet Kune Do. It was released on VHS and DVD by Warner Home Video. The documentary includes rare footage of Bruce Lee's incomplete film "Game of Death", which has been released with Bruce Lee's original English and Cantonese dubbing as part of the documentary. Most of the footage which was shot is from what was to be the centre piece of the film. BLACK BEULAHS is a documentary that explores the lives of three friends living within the largely unexplored Soweto gay sub-culture. There's Somizi - choreographer and entertainer; DK - a businessman who owns a funeral parlour and Chix - a body builder. They've defied societal expectations to live their lives as they see fit. It is a revealing personal portrait by director Fanney Tsimong of three people intersecting with changing sexual values and a community struggling with the reality of homosexuality in its midst. This is an engrossing and remarkable addition to the depiction of gay experiences in South Africa. The Altered Lives of LaVonne Salleé is a short documentary, comedy film directed by Jazmin Jamias. Stuborn As A Mule is a film directed by Miller Bargeron Jr. Marjoe is a 1972 American documentary film produced and directed by Howard Smith and Sarah Kernochan about the life of evangelist Marjoe Gortner. It won the 1972 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Dynasty: The Nehru-Gandhi Story is a 1998 documentary film. The Devil's Accordion is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Stefan Schwietert. Pitões, aldeia do Barroso – Pitoes, a Village of Barroso – is a Portuguese documentary feature film directed and produced by Ricardo Costa. Two Seconds After Laughter is a 2012 short film written and directed by David Rousseve. Just Gender is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by George Zuber. We Want (U) to Know is a documentary film directed by Ella Pugliese and Nou Va. Robots in Residence is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Brent Hoff and Alexander Reben. Nature’s Sentinels - Bishnoi is a 1997 short documentary film directed by P.C. Sharma and Shankar Patnaik. Wild Boar is a 2013 Dutch documentary directed by Willem Baptist. The film is a poetic and strongly stylized tale about the ambivalent relationship between humans and wild boars. The film was realised with support of the Dutch Cultural Media Fund and is part of project Doc25; a joint initiative by Dutch broadcasters AVRO, BOS, EO, IKON, NTR, VPRO. Wild Boar had it’s Dutch premiere at the Nederlands Film Festival in Utrecht and was shortlist nominated for a Gouden Kalf for Best Short Documentary at The Netherlands Film Festival. The film had its international premières in competition respectively at the renowned festivals Visions du Réel, AFI Docs and Hot Docs International Documentary Film Festival in Toronto. Baptist approach to the subject and peculiar way of telling the story found international recognition. AFI Docs described the film as "an otherworldly and poetic look at the classic conflict of Man vs. Nature." and Hot Docs wrote:"A village in the Netherlands is invaded by wild boar and its inhabitants must choose: eat or be eaten. A meticulously crafted folklore atmosphere beautifully captures the challenges we face when modern society conflicts with nature." Schindler: The Real Story is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Jon Blair. Swedes in America is a 1943 American short documentary film directed by Irving Lerner and produced by the Overseas Motion Picture Bureau of the United States Office of War Information. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. 95 Miles to Go is a 2004 comedy film which documents Ray Romano's stand-up comedy tour of the South. It was directed by Tom Caltabiano. The film premiered at the Deep Ellum Film Festival in October 2004 and released theatrically in the United Statesin April 2006 by THINKFilm. It premiered on HBO on July 10, 2007. The DVD of the film was released on May 22, 2012 by Video Services Corporation, a film distribution company located in Toronto, Canada. Predictions of Fire or Prerokbe ognja is a documentary film by American filmmaker Michael Benson about the Neue Slowenische Kunst. Investigation of a Flame is a 2001 documentary by Lynne Sachs about the Catonsville Nine, nine Catholic activists who became known for their May 17, 1968 nonviolent act of civil disobedience in burning draft files to protest the Vietnam War. The 45 minute film includes interviews with six members of the pioneers from the 1968 expression, including Daniel and Philip Berrigan, John Hogan, Thomas Lewis, and married couple Marjorie and Tom Melville. The film also includes commentary by historian Howard Zinn. Gesualdo: Death for Five Voices is a 1995 film by German director Werner Herzog filmed for ZDF television. The film explores the music of Carlo Gesualdo and the legends surrounding Gesualdo's personality, his cursed castle, and his murder of his wife and her lover. Between narration and interviews, several of Gesualdo's madrigals are performed. Herzog calls Death for Five Voices "one of the films closest to my heart." Road to Las Vegas is a 2010 documentary biographical film directed by Jason Massot. Unfinished Italy is a 2011 documentary adventure film directed by Benoit Felici. The Cliff House & Sutro Heights is 2013 documentary film written and directed by Tom Wyrsch. "Filmmaker Jan Raiber sets off on a search for his own identity. He wants to meet his biological father – an encounter that is long overdue. His quest is one upon which, sooner or later, many a child from a patchwork family may find themselves embarking. But why is this topic so often hushed up? Jan announces his intentions to his siblings, his parents and his grandparents. He also tells them of his plan to record his search on film. The camera is his rock; it gives him the courage not to eschew painful truths – as so often before. But his brother is shocked to discover that he is only his half-brother; his grandparents are not sure whether his father will be pleased to see him, and his mother refuses to be filmed. Jan stands by the fence outside the house of the man who made him, but daren’t go in. Old nightmares and long-buried memories are rekindled. A letter from his mother arrives. She tries to explain things but ends up making things more confusing than ever. In order to understand the past, Jan first has to understand what life was like for his mother when she was young: her relationship to her parents, the all-pervasive atmosphere of control and influence, the problems of a young couple in the GDR, and the appearance of a second husband – Jan’s de facto father. And so, what now? He still hasn’t met his biological father. What should be his next step? Who can he damage? Isn’t it better to leave things as they are? Jan must fight his way through a quagmire of well-meaning advice and embargos in order to get to the bottom of it all. But then his mother decides to support him; for the sake of her son she makes a bid to overcome her fear and face up to her long-repressed past." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Berlin Film Festival site. India ’67 is a 1968 documentary film directed by S. Sukhdev. Iranian is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Mehran Tamadon. "Undoubtedly one of the most influential media figures of the twentieth century, Hugh Hefner is most famous as the pipe-smoking mogul who promoted a sexual lifestyle while creating a publishing empire. In Academy Award-winner Brigitte Berman's expansive documentary, we gain valuable insight into Hefner's amazing work and storied personal life. Equally as impressive as Playboy magazine's ultimate success is the fact that it came from very humble beginnings. Hefner borrowed money and on a shoestring began publishing his magazine – one committed to sexy photos of women and strong, trail-blazing writing. Hefner had the smarts to purchase a nude spread of Marilyn Monroe, whose images would grace the magazine's first edition. There were many more landmarks to come for the publication, which embodied the then-nascent sexual liberation movement carried along by the baby boomer generation. The tales of women, cocktails and the mansion are famous, and will be familiar to most, but what's revealing here is Hefner's place in the African American civil rights movement. When some Playboy clubs in the southern United States would not let black patrons in, Hefner used his own money to buy the franchises back from their owners, ensuring that institutions bearing the Playboy name would be racially integrated. The main criticism of the Playboy brand and accompanying philosophy is that it has been degrading and damaging to women, but Berman also shows Hefner's support for feminist causes – for example, he sent legal teams to fight for abortion rights cases, which paved the road for groundbreaking Supreme Court decisions such as Roe v. Wade. What emerges is the profile of a man far more complex than the smut peddler many of his detractors purport him to be. Berman has also dug up some priceless clips from Hefner's own syndicated television series, in which he would interview celebrities from his home while wearing a smoking jacket. Her film celebrates the hedonist, but also clearly illustrates that there's far more to this man than just a good time." Quoting Matthew Hays on the 2009 TiFF site. We are living through the most unsettling upheaval of checks and balances the planet has ever seen. In the maelstrom of media hysteria, communication strategies and an obsession with the short term, Hubert Védrine, former French Minister of Foreign Affairs, offers clear thinking. He analyses the profound mutation in international relations as the beginning of a long geographical redistribution. He looks at all the major challenges. This reflection is reinforced with political illumination through dialogue with international personalities. Das magische Band is a 1960 short documentary film directed by Ferdinand Khittl. Mama Illegal is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Ed Moschitz. Faces of Death IV is the final "real" sequel to Faces of Death, in that it is the last sequel to include any original footage. It was directed by John Alan Schwartz, Susumu Saegusa and Andrew Theopolis. John Alan Schwartz's brother James B. Schwartz is credited as writer. Dutch Darlings is a 2013 historical documentary film written and directed by Niek Koppen. The Sacrifice - A Film About a Forest is a 1998 documentary film directed by Markku Lehmuskallio. Live at the Beacon Theatre is a DVD concert video of James Taylor and his band performing at the Beacon Theatre in New York City on May 30, 1998. The Short Films of David Lynch is a DVD collection of the early student and commissioned film work of American filmmaker David Lynch. As such, the collection does not include Lynch's later short works, which are listed in the filmography. The films are listed in chronological order, with brief descriptions of each film. The DVD contains introductions by Lynch to each film, which can be viewed individually or in sequence to each other. Moving Stills - Kadir Van Lohuizen is a 2013 documentary film written by Tinus Kramer and Tamara Vuurmans and directed by Tinus Kramer. Gangster of Love is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Nebojsa Slijepcevic. War File: The Desert War is a 2008 historical documentary film. The Fortune Teller is a 2013 short film directed by Leo Herrera. Scout's Honor is a 2001 documentary film written by Meg Moritz and directed by Tom Shepard. Anna German In San Remo is a biographical documentary film directed by Zofia Dybowska-Aleksandrowicz. The Day of the Roses is a two-part Australian television mini-series, a docu-drama directed by Peter Fisk, based on the events of the 1977 Granville railway disaster. The film was made in 1998 and runs over 3.5 hours. To What Do I Owe The Honor Of This Illustrious Visit? is a 2013 short documentary biographical and drama film written and directed by Rafael Urban and Terence Keller. Circles of Confusion is a 2007 short film directed by Phoebe Tooke. Barber's Dozen is a 2009 film directed by Tara Manandhar and David O'Neill. Marie Curie, au-delà du mythe is a 2011 documentary biographical film written by Michel Vuillermet, Nathalie Huchette and Géraldine Bergé and directed by Michel Vuillermet. Jews and Baseball: An American Love Story is a 2010 American documentary film narrated by Academy Award winner Dustin Hoffman, written by Pulitzer Prize winner Ira Berkow, and directed by award-winning documentary filmmaker Peter Miller. It is about the connection and history between American Jews and baseball. Kenneth Turan of The Los Angeles Times, wrote that the "warm and enthusiastic" film "not only lives up to its title ... but also delivers a bit extra as well." The documentary received the Best Editing Award at the Breckenridge Film Festival for Editor Amy Linton, the Audience Choice Award at the 2011 Greater Phoenix Jewish Film Festival, and the Audience Choice Award for Best Feature Documentary at the 2011 Seattle Jewish Film Festival. A Year Goes By is a 1988 documentary film directed by Ebbe Gilbe, Kjell Tunegård and Gunnar Källström. Shocking Asia is a 1974 documentary film written and directed by Rolf Olsen with Ingeborg Stein Steinbach. The film was banned in Finland due to its graphic content. A sequel titled Shocking Asia II: The Last Taboos was released in 1985. The story of a small-town disc-jockey, a struggling inventor, and an animatronic rock band, that quickly becomes an eccentric portrait of childhood memories, broken dreams, and the resilience of the human spirit. Las Luchadoras de México is a 2013 film written by Marie Losier and directed by Marie Losier and Rania Attieh. Endless Harmony: The Beach Boys Story is a 1998 biographical documentary directed by Alan Boyd. The film is a biography of the American rock band The Beach Boys. The documentary features archived footage and interviews by band members along with interviews from musicians such as Jackson Browne, Glen Campbell, Elvis Costello, and Sean Lennon. The soundtrack to the documentary was released along with the documentary's release. HavanyorK is a 2010 documentary film directed and written by Luciano Larobina. "Anne Truitt Working is a portrait of the Minimalist painter and sculptor, who is receiving long-overdue recognition for her critical contribution to the American avant-garde painting scene of the 1960’s. Elegantly observed by Jem Cohen, Truitt is utterly charming as she shares her theories on colour and her philosophy about making art." Quoting the description from the 2010 Toronto International Film Festival site. The Reluctant Revolutionary is a 2011 documentary, drama, news film directed by Sean McAllister. Why Me? Tom Moran's Long Walk is a 2012 Telly Award winning film. Keep Me Upright is a 2012 film written and directed by Zoé Chantre. Mondays With William is a documentary film directed by Steve Beebe. "Russia is the second-most-dangerous country in the world for journalists, after Iraq. The Russian Union of Journalists has recorded the names of its members killed in Russia since 1991. Anna Politkovskaya was number 211. Her assassination in 2006 was stunning in its simplicity: she was shot point blank in her apartment building in Moscow. Her murderer has never been identified, and it is widely assumed that her continuing coverage of the Russian government’s brutality toward its own people, particularly in Chechnya, resulted in her death. 211: Anna weaves a story of modern Russia and a woman who passionately believed that the untold stories of everyday people were an unheralded history. As a journalist, she followed events heartbreaking in their cruelty, from the war in Chechnya to the siege of the Russian Parliament building to the death of hundreds of children during the Beslan school-hostage crisis. Her stark coverage brought her international recognition, as well as anonymous threats, poisoning attempts, and government reprisal. In the end, it brought death to her doorstep. Combining interviews with her husband of many years, Russian TV anchor Alexander Politkovski, her children, and her newspaper colleagues with the writings of Politovskaya herself, Italian directors Paolo Serbandini and Giovanna Massimetti create an impressionistic portrait of a woman, a nation, and a people under siege." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Water Square And Guernica Project is a 2012 documentary film directed by Francisco Vorcaro. "Nev, a 24-year-old New York–based photographer, has no idea what he’s in for when Abby, an eight-year-old girl from rural Michigan, contacts him on MySpace, seeking permission to paint one of his photographs. When he receives her remarkable painting, Nev begins a friendship and correspondence with Abby’s family. But things really get interesting when he develops a cyber-romance with Abby’s attractive older sister, Megan, a musician and model. Prompted by some startling revelations about Megan, Nev and his buddies embark on a road trip in search of the truth. Catfish centers on a riveting mystery that is completely a product of our times, where social networking, mobile devices, and electronic communication so often replace face-to-face personal contact. Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman’s grounded documentary is a remarkable and powerful story of grace within a labyrinth of online intrigue." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. A Different Path is a 2010 Documentary film directed by Monteith McCollum. Rave Un2 the Year 2000 is a 2000 direct to video film of Prince in concert. Although taped earlier in December, 1999, the concert was originally broadcast via Pay-per-view on New Year's Eve, 1999. The concert features several notable cover versions, and some Prince's biggest hits. Special guests included former band associates, Rosie Gaines and Morris Day, funk legends Maceo Parker and members of The Family Stone such as bass player Larry Graham, as well as funk-rock performer, Lenny Kravitz. The concert is notable for "retiring" Prince's classic hit, "1999". freedom2speak v2.0 is a 2003 film directed by Markus CM Schmidt, Christoph Gampl, Brigitte Kramer, Marc Meyer and Uwe Nagel. When Comedy Was King is a 1960 comedy and documentary film written and directed by Robert Youngson. Lunch Together (Zajednicki rucak)is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Vinko Brešan. Isfahan's Son is a 2013 documentary film, written and directed by Farshad Ektesabi. Trees Cry for Rain: A Sephardic Journey is a short 1989 documentary that profiles Rachel Amado Bortnick, exploring her Turkish-Jewish heritage. Old Partner is a 2008 South Korean documentary film directed by Lee Chung-ryoul. Set in the small rural town of Hanul-ri in Sangun-myeon, Bonghwa County, North Gyeongsang Province, the film focuses on the relationship between a 40-year-old cow and an old farmer in his 80s. The film was a surprise success. It attracted more than 2 million viewers, setting the record for the highest grossing independent film in Korean film history. It won the PIFF Mecenat Award at the Pusan International Film Festival and the Audience Award at the Korean Independent Film Awards. Lee Chung-ryoul became the first independent film director to receive the Best New Director award at the Baeksang Arts Awards. Ivan Mosjoukine ou L'enfant du carnaval is a 1999 film written by Galina Dolmatovskaia and Neya Zorkaya and directed by Galina Dolmatovskaia. Mykosch is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Danniel Danniel. Chevelle is a 2011 short film directed by Kevin Jerome Everson. Ten Skies is a 2004 film directed by James Benning. Ballet Girls is a 2006 documentary film written by Elise Swerhone, Donna Gall and directed by Elise Swerhone. This film celebrates the longevity and startling impact that Green Day has had across more than a 1/4 of a century. Featuring a disc of video interviews with the band from throughout their career, this deluxe package will delight the group's millions of fans old and new. The Commoners is a 2009 documentary film directed by Penny Lane and Jessica Bardsley. Queen at Wembley is a video recorded at the Original Wembley Stadium, England on Saturday 12 July 1986 during Queen's Magic Tour. It was first released in December 1990 as an edited VHS, then as an audio CD in 1992, followed by a DVD release as Queen: Live at Wembley Stadium to coincide with the CD rerelease in 2003. The DVD has gone five times platinum in the United States, four times platinum in the United Kingdom, and achieved multi platinum status around the world. On 5 September 2011, the 25th Anniversary Edition of the concert was released as a standard 2-DVD set and a deluxe 2-DVD and 2-CD set. Eagle Rock Entertainment announced that the 25th Anniversary Edition would be released in the USA and Canada on 12 March 2013. Un instante en la vida ajena is a 2003 documentary written by Arantxa Aguirre, Javier Rioyo, Mauricio Villavecchia and directed by José Luis López-Linares. Deh Namaki-ha is a 2008 documentary film directed by Pegah Ahangarani. Mariposas En El Hierro a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Bertha Gaztelumendi. Remember: The '70s Greatest Hits Live The Halfmoon Files is a 2007 documentary film directed by Philip Scheffner. Abbado in Lucerne is a 2005 concert film . O Amor Natural is a 1996 Dutch documentary film directed by Heddy Honigmann. The film was shot in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in Portuguese and examines Brazil's relationship with the poetry of Carlos Drummond de Andrade, and their own sexuality. Der Kongress der Pinguine is a Swiss philosophical documentary film by Director Hans-Ulrich Schlumpf with a narrative by Franz Hohler about someone visiting Antarctica and finding an assembly of penguins. It is similar to the film March of the Penguins although it predates it by over 10 years. The Last Blossom of Life is a film directed by Masayuki Mizobuchi. Proud to Serve: The Men and Women of the U.S. Army is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Andrew Goldberg. Dens - Die eigentlich nicht sind is a 1993 directed by Carsten Lippstock. The 11Eleven Project is a documentary film created by Danielle Lauren. The film features crowdsourced video footage, audio and images taken on the 11 November 2011. The film premiered worldwide on the 11 November 2012. Grüße von Rosita aus Peru is a 1978 short film directed by Hans Rolf Strobel. Illimited is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Marleine van der Werf. Lot 248 is a 2014 documentary short film directed by Amie Siegel. Tsunami: Caught on Camera is a 2009 documentary directed by Janice Sutherland. Garbo: The Spy is a 2009 documentary film written by Edmon Roch, Isaki Lacuesta and Maria Hervera and directed by Edmon Roch. "A portrait of the Spaniard Joan Pujol Garcia, who fought on both sides in two wars without ever having held a weapon. During the Second World War, he was both the German spy Arabel and the British spy Garbo. He earned his British codename because his bosses considered him to be the best actor in the world -- so great was the web of lies that he span to deceive his German superiors. In the words of one clearly impressed espionage expert in the film, "The bigger the lie, the more they believed him." In addition to these interviews, most of which are filmed in front of multicolored backgrounds, the film tells Pujol's story primarily through black-and-white archive footage. It interweaves documentary recordings of the events in question with excerpts from various fiction films, from classics like Our Man in Havana to more obscure espionage flicks like the British Pimpernel Smith: a more than fitting form for a film in which the boundary between fact and fiction is fluid and constantly shifting. In the closing credits, Winston Churchill isn't quoted for nothing: "In wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies."" Quoting the program notes from the 2009 IDFA site. A Sad Doll (Smutná panenka) is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Lucie Pášová and Inventura. Eatrip is a 2009 documentary film directed by Yuri Nomura. El efecto Iguazús is a 2002 film written by Pere Joan Ventura and Georgina Cisquella and directed by Pere Joan Ventura. Critically acclaimed documentary about one Iraqi's family struggle to survive the carnage and confusion of the second Iraq war. A stunning visual exploration of the Festival of the Burning Man against the backdrop of a question: What is the meaning of life? Stars Julie Pifher. The Last Bolshevik is a 1992 French documentary film about director Aleksandr Medvedkin, directed by Chris Marker. 10 Men is a 2012 short lgbt film directed by Nigel Charnock and Graham Clayton-Chance. The Miracle of Weebosch is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Wendelien Voogd. Gozaran - Time Passing is a 2012 documentary film directed by Frank Scheffer. When Björk Met Attenborough is a 2013 documentary television film directed by Louise Hooper, executive produced by Lucas Ochoa and produced by Caroline Page. It was aired for the first time on 27 July 2013 on Channel 4, in conjunction with Pulse Films and One Little Indian Records. Partly filmed at the Natural History Museum in London, the documentary features an encounter between Icelandic singer-songwriter and musician Björk and English broadcaster and naturalist David Attenborough. They discuss the nature of music and the intersection between music, nature and technology. It also follows the singer as she prepares for her Biophilia Tour, along with rehearsal and studio recording. The documentary was inspired by the singer's eighth studio album Biophilia, which was released as a series of apps which blends nature elements with musicology. Collaborators in the project Scott Snibbe, Damian Taylor, Andy Cavatorta and Evan Grant appear in the documentary to talk about their role in the development of the album and the live show. It also includes neurologist Oliver Sacks, who talks about the effect of music on the brain. Les dites cariatides bis is a 2005 short documentary video written and directed by Agnès Varda. De Polonia a Santa Rosa is a 2014 short documentary film written by Luis Abraham González Rocha and directed by Alejandro Hurtado De León and Berenice Sánchez Luna. Banished: How Whites Drove Blacks Out of Town in America is a 2006 documentary film about four U.S. cities, which were part of many communities that violently forced African American families to flee in post-reconstruction America. In incidents which took place in Texas, Missouri, Georgia and Indiana between 1886 and 1923. Banished was screened in competition at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. The Animals Film is a feature documentary film about the use of animals by human beings, directed by Victor Schonfeld and Myriam Alaux, and narrated by actress Julie Christie. The film was first released in 1981. My Makhzen and Me is the 2012 documentary Moroccan film by director Nadir Bouhmouch. The film was the first of its kind in Morocco, providing an unprecedented direct critique of the Moroccan Makhzen by portraying the struggles of the pro-democracy February 20 youth Movement. Footsteps in Jerusalem is a documentary film directed by Amichai Chasson, Boaz Frankel, Benjamin Freidenberg, Dan Geva, Moran Ifergan, Yarden Karmin, Nadav Lapid, David Ofek, David Perlov and Elad Schwartz. Francophrenia (Or Don't Kill Me, I Know Where the Baby Is) is a 2012 short documentary film directed by James Franco and Ian Olds and written by Ian Olds and Paul Felten. Storm the Skies is a 1999 documentary film directed by José Luis López-Linares and Javier Rioyo. Mudbloods is a sports documentary directed by Farzad Nikbakht. Adam Surat is a 1989 Bangladeshi documentary film about the Bangladeshi painter Sheikh Mohammed Sultan, directed by Tareque Masud. Forbidden Temptations or Italian: Tentazioni proibite is a 1965 Italian documentary film directed by Osvaldo Civirani. Google: The Thinking Factory is documentary film about Google Inc. from 2008 written and directed by Gilles Cayatte. CinemAbility is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jenni Gold. Knots Landing Reunion: Together Again is non-fiction television special, celebrating the long-running primetime television series Knots Landing. It aired on CBS on December 2, 2005. The special was made after a similar reunion show, Dallas Reunion: The Return to Southfork, aired the previous year. Produced by the same team, the Knots Landing reunion enlisted most of the main cast of the show, who reminisced about their time working on it. It also included clips from the show, as well as outtakes and bloopers. The special was filmed on location at the famous Knots Landing cul-de-sac "Seaview Circle", with interiors filmed at a newly made studio set reconstruction of the MacKenzie house. Although not appearing with the main cast, separate segments with stars Alec Baldwin, Don Murray and Nicolette Sheridan were included. Julie Harris made a "surprise" appearance towards the end of the special, much to the delight of the other castmembers. The special actually aired on Harris's 80th birthday. Knots Landing creator and executive producer David Jacobs also recorded a segment for the special, as did his co-executive producer Michael Filerman. The Year of the Yao is a 2004 documentary film telling the first year of basketball player Yao Ming in the United States. The film is narrated by his friend and former interpreter Colin Pine, who stayed with Yao during Yao's rookie year, and interpreted for him for three years. Wanda Sykes: Sick & Tired is a 2006 tv documentry written by Wanda Sykes and directed by Michael Drumm. Rhythms of a Land and Its People is a 1976 documentary film directed by Prakash Jha. In the Shadow of the Sun is a 2012 documentary, biographical and drama film directed by Harry Freeland. Char... The No-Man's Island is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sourav Sarangi. The documentary is a co-production by India, Japan, Norway, Italy and England. The film was shown in the Berlin Film Festival. Atomic Africa: Clean Energy's Dirty Secrets is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Marcel Kolvenbach. Sertres is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Ainara Vera. Honor Diaries is a 2013 documentary film by producer Paula Kweskin. Honor Diaries explores violence against women in honor-based societies, with particular focus on female genital mutilation, honor violence and honor killings, early and forced marriage, and lack of access to education. The film profiles nine women’s rights activists with origins in the Muslim world, and follows their efforts to effect change, both within their communities and beyond. Honor Diaries premiered at the Chicago International Film Festival in October 2013 and won the Interfaith Award for Best Documentary at the St. Louis International Film Festival in November 2013. It was featured from December 2013 through April 2014 on DirecTV’s Audience Network as part of the Something to Talk About film series. Enchanted Kingdom 3D is a documentary film directed by Neil Nightingale and Patrick Morris. Written in Ink is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Martin Rath. The Questioning is a 2013 short comedy and documentary film directed by Zhu Rikun. Conversations on Serious Topics is a 2012 Lithuanian documentary film directed by Giedrė Beinoriūtė. The film was selected as the Lithuanian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards, but it was not nominated. Hoy como ayer is a 2011 film written and directed by Bernie IJdis. All City is a 2013 documentary film directed and written by Stephen Bell and Hugo Martinez. Getting Back to Abnormal is a 2012 drama-comedy documentary film directed by Louis Alvarez, Andy Kolker, Peter Odabashian and Paul Stekler. How an Aeroplane Flies: Part 1 is a 1975 documentary film directed by Derek Armstrong. Born deaf, James Castle mined the local landscape of his family's homesteads and his own deeply private world to produce an astonishing body of drawings, collages, and constructions that eventually gained worldwide recognition. How to Survive a Plague is a 2012 American documentary film about the early years of the AIDS epidemic, and the efforts of ACT UP and TAG. It was directed by David France, a journalist who covered AIDS from its beginnings. For France it was his first film. He dedicated it to his partner, who died of AIDS-related pneumonia in 1992. The documentary was produced using more than 700 hours of archived footage which included news coverage, interviews as well as film of demonstrations, meetings and conferences taken by ACT UP members themselves. France says they knew what they were doing was historic, and that many of them would die. The film, which opened in select theatres across the United States on September 21, 2012, also includes footage of a demonstration during mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral in 1989. Chained Girls is a 1965 film. It is an example of the exploitation film. This "expose" claims to reveal the shocking truth about lesbianism in today's society with supposed hidden camera footage. This was a way of getting round censorship, to include what was by the standards of the time fairly explicit material. It includes some bizarre scenes, including what purports to be a lesbian initiation, with a woman gang-raped by a group of "dykes" led by a "bull dyke", and two "dykes" fighting each other over the same "femme" lesbian. Some have detected an irony that the background music is by Tchaikovsky, who was gay. It was produced by George Weiss, and written directed by Joseph P. Mawra. It has been released on DVD along with Daughters of Lesbos. Timbrels and Torahs is a 2000 documentary film written, produced and directed by Judith Montell and Miriam Chaya. The film explains a new Jewish ritual designed to celebrate women on their 60th birthday. Instead of slowing down, these women have decided to embrace the last chapters of their lives. The Other Face of the Island is a 1970 short documentary film directed by John M. Bale. The Miracle of Saint Anthony is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Sergei Loznitsa La nuit nomade is a 2011 documentary drama film written and directed by Marianne Chaud. Keys to the Code: Unlocking the Secrets of Symbols is a 2007 documentary film written by Timothy Wallace-Murphy and directed by Philip Gardiner. A Home for Everyone: The Making of 'Hotel for Dogs' is a 2009 short documentary film starring Thor Freudenthal and Jason Clark. Rayning is a 2010 documentary experimental Short film and directed by Deborah Stratman. Love In The Time Of March Madness is a 2014 short animation film written by Melissa Johnson and directed by Melissa Johnson and Robertino Zambrano. This memorable and highly evocative documentary examines the effects of Hurricane Katrina through the eyes, voices, and drawings of the city's children. With their disarming honesty and innocent wisdom, the children are at once witnesses, victims, heroes and survivors. The film, like the children, is both deeply moving and at times refreshingly funny.The children come from all walks of life: from the daughter of a former queen of Carnival, to underprivileged kids still stuck in Texas. Their common denominator is Katrina - an event that affected them all, to varying degrees. The similarities and differences between these children are at times surprising and reveal patterns and problems that predate Katrina.By focusing exclusively on children's experiences, KATRINA'S CHILDREN humanizes this epic storm and seeks to understand the tragic ramifications in a small intimate way. The children's artwork is brought to life through animation and captures with vivid poignancy the children's interior universe.Aching with sadness, yet grounded in hope, KATRINA'S CHILDREN is ultimately a celebration of children's extraordinary resilience and a tribute to New Orleans' unique and indomitable spirit. Eyengui, el dios del sueño is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by José Manuel Novoa. Maria, Callas is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Lyia Terki. Eat the Sun is a 2011 documentary film directed by Peter Sorcher. On the Edge: The Poverty Crisis in Africa is a 2009 documentary film directed by David McKenzie. The Pacific Century was a 1992 PBS Emmy Award winning ten part documentary series narrated by Peter Coyote about the rise of the Pacific Rim economies. Alex Gibney was the writer for the series, and Frank Gibney, his father, wrote the companion trade book, The Pacific Century: America and Asia in a Changing World. The companion college telecourse, Pacific Century: The Emergence of Modern Pacific Asia, was written and edited by Mark Borthwick. The series was a co-production of the Pacific Basin Institute and KCTS-TV in Seattle. Principle funding was provided by the Annenberg Foundation. Duke And The Buffalo is a 2014 documentary, short, drama, biography and western film written and directed by Alfredo Alcantara and Josh Chertoff. Jackass: The Movie is a 2002 American reality comedy film directed by Jeff Tremaine with the tagline "Do not attempt this at home." It is a continuation of the stunts and pranks by the various characters of the MTV television series Jackass, which had completed its unique series run by this time. The film was produced by MTV Films and Dickhouse Productions and released by Paramount Pictures. The show features all of the original Jackass cast, including the leader Johnny Knoxville, Steve-O, Chris Pontius, Dave England, Bam Margera, Preston Lacy, Ryan Dunn, Ehren McGhehey and Jason "Wee Man" Acuña. Brandon DiCamillo and Raab Himself also appear but not as frequently as in the show. Other regular Jackass personalities who made appearances include Rake Yohn, Manny Puig, Phil Margera, and April Margera. In addition, Rip Taylor, Henry Rollins, Spike Jonze, boxing star Butterbean, Mat Hoffman, and Tony Hawk make cameo appearances. An unrated version of the film was released in 2006 and clocked in at 91 minutes long. Mateo is a 2014 documentary, adventure, biography and music film directed by Aaron Naar. Roberto: The Roberto Clemente Story is a 1993 documentary film. Woody Woodpecker and His Friends is a 1982 animated documentary written by Homer Brightman, Ben Hardaway, Walter Lantz and John Semper; directed by John Semper, Tex Avery, Shamus Culhane, Walter Lantz, Alex Lovy, Dick Lundy and Paul J. Smith. "Throughout human history, people have had giddy dreams and fantastic notions about what the future would bring. Today the future has become more of a threat than a promise—a knot of intractable problems looming menacingly on the horizon. With a powerful sense of poetry, Utopia in Four Movements uses the collective experience of cinema to explore the battered state of the utopian impulse at the dawn of the twenty-first century. In this “live documentary,” filmmaker Sam Green cues images and narrates in person while musician Dave Cerf performs the soundtrack. From the establishment of a man-made language designed to end war and cultural conflict and the undying optimism of an American exile in Cuba, to the current economic boom in China and the desire to give the remains in mass graves a dignified burial, Green and Cerf sift through the history of the utopian impulse with audiences and search for insights about the way to build a vision of the future based on humankind’s noblest impulses." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Reynaldo is a 2012 short documentary biographical film directed by Nick Werber and Dan Childs. Dilli is a multiple-award winning documentary film that explores issues of urbanization, development and space through the narratives of people living in Delhi, capital to the world's largest democracy. Dilli is directed by Sushmit Ghosh and Rintu Thomas of Black Ticket Films and executive produced by Robin Raina. The movie film brings out a stark comparison of the rampant progress and development of the megalopolis vis-à-vis thousands who are left homeless while the whole city is modernized and revamped. The film was premiered at the NASDAQ in Times Square, New York on April 1, 2011 following the ringing of the NASDAQ closing bell by Robin Raina, Founder RRF.Dilli was declared the 1st place winner in the Short Documentary section at the Los Angeles Movie Awards. The film also won the Best Cinematography award in the short documentary section. The film got mention at the 2011 Los Angeles International Underground Film Festival.Dilli found honorable mention in Los Angeles Art House Film Festival 2011.Dilli also won the Best Documentary Award at the 2012 Norwich Film Festival. Magnet is a 2013 documentary film directed by Silvio Spahiu. Hong Kong (HKG)is a 1999 short film written and directed by Gerard Holthuis. Gunner Palace is a 2004 documentary film by Michael Tucker, which had a limited release in the United States on March 4, 2005. The film was an account of the complex realities of the situation in Iraq during 2003–2004 amidst the Iraqi insurgency not seen on the nightly news. Told first-hand by American troops stationed in the middle of Baghdad, Gunner Palace presents a portrait of a dangerous and chaotic war. Los is a 2000 documentary film directed by James Benning. Kudzu Vine is a 2011 short documentary science-fiction film written and directed by Josh Gibson. La Raulito, Low Blows is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Emiliano Serra. Total Denial is a 2006 documentary film about fifteen Burmese villagers going up against oil giants UNOCAL and Total as they build the Yadana Pipeline. Alpha Man: The Brotherhood of MLK is a television documentary film that reveals the story of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s fraternity days as a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. Produced by Rainforest Films, the half-hour special originally aired August 28, 2011 on Black Entertainment Television. The documentary special was scheduled to debut on the same day as the much-anticipated official dedication of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial statue on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.. The statue's dedication, which was to coincide with the 48th anniversary of the March on Washington and Dr. King’s “Dream” speech, was postponed until October 16, 2011 due to Hurricane Irene. New York, N.Y. is a 1986 short, documentary film directed by Raymond Depardon. El Viento en la Orilla del Mar is a 2008 documentray film written and directed by Cristian Saldia Ramírez. Unternehmen Teutonenschwert is an East German film. It was released in 1958. They Cannot Touch Her is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Katie Barkel. Journeys Below the Line: The Editing Process of 24 is a 2005 film directed by Bruce Bilson. Deseret is a 1995 documentary film directed by James Benning. Anatomy Of Failure is a 2007 film directed by Minou Norouzi. America: Freedom to Fascism is a 2006 film by Aaron Russo, covering a variety of subjects, including: the Internal Revenue Service, the income tax, Federal Reserve System, national ID cards, human-implanted RFID tags, Diebold electronic voting machines, globalization, Big Brother, taser weapons abuse, and the use of terrorism by the government as a means to diminish the citizens' rights. La Vie Moderne is a 2008 film directed by Raymond Depardon. Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast is a documentary film written and directed by Bruce Weber. London Can Take It! is a short documentary film produced by the GPO Film Unit for the Ministry of Information covering less than eighteen hours of the German blitz on London and its people. It was directed by Humphrey Jennings and Harry Watt and featured Quentin Reynolds as the narrator. Standing on Sacred Ground 2 : Profit and Loss is a 2013 documentary film written by Jennifer Huang and directed by Christopher McLeod. Anton Corbijn Inside Out is a 2012 documentary film written by Klaartje Quirijns and Thomas den Drijver and directed by Klaartje Quirijns. High Grass Circus is a 1976 National Film Board of Canada documentary film co-directed by Tony Ianzelo and Torben Schioler, exploring life in the Royal Brothers' traveling circus. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film was shot spring and summer of 1975 and part of 1976. Following its Oscar nomination, it was acquired by CBC-TV, which broadcast it on July 12, 1978. It was subsequently sold to television networks in New Zealand, the UK, South Africa and Yugoslavia. A nine-minute cut-down version of the film, entitled Little Big Top, played in Canadian theatres in late 1977, including 15 week run in Vancouver. In August 1980, PBS acquired the film along with seven other NFB documentaries and broadcast them on 11 of its stations. Praying in Her Own Voice is a documentary film directed by Yael Katzir. Late Night Talks with Mother is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Jan Nemec. Diamante is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Emiliano Grieco. Killer.berlin.doc is a 1999 film directed by Bettina Ellerkamp and Jörg Heitmann. Un Anno Dopo – Progetto Memory Hunters is a documentary film directed by Carlo Liberatore, Marco Castellani, Stefano Ianni, Antonio Iacoboni and others. The Deathless is a documentary film directed by Kearn-Hyung Ahn. Eislimonade für Hong Li is a 2000 film directed by Dietmar Ratsch. Persepolis Men is a documentary film about Iranian football club Persepolis. the cover of CD shows Afshin Ghotbi rising his hand toward on a red background. Meetings, Bloody Meetings is a 1976 British comedy training film that stars John Cleese as a bumbling middle manager. The film was written by John Cleese and Antony Jay, and was produced by Cleese's production company Video Arts. They updated and rereleased the film again in 2012 with British comedian Will Smith starring as the central character in charge of a meeting. John Cleese appears in the new version, this time in the role of the judge in the dream sequence. How We Played the Revolution is a 2011 music, historical documentary film written and directed by Giedre Zickyte. The First Movie is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Mark Cousins. Immigrant Nation! The Battle for the Dream is a 2010 feature documentary movie by Esaú Meléndez about the immigrant rights movement from 2006 to 2009 and Elvira Arellano's resistance to deportation. It opened on 2010-03-06 in Washington, DC, at the DC Independent Film Festival. The film includes stories of individuals, organizations, activists and community leaders. It includes coverage of anti-immigrant activists, but more coverage of those "united by passion and a concern for justice." This film features the opposition to the controversial HR4437 immigration bill, especially the march to Batavia, Illinois, to decry Speaker Dennis Hastert's blockage of comprehensive immigration reform. Kid Chocolate is a 1987 short documentary film written by Eliseo Alberto and Gerardo Chijona and directed by Gerardo Chijona. Dan Brown's novel The Da Vinci Code sparked a cultural phenomenon which has led millions of people to explore the mysteries of the isolated hilltop village of Rennes-le-Chateau. Behind the fiction of the novel is a wealth of detail originally uncovered by Henry Lincoln in his book Holy Blood, Holy Grail. Origins of the Da Vinci Code, sets out to explore these mysteries in detail, including: * The history of the Rennes-le-Chateau ** The development of the Holy Bloodline hypothesis BEFORE the publication of Dan Brown's novel ** How Henry Lincoln discovered the codes ** The discovery of the Rennes-le-Chateau geometry ** Startling new discoveries of more landscape geometry beyond the original Pentacle of Mountains ** The true extent of the "Invisible Temple" ** And more! * The Space is a 2014 short, documentary film directed by Eléonor Gilbert. 'Coral Sea Dreaming - Awaken' celebrates and pays tribute to the magical but fast disappearing world of coral reefs. It was filmed in High Definition on over 2,000 dives by Emmy Award winner cameraman and Producer David Hannan over the last 8 years on the world's most beautiful reefs and features Australia's Great Barrier Reef, Western Australia's Ningaloo Reef and Papua New Guinea. Rainbow Town is a family, drama, war, documentary film directed by Lauren Selmon Roberts. Brasileirinho is a 2005 musical documentary film by Finnish film director Mika Kaurismäki about traditional Brazilian choro music. For I Know My Weakness is a 2012 documentary film written by John Dentino and directed by John Dentino. Birds, Backyard Habitat and Beyond is a documentary film directed by Craig Johnson and Joy Johnson. influenza/Composition II (chrome square) is a 2009 film directed by Jeroen Jongeleen. A sticker project translated into animation, this film uses shiny square stickers as miniature, abstract urban screens that quietly reflect the city life on their blurry surface. In the mid-1990s filmmaker Jeroen Jongeleen discovered in stickers a simple and cheap means of functioning in public. By The River is a 2013 drama film directed by Nontawat Numbenchapol. Chang'an Boulevard is a 2004 documentary film directed by Ai Weiwei. Before the Music Dies is a 2006 U.S. documentary film that criticizes the American music industry and the increasing commercialization of the art of music over the past thirty years. The film features interviews and performances from such musicians and groups as Doyle Bramhall II, Erykah Badu, Eric Clapton, Dave Matthews, Branford Marsalis, Elvis Costello, Bonnie Raitt and My Morning Jacket. It was directed by Andrew Shapter, produced by Joel Rasmussen, and co-written by Shapter and Rasmussen. The film premiered on March 12, 2006 at the South by Southwest film festival in Austin, Texas. Istintobrass is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Massimiliano Zanin. In the Street is a 16-minute documentary film released in 1948 and again in 1952. The black and white, silent film was shot in the mid-1940s in the Spanish Harlem section of New York City. Helen Levitt, Janice Loeb, and James Agee were the cinematographers; they used small, hidden 16 mm film cameras to record street life, especially of children. Levitt edited the film and, subsequent to its first release, added a piano soundtrack composed and performed by Arthur Kleiner. The film is generally considered as an extension of Levitt's street photography in New York City, and Levitt subsequently re-used the title, In the Street, for a volume reproducing her photographs. Loeb was a painter and photographer. James Agee was a noted writer; both Loeb and Agee subsequently collaborated with Levitt on a second film, The Quiet One. Manny Farber summarized the film at the time, "The movie, to be shown around the 16mm circuit, has been beautifully edited into a somber study of the American figure, from childhood to old age, growing stiffer, uglier, and lonelier with the passage of years." The artist Roy Arden recently summarized the film somewhat differently, "In The Street is reportage as art. The Log of the U-35 is a 1917 war-propaganda film documentary written and directed by Hans Brennert. Paul Simon, Graceland: The African Concert is a TV Movie. The Home Team is a 2014 short documentary sport film written by Erika Frankel and directed by Joshua Seftel. Arlit, deuxième Paris is a 2005 documentary film written by Idrissou Mora Kpai and Isabelle Boni-Claverie and directed by Idrissou Mora Kpai. GLOW: The Story of The Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling is a 2012 documentary film written by Bradford Thomason and directed by Brett Whitcomb. Tibira is Gay is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Emilio Gallo. A 90-minute special celebrating the finest African-American entertainers ever to grace the silver screen featuring performances from PORGY AND BESS, LILIES OF THE FIELD, GONE WITH THE WIND, COTTON COMES TO HARLEM, WAITING TO EXHALE and many more.A CENTURY OF BLACK CINEMA celebrates the finest Black entertainers ever to grace the silver screen. This absorbing program takes you on an illuminating journey through the careers of the fortunate, the unfortunate, the ground- breakers, the spectacular, the musical, and the comical performers who have inspired millions of people since the first cameras rolled. Enjoy rare film footage ranging from turn-of-the-century independent director OSCAR MICHEAUX to modern day filmmaker, SPIKE LEE. The program features brilliant performances from scenes of PORGY AND BESS, LILIES OF THE FIELD, GONE WITH THE WIND, COTTON COMES TO HARLEM, WAITING TO EXHALE, to name a few, and priceless behind-the-scenes takes with RICHARD PRYOR, SIDNEY POITIER, and JAMES EARL JONES. A CENTURY OF BLACK CINEMA also includes interviews with superstars such as EDDIE MURPHY, WHOOPI GOLDBERG, DENZEL WASHINGTON, LAURENCE FISHBURNE, DANNY GLOVER and FAYARD NICHOLAS of "The Nicholas Brothers", and the list continues. Girl 27 is a 2007 documentary film about the 1937 rape of MGM movie extra Patricia Douglas, the front-page news stories that followed, and the subsequent cover-up of the entire event. Also covered are a similar assault on singer Eloise Spann and her subsequent suicide, as well as the better known scandal involving actress Loretta Young and her "adopted" daughter Judy Lewis. The filmmaker, David Stenn, uses first-person interviews and vintage film footage and music to explore the political power of movie studios in 1930's Hollywood as well as public attitudes toward sexual assault that discouraged victims from coming forward. The filmmaker's dogged pursuit of Douglas and their subsequent friendship is a consistent theme throughout. Sun Ra: A Joyful Noise is a 1980 jazz film by Robert Mugge documenting performances by Sun Ra and his Arkestra in Philadelphia, Washington D.C., and Baltimore, and also including interviews and rehearsal footage. The Philadelphia performances captured by the film took place at Danny's Hollywood Palace and on the rooftop of the Philadelphia International Center. The Baltimore performance took place in the Famous Ballroom, hosted by the Left Bank Jazz Society. Sun Ra compositions featured in the film include "Astro Black," "Along Came Ra," "We Travel the Spaceways," and "Requiem for Trevor Johnson." In 2001, the film was screened as part of Maryland Film Festival in the former Famous Ballroom, now part of the expanded Charles Theatre, where the film's Baltimore performances were shot. Bingo Night is a 2013 documentary directed and written by Conor Fetting-Smith. Petite Histoite des Plateaux Abandonnés is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Rä di Martino. Children in War is a 2000 documentary written and directed by Alan and Susan Raymond. Soul Power is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jeff Levy-Hinte about the Zaire 74 music festival in Kinshasa which accompanied the Rumble in the Jungle heavyweight boxing championship match between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman in October 1974. The film was made from archival footage; other footage shot at the time focusing on the fight was edited to form the film When We Were Kings. Performers in the film include James Brown, The Spinners, OK Jazz featuring Franco, Bill Withers, Miriam Makeba a.k.a. "The Click Song", B.B. King, Pembe Dance Troupe, The Crusaders, Fania All-Stars featuring Celia Cruz, Big Black, Afrisa featuring Tabu LEY, The Mighty J.B.'s and Manu Dibango. The DVD includes bonus tracks of James Brown, Sister Sledge, Abeti and folk dance performance Pembe Dance Troupe. Footage was shot by a variety of camera operators, including Albert Maysles. 'Glenn Tilbrook: One for the Road' is a 2004 documentary directed by Amy Pickard which follows a 2001 solo American tour by Glenn Tilbrook, lead singer of British new wave group Squeeze. The film - which was self-financed by Pickard after she sold all her possessions - shows Tilbrook attempting to mount a month-long US tour using a mobile home instead of a tour bus and hotels. The film centres on Tilbrook's apparent good humour in the face of a series of calamities - including vehicle breakdown - and his unusual stagecraft. At one stage he takes his entire audience into a car park and in another sequence performs in a fan's apartment. The film features performance excerts from a number of Squeeze and Tilbrook songs including: "Tempted", "Hourglass", "Take Me I'm Yours", "Up the Junction", "Goodbye Girl", "Some Fantastic Place" and "By The Light of the Cash Machine". The film premiered in 2004 at London's Raindance festival and has since been released on DVD. Fanalysis is a 2002 documentary film starring Bruce Campbell, Ted Raimi, Harry Knowles and directed by Bruce Campbell. The Alaska Syndrome is a 1991 film directed by Axel Engstfeld. Journey To Jah is a 2013 music and documentary film written by Moritz Springer and directed by Noël Dernesch and Moritz Springer. Kyteman. Now What? is a 2011 documentary drama music film written by Estelle Bovelander and directed by Menna Laura Meijer The Master of Disaster is a 1986 American short documentary film produced by Sonya Friedman. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Rainbow Chaser is a 2013 short film directed by Conor Heffernan. The Jungle Prescription is a 2011 documentary TV series directed by Mark Ellam. The true cost of owning a piece of the American Dream is frankly demonstrated in The First Season, chronicling the trials and tribulations of an American family trying to make a go of it as novice dairy farmers. Determined to live off the land just like their forefathers, Paul and Phyllis Van Amburgh quit the city life and relocate their young family to a defunct dairy farm in upstate New York. Their bumpy road to survival is candidly documented in this revealing debut directorial effort by Rudd Simmons. Armed with plenty of idealism but not much in the way of prior experience, the Van Amburghs certainly have their work cut out for themselves. Simmons and his cameras are there to capture all the daily chores and precarious acts of checkbook balancing that is the lot of today's farmers. While they come across as a couple with a healthy marriage, the financial challenges and the long hours eventually put a strain on their back-to-the-basics good intentions. Clash of the Titans: A G4 Special is a 2010 documentary film starring Gemma Arterton, Alexa Davalos and Ralph Fiennes. Opening Nights is a 1998 documentary short film directed by Camille Servan-Schreiber and Andrew Gilbert. 89mm from Europe is a 1993 Polish short documentary film directed by Marcel Łoziński, looking at the 89 mm difference in track gauge between Russian and European railroads. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Mr. Cao Goes to Washington is a 2012 biographical drama documentary film directed by S. Leo Chiang. My Place is a 2013 biographical family drama documentary film directed by Emmanuel Moonchil Park. The High Level Bridge is a 2010 short documentary comedy film written and directed by Trevor Anderson. In an increasingly interconnected world, it's hard to imagine that faraway regions of the earth are still untouched by occidental influencs. Places which still follow ancestral laws of their own individual past. These are "lost worlds", untouched corners, virgin forests, hiding places with archaeological ruins from ancient civilizations now inhabited by aboriginal races jealous of their culture and traditions. Australia, The Ivory Coast, Borneo, Alaska, Madagascar or Laos are just some of these places which are sheltering in their inner culture mysterious and forgotten spaces. The Wedding in Monaco is a 1956 documentary covering the celebrations in Monaco leading up to wedding of Prince Rainier III to Grace Kelly. The 31-minute color CinemaScope film was directed by Jean Masson and released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Kelly’s film studio before her retirement from acting. First Person Shooter is a 2002 documentary tv movie directed by Robin Benger. A Life Outside is an action adventure sports documentary film directed by Catherine Brabec. #alleman is a 2013 experimental and documentary film directed by Bert Hana. Live Through This is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Lisa Camillo. The Captains is a 2011 feature documentary that follows actor William Shatner through interviews with the other actors who have portrayed starship captains in five other incarnations of the Star Trek franchise. Shatner's subjects discuss their lives and careers before, during and after their tenure with Star Trek. They explore the pressures, stigmas and sacrifices that accompanied their roles and their larger careers. The film makes use of conversations, personal observations, interviews and archival footage. Dance Craze is a 1981 British documentary film about the English 2 Tone music genre. The film was directed by Joe Massot, who originally wanted to do a film only about the band Madness, whom he met during their first US tour. Massot later changed his plans to include the whole 2 Tone movement. The film, shot in 1980, comprised performance footage of Madness, the Specials, the Selecter, the Bodysnatchers, the Beat and Bad Manners on tour throughout the United Kingdom. A soundtrack album of the same name was released the same year, featuring fifteen of the songs that were featured in the film. Later versions of the soundtrack album do not contain the Madness tracks, adding tracks credited to the Special AKA, a name under which the Specials were known. Schlachtenbummel is a 1988 documentary film directed by Thomas Frickel. The Great Vacation Squeeze is a 2013 documentary film written by John de Graaf. It was also written by John de Graaf, Diana Wilmar, David Fox and Greg Davis. The secret world of plants gets us closer to these motionless and quiet creatures, just as attractive and surprising as other living creatures. This documentary reveals the most unknown aspects of the vegetable kingdom. We will learn about the secret of the eternal youth of a 3500 years old sequoia and be charmed by the ‘rafflesia arnoldi’ flowers, able to reach up to one meter of diameter. Join us in our exhaustive journey into the world of planets, which promises to leave no stone unturned. Een schitterend ongeluk was a 1993 documentary featuring several prominent scientists and philosophers. Hosted by Wim Kayzer, guests included Daniel Dennett, Freeman Dyson, Stephen Jay Gould, George Page, Oliver Sacks, Rupert Sheldrake, and Stephen Toulmin. It was filmed in the Netherlands by the VPRO and produced by Nellie Kamer. Grounded on 9/11 is a documentary film that premiered on September 11, 2005 on The History Channel, marking the fourth anniversary of the 2001 attacks. The film covers Operation Yellow Ribbon and the events after the FAA ordered all airplanes to immediately land after the attack on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. M/F Remix is a 2010 film directed and written by Jy-ah Min. Momma Don't Allow is a short British documentary film about a north London jazz club made in 1955. It was co-directed by Karel Reisz and Tony Richardson and filmed by Walter Lassally. It was produced by the British Film Institute Experimental Film Fund. It was first shown as part of the first Free cinema programme at the National Film Theatre in February 1956. Smaller Than The Sky is a 2012 short documentary film written by Mohammed Hasan Ahmed and directed by Abdullah Hassan Ahmed. Divide and Conquer is the third film of Frank Capra's Why We Fight propaganda film series, dealing with the Nazi conquest of Western Europe in 1940. The film begins immediately after the fall of Poland. Of the two major Western Allies of 1940, the United Kingdom is first to be mentioned. The role of the Royal Navy in blockading Germany is highlighted, in that it means that Germany must overcome British resistance in order to clear the way for its world conquest. Hitler's treachery towards the small neutral countries of Europe is exposed - to Denmark: "We have concluded a non-aggression pact with Denmark" - to Norway: "Germany never had any quarrel with the Northern States and has none today" - to the Netherlands: "The new Reich has always endeavored to maintain the traditional friendship with Holland" - and to Belgium: "The Reich has put forth no claim which may in any way be regarded as a threat to Belgium". These quotes are repeated after the conquest of each of these countries is shown. The first targets of the Nazis in 1940 were Denmark and Norway. From Mother to Daughter is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Andrea Zambelli. Bond Girls Are Forever is a 2002 James Bond documentary film hosted by actress Maryam d'Abo, who had played the role of Kara Milovy in the 15th James Bond film The Living Daylights. It was accompanied by a 2003 book written by John Cork and d'Abo. The book is subtitled The Women of James Bond. Both the film and the book is a tribute to the elite club of women who have played the role of a Bond girl. The TV film, which was released in November 2002 alongside Die Another Day features interviews with a number of Bond girls who were featured throughout the film franchise between the first James Bond film, Dr. No starring Ursula Andress and the then-current 20th film Die Another Day starring Halle Berry. In 2003, the documentary was released on DVD and offered as a free gift with the purchase of Die Another Day on DVD by some retailers. In 2006, a new version of the documentary, updated to include interviews with cast from Casino Royale and edited to include commercial breaks, was produced for the AMC network and was later released as a bonus feature on the March 2007 DVD and Blu-ray editions of Casino Royale. Teardrops Video is a 2013 short documentary film written by Larissa de Jesus and Paloma Silva Santos. Anything but black is a 2009 documentary film directed by Aušra Linkevičiūtė. The Long Island Railroad Massacre is a 2013 documentary film directed by Charlie Minn. Traces and Memory of Jorge Preloran is a 2009 documentary, biography and drama film written by Fermin Rivera and directed by Fermin Rivera and Emiliano Penelas. My Joan of Arc is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Dany Chiasson. Eldridge Cleaver, Black Panther is an Algerian documentary film made in 1969, in which Black Panther activist Eldridge Cleaver spoke from exile in Algeria, where he had moved after the state of California tried to charge him with intent to murder. In the documentary Cleaver discussed revolution in the United States and spoke against such political enemies as Nixon, Agnew, Reagan and Richard J. Daley. Age of Rust is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Alessandro Mattei and Francesco Aber. Lichtspielhaus is the German NDH-metal band Rammstein's second DVD, and was released on December 1, 2003. It is a compilation of all their videos to date and some live performances, commercial advertisements, trailers and "makings-of". Claude Jutra: An Unfinished Story is a 2002 documentary written by Jefferson Lewis and directed by Paule Baillargeon. I tabù n. 2 is a 1965 Italian documentary film directed by Romolo Marcellini. It showcases various practices around the world, including tribal circumcision ceremonies, male Japanese geishas and headhunting Indian tribes in the Brazilian jungles. The Psycho Legacy is a 2010 independent documentary film that examines the history of the Psycho film franchise and the continuing legacy of the original Psycho. It also pays a tribute to actor Anthony Perkins for his portrayal of character Norman Bates. It is written and directed by Robert Galluzzo. It includes interviews with the cast and crew who were involved in the productions of Psycho, Psycho II, Psycho III and Psycho IV: The Beginning. It also features interviews with current horror filmmakers who are fans of the Psycho series. The documentary was in production for 3 years and was released on DVD on October 19, 2010 in the United States and Canada. In April 2012, it was announced on the documentary's official Facebook page that a full length book based on the documentary is being written by director, writer and producer Robert V. Galluzzo. L'épreuve du feu is a 1997 film directed by Bernard Émond. The Diary of Sacco and Vanzetti is an 2004 American docudrama, written and directed by David Rothauser, about the trial of Sacco and Vanzetti and an account of Vanzetti's life from the moment of his arrival as an immigrant in the United States, to the events leading to his execution. Rothauser performs in his film in the role of Bartolomeo Vanzetti. Another World Is Possible is a 2001 Italian film directed by the following; Citto Maselli, Gillo Pontecorvo, Cristina Comencini, and Pasquale Scimeca. The War Campaign is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Boris Bertram. The Malagasy Way is a 2014 film written and directed by Nantenaina Lova. A warm and humorous film growing from the entertaining and errant life of Alf Mørner. There has always been a distance between director Bjarte Mørner Tveit and his grandfather, the strong patriarch sea captain Alf Mørner. However, the gap between the generations is perhaps about to close when old Alf presents a strange gift to Bjarte; countless metal cans containing 8mm film from Alf's life and his journeys around the world. The films open a hidden universe of grandfather's past to Bjarte, and while looking at the films he discovers stories that had remained hidden for up to seventy years. But strings were attached to the seemingly generous gift and Bjarte soon has to embark on a demanding voyage of his own.DISCOVERIES OF A MARIONETTE is a poetic and peculiar documentary film. It alters between entertaining or heartbreaking personal episodes and philosophical reflections on eternal matters. Through the film Alf Mørner leads us on a weird and wonderful expedition through life and death, love and hate, over the sea and in the end: into eternity. Nothing less. Stormy Weather: The Music of Harold Arlen is a 2002 documentary film directed by Larry Weinstein. The Shroud of Turin: sacred Christian relic or clever fake? If it was created, it must have been by someone with extraordinary technical and artistic skills. The evidence points to one man, one of the greatest geniuses that have ever lived. Was Leonardo da Vinci the man behind the Shroud of Turin? Using remarkable technology, this programme discovers evidence that suggests the answer is yes. Virginia Tobacco was a 1962 film directed by P. R. S. Pillay. Rock the Boat is a 1998 documentary film directed by Robert Houston. Invocation: Maya Deren is a 1987 documentary film directed by Jo Ann Kaplan. Public Telephone is a 1980 French documentary film directed by Jean-Marie Périer. It was screened out of competition at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival. Everybody's Nuts is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Fabian Vasquez Euresti. Planet B-Boy is a 2007 documentary film that focuses on the 2005 Battle of the Year while also describing B-boy culture and history as a global phenomenon. This documentary was directed by Canadian-American Korean filmmaker Benson Lee, shot by Portuguese-American filmmaker Vasco Nunes, and released in theaters in the United States on March 21, 2008. It was released on DVD on November 11, 2008. La Source is a 2012 documentary film written by Patrick Shen and Brandon Vedder and directed by Patrick Shen. Tour of Duty is a 2012 documentary film directed by Gyeong-tae Park and Dong-ryeong Kim. "Eye-opening documentary looking at the social and political position of the LGBT community in Nepal. Eye-opening documentary looking at the social and political position of the LGBT community in Nepal. Tritiya Prakriti is a Sanskrit term used in religious texts to refer to gender variance, also referred to as ‘third gender'. In 2007 the Supreme Court in Nepal made a ruling that acknowledged third gender identity and protected the rights of sexual minorities; but despite legalising gay marriage in 2008, the Nepalese government have been slow to take many of the rights of this community on board. In Other Nature we meet some of the people these changes are affecting, including third gender activists, a lesbian couple from India who come to Nepal for help and the founder of Nepalese LGBT group Blue Diamond. NJ" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival site. Standing on My Sister's Shoulders is a 2002 documentary film directed by Laura J. Lipson. Fidaï is a 2012 documentary film written by Linda Amiri and Damien Ounouri and directed by Damien Ounouri. The House of Cain is a 2000 film written by Hristos Karakepelis and Natasha Segou and directed by Christos Karakepelis. Fighter's Room is a short sports documentary film directed by Slav Zatoka. Land Of Nod is a 2013 short, documentary and experimental film directed by Coleen Fitzgibbon. Janus is a 2012 documentary film directed by Erik van Lieshout. Nefarious: Merchant of Souls is a 2011 American documentary film about modern human trafficking, specifically sexual slavery. Presented from a Christian worldview, Nefarious covers human trafficking in the United States, Western and Eastern Europe, and Southeast Asia, alternating interviews with re-enactments. Victims of trafficking talk about having been the objects of physical abuse and attempted murder. Several former prostitutes talk about their conversion to Christianity, escape from sexual oppression, and subsequent education or marriage. The film ends with the assertion that only Jesus can free people from sexual slavery. Nefarious was written, directed, produced and narrated by Benjamin Nolot, founder and president of Exodus Cry, the film's distributor. Nolot, who travelled to 19 countries to collect the film's content, said that the purpose of the film is "to draw people's attention to the issue, but also to inspire them in terms of what they can be doing … to take a stand against this injustice." The film was officially released on July 27, 2011, with individual grassroots screenings also taking place. The Atlanta Way is an upcoming documentary film written by Zettler Clay IV and King Williams and directed by King Williams. Happy to Be Different is a 2014 documentary film directed by Gianni Amelio. Soldier Brother is a 2011 documentary film directed by Kaitlin Ann Jones and Alicia Smith. From the producers of Twilight in Forks, Travel to the real town of Volterra, Italy where medieval magic and mystery combine as the perfect setting for Stephenie Meyer's Twilight Saga. No Look Pass is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Melissa Johnson. Coma: The Silent Epidemic is a 1998 Emmy News and Documentary Award winner for Outstanding Background/Analysis of a Single Current Story-Programs. The Golden Age of Comedy is a compilation of silent comedy films from the Mack Sennett and Hal Roach studios, written and produced by Robert Youngson. Youngson had previously produced several award-winning short documentaries beforehand, and this was the first compilation of its kind in feature-length form. Initially, the film was distributed by a small independent company, Distributors Corporation of America, before being taken up by one of Hollywood's best known film studios, Twentieth Century Fox. The film's commercial success led Youngson to follow suit with other silent film compilations over the next decade. The film is often regarded as particularly bringing Laurel and Hardy back into the public's notice after years of obscurity, but Oliver Hardy died around the time of the film's release in August 1957. The film was released on DVD for the first time in the USA in 2007. Its main musical theme is derived from Chopin's Ètude Op. 10,No. 3, often known as "Tristesse". William Kentridge: Anything is Possible is a 2010 documentary film directed by Charles Atlas and Susan Sollins. Vokzal - Bahnhof Brest is a 1993 film directed by Gerd Kroske. Porches. Being Alone is a documentary film directed by Heather Craig. Ramón Rojas - Dreams of Huts is a 2009 documentary short film written and directed by María Rosa Andreotti. Neptune 50: A Marriage is a 2012 short, documentary film written and directed by Michael Melski. Classified People is a 1988 documentary, short film directed by Yolande Zauberman. Strangers in the Neighborhood is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Patrick Bisschops. Welcome to the modest small town of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Enjoy your stay at Bucksville house and have your room tidied up in the morning by colonial maids who turn and vanish. At the Wedgewood Inn, explore a tunnel of the Underground Railroad where slaves passed through to freedom and the spirits of some still linger. Examine the mystery of the figure on horseback, spotted in the woods outside the Arianna Miles, as this fascinating documentary reveals some of the most amazing images of spirits ever recorded! Chimpanzee is a 2012 nature documentary film about a young common chimpanzee named Oscar who finds himself alone in the African forests until he is adopted by another chimpanzee who takes him in and raises him like his own child. The U.S. release of the film is narrated by Tim Allen. The film was released by Disneynature and directed by Alastair Fothergill and Mark Linfield. It is the sixth film produced by the Disneynature label, following Earth, The Crimson Wing: Mystery of the Flamingos, Oceans, African Cats and Wings of Life, and was released in theaters on April 20, 2012 just before Earth Day, April 22. Digital Video Essentials is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Joseph J. Kane Jr. My Croatian Nose is a 2007 film directed by Richard Dinter. Salvador Dalí is a 35-minute film directed by Andy Warhol. The film features surrealist artist Salvador Dalí visiting the Factory and meeting the rock band The Velvet Underground. The Doll Lady is a 1996 documentary film by Quebec film director and producer Denys Desjardins. The Race for Space is a 1959 American documentary film directed by David L. Wolper. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Muse of Fire is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Dan Poole and Giles Terera. My Life with Carlos is a 2010 documentary film directed by German Berger-Hertz and written by Joaquim Jordà, Roberto Brodsky and German Berger-Hertz. Pope John Paul II: Santo Subito is a 2007 documentary film. A Powerful Noise Live is a 2009 Talk-Show film written by Scott Thigpen and directed by David Stern. Indus Waters is a 1967 short documentary film written and directed by Derek Williams. This Air Age is a documentary film that received the 1965 award for the AACTA Award for Best Documentary, Honourable Mention. With God On Our Side is a 2009 film by Porter Speakman Jr. and Kevin Miller, the latter of whom is the co-creator of the documentary Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed. The documentary criticizes the theology behind Christian Zionism and the attitude toward the Israeli-Palestinian conflict taken by many American evangelicals, as well as the indifference by many Westerners toward the plight of Palestinian Christians. The film argues that Christians who take the Bible seriously should not "take either side" in the conflict, but rather be peacemakers and stand up for the rights of all people in the region. In the film, Palestinian Christians are interviewed and share their families' stories. Leading evangelical supporters and critics of Christian Zionism are also given the opportunity to share their views. Jürgen Bühler of the International Christian Embassy Jerusalem said that the views expressed in the film are "unfortunately colored by a strong sense of Palestinian nationalism.” Cut Poison Burn is a documentary film directed by Wayne Chesler. Fighting For The Futaleufu is a 2013 is a short documentary sport film written and directed by Stephanie Haig. In Your Dreams: Stevie Nicks is a 2013 documentary film directed by Dave Stewart. The Boiling Blood is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Kh. Bishwamittra Singh. Del viento y del fuego is a 1983 short documentary film directed by Adolfo García Videla and Humberto Ríos. Hollywood Renegade is a 2011 documentary film which is written and directed by Benn Schulberg. Hidden and Seeking is a 1971 documentary directed by Peter Werner. Sagebrush and Silver is a 1941 American short documentary film directed by Frank Hurley. It was nominated for an Academy Award at the 14th Academy Awards for Best Short Subject. Sold Out: A Threevening with Kevin Smith is the third in Kevin Smith's "Evening With" series. Footage for the release was shot at a Q&A performance on August 2, 2007 in front of a sold-out crowd at the Count Basie Theatre in Red Bank, New Jersey. Smith was introduced by his wife Jennifer Schwalbach Smith and his daughter, Harley Quinn Smith. Kevin has said on his web board that they could not use the "Evening With.." moniker for this installment because it is being produced and released by a different studio, but got around it by subtitling it "A Threevening With Kevin Smith". The main feature on the DVD features 4 hours cut from the original 7 hour performance. Topics include the origin of Kevin's name, Kevin suffering from an anal fissure, as well as stories from acting in Manchild, Live Free or Die Hard, Catch and Release and shooting Clerks II. It is also revealed that because of his work on Live Free or Die Hard, Bruce Willis contacted him about working together; this eventually led to Cop Out. The DVD was released on October 21, 2008. Lest We Forget is a 1947 military documentary produced by the U.S. army and signal corps. Tornado Alley is a 2011 short documentary film written by Paul Novros Sean Casey and directed by Sean Casey. Fucking Different XXY is a 2014 documentary film directed by Kay Garnellen, Buck Angel, Mor Vital, Jasco Viefhues, Gwen Haworth, Sasha Wortzel, Felix Endara and J.Jackie Baier. Milice, film noir is a French documentary film from 1997. It was directed and written by Alain Ferrari, starring Emile Augonnet, Francoise Basch, and Michel Bouquet. The Stockholm Syndrome is a 2002 documentary short film written and directed by Carl Johan De Geer. Graffiti Verite 4: Basic Techniques for Creating Graffiti Art on Walls & Canvas is a 2003 documentary historical fiction family film written and directed by Bob Bryan. Suburban Limits is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Sara Oliveira and Ana Paula Oliveira. In the Shadow of the Water Tower is a 2013 short biographical documentary film written by Lewis Smithingham and Trevor Izzo and directed by Lewis Smithingham. In SUPER SIZE ME, filmmaker Morgan Spurlock unravels the American obesity epidemic by interviewing experts nationwide and by subjecting himself to a "McDonald's only" diet for thirty days straight. His Sundance award-winning feature is as entertaining as it is horrifying as it dives into corporate responsibility, nutritional education, school lunch programs and how we as a nation are eating ourselves to death."For 30 days, Morgan Spurlock consumed nothing but food from McDonald's, an experiment in bad living that frames a jaunty critique of junk gastronomy and corporate power. Like a thinner, less aggressive Michael Moore, the director talks to consumers, experts and food-industry flacks, weaving alarming statistics about rampant obesity with visits to the doctor and double-quarter-pounder-with-cheese combo meals. The film is an entertaining statement of the obvious, though its big questions - do corporations serve our need or enslave our bodies and soul?, are public health problems caused by capitalist rapacity or personal choice? - are not as simple as Mr. Spurlock would have us believe." - A. O. Scott, The New York Times Mory Want a Wife is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Baktash Abtin. Remix to Rio is a 2010 Canadian documentary depicting young people from Toronto, Canada and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil as they create community outreach projects aimed at rescuing their peers from lives of crime. This film follows Canada’s innovative youth outreach organization, The Remix Project as they travel to some of the most violent favelas in Rio de Janeiro and test their unique hip-hop outreach model on some of today’s most “unreachable” youth. Remix Project co-founders Gavin Sheppard and Drex Inkredible join forces with "Sandro", an Ex-drug lord turned activist and Soldiers Never More project founder "Farina" in hopes of constructing a recording studio for disadvantaged youth in the Favela known as “The Enchanted Land”. Gavin and Drex also bring four of their most hopeful students to Rio. The HUTUZ Hip-Hop festival, Latin America’s largest Hip-hop festival, is in full swing and sets the scene for these REMIX participants to test their skills. The culture shock the Remixers experience and the perspectives they gain change their perspectives on poverty and redefine their personal circumstances at home. Georgena Terry is a 2013 short documentary biography film directed by Amanda Zackem. Ari Ari the Korean Cinema is a 2011 documentary film directed by Heo Chul and Chung Ji Young. One: A Story of Love and Equality family drama documentary film directed by Becca Roth. The Mighty River is a 1993 animated short film directed by Frédéric Back. Greg Packer: Most Quoted Man In News is a 2013 documentary film that was directed by Andrew David Watson. When the World Break is a documentary film written by Hans Fjellestad, Jason Sallee and Joe Mundo, and directed by Hans Fjellestad. Heavy Load is a 2008 British documentary film directed by Jerry Rothwell. The documentary tells the story of Heavy Load, a British punk band composed of disabled musicians. The film captures the band over two years, as they record their first album and take their show to bigger venues, and has been described by Mark Kermode as 'a really, really fine music documentary'. All members met at Southdown Housing, a non-profit assisted-living community for people with psychiatric disabilities and learning disabilities. Speaking Our Peace is a 1985 documentary film written by Gwynne Basen, Gloria Demers, Bonnie Sherr Klein,Terre Nash and directed by Bonnie Sherr Klein & Terre Nash. Garden Isle is a 1973 short film which was the first short film made using the Omnimax or IMAX cinematographic process. It was directed by Roger Tilton. Garden Isle at the Internet Movie Database Shackleton's Antarctic Adventure is an IMAX film about the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition led by Ernest Shackleton between 1914 and 1917. Directed by George Butler, the film was released in February 2001 and was narrated by Kevin Spacey. It documents Shackleton's journey aboard the Endurance and was the follow-up to Butler's previous film, The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition. Playboy presents this documentary history of the pornographic movie, which traces onscreen sex from the early days of the silent films to today's shot-on-video lust epics. Buck Henry appears as host and narrator; interviewees include Hugh Hefner, Al Goldstein, David Friedman, Linda Lovelace, Marilyn Chambers, Russ Meyer, and John Wayne. Deepsouth is a 2012 documentary film directed by Lisa Biagiotti. The Fall of '55 is a documentary about the Boise homosexuality scandal, a witch-hunt targeted at homosexuals in 1955 that resulted in a number of arrests and prison terms ranging anywhere from six months to life in prison. The scandal began October 31, 1955 when a number of prominent Boise men were persecuted for alleged homosexual acts. The film covers the same subject matter as John Gerassi's book The Boys of Boise, although Seth Randal, the film's writer, director, and producer, says he completed five years of independent research on the topic. Some accounts of the incident claim that nearly 1,000 boys were seduced by a "ring" of men. A 1955 TIME magazine article said "Boiseans were shocked to learn that their city had sheltered a widespread homosexual underworld that involved some of Boise's most prominent men and had preyed on hundreds of teen-age boys for the past decade". The film is narrated by former Boise television anchor Claudia Weathermon. The film premiered on 10 June 2006 at Newfest in New York City, at the Idaho International Film Festival at Boise's Egyptian Theater on 30 September 2006, and at the Spokane International Film Festival on 4 February 2007. The Final Solution is a 2004 documentary directed by Rakesh Sharma about the 2002 communal Gujarat Riots that arose as a response to the Godhra Train Burning incident on February 27, 2002, where 58 Hindus were burnt alive on a train carriage. An official estimate states that 254 Hindus and more than 790 Muslims were killed during the riots, with 223 more missing. The documentary consists mostly of interviews, with both Muslims and Hindus, of multiple generations, and both sexes, with different views regarding the causes, justifications, and the actual events of the violence that occurred, as well as their prospects for the future. "From Ground Zero to Ground Zero is the story of Masuda Sultan, a 23 year old, Afghan-American woman who travels back to Kandahar, Afghanistan to see what has become of her country. Masuda is delighted to see the yoke of the Taliban lifted, but horrified to find out what happened to her family. Seeking refuge from the American bombing, a large number of her family escaped to the small village of Chowkar-karez, 60 miles north of Kandahar. On October 22, 2001 Chowkar-Karez was attacked by the American military. 41 civilians were killed. 19 of them were members of Masuda's family. Masuda who supports America's effort against terrorism wants to know why her family had to die in the desert." Quoting the synopsis from the 2003 Brooklyn International Film Festival site. Assassination of Russia is a 2002 documentary film that describes the September 1999 Russian apartment bombings as a terrorism act committed by Russian state security services. The film was created in 2001 by French producers Jean-Charles Deniau and Charles Gazelle. Yuri Felshtinsky and Alexander Litvinenko worked as consultants for the film; the film was made on the basis of their book Blowing Up Russia: Terror from Within. The French producers initially worked for Russian TV company NTV to expand their program "Sugar of Ryazan" and later to TV-6. When TV-6 channel was closed by Russian authorities, the film was 70% completed. The remaining funds were provided by Boris Berezovsky. Leader of party Liberal Russia, Sergei Yushenkov flew to the premier on March 5, 2002 in London, to announce that his party is going to distribute copies of the film around the country to demonstrate "how the secret services deceived Russian citizens". This film was broadcast by the main TV channels of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. Russian Deputy Yuli Rybakov brought a hundred copies to St. Petersburg, but the copies were confiscated at customs in violation of his parliamentary immunity. John Paul II Vol 4: 1996-1999: Towards the Third Millennium is a 2006 biographical documentary film. Laughing Behind Enemy Lines is a 2010 LGBT documentary short film directed by David C. Jones. Dansa als esperits is a Spanish 2009 documentary film. Land of Youth is a 1946 documentary and concert film written and directed by Aleksandr Andrievsky. "When Infamous street artist Ron English’s image of Abraham Lincoln and Barack Obama merged together gains national attention for being illegally pasted all over Boston, he decides to gather a crew of artists and musicians and take off across America, plastering the image wherever they can find an open wall. Along the way they meet up with counter culture heroes such as Shepard Fairey, Morgan Spurlock, and David Choe, and spread their subversive propaganda to America’s heartland on a grassroots campaign to get Barack Obama elected. Abraham Obama is a raw unfiltered look at the power of street art and offers a rare glimpse inside the insane lives of some the most prolific artists in America today. Internationally acclaimed" Quoting the description from the 2009 Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival site. Det sociala arvet is a 1993 documentary film written and directed by Stefan Jarl. Mademoiselle C is a 2013 documentary film directed by Fabien Constant. Passin' It On is a 1993 documentary film directed by Jon Valadez. Choice and Destiny is a 1993 film directed by Tsipi Reibenbach. Rebellion: The Litvinenko Case, distributed as Poisoned by Polonium is a 2007 Russian documentary film covering the death of ex-Russian spy and dissident, Alexander Litvinenko, who was assassinated in London, United Kingdom in 2006. It was directed by Russian filmmaker Andrei Nekrasov and written by Nekrasov and producer Olga Konskaya. Palomas 76 is a 1976 documentary film directed by Carlos Velo. River of Time is a 2012 Telly award winning film created for,Wyoming PBS. En attendant les hommes is a 2007 documentary film about women muralists in Oualata, Mauritania. In this town on the far edge of the Sahara desert, three women practice traditional painting, and decorate the walls of the town. In a society apparently dominated by tradition, religion and men, these women unreservedly express themselves and comment freely on the relationship between men and women. The Living City is a 1953 American short documentary film about Chicago, by Haskell Wexler and John Barnes. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. I Castelli dell'Emilia is a 1951 Italian film. The Man Who Made Angels Fly is a 2013 documentary film directed by Wiktoria Szymanska. The Horizons or Life at Louvres is a 2005 documentary film directed by Kornelijus Matuzevicius and Diana Matuzeviciene. If Not Now is a documentary film directed by Louis Haggart. Fritz Lang Interviewed by William Friedkin is a 1974 documentary film directed by William Friedkin. Lisetta Carmi. Un'Anima In Cammino is 2010 documentary/ biography film directed by Daniele Segre. John Tesh Live at Red Rocks is a 1995 music documentary. Those Who Walk Softly Die Without a Trace is 1992 biography, documentary film written and directed by Bernard Émond. El olvido de la memoria is a 1999 short documentary film written and directed by Iñaki Elizalde. Beijing 2008 is a 2010 documentary film directed by Lei Jianjun. Google Me is about a guy, Jim Killeen, who Googled himself and then went all over the world meeting others with his name. This documentary is broad sweeping look at life from seven different perspectives. The film contains touching stories of real life, set against an international background made up of Scotland, Ireland, Australia, New York, Denver, St. Louis and Los Angeles. You will find Google Me a richly exciting and satisfying ride. Lost Pictures - Lost Memory? is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Benjamin Geissler. Stanley Kubrick's Boxes is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jon Ronson about the film director Stanley Kubrick. Ronson's intent was not to create a biography of the filmmaker but rather to understand Kubrick by studying the director's vast personal collection of memorabilia related to his feature films. The documentary came about in 1998 when Ronson received a request from Kubrick's estate for a copy of a documentary Ronson made about the Holocaust. A year later, as Ronson was making plans to conduct a rare interview with the director, Kubrick suddenly died after completing work on his final film Eyes Wide Shut. To his surprise, Ronson was invited to Kubrick's house by his widow. When he arrived at the house he found that half the house was filled by over one thousand boxes, each containing snap shots, newspaper clippings, film out-takes, notes, and fan letters which the director used for research towards each of his films. 70 critics and filmmakers discuss cinema from the age old conflict between the artist and the observer, the creator and the critic. From 1998 to 2007, Kleber Mendonça Filho has collected points of view about this relationship in Brazil, USA and Europe, using his personal experience as both filmmaker and critic. CRITICO opens a window to an art which is more and more judged by the industry and which struggles to remain human in the way it is realized and observed. When I Stop Looking is a 2013 short documentary mystery film directed by Todd Herman. Escape from Affluenza is a 1998 PBS 56-minute documentary film produced as a sequel to the 1997 documentary Affluenza. While the original concentrates on affluenza--consumerism and materialism in modern society, the sequel focuses on how to avoid this. It looks at stories of how to reduce debt, stress, time-pressure, and possession-overload. The cast includes Wanda Urbanska as the host and Cecile Andrews, author of "Circle of Simplicity". Sieg im Westen is a 1940 Nazi propaganda film. It was produced by the Oberkommando des Heeres, the German Army High Command, rather than the Propaganda Ministry of Joseph Goebbels. Goebbels indeed sabotaged its release in minor ways, delaying its premiere and telling propagandists not to promote it. The prologue consists of the Nazi version of European history and the origins of World War II, and the rest deals with the Battle of France, a Blitzkrieg in the Low Countries and France. The movie was made largely from newsreel footage recut into a documentary. The programme provided states that it is to show the audacity of the German offensive and the superiority of German arms, required because they will not be permitted to live in peace. It did not give Hitler or the Nazi party a central role, thus ensuring its disfavor with Goebbels. The Nazi journal "Der deutsche Film" called Sieg im Westen "the greatest of all German newsreels." Unlike many other German propaganda films, Sieg im Westen does not belittle the enemy, instead admitting that the French soldiers fought gallantly. Short Message is a 2013 short film directed by Vardan Danielyan. In Search of Dracula is a 1975 documentary horror film written by Yvonne Floyd and directed by Calvin Floyd. Yes, there really was a Dracula. The legend of Count Dracula, the vampire who slept in a coffin by day and fed off the living by night, is based on a real person, Prince Vlad Tepes. The deeds of real men are often more disturbing than those of fictional characters. And so it is with Dracula, a Romanian prince who lived five centuries ago. Tells the personal story of Neda Agha-Soltan who became the iconic symbol of Iran's 2009 post-election protests, and explores the larger Iranian struggle. The Private Life Of Fenfen is a 2013 short drama documentary experimental film written and directed by Leslie Tai. Pell Grants: A Passion For Education is a 2013 short documentary film written by Steven Feinberg and Elyse Katz and directed by Steven Feinberg. Het is een schone dag geweest is a 1993 Dutch documentary film directed by Jos de Putter. GasHole is a 2008 documentary film about the history of oil prices and the future of alternative fuels which was released directly to DVD. The film details the dependency of United States on foreign supplies of oil. The documentary is directed by Scott Roberts and Jeremy Wagener and narrated by Peter Gallagher. A Sign Of The Times is a 2007 short film directed by Daisy Khamphakdy. A Fun Fair behind the Dikes In his trademark tongue-in-cheek style, director Michiel van Erp follows a Chinese tour bus' exploration into the daily distractions of people in the Netherlands. Focusing on the mechanics of the Dutch tourism industry and events from Gay Pride Amsterdam to an Elf Fantasy Fair, the film follows the organizers and key figures behind events and destinations. This includes the director of the Efteling theme park creating a new roller coaster, to a manager of an outlet store promoting his store with a chocolate bed. A look at how Dutch citizens spend their vacation and leisure time as seen through the eyes of Chinese tourists. There is nothing quite like this. Ilya and Emilia Kabakov: Enter Here is a documentary biographical film directed by Amei Wallach. The Death of Kevin Carter: Casualty of the Bang Bang Club, also known as The Life of Kevin Carter, is a 2004 American documentary short subject about the suicide of South African photojournalist Kevin Carter. The film was produced & directed by Dan Krauss. It describes how Carter, who won the Pulitzer Prize for a photograph of an emaciated African girl being stalked by a vulture, became depressed by the carnage he witnessed as a photographer in war-torn places. In addition, he was devastated by the death of Ken Oosterbroek, a close friend and colleague who was shot and killed while working in the township of Thokoza. On January 31, 2006 it was nominated for the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. Kalamandalam Ramankutty Nair is a 2005 documentary biographical film written and directed by Adoor Gopalakrishnan. "In nature, everything is birth, death, and rebirth, even when man is there to observe it. Just as she did in her 1996 documentary The Old Man and the Cottage, Swedish filmmaker Nina Hedenius records life as it silently but unstoppably passes by. In her earlier documentary, Hedenius filmed the daily routine of an old man named Ragnar. This time around, she records the sounds and movements on a farm under the clear northern light. Without adding a single word, not even from the people working on the farm, goats, cows and horses are born and the seasons go by. What we get to see is a perfect symbiosis of man and nature. The farmers have learned how they can live off the land, but the farm's small scale breathes respect for nature at the same time. The silence and the rhythm in which the daily activities pass by emanate that same respect. The milking of the cows, even if it's done by machines, scenes of animals and people eating, resting: the combined sounds and images are like a music composition that you only recognise if you listen very patiently." Quoting the program notes from the 2008 IDFA site. The Ice Pond is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Egil Pedersen. Alfred Hitchcock: More Than Just a Profile the 1930 film directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Those Days in Terezin is a 1997 documentary film written by Sibylle Schönemann and Lena Makarova and directed by Sibylle Schönemann. Fascist Legacy is a 1989 BBC documentary film about Italian war crimes during World War II. It consists of two parts. The first part itself consists of two sections and was aired on November 1, 1989, on BBC, under the title A Promise Fulfilled. Siamo Italiani (The Italians) is a 1964 documentary film from Switzerland, written and directed by Alexander J. Seiler; with writing credits by Rob Gnant and June Kovach. Acts of Men is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Kiko Goifman. A River Changes Course is a 2013 documentary by Kalyanee Mam. The film explores the damage rapid development has wrought in her native Cambodia on both a human and environmental level. The film premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival on January 21, 2013 and won the Grand Jury Prize for World Documentary. The film also received the Golden Gate Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 2013 San Francisco International Film Festival. World Mirror Cinema is a short documentary film directed by Gustav Deutsch. Taste Of Body is a 2012 drama documentary film written and directed by Wang Fan. Dream House by the Border is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Lyang Kim. Behind the Scenes of This Old House is a TV documentary directed by Russell Morash. We Fun is a 2009 musical documentary film directed by Matthew Robison. Rangili is a 1952 documentary film directed by Najam Naqvi. The Wages of Work is a 1978 short documentary film directed and written by David Wilson. The Meerkats, also known as Meerkats: The Movie, is a feature-length 2008 British wildlife fiction film which anthropomorphises the daily struggles of a clan of meerkats in the Kalahari Desert. It was produced by BBC Films and The Weinstein Company, and filmed by the award-winning BBC Natural History Unit. It is the debut directorial feature of James Honeyborne, previously a producer of natural history programmes for television. The worldwide premiere was held at the Dinard Film Festival, France in October 2008, expanding to a wide release the following week. The film was released in 2009, on 7 August in the UK. A US date has not yet been announced. This was dedicated to actor Paul Newman, who died in 2008, shortly before this movie was released. An Inconvenient Truth is a 2006 Academy Award winning documentary film directed by Davis Guggenheim about former United States Vice President Al Gore's campaign to educate citizens about global warming via a comprehensive slide show that, by his own estimate made in the film, he has given more than a thousand times. Premiering at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival and opening in New York City and Los Angeles on May 24, 2006, the documentary was a critical and box-office success, winning two Academy Awards for Best Documentary Feature and Best Original Song. The film grossed $24 million in the U.S. and $26 million in the foreign box office, becoming the ninth highest grossing documentary film to date in the United States. The idea to document his efforts came from producer Laurie David who saw his presentation at a town-hall meeting on global warming which coincided with the opening of The Day After Tomorrow. Laurie David was so inspired by Gore's slide show that she, with producer Lawrence Bender, met with Guggenheim to adapt the presentation into a film. Hamburg Damals - Die Jahre 1975-1979 is a 2007 documentary film directed by Christian Mangels. Embodies is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Hillary Bachelder. Sobre Viver is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Cláudia Alves. Super Speedway is a 1997 documentary racing film chronicling one man's quest to get his new Champ Car Lola chassis up to speed, and another's goal of rebuilding an old 1964 roadster once driven by the legendary Mario Andretti. The film was directed by renowned IMAX director Stephen Low and produced by Pietro Serapiglia. It was narrated by Paul Newman. It first premiered at IMAX theaters nationwide. Young Black Males: America's Promise or America's Problem is a documentary film directed by Shabaka Mu Ausar. Herdsmen of the Sun is a 1989 documentary film by Werner Herzog. The film explores the social rituals and cultural celebrations of the Saharan nomadic Wodaabe tribe. Particular focus is given to the Gerewol celebration, which features an elaborate male beauty contest to win wives. Although the film may be considered to be ethnographic, Herzog commented that: "[My films] are anthropological only in as much as they try to explore the human condition at this particular time on this planet. I do not make films using images only of clouds and trees, I work with human beings because the way they function in different cultural groups interests me. If that makes me an anthropologist then so be it." The opening shots of the film depicts a celebration of male beauty, showing males dancing in elaborate costume, accentuating their height and whites of their eyes and teeth to attract females, as we hear "Ave Maria" in the background. I'm a Porn Star is a 2013 biographical, documentary and comedy film written and directed by Charlie David. Madrid, The Shadow of a Dream is a 2007 film directed by Alejandro Andrade Pease. The Carbon Rush is a documentary film directed by Amy Miller. Reporting on The Times: The New York Times and The Holocaust is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Emily L. Harrold. Style Wars is a 1983 documentary on hip hop culture, directed by Tony Silver and produced in collaboration with Henry Chalfant. The film has an emphasis on graffiti, although bboying and rapping are covered to a lesser extent. The film was originally aired on PBS television in 1983, and was subsequently shown in several film festivals to much acclaim, including the Vancouver Film Festival. It also won the Grand Jury Prize: Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. Amadeu Antonio is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Balzer. Playboy Video Centerfold: Playmate of the Year Stacy Sanches is a 1996 documentary film directed by Scott Allen. System Error is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Guli Silberstein. Free Fall: Johanna K. is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Klaus Wildenhahn. Gipsies of the City is a 1981 film directed by Irmgard von zur Mühlen. Danshi Tatekawa is a documentary film directed by Takeshi Katô. O meu marido esta a negar is a 2007 documentary film about a play of the same name, written and directed by Rogério Manjate. The film and play both discuss HIV/AIDS issues. Manjate directed the award-winning short I Love You, also concerning HIV/AIDS, the same year. The film's title means "My Husband is in Denial". Kurt Gerron's Karussell is a 1998 documentary film directed by Ilona Ziok. Lyalik is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Ara Tchagharyan. Salma yoba is a 2005 documentary film. Ice Theatre of NY: Ensemble and Collaboration on Ice is a 2013 documentary film directed by Moira North. Rize is an American documentary movie starring Lil' C, Tommy Johnson, also known as Tommy the Clown, and Miss Prissy. The documentary exposes the new dance form known as krumping which originated in the early 1990s in Los Angeles. The film was written and directed by David LaChapelle. Working alongside LaChapelle were executive producers, Ishbel Whitaker, Barry Peele, Ellen Jacobson-Clarke, Starvos Merjos, and Rebecca Skinner. Rize was produced by Lions Gate Entertainment and released in January 2005, grossing $3.3 million at the box office. Pourquoi Israël is Shoah filmmaker Claude Lanzmann's first film. The documentary examines life in Israel twenty-five years after the birth of the state. Lanzmann spends time with, among others, German-Jewish émigrés, intellectuals, dock workers, police, prison inmates, and the newly arrived surveying life in the new homeland. The title of the film is often incorrectly given as a question "Why Israel?" however, Lanzmann intended it as an answer or an explanation from a collection of viewpoints. The film premiered just three days after the Yom Kippur War in Israel. International media attention was caused by an incident in Hamburg, Germany, where leftist groups violently prevented a showing of the movie in October 2009, claiming the movie took a one-sided zionist perspective. Diane Goes For You is a 2013 documentary film directed by Diane Rabreau. Last Fast Ride - The Life, Love And Death Of A Punk Goddess is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Lilly Scourtis Ayers. A Great New Star is a 1952 musical sponsored film starring Dinah Shore, with her singing "See the U.S.A. in Your Chevrolet". It starts off with her singing "It's a Most Unusual Day", and then shows an ephemeral film being made. The ending has her singing the Chevrolet jingle with shots of Chevrolet cars and America. It was made by the Jam Handy Organization. The last surviving native Americans on Long Island is the focus of The Lost Spirits. The film chronicles their struggles as an indigenous people to maintain their identity amidst relentless modernization and a heartless beauracracy. Barbers is a 2012 short, comedy, documentary and drama film written and directed by Guilherme Aguilar and Luiz Ferraz. American Mustang is a family western documentary film directed by Monty Miranda. The Store is a documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. Soulmates Never Die (Live in Paris 2003) is the first live DVD release by the band Placebo that was released mainstream and was made available worldwide. The DVD was released in Great Britain on 15 March 2004 and in the United States and Canada on 29 June 2004. It reached #33 in Germany. The Truth about tigers is a 40-minute wildlife documentary produced by award winning wildlife and conservation filmmaker, Shekar Dattatri. The film explains how the public can contribute towards saving the tiger. Two years in the making, the film combines footage shot by some of the world’s leading wildlife cinematographers with insight from experts such as tiger biologist, Dr. Ullas Karanth, of the Wildlife Conservation Society, and illegal wildlife trade specialist, Belinda Wright of the Wildlife Protection Society of India. The film shows a tiger’s life from birth to death, and illustrates how human activities impact its conservation. The film uses material from sources including the BBC, Icon Films, conservation organizations, individual filmmakers and photographers. Actor, Roshan Seth, provides the narration, and a British documentary composer, David Mitcham, contributed a large proportion of the music. Angelos’ Film is a 2001 historical drama documentary film directed by Peter Forgacs. Diary of a Tired Black Man is a 2008 independent film that combines elements of a comedy-drama with elements of a documentary film. It is the debut film of writer/director Tim Alexander. The history of Fleetwood Mac is one of incredible music, huge record sales, personal conflicts between band members, and a legacy that is revered throughout the music industry. This revealing documentary offers a candid look at the band throughout their amazing 30-year history. Louis Theroux: Miami Mega Jail is a British television documentary film presented by and featuring Louis Theroux. It is in two parts, with part one initially shown on 22 May 2011 and part two shown on 29 May 2011. The programme follows Theroux as he spends time in the Miami-Dade County jail system: the Pre-Trial Detention Center; Metro West Detention Center; Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center; and the Miami-Dade County Corrections and Rehabilitation Department Boot Camp Program. "ON COAL RIVER takes viewers on a gripping emotional journey into the Coal River Valley of West Virginia — a community surrounded by lush mountains and a looming toxic threat. The film follows a former coal miner and his neighbors in a David-and-Goliath struggle for the future of their valley, their children, and life as they know it. Ed Wiley is a former coal miner who once worked at a toxic waste facility that now threatens his granddaughter’s elementary school. When his local government refuses to act, Ed embarks on a quest to have the school relocated to safer ground. With insider knowledge and a sharp sense of right and wrong, Ed confronts his local school board, state government, and a notorious coal company — Massey Energy — for putting his granddaughter and his community at risk. Along the way, Ed is supported by his neighbors Bo Webb and Judy Bonds, who have their own problems with Massey Energy. Ex-marine Bo Webb retired to his childhood home only to discover that this once-idyllic valley is being transformed by a company practicing “mountaintop removal” – blowing up mountains to extract coal. Bo’s neighbor Judy Bonds was forced to leave her ancestral home when the same company opened a mine next door – sending dangerous black water down the creek where her grandson played. Together, Bo and Judy help Ed bring attention to the dangers at Marsh Fork Elementary, hoping that if they save the school, they can save the valley. Across the river, Maria Lambert recognizes a pattern in the unusual health problems plaguing her community. Following intuition, and what she describes as a mission from above, Maria gathers evidence suggesting the state’s largest mining company has contaminated her neighborhood’s water supply. Shot over a five year period, ON COAL RIVER follows the transformation of these four remarkable individuals as they fight for the valley they love and for future generations — making dramatic changes against all odds." Quoting the synopsis from the Official Site. The Making of the President: 1960 is a 1963 documentary directed by Mel Stuart. A Luz do Tom is a 2013 Brazilian documentary film directed by Nelson Pereira dos Santos, based on the book Antonio Carlos Jobim: um Homem Iluminado, written by Helena Jobim. The documentary follows the life and work of Antonio Carlos Jobim, better known as Tom Jobim. It discusses the relationship of the conductor and composer with women, including his sister, Helena Jobim, and his two wives, Teresa and Ana. An All Star Celebration Honoring Martin Luther King Jr. is a 1986 documentary music film directed by Marty Pasetta. Resolved is a 2007 documentary film concerning the world of high school policy debate. The film was written and directed by Greg Whiteley of New York Doll fame. The film captured the "Audience Award" title at its debut on June 23, 2007 at the Los Angeles Film Festival. The film was produced by One Potato Productions. The film made its television debut on HBO in the summer of 2008 and subsequently received 2 Emmy Nominations: one nomination for Best Documentary; the other for Editing for the 2009 Emmy Awards held in September, 2009. In July 2009 it was released on DVD by Image Entertainment. The N-Word is a 2004 documentary directed and written by Todd Larkins Williams. The movie, as the title may suggest, looks into the history and usage of the word nigger and its variations. How much do we know about the food we buy at our local supermarkets and serve to our families? Though our food appears the same as ever — a tomato still looks like a tomato — it has been radically transformed. In the Academy Award®-nominated blockbuster Food, Inc., producer-director Robert Kenner and investigative authors Eric Schlosser (Fast Food Nation) and Michael Pollan (The Omnivore’s Dilemma) lift the veil on the U.S. food industry, revealing surprising and eye-opening facts about what we eat, how it’s produced, who we have become as a nation and where we may go from here. (120:00) Dostoyevsky’s Travels is a 1992 documentary film directed by Pawel Pawlikowski. Held Hostage in Colombia is a 2003 war documentary directed by Jorge Enrique Botero, Victoria Bruce and Karin Hayes. In early March 2007 three Spanish parachute jumpers flew over Antarctica in wingsuits, a feat that nobody had achieved before. The only previous attempt, by a US team, ended in tragedy. The film follows the meticulous preparation of the flight from the design of the wingsuits to the final stages of the jump when the unpredictable weather conditions in Antarctica put the expedition on the verge of disaster. Beyond the adventure, this film captures a revealing story about one of the most primal human desires to feel the exhilarating freedom of birdlike flying. Freebird... The Movie is an in-depth look at Southern rock band, Lynyrd Skynyrd. Released on August 30, 1996, it is part documentary and part concert footage. WE WERE THERE is a documentary film directed by Joon-ki Park. A few months after the withdrawal of the American troops from Iraq a filmmaker decides to cross the country in a taxi. From the far north to extreme south passing through the cities that featured heavily in Iraq's recent dramatic history. It is a long and possibly dangerous journey through a war ravaged landscape. Le Temps d'un film is a 2007 film. The Given Word is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Juan Pablo Ruiz and Martín Masetti. Mix-Up is a 1986 documentary film directed by Françoise Romand. AC/DC: Let There Be Rock is a live concert motion picture featuring the Australian hard rock band AC/DC, released theatrically in September 1980 and on videotape the same year. It was filmed at the Pavillon de Paris in Paris, France on 9 December 1979, and also contains interviews with members of the band, including lead vocalist Bon Scott, who died two months after filming. The concert film was re-released on a Blu-ray/DVD double pack along with a collector's tin, concert pictures, a souvenir guitar pick, and a 32 page booklet, or just as Blu-ray or DVD individual sets on 7 June 2011. Only 90,000 of the collectors tins were made, and each labeled with a number out of 90,000 on the base of the tin. Though it shares a name with AC/DC's fourth studio album, Let There Be Rock, the movie also includes live versions of songs from T.N.T., Powerage, and Highway to Hell. The movie's poster and videotape package featured similar cover art to that used on the most-widely distributed editions of the Let There Be Rock album. In 1997, an expanded audio recording of this concert was released on CD as Let There Be Rock: The Movie – Live in Paris, on discs 2-3 of the Bonfire box set. Change Over Time is a 2013 animated documentary film written and directed by Ewan Duarte. "A portrait of the artist known simply as Trimpin, a sonic experimenter, a combination of inventor, engineer and composer. The artist known simply as Trimpin is a sonic experimenter, a combination of inventor, engineer and composer, who builds stunning installations, such as a mountain of self-tuning, automatic electric guitars or a perpetual motion machine. Originally from Germany's Black Forest region, as a young boy he became obsessed with Harper's Electricity Book for Boys, and was drawn to America when he discovered he would have access to more material (that is, junk) which he could use in his creations. He shuns loudspeakers and recording equipment, and is deeply cynical about the commercial art world, refusing to put a price on his work, so it has only been seen and heard in select galleries, museums and concert venues. Filmmaker Peter Esmonde followed this brilliant eccentric over a two-year period, taking in an attempt to convert earthquake data into music and a lively collaboration with the Kronos Quartet that involves toy instruments and some fraught discussions, emerging with this insightful, exultant documentary portrait, celebrating the man, his life, and his creative process." Quoting Michael Hayden The Spanish Earth is a 1937 propaganda film made during the Spanish Civil War in support of the democratically elected Republicans, whose forces included a wide range of the political left, communists, socialists, anarchists, centrists, and liberalist elements. The film was directed by Joris Ivens, written by John Dos Passos and Ernest Hemingway, narrated by Orson Welles, with music composed by Marc Blitzstein and Virgil Thomson. Over Canada: An Aerial Adventure is a 1999 documentary film directed by Gary McCartie. Drogi is the 2012 documentary film directed by Małgorzata Ruszkiewicz. Sifuna Okwethu is a documentary film about loss, resistance, identity and the elusiveness of justice as experienced by the Ndolilas, a South African family. The family’s land was taken by the apartheid government in the 1970s without compensation, and ever since then they have been on a quest to get it back. Live on the Sunset Strip is a comedy album by Richard Pryor. Recorded in 1982, the film was the most financially lucrative of the comedian's concert films. The material includes Pryor's frank discussion of his drug addiction and of the June 9, 1980 night that he caught on fire while freebasing cocaine. The album won a Grammy for Best Comedy Recording in 1982. You Are Such a Fool is a documentary film directed by Kang Seong-ok. Beijing Besieged by Waste is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jiuliang Wang. Voices From The Front is a 1991 film directed by David Meieran, Robyn Hutt and Sandra Elgear. Globe Trekker: Turkey is an episode of adventure tourism television series Globe Trekker The Black Sabbath Story Vol. 2 - 1978-1992 is a documentary video by heavy metal band Black Sabbath. It is the follow-up to The Black Sabbath Story Vol. 1 - 1970-1978, and discusses the line-up changes Black Sabbath experienced during the period between 1978 and 1992. I'm a Fucking Panther is a 2014 drama documentary film written and directed by Jennifer Jerez, Leo Palmestål and Anders Rundberg. The Hand of the Butterfly is a 2010 documentary film directed by Emmanuelle Demoris. From Mambo to Hip Hop is a 2006 TV Documentary written by Diane Bardinet and directed by Henry Chalfant. Displaced Perssons is a 2013 drama, family, biographical and documentary film written by Åsa Blanck and directed by Åsa Blanck and Johan Palmgren. Indelible: The Case Against Jeffrey Womack is a 2012 documentary film directed by Demetria Kalodimos. Harsh Beauty is a 2005 documentary bollywood film directed by Alessandra Zeka The American Nightmare is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Adam Simon. Brooklyn Bridge is a documentary film on the history of the Brooklyn Bridge. It was produced by Ken Burns in 1981. The film included interviews with personalities such as writer Arthur Miller. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Documentary Feature. It was narrated by historian David McCullough. World Without Sun is a 1964 French documentary film directed by Jacques-Yves Cousteau. The film was Cousteau's second to win an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, following The Silent World in 1956. Karen Blixen - Behind Her Mask is a 2011 documentary film directed by Morten Henriksen. Threshold: The Blue Angels Experience is a 1975 American film. It features Leslie Nielsen as the narrator. This movie is about the true-life adventures of the six men, members of the United States Navy aerobatic team Blue Angels, who show almost super-human qualities in maneuvering aircraft in the air. The Blue Angels are world famous for flying the F-4 Phantom, and while doing so performing breathtaking maneuvers. The film is about what these men go through every day - the real drama, hardship, and effort these people must endure. Teta, Alf Marra is a documentary film about a feisty Beiruti grandmother. The 50-minute film was produced in 2010 as a UAE/Qatar/Lebanon co-production with the financial support of the Doha Film Institute and Screen Institute Beirut. The film was produced by Veritas Films. It was the first film to be released by a company based in Twofour54, Abu Dhabi’s media content creation freezone. “Teta, Alf Marra” achieved several ‘firsts’ for the regional filmmaking industry. It was the first locally-produced documentary to show in cinemas in the UAE and secure regional distribution. It was also the first documentary produced in the GCC to qualify for Academy Awards qualification, with theatrical runs in Los Angeles and New York City. Ulster-born movie director Brian Desmond Hurst's homeland movie A Letter from Ulster saw Hurst and lifelong friends Terence Young and his fellow Ulsterman and Assistant Director William MacQuitty creating a film promoting a sense of community between the people of Northern Ireland and over one hundred thousand troops from the USA based in Northern Ireland at the time. Hurst went on to become Northern Ireland's greatest film director and Young went on to direct the early Bond movies Dr. No, From Russia With Love and Thunderball. William MacQuitty went on to direct the definitive Titanic film A Night to Remember. In 1942 tensions between the US troops and the local population were stirred up by propaganda from German spies in Dublin. Hurst's brief was simple- to make a documentary to show that everyone was getting along fine. Brian McIlroy in Chapter 3 of Re-viewing British Cinema 1900 - 1992: Essays and Interviews explained that "Hurst was able to persuade one Catholic and one Protestant soldier to write letters home, explaining their impressions of their stay. Black Tar Heroin: The Dark End of the Street is a 1999 documentary directed by Steven Okazaki. Filmed from 1995 to 1998 in the Tenderloin, San Francisco, California, the documentary describes the lives of heroin addicts. Hendrix 70: Live at Woodstock is a music documentary film directed by Bob Smeaton. Tar Wars is a 2013 Short Documentary film written and directed by Emily de Moor. A look at the events leading up to and including the legendary March 1971 bout between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier. The film also looks at the political and social factors that helped to make this fight more than just an ordinary boxing match between two of the greatest heavyweight champions that ever lived as Ali was a symbol for liberals, militant blacks and hippies and Frazier was a symbol for the more conservative elements for society. We Are the Music is a 1964 documentary film written and directed by Rogelio Paris. Go Ganges! is a 2012 documentary film written by Josh Thomas and J.J. Kelley and directed by Ben Gottfried, Josh Thomas and J.J. Kelley. Keep Dancing is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Greg Vanderveer. Finding Kind is a 2011 American documentary film directed by Lauren Parsekian. It follows two friends traveling across America exploring the topic of how women can be mean to other women. In May 2011, filmmakers Lauren Parsekian and Molly Stroud went on a tour of the U.S., showing the documentary to school students and encouraging them to fill out apology cards for someone they've bullied or to write descriptions of how they themselves have experienced bullying. Off the Grid: Life on the Mesa is a 2007 documentary written and directed by Jeremy Stulberg and Randy Stulberg. The film documents a loose-knit desert community in "the Mesa," five miles from the Rio Grande and 25 miles from the nearest town. The film was a 2007 entrant into the Slamdance Film Festival for Documentary Competition Features, and it has aired on The Sundance Channel. Neither Cops Nor Blacks Nor Whites is a 2002 film written by Claude Muret and directed by Ursula Meier. Rabbit Fever is a 2009 feature-length documentary film directed by Amy Do, about the competition at the 2005 National Convention of the American Rabbit Breeders' Association, the largest assemblage of rabbits in the world. The film has found support from, among others, the Ignatz Award-winning artist Jeffrey Brown, who illustrated the movie poster. It was shown at the 8th San Francisco Documentary Film Festival in October 2009 as a work-in-progress. The final work officially premiered in 2010. Oma Bella is a 2012 documentary, family drama and historical film directed by Alexa Karolinski. Tunisian Victory is an Anglo-American propaganda film about the victories in the North Africa Campaign. The film follows both armies from the planning of Operation Torch / Operation Acrobat to the liberation of Tunis. Interspersed in the pure documentary format are the narrative voices of supposed American and British soldiers, recounting their experience in the campaign. The British and American talk separately until the end of the film when they have a dialogue, agree to co-operate after the end of the war, with the other Allied nations to create a more just and peaceful post-war order. The film was intended as a follow-up to the successful British documentary film Desert Victory. Frederic Krome's article "Tunisian Victory" and Anglo-American Film Propaganda in World War II from The Historian details the acrimony between the British and US film makers on the project. Most of the actual American combat footage taken during Operation Torch was destroyed when the ship carrying it was sunk, requiring many "battle scenes" to be reshot in U.S. by director John Huston. Lesbiana: A Parallel Revolution is a 2012 documentary film directed and written by Myriam Fougère. Chez Schwartz takes us inside a year in the life of Schwartz's Deli, the unique 83-year-old landmark on Montreal's historic Main - the Boulevard St. Laurent. Famous worldwide for its smoked meat sandwiches, Schwartz's Deli is also home to a fascinating cast of characters.Filmed through changing seasons, from the quiet of early morning preparation to the frenetic bustle of packed lunch times and never ending line-ups, to the more relaxed ambience late at night - Chez Schwartz is an evocative, cinematic portrait of a small but spunky deli full of charm and the drama of human life.Through observational vignettes, we come to know the men of Schwartz's Deli - Frank, Johnny, Alex and others: the waiters and busboys, meat cutters and grill men who have become fixtures of the deli - some for as long as 40 years. Most are immigrants from Portugal, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and Asia. While they serve generously stacked smoked meat sandwiches, fries, pickles and cherry colas to an array of local and international patrons, we discover how a legendary institution transforms their lives.We also meet another group of men - Ryan, Herman, and Adrian: the panhandlers who have stationed themselves at the front entrance on the Main for the past 15 years and earn their livelihood from the deli's patrons.As these stories interweave, we become immersed in the restaurant's culture and daily rituals. Lush and sensual cinematography follows the daily preparation and consumption of spiced smoked meat and condiments. Our camera moves between privileged revelations of character and simple gastronomy as we capture the magic of a classic "hole in the wall" packed with atmosphere and dynamism. Blackwood is a 1976 Canadian short documentary film about Newfoundland artist David Blackwood, directed by Tony Ianzelo and Andy Thomson. Narration is provided by Gordon Pinsent. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Love Lockdown is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Nadia Hallgren. A look inside the La Modelo prison in Bogota. Colombia. Called a ""model"" prison by Colombian officials the prison in reality is controlled more by the prisoners, than the guards. With 5000 prisoners for 2400 spots, and not more than 150 security guards assigned to the prison. The prison is awash in violence, and drugs. Last year, 162 prisoners were killed there. The prison is controlled by three criminal groups: members of the guerrilla movement, paramilitary forces, and cocaine traffickers. They have broken the prison up into three different territories and each group has it's own security forces, defending its own territory. La Pasión del Prado is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Juan Carlos González Asenjo and José Morillas Cantero. How to build a mobile house is a documentary film directed by Takayoshi Honda. Reclaiming Their Voice: The Native American Vote in New Mexico is a 2009 documentary film directed by filmmaker, Dorothy Fadiman, which documents ways in which Native Americans have been disenfranchised over centuries, in particular in voting representation. It chronicles the Laguna Pueblo tribe of New Mexico in their 2004 groundbreaking voter registration drive and the challenges they faced once Laguna voters arrived at the polls. The film also shows the Sacred Alliance for Grassroots Equality's fight to preserve parts of the sacred Petroglyph National Monument. The film is narrated by Peter Coyote and features interviews with members of the local Laguna community, including New Mexico House Representative, W. Ken Martinez. Robin H. Levin, the Community Librarian of the Fort Washakie School in Wyoming, said of the film: "Emotions run deep when viewing this insightful political documentary. The story blends sincere efforts to achieve political clout with unfortunate results that, somehow, do not shut down the hopes of Native voters in New Mexico." Bookin' is a 2013 short documentary musical film directed by John Kirkscey. A Ballet Dialogue is a 2012 short drama documentary film written and directed by Filipe Matzembacher and Marcio Reolon. The Skin I'm In is a 2012 autobiographical documentary film that was produced, directed, shot, and edited by American filmmaker, scholar, and professor Broderick Fox. The film had its world premiere at the 2012 Byron Bay Film Festival and had its United States premiere at the Arizona International Film Festival, where it was awarded a Special Jury Award for Best Personal Filmmaking. The Skin I'm In will be released for stream and download on October 1, 2013 through The Orchard. American Losers is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Ada Bligaard Søby. Diamonds in a Vegetable Garden is a 1992 Documentary film written and directed by Nilita Vachani. Kiss and Tell: The History of Black Romance in Movie is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Darryl Pitts. Actores Secundarios is a 2004 documentary film written by Jorge Leiva, Pachi Bustos and René Varas and directed by Jorge Leiva and Pachi Bustos. The Elusive English Organ is a documentary film co-written and presented by the organist Daniel Moult and directed by Will Fraser. It is the only film to trace the development of the English pipe organ from 1550 to 1830, discovering why so few pre-1830 English organs survive and to what extent it is possible to perform repertoire written during this period on instruments from the composers’ times. Locations include the Dallam organs at Lanvellec and Ploujean, Adlington Hall, St Botolph's Aldgate and St James Bermondsey. The film was produced by Fugue State Films and released in 2010 with an accompanying CD. The CD, which is of longer duration than the film, contains recordings by Daniel Moult of music by William Byrd, Thomas Tomkins, John Blow, Henry Purcell, George Frideric Handel, John Stanley and Samuel Wesley. Reviews include: "Will Fraser’s beautifully made organ-related films are a fascinating development in the integration of the organ culture into the wider artistic world. This film tackles a tricky subject with considerable aplomb...****" Choir & Organ magazine. The Samba That Lives Within Me is a 2010 documentary film written by Georgia Guerra-Peixe and Ticha Godoy and directed by Georgia Guerra-Peixe. In the 1990's, street skateboarding was on the rise, it even overshadowed the once dominant type of skateboarding called "vert" - as the preferred style. As street skating was quickly progressing, so was the small town Wasilla Alaska. By some statistics during this time frame, Wasilla was the fastest growing city in the United States. This movie tries to capture the surge of skateboarders that mirrored the growth of this frontier city during the 1990's. Virus Called The Blues was a 30 minute documentary spoof based on a day in the life of blues & jazz guitarist/songwriter Billy Jenkins and his band The Blues Collective. The documentary was produced, directed by Craig Duncan who met Billy on the set of the BBC Two music series 'Jazz 606' in the mid nineties. It features serious interviews and spoof action, plus actual performance from the band at The Blue Elephant Theatre, Camberwell, South-east London. Also visible in the audience is stand up comedian Stewart Lee, a long-time friend of Jenkins. Wildlife conservationist Paula Del Guidice travels to the wilds of South Africa to visit the world's best trackers in this episode of The National Wildlife Federation's series, which explores wildlife heroes and their habitats. Lauren Hutton narrates this extraordinary story about the Kalahari's indigenous San people, who work closely with conservationists to record their vast knowledge of animal behavior and preserve Africa's wildlife. Rehearsals is a 2004 documentary film directed by Michal Leszczylowski. Kumu Hina is a 2014 biographical documentary film directed by Dean Hamer and Joe Wilson. New Gift is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Supriyo Sen. But I'm a Genderqueer is a 2011 short documentary experimental film written by Lauren Soldano and directed by Lauren Soldano and Zara Sedore-Mallin. I Dream of Wires is a documentary music film directed by Robert Fantinatto. July, 1944. As WWII raged on, a group of conspirators, led by Claus von Stauffenberg, plotted to assassinate Hitler and end his reign of terror. The portrait of an incredible diver through a dozen stories and four seasons... The film follows the diver Serge Dumont, to an unknown world: the underwater environments of the Rhine and its tributaries. The Way Things Go is a 1987 art film by the Swiss artist duo Peter Fischli and David Weiss. It documents a long causal chain assembled of everyday objects, resembling a Rube Goldberg machine. Mush-Room is a docu-comedy film directed by Tom Shinan and Niv Singer. This Old Cub is a documentary film which was released in 2004. The film is centered on former Chicago Cubs third baseman Ron Santo and both his playing days and his battle against diabetes. The film was written, co-produced, and directed by Santo's son Jeff. It is often mentioned during Cub game broadcasts by Pat Hughes, who was Santo's partner in the WGN Radio booth. The film was a gift from Jeff to his father as a part of the "Ron Santo Day" celebration that season after Santo had both his legs amputated and had just missed induction into the MLB Hall of Fame a few months earlier. A portion of all proceeds from the release of This Old Cub are donated to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. The film has raised over a half-million dollars for the JDRF. Cub shortstop Ernie Banks, Gary Sinise, Bill Murray, former Chicago Bears linebacker Doug Buffone, and many others are interviewed in the film, which is narrated by actor Joe Mantegna. The documentary inspired an Arizona teacher and lifelong Cub fan named Bill Holden to engage a 2100-mile walk from Arizona to Wrigley Field to raise funds for the JDRF. Galumphing is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Kamila Jozefowicz. Carry Over is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Ryan Hopkinson. Iitatemura: hôshanô to kison is a documentary film directed by Toshikuni Doi. Return to Kandahar is a 2003 documentary film directed by Paul Jay and Nelofer Pazira. Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg is a 2009 documentary film on the broadcast career of Gertrude Berg and her radio and television serials, The Goldbergs. Aviva Kempner directed the film, interviewing family members of Berg, cast members of the Goldbergs and historians of radio and television. She also includes interview statements by non-celebrities, and celebrities, including All Things Considered anchor Susan Stamberg, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, television sitcom producer Norman Lear and Mary Tyler Moore Show actor Ed Asner. The film follows Berg's early years of marriage, her short period in New Orleans, her move to New York City, to her work in the radio and television renditions of The Goldbergs. The film devotes attention to the role of The Goldbergs in helping to present a congenial image of a striving Jewish family to the broader American public, and the tremendous popularity that the radio and television shows experienced. Stamberg deems Berg, "the Oprah of her day." Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg addresses developments contemporaneous with the years of The Goldbergs, Kristallnacht, the American Nazi German-American Bund and right-wing radio lecturer Father Coughlin. A Litany For Survival: the Life and Work of Audre Lorde is a 1995 documentary film directed by Ada Gay Griffin and Michelle Parkerson. Cabo Pulmo is a 2013 documentary film written by Manuel Mendieta and directed by Manuel Mendieta and Juan Pablo Maturana. Sable is a 1982 documentary film written and directed by Velu Viswanandhan. Arsy-Versy is a 2010 documentary/short/biography film directed by Miro Remo. A Tour of the White House with Mrs. John F. Kennedy was a special program that aired on CBS and NBC. While You Were Gone is a 2011 documentary, drama and short film directed by Frida Kempff. The deeply personal values of a gay minister and a religious-right family man collide when they agree to exchange lives to debate same-sex marriage in a fascinating television documentary experiment. From conservative Alberta beef country, to the heart of Vancouver’s gay community; these men move into each others homes and lives and attempt to hang on to their belief systems while facing off with the opposing social networks. Age Is... is a 2012 documentary film directed by Stephen Dwoskin. Chisholm `72: Unbought Unbossed is a PBS P.O.V. documentary about Shirley Chisholm. Miwa: A Japanese Icon is a 2010 documentary film directed and written by Pascal-Alex Vincent. Mattanja Joy is a 2013 biographical documentary film written and directed by Ellen van Kempen. The Roper is a 2012 short documentary directed by Ewan McNicol and Anna Sandilands. Lizbeth: A Victorian Nightmare is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Ricardo Rebelo. Moana is a 1926 documentary film, the first docufiction in the history of cinema, directed by Robert J. Flaherty, the creator of Nanook of the North. Moana was filmed in Samoa in the villages of Safune on the island of Savai'i. The name of the lead male character, moana means 'deep water' in the Samoan language. In making the film, Flaherty lived with his wife and children in Samoa for more than a year. Flaherty arrived in Samoa in April 1923 and stayed until December 1924, with the film being completed in December 1925. Along with Flaherty, the Portuguese director José Leitão de Barros is one of the first filmmakers to explore docufiction and ethnofiction as forms of dramatic narrative: Maria do Mar is the second one. Trying to get Flaherty to repeat the success of Nanook, Paramount Pictures sent Flaherty to Samoa to capture the traditional life of the Polynesians on film. Flaherty took both a regular movie camera and a Prizmacolor camera, hoping to film some footage in that color process, but the Prizmacolor camera malfunctioned. Josh Asen decided to film hip hop in Morocco with his friend Jennifer Needle. While interviewing Moroccan hip hop artists, they told him that what they needed to promote their music are concerts. Asen managed to get the U.S. Embassy and Coca-Cola to sponsor a music festival. Groups of musicians started the country's first hip hop tour in three Moroccan cities - Meknes, Marrakesh, and Casablanca. The three concerts brought in thousands of audience members. The film ended up as a 2007 documentary about the musicians' struggles and what it is like to rap in a Muslim country. The documentary mainly focuses on DJ Key, H-Kayne, Bigg, Fatima, and the hip hop group Fnaire. Here's Johnny is a 2008 documentary film about John Hinckleton battle with Multiple Sclerosis. It was produced by Animal Monday and launched at the Science Museum on January 30 2008, followed by its world première at the South by Southwest film festival in Austin, Texas. It got its television debut on More4 on February 17, 2009. The film took over 5 years to make and documents Hinckleton's brave and often humorous battle against MS. The film was favourably reviewed by the British Medical Journal and in 2008 won two Grierson Awards for "Best Newcomer" and "Best Arts Documentary". Jean Cocteau—Self Portrait of a Man Unknown is a 1985 documentary film directed by Edgardo Cozarinsky. Cafeteria Man: Memphis Schools Makeover is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Richard Chisolm. To the Devil is a 2011 short film written and directed by Claire Denis. Half Sour is a 2013 short drama biographical documentary film written by Jonathan Mann and directed by Sean McGing and Mary Anne Rothberg. This fascinating documentary explores the manner in which Hollywood has adapted stories from the Bible for the silver screen. Utilizing film clips, cast interviews, and behind-the-scenes footage, THE BIBLE ACCORDING TO HOLLYWOOD celebrates the golden age of big-budget Bible epics such as BEN HUR, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS, SAMSON AND DELILAH, KING OF KINGS, DAVID AND BATHSHEBA, and many more. Kazuya: The World's Most Unsuccessful Musician is a documentary, biography and music film directed by Hiromi Tamura. The 16th Man is a documentary film directed by Cliff Bestall that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. On est au coton is a documentary film directed by Denys Arcand in 1970, about the conditions of workers in the textile industry in Quebec. The Obama Deception: The Mask Comes Off, or The Obama Deception, is an American political conspiracy theory film written and directed by radio talk show host and filmmaker Alex Jones. The film was released on March 12, 2009 and distributed by Alex Jones Productions. Inside a Writer's Mind: A Conversation with Akiva Goldsman is a 2002 short documentary film. Team Taliban is a 2009 film directed by Benjamin Kegan. Cadaver is a 2012 short animation, adventure, drama and romance film written and directed by Jonah D. Ansell. My War is a 1989 film directed by Harriet Eder and Thomas Kufus. Rig Move is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Don Higgins. Territorio de Fronteras is a 2008 documentary film directed by Guido Brevis. Violated Letters is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Maciej J. Drygas. Provenance is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Amie Siegel. Facing Climate Change: Plateau Tribes is 2012 short documentary film. Print the Legend is a 2014 documentary film and Netflix Original focused on the 3D printing revolution. It delves into the growth of the 3D printing industry, with focus on companies MakerBot, Formlabs, Stratasys, and 3D Systems, as well as figures of controversy in the industry such as Cody Wilson. The title of the film comes from the denouement of the film The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. E' Stato Morto Un Ragazzo. Federico Aldrovandi Che Una Notte Incontro' La Polizia is a film directed by Filippo Vendemmiati. Here We Are is a 2005 documentary film written by Jaroslav Vojtek and Marek Lescák, and directed by Jaroslav Vojtek. Lost in the Amazon: Col. Percy Fawcett is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Peter von Puttkamer. Budrus is a 2009 Israeli/Palestinian/American documentary film directed by Julia Bacha, produced by Ronit Avni, Rula Salameh, and Julia Bacha, and with a screenplay by Bacha. The film is about non-violent demonstrations conducted by the residents of Budrus during the early 2000s to protest against the building of the Israeli West Bank barrier inside of the village. Budrus debuted on the festival circuit at the Dubai International Film Festival on December 13, 2009. Its theatrical release was on September 24, 2010, in the UK. and on October 8, 2010, in the United States. From the world's first roller coaster to freak shows, amazing displays of modern machinery, hot dogs and more, "American Experience" chronicles Coney Island's rich history through newsreel footage, archival photography and interviews. This uncut version of the program also includes quote-of-the-day readings by Eli Wallach, Frances Sternhagen, George Plimpton, Judd Hirsch, Lois Smith, Vincent Gardenia, Jerry Orbach, and others. The War on Drugs is a film documentary on the War on Drugs. It shows how the War on Drugs is being fought on various fronts: In Colombia the film follows the efforts to eradicate the coca and poppy plants under Plan Colombia. In the United States the cases of Richard Paey and Sharanda Jones illustrate the effects for individuals and society. Above all hovers the Drug Enforcement Administration. The films first public screening was on March 20, 2007 at the Diagonale film festival in Graz, Austria. It was theatrically released in Austria on October 12, 2007 and in Spain on January 17, 2008. The film was also immediately released on the Internet via doc-air, an Internet download platform which became part of DOC Alliance in 2009. The War on Drugs is the second film from Parallel Universe. Diego l'interdite is a Mauritian 2002 documentary film directed by David Constantin. The Lion Roars Again is a short film that documents an event that was hosted by Metro–Goldwyn–Mayer. The event was the International Press Conclave of 1975. The film was shot in a span of a couple days and was used as a preview of upcoming MGM movies. The film was narrated by Wayne Thomas. Seven Signs is a film directed by JD Wilkes. Life and Debt is a 2001 American documentary film directed by Stephanie Black. It examines the economic and social situation in Jamaica, and specifically the impact thereon of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank's globalization policies. Its starting point is the essay A Small Place by Jamaica Kincaid. These loans were conditional on structural adjustment policies, which required Jamaica to enact major economic reforms, including trade liberalization, privatization, and deregulation. However, the reforms were not successful; the film claims the reforms left Jamaica with $4.6 billion in debt. The film blames the World Bank and the IMF for causing this situation. The film features a number of interviews with former Jamaican Prime Minister Michael Manley in which he critiques the system of International Financial Institution loans. He is particularly critical of required structural adjustments as an attack on the sovereignty of many former colonial nations and suggests the system is akin to imperialism or neocolonialism. Fire and Ice: The Winter War of Finland and Russia is a documentary film, produced and directed by Ben Strout. The documentary shows how the Finnish–Russian Winter War of 1939 influenced World War II and how Finland mobilized against the world’s largest military power. It was selected as the best documentary at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film Festival in 2006. Ben Strout received an Emmy as Director of Fire and Ice from the Lower Great Lakes Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in 2007. In 2005 Strout was recognized by The New York Times as a Critics Pick Director for "Fire and Ice", as well, editor Kurt Poole received the New York Times recognition as Critics Pick Editor. Mohor is a 1990 documentary film directed by Gautam Ghosh. Fish-i: Africa is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Charlotte Smith. Age of Champions is a documentary film directed by Christopher Rufo. Santiago Files, directed by Cetywa Powell, is a documentary film about Salvador Allende's topple from Chile's unstable government and the players in his downfall: the CIA, Chile's military, and Allende himself. Malcolm McDowell narrates the film. The film premiered in September 2011. The documentary is in the permanent collection of the American Documentary Film Festival's archives, housed at the Rancho Mirage Library in Palm Springs. La véritable histoire d'Artaud le momo is a 1994 documentary film directed by Gérard Mordillat and Jérôme Prieur. The Tijuana Project is a 2009 documentary film directed by John Sheedy. Blitz Attack: The Andrea Hines Story, Part I and Blitz Attack: The Andrea Hines Story, Part II - Revelations are documentary films from Permanent Productions, Inc., written and directed by Constance L. Jackson. The films feature the family of Andrea Hines and citizens of Holtville, CA. Rise is a 2010 documentary film written by Maggie Monteith and directed by Lisa Lax and Nancy Stern Winters. Demolition Of The Hatch Show Print Building is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Jim Sherraden. Dad or A Life is 2011 documentary written by Sandra Van Slooten, directed by Sandra Van Slooten and Volker Maria Engel. Elvis: Memories of the King is a 2007 documentary film. In Search of Peace is a 2001 documentary film directed by Richard Trank. Chronicle of Oldrich S. is a 2011 animated documentary short film written by Rudolf Smid and Jana Svermova and directed by Rudolf Smid. Four Horsemen is a 2012 British film pamphlet directed by Ross Ashcroft. The film criticises the system of fractional reserve banking, debt-based economy and political lobbying by banks, which it regards as a serious threat to Western civilisation. It criticises the War on Terror, which it maintains is not fought to eliminate al-Qaeda and other militant organizations, but to create larger debt to the banks. As an alternative, the film promotes a return to classical economics and the gold standard. Among those interviewed are Joseph Stiglitz, former chief economist at the World Bank; Noam Chomsky, linguistics professor; John Perkins, author of Confessions of an Economic Hit Man; Herman Daly, economy professor; and Max Keiser, TV host and former trader. The film was released theatrically in the United Kingdom on 14 March 2012. The Music Lesson is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Andrzej Mankowski. A Tale of Two Islands is a 2012 two-channel-video installation written and directed by Steffen Köhn and Paola Calvo. A Portrait of St. Louis at 250 Years is a documentary film directed by Eric Wilkinson. A Personal History of the Australian Surf: Being the Confessions of a Straight Poofter is a 1981 Australian documentary. One Step Ahead is a 2012 biographical documentary film written and directed by Dimitris Athiridis. Percy Schmeiser: David vs Monsanto is a documentary thriller film directed by Bertram Verhaag. Wild Japan is a documentary film. Cirque du Soleil: Lovesick is a 2008 documentary, family television movie. Leaving Home is a full-length documentary film on the Indian music band Indian Ocean, directed by Jaideep Varma. The film was shot in 2006 and edited in 2007/8. It made history in 2010 by becoming the first documentary film in the history of Indian cinema to release nationally in theatres. Besides travelling to a few film festivals in India and abroad, it was the opening film at the Goa International Film Festival in November 2010 and won the National Film Award in 2011. The film was produced by Cartwheel Features, a now-defunct subsidiary of an advertising agency called Cartwheel. The film chronicles the members of the band Indian Ocean since their formation in 1990 till the end of 2006, and showcases their music. The film received good reviews in the Indian media when it released in 2010. It was also the first documentary ever in India to be reviewed so heavily. A 286-minute version of the film was released on DVD in December 2010, which included an updating of the band’s story, including the tragic death of Asheem Chakravarty in 2009. It also included several new chapters and facets that could not be covered in the theatrical version. Matt Shepard Is a Friend of Mine is a 2012 documentary historical fiction and biographical film written and directed by Michele Josue. Paldang is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kauh Eun Jin. Penguins: Waddle All The Way is a 2013 documentary film directed by John Downer. Truly, Madly, Deeply Vale is a 2004 television documentary produced by David Nolan for Granada Television, about the history of the Deeply Vale Festivals which ran from 1976 to 1979 in the North West of England. The programme makers tracked down many of the musicians who played there, including Mark E. Smith of the Fall, Steve Hillage and Vini Reilly of the Durutti Column. The hour-long programme is an elaborate pastiche of the film Woodstock and is largely presented in split-screen. It follows the efforts of festival organisers as they attempted a Glastonbury for the north, while the British musical landscape was changing from progressive rock to punk. It was narrated by Bob Harris, former presenter of The Old Grey Whistle Test, and has since been released on DVD in a much extended form as the 3 hours plus the Deeply Vale Festivals DVD. Rhythm Is It! is a 2004 German documentary film directed by Thomas Grube and Enrique Sánchez Lansch. The film documents a project undertaken by the Berlin Philharmonic principal conductor Simon Rattle and choreographer Royston Maldoom who decided to popularize classical music by staging a performance of Igor Stravinsky's ballet The Rite of Spring with a cast of 250 children recruited from Berlin's public schools. In Germany the film was released in theaters in September 2004 and by February 2005 it sold 400,000 tickets. The film also won several prizes, including two for Best Editing and Best Documentary at the 2005 German Film Awards. "A journey through the male-to-female transition of Michelle, formerly known as Joe O'Ferrell, a prominent East Coast independent filmmaker, delving head-first into the gender-bending highs and lows of Michelle's male to female metamorphosis" Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Playboy Video Playmate Calendar 1997 is a 1996 documentary film directed by Scott Allen and Steve Conte. SlingShot is a biographical documentary film directed by Paul Lazarus. Take It Out in Trade: The Outtakes is a compilation film of bloopers, alternate takes, behind-the-scenes footage, and deleted scenes from the 1970 soft-core pornographic film, Take It Out in Trade, directed by Edward D. Wood, Jr. The footage is completely silent with an instrumental musical score. Kärlekens språk is a 2004 Swedish sex educational film directed by Anders Lennberg. The title is a reference to the 1969 sex educational film Ur kärlekens språk. Meine Keine Familie is a 2012 film directed by Paul-Julien Robert. Osdorf is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Maja Classen. Little Africa is a 2002 short documentary film written and directed by Zózimo Bulbul. Paul Williams Still Alive is a 2011 biographical documentary film written and directed by Stephen Kessler. Winnebago Man is a 2009 American documentary feature film directed by Ben Steinbauer that follows the Internet phenomenon created by a series of twenty-year-old outtakes from a Winnebago sales video featuring profane outbursts from the salesperson, Jack Rebney. Originally intended as an inside joke, the video spread across the globe first on VHS tape then via YouTube and other online video sites, earning the salesman the title of "The Angriest Man in the World". The documentary explores the story of the clip’s origin and how, two decades later, it affects the man who never even knew it existed. Louder Than a Bomb is a documentary film about Louder Than a Bomb, an annual youth poetry slam in Chicago. The film was directed and produced by Greg Jacobs and Jon Siskel. It follows the stories of several high school teams and individuals leading up to Louder Than a Bomb 2008 and their experiences at the slam. It opened theatrically in New York City on July 30, 2010 and opened in Los Angeles on August 6, 2010 at the 14th Annual DocuWeeks. A Lesson of Belarusian is a 2006 documentary film by Polish director Mirosław Dembiński. It follows the activities of several Belarusian pro-democracy youth activists in the four weeks running up to the highly controversial presidential re-election of Alexander Lukashenko on March 19, 2006. The film has won multiple festival prizes. Stories We Tell is a 2012 Canadian documentary film written and directed by Sarah Polley and produced by the National Film Board of Canada. The film explores her family's secrets—including one intimately related to Polley's own identity. Stories We Tell premiered August 29, 2012 at the 69th Venice International Film Festival, then played at the 39th Telluride Film Festival and the 37th Toronto International Film Festival. Her Name is Sabine is a 2007 documentary film written by Sandrine Bonnaire and Catherine Cabrol and directed by Sandrine Bonnaire. Parajanov: The Last Spring is a 1992 award-winning documentary by the Russian-Armenian filmmaker Mikhail Vartanov, that also includes the complete surviving footage of Sergei Parajanov's unfinished last film "The Confession", Vartanov's behind-the-scenes sequences of Parajanov at work on the shooting of the "Color of Pomegranates" and other material. Featured in 7th Annual Russian Academy of Cinema Arts Awards. Bringing King to China is a 2011 documentary film by Kevin McKiernan. The cinematographers include three-time Oscar-winner Haskell Wexler. The documentary is "a father's 'love letter' to his adult daughter, a young American woman struggling to bring Martin Luther King, Jr.'s dream of nonviolence to China, and then back to the United States. Her life is thrown into turmoil when she learns, mistakenly, that her father, a journalist covering the war in Iraq, has been killed by a suicide bomber." Bringing King to China conveys the lead character's "dream to build a bridge between the societies by talking about peaceful struggle and universal rights." It chronicles her struggle to interpret and adapt King's message for Chinese society, preserve the historical accuracy of the U.S. civil rights movement, clear bureaucratic hurdles before opening night and raise funds to pay the theater company. The film takes American viewers backstage at the National Theatre of China, as Chinese actors rehearse with African-American gospel singers. Children of Soleil is a documentary film directed by Yoichiro Okutani. A Sunday in Hell is a 1976 Danish documentary film directed by Jørgen Leth. The film is a chronology of the 1976 Paris–Roubaix bicycle race from the perspective of participants, organizers and spectators. Paris–Roubaix is the most famous and usually the most dramatic of the spring classics. Much of the latter portion is over narrow, cobbled tracks that choke with dust on dry days and become slick and muddy in rain. For the riders it's a challenge to keep going without puncturing or crashing. The film captures not just the events of the 1976 edition but the atmosphere of a professional race. It begins by introducing the contenders: Eddy Merckx, Roger De Vlaeminck, Freddy Maertens, and Francesco Moser, each with their supporting riders, who are charged with helping their team leader win. The film gives views of the team directors, protesters, spectators, mechanics and riders. As the cobbled section is entered the selection begins. Riders puncture, crash, make the wrong move - the race plays out. By the finish in the velodrome in Roubaix only a few are in with a chance. The winner is a surprise, but that is part of the appeal. Unraveled is a 2011 American documentary film about prominent lawyer Marc Dreier, who was arrested for orchestrating a massive fraud scheme that netted hundreds of millions of dollars from hedge funds. Set during his house arrest, the film recounts Drier's struggle to prepare for the possibility of life imprisonment with first-person flashbacks of his actions. The film also show Drier's attempts to grasp his tragic unraveling. The film was produced and directed by Marc H. Simon of Stick Figure Productions. Other producers include Matthew Makar, Steven Cantor, and Miranda Bailey. Monks: The Transatlantic Feedback is a 2006 film directed by Dietmar Post and Lucia Palacios about the seminal German-American beat band The Monks. The film was produced by Play Loud! Productions and shot on location in the USA and Germany between 1997 and 2002. In 2008 the filmmakers obtained the German TV Oscar, the Adolf Grimme Awards. The Blonds is a 2003 Argentine and American documentary/drama film, directed by Albertina Carri, and written by Carri and Alan Pauls. The award winning film documents the search of director Albertina Carri as she investigates what happened to her family during Argentina's "Dirty War." The themes: Why did they disappear? Why were they murdered? Film critics have called the work an autobiographical semi-documentary work. The drama/documentary was filmed in black-and-white and in color. The Life and Times of Count Luchino Visconti is a 2002 documentary film directed by Adam Low. Malcolm X: A Search for Identity is a 1995 Documentary. The Immortal Balladeer of Prague is a 2008 documentary film written by Marek Jícha, Josef Lustig and Arnošt Lustig and directed by Marek Jícha and Josef Lustig. La Camioneta: The Journey of One American School Bus is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mark Kendall. "Mormons in California and Utah, following their prophet's call to action, wage spiritual warfare, fueled with money and religious fervor, against LGBT citizens and their fight for equality. This exploration of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ involvement in the passage of California's Proposition 8 reveals a secretive, decades-long campaign against lesbians’ and gays’ right to marriage. Directors Reed Cowan, a former Mormon missionary, and Steven Greenstreet deftly investigate this ongoing battle through three telling perspectives: personal, political, and ideological. They are careful not to succumb to emotional rant but choose instead well-researched data and a range of interviews with politicians, historians, and those most affected by the outcome. One such couple is composed of Spencer Jones and Tyler Barrick, who is the direct descendant of Mormon polygamist Frederick G. Williams. Cowan and Greenstreet's film tellingly reminds us that, if any common ground can ever be found, it must be based on truth and transparency." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. In Search of Happiness is a 2005 Russian documentary film that poetically follows the lives of Boris and Masha Rak, Soviet Jews who in 1934 moved to the Jewish Autonomous Oblast created by the order of Joseph Stalin in Russian Far East. The film won the Best Documentary award in the Russian Film Festival in 2006. The Jewish population of the JAO never reached 30% and as of 2003 it was only about 1.2%. The population of the capital, Birobidzan, has dwindled, The city's only Birobidzhan Synagogue holds services twice a week. Raw Herring is a 2013 documentary film written by Ester Gould, Leonard Retel Helmrich and directed by Hetty Naaijkens-Retel Helmrich, Leonard Retel Helmrich. Close, Closed, Closure is a documentary film by Ram Loevy that aired on Israel's Channel 8 on 5 August 2002. The film describes life in the occupied Gaza Strip, three years before Israel unilaterally disengaged from there in 2005. The film employed both Israeli and Palestinian film crews to tell the story behind the intense frustrations of the local population, which erupted in the Second Intifada and the 2008-2009 Gaza War. At the same time, it also presents the attitudes of two conflicting groups in Israel: the rightwing settlers, who express their contempt for the local population; and the leftwing peace camp that demanded an Israeli withdrawal. The title derives from the frequent closures of Gaza by the Israeli government—during the filming, the border between Israel and Gaza was closed, opened, and closed again. La Guajira is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Calogero Salvo. How Shakespeare Changed My Life is a 2010 documentary film directed by Melinda Hall. The Landing (l’approdo Delle Anime Migranti) is a 2013 film written and directed by Simone Salvemini. The kimono: flowing, elegant, and steeped in mythology. It is a symbol of ancient Japan which has survived for fifteen hundred years, preserved by the rules of tradition. From Samurai warriors, who wore it as a uniform to show their allegiance to a war lord, to high class courtesans, it is a symbol that unites the generations and mirrors the history of Japanese culture. What Is It Like to Be a Bird? is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Thijs van Vuure. Confesiones de un Sicario is a 2010 documentary film written by Nicolas Gueilburt and directed by Matías Gueilburt. Mountain Man is a 2010 short documentary biographical film written by Rory Owen Delaney and P.G. Banke and directed by Rory Owen Delaney. "TIFF In Concert Film Series: The Neil Young Trunk Show with host, director Jonathan Demme The words Trunk Show conjure visions of unique and precious goods, displayed from old chunky leather-strapped luggage. The images recall a time of purposeful travel, when people moved across the country with deliberate speed. Neil Young’s Trunk show uses the traveling exhibit concept to bring to life his collection of rare song gems (“Mexico,” “Kansas” and the “The Sultan”), crowd favorites (“Cinammon Girl,” “Cowgirl in the Sand” and “Like a Hurricane”) and more recent material (“No Hidden Path” and “The Believer”). It is a collection for the ages. Young surrounds himself with his favorite instruments, played at whim, and a stage set filled with personal icons: a small-scale model of a guitar shop, a red phone and other items. The feeling on the stage is of a favorite place where Neil Young is able to create his music exactly as he wants, supported by long-time touring band friends Ben Keith, Rick Rosas, Ralph Molina, Anthony “Sweetpea” Crawford and wife Pegi Young. The spontaneous and raw film was shot during two shows at the Tower Theater in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania during the Chrome Dreams II tour. Director Jonathan Demme described it as “a reaction to ‘Heart of Gold,’” his previous film featuring Neil Young. That performance, done at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, was catefully staged for the camera, whereas Neil Young Trunk Show is caught on the fly. The viewer is taken into the live experience from all angles, including candid backstage moments with crew and complete set-up, from the wires to the rigging. “We didn’t plan anything,” said Demme. “This was the easiest film in the world to make.” The Academy Award-winning director (“Silence of the Lambs,” “Philadelphia”), brought his veteran crew to shoot the two concerts with mostly hand-held cameras in HDCam, HDV and Super-8mm formats. The team included Director of Photography Declan Quinn (“Rachel Getting Married,” “28 Days,” “Leaving Las Vegas”) and a team of camera operators from Demme’s feature films and documentaries. “We made a home movie in a way,” noted Demme. Demme and editor Glenn Allen drew on the director’s longstanding relationship with Neil Young to provide viewers with an intimate portrait of the artist. The film uses long takes as an antithesis to the current fashion of quick-cutting, giving the music full reign over production techniques. The two nights allowed Young and his band to pull a wide-variety of songs, from the artist’s very early days right up to the present. The result is a lingering and emotional gaze at the interior character of Young, unpacked piece by piece from a lifetime of carefully-crafted music." Quoting the synopsis from the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival site. Delta Blues is a documentary film shot in 2000. The movie deals with the environmental problems emanating from the drying up of the Aral Sea, and the impact this has on political relationships in the Central Asian region. In particular, it focuses on the by UNESCO, as presented in 2000 at the 2nd World Water Forum in The Hague. This document has been criticized for setting unrealistic goals, and also, by focusing on the entire basin, for implicitly giving up on the Aral Sea and the people living downstream in Karakalpakstan. From the Branches Drops the Withered Blossom is a 1960 documentary film written and directed by Paul Meyer. Get Thrashed is a 2006 American documentary directed by Rick Ernst and starring Lars Ulrich, Sully Erna, Frank Bello, Death Angel, Dave Mustaine and many others. Stählerne Adern is a 1956 documentary film directed and written by Hugo Niebeling. "What draws the fuzzy line between one gender and another? Both When I’m Not Alone and Trans Francisco uniquely respond to questions about being caught between rigid stereotypes of gender identity and the real-world challenges of gender fluidity. What is life like for transwomen in the most liberal region of the United States? Trans Francisco presents an intimate discussion with trans women from the San Francisco Bay Area, covering a variety of issues like cultural acceptance, sex work, violence, HIV/AIDS and family relationships. Women from various walks of life, including San Francisco Police Commissioner Theresa Sparks, readily and matter-of-factly discuss the challenges and advantages of living as a transwoman in the Bay Area. No topic is off limits in this poignant documentary, which unashamedly follows these women into their homes and out into the world." Quoting Alex Chousa from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Genpin is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Naomi Kawase. Kill The Messenger is a 2006 French documentary film about Sibel Edmonds. An English version of the film was produced in 2007 by SBS Australia. The documentary focuses on both Ms. Edmonds's personal struggle to expose the criminality that she uncovered while at the FBI, and also the Sept. 11, 2001 tied 'secret' itself - the network of nuclear black-market, narcotics and illegal arms trafficking activities. Interviewees include David Rose, Philip Giraldi, Daniel Ellsberg, Coleen Rowley and Russell Tice. Arson: Fire for Hire is a documentary film directed by Richard Gerdau. Lewd & Lascivious is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jallen Rix. Carhenge: Genius or Junk? is a 2005 documentary film about Carhenge, an artist's almost-to-scale interpretation of Stonehenge, but built with automobiles instead of megaliths. Located in Western Nebraska, Carhenge has become a huge tourist attraction and also a center of local controversy. In the film, creator Jim Reinders challenges a community's definition of art, freedom of political expression, and appropriate land use development. This documentary focuses on Reinders' effort to erect the monument, and to then keep it from being dismantled. It also addresses aspects of public art and how, in many forms of art, the creative effort is often more about group unity than about the final end-product. The program runs 26:40. The director, David Liban is a professor at the University of Colorado Denver. This film has been broadcast on Public broadcasting stations nationally, Israeli television, and at the following film festivals and conferences: Australian International Film Festival, Melbourne, Australia, Oct 2006 Berkeley Video and Film Festival, Berkeley, CA - Oct 28, 2005 Boulder International Film Festival, Boulder, CO - Feb 2006 Big Muddy Film Festival Carbondale, IL - Feb 2006 Leaders is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Pawel Ferdek. Bowling for Columbine is a 2002 American documentary film written, directed, and narrated by Michael Moore. The film explores what Moore suggests are the main causes for the Columbine High School massacre in 1999 and other acts of violence with guns. Moore focuses on the background and environment in which the massacre took place and some common public opinions and assumptions about related issues. The film also looks into the nature of violence in the United States. The film brought Moore international attention as a rising filmmaker and won numerous awards, including the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, the Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary Feature, a special 55th Anniversary Prize at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival, and the César Award for Best Foreign Film. Misery Loves Company: The Life and Death of Bruce Gilden is a 2006 documentary film directed by Gideon Gold. Beyond the Wave is a 2013 Documentary film written by Kyoko Miyake and Friedemann Hottenbacher and directed by Kyoko Miyake. Wild in the Streets is a 2012 documentary film written by Jay Nelson and directed by Peter Baxter. Derrida is a 2002 American documentary film directed by Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering Kofman about the French philosopher Jacques Derrida. It premiered at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival before being released theatrically on October 23, 2002. Burma Diary is a 1997 film directed by Jeanne Hallacy. AKA: Girl Skater is a 2003 documentary about four female professional skateboarders on a skateboarding tour in Australia. The documentary follows Dave Carnie as he leads pro skaters Amy Caron, Vanessa Torres, Monica Shaw, and Jaime Reyes on a tour of Australia, visiting a variety of skate parks and tourist attractions. Chasing Beauty is a 2013 biographical documentary film written by Brent Huff and Pete Sepenuk and directed by Brent Huff. Debi Derryberry is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Gary Conrad. This revealing program explores the degree to which money and expediency has corrupted science and the ways in which the scientific method can expose those who commit it. Homemad(e) is a 2000 film directed by Ruth Beckermann. The Fear of God: 25 Years of 'The Exorcist' is a 1998 documentary writen by Mark Kermode and directed by Nick Freand Jones. Yes I Can is a 2012 documentary film directed by Wasim Baobaid. The Theory of Happiness is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Gregory Gan. In 1998 Lee Geun Hyuk left the city, along with his wife and infant daughter, for Korea's South Chungcheong Province to begin a new life in farming. Lee harbored no romantic illusions about becoming a farmer, since he had been born and raised in a farming family, but he believed strongly in the importance of traditional agriculture and in the urgent need to organize a farmers' movement to protest new government policies.To produce BACK TO THE SOIL, documentary filmmaker Kwon spent a year living with and filming the Lee family, chronicling with remarkable intimacy their numerous difficulties-such as harvesting on a trial-and-error basis, Lee's role in leading militant rallies against the expansion of the Free Trade Agreement, and the emotional impact of their young daughter's heart operation.BACK TO THE SOIL thus functions as both an emotionally engaging portrait of the young couple's challenges in starting a new life as well as a revealing depiction of a rapidly changing agricultural system that threatens to destroy traditional farming methods. On a more personal level, the film shows how Lee's fight for his beliefs creates tensions between him and older, more apathetic farmers in the community, and how his newfound political militancy creates emotional strains between him and his wife.In portraying the impact of the Korean government's new policies that abandon small national farmers in favor of a globalized agrobusiness, flooding the market with cheap imported rice and other foods, a trend against which Lee is valiantly striving to sustain and revitalize traditional farming, BACK TO THE SOIL dramatizes a situation facing small farmers not only in Korea but also throughout the world. Métro is a 2008 short and documentary film directed by Martin LaPorte. Wasting ones youth.doc is a 2005 documentary directed by Jürgen Teipel and Sigrid Harder. Here We Drown Algerians: October 17th, 1961 is a 2011 documentary written and directed by Yasmina Adi. Pink Smoke over the Vatican is a 2011 documentary film by Jules Hart about women who have been ordained as priests in the Roman Catholic Church despite their status as invalid. The film has won several awards including Best Female Filmmaker and Best Faith-Based Film at the Action On Film International Film Festival; Best Documentary at the Santa Fe Independent Film Festival; and the Emerging Artist Award at Beloit International Film Festival. The film received three Accolade awards: Award of Merit for Feature Documentary; Editing and Voice-over Talent; and an Indie Award of Merit for Feature Documentary. It was also notminated at the Oaxaca Film Fest. "An explosive introduction to the North American transgender music scene. An explosive introduction to the North American transgender music scene, combining candid interviews with performance footage. Amongst those featured are Katastrophe, The Cliks, Trannysaurus Sex and The Shondes with music styles as varied as the participants' gender expression; from tender finger-picked ballads through rousing accordion sea shanties to screaming punk rock. In talking about their music, inspiration and lives the interviewees cover such topics as passing/not passing, how to cope with changing voices, audience reactions, coming out and the personal as political. The visuals are as exciting as the music, combining 16mm, Super8, video and stills. Riot Acts' enthusiasm is infectious - I wonder how many bands will be formed after the screening? JB" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. Awka Liwen is a documentary film directed by Mariano Aiello and Kristina Hille, with a script by Osvaldo Bayer, Mariano Aiello and Kristina Hille. The work develops the history of the possession of the land in Argentina. It is also a history of racism against the indigenous peoples, where racism was the alibi for their exploitation and elimination. Awka Liwen, which in the Mapuche language means “Rebel at Dawn”, was filmed in Chubut, Jujuy, Río Negro, the province and city of Buenos Aires and Germany. East of Havana is a 2006 documentary film produced by South African actress Charlize Theron. The film features three young Cuban rappers: Soandry, Magyori, and Mikki and centers on their experiences in the Cuban underground hip hop scene. Charlize Theron attended SXSW Film Festival to introduce her productions new movie titled “East of Havana". The Movie chronicles the journey of three underground hip hop artists in Cuba. Charlize Theron has already won an Oscar for her acting skills. Thakazhi is a 1998 Malayalam documentary film made by M. T. Vasudevan Nair on renowned Malayalam writer, Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai. The 57-minute film was written, directed and narrated by Nair for Sahitya Akademi. The film's music was provided by Raveendran. Kosanji is a 2009 documentary film directed by Woo-Jung Kang. Life in Movement is a 2011 documentary biography written and directed by Sophie Hyde and Bryan Mason. To Be Like Avi is a documentary, biographical and drama film directed by Inbal Shprinzak. Was geht mich der Frühling an... is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Heinz Bütler. Tokyo Olympiad is a 1965 documentary film directed by Kon Ichikawa which documents the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Like Leni Riefenstahl's Olympia, which documented the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, Ichikawa's film was considered a milestone in documentary filmmaking. However, Tokyo Olympiad keeps its focus more on the atmosphere of the games and the human side of the athletes instead of concentrating only on the winners and the results. It is one of the few sports documentaries included in the book 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die. Snake Fever is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Wendy Greene. Pop in Reykjavík is a 1998 documentary/music film directed by Áugúst Jakobsson. Farewell is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Ditteki Mensink. "Constructed entirely of archive footage, Farewell is the story of English journalist Lady Grace Drummond-Hay. In August of 1929, two months before the stock market crash would plunge the world into the Great Depression, newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst added Drummond-Hay to the passenger list of the Graf Zeppelin as the only female. This impressive airship would be the very first to make a voyage around the world. For this prestigious project, a symbol of hope and progress, Hearst was looking for someone who wanted to write about the trip "from a female perspective." Drummond-Hay was ecstatic: "I shall write for him as if my life depended on it." Under the supervision of her colleague and ex-boyfriend Karl Henry von Wiegand, she spent 21 days reporting on the flight, which started in New York and went to Friedrichshafen, Tokyo, Los Angeles, and ended back in the Big Apple. Needless to say, it was a trip that did not go off completely without a hitch. Using Drummond-Hay's diary entries and newspaper articles as a basis, the film sketches a picture of the occasionally tough journey and a changing Europe. Drummond-Hay makes the viewer part of her impressions of the devastated continent. She tells of the funeral wreaths thrown from the Zeppelin over Verdun, riots in Berlin, and the rise of Communism in Russia, struggling with feelings for her ex-boyfriend all the while." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. The disturbingly shocking HBO documentary HACKING DEMOCRACY bravely tangles with our nation's ills at the heart of democracy. The film the Diebold corporation doesn't want you to see, this revelatory journey follows tenacious Seattle grandmother Bev Harris and her band of extraordinary citizen-activists as they set out to ask one simple question: How does America count its votes? From Florida and California to Ohio and Washington State, filmmakers Simon Ardizzone, Robert Cohen, and Russell Michaels starkly reveal a broken system riddled with secrecy, incompetent election officials, and electronic voting machines that can be programmed to steal elections. Equipped only with a powerful sense of righteous outrage, the activists take on voting machine industry, exposing alarming security holes in America's trusted voting machines.They even go dumpster diving at a county election official's office in Florida, uncovering incendiary evidence of miscounted votes. But proving our votes can be stolen without a trace culminates in a duel between Diebold voting machines and a computer hacker from Finland - with America's democracy at stake. Burning Wall is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Hava Kohav Beller. KT-MAN is a 2014 documentary film directed by Lee Jinwoo. The Inner and Outer World of Shahrukh Khan is the release title for a pair of documentaries about Bollywood superstar Shahrukh Khan, both directed by the London-based writer and producer/director Nasreen Munni Kabir, an authority on Hindi cinema. The first film, The Inner World of Shahrukh Khan, for BBC Channel 4, examines the actor's family history and daily life, while the second, The Outer World of Shahrukh Khan, produced by Khan's Red Chillies Entertainment, follows him on his 2004 Temptations concert tour in Europe and the United States. In contrasting Khan's two worlds, Kabir analyzes the effect of stardom on "a man who has taken Indian cinema to the next level." Shanghai Ghetto is a 2002 documentary film produced and directed by Dana Janklowicz-Mann and Amir Mann. Narrated by Martin Landau, the film chronicles the story of Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi Germany in the 1930s and their lives in the Shanghai Ghetto. The film was awarded the Audience Choice Award and the Human Rights Award at the 2002 Santa Barbara International Film Festival. The Battle for Late Night is a 2010 documentary directed by John Murphy. The term "working poor" should be an oxymoron. If you work full time, you should not be poor, but more than 30 million Americans — one in four workers — are stuck in jobs that do not pay the basics for a decent life. Waging a Living chronicles the day-to-day battles of four low-wage earners fighting to lift their families out of poverty. Shot over a three-year period in the northeast and California, this observational documentary captures the dreams, frustrations, and accomplishments of a diverse group of people who struggle to live from paycheck to paycheck. By presenting an unvarnished look at the barriers that these workers must overcome to lift their families out of poverty, Waging a Living offers a sobering view of the elusive American Dream. A Little Elbow Room is a 2012 short documentary and biographical comedy film written and directed by Mavreen David. What enables a simple arch bridge to support such great weight? What holds up a suspension bridge? Bridge the world with award-winning author-illustrator--and captivating storyteller--David Macaulay (The Way Things Work) and meet the brilliant designers who dared to extend roads and railways with ingenious but sometimes flawed designs. Muhammad: Legacy of the Prophet is a PBS documentary film about the life of the Islamic prophet Muhammad based on historical records and on the stories of living American Muslims who call Muhammad the Messenger of God. It was produced in 2002 by Alex Kronemer and Michael Wolfe of Unity Productions Foundation and Kikim Media. Inside Fighting China is a 1941 Canadian short documentary film directed by Stuart Legg, and narrated by Lorne Greene. The film documents China's resistance to Japan's invasion during World War II. It was produced by the National Film Board of Canada for Universal Pictures. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1942, as part of an expanded category featuring over two dozen nominations for World War II Allied propaganda films. Child Marriage is an award-winning 2005 American film documentary about the Indian and Hindu practice of engaging children before they are born. What happened here? What keeps all civilizations alive? To find out, join narrator Harrison Ford on a scientific adventure from the arctic to the equator. Tunnel into a metropolis of micro-organisms beneath New York, swim through the underwater forests of the Pacific, and climb to the top of the mysterious mountains in Venezuela that inspired Arthur Conan Doyle's novel The Lost World. Discover the wonders of biological diversity—and its importance to all of us. Andre Mathieu, Musicien is a 1993 music documentary film directed by Jean-Claude Labrecque. Tootie's Last Suit is a documentary film directed by Lisa Katzman. Lost Treasures of the Ancient World: The Dark Ages is a 2000 documentary film directed by Chris Gormlie. Blackfish is a 2013 documentary directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite. The film premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2013, and was picked up by Magnolia Pictures and CNN Films for wider release. Blackfish focuses on Tilikum, an orca held by SeaWorld, and the controversy over captive killer whales. No Subtitles Necessary: Laszlo & Vilmos is a 2008 American documentary film written and directed by James Chressanthis. Mr and Mrs Gunya is a 2012 short film directed by Astrid Bussink. City Slickers: A Tale of Two African Penguins is a 2002 International Emmy Award nominated for documentary. Great Railroad Adventures: British Rail Journeys: Vol. 1 is a 2008 travel documentary film. Becoming Traviata is a 2012 French documentary film chronicling rehearsals of the Verdi opera La traviata at the Aix-en-Provence Festival. Directed by Philippe Béziat, the film focuses largely on stage director Jean-François Sivadier working with coloratura soprano Natalie Dessay. The film's French title is Traviata et nous. Flight of the Red Tail is a 2009 historical documentary film by Adam White about the Red Tail Project's successful return to flight of a World War II P-51 Mustang that had become inoperable during a 2004 crash after having been restored for exhibition flying once before in 2001. The Red Tail Project is a part of the Commemorative Air Force. The plane had been originally flown by the United States Air Force 332d Fighter Group as a bomber escort for the Allied Forces in the European Theatre of World War II and serves as a traveling and flying tribute to the Tuskegee Airmen. The film is a sequel to Red Tail Reborn which brought attention to the attempt to relaunch of the plane after the 2004 crash. Days Of Hope is a 2013 documentary, drama film written and directed by Ditte Haarløv Johnsen. Waking up the Nation: The Freedom Bus is an Australian documentary film shot in 2002 and internationally released in 2005, directed by Agostino Imondi. Sometimes I Dream I'm Flying is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Aneta Popiel-Machnicka. JFK: A President Betrayed is a documentary, drama and historical film directed by Cory Taylor. Hepworth is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Alexis Bravos. Modena, città dell'Emilia Rossa is a 1950 Italian documentary film directed by Carlo Lizzani. Century of the Wind is a 1998 film directed by Fernando Birri. Smoke Traders is a 2012 documentary film written by Howard Goldberg, Jeff Dorn and Catherine Bainbridge, and directed by Jeff Dorn and Catherine Bainbridge. Dancing Across Borders is a 2010 documentary film directed by Anne Bass. Cinderelas, lobos e um príncipe encantado is a Brazilian 2009 documentary film. Do You Really Want To Know? is a 2012 documentary film directed by John Zaritsky and produced by Kevin Eastwood. Using interviews and dramatic recreations, the film recounts the stories of three families who carry the gene for Huntington's Disease, a neurodegenerative illness which is the result of a genetic abnormality, whose symptoms typically appear in mid-life. Members of each featured family have undergone predictive testing to learn whether or not they have inherited the gene that causes the disease, and they each describe the impact that testing has had upon their lives. "Do You Really Want To Know?" had its world premiere in Canada at the 2012 DOXA Documentary Film Festival and its broadcast premiere on November 13, 2012 on Knowledge Network. The Mayor is a 2012 crime biography documentary film written and directed by Emiliano Altuna, Diego Enrique Osorno and Carlos Rossini. Who Cares? is a 2013 documentary drama historical film written and directed by Mara Mourão. Strings of Color is a 2012 short documentary biography film written and directed by Sharan Mohanadoss. Strange Culture is a 2007 American documentary film directed by Lynn Hershman Leeson. It stars Tilda Swinton and Thomas Jay Ryan. It premiered January 19, 2007 at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. Wilbur Wright und seine Flugmaschine is the German viewing market title of a silent film made in 1909 and is considered to be the first-ever use of motion picture aerial photography as filmed from a heavier-than-air aircraft. It was filmed 24 April 1909 near Rome by French cinematographic company Société Générale des Cinématographes Eclipse. The events leading up to the creation of the film began in 1908 when the Wright brothers received an invitation from the Compagnie Générale de Navigation Aérienne to ship a Wright Flyer "Model A" airplane to France and fly it at Le Mans to dispel any remaining doubt that they had indeed conquered heavier-than-air flight. Since few had witnessed their earlier successes, many in Europe were skeptical about their claims. Some skeptics in the European press went so far as to claim that the stories were a "bluff." The August 30, 1908 edition of Le petit journal illustré was quoted as saying, "The experiments that Wilbur Wright is carrying out in France at the moment victoriously responded to this accusation." The Weald is a 1997 documentary film directed by Naomi Kawase. Have You Seen This Man? is a 2002 documentary short film directed by Anna Boden, Ryan Fleck Once At Miracle Mile is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Sasha Pirker. This feature-length documentary is a hilarious and mind-bending journey into the multi-dimensional life of Robert Anton Wilson, one of the foundations of 20th Century Western counterculture and author of the Illuminatus! Trilogy. It features video spanning 25 years and follows Mr. Wilson as he penetrates human illusions, exposing the mathematical probabilities and spooky synchronicities of the eight dimensions of his Universe. Guerrero 12, also known as 12th Warrior, is a Mexican film documentary that plans to release in theaters in the winter of 2011 in Mexico. The film is directed by Mexican director Miguel A. Reina and produced by E Corp Studio, and was shot on three continents in high definition digital cinema. Everyone Was a 'Pimpf' is a 1992 documentary film written by Erwin Leiser and directed by Erwin Leiser and Vera Leiser. Horrors of the Zone is a 2009 documentary comedy-film directed by Ken Potocki. Arna's Children is a 2004 Dutch-Israeli documentary film directed by Juliano Mer Khamis and Danniel Danniel about a children's theater group in Jenin in the Palestinian territories established by Arna Mer-Khamis, the director's mother, an Israeli Jewish political and human rights activist. The film portrays the lives of Arna Mer-Khamis and the children members of the theater including Ala el-Sabagr, Zakaria Zubeidi, Daud Zubeidi, Majdi Shadi, Haifa Esteti, Nidal Swetti, Yussef Swetti, Mahmoud Kaneri, Khairia Fakhri and Ashraf Abu-Alheji. The film won "Best Documentary Feature" in the 2004 Tribeca Film Festival. Three of the theater children died in various operations or while resisting the Israeli army, namely Ala, Nidal, and Ashraf. Yussef committed a suicide attack in Hadera in 2001, murdering four civilians. Two other children, Daud and Zakaria were imprisoned. The director of the film Juliano Mer Khamis was assassinated in Jenin on 4 April 2011 by masked militants. The Language Healers is a documentary film directed by Brian McDermott. Familiar Places is a 1982 documentary film directed by David MacDougall and Judith MacDougall. Isle of Flowers is a 1989 Brazilian short film by Jorge Furtado. It tracks the path of a tomato from garden to dump with the help of a monotone voiceover and a collection of bizarre images. While a very humorous film, the message it delivers about how human beings treat each other is anything but such. The director himself has stated that the film was inspired by the works of Kurt Vonnegut and Alain Resnais, among others. The film has been denounced as "materialistic" because one of its early credits displays the phrase "God doesn't exist". Nevertheless, critic Jean-Claude Bernardet defined Isle of Flowers "a religious film", and the Brazilian National Bishop Confederation awarded the film with the Margarida de Prata, calling it "the best Brazilian film of the year" in 1990. In 1995, Isle of Flowers was chosen by the European critics as one of the 100 most important short films of the century. Why We Bang is a 2006 independent documentary film that documents the historical background of LA's Bloods and Crips gangs. The film follows several current and former members of the Bloods and Crips of Los Angeles through interviews. The objective of the film is stated by director C. Jones as; "We just got tired of seeing people, not from our community making so called "Hood movies" that did not really depict what our community was all about, our goal is to bring real images and real stories about real people to the big screen." Intonation. Yuri Shmidt is a short documentary film written and directed by Alexander Sokurov. Jim Dine: A Self-Portrait on the Walls is a 1995 short documentary film about artist Jim Dine produced by Nancy Dine and Richard Stilwell. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The film presents the artist in the context of the gallery as the studio. It allows the viewers to follow along as he builds his work on the walls of a gallery in Ludwigsburg, Germany. Art students benefit from it because they learn the obstacles an artist faces when working with a medium larger than the Canson Biggie art pad, and the frustrations Mr. Dine had to face when making an image larger than life. The narrator explains how the gallery that invited Mr. Dine to present his work could not afford to bring his finished pieces, so they commissioned him instead to simply recreate his images on their walls. The film then follows him along as he pushes himself and an assistant to meet a six day deadline. He uses the medium of charcoal to compose portraits not only of himself but of various birds. Hiroshima is a BBC docudrama that premiered as a television special on 5 August 2005, marking the eve of the 60th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. The program was aired on the Discovery Channel in the United States. The documentary features historical reenactments using firsthand eyewitness accounts and computer-generated imagery of the explosion. The film won an Emmy and three BAFTA awards in 2006. 25 år med Mr. Rallycross, DVD with 90 minutes of running time the Martin Schanches Rallycross career from 1978 to 2001 documents (only norw. Comment) 10 Days In October is a 1989 film directed by Thomas Frick. Into Thin Air is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Mohammadreza Farzad. Samba Riachao is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Jorge Alfredo. My Beautiful Dacia is a 2009 documentary historical film written by Julio Soto Gurpide, Stefan Constantinescu and directed by Stefan Constantinescu, Julio Soto Gurpide. Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio is a non-fiction book by Tom Lewis, a history of radio in the United States, published by HarperCollins in 1991. The book was adapted into both a 1992 documentary film by Ken Burns and a 1992 radio drama written and directed by David Ossman. The source of the title is from a quote by Lee DeForest. Ali's Dozen is a 2006 television series. Saturday Night Live in the 2000s is a two-hour documentary television special that showcases the years of Saturday Night Live from 2000–2009. It features interviews with the cast and crew from those years, and aired on NBC on April 15, 2010. Topics discussed include Jimmy Fallon and Tina Fey as the new Weekend Update anchors after the departure of Colin Quinn, how SNL became popular for its spoofs on the 2000 United States presidential election, how the show's humor survived the 9/11 attacks and the anthrax scare, Will Ferrell's departure at the end of season 27 and the search for a replacement cast member to play George W. Bush, SNL's shaky years between seasons 28 and 30 due to Jimmy Fallon's and Horatio Sanz's cracking up on camera, Jimmy Fallon's departure from the show, Amy Poehler teaming up with Tina Fey for Weekend Update, the hiring of Bill Hader, Andy Samberg, and Kristen Wiig, and SNL regaining its popularity with the Digital Shorts, and fan-favorite host Justin Timberlake. From Nothing, Something is a 2012 documentary, music, biographical film written and directed by Tim Cawley. The Shark Riddle is a 2011 family comedy documentary film written by Dave Cain, Laura Sams, Robert Sams, and directed by Laura Sams and Robert Sams. All Im Left With is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Nicole Elyse Wong. 7/7 Ripple Effect is a 57-minute homemade film produced and narrated under the anonymous pseudonym "Muad'Dib", later named by the BBC as conspiracy theorist John Hill. The film disputes the official account of the 7 July 2005 London bombings, a terrorist attack on public transport in Central London, by four suicide bombers later named as Hasib Hussain, Germaine Lindsay, Shehzad Tanweer, and Mohammad Sidique Khan. The film was first released on the Internet on 5 November 2007, two years after the attacks. Physical copies were also sent to many of the people connected with the attacks. The film poses numerous questions about the events surrounding the attacks, and alleges alternative theories for who was behind them. The film implicates the Metropolitan Police and Tony Blair, and claims that the true perpetrators of the attacks were MI5 and/or Mossad, who tricked the four men into travelling to London with rucksacks, in order to provide CCTV footage later to be used as evidence in the investigation of the attacks. Berlusconi's Mousetrap is a documentary film directed by Eamonn Crudden. Cocaine Cowboys Reloaded is a 2013 documentary crime fiction film directed by Billy Corben. Hail Columbia!: IMAX is a 1982 short documentary film written by Roman Kroitor and directed by Graeme Ferguson. Gibbons are highly intelligent, agile and acrobatic tree-dwelling apes, found in the tropical forests of Asia. Most of the gibbon species are highly endangered and are on the verge of extinction as a result of the destruction of their tropical rain forest habitat as well as being hunted for food. "Wavy Gravy will make as big a fool of himself as is necessary to make a wiser man of you." –Village Voice "Saint Misbehavin': The Wavy Gravy Movie reveals the true story of cultural phenomenon Wavy Gravy – a man whose commitment to making the world a better place has never wavered. We experience the impact one man can have and connect to the hope that each one of us can make a difference and have fun doing it! Wavy Gravy is known in some circles as the MC of the Woodstock festival, a hippie icon, clown, and even a Ben & Jerry's ice cream flavor. He is all those things, but in Saint Misbehavin' we meet a true servant to humanity who carries his message through humor, compassion and a song he sings where ever he goes, called "basic human needs." Saint Misbehavin' weaves together intimate verite footage, reflections from an array of cultural and counter-cultural peers, and a rich collection of never-before-seen archival footage to tell a story that is bigger than the man himself. " Quoting the synopsis on the Mill Valley Film Festival site. Breaking the Frame is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Marielle Nitoslawska. 58: The Film is the inspiring true story of the global Church in action. Witness bravery and determined faith in a journey from the slums of Kenya to the streets of New York. Confront the brutality of extreme poverty and meet those who live out the True Fast of Isaiah 58 and create stunning new possibilities for the future. Travel from the sun-scorched plains of rural Ethiopia to British shopping centers, from Brazilian ganglands quarries of India to western churches, businesses and conferences. Experience eye-opening reasons to lift our expectations of the future. This film draws audiences in– a young British woman prevailing over the pressures of consumer society, Ethiopian Christians working to restore their environment, an American business owner promoting Fair Trade coffee and focusing on ending poverty, a local pastor in India working for those enslaved by bonded labor, and the sacrificial generosity of New York youth giving up their food to those with even less. The Last Minute Man is a 2004 short documentary film written and directed by Elio Quiroga. Pearl and Savages is a 1921 documentary from filmmaker Frank Hurley about the people of Papua New Guinea and Torres Strait. Fashion Girls is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Tuca Siqueira. If I Should Fall is a Canadian documentary film about Marc Diab, a Canadian soldier of Lebanese origin serving in Afghanistan. Directed by Canadian film director Brendon Culliton, and co-directed by Dan Heald, it is their first long feature documentary film and is a Joint Media Group Inc production co-founded by Culliton himself. Dreaming in America is a 2005 documentary film directed by Aaron Goldman. All We Ever Wanted is a 2010 documentary film directed by Sarah Mathilde Domogala. Fire Talker is a 2009 documentary film by Australian filmmaker Ivan Sen. It is a documentary biopic about Australian Aboriginal political activist, footballer and administrator, Charlie Perkins. It premiered at the 10th Anniversary of the Message Sticks Indigenous Film Festival held at the Sydney Opera House in May 2009. This festival was curated by Perkins' daughter Rachel. The Divided Trail: A Native American Odyssey is a 1978 American short documentary film directed by Jerry Aronson. It was nominated in 1978 for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. It lost to The Flight of the Gossamer Condor. Letter to Jane is a postscript film to Tout va bien directed by Jean-Luc Godard and Jean-Pierre Gorin and made under the auspices of the Dziga Vertov Group. Narrated in a back-and-forth style by both Godard and Gorin, the film serves as a 52-minute cinematic essay that deconstructs a single news photograph of Jane Fonda in Vietnam. This was Godard and Gorin's final collaboration. In 2005, the film was made available as an extra on the Tout va Bien DVD released by the Criterion Collection. Waking Sleeping Beauty is a 2009 American documentary film directed by Disney film producer Don Hahn and produced by Hahn and former Disney executive Peter Schneider. The film documents the history of Walt Disney Feature Animation from 1984 to 1994, covering the rise of a period referred to as the Disney Renaissance. Unusual for a documentary film, Waking Sleeping Beauty uses no new on-camera interviews, instead relying primarily on archival interviews, press kit footage, in-progress and completed footage from the films being covered, and personal film/videos shot by the employees of the animation studio. Waking Sleeping Beauty debuted at the 2009 Telluride Film Festival, and played at film festivals across the country before its limited theatrical release on March 26, 2010 by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. Citizen Zero is a 2012 documentary/short biography film directed by Alexandra Stergiou. Empire North is a 2010 film written and directed by Jakob Boeskov. The film follows Jakob Valdason a cartoonist whose life changes drastically when he invents a fictional hi-tech weapon called the ID Sniper. The film is partly based upon the story of ID Sniper. The ID Sniper was an art project that took place in Copenhagen and Beijing August 2002. Réquiem NN is a history documentary film directed by Juan Manuel Echavarría Olano. Castaic Lake is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Brigid McCaffrey. "SEX POSITIVE explores the life of Richard Berkowitz, a revolutionary gay S hustler-turned-AIDS activist in the 1980s, whose incomparable contribution to the invention of safe sex has never been aptly credited. Berkowitz emerged from the epicenter of the epidemic as a community leader, demanding a solution to the problem before anyone else would pay attention. However, it was not Berkowitz' voice alone that sparked contention. Dr. Joseph Sonnabend, a controversial virologist and AIDS doctor, postulated that AIDS was more complicated than just a new virus. With Sonnabend's theory in tow, Berkowitz fought, alongside beloved activist and musician Michael Callen, for safer sex practices without giving up on sex altogether. SEX POSITIVE explores the explicit bravery of this unrecognized triumvirate, and their dire quest to save lives in the midst of unwavering dissent. Now destitute and alone, Mr. Berkowitz tells his story to a world who never wanted to listen. Through the eyes of Mr. Berkowitz, the audience is made witness to a graphic testimony of sex, death, and betrayal, while placing the invention of ‘safe sex’ in a fresh and compelling context." Quoting the synopsis from the Official Site. Article VI: Faith. Politics. America is a documentary film at the intersection of faith, politics, and bigotry. Religious leaders, political pundits, and average citizens are asked who has the right to be elected. Has the Founding Fathers' vision of religious freedom been upheld or violated? Article Six of the United States Constitution grants the right that no religious test shall be required to enter into elected public office. But have the citizens taken that right away? Would the religious and moral judgments of today have prevented Americans from electing some of their most beloved Presidents? Article VI investigates politics in the ever-changing world of religious tolerance and freedom. Wingspan is a 2001 made-for-television documentary film about Paul McCartney's musical career, after The Beatles split up, with his second band, Wings. Produced by the McCartneys' MPL Communications, it was broadcast around the world to accompany the contemporary release of a 2-disc retrospective collection from McCartney's solo career, titled Wingspan: Hits and History. An accompanying book, also titled Wingspan, based upon the documentary's script as edited by Beatles' historian Mark Lewisohn, was published in 2002. Sharing Of The Heart: Conversations At Iweci Summit 2013 – Jane Goodall is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Terra Nyssa. Ruth Asawa: Roots Of An Artist is a documentary film directed by Bob Toy and Lola Fraknoi. La commission de la vérité is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by André van In. Pitch is a 1997 Canadian documentary created by Kenny Hotz and Spencer Rice, featuring themselves as two young filmmakers attending the Toronto Film Festival to pitch a film concept to various celebrities. Their film idea, titled "The Dawn", concerns a Mafia don who goes for a hernia operation but gets a sex change instead. During the 1996 Toronto fest, they approach Roger Ebert, Norman Jewison, Eric Stoltz, Al Pacino, and others without much success. On a roll, they leave Toronto for Hollywood, getting advice from Arthur Hiller and Neil Simon and finding an agent who expresses interest in their pitch. The film was shown at the 1997 Toronto Film Festival. The film features songs by the Toronto band Phono-Comb. Garrincha: Hero of the Jungle is a 1962 Brazilian documentary film directed by Joaquim Pedro de Andrade, about the Brazilian soccer player Garrincha. It was entered into the 13th Berlin International Film Festival. Fellini: I'm a Born Liar is a 2002 French documentary film written and directed by Damian Pettigrew. Based on Federico Fellini's last confessions filmed by Pettigrew in Rome in 1991 and 1992, the film eschews straightforward biography to highlight the Italian director's unorthodox working methods, conscience, and philosophy. A masterclass in cinema aesthetics, the feature documentary uses excerpts and behind-the-scenes from 8½, Juliet of the Spirits, Histoires extraordinaires, Satyricon, Amarcord, Fellini's Casanova, And the Ship Sails On, and City of Women. Also interviewed are Roberto Benigni, Terence Stamp, and Donald Sutherland, among other notable Fellini collaborators. The film was nominated for Best Documentary at the European Film Awards, Europe's equivalent of the Oscars. The story of rap superstar Eminem and his rise to fame, as told through interviews with family and friends. Two Doors is a Korean documentary film tracks down the 2009 Yongsan tragedy, which resulted in the death of 5 evictees and one police commando. The evictees, who were cornered into to climbing up a steel watchtower to appeal for their right to live, came back down as cold corpses only 25 hours after they started building the tower. Those who survived became law offenders. A long battle for the truth started as the police statement accused the evictees for causing the tragedy by carrying firebombs up the tower for an illegal and violent protest while on the other side criticism voiced that the governmental authority’s excessive use of force had aggravated the tragedy. The heightened tension between the two parties and opposite views of the truth led for the judgment of the government and the eradication of illegal and violent protests by a decision from the court. One Year's Remainder is a 2012 documentary drama family music film written by Giovanni Calamari, Michele Di Salle, Matteo Festa, Luca Papaleo and directed by Michele Di Salle and Luca Papaleo. Wes Brown and TJ Barrack take their film crew to the rugged deserts and jungles in Peru with some of the Worlds best surfers. An Inconvenient Tax is a 2010 documentary film produced by Life Is My Movie Entertainment. The film explores the history of the income tax in the United States and the causes of its many complexities. On Thursday 3rd May 1902, Mount Pelee, the volcano on the beautiful Caribbean Island of Martinique erupted.In just under 3 minutes every one of the 27,000 inhabitants of the neighboring town of Saint Pierre had died writhing in agony. Mount Pelee had unleashed the most deadly eruption ever recorded. Yet amazingly one man, Ludger Sylbaris survived. Now acclaimed journalist Peter Morgan investigates the lethal nature of this hellish eruption and the deadly effects it had on the entire population of Martinique. He joins a team of scientific detectives, volcanologists, doctors and archaeologists to discover just what happened in this "Silent City of Death" and whether it is now due to happen again. Target Tokyo is a 22-minute film portraying the travels of an aircraft bomber and its crew from training to the bombing of Japan. They Were There is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Errol Morris. Voodoo Lounge Live by The Rolling Stones is a concert video, filmed at the Joe Robbie Stadium in Miami, Florida on 25 November 1994 during the Voodoo Lounge Tour. This concert was broadcast as a pay-per-view special. Of the 27 songs played, 17 were released on home video. Voodoo Lounge Live was first released on VHS-video on 5 December 1995, and then on DVD-video on 6 May 1998. Just over the border in Mexico is an area peppered with maquiladoras: massive factories often owned by the world's largest multinational corporations. Carmen and Lourdes work at maquiladoras in Tijuana, where each day they confront labor violations, environmental devastation and urban chaos. In this lyrical documentary, the women reach beyond the daily struggle for survival to organize for change, taking on both the Mexican and U.S. governments and a major television manufacturer. A co-production of the Independent Television Service (ITVS). La Soufrière – Warten auf eine unausweichliche Katastrophe is a 1977 West German documentary film in which German director Werner Herzog visits an island on which a volcano is predicted to erupt. The pretext of this film was provided when Herzog "heard about the impending volcanic eruption, that the island of Guadeloupe had been evacuated and that one peasant had refused to leave, [he] knew [he] wanted to go talk to him and find out what kind of relationship towards death he had". Herzog explores the deserted streets of the towns on the island. The crew of three treks up to the caldera, where clouds of sulfurous steam and smoke shift drift like "harbingers of death", an example of the sublime Herzog seeks to conjure in his films. Herzog converses in French with three different men he finds remaining on the island: one says he is waiting for death, and demonstrates his posture for doing so; another says he has stayed to look after the animals. In the end, the volcano did not erupt, thus sparing the lives of those who had remained on the island, including Herzog and his crew. Tongue Twister is a 2014 documentary short film directed by Roman Stetina. Vannin' is a sport comedy historical documentary film directed by Andrew J. Morgan and Nicholas Nummerdor. Gian Luigi Rondi: vita, cinema, passione is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Giorgio Treves. The Diatom is a 2012 short science fiction film written and directed by Chris Peters. Fierce Light: When Spirit Meets Action is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Velcrow Ripper that focuses on Spiritual Activism. Fueled by the belief that “another world” is possible, Ripper explores the stories of people who have turned to spiritual activism as a means to cope with personal and global crises. The film contains interviews from Daryl Hannah, Thich Nhat Hanh, Desmond Tutu, Julia Butterfly Hill, Van Jones, Alice Walker, Joanna Macy, Noah Levine and John Lewis. Others featured include Michael Beckwith, Sera Beak, Ralph Nader among many others such as the original inspiration for the film, Brad Will. The film is produced by the Fiercelight Films Inc. and the National Film Board of Canada and is distributed by Alive Mind. The United Kingdom distributor is Dogwoof Pictures. The Last Day's Work is a 1986 documentary film directed by Brian McKenzie. The Man in Gray is a 1961 Italian short documentary film produced by Benedetto Benedetti. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. God Only Knows: Vocal Harmony - The Voice is a 2003 documentary film. Here Today is a documentary film directed by Bess O’Brien and Mary Arbuckle. Based Down South is a 2010 German-Turkish documentary film written and directed by Martina Priessner about four Turks born in Germany but who now live in Istanbul. The film was selected for the 29th International Film Festival Istanbul, where it premiered, 53rd International Leipzig Festival for Documentary and Animated Films, 16th London Turkish Film Festival and the 13th Istanbul International 1001 Documentary Film Festival. Based Down South was nominated for the Grimme Award in 2011. The Truth According to Wikipedia is a Dutch documentary film about Wikipedia directed by IJsbrand van Veelen. The documentary examines the reliability of Wikipedia, and the dichotomy between usage of experts versus amateur editors. The film includes commentary from Wikipedia co-founders Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger, The Cult of the Amateur author Andrew Keen, O'Reilly Media chief executive officer Tim O'Reilly, and former editor-in-chief of Encyclopædia Britannica Robert McHenry. Keen argues that experts should serve as guardians of information during the Web 2.0 phenomenon; this point of view is supported by analysis from Sanger. The documentary premiered at the Next Web conference in Amsterdam in April 2008, and was broadcast by VPRO television in the Netherlands. It was subsequently made available through American Public Television. The Truth According to Wikipedia received a generally positive reception, with favorable commentary in a review from Film Quarterly, and in an analysis published by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Light and Dark is a 2013 documentary film written by Luaan Hong and Paulene Abrey and directed by Paulene Abrey. Computer Networks: The Heralds of Resource Sharing is a documentary film from 1972, produced by Steven King and directed/edited by Peter Chvany, about ARPANET. It features many of the most important names in computer networking. Speaking parts: Fernando J. Corbato, more links here: Turing Award-winning implementer of multitasking operating systems. J.C.R. Licklider:, and many times throughout the film Lawrence G. Roberts: SIGCOMM Award winner. Robert Kahn: Turing Award winner. Frank Heart: William R. Sutherland: Richard W. Watson: Dick is one of the key mass storage researchers of the last thirty years. John R. Pasta: Donald W. Davies: George W. Mitchell: Non-speaking: Daniel L. Murphy: Unidentified: : previously misidentified as Jon Postel Link to the film on archive.org For the Best and for the Onion is a 2008 Nigerien documentary film about onion farmers in Galmi, Niger, written and directed by Sani Elhadj Magori. VTR St-Jacques is a 1969 short documentary film written and directed by Bonnie Sherr Klein. Awake and Sing is a 2003 film written and directed by Lee Anne Schmitt. Double Concerto is a 1982 documentary film directed by Hugh Piper. Hold On Hallelujah is a 2013 documentary biographical drama film written and directed by Ann Holmgren. Window Water Baby Moving is an experimental short film by Stan Brakhage, filmed in November 1958 and released in 1959. The film documents the birth of the director's first child, Myrrena. Naomi Campbel is a 2013 drama film written and directed by Camila José Donoso and Nicolas Videla. Jorden rundt på to timer is a 1949 documentary film directed by Rasmus Breistein. Honour Me is a 2008 British documentary film produced and directed by Alex Tweddle for Screen East and the UK Film Council. Abandoned by her parents, Sameem Ali spent six and a half years growing up in a children's home. When she was told that her family wanted to take her back she couldn't wait to start her new life with them. Instead, she returned to a dirty house where she was subjected to endless chores. Her mother began to beat her and her unhappiness drove her to self-harm. So Sameem was excited when she boarded a plane with her mother to visit Pakistan for the first time. It was only after they arrived in her family's village that she realised she wasn't there on holiday. Aged just thirteen, Sameem was forced to marry a complete stranger. When pregnant, two months later, she was made to return to the UK where she suffered further abuse from her family. After finding true love, Sameem fled the violence at home and escaped to Manchester with her young son. She believed she had put her horrific experiences behind her, but was unprepared for the consequences of violating her family's honour. Rocky Mountain Express is a 45-minute IMAX film released in the fall of 2011. Directed by Canadian filmmaker Stephen Low, it features the Canadian Pacific Railway’s restored 4-6-4 H1b Hudson steam locomotive 2816. Shooting began in 2006 and continued intermittently over the next five years, primarily on the main line between Calgary and Vancouver, with the cooperation of the CPR. The film was shot in 15 perforation/70 mm film, using a helicopter and gyro-stabilized camera mount as well as a variety of engine and train mounts. The film takes the audience on a steam journey along the historic Canadian Pacific route from Vancouver to Montreal, focusing on the western mountain portion. In parallel, it tells the story of the construction of the first transcontinental railway to link the new Dominion of Canada from sea to sea and the massive effort required of a nation of fewer than five million people to connect its population for the first time. The Last Moose Of Aoluguya is a 2013 documentary biography film written and directed by Tao Gu. Unconstitutional: The War on Our Civil Liberties is an American 2004 political documentary about the legal problems with the PATRIOT Act. It posits that the law, hastily passed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, is used to justify a variety of abuses of civil rights that are guaranteed by the US Constitution. This third and final film in the Un-trilogy from Executive Producer Robert Greenwald was written, produced and directed by Nonny de la Peña. The Invisible Policeman is a 2011 documentary film written by Laith Al-Juneidi and directed by Laith Al-Juneidi. My Name Is Peng is a 2010 documentary film written by Consuelo Ábalos and directed by Jahel Guerra and Victoria Molina de Carranza. For 13 days in 1962, the world was on the brink of nuclear war. Krushchev’s decision to place nuclear weapons in Cuba sparked the Cuban Missile Crisis. But what’s relatively unknown is that he was responding to an earlier perceived threat from America: the stationing of nuclear weapons in Murge, Italy - within striking distance of the USSR. We reveal how Murge was transformed unwittingly into a theatre of the Cold War. Our Greatest Hopes, Our Worst Fears: The Tragedy of the Munich Games is a 2002 documentary TV movie. Nipaa I!itqusipta/The Voice of Our Spirit is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Rachel Naninaaq Edwardson. Mondo Enduro was a round-the-world adventure motorcycle expedition in 1995-1996. Team members Austin Vince, Gerald Vince, Chas Penty, Bill Penty, Clive Greenhough, Nick Stubley and Mark Friend set off to go round the world by the longest route possible in the shortest time on Suzuki DR350 Dual Sport bikes. Their route took them from London, through Central Asia, Kazakhstan and Siberia; then from Alaska to Chile and finally from Cape Town through Africa and the Middle East back to London. The expedition was filmed and was subsequently made into a 2 part TV series. Shown on Discovery Travel and Adventure Channel over 40 times, this has since reached cult status amongst biking and adventure travel fans. The real difficulties in the expedition came in the Zilov Gap, the 400 mile roadless section in Siberia. The team got bogged down here and eventually ended up taking the Trans-Siberian railroad and then river barge to circumvent this problem. As well as a cult TV show and DVD, the expedition diaries are a fascinating account of a round-the-world expedition done on a shoestring, with rough camping the order of the day. Faced with extraordinary trauma of losing both parents to alcoholism and divorce, seven siblings form a unique family structure. The Watershed is a moving documentary of survival and forgiveness that shows how tragedy can have transforming effects on individual identity. A video of four short films on controversial subjects. A profile of "Sexual Personae" author Camille Paglia; a documentary on Annie Sprikle, pornographic film star; a profile of Carol, a woman who supports S-M; and a short look at transsexualism. The Eleanor Roosevelt Story is a 1965 American biographical documentary film directed by Richard Kaplan. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1965. Red Wedding is a 2012 documentary film co-directed by Lida Chan and Guillaume Suon, which portrays a victim of forced marriage under the Khmer Rouge regime. The film premiered at the 2012 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam and won the Award for Best Mid-Length Documentary. Away to Me is a 2012 documentary film directed by Andrew C. Hadra. Dance For Modern Times is a 1987 documentary film. The Death of Celebrity was a one hour special of Channel 4's popular 100 Greatest programmes. The programme attempted to discover Britain's most pointless celebrity. The programme was hosted by Piers Morgan. Here are the results: Victoria Beckham David Beckham Katie Price Abi Titmuss Tony Blair Jade Goody The Royal Family Jodie Marsh Anyone from Big Brother Rebecca Loos Track Stars.: The Unseen Heroes of Movie Sound is a 1979 short documentary film directed by Terry Burke. 3 Millones is a 2011 Uruguayan documentary film written by Jaime Roos and Mauro Sarser and directed by Jaime Roos and Yamandú Roos. Arakimentari is a 2004 USA film directed by Travis Klose. It is a documentary film about acclaimed and controversial Japanese photographer Nobuyoshi Araki. The film looks at Araki's personal life as well as his art. Triumph of the Will is a 1935 propaganda film directed, produced, edited and co-written by Leni Riefenstahl. It chronicles the 1934 Nazi Party Congress in Nuremberg, which was attended by more than 700,000 Nazi supporters. The film contains excerpts from speeches given by Nazi leaders at the Congress, including Adolf Hitler, Rudolf Hess and Julius Streicher, interspersed with footage of massed Sturmabteilung and Schutzstaffel troops and public reaction. Hitler commissioned the film and served as an unofficial executive producer; his name appears in the opening titles. The film's overriding theme is the return of Germany as a great power, with Hitler as the leader who will bring glory to the nation. Because the film was made after the 1934 Night of the Long Knives many prominent Sturmabteilung members are absent since they were murdered in that Party purge organized and orchestrated by Hitler to replace the SA with the Schutzstaffeln as his main instrument of mass terror. Triumph of the Will was released in 1935 and became a prominent example of propaganda in film history. The New Zlín is a 1947 documentary film directed by Emanuel Kaněra. So Much for So Little is a 1949 American short documentary film directed by Chuck Jones. It won an Academy Award in 1950 for Documentary Short Subject, tying with A Chance to Live. As a work of the United States Government, the film is in the public domain. Business as Usual: The Exploitation of Hip Hop is a 2011 documentary film written by Jeff Dillard and Maurice Dortch, and directed by Frank Pinnock and Jeff Dillard. La Libération de Paris is a short historical documentary shot in secret by small propaganda units of the French Resistance during the Battle for Paris in August 1944. Reinventando Hollywood is a 2008 TV documentary directed by David Ulloa. Over Troubled Waters is a 2012 documentary film written by Jane Wagner Tyack and directed by Russell Fisher and Jason Sturgis. Sharkwater is a 2006 Canadian documentary film written and directed by Rob Stewart, who also narrates it. In the film, Stewart seeks to deflate current attitudes about sharks, and exposes how the voracious shark-hunting industry is driving them to extinction. His next film, Revolution, builds on Sharkwater. Filmed in high definition video, Sharkwater explores the densest shark populations in the world, exposing the exploitation and corruption of the shark-hunting industry in the marine reserves of Cocos Island, Costa Rica and the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador. Stewart travels with Paul Watson and his Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ship as they confront shark poachers in Guatemala and Costa Rica. Among the group's experiences are boat chases with poachers and police, boat ramming, hidden camera footage of massive shark finning facilities, corrupt court systems and eventually attempted murder charges which force Stewart and Watson to flee from the police. Stewart explores how the increasing demand for shark-fin soup in Asia is fueling an illegal trade in sharks. His expedition is cut short, however, when he is diagnosed with necrotizing fasciitis. Silent Partners is a 2009 documentary short film directed by Abe Forman-Gree. Your Mommy Kills Animals is an American 2007 documentary film written and directed by Curt Johnson. Filmed in several locations across the United States, the film is about the animal liberation movement and takes its name from a 2003 PETA comic book of the same name. The film was picked up for distribution by HALO 8 Entertainment after successful festival response. Among those interviewed for the documentary were Jessica Biel, James Cromwell, Kaley Cuoco, Bo Derek, Gloria Estefan, Jorja Fox, Leo Grillo, Tippi Hedren, Katherine Heigl, Christopher Hitchens, Margot Kidder, Jennifer Lee, Joe Mantegna, Mark McGrath, Esai Morales, Shelley Morrison, Alexandra Paul, Ben Stein, and Betty White, as well as many individuals involved with animal rights movements. Filming began in January 2006, covering 17 states in 90 days, and was in editing by April of that year. Incanto The Documentary is a 2008 documentary film starring Andrea Bocelli. The stars of this show - Giant Pandas, Cheetahs, Orangutans, and other animals on display at the Zoo - are "ambassadors" for their dwindling species in the wild. As part of a worldwide conservation effort, scientists at the National Zoo breed endangered species for the purpose of re-introducing them to nature. The National Zoo is truly a park full of wild animals, but it is also a reminder that humans don't rule the earth; we share it. Camp Story is a 2013 film written and directed by David B. Levy. Eine Melodie - vier Maler is a 1955 short animated documentary film directed by Herbert Seggelke. The Work of Director Michel Gondry is a documentary film directed by Michel Gondry. Devil In The Room is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Carla MacKinnon. Silence: All Roads Lead to Music is a 2011 music documentary film written and directed by Haider Rashid. Set Backs is a short documentary film written and directed by Délia Gunn. Queer Artivism is a documentary film directed by Anja Wutej and Masa Zia Lenardic. Mokarrameh, a widow in a rural Iran, once owned a beloved cow. She had to seek grass on a long and tiring walk to feed the animal. One day her children sold the beast without telling her. Overcome by sorrow, she began to paint.Mokarrameh made her first painting (a portrait of the cow) with mud and cow dung on a rock as a means to find consolation for its death. She painted on the walls of her house, on pumpkins, on whatever surfaces she could find until one of her sons, on his monthly visit from Tehran, brought her paper and paint. From that day Mokarrameh has painted tirelessly. Now her home overflows with her colorful work, in which local life, legends and memories are vividly depicted.All of Mokarrameh's paintings tell a story. Some tell the story of her life, the stories of other wives of her husband, or of other women in the village. Interwoven are bittersweet tales; bickering between wives about their husband-in-common, and Mokarrameh's confrontation with her uncle about why she was sold into marriage at such a young age.Mokarrameh's paintings represent a mingling of reality and her imagination, providing rare insight into the lives of women in Iran. Mallamall is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Lalita Krishna. Breaking Point is a Canadian documentary film, released in 2005. Aired on CBC Television in English and on Télévision de Radio-Canada in French and released to mark the tenth anniversary of the 1995 Quebec sovereignty referendum, the film explored the dynamics of the referendum campaign through interviews with and news clips of several of the major players on both sides of the debate. The two-part film aired on SRC in September 2005, and on CBC in October. It has also been released on DVD. Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures is a 2001 documentary about the life and work of Stanley Kubrick, famed film director, made by his long-time assistant and brother-in-law Jan Harlan. 142 minutes long, it consists of several 15-minute chapters, each detailing the making of one of his films – and two more showing his childhood and life. Jan Harlan managed to get many of Kubrick's collaborators for interviews, including Tom Cruise, Nicole Kidman, Keir Dullea, Arthur C. Clarke, Malcolm McDowell, Peter Ustinov, Jack Nicholson, György Ligeti and Matthew Modine. It also has interviews from film directors who were inspired by Kubrick such as Woody Allen, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese and Sydney Pollack. The film contains some rare footage, including from the Kubrick family home videos and on film sets, and clips from Fear and Desire - Kubrick's first feature-length film. It was released on DVD on October 23, 2007, and was featured on the tenth disc of Stanley Kubrick: The Essential Collection and Stanley Kubrick: Limited Edition Collection DVD and Blu-ray released May 31, 2011, respectively. Of Dolls and Murder is a documentary film about a collection of dollhouse crime scenes and society's collective fascination with death. It was released in April 2012. Kathy is a 1981 television documentary produced by Kier Cline and Barry Teicher. Friede, Freude, Katzenjammer is a 1991 film directed by Detlef Gumm and Hans-Georg Ullrich. Animalopolis is a 2008 documentary film directed by Tim Huntley. WikiRebels: The Documentary is a 2010 tv documentary directed by Jesper Huor and Bosse Lindquist. The Price of Sugar is a 2007 Uncommon Productions film directed by Bill Haney and produced by Haney and Eric Grunebaum about exploitation of Haitian immigrants in the Dominican Republic involved with production of sugar, and the efforts of Spanish priest Father Christopher Hartley to ameliorate their situation. It is narrated by actor Paul Newman. The documentary shows the poor working conditions in the sugar cane plantations, and political control exerted by the Vicini family to stifle efforts to change the situation. While the documentary highlights the efforts of Father Christopher Hartley to bring medicine, education, and human rights to Haitian workers, it also shows the widespread resentment of his actions held by Dominican people. Beautiful Me(s): Finding Our Revolutionary Selves in Black Cuba is a short documentary that depicts a predominately African American group of Yale University students who are passionately concerned about racial inequality. The students, whose sense of being marginalized within the university led to their intrigue with the revolutionary culture of Cuba and its antagonistic relationship with the United States, decide to take an extraordinary "field trip" to Havana and Santiago in May 2002. They embarked on the trip as a way to study an alternative society that accepts and embraces its African roots. These students come to experience the distinct culture of Cuba that is driven by its sense of community and hope. The documentary, which focuses on the students' reactions to Cuban society, includes footage of hip hop, reggae and rumba performances, interviews with Cuban scholars and scenes of everyday life in Havana and Santiago that the students shot themselves, as well as interviews with the travelers that captures their reflections after the trip. Till It Hurts is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Marcin Koszalka. Souvenir of Canada is a documentary film directed by Robin Neinstein. The Klan: A Legacy of Hate in America is a 1982 American short documentary film directed by Werner Schumann. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Battle of Jutland between Britain and Germany was the largest naval action of all time. It was a confrontation that the British wanted. An opportunity to unleash their lethal super weapons of the day – the great ships they called Dreadnoughts – and to prove that Britain still ruled the waves. Yet, in the cold grey waters of northern Europe, the showdown ended in carnage on a scale few could have imagined. Today the ships with their vast gun turrets and thousands of shells still litter the sea bed. Nine thousand lives were lost, the majority British. Thousands were blown apart in three catastrophic explosions. Now, using the latest modern science, Battlefield Detectives investigates and asks: what went wrong? Why was Jutland so disastrous for the Royal Navy? And could it be that, in losing the battle, they won the naval war? Crashing the Water Barrier is a 1956 American short documentary film directed by Konstantin Kaiser. It won an Academy Award at the 29th Academy Awards in 1957 for Best Short Subject. La provincia dei sette laghi is a 1948 short documentary film directed by Dino Risi. "Castle in the Sky: Character Sketches" is a 2010 short documentary film starring Cloris Leachman, Anna Paquin and James Van Der Beek. Waiting for Hockney is a 2007 documentary film written by Julie Checkoway, Neal Checkoway and Chris A. Peterson and directed by Julie Checkoway. After Innocence is a 2005 American documentary film about men who were exonerated from death row by DNA evidence. Directed by Jessica Sanders, the film took the Special Jury Prize at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival. The featured exonerees are Dennis Maher; Calvin Willis; Scott Hornoff; Wilton Dedge; Vincent Moto; Nick Yarris; and Herman Atkins. Also featured are Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld of the Innocence Project and Lola Vollen of the Life After Exoneration Program. "Being a woman in Iran is a daily struggle. Being a painter, too. Through this "extreme situation", the struggle can become the very aim of artistic creation... Indeed, despite all the restrictions and Islamic taboos, Iranian society has recently been enjoying a cultural renewal in which women have undeniably been playing an ascendant role. In Teheran, more than 3,000 women are officially recorded in the profession - they are painters, plastic artists, gallery owners... They address the camera, veiled or bare-headed, and provide an image of themselves that has nothing to do with the stereotypes and clichés of the Iranian woman." Quoting FIPAtel. The Battle of Long Tan is a Documentary film that received the 2007 ASTRA Awards for Most Outstanding Documentary. A Conversation with Haris is a short animation documentary film directed by Sheila M. Sofian. Pleasure Factory is a 2007 docudrama film set in Geylang, the red-light district of Singapore. Directed by Ekachai Uekrongtham, the film was selected for the Un Certain Regard competition at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival. The film is unusual in Southeast Asian cinema for its frank depiction of subjects traditionally hidden in Asian society, such as prostitution and same-sex relationships, and features explicit male nudity. "Not everything has been said about the “war to end all wars”, about the history of that immense treachery and infinite waste. Far from it. Between 1914 and 1918 entire armies were submerged in unprecedented brutality and a hitherto inconceivable eruption of suffering. World War I altered the nature of war. It ended in a declaration of war against war and the determination to end it once and for all. In contrast to the prevalent notion of the soldier as victim, what we will say and show on the screen is new: the First World War continued due to general consent. The first historians of the Great War neglected the soldier in favour of studying military and diplomatic strategies. When a second generation of historians turned to life in the trenches, the idea that such suffering must have been forced upon the soldiers took on the allure of fact. The story of the war thereby became the story of the soldier’s refusal: spontaneous truces and fraternisation, desertions, rebellions, the Russian Revolution. This vision of refusal was excessively exaggerated but nonetheless considered to be « historically correct ». In the end, it distorted the truth. The soldiers and the public both supported the war and believed in the absolute necessity of victory. This support can be seen, for example, in the large numbers of volunteers that maintained the armies of Great Britain and the Commonwealth. Entire societies threw themselves into what they considered to be a conflict between civilisation and savagery. For this reason they became involved in the first modern massacre, without the slightest idea of what awaited them. Following the analysis of Annette Becker, one of the leading scholars in this new historiographical approach, this documentary offers a new perspective on this conflict whose extent, violence and character foreshadowed and gave rise to many of the tragedies of the 20th century. This film is international. A German or an Englishman can as easily recognize himself in it as a Frenchman or a Belgian would. The human, social and military experience and the culture of war were markedly of the same nature in each of the war-raging countries, and the suffering equally shared. The film’s transversal treatment represents them all." Quoting the description from the Official Site Metropolità is a short documentary film written and directed by Albert Solé. Margaret Mee and the Moonflower is a 2012 Brazilian documentary film directed by Malu De Martino, about the work and legacy of British botanical artist Margaret Mee, who moved to Brazil in the 1950s, produced over 400 illustrations about Brazilian flora and, used her art as a tool to defend the environmentalism. For Our Children: The Concert is a 1993 music documentary directed by Louis J. Horvitz. Jogo de Cena is a 2007 documentary film directed by Eduardo Coutinho. No. 5 is a 1968 documentary film written and directed by John Lennon and Yoko Ono. At the Core is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Anthony Hun and Uriel Reynisa. Undiscovered Worlds: The Search Beyond Our Sun is a short documentary film written by Alan Lightman. Deux fois is a 1968 experimental film by Jackie Raynal. Raynal stars in the film, her first as a director; she had previously worked for several years as a film editor, most notably for films in Éric Rohmer's "Six Moral Tales" series. The film's title, which literally translates as Twice and is sometimes translated into English as Twice Upon a Time, refers to the occasional repetition of scenes or actions. Deux fois is one of the most notable of the Zanzibar Films, a group of feature-length experimental work made from 1968 to 1970 with the financing of Sylvina Boissonnas. It is also considered a landmark of Feminist filmmaking. Raynal shot the film in nine days in Barcelona, Spain, casting a man she had met there, Francisco Viader, as one of the leads. Regarding the film, the influential French critic Serge Daney wrote: "She put in her film the visionary crazed coldness of major paranoiacs. We also find the murderous, painful madness of Fritz Lang's great films, in which all the fiction is reduced to sketchy outlines, arabesques, leaving almost no trace." Between the Folds is a 2008 film documentary about origami. Directed by Vanessa Gould and broadcast on Independent Lens, the film received a 2010 Peabody Award. Notable origami artists featured in the film include Erik and Martin Demaine, Tom Hull, Éric Joisel, Satoshi Kamiya, Robert J. Lang, and Akira Yoshizawa. In Search of Janáček is a film about life of composer Leoš Janáček. The film, written and directed by Petr Kaňka, received Special Mention at the International Television Festival Golden Prague in 2003. It was released in 2004 to celebrate 150 years anniversary of Janáček. The director combined archive footage and contemporary stagings. The film reflects the complicated character of Janáček, his work and his relationship with his wife and his mistress Kamila Stösslová. It presents Janáček developed as a visionary of musical realism through the use of a specific musical language. The director tried to avoid any stereotypes of the composer. The film reveals his rather tough childhood, an early parting with parents and various conflicts, as well as hard work, self-education, and a desire for creation. The Pirate Tapes is a documentary filmed by Somali-Canadian Mohamed Ashareh in Somalia and edited and produced by Palmira PDC in Canada. Ashareh lived with pirates in Somalia for months undercover during 2009, filming their activities with a small camera hanging around his neck. Some of the filming was done by a second cameraman. Ashareh was frequently in danger, and at one point they were both arrested and spent time in a Somali jail. The film has been heavily criticized for shortcomings attributed to Ashereh's lack of journalistic and filming experience, but has been extensively shown anyway because of its unusual perspective on the lives of the pirates. There has also been a dispute between Ashareh and Palmira PDC over the rights to the footage filmed by Ashereh. The Pirate Tapes was screened at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival in 2011. Para Fuera: A Portrait of Dr. Richard J. Bing is a 2010 short documentary film about Dr. Richard J. Bing on his hundredth birthday. The film was written and directed by award winning director Nicholas Jasenovec and executive producers Sean Carver, Eric Hadley, Loretta Jeneski, and Michael Degan. The film was conceptualized when Dr. Richard Bing learned of Microsoft's new search engine Bing, and wrote a letter to Microsoft about his life and upcoming 100th birthday. Sean Carver, Director of Brand Entertainment at Bing and Stefan Weitz, Director, Influentials at Bing traveled to La Canada, CA to meet Dr. Bing. After meeting him, it was apparent he had much to tell about the remarkable decisions he had made in his life, the sacrifices, struggles, successes, and ultimate wisdom of a man who has achieved so much over the last century. Deciding to capitalize on the opportunity to share Dr. Bing's story, Sean Carver enlisted Creative Artists Agency and ultimately director Nick Jasenovec for the project. Para Fuera was shot from July 2009 to August 2009 before premiering as an Official Selection of the 2010 Sundance Film Festival on January 25, 2010. In the Name of the Family is a 2010 documentary film directed by Shelley Saywell. Garden in the Sea is a 2012 documentary film directed by Thomas Riedelsheimer. Sokurovin ääni is a 2014 documentary film written by Leena Kilpeläinen and Velipekka Makkonen and directed by Leena Kilpeläinen. Hear This! is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Soulaima El Khaldi. Lagos - Notes of a City is a 2012 documentary drama music film written and directed by Jens Wenkel Return to Mexico City is a 2009 documentary film directed by Joie Walls and Maura Mandt. Todavía Trabajando is a 2013 biographical short documentary film directed by Esteban Arguello. Balcony Tales is a 2013 documentary film written by Janis Reyes Hernández and Helle Windeløv-Lidzélius and directed by Helle Windeløv-Lidzélius. Mr. Big is a 2007 documentary directed and produced by Tiffany Burns and edited by Alec MacNeill Richardson. The documentary examines the "Mr. Big" undercover methods used by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. In these operations, RCMP officers pose as gang criminals and develop a relationship with the target in the hope of eventually determining what, if any, knowledge the target has of the crime being investigated. "Mr. Big" operations have been credited with securing difficult convictions in a large number of cases, but concerns have been raised that they involve a risk of false confessions and wrongful convictions. Tiffany Burns is the sister of Sebastian Burns who, along with Atif Rafay, was convicted of murdering Rafay's family in Bellevue, Washington in 1994. The major evidence presented at the high profile 2003 trial of Burns and Rafay was a confession that occurred in the context of a "Mr. Big" operation. The Burns / Rafay case is one of those featured in Mr. Big. Mr. Big includes interviews with targets of "Mr. Big" operations and their families – including the Burns family, interviews with various professionals who have an interest in the "Mr. Fury in the Pacific is a 1945 American documentary short film about a pair of World War II battles in the Pacific: the Battle of Peleliu and the Battle of Angaur. It was co-produced by the United States Army, United States Navy, and the United States Marines, and directed by a series of combat cameraman — of whom nine became casualties of the battles they were filming. The film is especially noteworthy for its praise of the fighting abilities of Japanese soldiers, and its fast-paced editing. The film is sometimes erroneously credited to Frank Capra, but he did not, in fact, direct the film. The Promise of New York is a 2009 documentary film documenting some less-well-known candidates in the New York City 2005 mayoral race. Shannon Brown, a Canadian Filmmaker, woke up on September 10th having a vivid nightmare that would later prove to be disturbingly accurate. She wrote it down in a journal and dated it, her partner, journalist Albert Nerenberg, a skeptic remembers watching her do it on the morning of September 10th. The next day the events of September 11th would take place. Seeing 911, the documentary is the story of the search for an explanation for something that seems impossible. Chrysler: Once upon a Time... Then and Now is a 1983 Emmy News and Documentary Award winner for Outstanding Background/Analysis of a Single Current Story - Programs aired in 1982 in the United States of America. When Comedy Went to School is a 2013 documentary, drama, and comedy film directed by Mevlut Akkaya and Ron Frank. Death Songs & Car Bombs is a 2013 short film directed by Jeremy and Brendan Smyth. The Wagner Files is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ralf Pleger. Vigia is a 2013 animated short film written and directed by Marcel Barelli. The Naked Brothers Band is an American musical comedy film written and directed by Polly Draper which stars her sons, Nat Wolff and Alex Wolff, who portray members of a fictional rock group. It tells of the boys' struggles with their fame and an internal dispute that causes the band to split before reuniting in the end. The film was emboldened by Nat's genuine band, The Silver Boulders, which he created in preschool with his friends who all portray themselves alongside Nat's faux female interest, the siblings' real life cousin as the babysitter, and their real life father as their inept accordionist dad. Draper shot the film in the style of a mockumentary—a parody in documentary format—that depicts the daily activities of the characters. Nat composed and performed the music, though one song had been written by Alex. Principal photography took place in mid-2004 on location in New York City, and the interior scenes were vastly filmed in the family's Manhattan apartment. Draper's brother, Tim, a venture capitalist, provided financial incentives for the shoot. One Day In Yosemite is a 2013 documentary, short, action, adventure and family film written and directed by Steven M. Bumgardner. Where Does Your Hidden Smile Lie? is a 2001 documentary film directed by Pedro Costa and Thierry Lounas. Blueberry Soup is a documentary drama film directed by Eileen Jerrett. Shamans of the Blind Country is a 1980 documentary film directed by Michael Oppitz. Himeyuri is a documentary film directed by Shohei Shibata. Nuala is a 2011 biographical documentary film directed by Patrick Farrelly and Kate O'Callaghan. My Friend Bety is a 2012 film written and directed by Diana Garay. Memories to Light 2.0 is a documentary film directed by Stephen Gong. A Letter from Prague is a 1945 film directed by František Sádek and Jiri Weiss. Tomorrow We Disappear is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jim Goldblum and Adam M. Weber. Notes on the Other is a 2009 documentary short film written by Sergio Oksman and Carlos Mugiro and directed by Sergio Oksman. "Each summer, a crowd of Ernest Hemingway doubles meets in Key West, Florida, to choose the authentic Hemingway after his death. One day in 1924, the real Ernest Hemingway also wanted to be someone else." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. This Is Not a Show: Live at the Olympia in Dublin is a 2009 musical documentary film directed by Jeremiah and Vincent Moon. Roots of Rescue is a 2013 history and crime documentary film directed by Joseph Olivieri and David Cowardin. Seoul Train is a 2004 documentary film that deals with the dangerous journeys of North Korean defectors fleeing through or to China. These journeys are both dangerous and daring, since if caught, they face forced repatriation, torture and possible execution. Seoul Train has been broadcast on television around the world, including on the PBS series Independent Lens. In January 2007, Seoul Train was awarded the Alfred I. duPont – Columbia University Silver Baton for excellence in broadcast journalism. In April 2007, "Seoul Train" was named runner-up in the National Journalism Awards. The film was produced, directed and filmed by Jim Butterworth, a technology entrepreneur in Colorado in the U.S., and Lisa Sleeth of Incite Productions. It was co-directed and edited by Aaron Lubarsky, a documentary filmmaker in New York. Antonioni Seen by Antonioni is a 1978 shot documentary directed by Lino Miccichè. Lenin kam nur bis Lüdenscheid - Meine kleine deutsche Revolution is a 2008 film directed by André Schäfer. Carnegie Hall at 100: A Place of Dreams is a 2006 documentray film directed by Peter Rosen. Dan T. Hall and his crew of experts—trained in psychology, the paranormal, and folklore—take an exclusive tour through the grounds of the abandoned Central State Mental Institution in Indianapolis. In their quest to uncover the asylum's supernatural history, the team interviews former staff and even an ex-patient to find out what really happened behind closed doors. This intimate account of Central State's haunting presence will leave audiences stunned…and sleeping with the lights on. Alan Turing is the genius British mathematician who was instrumental in breaking the German naval Enigma Code during World War II, arguably saving millions of lives. He was also the visionary scientist who gave birth to the computer age, pioneered artificial intelligence and was the first to investigate the mathematical underpinnings of the living world. Turing is one of the great original thinkers of the 20th century, who foresaw the digital world in which we now live. In the eyes of many scientists today Turing sits alongside Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein and Charles Darwin at the table of scientific greats. Turing's achievements went unrecognised during his lifetime. Instead he ended up being treated as a common criminal, for being homosexual at a time when homosexual acts were a crime. In 1952, he was convicted of 'gross indecency' with another man and was forced to undergo so-called 'organo-therapy' - chemical castration. Two years later, he killed himself with cyanide, aged just 41. Alan Turing was driven to a terrible despair and early death by the nation he'd done so much to save. In the last 18 months of his short life, Turing visited a psychiatrist, Dr Franz Greenbaum, who tried to help him. This film brings Turing's ideas to life by dramatising this relationship and these sessions, based on historical records, Turing's writings, and accounts of those who knew him. The film includes the testimony of people who knew and remember Turing. Plus, contemporary experts from the world of technology and high science, including Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, bring Turing's exciting impact up to the present day, explaining why, in many ways, modern technology has only just begun to explore the potential of Turing's ideas. Chandani - The Daughter of the Elephant Whisperer is a 2010 documentary family world cinema film written and directed by Arne Birkenstock. We Can't Eat Gold is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Joshua Tucker. Breaking Through is a documentary and biographical film directed by Cindy Abel. Saint Matthew Passion is a 1966 Hungarian short documentary film directed by Tamás Czigány. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Mauna Kea: Temple Under Siege is a television documentary movie directed by Joan Lander and Puhipau. Snow Blind is a 2006 documentary film about the history, culture, and lifestyle of snowboarding. Shot over the season of 2004-2005, the film covers the origins of snowboarding, the evolution of it into an Olympic sport and the passionate participants, thrill seekers and competitors. The film was released on December 8, 2006. The DVD release date is pending. It was filmed on location in Colorado and Utah and shot entirely in HD. Melvin Williams was asked by officials to stop the riots following Dr. King's assassination. After helping authorities, Williams was then labeled a threat, framed and incarcerated. Misfire: The Rise and Fall of the Shooting Gallery is a 2013 documentary history film directed by Whitney Ransick. A Promise to the Dead: The Exile Journey of Ariel Dorfman is a 2007 documentary film written by Ariel Dorfman and directed by Peter Raymont. Radio Unnameable is a 2012 documentary film directed by Paul Lovelace and Jessica Wolfson. Lampedusa auf St. Pauli is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Rasmus Gerlach. Karayuki-san, the Making of a Prostitute is a 1975 Japanese film by director Shohei Imamura. It is a documentary on one of the Japanese "karayuki-san," who were women who left their homes in Japan to work as prostitutes in Japanese-occupied territories during World War II. Many of these women were told that they were doing this to support their families because of the extreme poverty in wartime Japan. Imamura focuses on one particular woman who was sent to Malaysia and never returned to Japan. Joan Mellen, in The Waves at Genji's Door, called this film, "Perhaps the most brilliant and feeling of Imamura's fine documentaries." Puente Llaguno: Claves de una Masacre is a documentary film about the events of the 2002 Venezuelan coup d'état attempt. The film argues that "anti-Chávez opposition alliance manipulated coverage ... to make it look like the government used gunmen to shoot and kill opposition demonstrators". The Puente Llaguno of the title is a bridge in central Caracas, near the Miraflores Palace, made infamous by the events of 11 April 2002, when Venezuelan private media showed gunmen firing from it, allegedly at opposition protestors. Director Ángel Palacios is described as a "staunch supporter of President Hugo Chávez who is nevertheless frequently critical of stances taken by the government"; he graduated in film studies from Cuba's San Antonio de los Baños. I'm Going to Tell You a Secret is a 2005 American documentary film directed by Jonas Åkerlund, that follows singer-songwriter Madonna on her 2004 Re-Invention World Tour. The film premiered on MTV on October 21, 2005, and was released in DVD on June 20, 2006, by Warner Bros. Records. The documentary was originally called The Re-Invented Process, referring the tour and the Steven Klein exhibition titled X-STaTIC Pro=CeSS. It starts with imagery from the exhibition and Madonna auditioning dancers for the tour, continues with her entourage travelling through different cities and performing, the singer's introspection on her life, her marriage, her religion, and her children, and ends with Madonna's visit to Israel in the midst of protests. The documentary was inspired by Madonna's need to show her artistic side on the tour and her devotion towards the Jewish mysticism Kabbalah. Unlike her 1991 documentary Truth or Dare, which portrayed Hollywood glamour, I'm Going to Tell You a Secret clarified from its beginning that it was about the singer's personal views on life and spirituality. Vote Jesus: The Chronicles of Ken Stevenson is a documentary film directed by Vic David. My Flesh and Blood is a 2003 documentary film by Jonathan Karsh chronicling a year in the life of the Tom family. The Tom family is notable as the mother, Susan Tom, adopted eleven children, most of whom had serious disabilities or diseases. It was nominated for and won several awards, including the Audience Award and the Director's Award at the Sundance Film Festival. Camilla Horn 85 is a 1987 short documentary film written and directed by Peter Schamoni. Beautiful Child is a documentary film directed by Lee Seong-Soo. Fragments (aka Bruchstücke) os a 2010 documentary film directed by Martin Bruch and Reinhilde Condin. It was written by Reinhilde Condin. The Return of Navajo Boy is a documentary film produced by Jeff Spitz and Bennie Klain about the Cly family, Navajo who live on their reservation. Through them, the film explores several longstanding issues among the Navajo and their relations with the United States government and corporations: environmental racism, white supremacy, media and political representation, off-reservation adoption, and denial of reparations for environmental illnesses due to uranium mining in Monument Valley, Utah, which was unregulated for decades. Bill Kennedy served as the film's executive producer; his late father had produced and directed the earlier silent film The Navajo Boy, which featured the Cly family. In 2000, the film was an official selection of the Sundance Film Festival. It has won numerous awards. The Reality of the Virtual is a 2004 documentary film lecture by Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek. Recorded in a single day by Ben Wright, the film consists of 7 long takes of Žižek seated in front of a bookshelf. The discourse concerns the concept of "real effects produced, generated, by something which does not yet fully exist, which is not yet fully actual", with numerous examples from psychoanalysis, politics, sociology, physics and popular culture. The Making of 'Last of the Mohicans' is a 2010 video documentary written and directed by Tjardus Greidanus. Screamers is a 2006 documentary by director Carla Garapedian conceived by Peter McAlevey and Garapedian and produced by McAlevey.. The film explores why genocides have occurred in modern day history and features talks from Serj Tankian, lead vocalist of the American alternative metal band System of a Down, whose grandfather is an Armenian Genocide survivor, as well as from human-rights activist, journalist, and professor, Samantha Power, as well as various other people involved with genocides in Rwanda and Darfur. Screamers also examines genocide denial in current-day Turkey, and the neutral trend that the United States generally holds towards genocide. Hrant Dink was assassinated in Istanbul in January 2007, by a 17-year old Turkish nationalist shortly after the premiere of Screamers, in which he was interviewed about Turkish denial of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and the case against him under article 301. Which Way Home is a 2009 film directed by Rebecca Cammisa. "As the United States continues to build a wall between itself and Mexico, Which Way Home shows the personal side of immigration through the eyes of children who face harrowing dangers with enormous courage and resourcefulness as they endeavor to make it to the United States. The film follows several unaccompanied child migrants as they journey through Mexico en route to the US on a freight train they call "The Beast." The filmmaker tracks the stories of children like Olga and Freddy, 9-year-old Hondurans who are desperately trying to reach their families in Minnesota, and Jose, a 10-year-old El Salvadoran who has been abandoned by smugglers and ends up alone in a Mexican detention center. The film focuses on Kevin, a canny, streetwise 14-year-old Honduran, whose mother hopes that he will reach New York City and send money back to his family. These are stories of hope and courage, disappointment and sorrow. They are the ones you never hear about—the invisible ones." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Winston Churchill: Walking with Destiny is a 2010 documentary biography film directed by Richard Trank. La Locomotive is a 1946 short documentary film written and directed by Stanisław Urbanowicz. Notorious C.H.O. is a 2002 comedy documentary film written by Margaret Cho and directed by Lorene Machado. Andrew Bird: Fever Year is a 2011 biographical documentary music film directed by Xan Aranda. Navajazo is a 2014 documentary biographical film written and directed by Ricardo Silva. Low Definition Control - Malfunctions #0 is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Michael Palm. Chicago 10: Speak Your Peace is a 2007 American animated film written and directed by Brett Morgen that tells the story of the Chicago Eight. The film features the voices of Hank Azaria, Dylan Baker, Nick Nolte, Mark Ruffalo, Roy Scheider, Liev Schreiber, James Urbaniak, and Jeffrey Wright in an animated reenactment of the trial based on transcripts and rediscovered audio recordings, making the film fall in the animated documentary genre. It also contains archival footage of Abbie Hoffman, David Dellinger, William Kunstler, Jerry Rubin, Bobby Seale, Tom Hayden, and Leonard Weinglass, and of the protest and riot itself. The title is drawn from a quote by Rubin, who said, "Anyone who calls us the Chicago Seven is a racist. Because you're discrediting Bobby Seale. You can call us the Chicago Eight, but really we're the Chicago Ten, because our two lawyers went down with us." Heroes, Wings Are Not Necessary to Fly is a 2007 film directed by ngel Loza. Don'T Think I'Ve Forgotten: Cambodia'S Lost Rock And Roll is a 2014 music documentary film directed by John Pirozzi. Alma, a Tale of Violence is an World Press Photo Award-winning interactive documentary by Alexandre Brachet, Margaux Missika. Reincarnated is a documentary film about the musician Snoop Dogg's explorations of reggae and Rastafarian culture, and his transformation into Snoop Lion. It premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 7, 2012, and was released to theaters March 21, 2013. It is a companion film to his 12th studio album, Reincarnated. The film was shot by Andy Capper of Vice Magazine. La Quinceañera is a documentary film produced and directed by Adam Taub released in 2007. It was shot in Tijuana, Mexico and follows Ana Maria and her family as they prepare for and celebrate her Quinceañera. The Quinceañera or Quince Años is, in some Spanish-speaking regions of the Americas, a young woman's celebration of her fifteenth birthday, which is celebrated in a unique and different way from her other birthdays. The word is also used to refer to the young woman whose 15th birthday is being celebrated. Stop! Rodando el cambio is a 2013 documentary film directed by Alba González de Molina Soler and Blanca Ordóñez de Tena. F.T.A. is a 1972 American documentary film starring Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland and directed by Francine Parker. Occupation 101: Voice of the Silenced Majority is a 2006 documentary film on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict directed by Sufyan Omeish and Abdallah Omeish, and narrated by Alison Weir, founder of If Americans Knew. The film focuses on the effects of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, and discusses events from the rise of Zionism to the Second Intifada and Israel's unilateral disengagement plan, presenting its perspective through dozens of interviews, questioning the nature of Israeli-American relations — in particular, the Israeli military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and the ethics of US monetary involvement. Occupation 101 includes interviews with mostly American and Israeli scholars, religious leaders, humanitarian workers, and NGO representatives — more than half of whom are Jewish — who are critical of the injustices and human rights abuses stemming from Israeli policy in the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Gaza. Behind the Nudist Curtain is an American 1964 nudist film produced and directed by Doris Wishman. OR7 The Journey is a documentary film directed by Clemens Schenk. The Great Invisible is a 2014 documentary film directed by Margaret Brown. Life of a Thoroughbred is a 1941 American short documentary film directed by Tom Cummiskey. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. George Orwell: A Life in Pictures is a 2003 BBC Television docudrama telling the life story of the British author George Orwell. Confessions of a Superhero is a 2007 documentary film directed by Matthew Ogens about costumed superheroes on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The film focuses in particular on Christopher Dennis, Jennifer Wenger, Joseph McQueen, and Maxwell Allen, who dress as Superman, Wonder Woman, The Hulk, and Batman, respectively. The film tells the life story of its four main subjects, all aspiring actors who have very different backgrounds. Dennis grew up in Los Angeles as an orphan, but claims to be the son of Oscar and Tony winning actress Sandy Dennis, though Sandy Dennis's family denies that she had any children. Wenger was a small-town cheerleader before moving to Hollywood to become an actress. McQueen moved to Los Angeles during the Rodney King riots and was homeless for four years before becoming the Hulk, and achieves the most success of any of the subjects in the film, winning a small role in Justin Lin's Finishing the Game. Allen claims to be a former mobster with a murderous past, though his wife casts doubts on his stories in the film. Peace, Love and Cinema is a 2009 short documentary film. Live at the Cavern Club is a 1999 concert film starring Paul McCartney. It was filmed during his 1999 concert at the Cavern Club, and it was directed by Geoff Wonfor. On stage with McCartney were David Gilmour, Mick Green, Ian Paice, Pete Wingfield and Chris Hall. The DVD earned Gold status in Australia. All I Want is a 2005 DVD that contains the documentary, A Portrait of Rufus Wainwright, along with live performances, music videos, interviews and more. The documentary features background information about Rufus' childhood, teen years and family, and how each of his first four albums were influenced. Celebrities providing commentary during the film include Elton John, Sting, Keane, and Jake Shears and Babydaddy of the Scissor Sisters; family members interviewed include his mother, Kate McGarrigle, and sister Martha Wainwright. The DVD was produced by Nick de Grunwald and Martin R. Smith. The Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, Bone and the Changing Face of Comics is a 2009 documentary about the life and art of Jeff Smith, the creator of the Bone comic series and regarded as one of America's greatest living cartoonists. The feature-length film is by American director Ken Mills and was produced by Mills James Productions. The Cartoonist has been released for international distribution on DVD. Useless is a 2007 documentary film directed by Jia Zhangke. It is Jia's second full-length documentary film after 2006's Dong. The film follows China's fashion and clothing industry. The film was produced by Jia Zhangke's own Xstream Pictures, in association with the China Film Association and the Mixmind Art and Design Company. Hackers Wanted is an unreleased American documentary film. Directed and written by Sam Bozzo, the film explores the origins and nature of hackers and hacking by following the adventures of Adrian Lamo, and contrasting his story with that of controversial figures throughout history. The film is narrated by Kevin Spacey. Originally named "Can You Hack It?" The film failed to get a conventional release, according to Lamo, because of conflicts between its producer and others on the team. The more commonly cited reason is a problem with the quality of the finished product. On May 20, 2010, a version of the film was leaked to BitTorrent. Lamo has stated that he had no involvement in the leak. "It's ironic that a film about overcoming barriers, about new technologies, about thinking differently, had to come to the public eye by being hacked out of the hands of people who, after making a film about the free flow of information, tried to lock away that information forever. The truth tends to itself." -Adrian Lamo On June 12, 2010, a director's cut version of the film was also leaked onto torrent sites. Mein Kampf is a 1960 war drama documentary film written by Erwin Leiser and Maurice Croizat and directed by Erwin Leiser. Gangster Project is a 2011 documentary film written by Teboho Edkins and François-Xavier Drouet and directed by Teboho Edkins. Wild Wheels is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Harrod Blank. Chung Kuo, Cina is a 1972 Italian documentary directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. It focuses primarily on the lives of contemporary working class Chinese people. Tsar to Lenin is a documentary and cinematic record of the Russian Revolution, produced by Herman Axelbank. It premiered on March 6, 1937, at the Filmarte Theatre on Fifty-Eighth Street in New York City. Pioneer American radical Max Eastman narrates the film. The film, suppressed after its premier by the Stalinists of the American Communist Party, was only available in a shortened format in the Library of Congress until its re-release in 2012. Flesh and Blood: The Hammer Heritage of Horror is a 1994 documentary and horror film written and directed by Ted Newsom. People of the Australian Western Desert, Part 4 is a 1966 documentary film directed by Ian Dunlop. Dave Brubeck: In His Own Sweet Way is a 2010 documentary film about jazz pianist legend Dave Brubeck. It was directed and produced by Bruce Ricker with Clint Eastwood as executive producer for Turner Classic Movies to commemorate Brubeck's 90th birthday in December 2010. It aired on his birthday, December 6, 2010. The Filth and the Fury is a 2000 British rockumentary film about the Sex Pistols, directed by Julien Temple. The Real Robin Hood is a 2010 documentary, biography, history film directed by M. David Melvin. Decrescendo is a documentary directed by Marta Minorowicz. The Poor Stockinger, the Luddite Cropper and the Deluded Followers of Joanna Southcott is a 2012 documentary film directed by Luke Fowler. Scandalize My Name is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Alexandra Isles Sam is a 1986 American short documentary film directed by Aaron D. Weisblatt. It focuses on Sam Phelps, a New York State farmer who is opposed to the destruction of a nearby watershed, and argues for better planning and land management. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Simply Magical, Tearing Down Walls is a short biographical documentary family musical film directed by Darla Rae. Dead to the World is the first live video album by American rock band Marilyn Manson, released on February 10, 1998 on VHS, documenting the infamous tour of the same name. It contains primarily live performances but delves into backstage and archival footage of the band. Notable features are: extensive protests by right-wing Christian groups; spoken relations of meaning and intent by Manson himself; and the brutal, immense theatrics presented by the band in the live setting. Based from Antichrist Superstar, this video features six songs from the album as well as hits from earlier releases Portrait of an American Family and Smells Like Children. Naturally this tour reflected the album it was built upon - Manson's criticisms of organized religion in this video and otherwise are ironically proven in the very actions of the people featured protesting his credibility. The Hour of the Furnaces is a 1968 film directed by Octavio Getino and Fernando Solanas. 'The paradigm of revolutionary activist cinema', it addresses the politics of the 'Third worldist' films and Latin-American manifesto of the late 1960s. You Laugh But It's True is a 2011 documentary, biography, comedy and drama film directed by David Paul Meyer. Neue Kunst - neues Sehen is a 1952 short docuentary film directed and written by Ottomar Domnick. Being Dad 2: Bringing the Baby Home is a 2009 documentary film directed by Leslie Marsh. River Colors is a 1994 film directed by Christoph Janetzko. Are African American males becoming extinct? Will future generations of African American women not be able to find husbands? These are but a few of the questions explored in this 1 hour 16 minute documentary. Written/directed/produced by Hisani DuBose, it features Melvin Jackson, Jr. (whose acting credits include HBO's "The Wire" and UPN's "Everybody Hates Chris") who interviews doctors, politicians, college students, teachers, law enforcement personnel, a screenwriter and others. Music, artwork and a series of monologues woven throughout the movie should captivate viewers. Oscar nominated editor, Alfred Santana, helps the visuals flow smoothly. Named Best Documentary and Best Director by Kam Williams. The crew shoots over to Buffalo for a divisional showdown against the Dolphins. First things first, it's time to figure out whose wings will make John cry harder, Anchor Bar or Duffs? Then it's off to the tailgate where they carouse with legendary characters Hammer, Pinto Ron, and Captain Buffalo. And to finish things off Mike partakes in a bizarre tradition where he gets covered in ketchup and mustard by some of the most colorful Bills fans. Dear Friend Hitler, released in India as Gandhi to Hitler, is a multilingual Indian drama film based on letters written by Mohandas Gandhi to the leader of the Nazi Party and Chancellor of Germany Adolf Hitler. The film, starring Raghubir Yadav as Adolf Hitler and Neha Dhupia as Eva Braun, was directed by debutant Rakesh Ranjan Kumar and produced by Anil Kumar Sharma under the production house Amrapali media vision. The film's promotion was screened at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival where it received positive reviews. Film Business Asia quoted that "despite the provocative title, the film is not a tribute to the murderous Führer". The film was scheduled to release on July 29, 2011 in India. Marty & Bobby is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Jeffrey Schwarz. Born in Beijing is a documentary film directed by Ma Li. Veer Savarkar is a 1983 documentary film directed by Prem Vaidya. Following the Sun and Goats is a 2011 Lithuanian documentary film written and directed by Giedre Žickytė. Eagles: Hell Freezes Over is a 1994 tv special. Alfred and Jakobine is a 2014 documentary, drama, biographical, family and romance film directed by Jonathan Howells and Tom Roberts. Unveiled: The Mother/Daughter Relationship is a 1997 documentary short film directed by Maureen Judge. Legends of Jazz with Ramsey Lewis was a 13-week, public television show, produced by the Chicago-based independent music entertainment company, LRSmedia and distributed by WTTW. It was first broadcast on public television stations in April 2006. The series was the first weekly network television jazz show in 40 years. Each themed episode featured intimate conversations and original performances by some of the world's leading musicians. Grammy Award-winning composer/pianist Ramsey Lewis hosted the series, which was produced in multi-camera HDTV and lossless Dolby Surround 5.1 audio. This Is What Winning Looks Like is a documentary film about the War in Afghanistan by Ben Anderson. Initially in 2007, Anderson was documenting the "undermanned [and] underequipped" British forces fighting the Taliban in Helmand, Afghanistan. The documentary begins in December 2012, when Anderson followed U.S. Marines as they trained Afghan security forces to take control for when U.S. forces leave Afghanistan; the film shows that the transition is less than seamless as there are killings and sexual molestation of children, heavy drug addiction, corruption, and false imprisonment of prisoners by Afghan police officers; at the same time, there are Afghan officers who truly do want to enforce law justly. Further perceived negative impact comes from American and British officials only receiving and broadcasting the message that they are succeeding in Afghanistan, even in spite of the beliefs of U.S. Marine Major Bill Steuber, the commanding officer of the police advisory team. Anderson says, "All it is now is about getting out and saving face. We're [U.S. forces] not leaving because we achieved our goals. We're leaving because we've given up on achieving those goals." Beyond the Gates of Splendor is a feature-length documentary film that was released in 2004. It chronicles the events leading up to and following Operation Auca, an attempt to contact the Huaorani tribe of Ecuador in which five American missionaries were killed. The film was produced by Bearing Fruit Productions and distributed by Every Tribe Entertainment. Bogman Palmjaguar is a 2007 film directed by Luke Fowler. Wavemakers is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Caroline Martel. NATUROPOLIS: NEW YORK, THE GREEN REVOLUTION is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Matthias Schmitt and Bernard Guerrini. A Step Away is an Official Olympic Film, a documentary filmed during the VIIIth Pan American Games held in San Juan, Puerto Rico, from July 1 to July 15, 1979. It was produced and directed by Roberto Ponce and co-directed by Marcos Zurinaga. The English language narrator was Orson Welles; Carlos Montalban narrated the Spanish version. The film was remastered in 2010, and for the first time, is now available in a Collector's Limited Edition, at www.astepaway.tv. FU377 is a 2014 animation family documentary LGBT film directed by Neelu Bhuman. Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished was an investigatory documentary about the final weeks of the Sri Lankan Civil War broadcast by the British TV station Channel 4 on 14 March 2012. It was a sequel to the award winning Sri Lanka's Killing Fields which was broadcast by Channel 4 in June 2011. Made by film maker Callum Macrae, this documentary focused on four specific cases and investigated who was responsible for them. Using amateur video from the conflict zone filmed by civilians and Sri Lankan soldiers, photographs and statements by civilians, soldiers and United Nations workers, the documentary traced ultimate responsibility for the cases to Sri Lanka's political and military leaders. The documentary was made by ITN Productions and presented by Jon Snow, the main anchor on Channel 4 News. The Sri Lankan government has denied all the allegations in the documentary. Running for Jim is a drama sports biographical documentary directed by Robin Hauser Reynolds and Dan Noyes. Approximately Nels Cline is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Steven Okazaki. Buried Prayers is a 2010 documentary film directed by Steven Meyer and written by Matt Mazer and Steven Meyer. Walking on Dead Fish is a 2008 independent film by first time American director, producer, and writer Franklin Martin. It is a heart felt documentary about a small town high school football team and its "displaced players" who are thrown together by the powerful winds and floods of Hurricane Katrina. It is executive produced by Franklin Martin, Stan Cassio, and Terry Bradshaw; who also narrates the documentary. Gypsy Eyes is a 2012 short documentary film written by Francisco Adão and directed by Leonor Teles. Our Sacred Parliament is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Olivia D'Oliveira, Cynthia Liao, Zaheer Mohamed and Brynjar Chapman. Nessa is a 2012 documentary film directed by Loghman Khaledi. Apple Stories is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Rasmus Gerlach. Document of the Dead is a 1979 documentary film by American filmmaker Roy Frumkes that was largely shot during the production of the 1978 film Dawn of the Dead. Originally a 66 minute feature, it has since been expanded two times. First, in 1989, when an 85 minute version was released, featuring new interviews from the set of Two Evil Eyes. Then, in 2012, it was released as The Definitive Document of the Dead, with a 102 minute runtime, featuring new footage filmed through 2006. Reno Finds Her Mom is a 1998 documentary and comedy film written by Reno and directed by Lydia Dean Pilcher. What is it like to work in a palace, founded by William the Conqueror, rebuilt in Victorian Gothic Splendor in which for 700 years successive Parliaments have met? Over a period of twelve months, Tony Benn toured the palace with his camera, talking to people who work there and filming places that visitors and most MP's never see. What goes on behind the closed doors of Westminster. The Buck-Tick Syndrome I is a documentary film directed by Yuichiro Iwaki. Malcolm's Echo: The Legacy of Malcolm X is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Dami Akinnusi. Chain Camera is a 2001 American documentary film directed by Kirby Dick about the lives of Los Angeles high school students. It premiered at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival. Béla Fleck: How To Write A Banjo Concerto is a documentary music film directed by Béla Fleck and Sascha Paladino. Watch the Watch is a 1994 documentary film written by Malcolm McDonald and Peter Miller and directed by Malcolm McDonald. When The Moors Ruled In Europe is a documentary movie presented by the English historian Bettany Hughes. It is a two-part series on the contribution the Moors made to Europe during their 700-year reign in Spain and Portugal ending in the 15th century. It was first broadcast on Channel 4 Saturday 5 November 2005. and was filmed in the Spanish region of Andalusia, mostly in the cities of Granada, Cordoba and the Moroccan city of Fes. The era ended with the Reconquista during which the Catholic authorities burnt over 1,000,000 Arabic texts. North on Evers is a documentary film directed by James Benning. El que manda... vive enfrente (1930-1934) is a 1992 short documentary film written by Reyes Bercini and directed by Francisco Ohem Ochoa. Das ganze Stadion is a 2011 documentary film written by Ascan Breuer, Felix Grimm and Sven Langner and directed by Felix Grimm. A School of My Own is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Gargi Sen. The Chances of the World Changing is a 2006 documentary film about Richard Ogust's efforts to save endangered turtle species from extinction. It was directed and produced by Eric Daniel Metzgar and produced by Nell Carden Grey. Other credits include Eric Liebman, Noe Venable, and Faun Fables. The film follows Ogust's efforts to establish a "Noah's ark," or sanctuary and research institute, in order to preserve the animals until such time that they can be returned to their natural habitats, which are being wiped out by ecological destruction and poaching - the problem that conservation biologists have dubbed "the Asian turtle crisis". Chances premiered at the 2006 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival and was aired on the Public Broadcasting Service series P.O.V. beginning July 17, 2007. It was also nominated for the Axium Truer Than Fiction Award as part of the 2007 Independent Spirit Awards. In Bob We Trust is a feature documentary about Father Bob Maguire directed by Lynn-Maree Milburn and Produced by Ghost Pictures Pty Ltd. Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse is a 1991 documentary film about the production of Apocalypse Now. Will There Be A Theatre Up There? is a 2011 Documentary film written by Nana Janelidze and Nino Natroshvili and directed by Nana Janelidze. As one of the big retirement destinations for middle class Americans, Phoenix Arizona has also become a capital of dementia care. Louis visits the city in order to spend time in state-of-the-art care home Beatitudes and with home-based carers, whose love is tested by a condition that steadily erodes the personality and character of their partners. At Beatitudes Louis meets Gary, a 69-year-old patient who thinks he is serving in the military and that it is his job to check the state of everyone's teeth. Louis submits to a dental check-up, is introduced to two of Gary's new resident girlfriends and spends time with Gary's wife of 20 years, Carla – a woman whom Gary robustly denies ever having married. In a suburban Phoenix bungalow Louis agrees to become carer-for-a-day to Nancy, a formerNew York model with a personality to match. News Items is a 1983 French documentary film, directed by Raymond Depardon, about daily life at police station in the fifth arrondissement of Paris. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival. Dr. Drew's Celebrity Addiction Special is a 2008 documentary TV special starring Drew Pinsky, Ben Widdicombe and Jack Osbourne. X-Ray of a Lie is a 2004 documentary film examining another film, The Revolution Will Not Be Televised about the events of the 2002 Venezuelan coup d'état attempt. The X-Ray documentary, directed by Wolfgang Schalk and written by Schalk and Thaelman Urguelles, accuses Kim Bartley and Donacha O'Briain of "omissions and distortion" in The Revolution Will Not Be Televised. It premiered on DVD in Venezuela in July 2004. So Right So Smart is a 2009 documentary film directed by Justin Maine and Guy Noerr. Selling Out is a 1972 Canadian short film for cinema and TV directed by Tadeusz Jaworski, written and produced by Jack Winter, distributed by Unit Productions and Encyclopædia Britannica. Hollywood: The Fabulous Era is a 1962 American film directed by Jack Haley Jr.. Elliot is a 2014 documentary comedy drama film written and directed by Matthew Bauckman, Jaret Belliveau. Putting the I in Trans is a 2012 short comedy news film written and directed by Steen Star. Forgotten Ellis Island is a documentary film directed by Lorie Conway and narrated by Elliott Gould. A book of the same name by Lorie Conway, designed by Judith Stagnitto Abbate, was published by Smithsonian Books in 2007. The film took 9 years to produce and was supported by three grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities. It portrays the story of the Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital. The work premiered on the Public Broadcasting Service on February 9, 2009. Imma Hustle Girl "the Heart Of The West" is a 2013 documentary music film written and directed by Sharmaine Starks. MANSOME will bring daily advice for the guy who never compromises in rising above masculine mediocrity. Y! Originals has gathered the greatest men's lifestyle experts to bring you the ultimate guide to grooming, survival, culinary arts, and sports. From executive producers Morgan Spurlock, Will Arnett, and Jason Bateman, MANSOME covers the topics we know men truly crave with a mixture of humor and expertise. Whether grilling a burger, complimenting a date, or finding a dream job, MANSOME is the ultimate men's guide to rising above the pack. Out Living It is a 2012 Telly Award winning documentary film. If I Wasn’t Born is a documentary film written and directed by Hendrik Schäfer. It's Only Rock N'Roll (But I Like Keith) is a 2008 musical documentary film written and directed by Piergiorgio Gay. In the Land of the Deaf is the English title of a French documentary created and produced by Nicolas Philibert in 1992. The film is presented French Sign Language and French, with English subtitles and closed captions. Philibert's uses sparse dialogue in creating an unsentimental, non-manipulative work which allows its subjects to communicate their feelings about the richness of life despite hearing problems. Prior to its initial theatrical release, this excursion into the unique world of Deaf communities in France was featured in international film festivals. In its subsequent broadcast debut in the United States, the film was honored with a Peabody Award for excellence. World Discoveries III: Dead Sea is a 1999 documentary that takes an indepth look at the Dead Sea, which is a lake on the border between Israel and Jordan. At 8.6 times saltier than the ocean, the Dead Sea is so salty fish can't swim in it, boats can't sail on it, and animals can't survive around it. The film explores the ominous reputation the salty body of water has acquired and shows slow wide-screen nature shots of its surroundings. Money and Honey is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jasmine Ching-Hui Lee. Learn to strip while you work out! Carmen Electra leads a fun, flirty workout that will make you feel sexy while you work up a sweat. Carmen brings together hot moves from dance and fitness in a low-intensity workout that will work your abdomen, thighs, butt, and hips. Working with the best choreographers around, Carmen brings the art of the striptease into your living room. As volume one of Carmen's series, AEROBIC STRIPTEASE teaches basic striptease technique, introducing you to the program with a full warm-up and three cardio dance routines. In 2004, The Gilmore Keyboard Festival, held every two years in Kalamazoo, Michigan, invited 8 of it's previous winners of the Gilmore Young Artist Award to perform at the festival. These are the carefully selected best young pianists in America, who receive the anonymous award, one of the most respected and lucrative in the music world. Their challenge was to rehearse and play a variety of multi-piano pieces, some of the most difficult repertoire in the piano literature.This documentary follows all 8 pianists as they go through periods of uncertainty and anguish, and finally pull off the impossible. Children of Tsunami: No More Tears is a 24-minute documentary film that was produced at the end of 2005. The program depicts the lives of eight children in four Asian countries during the year following the Indian Ocean tsunami that struck South and Southeast Asia on 26 December 2004. It was co-produced by the Singapore-based regional news and current affairs channel Channel News Asia, in partnership with TVE Asia Pacific. It was broadcast Asia-wide by the Channel News Asia on 26 December 2005, the first anniversary of the Asian tsunami, and has since been repeated several times. Glastonbury is a 2006 rockumentary film directed by Julien Temple which details the history of the Glastonbury Festival from 1970 to 2005. It is the third attempt to make a film about the festival. The film is made up of footage shot by Temple at the festival in 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2005, as well as footage sent in by festival goers after a request on websites and newspapers for footage. Temple had initially only agreed to make a film of the 2002 festival after organiser Michael Eavis expressed concern that that would be the last year of the festival. Temple then realised that he wanted to make a film detailing the full history of the festival. The film also includes footage shot by Channel 4 and the BBC during their coverage of the festival since 1994. A series of special charity premieres took place on 13 April 2006 which included live performances from bands such as The Levellers. The DVD has a fully interactive feature which allows viewers to make their own festival experience by selecting which live footage they would prefer to see in the film. The DVD was released on 17 July 2006 after a showing on BBC Two on 15 July 2006. Naija Diamond is a short documentary film directed by Nform Leonard. Berkeley in the Sixties is a 1990 documentary film by Mark Kitchell. The film highlights the origins of the Free Speech Movement beginning with the May 1960 House Un-American Activities Committee hearings at San Francisco City Hall, the development of the counterculture of the 1960s in Berkeley, California, and ending with People's Park in 1969. The film features 15 student activists and archival footage of Mario Savio, Todd Gitlin, Joan Baez, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Huey Newton, Allen Ginsberg, Gov. Ronald Reagan and the Grateful Dead. The film is dedicated to Fred Cody, founder of Cody's Books. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Fårödokument is a 1969 documentary film directed by Ingmar Bergman. On the Scrap Heap is a 1982 film directed by Ebba Jahn. Le Steak is a 1992 documentary film directed by Pierre Falardeau and Manon Leriche. Powering a Nation: Coal - A Love Story is the 2011 documentary film directed by Laura Ruel. Prophets of Science Fiction is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Dan Levitt. Derby Crazy Love is a 2013 documentary film written by Maya Gallus and directed by Maya Gallus and Justine Pimlott. Catching Trouble is a 1936 short documentary film starring Ted Husing and Ross Allen. For You Naked is a 2012 documentary film directed and written by Sara Broos. Priscilla's Legacy is a 2014 documentary film directed by Thomalind Martin Polite. The Dike of Transience is a 2004 short documentary film written and directed by Gyula Nemes. Living with the Past: Historic Cairo is a 2001 documentary film directed by Maysoon Pachachi. Lucebert, Time and Farewell is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Johan van der Keuken. For the Love of Movies: The Story of American Film Criticism is a 2009 documentary film dramatizing a hundred years of American film criticism through film clips, historic photographs, and on-camera interviews with many of today’s important reviewers, mostly print but also Internet. It was produced by Amy Geller, written and directed by long-time Boston Phoenix film critic Gerald Peary, and narrated by Patricia Clarkson. Critics featured include Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times, A.O. Scott of The New York Times, Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly, Kenneth Turan of The Los Angeles Times, and Elvis Mitchell, host of the public radio show The Treatment. Many more critics, journalists, and writers from the present and past appear in film clips and interviews. Among them: Jami Bernard, Manny Farber, Andrew Sarris, Molly Haskell, J. Hoberman, Harlan Jacobson, Stanley Kauffmann, Stuart Klawans, Leonard Maltin, Janet Maslin, Wesley Morris, Rex Reed, B. Ruby Rich, Jonathan Rosenbaum, Richard Schickel, David Sterritt, Pauline Kael, Richard Corliss, and Gene Siskel. Death & Taxes is a 1993 documentary film directed by Jeffrey F. Jackson about Gordon Kahl, a tax protester who was killed in a shootout with local law enforcement officials in Smithville, Arkansas in 1983. Mohan Kaka is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Aditya Gowtham. On the Art of War is a 2012 documentary film directed by Luca Bellino and Silvia Luzi. THE BALLAD OF BERING STRAIT is a cinema-verite film following seven Russian teenagers who have come to America to become country music stars. Principle photography began in July 1999 when the band, Bering Strait, entered the United States and began recording their first album in Nashville. The film documents the band responding to the twists and turns of the recording industry, rehearsing for their tour, preparing for their debut concert at the Grand Ole Opry, charting the course for their career with their managers, and living every-day life on the farm where they reside in rural Tennessee.The crew traveled with the band to their homes in Obninsk, Russia and to their music conservatories in Moscow, documenting how these two girls and five boys became so adept at playing American country music. The film culminates with the band's arrival on the U.S. stage at Wolf Trap National Park.THE BALLAD OF BERING STRAIT is a two and a half year epic that follows Bering Strait's amazing cultural fusion-coming of age journey in America. Destressed is a 2014 film directed by Garry Pastore. Assume Nothing is a 2009 documentary film directed by Kirsty MacDonald. Focusing on the art, photography and performances of four "alternative" gender artists Assume Nothing poses the questions: "What if "male" and "female" are not the only options? How do other genders express themselves through art?" Assume Nothing takes its title from the work of renowned NZ photographer Rebecca Swan's book "Assume Nothing" (2004), which reveals an extraordinary diversity of gender identity from the Pacific region and beyond. Assume Nothing creates "living" portraits of four artists featured in Swan's work, woven together by a portrait of Swan herself as an artist, blurring the conventions of documentary, animation, drama and gender in the process. Written by Kirsty MacDonald The Immortalists is a 2013 documentary film written by Jason Sussberg and directed by Jason Sussberg and David Alvarado. De Boma à Tshela is a Belgian 1926 documentary film. Wesley Willis: The Daddy of Rock 'n' Roll is a 2003 documentary film directed by Daniel Bitton about rock musician and artist Wesley Willis, who died in 2003 at age 40. Willis, challenged by a weight disorder as well as paranoid schizophrenia, is followed in his daily tasks, trials and tribulations in autumn 2000, showing him writing his unique yet virtually identical songs, playing a show, and attending to daily chores. A Sidewalk Astronomer is a documentary film about former Vedanta monk and amateur astronomer John Dobson. The film follows Dobson to state parks, astronomy clubs, and downtown streets as he promotes awareness of astronomy through his own personal style of sidewalk astronomy. The documentary includes voice overs by Dobson himself promoting his unorthodox views on religion and cosmology. V... For Verneuil is a 2013 documentary film directed by Arto Pehlivanian. The Rockerball Documentary is a documentary film directed by Patrick Gillett.It explores the origins of the sport of Rockerball as well as the future of the game Under the Sign of Sagittarius is a 1982 film directed by Juris Podnieks. The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginia is a 2009 documentary film directed by Julien Nitzberg, chronicling the White Family of Boone County, West Virginia. Pandora's Promise is a 2013 documentary film about the nuclear power debate, directed by Robert Stone. Its central argument is that nuclear power, which still faces historical opposition from environmentalists, is a relatively safe and clean energy source which can help mitigate the serious problem of anthropogenic global warming. The title is derived from the ancient Greek myth of Pandora, who released numerous evils into the world, yet as the movie's tagline recalls: "At the bottom of the box she found hope." The Empire of Shame is a documentary film directed by Li-Kyung Hong. Earth is a 2007 nature documentary film which depicts the diversity of wild habitats and creatures across the planet. The film begins in the Arctic in January of one year and moves southward, concluding in Antarctica in the December of the same year. Along the way, it features the journeys made by three particular species—the polar bear, African bush elephant and humpback whale—to highlight the threats to their survival in the face of rapid environmental change. A companion piece to the 2006 BBC/Discovery television series Planet Earth, the film uses many of the same sequences, though most are edited differently, and features previously unseen footage. Earth was co-directed by Alastair Fothergill, the executive producer of the television series, and Mark Linfield, the producer of Planet Earth's "From Pole to Pole" and "Seasonal Forests" episodes. It was co-produced by BBC Natural History Unit and Greenlight Media, with Discovery providing some of the funding. The same organisations collaborated on Fothergill's previous film, Deep Blue, itself a companion to his 2001 television series on the natural history of the world's oceans, The Blue Planet. Keiko: The Untold story is a 2010 documentary film about Keiko, the Orca best known for starring in the film Free Willy and its two sequels. It was directed and produced by Theresa Demarest. The film made the official selection list of many film festivals, including the Southern Utah International Documentary Film Festival, the San Francisco Ocean Film Festival and the Denver Film Festival. In August 2013 a HD version of the film entitled Keiko: The Untold Story of the Star of Free Willy premiered at the Eqyptian Theater in Hollywood during the 20th Anniversary Celebration Benefit for the Free Willy Keiko Foundation. The World Premiere of the film included a Blue Carpet Ceremony with the stars and director of both Free Willy and the documentary. Inside Burma: Land of Fear is a 1996 Central Independent Television documentary, written and presented by John Pilger, which was directed by David Munro. The two men worked undercover in order to investigate the use of slave labour in Burma. El Sicario Room 164 is a 2010 documentary film written by Gianfranco Rosiand and Charles Bowden and directed by Gianfranco Rosi. In the Light of Reverence is a documentary produced by Christopher McLeod and Malinda Maynor. It features three tribal nations, the Hopi, the Winnemem Wintu, and the Lakota Sioux, and their struggles to protect three sacred sites. Such sites are central to their understanding of the world and their spiritual responsibilities to care for their homelands. The three stories featured in In the Light of Reverence are intended to lead to understanding and dialogue. They were developed with an advisory board composed of Native Americans and were based on personal relationships nurtured for decades. The three sacred sites, Devils Tower, situated in the Lakota Black Hills; the Four Corners of the Hopi in Arizona; and the Winnemem Wintu's Mount Shasta, are places of extraordinary beauty. They have been sites of controversy over differing ideas of how to use the land among American Indians and non-Indians. The Lakota, Hopi, and Winnemem Wintu consider the land sacred. Users such as mining companies, New Age practitioners, and rock climbers think of the land as a material resource best used for industry and recreation. Another Side of Peace is a 2004 human rights documentary film directed by Ellen Frick and Gretchen Burger. Lucio is a 2007 film directed by Aitor Arregi and Jos Mari Goenaga. Nami no koe: Kesennuma is a documentary film directed by Ryusuke Hamaguchi and Kou Sakai. Kesha Rose Sebert's unique style of rapping and singing keeps dance floors crowded all around the world. But don't let the accolades fool you! Kesha is far from an overnight success. In fact, she has been preparing for this moment her entire life. Happy to be Nappy and Other stories of Me is a 2004 documentary film written by Bell Hooks and directed by Michael Sporn. Somebody Waiting is a 1971 American short documentary film produced by Woody Omens. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. A Short History Of The Highrise is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Katerina Cizek. Nature's Revenge is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Stefan Jarl. Gedächtnis is a 1982 documentary film directed by Bruno Ganz and Otto Sander. Before the Revolution is a 2013 documentary, family, historical fiction and thriller film directed by Dan Shadur. Seattle Komedy Dokumentary is a 2010 documentary biography comedy film directed by Clint Berquist. Mau Mau is a documentary film directed by Anthony Howarth and David R. Koff. It is a part of The Black Man's Land Trilogy. The life and legacy of Marlon Brando and how he changed acting. Mississippi Triangle is a 1983 documentary film directed by Christine Choy, Worth Long and Allen Siegel. Berlin im Aufbau is an East German documentary film directed by Kurt Maetzig between 1945 and 1946. It was a prominent 22 minute documentary, released in 1946 and produced by the Deutsche Film-Aktiengesellschaft film company. Maetzig was assisted in the assembly of the film by Marion Keller, who had also scripted and organized several other propaganda films of the late 1940s. The film has historical significance in that it documents the first phase of the rebuilding of the destroyed city of Berlin after World War II and was one of three documentaries shot in the immediate aftermath examining the reconstruction of the city. The documentary explores the redevelopments in culture, transport, health care and education, industry and trade, compiled using newsreel footage of eyewitnesses. It also explores the marked social changes since the fall of Nazi Germany; in one scene a Jewish carpenter is helping a German man on a roof top reconstructing it. The film is essentially a propaganda film, intended to raise the morale of the people after the devastation and showing promise to the nation in the redevelopment programme. New Born is a 2012 documentary and short film directed by Zena Merton. Deuce is the second DVD by the American Nu Metal band, Korn. It was released on June 11, 2002 - the same day as the band's fifth studio release, Untouchables. The DVD was certified platinum by the RIAA. The DVD includes the band's first home video Who Then Now? and features the music video collection from Korn to Issues. Other extras include biographies of each band member, gags, behind-the-scenes of the music videos or live concerts, and various other things. Satan rir media is a 1998 Norwegian documentary by Torstein Grude. The film covers the controversy that surrounded black metal musician Varg Vikernes in the early 1990s, who not only has been tied to a series of church arsons in Norway, but received widespread media attention for the murder of Mayhem band member Øystein "Euronymous" Aarseth. The Tao of Bluegrass : A Portrait of Peter Rowan is a 2013 documentary music biographical film, written and directed by Christine Funk. The Rite of Spring is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Jana Sevciková. Katanga Business is a 2009 film by Belgian director Thierry Michel that explores the mining industry in Katanga Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo. "Social Business: A New Path for Capitalism?" is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Stephanie Failloux and Nicolas Jouvin. Die Akte Lindenberg: Udo und die DDR is a 2010 documentary film written by Reinhold Beckmann and Falko Korth and directed by Falko Korth. Endless Escape, Eternal Return is a 2013 documentary film written by Harutyun Khachatryan, Mikayel Stamboltsyan and directed by Harutyun Khachatryan. Matchmaking Mayor is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Erika Hníková. The Maestro: King of the Cowboy Artists is a 1995 documentary film directed by Les Blank. Foo Fighters: Back and Forth is a 2011 rockumentary about Foo Fighters, directed by filmmaker James Moll. The film documents the band's history, and gets its title from a track on the Foo Fighters' seventh studio album Wasting Light. The film includes material taken from over 1,000 hours of historical and new footage, and interviews with the current members of Foo Fighters, former bandmembers William Goldsmith and Franz Stahl, and producer Butch Vig. Frontman Dave Grohl has said the main inspiration for the film was the decision to record Wasting Light in the garage of his mansion in Encino, California – "Personally, I thought it would be a good idea to now tell the story of the last 16 years, so it would make more sense to watch us make a record in a garage. After selling out fucking stadiums and becoming this big rock band, why would you make a garage record? To me the first hour and 20 minutes of the movie is leading up to that moment." No More Tour is a 2013 documentary film written by Lara Cano Herrero, Daniel Gomez Lillo and Fermín Muguruza and directed by Daniel Gomez Lillo. Mr. Patterns is a 2004 documentary film written by Jo Plomley and Nic Testoni. It is also directed by Catriona McKenzie. Miracle at Sea: The Rescue of Tony Bullimore is a 1998 documentary TV movie directed by Guy Norris. Satan's Angel: Queen of the Fire Tassels is a 2012 documentary, biography film directed by Joshua M. Dragotta. Crazy About You is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Danilo Marunovic. Detlef is a 2012 documentary film written by Stefan Westerwelle and directed by Jan Rothstein and Stefan Westerwelle. I Beat Mike Tyson is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Joshua Weinstein. Our Generation is a 2010 documentary film about the struggle of Aboriginal peoples of Australia for their land, culture and freedom. Handicapped Future is a 1971 documentary film by Werner Herzog about physically disabled children in Munich. The film was made at the request of a disabled friend of Herzog's, specifically in order to raise awareness for the cause of the disabled in West Germany. Herzog compares the film to his earlier The Flying Doctors of East Africa in that it has very little stylization, and is, he says, "dangerously conventional." During production of Handicapped Future, Herzog met Fini Straubringer, and this meeting led directly to Herzog's more well-known film Land of Silence and Darkness. Man no run is a 1988 documentary film written by Claire Denis, Jean-Marie Ahanda, Blaise N'Djehoya and directed by Claire Denis. Sunday Warriors is an action adventure documentary film directed by Andreas Geiger. The Ambivalent Future: Kiyoshi Kurosawa is a documentary film directed by Kenjirô Fujii. A Whisper to a Roar is a 2012 American documentary film made by Ben Moses and inspired by the work of Larry Diamond. The film chronicles the fight for democracy in Egypt, Malaysia, Ukraine, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe, and includes animated segments narrated by British actor Alfred Molina. Arrivederci Macau is a 2013 documentary film directed by Rosa Cabral. 20 year old Naoki is caught up in the ever increasing new problem of juvenile delinquency in Japan. His record is dismal. A failure at school, work and in his personal life, Naoki has decided to turn to a life of petty crime.Naoki's mother, Mrs. Watanabe, is driven to despair and shame by his lifestyle. One day she meets up with an old school friend, Mr. Imai. During her conversation with him, she reveals with great sadness, that, as much as she has tried everything to make her son become a productive member of Japanese society, he has now started to stray. She asks Mr. Imai's advice - can he think of a way out for her son?Mr. Imai suggests that she place her son, for a while, in a "yakuza", a Japanese styled Mafia family - long enough for him to decide if he wants to stay within the "yakuza" or go back to his mother. He believes that the experience could anchor Naoki.Mrs. Watanabe is stunned. She is torn between immense feelings of shame towards the community - her own family, the neighbors, her work colleagues - and the glimmer of hope that this last chance might just save her son. Naoki will have to choose between the light and the darkness... Fearless: The Hunterwali Story is a 1993 documentary film directed by Riyad Vinci Wadia. Location Africa is a 1987 film by Swiss filmmaker Steff Gruber. Children of Darkness is a 1983 American documentary film produced by Ara Chekmayan and Richard Kotuk. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It was about mentally ill and emotionally troubled children and young adults living in various private and public residences, state institutions, such as Elan School in Poland, Maine and New York City's public run South Beach psychiatric hospital in Staten Island. It had interviews with various parents, including ones whose children died under suspicious circumstances while in custody as well as with various staff members who work with people who will carry their handicaps and illnesses all their lives, and the staff's awareness of their inability to cure them. One of the drugs that caused patient deaths in the South Beach hospital is Mesoridazine, which was withdrawn from the United States market in 2004 due to dangerous heart side effects. The Élan School closed in 2011 due to criticism of its alleged treatment of patients. Inés, Recuerdos De Una Vida is a 2013 documentary film directed by Luisa Sossa. Tempting Fear is a 2013 film directed by Mike Douglas. Bay of Pigs is a documentary film directed by Manuel Herrera. The Barrel is a 2013 short documentary film written by Marianela Maldonado and directed by Anabel Rodriguez. Stalin: Red God is a 2001 documentary historical drama biographical film directed by Frederick Baker. Durakovo: The Village of Fools is a 2007 film directed by Nino Kirtadze. Durakovo, The ironically named Village of Fools, is a secluded town 90 miles outside Moscow brews old ideals in hopes of a revitalized regime. Mikhail Fyodorovich, (aka Mikhail Morozov) rules this small community with concepts of God, Tsar and Fatherland. That happiness is only around God, the Tsar does God’s bidding and the people work hard in life to achieve the will of the Tsar. Prayer, labor and the political notion in contrast of Western Democracy is of frequent discussion. Mikhail makes known his stance in politics frequently, with those in his charge or with politicians from the capitol: to rebuild Russia to its former glory, criticize their leaders of the last thirty years and denounce Western ideals. He preaches the hand of God, the foundation he is laying, the old ways he is restoring, will one day win out over the US and it’s politics. A mix of hard religion, firm politics and strict labor play out before the camera with little intervention or direction from the filmmaker. Village Music: Last of the Great Record Stores is a 2012 documentary movie directed by Gillian Grisman. La Prima Volta A Venezia is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Antonello Sarno. Facing Climate Change: Potato Farmers is a 2012 short documentary film written by Jen Marlow. Prospects is a 2013 sports documentary film written and directed by Sebastian Duthy. Faith and Fate: The Story of The Jewish People In The 20th Century is documentary about the Jewish people in the last century. Faith and Fate, by Berel Wein, focuses on Jewish history and how the events and occurrences of the 20th century affected these people - a people whose survival has defied the ravages and challenges not only of this century, but of the over 40 centuries that have led up to it. Faith and Fate tells the story of how the events of the century affected the Jews - and the impact the Jews had on the century. As Berel Wein puts it, “What makes this series so unique is that it puts the Jewish history of the 20th century into perspective. We can see ourselves in the “big picture”, how we fit into nearly 4,100 years of Jewish survival. Who we are as Jews? How, and why, we have survived so long? What is our purpose? And what is our Jewish Destiny? It tells our children, and our grandchildren, that despite the tragedies, there are triumphs and that knowing where we come from will help us understand where we are going.” Carnavalero is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ariel Carlino and Graciela Scorzo. Dokumentárny film o Tatrách od Pavla Barabáša ' ' ' Anatomy Of Sex ' ' ' was a documentary in 2005 on The Discovery Channel, The Story was about as one young couple settles down to start a family, Learn how to keep the human race running. Our Bodies work in specific, subtle ways for one reason only: Making more humans to both men and women when attraction occurs and when orgasm finally ensures the possibility of replicating ourselves. Learn why humans are one of only 3%of all mammal species that require both a male and a female for care giving. And discover the evolutionary significance behind the fact that humans mate front to front - when all species prefer front to back. See it on The Discovery Channel or Discovery Health. Fantasy: Mariah Carey at Madison Square Garden is Mariah Carey's fourth DVD/home video release. It presents Carey performing live at the Madison Square Garden on October 10, 1995. The home video was originally released in early 1996, and the DVD was released in late 2004. It was distributed by Columbia Pictures. Originally shown as a television special on November 29, 1995 on Fox, the video presented Carey performing a concert to celebrate and promote her fifth studio album, Daydream, and to help prepare her and her crew for her 1996 Daydream World Tour. Carey performed five songs from Daydream—"Fantasy", "One Sweet Day", "Always Be My Baby", "Open Arms", and "Forever"—in addition to six of her older hits: "Vision of Love", "Make It Happen", "I'll Be There", "Dreamlover", "Hero", and "Without You". The concert featured a number of guest stars. Boyz II Men performed "One Sweet Day" with Carey, and Wanya Morris of Boyz II Men also performed "I'll Be There" with her. Although he did not perform with Carey, Ol' Dirty Bastard came out and rapped some of his lines to the Bad Boy Remix of "Fantasy". Black-and-White in Colour is a 1998 documentary film directed by Mira Erdevički. Van Van Fever is a documentary film directed by Ian Padrón. Neither Fish Nor Fowl is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Fiona Murphy. Shore Things is a 1996 PBS television documentary by Rick Sebak of WQED Pittsburgh. The show profiles American beaches, the things they are known for, and other notable facts. The beaches and other things featured are: Daytona Beach, Florida — cars allowed on sand Stephen Leatherman — "Dr. Beach" Venice, Los Angeles, California — canals; artists Ocean City, New Jersey — boardwalk; salt water taffy; dry town Ocean City, Maryland — crabs Outer Banks — fishing Punalu'u, Hawai'i — 'oama fishing Calabash, North Carolina — seafood Rehoboth Beach, Delaware — gay beach Cape Cod — horseshoe crabs; Cape Cod National Seashore Nantucket, Massachusetts — sailing Lucy the Elephant — Margate City, New Jersey Ocean Beach, San Diego, California — dog beach Kailua, Hawaii — a "simple" beach Bonus Features on the DVD Include Kelly's Roast Beef from "Sandwiches That You Will Like" Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk from "Great Old Amusement Parks" Ligonier Beech from "Things That Are Still Here" L' Ospedale del delitto is a 1950 Italian short documentary film directed by Luigi Comencini. Women With Cows is a 2011 documentary film written by Tell Aulin, Malcolm Dixelius and Peter Gerdehag and directed by Tell Aulin and Peter Gerdehag. A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through American Movies is a documentary film of 225 minutes in length, presented by Martin Scorsese and produced by the British Film Institute. In the film Martin Scorsese examines a selection of his favorite American films grouped according to four different types of directors: the director as storyteller, the director as an illusionist: D.W. Griffith or F. W. Murnau, who created new editing techniques among other innovations that made the appearance of sound and color possible later on, the director as a smuggler - filmmakers such as Douglas Sirk, Samuel Fuller, and Vincente Minnelli, who used to hide subversive messages in their films and the director as an iconoclast, those filmmakers attacking social conventionalism — Charles Chaplin, Erich von Stroheim, Orson Welles, Elia Kazan, Nicholas Ray, Stanley Kubrick, Arthur Penn, and Sam Peckinpah. The documentary is structured in segments: Part I The director's dilemma The director as storyteller The Western The Gangster film The Musical Part II The director as illusionist The director as smuggler I Part III The director as smuggler II The director as iconoclast Boulevard'S End is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Nora Fingscheidt. Show Stopper: The Theatrical Life of Garth Drabinsky is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Barry Avrich. The Furious Force of Rhymes is a 2010 film written and directed by Joshua Litle. The Second Execution of Romell Broom is a 2012 news, documentary, crime fiction film written by Michael Verhoeven and Luise Lindermair, directed by Michael Verhoeven. The Capitol is a 1992 film directed by Trevor Peters. The Will - If Only There Were No Nuclear Power Plant is a documentary film directed by Naomi Toyoda and Masaya Noda. Best Hotel On Skid Row is a 1990 documentary film written by Renee Tajima-Peña and directed by Renee Tajima-Peña and Christine Choy. Body of War is a 2007 documentary portraying Iraq War veteran Tomas Young. Bill Moyers Journal featured a one hour special about Body of War including interviews with filmmakers Ellen Spiro and Phil Donahue. Steep is a 2007 documentary about extreme skiing written and directed by Mark Obenhaus. Steep explores the history of extreme and Big Mountain Skiing, starting with its roots in 1960s and 1970s North America and Europe, with Bill Briggs' now famous first descent of the Grand Teton, and progressing through to the current day sport. Steep was shot in High Definition and on film in a number of locations including Alaska, France, Canada and Iceland. Steep made its premiere in the Spotlight Section of the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival. In North America, Steep was acquired by Sony Classics and released to DVD on 18 March 2008. A Report From Haneda is a documentary film directed by Shinsuke Ogawa. This Is A True Story is a 2003 short documentary film directed by Paul Berczeller. Pushing the Elephant is a 2010 documentary film directed by Elizabeth Mandel and Beth Davenport. Pursuit of Equality is a 2005 documentary film directed by Geoff Callan and Mike Shaw, about the struggle of same-sex couples for marriage equality in the United States. Its focus is mostly on the same-sex marriages performed in San Francisco from February 12 to March 11, 2004. A major fundraising event for Equality California was also inspired by, and named after, the film. Director Geoff Callan, along with San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom and philanthropists Christopher Bently and Wilkes Bashford, hosted a wedding celebration titled The Pursuit of Equality in order to increase public awareness of this issue before the November 4th vote on California Proposition 8. Longing for Beauty is a 2010 documentary film directed by Julian Benedikt and written by Christian Metz, Julian Benedikt and Johannes Groschupf. Pride Divide is a 1997 documentary film directed by Paris Poirier. It examines the issues within the LGBT community relating to apparent divisions between lesbians and gay men. Whiplash is a 2014 American musical drama film written and directed by Damien Chazelle. The film stars Miles Teller as a young jazz drummer who attends one of the best music schools in the country under the tutelage of the school’s fearsome maestro of jazz. It also stars Melissa Benoist, Austin Stowell, Jayson Blair, and Kavita Patil. The film premiered in-competition in the US Dramatic Category at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 16, 2014, as the opening film of the festival. Shortly after the film's premiere screening, Sony Pictures Worldwide acquired the international distribution rights. "A documentary about Pauline Park, a transgendered woman who is an advocate for transgender rights." Quoting the description fromt he 2008 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. More Bloody Meetings is a 1984 British comedy training film that stars John Cleese as a bumbling middle manager. The film was directed by Charles Crichton and written by Antony Jay. It was produced by Cleese's production company Video Arts. Top Priority is a 1982 short animation drama film directed by Ishu Patel. Brossé is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jacques Servaes. Hermann Heinzel, ornithologue is a 1991 short, documentary film directed by Jacques Mitsch. Trans Global Spectacle is a documentary DVD released by Orgy after the release of their last album Punk Statik Paranoia, directed and edited by Bobby Hewitt and his company Image Industry. The DVD contains over two hours of footage between 1997 to 2004, including live performances, behind the scenes footage, music videos, and remixes of the single "Pure". It features Orgy's music videos for "Blue Monday", "Stitches", "Fiction" and "Vague". It also includes appearances by Alien Ant Farm, Papa Roach and Sugar Ray. Spirit of Science is a documentary film directed by Yuko Tadachi. Mary Pickford: The Muse of the Movies is a 2008 documentary film written by Janelle Balnicke and directed by Nicholas Eliopoulos. The Big Buy: Tom DeLay's Stolen Congress is a 2006 documentary by Mark Birnbaum and Jim Schermbeck that follows the rise of Tom DeLay from a Texas businessman to the Majority Leader of the United States House of Representatives. The movie examines the controversial 2003 Texas redistricting engineered by DeLay and his organization Texans for a Republican Majority, and DeLay's ties to other Congressional figures and businesses. The conservative National Review referred to the documentary as "The Ronnie Earle Movie." The filmmakers were interviewed on The Big Buy DVD noting that the National Review was digging for a story against Earle. They noted they were not given access to secret testimony, evidence, or anything else that the public was not allowed to get. Earle gave them "extraordinary access" to personal interviews while Earle chopped wood or worked a late night in his office. ×==Screenings and Awards== Grand Festival Award, Documentary —Berkeley Film and Video Festival Official Selection —Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival, Spindletop Film Festival, Dallas Video Festival How To Re-establish A Vodka Empire is 2012 documentary historical fiction film written and directed by Daniel Edelstyn. Unfolding Florence: The Many Lives of Florence Broadhurst, also known as A Colourful Life, is a 2006 documentary/drama based on the life of Florence Broadhurst. Starring Felicity Price, the film was written by Katherine Thomson and directed by Gillian Armstrong. The Australian documentary includes interviews with friends, family members and employees who knew Florence Broadhurst before her mysterious death in 1977. The film had a mixed critical response and was nominated for 4 awards despite being relatively obscure. The New Black is a 2013 documentary film written by Erin Casper and Yoruba Richen and directed by Yoruba Richen. What A Country is a 1962 documentary film directed by Roger Mirams. Ask Not is a 2008 documentary directed by Johnny Symons. Coming Out in the 1970s is a 2014 documentary,biographical,family and LGBT film directed by Gabriel Gasca and Phil Siegel. U-Boating is a 2002 documentary short film written and directed by Corinna Hohn. Montand is a 1994 biography and documentary film written by and directed by Jean Labib. A documentary that charts the life and music of gospel singer Mahalia Jackson. My Opposition: The Diaries of Friedrich Kellner is a 2007 documentary television film about an orphaned American who went in search of his German grandfather and discovered a secret diary written during the time of the Third Reich. The film is a production of Abella Entertainment Ltd. of Toronto, Canada, co-produced and co-directed by Arnie Zipursky and Fern Levitt, with executive co-producer Leonard Asper of CanWest Global. The film is distributed by CCI Entertainment. The documentary was based on news stories in Germany and America about the Friedrich Kellner diary. It was produced for Canadian television and shown in prime time on Global Television Network. The film received a 2007 Creative Excellence Award from the U.S. International Film and Video Festival in Los Angeles. A version of the documentary for libraries and schools has been produced by Chip Taylor Communications. This version has been renamed Anti-Nazi: My Opposition - The Diaries of Friedrich Kellner. EQUALITY U is a feature-length documentary following 34 young activists on the Soulforce Equality Ride. At some stops they're welcomed with open arms, at others they're arrested for trespassing or for simply attempting to open up a dialog. At every stop though, they're connecting with young people who've often never met an openly gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender person who is comfortable with who they are. New York Doll is a documentary based on the life of former New York Dolls member Arthur Kane. It was nominated for both a Satellite Award and a Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, where it premiered in 2005. Tire dié is an Argentine documentary directed by Fernando Birri and written Birri and seven other writers. The short film, billed as a "survey film", chronicles the harsh life of lower-class slums in Santa Fe, Argentina. Tackle Happy is an Australian documentary film released in 2000 about the live performance show Puppetry of the Penis starring Simon Morley and David Friend. It was produced and directed by comedian Mick Molloy, whose radio show Martin/Molloy had chronicled the chaotic 1998 tour captured in the film. Tackle Happy also features guest appearances by Stephen Curry, Paul Hester, Tony Martin, Andrew Denton, Amanda Keller, Pete Smith and Jimeoin. Zea is a 1981 short film directed by André Léduc and Jean-Jacques Leduc. Dream Riders is a 2008 American documentary film that shows a father's attempt to mend a broken relationship with his son. Bill Roulston takes his son, Nico, on a 4,000 mile bike journey across the United States to close the gap in their growing emotional divide. Bill and Nico depart on their planned 65 day journey from Hobuck Beach, Washington and end in Coney Island, New York 97 days later. The documentary is played on the Travel Channel. Flight 175: As the World Watched is an American television documentary film that premiered in August 2006 on TLC. It covers the final moments of the passengers and crew on board United Airlines Flight 175, which was the second commercial airliner to strike the World Trade Center, impacted with the South Tower, and was the most visually documented flight during the September 11 attacks. The documentary features interviews with a variety of people, including: relatives of the passengers and crew members, air traffic controllers who responded to the doomed flight, and the two F-15 fighter pilots scrambled from Otis Air National Guard Base who flew in the airspace over Lower Manhattan during the event. Death of a Japanese Salesman is a 2011 documentary written and directed by Mami Sunada about the illness and death of her father, Tomoaki Sunada. The film was a box office success in Japan, and has won prizes at the Dubai and Chicago International Film Festivals and was described as one of the ten best films of the year by The Japan Times. The Engineer is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Juan Luis Passarelli and Mathew Charles. Hang Up Your Brightest Colours is a 1973 film by Welsh actor and filmmaker Kenneth Griffith, about the life and death of Irish Republican leader Michael Collins. It was directed by Antony Thomas. Although usually classed as a documentary, the film more closely resembles a dramatic monologue, with Griffith frequently delivering quotes by key figures such as David Lloyd George, Winston Churchill, and Collins himself "in character." The film was commissioned by media mogul Lew Grade for transmission by ATV, the ITV region covering the Midlands he controlled at the time. Grade had, in fact, offered to fund whatever subject Griffith wanted to make, but when he viewed the finished film, he refused to show it. In his memoirs, Griffith claimed that Grade was unofficially instructed not to offer the film to the IBA for network transmission, so that the Association would not have to reject it and therefore could be accused of political censorship. Griffith took legal action, received an out-of-court settlement and built his home - Michael Collins House - in Islington with the proceeds. How do tunnels stay dry under water? Who dug the first tunnels? Go underground with award-winning author-illustrator--and captivating storyteller--David Macaulay (The Way Things Work) and get an amazing look at tunnels, from ancient Rome to the remarkable Channel Tunnel that connects France and England, through spectacular film footage, little-known facts, and dramatic recreations. Crying Wolf Exposing the Wolf Reintroduction to Yellowstone National Park is a 2011 independent documentary film by Jeffrey D. King, the founder of Broken Hints Media. It delves into the controversial Wolf reintroduction in Yellowstone issue, as well as environmentalism and conservationism in general from a Christian perspective. Shell Shocked is a 2013 documentary film directed by John Richie. Praying with Lior is a documentary about a Jewish boy, Lior, who has Down syndrome. The film follows Lior and his family as they prepare for Lior's bar mitzvah. Iran: The Hundred Year War is a 2009 documentary film written by Jean Francois Colosimo and directed Jean-Michel Vecchiet. 20,000 Days on Earth is a 2014 British documentary film co-written and directed by Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard. Nick Cave also co-wrote the script with Forsyth and Pollard. The film premiered in-competition in the World Cinema Documentary Competition at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. It won two Awards at the festival. After its premiere at Sundance Film Festival, Drafthouse Films acquired distribution rights of the film. The film released on September 17, 2014 in United States. "Sex on Wheels is a living history bike tour of San Francisco's queer sex workers. Like Colonial Williamsburg...but not quite." Quoting the description from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. De Zaanstreek is a 1927 documentary film written by Theo Güsten and G.J. Honig and directed by Theo Güsten. Sex Crimes and the Vatican is a documentary film filmed by Colm O'Gorman, who was raped by a Catholic priest in the diocese of Ferns in County Wexford in Ireland when he was 14 years old. Denké-Denké is a Nigerien 2006 documentary film. Occupy Unmasked is a 2012 American documentary film directed by Stephen K. Bannon and produced by David Bossie, which is critical of the Occupy movement and was produced by Citizens United Productions. The documentary was released in limited theaters on September 21, 2012, distributed by Mark Cuban's Magnolia Pictures. Cuban stated "I don't have any politics" and that his company released the documentary solely "because we believe there is an audience for it" before the 2012 U.S. Presidential election. Water Garden is a 1984 documentary short film directed by Ken Harrison. One Fast Move or I'm Gone: Kerouac's Big Sur is a musical documentary film directed by Curt Worden. Uckermark is a 2001 German documentary film written and directed by Volker Koepp. Todo el dia juntos is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Marcin Koszałka. The Standard of Perfection: Show Cats is a 2006 American documentary film directed by Mark Lewis about the lives of show cats and their owners. Last House Standing is a documentary filmed in Shanghai featuring interviews of "Uncle Jiang" about his reluctance to sell his 1930s mansion in a district zoned for demolition. Jiang talks about his family, his loneliness, the Cultural Revolution, and the relationship formed with his interviewer, reporter Zi "Miss Tomboy" Liang. Wood Sails Dreams is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by John Stanton. Beyond Expression Bright is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Erin Espelie. Live: A Music and Surfing Experience is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by David Parsa. When liberal filmmaker Michael Moore is invited to speak at Utah Valley State College, it created a firestorm not usually seen in the heart of conservative Mormon country. A media frenzy followed, as did FoxNews' Sean Hannity who agreed to speak at UVSC prior to Moore's engagement. Protests, anger and a bribery attempt by a local businessman to stop Moores appearance punctuate this documentary that cuts to the heart of the "red versus blue" rift in the nation.Would conservative activists prevent Michael Moore from speaking? Would Utah's liberals win their fight for freedom of speech? The answer lies somewhere within THIS DIVIDED STATE. Finding Normal is a documentary film directed by Brian Lindstrom. This Is My Home is a 2012 short film directed by Mark Cersosimo and Kelsey Holtaway. Sana is a 2013 short film written by Marcos Pimentel and Ivan Morales Jr. and directed by Marcos Pimentel. Without the spirituals, there would be no gospel, blues, jazz, R and B, hip-hop, or rap. And though many of us are familiar with some of the songs - Wade in the Water, Go Down Moses, This Little Light of Mine, Amazing Grace - few understand the spirituals' deep history, complex origins, and coded messages of a music born of slavery. I Can Tell The World follows members of an interracial, multigenerational choir committed to the preservation and performance of African American spirituals. As these diverse men and women share their stories of transformation, we learn how the experience of shared songs can help heal a nation still wounded by racism. The Children from the Napf is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Alice Schmid. Marcela is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Helena Třeštíková. Zonenmadchen is a documentary film directed by Sabine Michel. 3rd Street Times is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Michela Howard and Inita Johnson. El Noveno Horno is a 2014 film directed by Erika Oregel Espinoza and Emmanuel Vargas Diosdado. Carbon: Public Enemy No.1 is a 2010 Documentary film directed by Nicolas Koutsikas and Stephen Poulle. Pictures Concise Anatomy is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Olivier Smolders. Vita is a 2009 documentary short film written and directed by Gabriele Schwark. My So-Called Enemy is a 2010 documentary film directed by Lisa Gossels. Absolutely Positive is a 1991 documentary film written and directed by Peter Adair. The True Story of Che Guevara is a 2007 documentary film written by and directed by Maria Berry. "The documentary DIE JUNGS VOM BAHNHOF ZOO is a compelling weave of authentic stories about rent boys that manages to illuminate the phenomenon of male prostitution whilst carefully avoiding the clichés that surround the milieu. The film focuses on the biographies of five rent boys, three of whom are Roma. We follow Ionel back to his village in Rumania and learn of the impoverished lives that lads like him have left behind. Nazif is a former civil war refugee from Bosnia who came to Germany as a child. He was still very young when he began working as a prostitute and taking hard drugs at Bahnhof Zoo. Romica, a young Rumanian, has founded a family that has long relied on prostitution to make a living. Some of the rent boys are under age lads who were once abused by pedosexuals and later wound up as sex workers. One such individual is Daniel-René, a young man who, even today, still suffers deeply as a result of his traumatic experiences. The film’s main protagonist is Daniel, who began working as a male prostitute at the age of sixteen. His life makes abundantly clear the kind of social context which can pave the way for a life of prostitution. The film also features conversations with social workers as well as owners of bars frequented by prostitutes and johns, such as Austrian actor-director Peter Kern." Quoting the production notes fro the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Honor & Sacrifice is a 2013 documentary, short, biography film written by Don Sellers and directed by Lucy Ostrander. Makers: Women Who Make America is a 2013 documentary film about the struggle for women's equality in the United States during the last five decades of the 20th century. The film was narrated by Meryl Streep and distributed by the Public Broadcasting Service as a three-part, three-hour television documentary in February 2013. Makers features interviews with women from all social strata, from politicians like Hillary Rodham Clinton and television stars like Ellen DeGeneres and Oprah Winfrey, to flight attendants, coal miners and phone company workers. In 2014, PBS commissioned a six-episode series that would expand on the themes of the documentary, as a continuation of PBS's broader Makers partnership with AOL. The series premiered on September 30, 2014. Is the Man Who Is Tall Happy? is a 2013 French animated documentary film by Michel Gondry about the philosopher and political activist Noam Chomsky. From Swastika to Jim Crow is a 2000 documentary that explores the similarities between Nazism in Germany and racism in the American south. In 1939, the Nazi government expelled Jewish scholars from German universities. Many of them found teaching positions in Southern universities, where they sympathized with the plight of their African-American colleagues and students. Pablo Neruda presente! is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Mark Eisner. Hollywood on the Tiber is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Marco Spagnoli. Absences is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Carole Laganière. Inside the Royal Wedding is a 2011 documentary film produced by Nick Bullen and Olivia Lichtenstein. The Ministeries of Art is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Philippe Garrel. Maradona by Kusturica is a documentary on the life of Argentine footballer Diego Maradona, directed by the award-winning Serbian filmmaker Emir Kusturica. The documentary premiered at the Cannes Film Festival 2008. Kusturica stated the following regarding the film: Ordinary Fascism is a 1965 history war documentary film written by Yuri Khanyutin, Maya Turovskaya, Mikhail Romm and directed by Mikhail Romm. Walk Don't Walk is a 2000 documentary film directed by Thomas Struck. Der Weg nach oben is an East German film. It was released in 1950. Iso lo is a 1994 documentary film. Canciones para después de una guerra is a 1971 Spanish documentary film directed and written by Basilio Martín Patino based on post-war Spain. It was done in secret in 1971 and was not released until 1976, shortly after the death of Francisco Franco. Stolen Sea is a 1985 documentary film directed by Noriaki Tsuchimoto. Dans le silence, je sens rouler la terre is a 2010 documentary film. What Remains: The Life and Work of Sally Mann is a 2005 film directed and produced by Steven Cantor, which documents the photography and story of photographer Sally Mann at her Virginia farm home. The movie documents the photographer's progression from a child to a mother, and the struggles Mann faces through her public and private life. The movie garnered quite favorable reviews from publications such as The New York Times. Cantata For Two Generals is a 1990 film directed by Jean Rouch. Favela Rising is a 2005 documentary film by American directors Jeff Zimbalist and Matt Mochary. It was produced by Sidetrack Films and VOY Pictures. It debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 24, 2005 where it won the award for Best New Documentary Filmmaker for Zimbalist and Mochary. The film's look at life in Brazil's slums won it further awards such as Best Documentary Film from the New York Latino Film Festival and Best Feature Documentary from Big Sky Documentary Film Festival. The film has won over twenty-five international festival awards and was short-listed for an Oscar. The film focuses on the work of Anderson Sá, a former drug trafficker who establishes the grassroots movement AfroReggae. The group, Grupo Cultural AfroReggae, was initially intended to draw in adolescents interested in a number of musical genres. These genres include, but are not limited to soul, reggae, rap, and hip-hop. Early on, Grupo Cultural AfroReggae offered a different type of education to the youth it attracted. This education included workshops focusing on dance, recycling, football, percussion, and more. In a Dream is a documentary film by Jeremiah Zagar that premiered on March 9, 2008 at the South by Southwest film festival. Its broadcast premiere was August 19, 2009 on HBO. Gage is a short drama historical fiction western film directed by Keith Wilhelm Kopp. Liquid Time is a 2002 avant-garde surf film that focuses solely on the fluid forms of tubing waves. Brothers Monty Webber and Greg Webber revived a childhood passion for perfectly formed tiny waves by filming the wake of their runabout as it pealed along the edge of a river sandbank. The 20-minute film received the Cinematography Award at the Saint Jean de Luz Surf Film Festival. Relative is a 2012 short adventure documentary film written and directed by Anthony Butler. Canada's Sweetheart: The Saga of Hal C. Banks is a Canadian docudrama, written and produced by Donald Brittain. It aired in 1985 on CBC Television. The film was about Hal C. Banks, a controversial American labour union leader who came to Canada in 1949 to lead a sectarian fight between rival shipping unions. Banks left Canada in 1962 after being brought up on criminal charges. Banks appeared before the Norris Commission, which was set up to investigate his strongarm tactics and links to beatings of opposition unions, and non signed shipping companies. In particular was the ULS and the Maritime Union run by his former lieutenant Michael Sheehan, who had testified before the Norris Commission against Banks, and led the push to loosen the SIU grip on the Great Lakes. Maury Chaykin played the role of Banks in dramatic reenactments. Derailments is a 2011 documentary short film written and directed by Chelsea McMullan. Go for Broke!: Memories of Hawai'i Japanese "Niseis" is a 2013 documentary film. The New Great Game - Reaping the Whirlwind is a sequel to "The New Great Game - The River of Destiny".Reaping the Whirlwind looks at post - Taliban, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan in terms of Islamic fundamentalism and the large natural gas reserves of Turkmenistan that must necessarily transit through Afghanistan to markets in India and elsewhere.Till the late 19th century, Great Game between Czarist Russia and Imperial Britain led to the formal demarcation of Afghanistan's borders with Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, this region was one landmass alternatively ruled from Kabul or Samarkand depending upon who was in power. After the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the emergence of the Taliban in Afghanistan in 1996, these countries of the former Soviet Union were unsettled by Islamic fundamentalist led insurgencies that threatened their cosmopolitan and Slavic character.With US action in Afghanistan as a result of Operation Enduring Freedom, these countries have got a new lease of life and so has Afghanistan. For the first time there is a distinct possibility that Turkmen gas might find a transit route through Afghanistan and Tajikistan and Uzbekistan may be allowed to develop without the fear of further insurgencies. However, peace is only temporary, as Pakistan appears to be still keeping the Taliban - Al Qaida cabal alive and now augmented by the forces of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar who was and allegedly is a Pakistani ISI (Inter Services Intelligence) proxy.Reaping the Whirlwind explores whether the US Army along with the ISAF (International Security Assistance Force) will be able to drive out and deter the enemy from attcking Afghanistan and whether Turkmen gas will find a transit route through Afghanistan. Desert Riders is a 2011 documentary film written by Noemi Weis and directed by Victor Sarin. India: Matri Bhumi is a 1959 Italian documentary film directed by Roberto Rossellini. One of the writers for the screenplay was Iranian diplomat Fereydoun Hoveyda. It was entered into the 1st Moscow International Film Festival. Das Mesiterspiel is a 1998 film directed by Lutz Dammbeck. Slapping The Dash is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Tom Collyns. Visions of Mary Frank is a biographical and histrorical documentary directed by John Cohen. gODDESSES (We Believe We Were Born Perfect) is a 2010 documentary film directed by Sylvie Cachin. This Our Still Life is a 2011 documentary film directed by Andrew Kötting. Glaube, Liebe, Hoffnung is a 1994 film directed by Andreas Voigt. Harry Saltzman: Showman is a promotional featurette about producer Harry Saltzman, containing interviews with surviving film professionals of the first 10 James Bond production crews as well as with Saltzman's family. Produced by MGM, it is included on DVD releases of that company's From Russia with Love. Comment j'ai détesté les maths is a 2013 documentary film written by Olivier Peyon and Amandine Escoffier and directed by Olivier Peyon. Living Fossil is a 2014 short science fiction documentary film written and directed by Sean Hanley. "Ethiopia suffers from some of the worst environmental damage the world has ever seen. Over-deforestation has left tracts of land in ruin—driving away animals, sapping the ground of nutrients, and even drastically altering precipitation patterns. This short documentary follows Tesfaye, a middle-aged native Ethiopian who has witnessed over the past thirty years the consequences of such environmental abuse, and his search for hope in restoration." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Suing the Pope is a March 2002 documentary by Colm O'Gorman and the BBC which details the abusive activities of priest Sean Fortune and the response of the diocese of Ferns to his activities over the years. As a result, bishop Brendan Comiskey, the bishop of Ferns, resigned due to his perceived mishandling of the case. He had described Fortune as being "virtually impossible to deal with." The documentary won an award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Pyramid aka Building the Great Pyramid is a 2002 BBC Television documentary film which tells the story of the building of the Great Pyramid at Giza through the commentary of the fictional builder, Nakht. Yakshagana is a 1979 documentary film directed by Adoor Gopalakrishnan. My Little Friends is a 2013 short film directed by Megan Mylan. Paper Clips is a 2004 documentary film written and produced by Joe Fab, and directed by Elliot Berlin and Joe Fab, about a Middle School class that tries to collect 6 million paper clips to represent the 6 million Jews killed by the Nazis. Requiem for Detroit? is a 2010 Documentary film directed by Julien Temple. The Act of Killing is a 2012 documentary film about the Indonesian killings of 1965–66 directed by Joshua Oppenheimer, and co-directed by Christine Cynn and an anonymous Indonesian. It is a Danish-British-Norwegian co-production, presented by Final Cut for Real in Denmark and produced by Signe Byrge Sørensen. The executive producers were Werner Herzog, Errol Morris, Joram ten Brink, and Andre Singer. It is a Docwest project of the University of Westminster. It won the 2013 European Film Award for Best Documentary, the Asia Pacific Screen Award, and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 86th Academy Awards. The Act of Killing won best documentary at the 2014 BAFTA awards. In accepting the award, Oppenheimer asserted that the United States and the United Kingdom have "collective responsibility" for "participating in and ignoring" the crimes, which was omitted from the video BAFTA posted online. After a screening for US Congress members, Oppenheimer demanded that the US acknowledge its role in the killings. The Indonesian government has responded negatively to the movie. IN SEARCH OF BEETHOVEN offers a comprehensive documentary about the life and works of the great composer. One Couch at a Time is a 2012 documentary adventure film written and directed by Alexandra Liss. The Seafarers is Stanley Kubrick's fourth film and third short documentary, made for the Seafarers International Union, directed in June 1953. There are shots of ships, machinery, a canteen, and a union meeting. The film was shot in color, and was supervised by the staff of The Seafarers Log, the union magazine. For the cafeteria scene in the film, Kubrick chose a long, sideways-shooting dolly shot to establish the life of the seafarer's community; this shot is an early demonstration of a signature technique that Kubrick would use in his feature films. Another such shot involves a group of seafarers walking across screen from a shaded area to a sunlit space as they approach the SIU Union hall. The film was "discovered" in 1973 by film scholar and filmmaker Frank P. Tomasulo, who arranged for a 16mm print of the documentary to be deposited in the permanent collection of the Library of Congress' Motion Picture Division. The Seafarers was released on DVD in 2008 with audio commentary from directors Roger Avary and Keith Gordon, as well as an interview with one of Kubrick's daughters. Détour De Seta is a 2004 documentary film directed by Salvo Cuccia about Vittorio De Seta. The river Jordan runs in deep valleys through this mountainous landscape, providing shelter for a variety of animals that in turn feed the wolves. We follow the story of one particular pair of wolves as they meet and start a family, the beginnings of a new pack. Criada is a 2009 documentary film made by Matías Herrera Córdoba. One Small Step: The Story of the Space Chimps is a 2008 documentary film produced and directed by David Cassidy and Kristin Davy which aired on History Channel UK and CBC Television. The film chronicles the real story behind the early use of chimpanzees in space exploration. The film was released on DVD in April 2008, after several delays. David Cassidy is best known for producing the documentary Shut Up and Sing on the Dixie Chicks, and the Disney Channel show High School Musical: The Music in You. Centered in the Universe is a fulldome presentation that premiered the evening of October 29, 2006 at the "Galactic Gala" which marked the reopening of the renovated Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles. The 33-minute planetarium program utilizes a Zeiss Universarium star projector and an innovative laser video projection system developed by Evans & Sutherland to create an immersive environment. A live presenter narrates the script. The Art Of Speaking (mafrouza 5) is a 2010 film directed by Emmanuelle Demoris. Armine and Lady Macbeth is a 2012 documentary film written by Armen Dovlatyan, Misha Ghazaryan and directed by Misha Ghazaryan. The program of economic reforms initiated in China in 1978 by Deng Xiaoping aimed to finance the modernization of the nation. But what Communist Party leaders called "Socialism with Chinese characteristics" looked suspiciously to many as a return to capitalism. Today, some three decades later, the results of those sweeping economic reforms have become plainly visible in a country increasingly divided between its rural and urban sectors.Filmed in five different regions of China, UMBRELLA provides a telling look at the vast changes that have taken place in Chinese society, including a massive migration from the countryside to the cities, the rise of a prosperous new class of businesspeople, millions of new college graduates competing for a shrinking number of jobs, and the neglect of China's largest population group, its rural peasants. Among Others is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Pilvi Takala. Sayadeen is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Murat Gökmen. I'm Almost Not Crazy: John Cassavetes, the Man and His Work is a 1989 American documentary directed by Michael Ventura and starring John Cassavetes. Kill Your Darling is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jaap Van Hoewijk. Citizen Hearst is a documentary film directed by Leslie Iwerks. Havana Jam ’79 is an hour-long documentary written, produced and directed in 2009 by Cuban author, journalist and filmmaker Ernesto Juan Castellanos. It tells the story of the celebration of the historic three-day Havana Jam festival at the Karl Marx Theater, in Havana, Cuba, from 2–4 March 1979, sponsored by Bruce Lundvall, the president of Columbia Records, Jerry Masucci, the president of Fania Records, and the Cuban Ministry of Culture. The documentary includes interviews with some of the Cuban musicians who participated, as well as critics and some who were in the audience. Havana Jam ’79 recreates the performances by Weather Report, the CBS Jazz All-Stars, the Trio of Doom, Fania All-Stars, Stephen Stills, Billy Swan, Bonnie Bramlett, Mike Finnigan, Kris Kristofferson, Rita Coolidge and Billy Joel from the American side, as well as Irakere, Pacho Alonso, Zaida Arrate, Elena Burke, Orquesta de Santiago de Cuba, Conjunto Yaguarimú, Frank Emilio, Juan Pablo Torres, Los Papines, Tata Güines, Percusión cubana, Sara González, Pablo Milanés, Manguaré, and Orquesta Aragón, from the Cuban side. Back to Mandima is a 2011 short documentary, biographical and adventure film directed by Robert-Jan Lacombe. Notes From The Inside With James Rhodes is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ursula Macfarlane. The White Diamond is a 2004 documentary film by Werner Herzog. It illustrates the history of aviation and depicts the struggles and triumphs of Graham Dorrington, an aeronautical engineer, who has designed and built a teardrop-shaped airship which he plans to fly over the forest canopies of Guyana. It features music composed by Ernst Reijseger, which was re-used in Herzog's 2005 film The Wild Blue Yonder. Most of the film focuses on Dorrington's flights near Kaieteur Falls, in Guyana. Dorrington discusses the mechanics of his flight, as well as his own struggles with uncertainty and the "heaviness" he feels after the death of the cinematographer Dieter Plage. The film also explores the Kaieteur Falls themselves, a local man named Marc Anthony Yhap, a local diamond miner, and the white-tipped swifts which roost in an inaccessible cave behind the falls. The film holds ratings of 83% on the film review aggregator websites Metacritic and 94% on Rotten Tomatoes. The Stuart Hall Project is a 2012 biographical and historical drama documentary film directed by John Akomfrah. The Making of King Kong 360 3D is a 2010 documentary film written by Wendy English and Bryan Goldsworthy and directed by Bryan Goldsworthy. Clara Lemlich: A Strike Leader's Diary is a 2005 documentary film directed by Alex Szalat. Low Clear is an 2012 documentary film directed by Kahlil Hudson and Tyler Hughen. Ride, Rise, Roar is a documentary film chronicling the Songs of David Byrne and Brian Eno Tour conducted by David Byrne in 2008–2009. The film includes concert footage, footage of the planning and rehearsals for the tour, and exclusive interviews with Byrne, Eno, and the supporting musicians and dancers. Prague Castle is a 1931 documentary short film written and directed by Alexander Hammid. Playgirls International is an American 1963 nudist film produced and directed by Doris Wishman. The film is also known as Playgirls of Nature. Degenerate Art is a 1993 documentary film written and directed by David Grubin. "Visitors to the Berlinale are well acquainted with the work of Canadian underground director Bruce LaBruce. Co-directed with Rick Castro, his feature film debut, HUSTLER WHITE, which told the story of a rent boy working on Santa Monica Boulevard, screened at the Berlinale in 1996. Bruce LaBruce also showed his gay zombie horror film OTTO; OR, UP WITH DEAD PEOPLE – at the festival in 2008. Bruce LaBruce freely admits that “most of my films are sexually explicit”. His work mixes gay porn with the artistic mores of independent cinema. Bruce LaBruce, whose real name is Justin Stewart, was born in Southampton, Ontario, in 1964. He attended film school in Toronto and studied film theory at New York University. He has worked for gay punk fanzines and produced Super 8mm films. “Aficionados think of him as a transgressive artist in the truest sense of the word” says French festival director Frédéric Thibaut, “those who are more behind the times see him, at best, as the spiritual son of Kenneth Anger and John Waters. Pragmatists cherish him as a leading light of the queercore movement.” In her portrait of this controversial filmmaker Angélique Bosio combines rare archive material with statements from his collaborators and famous colleagues including John Waters, Gus Van Sant, Harmony Korine and Richard Kern. The film also includes an interview with Berlin producer Jürgen Brüning, for LaBruce’s most recent films (including the 2004 work THE RASPBERRY REICH), were all made in Berlin. Bruce LaBruce: “It’s great filming in Berlin. The city is one of the best places to film in the world; it has spectacular locations where you can either film for nothing or very cheaply.”" Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Soldiers of the Pope is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Felice Zenoni. Tales of Twelve and One Years is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Manfred Stelzer. MacPherson is a 2012 short animation film written and directed by Martine Chartrand. The True Story of Killing Pablo is a 2002 crime fiction historical drama documentary film written and directed by David Keane. Through These Gates is a documentary family film directed by Ryan Tweedy. Our Russian Front is a 1942 American documentary film directed by Joris Ivens and Lewis Milestone, and narrated by Walter Huston to promote support for the Soviet Union's war effort. The Stitches Speak is a 2010 documentary animation short film written and directed by Nina Sabnani. ÖDLAND - Damit keiner das so mitbemerkt is a 2013 documentary film written by Friede Clausz and Anne Kodura and directed by Anne Kodura. "If you’re a basketball fan, you know that one of the great NBA rivalries in the mid-1990s was between the Indiana Pacers and the New York Knicks. In classic David-meets-Goliath style, the two teams faced off in thrilling seven-game battles during the 1994 and 1995 playoffs. In Winning Time: Reggie Miller vs. the New York Knicks, Dan Klores focuses on the Pacers’ master showman, Reggie Miller, who was as skilled at three-pointers as he was at trash talking. Not only did he antagonize the Knicks; he antagonized a whole city and relished every minute of it—just ask Spike Lee. Winning Time entertains on many levels: it goes beyond the action on the court and delves into the psychology of the game. By deftly weaving humorous interviews with exciting archival footage, Klores has created a film that appeals to both the die-hard fan and someone who has never seen a game." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Wrinkles Of The City - La Havana is a 2012 documentary short action film directed by José Parlá. Yakimanka 90S is a 2013 documentary film written by Liusa Artemyeva and directed by Andrey Silvestrov. The Trials of Darryl Hunt is a 2006 documentary/true crime film written and directed by Ricki Stern and Anne Sundberg. Pelym is a 1998 film directed by Andrzej Klamt and Ulrich Rydzewski. In Search of Kennedy is a 2008 drama and documentary film directed by Chuck Workman. Himno Nacional is a 1954 short documentary film directed by Ramón Villarreal. Ultimate Jordan is a 2001 sport documentary film. Jacoba is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Joram ten Brink. Water Hands is a 2011 film directed by Vladimir Todorovic. Journey into Medicine is a 1947 American documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Cairo from 5 to 7 is a 2013 mystery comedy drama short documentary film directed by Ahmed M. Abo el-Fadl. Samba - Samba is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Claudio Fischer-Zernin, Klaus Otto and Volker Schutsch. The National Parks: America's Best Idea is a 2009 documentary film for television, DVD and companion book by director/producer Ken Burns and producer/writer Dayton Duncan which features the United States National Park system and traces the system's history. The series won two 2010 Emmy Awards for outstanding writing in episode 2 "The Last Refuge", and for outstanding non-fiction series. From arrival at Heathrow, to backstage at Hammersmith Odeon, this is the chronicle of The Beach Boys' first visit to London! The band talks us through their early days when three brothers, a cousin and a high school friend began their surfing harmony group. And There We are, in the Middle is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Sebastian Brameshuber. White Lobster is the 2012 film by David Lalé. Lightning Over Water is a 1980 documentary film by Wim Wenders and Nicholas Ray about the last days of Ray's own life; the director was most famous for his 1955 film Rebel Without a Cause. It was screened out of competition at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival. With Babies and Banners: Story of the Women's Emergency Brigade is a 1979 documentary film directed by Lorraine Gray. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. This film was one of the first to put together archival footage with contemporary interviews of participants and helped spur a series of films on left and labor history in the US utilizing this technique. The film was also important in helping bring into view the history of American women being active in the public sphere, particularly in union and labor actions. The film was, further, ground breaking because it was produced and directed by women. Ungdommens råskap is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Margreth Olin. Hier is Harry Merry is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Joke Olthaar. Winner of the Grand Jury Prize at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival, CAPTURING THE FRIEDMANS was the most riveting, provocative, and hotly debated film of the year. Despite their predilection for hamming it up in front of home-movie cameras, the Friedmans were a normal middle-class family living in the affluent New York suburb of Great Neck. One Thanksgiving, as the family gathers at home for a quiet holiday dinner, their front door explodes, splintered by a police battering ram. Officers rush into the house, accusing Arnold Friedman and his youngest son Jesse of hundreds of shocking crimes. The film follows their story from the public’s perspective and through unique real footage of the family in crisis, shot inside the Friedman house. As the police investigate, and the community reacts, the fabric of the family begins to disintegrate, revealing provocative questions about justice, family, and - ultimately - truth. Jersey City: 24 Hours in Public Places is a 2012 documentary film. Mondo Homo: A Study of French Gay Porn in the '70s is a 2009 documentary film written by Jérôme Marichy with Hervé Joseph Lebrun and directed by Hervé Joseph Lebrun. As Long as You Are Not Reminded Too Often is a 2012 film directed by Feiko Beckers. "Set in Tamilnadu, ‘Our Family’ juxtaposes excerpts from Nirvanam, a one person performance, and a family of three generations of trans-gendered female subjects, who belong to the Aravani community and are bound together by ties of adoption." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. "Hello. I'm going to read a declaration of a state of war... Within the next 14 days we will attack a symbol or institution of American injustice." -- Bernardine Dohrn Thirty years ago, with these words, a group of young American radicals called The Weathermen announced their intention to overthrow the U.S. government. Fueled by outrage over the Vietnam War and racism in America, they went undergound during the 1970s, bombing targets across the country that they felt symbolized "the real violence" that the U.S. government and capitalist power were wreaking throughout the world.From pitched battles with police on Chicago's city streets, to bombing the U.S. Capitol building, to breaking acid-guru Timothy Leary out of prison, this carefully organized clandestine network attempted to incite a national revolution, while successfully evading one of the largest FBI manhunts in history.One of the top documentaries of the year, this award-winning film interweaves extensive archival material with modern-day interviews to explore the incredible story of "The Weather Underground." As former members reflect candidly about the idealistic passion that drove them to "bring the war home," they paint a compelling portrait of troubled and revolutionary times, with unexpected and often striking connections to the current world situation. Closed Country is a 1999 film directed by Kaspar Kasics. Siberian Lesson is a 1998 documentary film written by Wojciech Staroń and Zbigniew Osinski and directed by Wojciech Staroń. My Dear Republic is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Elisabeth Scharang. When Abortion Was Illegal: Untold Stories is a 1992 American short documentary film directed by Dorothy Fadiman. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The film consists of first person stories which reveal the physical, emotional and legal consequences of having or providing an abortion when it was a criminal act. The film is the first of three films called the Reproductive Rights Trilogy or "From the Back Alleys to the Supreme Court & Beyond." Of making the film, Dorothy Fadiman said, "While a student at Stanford, I had become unintentionally pregnant. I had no money, no committed partner and my family was 3,000 miles away. I could neither find or afford a skilled provider. Abortion was illegal in California, so I paid $600 to a person whose face I never saw to terminate my pregnancy. I was blindfolded throughout the procedure. Soon afterward, I began to hemorrhage and ended up on the intensive care ward of Stanford hospital with a fever of 105. I could have died, like so many women who risked the back alleys or aborted themselves. Journal d'un montage is a 2012 documentary film directed by Annette Dutertre. Pucker Up: The Fine Art of Whistling is a documentary film on the 31st Louisburg International Whistling Competition that follows a Washington D.C. investment banker, a Dutch social worker and a turkey hauler among others as they compete for a prize in competitive whistling. Hundertwasser's Rainy Day is a 1972 West German short documentary film about artist Friedensreich Hundertwasser rebuilding an old wooden ship called Regentag. Directed by Peter Schamoni, it was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Not So Still Life is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Mark O'Connell. The Story of Stuff is a short animated documentary about the lifecycle of material goods. The documentary is critical of excessive consumerism and promotes sustainability. Filmmaker Annie Leonard wrote and narrated the film, which was funded by Tides Foundation, Funders Workgroup for Sustainable Production and Consumption, Free Range Studios and other foundations. Free Range Studios also produced the documentary, which was first launched online on December, 2007. The documentary is being used in elementary schools, arts programs, and economics classes as well as places of worship and corporate sustainability trainings. By February 2009, it had been seen in 228 countries and territories. According to the Los Angeles Times as of July 2010, the film had been translated into 15 languages and had been viewed by over 12 million people. Balaxanı-Sabunçu Polis İdarəsi Süvari Qorodovoylarının At Oynatmaları is one of the earliest films ever produced in the Cinema of Azerbaijan directed by Azeri cinema pioneer Aleksandr Mişon. It was released in 1898. The film was shot on 35mm. Tap or Die is a 2013 documentary, music, historical fiction film directed by Jackie Paré. Tarzan: Silver Screen King of the Jungle is a documentary focusing on the first six sound Tarzan films produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer starring Johnny Weissmuller and Maureen O'Sullivan. Written and directed by John Rust, the documentary features interviews with film historians Rudy Behlmer and Scott Tracy Griffin, who discuss the films' literary antecedents and behind-the-scenes production details. The documentary premiered on TBS on June 3, 2004, and was included as an extra in the DVD collection of the first six MGM Tarzan films: Tarzan the Ape Man, Tarzan and His Mate, Tarzan Escapes, Tarzan Finds a Son!, Tarzan's Secret Treasure, and Tarzan's New York Adventure. Canada '67 is a rare Circle-Vision 360° documentary film by Canadian film director Robert Barclay, which was presented at the Telephone Pavilion, part of Expo 67, an International World's Fair held in Montreal, Canada in 1967 to mark the centenary of the Confederation of Canada. The telephone pavilion was created to promote telephone companies and their services, but its main feature was the Canada '67 film produced by The Walt Disney Company and presented in a large, completely circular movie theatre. The Universe of Keith Haring is a 2008 documentary by the filmmaker Christina Clausen about the artist Keith Haring. In the film, the legacy of Haring is resurrected through colorful archival footage and remembered by friends and admirers such as artists Kenny Scharf and Yoko Ono, gallery owners Jeffrey Deitch and Tony Shafrazi. The film was produced by Paolo Bruno, Eric Ellena and Ian Ayres. The film was shown at the Tribeca Film Festival and has been released on DVD. Through interviews with collaborators and friends such as the choreographer Bill T. Jones, the film offers thoughtful reflection 'on a man whose impulse, Jones says, "was to do the work and live the life," it is the passion and commitment we see in the artist himself that makes the most lasting impression. XV en Zaachila is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Rigoberto Pérezcano. Over the River…Life of Lydia Maria Child, Abolitionist for Freedom is a 2007 documentary film and book about the life of Lydia Maria Child. The film was produced by Permanent Productions, Inc., written and directed by Constance L. Jackson, narrated by Diahann Carroll and features James Moses Black, Michele S. Patterson, Greta Muxworthy, Beth Lockhart and Jacob Conrad. We Came to Sweat: The Legend of Starlite is a documentary historical fiction music biographical film directed by Kate Kunath. Who Peter: Partners in Time - 1963-1989 is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Chris Chapman. City Around The Clock is a 1984 film written and directed by Waldemar Overkaemping and Barry Graves. Blame Omar is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Michiel Brongers. Paternal Instinct is a 2004 documentary directed by Murray Nossel. "A man of gentle paradox, 90-year-old poet Zhou Meng-die displays a particular economy of speech, gesture and expression belying his racing mental acuity. Viewers are quickly eased into his rhythm as Zhou’s life unfolds slowly and with purpose, thick with small pleasures. Those who allow themselves to be swept into his perspective will find themselves gently nudged into experiencing another mode of being." Quoting the description from the 2011 Taiwan Film Days site. Queen of the Sun is a 2010 documentary film directed by Taggart Siegel. "Queen of the Sun: What Are the Bees Telling Us? is a profound, alternative look at the global bee crisis from Taggart Siegel, director of The Real Dirt on Farmer John. Juxtaposing the catastrophic disappearance of bees with the mysterious world of the beehive, this engaging and ultimately uplifting film weaves an unusual and dramatic story of the heart-felt struggles of beekeepers, scientists and philosophers from around the world including Michael Pollan, Gunther Hauk and Vandana Shiva. Together they reveal both the problems and the solutions in renewing a culture in balance with nature." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site, The California Reich is a 1975 documentary on a group of Neo-Nazis in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Tracy, California, USA. They are members of the National Socialist White People's Party, a USA Nazi party started by George Rockwell. The film received a nomination in 1976 by the Academy Awards for best documentary. The film was also screened at the 1976 Cannes Film Festival, but wasn't entered into the main competition. The film features scenes with Jewish Defense League leader Irv Rubin confronting American Nazis. This short film focuses on the legend of a lost gold mine and a river in the Northwest Territories that lured men to their doom. Albert Faille, an aging prospector, set out time and again to find hidden gold. His route took him through the wild and awesome land which was particularly suited to the mood of this Canadian odyssey. Inside Hip Hop is a 2003 documentary film directed by Marcos Antonio Miranda. Spice Girls: Live in Istanbul is a 1997 music documentary film directed by David Barnard. Unborn in the USA: Inside the War on Abortion is a 2007 documentary film featuring interviews with pro-life activists across the United States. Its tagline is, "How the pro-lifers are winning". The film was started as a thesis project by students Stephen Fell and Will Thompson of Rice University. The film chronicles major events such as the annual March for Life and the 2004 March for Women's Lives, and features interviews with members of the Army of God and other pro-life activists. This biography goes beyond the music and explores the challenges and triumphs of Taylor Swift, the American Beauty. Stars Jeffrey Patrick Olson, Jonathan Donahue, Kathie Bostian. The Call of the Entrepreneur is a 2007 documentary produced by Acton Media, part of the Acton Institute, along with Cold Water Media. It premiered in Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA on May 17, 2007. 1040 is a documentary film about Christianity in the "10/40 Window". The film is narrated by musician Jaeson Ma, who travels to several countries including China, South Korea, and Singapore. Ma describes the growth of Christianity in Asia as one of the greatest Christian Revivals in history. American Jihadist is a 2009 documentary film directed by Mark Claywell and written by Jody Jenkins. Spit & Sweat was a music DVD featuring Rooney that was released in 2004. It includes live performances, music videos and interviews with band members. The title is a line from the song "I'm Shakin'", their most successful single. Mastering Bambi is a 2011 short film directed by Persijn Broersen and Margit Lukács. Disruption is a 2014 documentary film directed by Pamela Yates. The Other Song is a documentary film directed by Saba Dewan. It is made on life of Rasoolan Bai, a tawaif. It features her more famous song, Lagat karejwa ma chot, phool gendwa na maar, a 1935 Gramophone recording. It was produced with a grant from India Foundation for the Arts. Kennzeichen Luftballon is a 1967 short documentary film directed and written by Peter Pewas. At the Stairs is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Rajesh S. Jala. Flintown Kids is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Omar McGee. A Big thanks to the Crew: Vipul Amrutlal Shah is a 2010 short documentary film. Three In A Million is a 1959 documentary film directed by Jennie Blackwood. Worth the Risk? is a 1948 British public information film highlighting the importance of road safety. It was produced by the Crown Film Unit and funded by the Ministry of Transport. The Clinton Chronicles: An Investigation into the Alleged Criminal Activities of Bill Clinton is a 1994 film that accused Bill Clinton of a range of crimes. The video, directed by conservative activist Patrick Matrisciana, was characterized by The Washington Post as a "bizarre and unsubstantiated documentary." The New York Times reported that it was a poorly documented "hodgepodge of sometimes-crazed charges." It helped perpetuate a conspiracy theory known as the "Clinton Body Count" about a list of associates Clinton was purported to have had killed. The deaths listed in the film have largely been discredited due to deliberate bias, weak circumstantial evidence, and coincidence. The film was produced by Citizens for Honest Government, a project of a Westminster, California organization named Creative Ministries Inc., partially funded by Larry Nichols, a long-time Clinton opponent, and distributed with help from the Rev. Jerry Falwell, who also appears in the film. Over 300,000 copies of the film were put into circulation. Inside Out: The People's Art Project is a 2013 historical documentary film directed by Alastair Siddons. Sonic Youth is a 1985 film directed by Michael Wehmeyer. Cine Ambulante – ‘Licht in tijden van duisternis is a 2002 film directed by Ramon Gieling. Gore Vidal: The United States of Amnesia is a 2013 documentary film about the life and career of author Gore Vidal. It premiered at Tribeca Film Festival in 2013. Come Rain or Shine is an unusually frank and humorous music documentary about the band Genesis getting back together for their first tour in 15 years. Director Anthony Mathile followed the band for nearly a year to create this film which explores the relationship of three band members and the mechanics, decisions, and debacles that go into producing a stadium tour for a legendary band of this scale. This "rockumentary" was released as part of the "When in Rome" boxset, that was released in 2008 as a registration of the live show that Genesis performed in Rome, the last show in their European tour. The camera accompanies Genesis through all periods of tour preparation, from the first rehearsals in New York to the moment in autumn 2007 when the final bars of The Carpet Crawlers fade away. Documentary film takes a look at some of the world's most influential fashion images as conceived by the magazine's iconic fashion editors. Intonation. Boris Averin is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Alexander Sokurov. The Smiling Man is a 1966 documentary film written and directed by Gerhard Scheumann and Walter Heynowski. Gypsy Davy is a 2011 documentary directed by Rachel Leah Jones. Der Erfolgsbericht is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Stephan Köster. Alcan Highway is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Aleksi Salmenperä. Duran Duran: Unstaged is a music documentary film directed by David Lynch. On The Other Side Of The Screen - 100 Years Of Moviemento Cinema is a 2009 film directed by Bernd Sobolla. La Americana is a feature documentary film directed and produced by Nicholas Bruckman. The film tells the story of a young undocumented immigrant in New York City who struggles to save the life of her ailing daughter in Bolivia. La Americana received numerous festival awards worldwide, including best documentary at the New York and Los Angeles Latino film festivals. The film was broadcast on numerous television networks in Europe, Asia, and Latin America, and in 2012 aired nationwide in the US on National Geographic Mundo. Piranha: Wolf In The Water is an educational movie that came out in 1999. It was shown both in IMAX3D and normal versions. It covers different kinds of piranhas and tries to uncover the mystery behind those animals, which are often described in an overly sensationalist way. This movie is part of the Killer Instincts series, a movie series covering different kinds of predators. Sting: Ten Summoners Tales is a documentary film directed by Doug Nichol. "The island nation of Tuvalu is the first country expected to be eradicated by rising sea levels associated with climate change. This winner of the Grand Prize and Best Documentary Prize at the Taipei Film Festival examines the situation in Tuvalu and draws parallels to flooding in the Taiwanese town of Tainan, pointing to systematic ecological neglect as the common denominator between Tuvalu’s problems and those of Taiwan." Quoting the description from the 2011 Taiwan Film Days site. Tu as crié LET ME GO is a 1997 feature length documentary by Anne Claire Poirier exploring the events that led to the murder of her daughter, Yanne, who had turned to drugs and prostitution before being murdered at the age of twenty-six. The film was shot in Montreal and produced by the National Film Board of Canada. Conquer by the Clock was a short dramatic propaganda film produced by the RKO Radio Pictures in 1942 to encourage wartime industrial production. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1943. Tears Are Not Enough is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by John Zaritsky. Squires of San Quentin is a 1978 American short documentary film produced by J. Gary Mitchell. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The film was shot in San Quentin State Prison and depicts "The Squires," inmates who attempt to convince troubled children to avoid criminal behavior. Walk Like a Man, full title Walk Like a Man: A Real Life Drama About Blood, Sweat & Queers is a 2008 Australian documentary film about gay rugby union co-produced and co-directed by Patricia Zagarella and Jim Morgison and narrated by Australian former rugby league international Ian Roberts. Filmed in San Francisco, Sydney, Australia and New York, it concentrates on preparations for the 2006 New York final of the Bingham Cup, effectively the World Cup of gay rugby union, by the two finalist teams, the reigning incumbent champions San Francisco Fog RFC and the up-and-coming rivals, the Sydney Convicts. The Convicts end up winning the Cup with a score of 16-10. The prize is named after Mark Bingham, a gay rugby player and a member of San Francisco Fog, and a 9/11 hero, was a passenger on United Airlines Flight 93 and courageously stormed the cockpit and prevented the hijackers from hitting their eventual target. The film was released in February 2008. It was shown on Australian Special Broadcasting Service and also shown on Logo TV All This Can Happen is a 2013 documentary film directed by Siobhan Davies and David Hinton. Afghan Muscles is a 2006 Danish documentary film directed by Andreas Møl Dalsgaard about bodybuilding in Afghanistan. A documentary on the life and career of actor Lon Chaney, with clips from his films and interviews with people who knew him. Living Skin is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Fawzi Saleh. How I Filmed the War is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Yuval Sagiv. Wishbone Ash: Argus is a 2006 musical documentary film. Singer Songwriter Luke Haines flies back to his homeland to discuss his life on film. Wary of the idea of a film about his life and weary from the long plane ride home from Buenos Aires. While left waiting to go on set, he attempts to piece together his life. Through fragments of his existence thus far, comments from his contemporaries and friends, including, musician Jarvis Cocker, novelist David Peace and Arthur Matthews, amongst others, we will discuss the work, legacy, struggles, battles and future of the perennial outsider the British Music Scene. Haines has regularly been described in the media as one of the greatest English contemporary songwriters. His wry commentaries respect few boundaries and his musical arrangements are uniquely suited to both the worlds of music and film. He is equally at home writing about teenage sex, terrorism, pop/film stars, child murder or broken love affairs, yet the instrumental versions of his tunes stand firm. Here we meet again the forgotten man. Singer. Songwriter. Novelist. Artist. Luke Haines is not dead. He is alive and well and back in London..... This is his story. Songololo: Voices of Change is a 1990 short documentary film. オリンピック出場4回、ワールドカップSL総合5位の実績を持つ世界的なアルペンレーサー・木村公宣が、切れ味抜群で美しいショートターンの上達法を教える。内重心と外重心をシチュエーションに合わせて使い分けるトレーニング法を分かりやすく紹介する。 Little Isles of Freedom is a 1942 documentary film directed by Victor Stoloff. Richard Pryor: Live in Concert was the second of Richard Pryor's filmed concert performances, but the first to be released theatrically. Shot at Long Beach, California in December 1978, it was produced and distributed independently and is the first full-length, feature movie consisting of only stand-up comedy, often hailed as one of the seminal and most influential recorded stand-up performances of the modern era. In her review of Richard Pryor Live in Concert, Pauline Kael commented, "Probably the greatest of all recorded-performance films. Pryor had characters and voices bursting out of him .... Watching this mysteriously original physical comedian you can't account for his gift and everything he does seems to be for the first time." An audio version was released in 1978 titled Wanted: Live in Concert. The film and its copyright are owned by Gary Biller. M-ON! Monthly Icon: L'Arc-en-Ciel is a 2012 TV documentary directed by Etsuko Akiba. The Good Looker is a documentary film directed by Claire Jager. Let There Be Water is a 2001 short documentary film directed by Neven Hitrec. An Evening With John Barrowman is an extravaganza of John performing his favourite and most well known songs from the world of stage, screen and pop with his unique talent, charm, personality and enthusiasm.Johns multi talents have gained him a high profile on a variety of primetime award winning television shows, especially the lead role in the hugely successful Doctor Who spin-off Torchwood. He is an actor, judge, presenter and singer on the BBC and ITV in the UK, NBC and CBS in the USA and CBC in Canada and has appeared in numerous West End and Broadway productions and also been nominated for an Olivier Award.An Evening With John Barrowman was filmed at Glasgows Royal Concert Hall on May 14th 2009 during a sell out UK tour culminating in a full house at The Royal Albert Hall.Sit back and enjoy an evening of entertainment with one of the most colourful characters in showbusiness!! La palomilla salvaje is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Gustavo Gamou. Glasnost Rock - Rock Summer 88 is a 2011 documentary music film written by Sanna-Sisko Tohka and directed by Sanna-Sisko Tohka and Hannu Matti Seikkula. My Kith And Kin is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Rodion Ismailov. Moving Forward: Employment Rights in the Workplace is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Lese Skidmore. Sounds and Silence is a 2009 documentary drama film written and directed by by Peter Guyer and Norbert Wiedmer. Not at Home is a 2013 drama film written and directed by Katja Adomeit and Shahrbanoo Sadat. Kinderland ist abgebrannt is a 1997 documentary film written by Ute Badura and Sibylle Tiedemann and directed by Sibylle Tiedemann. Chapadmalal is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Alejandro Montiel. Amors bilar is a 1988 documentary film directed by Ylva Floreman. Using is a 2007 documentary film directed by Zhou Hao. Sunless Days is a 1990 documentary film written by Shu kei and Nien-Jen Wu and directed by Shu kei. More About Ashray from Director Ambika SamarthaAshray, one of the project organizations that makes up the Committed Communities Development Trust, is Bombay's first home for children who have either been infected or affected by HIV. The children at Ashray are there because their parents are unable to provide for them and often are very sick or have passed away. Ashray does not do any mandatory testing on any of the children. None of the over fifty children nor the staff know which youth are infected with the virus. Universal precautions are taken with everyone, as if everyone has the virus. Ashray provides more than nutritional support and medical services to its youth. It provides a home where kids can learn English, bollywood dancing, art, and enjoy other activities outside of their regular schooling. It is a place where they come to feel part of a larger family. The house-mothers who live and work at Ashray, as well as the rest of the staff, are an integral part of the children's lives. While the children miss their parents, Ashray has become their new home and family.When I was seventeen years old I went to India as part of a program where we gave educational presentations on HIV/AIDS to different schools and universities. One of the places we visited during our stay was Ashray, and I was inspired by the staff and the children there. I have always wanted to come back and document their lives.I am currently proposing a feature documentary on other facets of CCD Trust - including a program where they take care of the children of prostitutes during the day and evening hours. Dirty Hands: The Art and Crimes of David Choe is a 2008 documentary film about painter and graffiti artist David Choe, directed by Harry Kim. Over more than a decade, Kim filmed the most intimate and dramatic moments of his best friend David Choe's colorful life as an artist. Dirty Hands began as a film school project, but gradually expanded into a half-hour film entitled Whales and Orgies, then a feature-length documentary. The film premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival on June 21, 2008 and had a theatrical premiere at the Roxie Theater in San Francisco in May 2010. Tarnation is a 2003 American documentary film by Jonathan Caouette. The film was created by Caouette from over 20 years of hundreds of hours of old Super 8 footage, VHS videotape, photographs, and answering machine messages to tell the story of his life and his relationship with his mentally ill mother Renee. Tarnation was initially made for a total budget of $218.32, using free iMovie software on a Mac. As an early supporter, film critic Roger Ebert stated that $400,000 more was eventually spent by the distributor on sound, print, score and music/clip clearances to bring the film to theaters. The film went on to win the Best Documentary Award from the National Society of Film Critics, the Independent Spirits, the Gotham Awards, as well as the L.A. and London International Film Festivals. Birth Control is a 1917 film produced by and starring Margaret Sanger and describing her family planning work. It was the first film banned under the 1915 ruling of the United States Supreme Court in Mutual Film Corporation v. Industrial Commission of Ohio, which held that the exhibition of films did not constitute free speech. The banning of Birth Control was upheld by the New York Court of Appeals on the grounds that a film on family planning may be censored "in the interest of morality, decency, and public safety and welfare." If You Only Understood is a 1998 drama film directed by Rolando Díaz. The Long Holiday is a 2000 documentary film directed by Johan van der Keuken. Changing The Game is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Jacqueline Gares. Reception is a 2011 documentary short film written and directed by Maciej Bochniak. Jobriath A.D. is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Kieran Turner. Comrade President is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mosco Kamwendo. The Power Of Soul is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Marc Fehse. Der grüne Berg is a 1990 documentary film written by Pierre Bost, Fredi M. Murer, and Bertrand Tavernier and directed by Fredi M. Murer. Chulas Fronteras is a documentary film from 1976 which tells the story of the norteño or conjunto music which is played on both sides of the Mexico–Texas border. It was directed by Les Blank. A CD soundtrack of the music played in the film is also available, under the same title. In 1993, this film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Paris Paradise is a 2011 documentary film directed by Éléonore Yaméogo. Jackie Chan: Stunt Master and Mentor is a 2010 documentary short film. Dialogues with Madwomen is a 1993 documentary by Allie Light focusing on mental illness in women. Menachem Daum, the son of holocaust survivors, and a New York Orthodox Jew worries that both of his sons, full time yeshiva students who live with their families in Israel, are becoming seduced to intolerance by their religious studies. "All religions today are in danger of being hijacked by extremists." To open their perspectives just a little he sets off with his wife, Rifka, and both sons, Tzvi Dovid and Akiva, to visit the Polish towns where his parents grew up and to try to find the Catholic farmers who hid his father-in-law from the Germans. Enduring the bemused tolerance of his sons, Menachem persists until they find Honorata Matuszezyk Mucha who as a young woman brought food nightly to Rifka's father and his two brothers for 28 months until the end of World War II. The Daum sons perspectives widen a bit to allow for good Gentiles, but they also encounter some resentment from the Poles who heard no word from the three brothers after they left their hiding place, not even a postcard with a thank you. A lot of issues are surfaced but left unresolved in this well crafted documentary. The Cliburn: Playing on the Edge is a 2001 documentary film that gives a backstage look at one of the world's most prestigious musical competitions, directed by Peter Rosen and Alan Skog. Butterfly Girl is a 2014 documentary film directed by Cary Bell. Fukushima Hula Girls is a 2011 documentary film directed by Masaki Kobayashi. Hinterland - A Child Soldier’s Road Back to South Sudan is a 2011 Documentary film written by Albert Elings and directed by Eugenie Jansen and Albert Elings. El Peor Dios is a 2013 documentary music film written by Daniel Arasanz and Alejandro Montes and directed by Daniel Arasanz, Alejandro Montes and Nicolás Tarela. Sandwiches That You Will Like is a 2002 PBS documentary by Rick Sebak of WQED. The unique sandwich offerings of cities across the United States are shown, from those that are often found outside of their city of origin to the virtually unknown. The sandwiches showcased are: Tripe — George's, Italian Market The Elvis — Peanut Butter & Co., New York City Beef on weck — Schwabl's, West Seneca, New York Roast beef — Kelly's Revere Beach, Revere, Massachusetts Italian beef — Mr. Beef, Chicago Loose meat — Taylor's Maid-Rite, Marshalltown, Iowa Cheesesteak — Dalessandro's, Roxborough; Geno's and Pat's, South Philadelphia Pig ears and snouts — C & K Barbecue, St. Louis, Missouri Brain — Ferguson's, St. Louis St. Paul — Kim Van, St. Louis Bánh mì — Huong Lan, San Jose, California; Lucy Sheets, outside My Ngoc, Pittsburgh Primanti — Primanti Brothers, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Chipped ham — Isaly's, West View, Pennsylvania Hot Brown — Brown Hotel, Louisville, Kentucky Lobster roll — Red's Eats, Wiscasset, Maine Po' boy — Domilise's Restaurant, New Orleans, Louisiana I Am Louisa Jules is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Viola Scheuerer and Roberto Manhães Reis. The Bears of San Francisco is a 2012 short, biographical documentary film directed by Mike Agnew, Samantha André, Eunice Lai and Sabrina Tan Fen Yi. Serengeti Shall Not Die is a 1959 German documentary film written and directed by Bernhard Grzimek. His son, the cinematographer Michael Grzimek, died on-location during the filming of the documentary when a plane he piloted collided with a vulture. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1959. Vanishing Point is a 2012 National Film Board of Canada documentary film directed by Alberta filmmakers and environmental scientists Stephen A. Smith and Julia Szucs, chronicling life in the Arctic for two remote communities linked by a migration from Baffin Island to Greenland. The film is narrated in Inuktitut by Navarana K'avigak' Sørensen, a polyglot Inughuit linguist who is the great-great-great-niece of a Baffin Island shaman who had led the migration in 1860. Production of the film took Smith and Szucs four years. The filmmakers accompanied Navarana on three hunting trips across the remote north for Vanishing Point, which contrasts traditional life on the tundra with life in modern-day communities. The film also shows the impact of Arctic sea ice decline on families who still travel the north by dog teams. Vanishing Point was co-written by Alberta novelist Marina Endicott and produced by Szucs along with David Christensen for the NFB. The film premiered at the Calgary International Film Festival and was nominated for best feature documentary at the 2nd Canadian Screen Awards. Just Watch Me: Trudeau and the '70s Generation is a Canadian documentary film by Catherine Annau, produced in 1999 by the National Film Board of Canada. The film explores the social and cultural impact of former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's vision of a bilingual and bicultural nation, through interviews with eight Generation Xers whose views of Canada were formed and influenced during the Trudeau era. The name of the movie comes from "just watch me", a phrase made famous by Trudeau in October 1970 when he spoke of his determination to restore civil order in Quebec during the October Crisis. Actor Evan Adams was one of the eight interview subjects. Awards for the film include Best Canadian First Feature Film at the 1999 Toronto International Film Festival and the Genie Award for Best Feature Length Documentary. As I Was Moving Ahead Occasionally I Saw Brief Glimpses of Beauty is a 2000 experimental documentary film directed by Jonas Mekas. The film had its world premiere on November 4, 2000, at the London Film Festival and is a compilation of Mekas' home movies. At over five hours in length, it is considered to be one of the longest films ever made. "Riddles In Stone: Secret Architecture of Washington, D.C.", will continue to explore the fascinating history behind the origins and focus of the world's most powerful nation: America. Why was this nation founded? How was the precise location of Washington, D.C., determined? What is the meaning of the seemingly countless occult images in our nation's capitol? Volume II zeroes in on the Masonic Rosicrucian influence so prevalent amongst our Founding Fathers as they planned, and began to implement, the layout of America's Capitol. For years, extreme controversy has abounded as to the exact meaning of the occult symbols found within the street layout, the buildings, and the monuments of Washington, D.C. Is there really an inverted Pentagram formed by the street layout just north of the White House? We have discovered the esoteric reason why this Pentagram is missing one segment. Was this city laid out to reflect the vision of a Masonic Christ foreseen by Sir Francis Bacon? Is it true that America's capitol was laid out "according to the stars", i.e., in the astrological shapes of certain planets and stars so revered by occultists? Why did our Masonic Founding Fathers perform "Corn, Wine, and Oil" ceremonies at cornerstone layings and at the dedication of the finished structure? Does this occult "wisdom" represent the interests of America, or a hidden agenda? As with Volume I, this "Secret Mysteries" series will continue to explore current -- and possibly future -- events by examining America's past. What can these realities mean for the unfolding destiny of America and the world? Now you will know that, when President Bush said he was fulfilling the "Ancient Hope" of the "New Order of the Ages" (as we show in Volume I), he was merely acting out the plan reflected in the street layout and in the architecture of Washington, D.C. Echoes From A Ghost Minyan is a 1998 documentary film about the once vibrant Jewish community of South Philadelphia. Charles Mingus: Triumph of the Underdog is a 1998 documentary film about the life of jazz musician Charles Mingus. God Rides A Harley is a 1998 documentary film. Larwari and Walkara is a 1976 documentary film directed by Roger Sandall. Kangaroos, Faces in the Mob is an Australian documentary film. Leaves Fall In All Seasons is a 2013 short film written and directed by Ahmed Mater. The Pritchard is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Kevin Jerome Everson. In his documentary The Main Suspect, director Yaky Yosha attempted to explore the circumstances which led to the deaths of thirteen Israeli Arabs during the October 2000 events that triggered the ongoing Intifada. Israel, October 1, 2000. Intifada Al-Aqsa has begun. For the first time Israeli-Arab citizens actively participate. During the following three days, 13 Arabs are killed. The government appoints an investigation committee, but the people have already chosen the main suspect: the Galilee Chief of Police, Major Alik Ron. The Main Suspect participated at IDFA River Rites is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Ben Russell. Take Me Home Documentary is a 2013 documentary film directed by Famor Botero. The Real Jane Austen is a 2002 documentary film directed by Nicky Pattison. Kerry Katona: Coming Clean is a 2010 tv documentary film. A Night in 67 is a 2010 documentary and music film directed by Ricardo Calil and Renato Terra. Sandmann – Historien om en sosialistisk supermann is a Norwegian 52 minute long documentary by Jannicke Systad Jacobsen from 2005. The documentary looks back on the rise and fall of the East-German socialism through the tales of Sandmann of Sandmännchen. Mr. Kennedy, Mr. Reagan and the Big, Beautiful, Beleaguered American Dreamis a 1966 documentary film directed by Cliff Solway. Beyond Citizen Kane is a British documentary film directed by Simon Hartog, produced by John Ellis, and first broadcast on Channel 4. It details the dominant position of the Rede Globo media group, the largest in Brazil, and discusses the group's influence, power, and political connections. Globo's president and founder Roberto Marinho was criticized and compared to the fictional newspaper tycoon Charles Foster Kane, created by Orson Welles for the 1941 film Citizen Kane. According to the documentary, Marinho's media group engages in manipulation of news to influence public opinion. Rede Globo objected to the film's position and tried to buy Brazilian rights, but Hartog had already made agreements to give non-TV rights to political and cultural groups in Brazil. Rede Globo went to court to prevent a scheduled March 1994 screening at the Rio de Janeiro Modern Art Museum, and gained a court order by which Military Police confiscated movie posters and the copy of the film. It has never been broadcast on TV in Brazil or released in commercial theaters, but was shown illegally during the 1990s in universities and among political groups. "If global warming is our planet’s most pressing issue, large-scale population displacement is the human consequence. Massive continental migration is already under way, and diminished natural resources continue to threaten the lives of millions. The quickly submerging islands of Tuvalu in the South Pacific, drought-affected regions of Sudan, storm-susceptible coastlines of Bangladesh, and rapidly expanding deserts in China are forcing millions to relocate beyond their borders. Who will accept these refugees, and how will they impact their adopted homeland? Filmmaker Michael Nash spent two years traversing the globe, visiting these and other hot spots where rising sea levels are threatening millions of people’s survival. Strong visuals and potent testimony from the victims of climate change, politicians, scientists, relief organizations, and authors help sound the alarm for instituting new policies and working together to create solutions to cope with this imminent crisis. Climate Refugees fervently captures the human fallout of climate change." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Thorberg is a 2012 documentary film directed by Dieter Fahrer. Ahmed: Almost 13 is a 2011 documentary and family film directed by Ritchie Calavander Cole. Le Jeu de la Mort is a French/Swiss television documentary that was broadcast by the French public television channel France 2. The documentary was presented as a social commentary on the effects of humiliation in reality television and obeying orders, and its broadcast was followed by a studio discussion on the programme. The documentary focused on a conduction of the Milgram experiment, but with the additional factor of the popularity and influence of reality television on the general public. The experiment was performed under the guise of a television game show known as La Zone Xtrême. Volunteers were given €40 to take part as contestants in a "pilot" for the fictitious show, where they had to administer increasingly stronger electric shocks to trained actors posing as players as punishment for incorrect answers, as encouraged to do so by the host and audience. Only 16 of 80 "contestants" chose to end the game before delivering the highest voltage punishment. Nude, calde e pure is a 1965 documentary film written by Jacques Lanzmann and Sergio Spina and directed by Virgilio Sabel and Lambert Santhe. Tale of a Butcher Shop is a documentary film directed by Aya Hanabusa. Belarus has been called "Europe's last dictatorship". Since 1994, Alexander Lukashenko has ruled the ex-Soviet republic with a despotic hand, jailing the opposition, shutting down the press and refusing to investigate the assassinations of dissidents.He has virtually silenced his critics - except for one lone performance artist who stages public stunts mocking the dictator's pretentions. Belarusian Waltz is the story of Alexander Pushkin, whose audacious, comical exploits have earned him the hostility of the police and the consternation of his family. An offbeat tale in which post-modern street theatre meets 1930s-style authoritarianism, the film offers a surprising window into the soul of the Belarusian people. Heaven's Rage is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Ken Cole. Chante ton bac d'abord is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by David André. First Descent is a 2005 documentary film about snowboarding and its beginning in the 1980s. The snowboarders featured in this movie represent three generations of snowboarders and the progress this young sport has made over the past two decades. Most of the movie was shot in Alaska and its back country. It is the first movie to be produced and financed by a soft-drink company. Gates of Heaven is a 1978 documentary film by Errol Morris about the pet cemetery business. It was made when Morris was unknown and did much to launch his career. Donkey In Lahore is a 2008 documentary by Faramarz Rahber about the life of an Australian who falls in love with a Pakistani woman and decides to marry her. In North America, it premiered in the east coast at the Tribeca film festival and in the west coast at the Dawn Breakers International Film Festival, later winning the Audience Favorite award, Best Documentary and Best Director at the 2009 Noor Iranian Film Festival. "Based on the best-selling book by Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine seeks to explain the rise of disaster capitalism: the exploitation of moments of crisis in vulnerable countries by governments and big business. The film traces the doctrine’s beginnings in the radical theories of Milton Friedman at the University of Chicago, and its subsequent implementation over the past 40 years in countries as disparate as Augusto Pinochet’s Chile, Boris Yeltsin’s Russia, Margaret Thatcher’s Great Britain, and most recently through the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Filmmakers Michael Winterbottom and Mat Whitecross use a brand of artistic license to present a cinematic experience that takes this theory to a new audience. They make heavy use of archival images, offset with new footage of Klein's interviews and lectures. Warning: After viewing this film, you may interpret our world history in a new light." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. 10 on Ten is a 2004 Iranian documentary film directed by Abbas Kiarostami. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. Looking to his own art for inspiration, Abbas Kiarostami reflects on his techniques of filming and how he taped certain sequences in Ten in 2001. Orphans of the Genocide is a documentary film directed by Bared Maronian. Twin Brothers, 53 Scenes from a Childhood is a 2011 film directed by Axel Danielson. Frayland is a 2011 documentary film directed by Ramiro Ozer Ami and Sebastián Mayayo. Photographie und jenseits is a 2000 film directed by Heinz Emigholz. Tales from the Inside is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Guadalupe Miranda. The Balls to Prove It is a short comedy sports documentary film written by Jessica Becker and directed by Murray Scott. Daughters of Malakeh is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jet Homoet and Sharog Heshmat Manesh. 2000 M2 And A Garden is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Tama Tobias-Macht. Pepper LIVE DVD is a DVD by Pepper that was filmed over the course of two sold-out 2004 performances at the L.A.'s Troubador night club. The DVD was released on March 8, 2005 through Volcom Entertainment. "A visual illustration of a single evening where 20,000 people dance and sing daily at the only checkpoint between India and Pakistan." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. 7 Plus Seven is a 1970 documentary and biography TV movie directed by Michael Apted. Behind the Breadline is a 1974 documentary and short film directed by S. Sukhdev. An intimate and rare exploration of the world of Messianic Judaism and Jews who believe in Jesus. Filmed in Canada for a period of five years, the film follows members of the city of David congregation from Toronto, Canada as they try to carve out a life for themselves in their Jewish community, by following what many Jews believe to be Christian Dogma. The Chosen People reveals the most controversial group in the Jewish community and their crusade to have the North American Jewish community accept Jesus (Yeshua) of Nazareth as the Jewish Messiah. De Berg is a 1982 film directed by Gerrard Verhage. Roelof Uys is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Senara Wilson Hodges. The Secret of Selling the Negro Market is a 1954 film financed by Johnson Publishing Company, the publisher of Ebony magazine, to encourage advertisers to promote their products and services in the African-American media. The film showed African-American professionals, housewives and students as participants in the American consumer society, and it emphasized the economic power of this demographic community. The film, which was shot in Kodachrome Color, featured appearances by Sinclair Weeks, Secretary of the U.S. Department of Commerce, and radio announcer Robert Trout. The film had its premiere in July 1954 at the Joseph Schlitz Brewing Company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and was shown on a non-theatrical basis. Giant's Quoit is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Denzil Monk. L'altra altra metà del cielo...continua is a 2011 documentary film directed by Laura Valle. Take Back Your Power is documentary film directed by Josh del Sol. Petey and Johnny is a 1961 documentary film. The Incomplete is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jan Soldat. O Dia que Durou 21 Anos is a Brazilian documentary film that shows the influence of the U.S. government in the 1964 Brazilian coup d'état. Original White House tapes with John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson as well as CIA Top Secret documents reveal how the US government planned to overthrow Brazilian elected president João Goulart. The film has won three awards in international festivals cinemas, two of these in the United States and one in France. "Fourtyeight years of Salazar’s dictatorship in Portugal and its colonies. Accompanying the images of anthropometric photographs, voices of the regime’s much-feared PIDE (political police) and its opponents remember. There is not only the secret history of these photos, but also the confrontation between the executioner and his victim, frozen for eternity. The years move on but the photos remain the same, all on the same format: black and white, fullface and profile. Behind these monochromatic, monotonous images, sad and inert, the voices of those formerly photographed by the PIDE recall their memories, their fears, their scars, their arrests, the physical abuse, the torture, the humiliations and the prison." Quoting Yann Lardeau from the 2010 Vienna International Film Festival site. Beyond And Back is a 1978 documentary and "death-sploitation flick" released by Sunn Classic Pictures that deals with the subject of near death experiences. Kony 2012: Part II - Beyond Famous is a video follow up to Kony 2012. The Cult of the Suicide Bomber is a 2005 documentary TV movie. Tears of the Amazon is a TV program. "Fear permeates the daily lives of Kampala’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender men and women, or “kuchus.” Newspapers scream such headlines as, “HOMO TERROR! We Name and Shame Top Gays in the City,” and a sodomy conviction all too often results in a prison sentence. On the outskirts of town, in a small, unmarked office at the end of a dirt track, subsistence farmer and veteran activist David Kato labors to repeal Uganda’s homophobic laws and liberate his fellow kuchus. But David’s formidable task just became exponentially harder: a new “Anti-Homosexuality Bill” in Uganda’s Parliament proposes a prison sentence for anyone who fails to turn in a gay family member, and, having christened Uganda ground zero in their war on the “homosexual agenda,” U.S. evangelicals now frequent the church halls and universities of Kampala to hold prayer rallies and ordain local bishops. As if this weren’t enough, photos of David’s friend Stosh, an HIV+ transman, are plastered across a local tabloid, forcing him into hiding. In the midst of this chaos, it falls to the indignant and foulmouthed David, along with an idiosyncratic clan of fellow activists, to fight for Kampala’s kuchus in the press, in the churches, and in the courts, where they launch a landmark lawsuit against a gay-bashing tabloid. *** Until just two months ago, this was what our film was about. Then, on January 26th, 2011, the unthinkable happened: David was brutally murdered in his home. We were devastated by the news and returned to Uganda immediately. Over the past year, David had become a friend to both of us and a supporter of Call Me Kuchu, so we felt a natural duty to capture the response to his death, which marked a terrible and tragic loss for human rights activism in Uganda and around the world. We spent six weeks documenting the immediate impact of David's death on the kuchu community and the beginning of the trial of the suspect in his murder. With unprecedented access to a tumultuous year – both hopeful and tragic – for this small band of kuchus, Call Me Kuchu examines the astounding courage and determination required not only to battle an oppressive government, but also to maintain religious conviction in the face of the contradicting rhetoric of a powerful national church. As we paint a rare portrait of an activist community and its antagonists, our key question explores the concept of democracy: In a country where a judiciary increasingly recognizes the rights of individual kuchus, yet a popular vote and daily violence threaten to eradicate their rights altogether, can this small but spirited group bring about the political and religious change it seeks?" Quoting the description from the Kickstarter site. Losing LeBron is a documentary, sports, drama film directed by Nicole Hart and Allyson Sherlock. Generation Kunduz is a 2011 documentary film directed by Martin Gerner. Wahid's Mobile Bookstore is a 2009 bollywood short documentary biographical film directed by Anjoo Khosla. Gerboise bleue is a 2009 documentary film. Every conceivable perspective from the male "lesbian fantasy" to those casting a feminist shadow on women are explored in this light hearted documentary. Let Fury Have The Hour is a documentary film written and directed by Antonino D'Ambrosio. Fifty Lakes One Island is a 2013 documentary and adventure film directed by George Desort and produced by Lisa Thompson. Heimspiel is a 1999 film directed by Pepe Danquart. Running Stumbled is a 2006 documentary film directed by John Maringouin. Black Chicks Talking is an arts project by Australian actress Leah Purcell featuring a 2001 documentary film, a 2002 book, a stage production and an art exhibition. The film is co-directed by Brendan Fletcher and features Indigenous Australian women including Purcell, actress Deborah Mailman and politician Kathryn Hay. Following the book and film, Purcell wrote a fictionalised dramatisation under the same title. Ganja Queen is an Australian documentary film about the arrest, trial, and imprisonment of Schapelle Corby released in 2007. An expanded version titled Schapelle Corby: The Hidden Truth, was aired by the Nine Network in Australia in June 2008. Ganja Queen was later aired on HBO in North and South America, before being released on DVD. The film was produced by Janine Hosking and Steve Hosking. Schapelle Corby: The Hidden Truth was later nominated for Most Outstanding Documentary or Documentary Series at the Logie Awards of 2009. James Carroll's Constantine's Sword, or Constantine's Sword, is a 2007 historical documentary film on the relationship between the Catholic Church and Jews. Directed and produced by Oscar-nominated filmmaker Oren Jacoby, the film is inspired by former priest James P. Carroll's 2001 book Constantine's Sword. With Fidel Whatever Happens is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Goran Radovanovic. Terramatta: The Italian Twentieth Century of Vincenzo Rabito Sicilian illiterate is a 2012 documentary directed by Costanza Quatriglio, based on the memoir Terra Matta by Vincenzo Rabito. Winner of several awards, including the Nastro d'Argento 2013, it was shown in all major Italian cities. Ajawaska, fragmentos de un viaje a las alturas is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Violeta Soto Valdés. The Love Part of This is a 2012 documentary film directed by Lya Guerra. Mark Twain at Stormfield, 1909 is a 1909 silent film by Thomas Edison. Paradise Camp is a 1986 documentary about Theresienstadt concentration camp in Czechoslovakia, written and directed by the Australians Paul Rea and Frank Heimans, respectively. Czechoslovakian Jews were first told that Theresienstadt was a community established for their safety. They quickly recognized it as a ghetto and concentration camp. In 1944, the Nazis cleaned up the camp, painting buildings and planting flowers, and deporting inmates to reduce overcrowding, in order to fool international Red Cross officials on a visit into believing the Jews were being well cared for. That year, the Germans also filmed a propaganda documentary at Thereienstadt to promote how they were caring for Jews. The 1986 film includes excerpts from the propaganda film, in contrast with interviews of survivors, other material about the facts of the camp, and examples of art made by prisoners, including thousands of children's drawings hidden and preserved by their teacher. En 50 ans is a Belgian 1958 documentary film. Rainbow Bridge is a 1971 film directed by Chuck Wein about different countercultural figures interacting on the Hawaiian island of Maui. According to author Harry Shapiro, "the idea was to shoot an antidote to Easy Rider showing the positive side of the youth movement". Wein described it as "a kind of space-age Candid Camera. We're going to place Pat [New York model Pat Hartley, the protagonist] in all kinds of real-life situtations, and film what happens. We're going to shoot a lot of film and just see what comes out of it". Filmed with non-professional actors and without a script, it features improvised scenes with a variety of characters. When it became apparent that it was floundering, producer Michael Jeffery brought in his client Jimi Hendrix to film an outdoor concert. Hendrix's heavily edited performance appears near the end of the film. Rainbow Bridge was a critical failure and has been re-released on video tape and DVD formats. Although it only contains 17 minutes of Hendrix performing, it continues to attract attention as his second-to-last American concert and the last one filmed. Future Archaelogy is a short documentary film directed by Armin Linke and Francesco Mattuzzi. Manny is a 2014 documentary, drama, sports film directed by Leon Gast and Ryan Moore. Dads and Kids is a 1986 drama film written and directed by Christian Bruyère Rebalancing is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Tim Cone. Trespassing Bergman is a 2013 Documentary film directed by Jane Magnusson and Hynek Pallas. Zweiunddreißig Richtungen der Windrose is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Guido Wenzl. Roller Derby Girl is a 1949 short American film directed by Justin Herman. 4 is a 2007 Australian documentary film directed by Tim Slade exploring Antonio Vivaldi's The Four Seasons through the eyes of four violinists in four countries. Each musician represents a season appropriate to his or her country: Sayaka Shoji plays Spring in Japan, Niki Vasilakis plays Summer in Australia, Cho-Liang Lin plays Autumn in the United States, and Pekka Kuusisto plays Winter in Finland. The film was nominated for two Australian Film Institute Awards, an International Documentary Association Award, as well as awards at the Banff World Television Festival. It won several awards, including a Gold HUGO in Chicago. It has sold to more than 20 international broadcasters and screened at more than 25 international film festivals. It screened on NHK in Japan in December 2010, and on PBS stations in the USA in May 2011, and continues to sell via DVD in Australia, New Zealand and the United States, as well as via online sales. Man Conquers Space is an alternate history, faux documentary feature film in development, written and directed by David Sander, chronicling the fictional conquest of space along the lines of the famous series of articles "Man Will Conquer Space Soon!" by Collier's Magazine, published between 1952 and 1954, and edited by Cornelius Ryan, supported by Dr Wernher von Braun along with a team of experts, and illustrated by famed space artist Chesley Bonestell. The Last Script. Remembering Buñuel is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Javier Espada and Gaizka Urresti. Going up the Stairs is a 2011 documentary biography film written by Reza Mohammadi Noori and Rokhsareh Ghaem Maghami, and directed by Rokhsareh Ghaem Maghami Shinjuku Boys is a 1995 film by Kim Longinotto and Jano Williams. It explores the lives of three transgender men who work at the New Marilyn Club in Tokyo, Japan. Galapagos - Trauminsel im Pazifik is a 1962 documentary film directed and written by Heinz Sielmann. Agustin's Newspaper is a 2008 Chilean documentary, directed by Ignacio Agüero, a Chilean film director. A Perfect Candidate is a 1996 documentary about the 1994 U.S. Senate race in Virginia between Democrat Chuck Robb and Republican Oliver North. Moustapha Alassane, cinéaste du possible is a 2009 documentary film directed by Maria Silvia Bazzoli and Christian Lelong. Volcanos and Carnival is a 1993 short documentary film written by Michelangelo Antonioni and directed by Enrica Antonioni and Michelangelo Antonioni. Bush Family Fortunes: The Best Democracy Money Can Buy is a 2004 documentary film directed by Steven Grandison and Greg Palast. The film, which examines various aspects of the Presidency of George W. Bush, including the 2000 US Presidential election and the Iraq War, is adapted from the 2003 BBC production Bush Family Fortunes and based on the 2002 book The Best Democracy Money Can Buy by investigative journalist Palast, who had spent years tracking the Bush family for the BBC and The Guardian newspaper. The research for the original BBC film, which claims to have exposed the George W. Bush military service controversy, was also drawn upon by Michael Moore for Fahrenheit 9/11 and footage was used by Robert Greenwald in Unprecedented: The 2000 Presidential Election. What Happens Next? is a documentary film about the Canadian singer-songwriter, Dan Mangan. It explores Mangan's ideas on fate and destiny as he's about to perform in his biggest performance to date, a sold out show at the Vancouver, British Columbia Orpheum. It premiered on CBC Television on August 25, 2012. The movie was directed and produced by Brent Hodge and Jon Siddall. It was nominated for a Leo Award in 2013. Sample: Not For Sale is a documentary film written and directed by Mike Redman. East End Forever is a 2011 Quebec documentary film about seven young people from the Hochelaga-Maisonneuve district of Montreal. Written and directed by Carole Laganière. The film debuted at the Grand Library on February 18, 2011, before theatrical release on May 13, 2011. Pope John Paul II: Ambassador of Peace is a 2005 documentary film. An Eighty-Four Year Old Youngful Man Lives in the Cabin is a 2000 TV Movie written by Hee Suk Cho. Transforming Loss is a documentary film directed by Judith R. Burdick. The Making of Longbird is a 2011 short animated documentary comedy film written by Will Anderson, Ainslie Henderson and Vitalij Sicinava, and directed by Will Anderson. Good Times, Wonderful Times is a 1965 anti-war film, the third feature-length film written, produced, and directed by independent American filmmaker Lionel Rogosin. It was produced in London, and made with the support of James "Jimmy" Vaughan and Tadeusz Makarczynski, who assisted in an extensive multi-year search for archival footage detailing the atrocities of war. Inspired by a deep sense of the danger of nuclear annihilation and the horrors of war, Rogosin traveled the world to gather rare undiscovered footage in the early 1960s. Brilliantly contrasting these images in all their brute horror with a trendy cocktail party in London, it is a powerful orchestration of moral issues that leaves each viewer face to face with his own responsibilities. Inspired by Hiroshima Mon Amour, it pushes the use of historical images to the extreme, creating a chain reaction resulting in an emotional explosion of horror, awareness and hope. Thirty Years of Maximum R&B Live is a 1994 compilation video of English rock and roll band The Who. The compilation covers the band live from 1965 to 1989 and is edited together with interviews with band members Roger Daltrey, John Entwistle, and Pete Townshend. A 4-disc compilation boxset called Thirty Years of Maximum R&B released in 1994 is also available. The DVD was released in 2001 and was eventually re-released as a 2-disc package with the bonus content of the Rockpalast concert from 28 March 1981. The Tanglewood Music Shed songs from 1970 have been removed though and replaced by songs from London Colliseum 1969, Kilburn 1977 and Shea Stadium 1982. A Fool's World is a documentary film written by Francesco Torti and Guido Castaldo and directed by Roberto Bianchi Montero and Albert T. Viola. THE AIDS CHRONICLES: HERE TO REPRESENT is a focused look at the social and cultural impact of AIDS on the large African American community of the city of Atlanta. People of every educational and economic level, gender identity, age, and religion are infected or affected by AIDS. Those featured want their stories to be told;  and open their lives to the camera, holding little back. Through their actions, decisions and behaviors we learn why AIDS still rages as an epidemic for African Americans. México, la revolución congelada is a 1973 Argentine film. Code Stars is the 2013 short documentary film directed by Lesley Chilcott. Town of Runners is a 2012 sports documentary film directed by Jerry Rothwell. Buzzards Steal Your Picnic is a 2007 film directed by Terri Sarris. Zemo is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kemal Emir. Divorce Iranian Style is a 1998 documentary film directed by Kim Longinotto which chronicles the legal battles of three Iranian couples as they seek divorce in the Iranian court system. The film documents three couples as they go through the various legal processes and cultural barriers as they seek to file for divorce and highlights the poignant differences of men and women in the court system. The film also shows the complexity of blending religious law with a state run court system. Jungle Cavalcade is a compilation of footage from Frank Buck’s first three films depicting his adventures capturing animals for the world's zoos. Tomorrow's Saturday is a 2007 short film written and directed by Michael Grigsby. The Price of Memory is a 2014 family historical documentary film directed by Karen Marks Mafundikwa. Godheten is a 2013 documentary film directed by Stefan Jarl. Restoring Hope is a 2012 short documentary adventure film written and directed by Kris Millgate. All in This Tea is a 2007 documentary film co-directed by Les Blank and Gina Leibrecht, about Chinese tea. It follows the American tea connoisseur David Lee Hoffman as he travels to remote tea-growing areas of China. Hoffman attempts to interest Chinese tea growers and distributors in fair trade issues, and explores the importance of terroir and organic growing methods in both the quality and future sustainability of the Chinese tea market. The film premiered at the San Francisco International Film Festival in 2007. It was filmed with a hand-held camera on digital video and is 70 minutes in length. Carol Channing: Larger Than Life is a 2011 documentary film written by Dori Berinstein and Adam Zucker and directed by Dori Berinstein. "If there ever was a secret recipe for crafting entertainment in its purest and truest form, Dori Berinstein most likely has it. The Tony-winning producer and Tribeca alum (ShowBusiness, TFF '05; Gotta Dance TFF '08) is back with another inspiring story—and she couldn't have chosen a more appropriate subject or captured one more affectionately. With every lyrical word, movements akin to the grace of choreography, and a rich and rarefied storyline that rivals that of any heroine of the Great White Way, Carol Channing's life could itself be a Broadway musical. Footage from the archives—television appearances, song and dance numbers, and stage performances—show Carol at her best (not that there is a "worst"). Without batting a false eyelash, she effortlessly charms audience after audience with her hilarity, relentless energy, and unique beauty, reminding us that before Barbra or Marilyn, there was Carol. Perhaps the most brilliant thing about Berinstein's bubbly biopic is that you don't need to love Broadway or even theater itself to love or to be mesmerized by Carol. Theatrics aside, Larger Than Life proves that Carol Channing—as a person—is very much worth knowing about." Quoting Ashley Havey and Caroline Tran from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. Hotch Potch is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Volker Koepp. News of the Queen is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Ana Johann. The Pig Farmis a 2011 documentary film written by Chrisine Nielsen and directed by Malcolm Clarke. S&Man is a 2006 pseudo-documentary film that examines the underground subculture of horror films. It contains interviews with indie horror filmmakers and other horror experts, including Erik Marcisak, Bill Zebub, Fred Vogel, Carol J. Clover, and Debbie D., as well as a scripted plot that comes into focus in the film's second half. The film discusses why some people enjoy underground horror films involving fetishes. Although the film is classified as a documentary, there is a fictional subplot which helps advance the film's theme by showing what some people really think about the genre. S&Man was shown at the reRun Gastropub Theater in New York City, film festivals, and released on home video. The film has received praise and criticism; although some reviews are strongly against the nature of the film, most reviews were positive. The New Rulers of the World is a 2001 Carlton Television documentary written and presented by John Pilger which was directed by Alan Lowery. In the film, "Pilger investigates the realities of globalisation by taking a close look at Indonesia." John Pilger explores the impact of globalisation, taking Indonesia as his prime example, a country that the World Bank described as a "model pupil" until its 'globalised' economy collapsed in 1998. Under scrutiny are the increasingly powerful multinationals and the institutions that back them, notably the IMF and The World Bank. John Pilger has also published as a collection of essays under the same title which explore similar themes. I Will Forget This Day is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Alina Rudnitskaya. Bollywood: The Greatest Love Story Ever Told is a 2011 documentary film directed by Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra and Jeff Zimbalist. "We love it. We hate it. We see it as regressive. We see it as modern. Melodramatic or Mythic? Bollywood. Some say it's the only culture that holds India together. Others say it's the most corrupting influence on Indians and should be banished from their shores. A love a affair that has lasted over 70 years between almost 2 billion people worldwide . Not only does it refuse to stop, it keeps on growing. Embracing it's most important, it's most vilified, it's most loved element: the song and dance. No Bollywood film needs to be called a musical. It needs no such excuse. It just is one. Regardless of the genre." Quoting the synopsis form the 2011 Cannes Film Festival site. Remote Area Medical is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jeff Reichert and Farihah Zaman. Mondo New York is a 1988 Mondo film directed by Harvey Nikolai Keith. The Circle is a Swiss docudrama film, released in 2014. Written and directed by Stefan Haupt, the film depicts the social network that revolved around The Circle, a gay publication in Zurich in the 1940s and 1950s, which was scapegoated for the murders of several gay men in the city. The film focuses in particular, on the story of Ernst Ostertag and Robi Rapp, a schoolteacher and a drag entertainer who enter a lifelong romantic relationship through their involvement in the group. The film intersperses a scripted dramatic depiction of the story, in which the couple are portrayed by Matthias Hungerbühler and Sven Schelker, with documentary interviews with the real Ostertag and Rapp. The film's cast also includes Marianne Sägebrecht, Anatole Taubman, Antoine Monot, Jr., Stefan Witschi and Markus Merz. The film won the Teddy Award for Best Documentary at the 2014 Berlin Film Festival, as well as the Panorama Audience Award. North American distribution rights were subsequently acquired by Wolfe Video. It has been selected as the Swiss entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards. Director Stefan Haupt said "it's an honour to represent Switzerland". Parallax Sounds is a 2012 documentary film written by Kenya Zanatta and written and directed by Augusto Contento. Fairytale of Kathmandu is a 2007 documentary by Neasa Ní Chianáin. The documentary focused on visits by the poet Cathal Ó Searcaigh to Nepal during which he had close relationships with many young boys of 16 years old or older. The documentary questioned whether Ó Searcaigh's relationships with these youths were exploitative and whether they demonstrated a power and wealth imbalance between the 50 year old Ó Searcaigh and the young Nepalese. Ó Searcaigh is presented in the documentary as paying for the housing, food, bicycles and clothing of boys. He mentions on camera having sex with some of them, denying that he abused them or that he coerced them into having sex with him. According to Ó Searcaigh, he had sexual relationships with only a "small fraction" of them, and that he has never indulged in anal intercourse in Nepal. In March, 2008, Liam Gaskin, who had been acting as his public spokesman, stood down as a result of a DVD launched to defend Cathal Ó Searcaigh by his supporters in Kathmandu. Film Before Film (What Really Happened Between the Images?), is a 1986 documentary film directed by Werner Nekes. The Old Bus is a 1934 Australian documentary film about aviator Sir Charles Kingsford-Smith. Super, Girls!, directed by Jian Yi, is a 2007 independent Chinese documentary that follows 10 female teenagers on their quest to become instant superstars on China’s biggest television show. The Chinese equivalent of American Idol, the "Super Girls Singing Contest" spawned an unprecedented pop culture phenomenon. Drawing over 400 million viewers, the ending text of the documentary implies the show was cancelled by the Chinese government for political reasons. The film provides unparalleled, intimate access into the contestants’ lives over several months. Through candid interviews and footage of auditions and competitions, Super, Girls! examines sexuality and success in the new China. Seed Keepers is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Farida Pacha. A three hour documentary about Pearl Harbor containing over 25 survivor interviews revealing eyewitness accounts from both American and Japanese veterans. Witness the events of December 7, 1941, as a Japanese carrier fleet launches a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor and the island of Oahu which ultimately demolished the United States Pacific Fleet in under one hour. Approximately 2,500 American lives were lost and numerous US military battleships and aircraft were destroyed. It May Be That Beauty Has Strengthened Our Resolve - Masao Adachi is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Philippe Grandrieux. Mandeep is a 2011 short documentary film produced and directed by Darrin Klimek. Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West is a 2005 documentary film about the perceived threat of radical Islam to Western civilization. The film makes use of extensive Arab television footage depicting Islamic radicals preaching hate speech and seeking to incite global jihad. It also draws parallels between World War II's Nazi movement and Islamism and the West's response to those threats. Wayne Kopping of South Africa co-wrote and directed the film. Raphael Shore, a Canadian-Israeli, co-wrote and produced the film, and is the founder of The Clarion Fund, the film's distributor. The movie has received praise from some personalities in the media such as Glenn Beck and Sean Hannity, but others criticized it as Islamophobic with a political agenda, and for its association with pro-Israeli groups. Segments of the movie were broadcast on CNN Headline News and in several specials on Fox News. The movie was also screened on 30 college campuses and Capitol Hill. The Meadow of Things is a 1987 film directed by Heinz Emigholz. The Magic Voice of a Rebel is a 2014 Documentary film written and directed by Olga Sommerová. In My Own Words is a 2011 documentary film. Mad As Hell: Peter Finch is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Robert de Young. Viva Zapatero! is a 2005 documentary by Sabina Guzzanti telling her side of the story regarding the conflict with Silvio Berlusconi over a late-night TV political satire show broadcast on RAI-3. The show, RAIot, lampooned prime minister Berlusconi. Since it wasn't considered a satirical show, but a political one, it was cancelled after the first episode. The Second Gun is a 1973 documentary film written by Gérard Alcan and Theodore Charach and directed by Gérard Alcan. Laugh at My Pain is a 2011 stand-up comedy documentary film of comedian Kevin Hart. It includes Kevin Hart reprising his comedic self in a new barrage of jokes. Kevin Hart performed a stand-up special at the Nokia Theater at L.A. Live in Los Angeles. Isaac in America: A Journey With Isaac Bashevis Singer is a 1986 documentary made by director Amram Nowak and producer Kirk Simon. I Am Bruce Lee is a 2012 documentary film directed by Pete McCormack. The film documents the life of Bruce Lee, the famous actor and Martial Artist, featuring interviews with his widow Linda Emery and daughter Shannon Lee. It won a Leo Award in 2012. Smothered: The Censorship Struggles of the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour is a documentary film directed by Maureen Muldaur. Metamorphosen is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Sebastian Mez. Au 10 août is a 1986 documentary film written by Jean-Francois Amiguet and Anne Gonthier and directed by Jean-Francois Amiguet. Grass: A Nation's Battle for Life is a silent documentary film which follows a branch of the Bakhtiari tribe of Persia as they and their herds make their seasonal journey to better pastures. It is considered one of the earliest ethnographic documentary films. It was written by Richard Carver and Terry Ramsaye. The Non Fiction: Family Meeting - 7 Years in the Tanaka Family is a documentary film. Hannes Pussy Schmidhauser is a 2012 documentary film directed by Victor Tognola. There's No Place Like Utopia is an upcoming 2014 documentary film directed by Joel Gilbert. A Burning Star is a 1995 experimental short film written and directed by Kenji Oonishi. Generation Iron is a 2013 documentary film which follows the world's leading bodybuilders as they train and compete for the coveted Mr. Olympia title. The film gives front row access to the lives of the top seven bodybuilders in the sport, including Phil Heath, Kai Greene, Branch Warren and Dennis Wolf. Mickey Rourke narrates the film, with appearances by Arnold Schwarzenegger, Lou Ferrigno and Jay Cutler. Ecstasy of Order: The Tetris Masters is a 2011 American documentary film that follows the lives of several gamers from around the country as they prepare to compete in the 2010 Classic Tetris World Championship held in Los Angeles, California. It recounts the development and rise of Tetris as one of the most-played video games of all-time, the role it has played in shaping the lives of the gamers it chronicles, the mystery surrounding the whereabouts of former Nintendo World Champion Thor Aackerlund, and the conception & execution of the first ever Classic Tetris World Championship by gaming enthusiast Robin Mihara. The film was directed by Adam Cornelius and screened at over 15 film festivals both domestic and internationally, beginning with its World Premiere at the Austin Film Festival on October 21, 2011 and including an appearance at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, the largest film festival of its kind. It debuted on DVD and Video On Demand on August 21, 2012. An expanded version of the film's soundtrack from composer Chris Pickolick has also been released. The Day I Disappeared is a 2011 film directed by Atousa Bandeh Ghiasabadi. With Beak and Claw is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Krystian Matysek. "At 10 years old, Chico Colvard shot his older sister in the leg. This seemingly random act detonated a chain reaction that exposed unspeakable realities and shattered his family. Thirty years later, Colvard ruptures veils of secrecy and silence again. As he bravely visits his relatives, what unfolds is a personal film that’s as uncompromising, raw, and cathartic as any in the history of the medium. Driving the story forward is Colvard’s sensitive probing of a complex dynamic: the way his three sisters survived severe childhood abuse by their father and, as adults, manage to muster loyalty to him. These unforgettable, invincible women paint a picture of their harrowing girlhoods as they resiliently struggle with present-day fallout. The distance time gives them from their trauma yields piercing insights about the legacy of abuse, the nature of forgiveness, and eternal longing for family and love. These truths may be too searing to bear, but they reverberate powerfully within each of us." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Seven Woman of Different Ages is a 1971 short documentary film directed by Krzysztof Kieslowski. Randy Parsons: American Luthier is a 2011 documentary short film about Randy Parsons, an American luthier whose client list includes Jack White, Jimmy Page, Sammy Hagar, Death Cab for Cutie, Peter Frampton, Joe Perry, and Modest Mouse. Bailey-Boushay House: A Living History is a 2008 film directed by Terence Brown. A Time to Stir is a 2011 documentary film directed by Paul Cronin. How the Berlin Worker Lives is a 1930 documentary short film directed by Slatan Dudow. I Am Big Bird: The Caroll Spinney Story is a 2014 drama documentary biographical film written by Dave Lamattina and directed by Dave Lamattina and Chad N. Walker. Milking the Rhino is a 2009 documentary film, produced by Kartemquin Films, that examines the relationship between the indigenous African wildlife, the villagers who live amongst this wildlife and conservationists who look to keep tourism dollars coming in. Both the Massai of Kenya and the Ovahimba of Namibia have spent centuries as cattle farmers. With their lands being turned into protected game reserves, these ancient tribes have turned to tourism as a means of survival. While some environmentalists think that community-based conservation is ideal for these villagers, the dangers of drought and the starvation of their cattle remains a constant reality. Stuck between the always growing Western influence that wants Africa to remain a place for sight-seeing safaris and their own ancient cultures, the Maasai and Himba are at a crossroads of cultural change. Film for Tom is a 2005 documentary short film directed by Stephen Connolly. Speak to Me Sisters is a 1998 documentary film directed by Maj Wechselmann. Cracked Actor is a 53-minute-long BBC television documentary film about the rock star David Bowie. It was filmed in 1974. At the time he was a cocaine addict and the documentary has become notorious for showing Bowie's fragile mental state during this period. It was made by Alan Yentob for the BBC's Omnibus documentary strand, and was first shown, on BBC2 in the United Kingdom, on 26 January 1975. The documentary depicts Bowie on tour in Los Angeles, using a mixture of documentary sequences filmed in limousines and hotels, and concert footage. Most of the concert footage was taken from a show at the Los Angeles Universal Amphitheatre on 2 September 1974. There were also excerpts from D.A. Pennebaker's concert film Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, which had been shot at London's Hammersmith Odeon on 3 July 1973, as well as a few other performances from the tour. Cracked Actor is notable for being a source for footage of Bowie's ambitious Diamond Dogs Tour. The title of the documentary was originally to be The Collector, after a comment that Bowie had made to interviewer Russell Harty the previous year, whereby he described himself as "a collector of accents". Gospel is a 1983 musical documentary directed by David Leivick and Frederick A. Ritzenberg. Espoir voyage is a 2012 documentary film directed by Michel K. Zongo. The Smiths - Under Review is a 90 minute documentary film covering the full story and music of The Smiths. It features rare musical performances, videos, TV appearances, interviews with the band, and expert comment and review from an esteemed panel of experts. Best selling authors Graham Hancock and Robert Bauval explore the history and secrets of the pyramids, the Sphinx and a lost continent. Empreintes is a 1993 short, documentary film. Pablo's Villa is a 2013 Documentary, Short, Biography film directed by Matthew Salleh Discotheque is a 2012 documentary film directed by Rudolfas Levulis. Les amants d'assises is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Manu Bonmariage. The Hunters is a 1957 ethnographic film that documents the efforts of four !Kung men to hunt a giraffe in the Kalahari Desert of Namibia. The footage was shot by John Marshall during a Smithsonian-Harvard Peabody sponsored expedition in 1952–53. In addition to the giraffe hunt, the film shows other aspects of !Kung life at that time, including family relationships, socializing and storytelling, and the hard work of gathering plant foods and hunting for small game. The film was produced at the Film Study Center of the Peabody Museum at Harvard University by John Marshall in collaboration with Robert Gardner. It won the Robert J. Flaherty Award for best one-off documentary from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts in 1958, and was named to the National Film Registry by the Librarian of Congress in 2003 for its "cultural, aesthetic, or historical significance". The Hunters was preserved in 2000 with a grant from the National Film Preservation Foundation. North to Niugini is a 1979 documentary film directed and produced by Malcolm Douglas. Yes Madam, Sir is a 2008 documentary directed by Megan Doneman. Le pilier de cristal is a 1979 documentary film. The Crimson Wing: Mystery of the Flamingos is a 2008 British-American nature documentary produced by Disneynature that explores the massive gathering of lesser flamingos in Tanzania. It premiered in France on October 26, 2008 with narration by Zabou Breitman and was released theatrically in the UK in September 2009 and on direct-to-video in the United States in 2010 with narration by Mariella Frostrup. Earth of the Blind is a 1992 documentary film directed by Audrius Stonys. Robert Loveless: An American Legend is a documentary, biographical and historical film directed by David Bartlett and Jack Lucarelli. Kristallnacht is a 1979 short film written and directed by Chick Strand. The Flat is a 2011 Israeli feature documentary film written and directed by Arnon Goldfinger. It was theatrically released in Israel in September 2011. It played continuously for thirteen months and has received rave reviews. Time Out Tel Aviv chose to place the film at the top of its recommended films for 49 weeks under the headline: “not to be missed” and chose it as one of the 25 most important art works from around the world for 2011. The Flat was theatrically released in Germany in June 2012. The German version of the film features the voice of renowned German actor Axel Milberg taking on the role of narrator Arnon Goldfinger. The Flat was theatrically released in USA in October 2012. The film won the 2012 Best Editing in a Documentary Feature Award in the Tribeca Film Festival World Documentary Competition. It was the opening film at Dok Munich in 2012. The flat was one of the final three nominees for the German Academy Film Awards 2013. and nominated for the German TV Grimme Awards 2014. Yokohama Mary is a 2006 film directed by Takahiro Nakamura. Bigos 06 is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Marcin Gajewski. Take a journey through history and learn the importance and significance that blacks played in the creation and progress of Florida and Miami. The Black Miami revisits the past to understand how the race lines in South Florida were created and eventually transcended. The Black Miami takes you into a history that is rarely told but is not forgotten. Produced and Directed by South Florida Film Makers Michael Williams and Carlton Smith of Pixel Pusher Films and Baquas Productions, LLC. The documentary is based on the book “Black Miami in the 20th Century” by Dr. Marvin Dunn, a former professor from Florida International University. Dr. Dunn also serves as a participant and Producer with the documentary. Other people featured in the documentary are historians in South Florida, including; Arva Parks, Dr. Paul George, Thelma Gibson, Dr. Enid Pinkney, and many more. The documentary recently won Best Documentary for the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival on location at Grand Bahama. In addition it won the “Spirit of Independents” award for the entire Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival of 2012. Kenyatta is a documentary film directed by Anthony Howarth and David R. Koff. It is a part of The Black Man's Land Trilogy. Kern is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Veronika Franz and Severin Fiala. The Fleet That Came to Stay was a propaganda short film produced by the US Navy in 1945 about the naval engagements of the invasion of Okinawa. The film opens with the small talk of the American GIs soon after they find out where they are headed. One notes that he hears the island looks like San Francisco, while another responds that he once drove from LA to Frisco in eight hours, prompting another to boast that he once covered the 360 miles from Buffalo to New York in six. Then it dawns on the servicemen that they will be less than 350 miles from Japan when they get to Okinawa. The narration begins at that point explaining that the fleet on its way to Okinawa will be the first in history to come into battle with a land-based aerial opponent. Up to this point the Japanese have been at an aerial disadvantage, needing to fly a great distance from Japan to engage the enemy, or be stationed on an aircraft carrier that could be sunk. But now the Americans were coming up right under their home base. The narrator also talks at length about the kamikaze pilots and the difficulties the Navy has had with them in recent months. Yours for a Song: The Women of Tin Pan Alley is a 1999 documentary biography history musical romance film written and directed by Terry Benes. Parlons Grand-mère is a Senegalese 1989 short documentary film. Djibril Diop Mambéty followed and filmed the shooting of Yaaba, Idrissa Ouédraogo's second feature film. A documentary full of humorous anecdotes regarding the dangers of shooting in Burkina Faso. Indoctrinate U is a 2007 American feature-length documentary film written by, directed by and starring Evan Coyne Maloney, that examines controversial topics like equality and fairness, diversity, ideological conformism and political correctness in American institutions of higher education. To great extent, the film uses for comedic effect the irony of subjective and selective suppression of free speech and of thought in universities, from the harassment by administrators of professors who hold minority views, to institutional mechanisms such as speech codes, which are used to punish students who express political views that are unpopular within academia. "Conversation with a gay man in SF and his parents about his coming out and their reactions." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall is a 2013 documentary, biography, short film directed by Edgar Barens. Bougainville – Our Island Our Fight is a 1998 Australian documentary film. It was produced and directed by Wayne Coles-Janess. The film focuses on an indigenous people who fight against a multinational mining company and government forces. The guerrillas believe they are fighting to defend their independence and the local environment on the island of Bougainville. This film is notable for its unique subject matter, as most Western media has not reported upon the Bougainville conflict. "Shanghai, a fast-changing metropolis, a port city where people come and go. Shanghai has hosted all kinds of people – revolutionaries, capitalists, politicians, soldiers, artists, and gangsters. Shanghai has also hosted revolutions, assassinations, love stories. After the Chinese Communists' victory in 1949, thousands of Shanghaiers left for Hong Kong and Taiwan. To leave meant being separated from home for thirty years; to stay meant suffering through the Cultural Revolution and China's other political disasters." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Cannes Film Festival site. Joe Papp in Five Acts is a 2010 Documentary film directed by Tracie Holder. "Lori And Cathy Get Married" is a warm, funny, joyous look at gay marriage in San Francisco. Going inside San Francisco City Hall during the historic days of February, 2004, the video follows a lesbian couple through the marriage process, and on to their wedding reception with friends and Family in Napa, California. Inside 9/11 is a three-part television documentary film produced by Towers Productions that premiered on August 21 and August 22, 2005, on the National Geographic Channel. The program covers the September 11, 2001 attack, the events that led to it, and its aftermath. The first part consisted of examining, event by event, the build-up towards September 11. The second part consisted of the events of 9/11 itself and the aftermath. Experts and eyewitnesses provide their accounts of the attacks, and the events are covered in chronological order. Inside 9/11 was the highest-rated program ever on the National Geographic Channel and was nominated for an Emmy in 2006. On August 27, 2006, the documentary was released again with details about Zacarias Moussaoui and Able Danger. On May 7, 2011, the third part was released with details on the death of Osama bin Laden and the rise of attacks inspired by other leaders such as Anwar al-Awlaki, who is suspected of preparing three of the 9/11 hijackers in San Diego and Virginia. Desi is a 2000 Dutch documentary film by director Maria Ramos, featuring the 11-year-old Dutch girl named Desi. Coming from a dysfunctional family, her daily life is full of insecurities, and she is therefore relying on the help of social services in Amsterdam. Michael H – Profession: Director is a 2013 documentary film directed by Yves Montmayeur about the Austrian film director Michael Haneke. Grandpa Looked Like William Powell is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by David B. Levy. A Time Comes is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Nick Broomfield. Urban Fruit is a biographical documentary film directed by Roman Zenz. Potosi, the Journey is a 2007 film directed by Ron Havilio. Nursery University is a 2007 documentary film directed by Marc H. Simon. Six Days in the Life of a Genius is a 2012 documentary film written by Barry Amato and Francisco De Arriba. Charles Beaumont: The Short Life of Twilight Zone's Magic Man is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jason Brock. Grandma, Grandma! is a 2012 documentary, comedy, drama, family and short film written and directed by Andrea Ou. Transmutation is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Torquato Joel. On the Wing is a 1986 IMAX film featuring a half-sized robotic Quetzalcoatlus that demonstrates principles of animal flight. Produced by the National Air and Space Museum, it also traces the early history of manned flight. The film is narrated by F. Murray Abraham. In one scene filmed in Florida in 1984, a reproduction Benoist airboat was flown, depicting the inaugural flight of the world's first scheduled airline, the St. Petersburg-Tampa Airboat Line, in 1914. Malamondo is a 1964 documentary film written by Guido Castaldo, Paolo Cavara, Ugo Gregoretti, Francesco Torti and directed by Paolo Cavara. Entangling Shadows is a 1998 documentary film. Chiisana Akari is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ryusuke Ono. Profile of the well-known jazz singer, from early band performances and "scat" to her solo career. 311 is a 2011 documentary film directed by Matsubayashi Yojyu, Mori Tatsuya, Watai Takeharu, and Yasuoka Takaharu. Revision is a 2012 documentary film written by Merle Kröger and Philip Scheffner and directed by Philip Scheffner. Sample This is a documentary film directed by Dan Forrer. Quiet Days In Sommières is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Peter Leippe. Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Morgan Spurlock takes on the behemoth task of documenting 20 years of the global phenomenon that is THE SIMPSONS. In his distinctive and innovative style, the unprecedented one-hour special follows Spurlock as he sets off on a cross-country globe-trotting mission combing the streets for interviews from fans young and old. His travels take him from the home of THE SIMPSONS' biggest fan to the organization at the center of THE SIMPSONS' biggest controversies to landmarks such as the birthplace of "Groundskeeper Willie" and the Springfield Isotopes' playing field. In addition, Spurlock talks to cast, writers and celebrities about the undying cultural obsession with THE SIMPSONS. 4 Clowns is a 1970 documentary compilation film written and directed by Robert Youngson that studies the golden age of comedy through a compilation of rare silent film footage of the works of Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy, Charley Chase and Buster Keaton. This was the last feature film project of producer/director/writer Robert Youngson. The Top Secret Trial of the Third Reich is a 2009 historical documentary film directed by Jochen Bauer. I Believe I Can Fly (Flight of the Frenchies) is an amazing journey into the unknown. Two friends test the boundaries of free flight and friendship as they take their passion in a totally new direction. Join Tancrède and Julien on an incredible exploration into the world of free flight. The two friends are pioneers in ‘highlining’ - a vertiginous combination of climbing, slackline and tightrope walking. Using their skills and experience as climbers, the pair push their boundaries beyond the realms of possibility as they embark on a new evolution of their sport. We travel from the skyscrapers of Paris via Chamonix to the Verdon Gorge, and finally to the spectacular cliffs and fjords of Norway - where the pair plan to put weeks spent training to the ultimate test. Could months of planning and training really lead them to their dream of complete freedom... the freedom of flight? Rise Above the Mark is a documentary film directed by Jack Klink. Tito On Ice is a 2012 animated film written by Max Andersson and directed by Max Andersson and Helena Ahonen. Swarm and Destroy is a documentary chronicling the Moped Army and moped lifestyle. The documentary was filmed at the Decepticon's 2003 Moped BBQ 6 event in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Swarm and Destroy contains numerous interviews with Moped Army members, interleaved with animations and footage from the ongoing Moped BBQ rally. The documentary is named after the motto of the Moped Army. Tagline: The Greatest Documentary about a Moped Gang Ever Made Encounters at the End of the World is a 2007 American documentary film by Werner Herzog. The film studies people and places in Antarctica. It was released in North America on June 11, 2008, and distributed by THINKFilm. Dancing in Jaffa is a 2013 documentary film written by Philip Shane and Hilla Medalia and directed by Hilla Medalia. Miao Year is a 1968 documentary film directed by William Robert Geddes. Louis C.K.: Chewed Up is a 2008 comedy and documentary film. How to Make Money Selling Drugs is documentary film directed by Matthew Cooke and produced by Bert Marcus and Adrian Grenier. The film premiered at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival and was theatrically released in June 2013. The Chilean Building is a 2010 documentary film directed by Macarena Aguiló. Letters to Jackie: Remembering President Kennedy is a 2013 documentary film directed by Bill Couturié. Another Bullet Dodged is a 2011 short drama film written by Landon Zakheim, Todd Luoto and directed by Landon Zakheim. Go Inside to Greet the Light is a film sponsored by Quaker Outreach in Yorkshire and the Yorkshire Sculpture Park. Narrated by Judi Dench, this film gives a flavour of the spiritual experience of Quaker meetings for worship in James Turrell's Deershelter Skyspace. Its world premiere was on 29 September 2007. More information is available at the film's website: http://goinsidetogreetthelight.com/ and on its Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/GoInsidetoGreettheLight The First Zionist Bunny is a 2004 documentary by film maker Shiri Shahar X-Rated: The TV They Tried to Ban was a 2005 British one-off television documentary examining controversial material on British television. It was first broadcast on Channel 4, at 10pm on Sunday 6 March 2005, as part of their "Banned" season, and was approx. 90 minutes long. The TV They Tried to Ban highlighted examples of offensive language, sexually explicit content and disturbing images on television. The documentary itself could have become notable as an explicit programme, but Ofcom received only one complaint for "Offence" caused by the documentary, and did not uphold it because the programme contained sufficient warnings. It has been repeated many times, mainly on E4. It contained contributions from celebrities, media commentators, programme-makers and the critics of explicit broadcasts. Interviewees included Shaun Ryder, Caprice Bourret, Paul Ross, Stephen K Amos, Vince Powell, David Quantick, Garry Bushell and Charlie Parsons. The TV They Tried to Ban was light-hearted in its tone and narration; it was intended as entertainment rather than a solemn debate. It implied that 'Complainers' should not be so shocked by television programmes and should choose not to watch. Are You Having a Laugh? TV and Disability is a 2010 documentary comedy film directed by Mark Allen and Mark Murray A Call to Arms is a 2009 documentary film directed by Scott Miller. The Only Real Game is a 2013 documentary sports film directed by Mirra Bank. "An appropriately revealing, insightful and controversial study of the gay adult filmmaking industry, focusing on several of the subjects chronicled in the filmmaker's earlier doc on the same subject. REVIEW" Cycles of Porn is a revealing, scintillating and non-judgmental glimpse into a world where sex, art and business collide in the City of Angels. It's been seven years since the filmmaker's first documentary portrait, and director Jochen Hick now checks in with some of his previous subjects: adult film stars Kevin Kramer, Cole Tucker, and Matt Bradshaw, who are either still in the business or have retired. Kramer comes across as sad, quite a contrast from his interviews in the prior film. But sexuality is constantly evolving, and styles, tastes and even technology provide a new supply of up-and-coming talent. We meet the young inhabitants of a web cam-outfitted house who approach sex as an opportunity to make money so they can pursue their own dreams. This titilating trip to Chi Chi LaRue's Live & Raw Hotel is very hot, but a tad of a downer as the performers reveal a bit more than just their penises. The director also has quite a bit of footage from the bareback porn company Hot Desert Knights. These scenes are pretty damned shocking and also expose a lot more than their participant's cocks. The owner of Hot Desert Knights passionately explains his reasons for making condom-free porn. Exploring the dreams, disappointments and reality of the gay adult industry with insight and humor, Cycles of Porn will certainly be one of the most widely discussed and controversial films of the year." Quoting a descripton by TLA and a review by Lawrence Ferber Voyage of Discovery is a 2005 documentary directed by John Keller and Kelly D. Morris. Dream Country is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jihane Chouaib. Get ready for a wild ride as we journey through that provocative period in cinema, the 70’s and 80’s, a time of no-holds-barred moviemaking featuring unparalleled quantities of sex and nudity on-screen. Travel back in time through our retrospective series of documentaries that trace the roots of sex and nudity in cinema, uncovering groundbreaking films and the stars that disrobed in them. Narrated by our own in-house film historian, we highlight the series of events that led to the breaking down of the ratings system, the actresses and directors that challenged censorship and the controversial films that revolutionized the period and broke down long-standing barriers. Our in-depth expose is packed with revealing bios and facts, unveiling the most famous and sexiest actresses of the 70's and 80's and their contributions to skin on the screen. In many cases it was their first and only nude appearance on film, making this a must-have reference guide to nudity in cinema. Scenes with Kim Basinger, Morgan Fairchild, Darlyn Hannah, and hundreds more of Hollywood’s Hottest Actress The Beguiled: The Storyteller is a 1971 documentary short film directed by Clint Eastwood. The Dark Wave is a 1956 American short documentary film directed by Jean Negulesco about a young girl with severe epilepsy. It was nominated for two Academy Awards, one for Best Documentary Short and the other for Best Two-Reel Short. Boys For Rent is a 1993 short documentary written and directed by Liam McGrath. The Taking of Prince Harry is a 2010 British TV docufiction which shows the fictional capture of Prince Harry in Afghanistan. It was shown on 21 October on Channel 4. The show has been the subject of controversy, with the British military saying that it could be distressing for the families of the soldiers serving in Afghanistan. El Guaje is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Emanuel Negrete Vázquez. The Delian Mode is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Kara Blake. Spirit of the Marathon is a 2007 documentary film directed by Jon Dunham. The film chronicles the journey six marathon runners experience while training and competing in the 2005 Chicago Marathon. It was screened at the Chicago International Film Festival on October 5, 2007 and received a limited release in the United States on January 24, 2008. Wings of Defeat is a 2007 documentary feature film in which former Kamikaze pilots reveal they were not fanatics but were ordered to die by a desperate military. Wings of Defeat, broadcast on the PBS Independent Lens series in May 2009, was awarded the 2009 Erik Barnouw Award by the Organization of American Historians. In Japan, World War II Kamikaze are still revered as self-sacrificing heroes. Internationally, they remain a potent symbol of fanaticism. In astonishingly candid interviews, four former Kamikaze reveal that they were neither suicidal nor fanatical. The film reveals they were young men sentenced to death by a military that could not admit defeat. In heartbreaking testimony corroborated with rare archival footage, they tell us about their dramatic survival and their survivors’ guilt. This riveting, seamlessly edited film is an emotionally charged and timely exposé, probing the responsibilities that a government at war has to its people and its soldiers. The Broken Moon is a 2010 documentary adventure drama film written by Marcos Negrão and directed by Marcos Negrão and André Rangel. Oil on Ice is a 2004 documentary film directed by Bo Boudart and Dale Djerassi. It explores the Arctic Refuge drilling controversy in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the impact of oil and gas development on the land, wildlife, and lives of the Gwich'in Athabascan Indians and Inupiat Eskimos. Little People is a 1985 News & Documentary Emmy Award nominee. In Heaven Underground: The Weissensee Jewish Cemetery is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Britta Wauer. The World According to Ion B. is a HBO Romania and Alexander Nanau Production documentary film. The film was written, produced, directed, and photographed by Alexander Nanau. The film depicts the dream of a man living on the streets: to one day become famous and leave behind a life of poverty, misery and humiliation. The title character, Ion Barladeanu, is on his way to becoming an important contemporary artist, but in May 2008 he was still anonymous and living homeless on the streets of Bucharest. It was the first Romanian film to win an American Academy Award when it won an International Emmy Award in 2010 on Arts Programming category. Despite major efforts from governments and schools, bullying remains an intractable problem made worse by modern technology. Once it was fists, rocks and schoolyard chants - now bullies have the net, mobile phones and Facebook as playgrounds for brutality. No-holds-barred interviews with bullies and their victims reveal the true costs of our children’s cyberspace obsession. Gay Days is a 2009 Israeli documentary film about the emergence of a LGBT community in Israel, starring major activists in Israel's cultural life and LGBT community: Gal Uchovsky, Eytan Fox, Ellyot, Amalia Ziv, Amit Kama and others and some rare archival footage from pride events, feature films and student films. Cinc Batalles is a 2010 documentary film directed by Ariadna Relea. Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film is a 2006 documentary film about slasher films. It makes reference to many popular horror and thriller films. Scenes From a Visit to Japan is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Joel Schlemowitz. Life of Ryan: Caretaker Manager is a 2014 sport documentary about Ryan Giggs. Metal Shop: Adrenaline Edition is a 2007 documentary film directed by Jack Edward Sawyers. Summer of Terror: The Real Son of Sam Story is a 2001 documentary film. Dai nostri inviati: La Rai racconta la Mostra del Cinema di Venezia 1980-1989 is a 2013 documentary film directed by Giuseppe Giannotti, Enrico Salvatori and Davide Savelli. The Man in Black is a 2011 documentary film directed by Martijn Blekendaal. Scratching the Surface is a 2013 documentary and short film directed by Tamara Laine. Angdy Boy is the 1950 short documentary film written by Irving Jacoby and directed by Alexander Hammid. No Nukes is a 1980 documentary and concert film that contained selections from the September 1979 Madison Square Garden concerts by the Musicians United for Safe Energy collective, with Jackson Browne, Graham Nash, Bonnie Raitt, and John Hall being the key organizers of the event and guiding forces behind the film. Also included were scenes of the organizers getting the event together, expounding upon the dangers of nuclear power, and staging an anti-nuclear rally at Battery Park in New York City. Underwater Dreams is an upcoming documentary film written, directed, and produced by Mary Mazzio, chronicles the story of how the sons of undocumented Mexican immigrants learned how to build underwater robots, and go up against MIT in the process. In Berlin, 16.10. - 4.11.1989 is a 1989 film directed by J. Denzler and Petra Tschörtner. When rock and roll was born the world changed forever, and this documentary shows how it all happened, with vintage performances from Little Richard, Bill Haley, Ricky Nelson, and many others. Persian Pickles is a 2012 short film directed by Jodie Mack. 'Hairspray Extensions' is a 2007 documentary short film directed by Katy Leigh. My Heart of Darkness is a Swedish–German 2010 documentary film about four ex-soldiers from different sides of the Angolan civil war and their posttraumatic stress disorder. The film was recorded in 2007. It was first shown at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam on November 20, 2010. It premiered in Sweden on April 8 the next year. The title of the film is a reference to Joseph Conrad's novella Heart of Darkness. The film, like the novella, takes place on a boat traveling up an African river, and covers issues of tragedy and abuse. The four ex-soldiers do not all speak the same language, but translate for each other. The narrator Marius van Niekerk, who is also the film's director and lead character, speaks English, while the others speak Portuguese and Afrikaans. My Eye for a Camera is a 2001 autofiction movie by Quebec film director Denys Desjardins. This length feature is produced by the National Film Board of Canada. Mafia No! is a 1967 short documentary film directed by John Irvin. The Memory of Justice is a 1976 documentary film directed by Marcel Ophüls. It explores the subject of atrocities committed in wartime and features Joan Baez, Karl Dönitz, Hermann Göring, Hans-Joachim Kulenkampff, Yehudi Menuhin, Albert Speer and Telford Taylor. The film was inspired by Telford Taylor's book Nuremberg and Vietnam: An American Tragedy, and Taylor is interviewed extensively during the film. But Ophüls takes the book as a starting point for exploring the possibility of people judging one another, especially in light of their behavior in other contexts, as well as dealing with individual versus collective responsibility. The film had a difficult genesis. It was originally financed in the summer of 1973 by BBC, Polytel, and a private company based in London, Visual Programme Systems, the latter of whom had wanted the film to dwell heavily on America's involvement in Vietnam and France's involvement in Algeria. After completing rough cuts, VPS was dismayed at Ophüls work and tried to remove him as director. Hamilton Fish V organized a group of investors who were able to buy back the rights to the film from VPS and allow Ophüls to complete it. For Those Aboot To Rock: Live at the Commodore is a live performance DVD by the Canadian Heavy Metal band Strapping Young Lad, released in 2004 by Century Media. A CD version was released along with the 2013 "Metal for the Masses" reissue of City to celebrate Century Media's 25th anniversary. The Defector: Escape from North Korea is a 2012 documentary film about North Korean defectors, directed by Korean-Canadian filmmaker Ann Shin. The film premiered at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival and had its broadcast premiere on TVOntario on June 26. The film's release was accompanied by The Defector Interactive, an interactive documentary that uses a videogame-like approach to let the user find out about life in and escape from North Korea. Tong Tana is a 1989 Swedish documentary film about the Penan people of Sarawak, Borneo, a federal state of Malaysia, and their struggle to protect their natural environment, the Tropical rainforest of the low and hilly parts of the island and the global support they get through Swiss citizen Bruno Manser. It was made by Björn Cederberg and Kristian Petri and stars Alec Baldwin as narrator. To Go On Living is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Hans Haldimann. The Raw and the Cooked is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Monika Treut. The Invisible Lighthouse is a 2013 short documentary biographical film written and directed by Thomas Dolby. The Splendour of Garhwal and Roopkund is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Victor Banerjee. Identities is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Aistė Žegulytė. Se está volviendo gobierno (1915-1919) is a 1992 short documentary film written by Manuel Barbachano Ponce, Fernando Orduna and Ricardo Pérez Monfort, and directed by Miguel Barbachano-Ponce. Pit No. 8 is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Marianna Kaat. Children of Sodom is a 2013 short crime documentary film written and directed by York-Fabian Raabe. The Chola Heritage is a 1980 documentary film directed by Adoor Gopalakrishnan. "Born in the same city in Colombia but not related, Andrés Escobar and Pablo Escobar shared a fanatical love of soccer. Andrés grew up to become one of Colombia's most beloved players, while Pablo became the most notorious drug baron of all time. While adeptly investigating the secret marriage of crime and sports, Michael Zimbalist and Jeff Zimbalist (Favela Rising, TFF '05) reveal the surprising connections between the murders of Andrés and Pablo." Quoting the description from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. "Some members of Congress recently limited themselves to $1 meals, the average food stamp benefit. They mostly ate PB sandwiches and Top Ramen. But here in SF, nutritional educator Shira Potash created a real challenge: a healthy food stamp diet. Calculator in hand, she and husband Yoav prioritize organic veggies, forgo coffee and cheese, and discover that free samples help stave off the hunger. It doesn't take long for the painstaking rationing to erode their goodwill as they argue about whether a whole or half banana constitutes a serving of fruit. A thoughtful exploration of the politics and culture of cheap food in the first world. Our co-presenter for the made-in-SF documentary "Food Stamped" is the San Francisco Food Bank, who will be collecting edible donations at the screenings. They're looking for non-perishable food items, especially protein foods like tuna, peanut butter, and chili. Cereal and fruit juice are also great. No glass please. The San Francisco Food Bank serves over 200,000 people per year, and will distribute 43.5 million pounds of food to the community this year - enough for at least 88,000 meals every day. 60% of what is distributed is fresh fruits and vegetables. For more information, visit www.SFFoodBank.org" Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. "Dutch kinetic artist Christiaan Zwanikken resurrects the deceased local wildlife by reanimating the skeletal remains with servomotors and robotic engineering. He breeds these new species in a 400 yr. old monastery in a village in Portugal that has been restored from ruins, to become his family's home, an artists’ workshop and nature preserve. Filmed entirely in Portugal, Convento’s camera is almost perpetually in motion, tracking through the monastery and its landscape, transporting the audience into the daily lives of these extraordinary people. Each family member simultaneously nourishes the coexistence of art and nature, documented through a series of connected micro-narratives." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. Private Hungary: Dusi and Jenö is a 1988 documentary film directed by Péter Forgács. The Rink "Rebooted" is a documentary film directed by Ron Butts. Fine Food, Fine Pastries, Open 6 to 9 is a 1989 American short documentary film produced by David Petersen about Sherrill's Restaurant and Bakery in Washington D.C.. It was nominated in 1989 for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. 196 BPM is a 2002 film directed by Romuald Karmakar. Shape The Wind is a documentary film directed by Shinichi Ise. Bury Me in Redwood Country is a 2009 documentary film about the Redwood forest landscape. It is a meditative look at the tallest and largest trees on the planet, offering a reverential perspective that approaches the ecstatic. The film includes interviews with Redwoods experts, foresters, conservationists, native basketweavers, rangers and naturalists, including Steve Sillet and Michael Taylor. The project encapsulated a year of shooting in diverse locations in Redwood National and State Parks, Humboldt Redwoods State Park, Montgomery Woods State Reserve, Sequoia National Park, and others. Of Kites and Borders is a 2013 documentary film directed by Yolanda Pividal. Mario Lanza: The American Caruso is a 90-minute 1983 PBS documentary, narrated and hosted by Plácido Domingo. It explores the life of tenor Mario Lanza, and includes clips from six of the tenor's eight films, together with interviews with such Lanza associates and contemporaries as Anna Moffo, Kathryn Grayson, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Joe Pasternak, and Dorothy Kirsten, Frances Yeend, and the conductor Peter Herman Adler. The film also includes interviews and remembrances from Lanza's mother and all four of his children. Production credits as follows: Written by Stephen Chodorov, Co-Executive Producer; Director John Musilli, Writer JoAnn Young. The documentary film was nominated for a Primetime Emmy in 1983 as "Outstanding Informational Special." Co-Executive Producers were John Musilli, Stephen Chodorov; and JoAnn Young, Producer. 1991: The Year Punk Broke, released theatrically in 1992, is a documentary directed by Dave Markey featuring American alternative rock band Sonic Youth on tour in Europe in 1991. While Sonic Youth is the focus of the documentary, the film also gives attention to Nirvana, Dinosaur Jr., Babes in Toyland, Gumball and The Ramones. Also featured in the film are Mark Arm, Dan Peters and Matt Lukin of Mudhoney and roadie Joe Cole, who was murdered in a robbery three months after the tour ended. The film is dedicated to him. Several scenes in the film involve re-enactments and references to scenes from the contemporaneous Madonna tour documentary, Truth or Dare, such as Gordon complaining about "industry people" in the front row, or Cobain, introduced as "Costner" telling Sonic Youth that their show was "neat". At a screening of the film at the 2008 All Tomorrow's Parties festival in Monticello, New York, Markey mentioned that the working title for the film was Tooth or Hair, as a further play on this connection. A home video VHS was released by The David Geffen Company on April 13, 1993. The film was again re-released on DVD on September 13, 2011 by the Universal Music Group . Jeremy Stanford is an Australian actor and director, known for his role of Tick/Mitzi in the initial stage run of the musical Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. The Great Northwest is a 2012 documentary film directed by Matt McCormick. Living in a Perfect World is a 2006 feature-length documentary film by National Geographic Channel International about the Russian Mennonite people between Chihuahua Desert and the Bolivian forest. The dialogue in the documentary is in Spanish and Plautdietsch with English and other subtitles. Living in a Perfect World was awarded as Best Documentary of the BigScreen Festival in 2007. Nightmares in Red, White and Blue is a 2009 documentary film written by Joseph Maddrey and directed by Andrew Monument. Playboy Video Centerfold: Playmate of the Year Julie Lynn Cialini is a 1996 documentary film directed by Scott Allen. Hitler, Stalin and I is a 2002 film directed by Helena Třeštíková. The Korean Wedding Chest is a 2009 documentary film about Korean wedding traditions directed by Ulrike Ottinger. The German language film was described as "capturing the collision of ancient tradition and modern culture on the subject of love and marriage in Korea in a film that echoes the beauty, precision and care of the rituals she examines" by the Los Angeles Times. The Washington Post's website refers to the surrealist style of the film as being well suited to "the regal pacing of the ritual" and calls the film one of Ottinger's most praised works. From Generation to Generation is a 1959 American short documentary film produced by Edward F. Cullen. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Conducting Hope is a 2013 documentary film directed by Margie Friedman. In 1946, the United States ordered the 167 inhabitants of Bikini (a coral reef in the Marshall Islands of Micronesia) to evacuate their ancestral home for the purpose of nuclear weapons testing. The WORLD OF DISCOVERY series takes you to the far corners of the globe to explore the secrets of nature and wildlife, the frontiers of science and technology, and the compelling questions of history and the world we live in. Doaa … Aziza is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Saad Hendawy. The New Recruits is a 2010 documentary film written by Daniel A. Miller and directed by Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller and Jeremy Newberger. In This Life's Body is a 1984 film directed by Corinne Cantrill. Mau-Mau is a 1955 Documentary Drama film written by Dave Shepperd and directed by Elwood Price. Unlocking the Truth is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Luke Meyer. Ayatollah Khomeini: Holy Terror is a 1997 documentary, biographical and historical film written by Agnes Nixon. Small Small Thing is 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Jessica Vale. An examination of the dangers posed by potential comet and asteriod impacts with the Earth, as well as the future plans to research and expliot these celestial bodies. 1 More Hit is a documentary film by Shauna Garr. It follows the life of hip hop producer J-Swift, formerly of The Pharcyde, from homelessness and crack addiction to his mission to win back his life and music career. 1 More Hit screened at SXSW in 2007. In 2008, the festival version was nominated for a PRISM Award by the Entertainment Industries Council, in recognition of an outstanding contribution that demonstrates the entertainment industry's sincere efforts to accurately depict drug, alcohol and tobacco use and addiction. The filmmaker updated the documentary in 2011 when it was picked up for digital release by Gravitas Ventures. The doc had its ON DEMAND premiere in January 2012 and is available on DVD through Smart Girl Productions. NEVER is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Armando Lulaj. Kitchen Sync is a 1984 short animated film directed by Maree Woolley. Komadori shimai ga yattekuru Ya! Ya! Ya! is a documentary film directed by Eiko Kataoka. U2 Live at Red Rocks: Under a Blood Red Sky is a concert film by Irish rock band U2. It was recorded on 5 June 1983, at Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Colorado, United States on the group's War Tour. Originally released in 1984 on videocassette, U2 Live at Red Rocks was the band's first video release. It accompanied a 1983 live album entitled Under a Blood Red Sky, on which two tracks from the film appear. The video was directed by Gavin Taylor and produced by Rick Wurpel and Doug Stewart. The film was arranged by U2 management to showcase the band's live act and to promote them to American audiences. It depicts the band's performance at Red Rocks on a rain-soaked evening. The concert was almost cancelled because of the inclement weather, but the band had invested in the filming with Island Records and concert promoter Barry Fey and wished to proceed with the gig. The rain and the torch-lit atmosphere of the surroundings made U2's performance dramatic. Segments of U2 Live at Red Rocks were shown in regular rotation on MTV, and were also broadcast on other television networks. Critics praised the concert and the video, and it subsequently became a best-seller. Access to the Danger Zone is a 2012 documentary, war and historical film directed by Peter Casaer and Eddie Gregoor. White Hotel is a documentary film produced by American filmmakers Dianne Griffin and Tobi Solvang. It was shot in Eritrea. The film focuses on the issue of HIV/AIDS infection in Eritrea. The "White Hotel" is the tourist residence where Griffin and Solvang begin their journey in Eritrea. UNAFF, ‘White Hotel’ When two women with a video camera follow an American HIV research team to Eritrea, Africa, they are seduced by a land of joy and repression, of sensuality and sexual mutilation. White Hotel is the tourist residence where Griffin and Solvang begin their journey but their journalistic objectivity is shattered by the circumstances they encounter turning their documentary into an intimate investigation of their own capacities to love, suffer and forgive. White Hotel was picked up for distribution by Jane Balfour Films in 2003. It was released on VHS in 2004 reference DianneGriffin.com for further information. The Psychumentary is a documentary about rapper Tech N9ne. It charted at number seven on the Billboard Top Music Videos chart. It was directed by Soren Baker and Steven Reissner, Baker also served as writer and producer. The film includes appearances by Kottonmouth Kings and fellow Strange Music artists Krizz Kaliko, Kutt Calhoun, Skatterman & Snug Brim and Prozak. Other commentators on the DVD include Tech N9ne's ex-wife, mother of his two daughters, and Strange Music President Travis O'Guin. Blinded Angels is a 2006 documentary drama film written and directed by Jon Bang Carlsen. Pay 2 Play is a documentary film directed by John Ennis. Paulina is a 1998 documentary film directed by Vicky Funari. The New-Ark is a documentary film directed by Amiri Baraka. Chantier A is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Lucie Dèche, Karim Loualiche and Tarek Sami. Sheoeyin Kenna (We Were Communists) is a 2010 documentary film directed by Maher Abi Samra. Domingo, Carreras, Pavarotti In Concert is a TV program. Salt of the Earth: Palestinian Christians in the Northern West Bank is a series of documentary short films examining the lives of nine Palestinian Christians living in and around the cities of Jenin and Nablus. Released by Salt Films, Inc., in 2004, the film was produced by Presbyterian missionaries Marthame and Elizabeth Sanders while they lived and worked in the Palestinian Christian village of Zababdeh. Americanized is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Abhi Singh. Herr Kekulé, ich kenne Sie nicht is a 1966 short film directed by Robert Ménégoz and Wolfgang Urchs. Laborat is a 2014 short drama documentary film written and directed by Guillaume Cailleau. Be Like Others is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Tanaz Eshaghian about transsexuals in Iran. It explores issues of gender and sexual identity while following the personal stories of some of the patients at a Tehran gender reassignment clinic. The film played at the Sundance Film Festival and the Berlin International Film Festival, winning three awards. La donna nel mondo is a 1963 mondo documentary film made by Italians Gualtiero Jacopetti, Paolo Cavara and Franco Prosperi. Original music was composed by Riz Ortolani and Nino Oliviero. The film is a series of segments profiling many interesting or unusual activities done by women in different countries. Among those featured are women training in the Israel Army, a female priest in Sweden, window prostitutes in Hamburg's red light district, bed models in Hollywood California, professional mourners in Sardinia, Lamaze classes in Switzerland, a fashion show given to the Maasai, divorce ranches in Nevada, United States Treasurer Elizabeth Rudel Smith, eyelid-shaping surgery in Japan, and spent ordnance scavengers in Western Sahara. Released first in Italy on January 30, 1963, most of the footage was shot in 1962. Its original uncut length is 107 minutes. Narration for the Italian version was done by Stefano Sibaldi, while English narration was provided by Peter Ustinov. Stupidity sets out to determine whether our culture is hooked on deliberate ignorance as a strategy for success. From Adam Sandler to George W. Bush, from the IQ test and TV programming to the origins of the word moron, Stupidity examines the "dumbing down" of contemporary culture. Featuring opinions and comments from cultural figures, authors, and academics including John Cleese, Noam Chomsky, Selma Hayek, and Bill Maher, Stupidity reveals that despite our cultures extensive access to knowledge and information, humans continue to choose stupidity. Through Ellen's Ears is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Saskia Gubbels. In the Valley of the Wupper is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Amos Gitai. Fukushima: We Won't Forget is a 2013 documentary film directed by Hiroshi Shinomiya. Skile is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Sara Markovic. Pauses is a 1975 short documentary film directed by Monique Schwarz. Watch the true story behind The Fighter in this riveting and critically acclaimed documentary, which features Christian Bales' character from the blockbuster film.In blue-collar Lowell, Massachusetts, where disappearing industry has produced high unemployment, some residents have turned to crack for relief - only to see their dreams of a better life go up in smoke. HIGH ON CRACK STREET: LOST LIVES IN LOWELL is a harrowing documentary chronicling 18 months in the lives of three crackhouse friends whose addiction has let them to crime and despair.Brenda, Dicki and Boo-Boo have grown up in and around Lowell. Brenda was an aspiring actress; now she resorts to prostitution to pay for her crack addiction. "I love it more than anything. More than life itself. Yet I hate it worse than anything", says Brenda. Dicki was the "Pride of Lowell" a boxer who once fought Sugar Ray Leonard. He commits robberies to support his habit. Boo-Boo has spent the last twenty years smoking crack, shoplifting, and doing whatever he has to do to stay alive.To make the film, documentarians Jon Alpert and Mary Ann DeLeo teamed up with Lowell resident and former drug addict Rich Farrell, who was able to obtain remarkable access to the town's drug subculture. In the eighteenth months it took to complete this documentary, the camera follows Brenda, Dicki and Boo-Boo in and out of crack houses, rehab centers and jails. Their sad struggle mirrors the despair of their home town. There are many 'Lowells' in America - where citizens are abandoned to drugs and the empty factories echo their despair. Small roads is a documentary film directed by James Benning. No No: A Dockumentary is a 2014 American documentary film directed and produced by Jeff Radice. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. Jump! is a 2008 British-Austrian drama film written and directed by Joshua Sinclair. It starred Ben Silverstone, Patrick Swayze and Martine McCutcheon. It was loosely based on the real-life Halsman murder case. The film was premiered on the 2009 Jewish Film Festival in June 2009. Swayze was unable to attend due to pancreatic cancer. Wonder of It All is a 1974 nature documentary film that was produced by Pacific International Enterprises. The movie is rated G in the USA. Llana Lloyd's ""Glitter Goddess: Queen of the Sunset Strip"" brilliantly shows the trials and tribulations of growing up in the '50's and '60's with a domineering lesbian mother. We watch Llana blossom into a glitter rock '70's scenester, driven by her drug addled worship of Alice Cooper. Her subtle metamorphosis from victim to super groupie gives an enlightening ""hang onto yourself"" kind of exhibitionism which glorifies the narcissistic '70's. Features Angela Bowie. Attack in the Pacific is a 1944 American war documentary film. Space Odyssey: Voyage to the Planets is a fictional documentary about a manned voyage through the solar system. Space Odyssey premiered in 2004 and was made by the BBC. It was written and directed by Joe Ahearne and produced by Christopher Riley, who was presented with the 2005 Sir Arthur Clarke Award for Best TV & Radio Presentation. The story is set at an unspecified time in the future, though in the accompanying book, the mission's chief science officer recalls reading Arthur C. Clarke's 2010 some 40 years earlier. "The field of anthropology goes under the magnifying glass in this fiery investigation of the seminal research on Yanomami Indians. In the 1960s and ’70s, a steady stream of anthropologists filed into the Amazon Basin to observe this "virgin" society untouched by modern life. Thirty years later, the events surrounding this infiltration have become a scandalous tale of academic ethics and infighting. The origins of violence and war and the accuracy of data gathering are hotly debated among the scholarly clan. Soon these disputes take on Heart of Darkness overtones as they descend into shadowy allegations of sexual and medical violation. Director José Padilha brilliantly employs two provocative strategies to raise unsettling questions about the boundaries of cultural encounters. He allows professors accused of heinous activities to defend themselves, and the Yanomami to represent their side of the story. As this riveting excavation deconstructs anthropology’s colonial legacy, it challenges our society’s myths of objectivity and the very notion of “the other.”" Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance film Festival site. The Golden Age of Korean Cinema & the Legend of Shin Film is a documentary film directed by Cho Jae-hong. Queen on Fire - Live at the Bowl is the DVD version of the double compact disc live album by Queen. Tricky Bidness is a 2013 documentary film written by Joann Schuch and directed by Lynne Canning and Joann Schuch. Love Etc. is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jill Andresevic. Melissa-mom and Me is a 2010 documentary, drama, family film written and directed by Yael Shachar and Limor Pinhasov. Marco Ferreri: The Director Who Came from the Future is a 2007 documentary film written by Mario Canale and Annarosa Morri and directed by Mario Canale. Parade was the final film directed by Jacques Tati. It was made for television and featured Tati as a clown in a circus. The film was screened at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival, but wasn't entered into the main competition. 1 or 1: Life On The Limit is a 2013 documentary film directed by Paul Crowder and narrated by Michael Fassbender. The film traces the history of Formula One auto racing from its early years, in which some seasons had multiple fatalities, to the 1994 death of Ayrton Senna, the sport's most recent death at the time of production. Extensive and often rare archival footage is used throughout. Our Irish Cousins is a 2013 documentary, comedy, family, and historical film directed by Mike Houlihan. Mediterraneans is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Olivier Py. The trip that the American director David Lynch made to Brazil in order to disclose the Transcendental Meditation program and to release the book he wrote about the subject. The director defends the practice as the only way of bringing peace and welfare to men, especially in violent and socially unstable regions. Long Distance Revolutionary: A Journey with Mumia Abu-Jamal is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Stephen Vittoria. Marinoni is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Tony Girardin. Transitions is the first full colour 3D IMAX film, created for the Canada Pavilion at Expo 86, co-directed by Colin Low and Tony Ianzelo and produced by the National Film Board of Canada. It built upon We Are Born of Stars created for Expo '85 in Tskuba, Japan, which used anaglyph 3D. The film is also notable for the first use of stereoscopic computer animation. Plusieurs tombent en amour is a 1980 documentary film directed by Guy Simoneau. "During the cold war, public consciousness fixated on the atomic bomb. Then the cold war ended, and we retreated into denial. In fact, the danger of nuclear annihilation never disappeared; it only swelled. Countdown to Zero sweeps us into a scorching, hypnotic journey around the world to reveal the palpable possibility of nuclear disaster and frame an issue on which human survival itself hangs. Scientists, world leaders, and security experts—including Valerie Plame herself—expose the absurdities and alarming realities of the situation. The 1990s heralded a second nuclear age. Many countries and terrorist groups are now actively acquiring fissile materials and construction blueprints. The possibility of an accident or miscalculation looms even larger. As the film projects a startling vision, interviews with Jimmy Carter, Mikhail Gorbachev, Tony Blair, and Pervez Musharraf yield a unified message: our only option is to eradicate every-last nuclear missile. Luckily for us, getting to zero is possible—step by step. Let’s jump-start the change." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. The Last Buffalo Hunt is a 2011 documentary film written by Lee Anne Schmitt and Lee Lynch and directed by Lee Anne Schmitt. Ancient legends from Greece and Russia describe the time when the rising world ocean, at the end of the Ice Age, entered the Black Sea to connect it with the Mediterranean Sea - so what does mainstream science say about this? When did the Ice Age actually end to cause the infilling of the Old Black Sea, a huge inland freshwater lake during the Ice Age, and what does the geology and archaeology of the Black Sea region say about the timing and impact on the civilizations there at the end of the Ice Age? The answers will surprise you. Jelenin svet is a 2008 independent documentary film written and directed by Tanja Brzaković, about former World No. 1 female tennis player, Jelena Janković. Mabon "teenie" Hodges - A Portrait Of A Memphis Soul Original is a 2012 short film written by Susanna Vapnek, Roxanne Oldham and directed by Susanna Vapnek. Goodbye Holland is a 2004 documentary about the extermination of Dutch Jews during World War II. The film debunks the accepted notion that the Dutch were 'good' during the war, exposing how Dutch police and civil servants helped the Nazis implement massive deportations, which resulted in the death of 78 percent of the Jews in the Netherlands. The documentary was made by Emmy Award winning director Willy Lindwer. Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me is a 2012 documentary film about American rock band Big Star, directed by Drew DeNicola and Olivia Mori. Uksuum Cauyai: Drums of Winter, also referred to only as Drums of Winter is an ethnographic documentary on the culture of the Yup'ik people, focusing primarily on dance, music, and potlatch traditions in the community of Emmonak, on the shore of the Bering Sea. The film was produced through a "community-collaborative process" in which the subjects of the documentary had significant input as to the film's content and presentation. As a result, the film features conversations with individual Yup'ik in place of "the voice-over commentary by an unseen narrator that destroys the cinematic integrity of so many so-called ethnographic films". Drums of Winter won awards at a number of film festivals, including the American Film Festival in 1989, the International Ethnographic Film Festival in 1990, the Alaska International Film Festival in 1995, the Festival of the Native Americas in 1996, and the Margaret Mead Film Festival in 2000. In 2006, Drums of Winter was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Comics at war is a 2012 documentary animation biography history short film written by Thiago Brandimarte Mendonça and directed by Thiago Brandimarte Mendonça and Rafael Terpins. METH explores the rising wave of crystal methamphetamine use within the gay population. Through the reflections of a dozen gay men, we learn of the drug's allure, its promise, and why its popularity is soaring. Some of the men in the film are current users, and they share their life with us while under the constant influence of "Tina." Other interviewees are former denizens of "Tina World," who have managed to crawl back from the depths to which their addictions brought them. Throughout, METH is an unflinching look at the devastating effects of addiction to this very serious drug. Forbidden Forest is a 2004 Canadian documentary film directed by Kevin W. Matthews. Approximately 70 minutes long, it was co-produced by the National Film Board of Canada and Timber Colony Inc. The film follows Jean Guy Comeau, an Acadian woodlot and Francis Wishart, the grandson of Sir James Dunn, as they agitate for responsible forestry on New Brunswick Crown lands. World Class Trains: The American Orient Express is a 2004 documentary film directed by Robert Garofalo. The Economics of Happiness is a 2011 documentary film directed by Helena Norberg-Hodge, Steven Gorelick, and John Page, and produced by the International Society for Ecology and Culture. It has won "Best in Show" at the Cinema Verde Film and Arts Festival, "Best Direction" from EKOFilm 2011, "Judges' Choice" and "Audience Choice" at the Auroville International Film Festival, an "Award of Merit" from the Accolade Film Festival, and several other awards. L'Europe Moderne is a 2013 short film directed by Maja Kekonius. The Religious Test is a 2012 documentary film directed by Trevor Hill. A Family Of Weddings is a 2012 short animated documentary film written and directed by Cath Murphy. Peppers and Nudes - The Photographer Edward Weston is a 2004 short documentary film written and directed by Joachim Haupt and Sabine Pollmeier. The Sterilization of Leilani Muir is a 1996 documentary directed by Glynis Whiting about the life and times of Leilani Muir, the first person to file a lawsuit against the Alberta provincial government for wrongful sterilization under the Sexual Sterilization Act of Alberta. The story of "march king" John Philip Sousa and the connections between his music and the mood of the nation during his time. 5 Pictures of a Father is a short documentary film written and directed by Nadia Josefine El Said. Turned Towards the Sun is a 2012 documentary film directed by Greg Olliver. Strawberry Fields is a 2006 documentary film by Israeli filmmaker Ayelet Heller about the hardships faced by Palestinian strawberry farmers in Gaza, who find their livelihood disrupted by the Israel-Gaza conflict. Trekking to Utopia is a 1994 film directed by Michael Hammon. Marfil is a 2011 documentary film. Die Kinder von Berne is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Timo Großpietsch. Charlton Heston And Ben Hur: A Personal Journey is a 2012 documentary film directed by Laurent Bouzereau. Dreamers is a Bosnian short documentary film produced by the East West Theatre Company and directed by Nermin Hamzagic. The film follows the story of Samir Karić and Amir Muminović, young hip-hop artists from the village of Hajvazi, near the north-eastern Bosnian town of Kalesija. The mayor's son gave the hip-hop duo a bad beating because of their song which criticized municipal authorities. A newspaper report on the incident intrigues East West Theatre Company, a theatre and film production company from Sarajevo. Shortly after the incident, Samir and Amir become part of the cast of Class Enemy a play about disenfranchised youth in a violent secondary school in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Samir and Amir eventually end up touring the world with the East West Theatre Company's production. The film Dreamers is devised as a road movie. Secrets of the Nazi Criminals is a war documentary film directed by Tore Sjöberg. Comadres Day is a 2013 short film written by Lorena Maizares, Wanda López Trelles and directed by Wanda López Trelles. My Child Is Gay is a 2011 short film directed by Anubha Bhonsle. Playboy: Wet & Wild IV is a 1992 documentary film directed by Scott Allen. "From Europe to the USA, people express their views and build a colourful mosaic of Iran and its inhabitants. Politics is of course included. A personal account by the director, originally from Iran but living in Italy, showing the opinions of a wide range of people in the West about her fatherland: opinions generally formed by images from contemporary news. How little we know about this vast country with 70 million inhabitants hidden behind the curtain of political Islam." Quoting the description from the 2011 International Film Festival Rotterdam site. Comic Relief's Naughty Bits is a 2009 documentary film directed by Breid McLoone. This archival film from 1941 examines the new Japan which was emerging at the beginning of the 1900's and was firmly established as an industrialized nation by the outbreak of World War II.Facing the greatest threat in their history, the democracies of the Pacific took careful stock of this new Japan and its strength, and erected a vast system of defense across the world's greatest ocean.This archival film reflects the social and cultural values and beliefs prevalent at the time of production. Walking in the Sunlight, Walking in the Shadow is a 1971 documentary film directed by Bob Kingsbury. Cheating Death is a 2005 documentary, short and crime film written and directed by Eric Geringas. The Real Dirt on Farmer John is a 2005 documentary film directed by Taggart Siegel about the life of Midwestern farmer John Peterson, operator of Angelic Organics. It tells the history of the eccentric farmer's family farm in rural Caledonia, Illinois. Ask Your Shadow is a 2012 documentary biographical film directed by Lamine Ammar-Khodja. Life with Alex is a documentary historical fiction biographical film directed by Emily Wick. Bimbo is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Vincent Gargiulo. Message to Love is a feature documentary film of the Isle of Wight Festival 1970. The film unsparingly, often comically depicts the myriad problems associated with the famously chaotic festival—the main program of which was held on August 26–30, 1970—including gate-crashing, numerous crowd incursions onto the stage, Kris Kristofferson being booed offstage, and head promoter Rikki Farr's rants against the audience, which only intensified as the situation deteriorated: "We put this festival on, you bastards, with a lot of love! We worked for one year for you pigs! And you wanna break our walls down and you wanna destroy it? Well you go to hell!" This and two other brief dialogue extracts from the film were later sampled in the Oasis track "Fuckin' in the Bushes", from the album Standing on the Shoulder of Giants. In addition, several near-riots occurred over the price of tickets, as well as during several of the performances that took place over the weekend, especially Jimi Hendrix's last billed performance in England. Straight With You is a 2012 short, biographical, documentary, romance film directed by Daan Bol. Die verschiedenen Gesichter des Sergej Eisenstein is a 1997 documentary film directed by Dietmar Hochmuth. 9/11 is a 2002 French-American documentary film about the September 11 attacks in New York City, in which two planes crashed into the buildings of the World Trade Center. The film is from the point of view of the New York City Fire Department. The film was directed by Jules and Gedeon Naudet, and FDNY firefighter James Hanlon. Raising the Ashes is a 1997 documentary film directed by Michael O'Keefe. Look, Up in the Sky! The Amazing Story of Superman is a 2006 documentary film from executive producers Bryan Singer and Kevin Burns which details the history of the Superman franchise, from comic book, to television, to the big screen. The story of Superman is told through archival footage, as well as interviews with many of the actors, directors, and producers involved with the Superman media over the years. The closing credits feature outtakes from the Christopher Reeve Superman films, including an outtake of Marlon Brando improvising during the recitation of a poem in a scene deleted from the original version of Superman II. The documentary was released on DVD on June 20, 2006, shortly before the theatrical release of Superman Returns. A two DVD Best Buy exclusive Limited Edition version was released the same day. A shortened version of the documentary was played on A&E on June 12, 2006. Finally, the DVD was included as part of the 14-disc box set release Superman Ultimate Collector's Edition, in November 2006. Call + Response is a documentary film released in 2008 by Fair Trade Pictures to support human rights activism against human trafficking and slavery on a community level. The film was Justin Dillon’s directorial debut and has received worldwide recognition, becoming one of the most important devices in spurring the modern-day abolitionist movement and was one of the year’s top documentaries. Twenty Cigarettes is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by James Benning. A Decade Under the Influence is a 2003 American documentary film, directed by Ted Demme and Richard LaGravenese. It was produced by Independent Film Channel. It's about the "turning point" in American cinema in the 1970s. With Great Power: The Stan Lee Story is a 2010 documentary directed by Terry Dougas, Nikki Frakes and Will Hess Dreaming the Path is a documentary film written and directed by Jokūbas Vilius Tūras. More than a decade after the inauguration of Nelson Mandela, South Africa is slated to become the host of the World Cup - a public affirmation of its break with its violent legacy of apartheid. But while the founding Freedom Charter of the African National Congress (ANC) outlined ideals for "a better life for all," harsh inequalities still exist, from xenophobic attacks to corruption scandals and township protests. As a new decade looms, post-apartheid South Africa is at a crucial and dangerous crossroads. With the 2009 presidential election as a backdrop, Behind the Rainbow gives a previously untold account of the country's political problems, struggles, and realities.The film explores the transition of the ANC, from a liberation organization into South Africa's ruling party, through the evolution of the relationship between two of its most prominent veterans: Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma. Exiled under apartheid, they were once brothers in arms. Under Mandela's administration, they loyally labored to build a nonracial state. Now, they are bitter rivals. Their duel threatens to tear apart the ANC and the country, as the poor desperately seek hope in change and the elite fight for the spoils of victory.The film features key interviews with ANC current and former leaders, including Jacob Zuma, Kgalema Motlanthe, Pallo Jordan, Thabo Mbeki, and Terror Lekota. Examining previous events that the country's political decision-makers have agreed to bury for the sake of democracy, Behind the Rainbow is a behind-the-scenes look at South Africa's seemingly miraculous transformation. A PBS Indies /Independent Lens selection. The Beatles: The First U.S. Visit is a 1991 re-edited version of renowned documentary filmmaking team Albert and David Maysles' 1964 16mm documentary What's Happening! The Beatles In The U.S.A., about the Beatles' first visit to America in February 1964. It documents the Beatles' US trip as they travel to New York City, Washington, DC, and Miami Beach. Footage of the Beatles in hotel rooms makes up the majority of the non-musical portion of the film. The main difference between the original 1964 documentary and the 1991 re-edited version is that 22 minutes of the Beatles' live recorded performances on The Ed Sullivan Show have been inserted the 1991 release. However, as the 1964 documentary is 81 minutes long and the 1991 version is 83 minutes, some 20 minutes of the 1964 documentary have been excluded, such as several scenes with Brian Epstein. The original 1964 documentary is still being shown at various festivals, such as the Silverdocs in 2008, and was also shown at a special screening at the Maysles Cinema in New York on 18 November 2011 in honour of Albert Maysles' 85th birthday. This in-depth documentary from National Geographic takes a rarely seen look at Marine One, the president's official marine transport vehicle, and the helicopter equivalent of Air Force One. Evictions is a 1979 documentary film written by Wendy Lowenstein and directed by Richard Lowenstein. Triana Pura Y Pura is a documentary film directed by Ricardo Pachón. Behind the Fence is a 2005 short documentary film written and directed by Marcin Sauter. Zlatna levica, priča o Radivoju Koraću is a 2011 Serbian biopic and documentary film directed by Gordan Matić. It tells the story of Radivoj Korać, a famous Serbian basketball player. The film premiered in August 2011 in Kaunas during EuroBasket 2011 ahead of the tournament's knockout stage where it was screened for members of FIBA Europe, journalists covering the tournament, and representatives of the national teams that made the quarterfinals. In December 2011 it was shown at the film festival in Palermo. It premiered in Serbia on 16 February 2012. After its theatrical life, it is set to be broadcast as three-episode television mini-series during fall 2012. American Teen is a 2008 documentary film directed by Nanette Burstein and produced by 57th & Irving. It competed in the Documentary Competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival, where it received the Directing Award: Documentary. Following the Sundance Film Festival, the movie was picked up by Paramount Vantage and was released to general cinema July 25, 2008. Much of the movie was filmed at Warsaw Community High School in Warsaw, Indiana. Director Nanette Burstein originally reviewed more than 100 different schools in the pre-production process, and ten schools replied, agreeing to participate. After she interviewed incoming seniors at all 10, she chose Warsaw. I Am Britney Jean is a 2013 documentary TV movie on Britney Spears. Murasaki is a documentary film directed by Mika Kawase. Afrique 50 is a 1956 French documentary film directed by René Vautier. The first French anti-colonialist film, the film derived from an assignment in which the director was to cover educational activities by the French League of Schooling in West Africa. Vautier later filmed what he saw, a "lack of teachers and doctors, the crimes committed by the French Army in the name of France, the instrumentalization of the colonized peoples". For his role in the film Vautier was imprisoned over several months. The film was not permitted to be shown for more than 40 years. Ein Schritt weiter is an East German film. It was released in 1953. Stop à la Grèce en slip is 2013 documentary film written and directed by Brigitte Roüan. Fixing America is a 2011 American documentary written by Steve Laffey and produced with Stephen Skoly. It is a road-documentary daring to pick ordinary Americans' brains about America's financial crisis, the disconnect with the political elite, and ultimately collects their thoughts, their emotions and especially their solutions to fix America’s financial problems. Compound Eyes 1 is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Paul Clipson. Artie Lange: It's the Whiskey Talkin' is a 2004 comedy documentary film written by Artie Lange. The Big Durian is a 2003 Malaysian film by Amir Muhammad that combined documentary with fiction. It created history by being the first Malaysian film to screen at the Sundance Film Festival. When Engineering Fails is a 1998 film written and presented by Henry Petroski. It examines the causes of major disasters, including the explosion of the Space Shuttle Challenger, and compares the risks of computer-assisted design with those of traditional engineering methods. The original title of the film was To Engineer Is Human, the title of Petroski's non-fiction book about design failures. Though the Kentucky Derby only lasts two heart-pounding minutes, preparation for the annual event takes years. In this documentary, fraternal filmmakers the Hennegan brothers follow six trainers on their way to the 2006 event. The Hennegans traveled 150,000 miles and filmed 500 hours of footage in their quest to chronicle the road to this epic race in the first Saturday in May. "Alan Zweig is behind the wheel in his first film, chatting up strangers and colleagues in this impressionistic taxi travelogue. The instrumentation and ethnic make-up of drivers has changed since the 1970s, but “Keep going, make money, and be a nice guy” are words to live by for cabbies and budding documentarians alike!" Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Hot Docs site. Madman or Martyr is a documentary film directed by Luke Jaden. Celebrating diversity in America. Jain Temples of India is a 1963 documentary film directed by Arun Chaudhari. Sons of Shiva is a 1985 award-winning American documentary film by ethnographic filmmaker Robert Gardner and Askos Ostor, about the worship of the God Shiva, features practices of Hindu worship and devotion, a four-day Gajan ceremony, a Sacred Thread ceremony in Bishnupur and Baul singers of Bengal. It was the first film of "Pleasing God" trilogy of films about Hindu worship produced by Harvard's Film Study Center. It was followed by Forest of Bliss set in Benaras. Grizzly Man is a 2005 documentary film by German director Werner Herzog. It chronicles the life and death of bear enthusiast Timothy Treadwell. The film consists of Treadwell's own footage of his interactions with grizzly bears before he and his girlfriend Amie Huguenard were killed and eaten by a bear in 2003, and of interviews with people who knew or were involved with Treadwell. The footage he shot was later found, and the final film was co-produced by Discovery Docs, the Discovery Channel's theatrical documentary unit, and Lions Gate Entertainment. The film's soundtrack is by British singer songwriter and guitarist Richard Thompson. The Blooms of Banjeli is a Togolese short documentary film directed by Carlyn Saltman. The 29-minute film includes footage from 1914 but not released until 1986 or 1987. It documents Banjeli, from iron-smelting technology to local rituals and sexual prohibitions. The wolf has long been assumed to be a random predator, ruthlessly attacking its victims. This creature was so universally hated that it was pushed to the brink of extinction. Fatboy: The Movie is a 2005 documentary film directed by Michael Landsberg which first premiered on November 10, 2005 at the Fort Lauderdale Film Festival. It has won two awards on the independent film circuit. It is based upon the life of Grant Joubert. It is currently scheduled for DVD release in the fall of 2008. Playing the Fool is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sasha Djurkovic. We Are Superman is a 2013 historical documentary film directed by Kevin Bryce. An intimate film that does nothing less than re-imagine death's rituals for a new generation of the chronically mortal, UNLOOSENED AND ROOT expands artist David Dixon's video, performance, and sculpture practice into a film independent of the common conventions of cinema. A "Viking" funeral, Mardi Gras in pre-Katrina New Orleans, a colonoscopy searching for cancer, and a lonely campground that leads to the brink of consciousness: UNLOOSENED AND ROOT interweaves two stories - one documentary and one fiction - to tell a singular tale of mourning and loss. Douro, Faina Fluvial is a 1931 Portuguese documentary short film. It was the first film directed by Manoel de Oliveira and is a portrait of his hometown of Porto and the labor and industry that takes place along the cities main river, the Douro River. The film was first shown at the International Congress of Film Critics in Lisbon on September 19, 1931, where the majority of the Portuguese audience booed the film. However other foreign critics and artists who were in attendance praised the film, such as Luigi Pirandello and Émile Vuillermoz. Oliveira re-edited the film with a new soundtrack and re-released it in 1934. And again in 1994, Oliveira modified the film by adding a new, more avant-garde soundtrack by Luís de Freitas Branco. Oliveira was influenced by German filmmaker Walther Ruttmann's documentary Berlin: Symphony of a City, and Douro, Faina Fluvial was made in the same genre of city symphony films. Dust & Illusions is a 2009 documentary film about Burning Man and its founders. The film has been featured at several film festivals, and was shown at the San Francisco DocFest at The Roxie in San Francisco in October 2009. The film was written and directed by Olivier Bonin. The film discusses the history of Burning Man, such as its 1970s counter-culture foundations, and its origins on Baker Beach in 1986. The film also documents its contemporary development. Dust & Illusions uses archival footage and interviews, such as with founder Larry Harvey. Nadro is a 1997 film directed by Ivana Massetti. Tropico de cancer is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Eugenio Polgovsky. VHS Kahloucha is a Tunisian 2006 documentary film. The OLDEST LESBIAN in the World! is a 2011 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Mary Jo Godges and Renee Sotile. Sunlight is a 2009 documentary short film directed by Alex Harder. Drop City is 2012 documentary drama film directed by Joan Grossman. The Vision of Paolo Soleri: Prophet in the Desert is a 2013 American documentary film directed by Lisa Scafuro on the life & work of the late Italian Architect and environmentalist Paolo Soleri. Journey To Ararat is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Riho Västrik. The Four Year Plan is a documentary film directed by Mat Hodgson about London based football club Queens Park Rangers. The film chronicles the take over of the nearly bankrupt club in 2007 by a consortium of billionaires and their effort to promote the team to the Premier League by 2011. The consortium consisted of Bernie Ecclestone, Flavio Briatore and Alejandro Agag, steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal and Amit Bhatia. It is an observational documentary that follows the club from within the boardroom. The cameras for this documentary were brought in by the new owners to create the film, and although the club gave permission for the cameras to be there, they had no say on where on when the cameras would be filming. The title derives from a statement made by Briatore in 2007 where he declared his 'target to be Premier League in four years'. Art Is... is a 1971 American short documentary film directed by Julian Krainin. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Lamokowang is a 2003 documentary film. 9/11: Press for Truth is a 2006 documentary film about the September 11 attacks on the United States, directed by the American filmmaker Ray Nowosielski, and partially based on The Terror Timeline, by Paul Thompson. Portraits from Varangerfjord is a 2013 documentary short drama film written and directed by Egil Pedersen. Nats - the traditional street entertainers of India - are Jack’s of all performing trades. Follow their children down the chaotic streets of Kolkata as they act, sing and dance to pay off their parents’ debts. Filmed over a six year period, this poignant documentary explores a poor family’s desperate efforts to support themselves in the midst of a rapidly changing India. Wild Blue, Notes for Several Voices is a 2000 documentary film written by Thierry Knauff and directed by Thierry Knauff and Antoine-Marie Meert. A Village in Travancore is a 1956 documentary film directed by Fali Billimoria. Robert F. Kennedy: A Memoir is a 1998 documentary biography film written by Jack Newfield and directed by Steven Manuel, Jack Newfield and Charles C. Stuart. Separations is a 2010 documentary film directed by Andréa Seligmann Silva and Mieke Bal. Married... with Children Reunion is a 2003 documentary tv film directed by Hal Grant. Tomorrow We Fly is a 1943 American short documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Turkish Passport is a 2011 Turkish documentary directed by Burak Arliel. The film competed in the 'European Documentary' category at the European Independent Film Festival 2012. The Protocols of Zion is a 2005 documentary film by Jewish filmmaker Marc Levin about a resurgence of antisemitism in the United States in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks. Armed with his camera and appearing on screen along with his subjects, Levin engages in a free-for-all dialogue with Arab Americans, Black nationalists, evangelists, White nationalists, Kabbalist rabbis, Holocaust survivors, and Frank Weltner, the founder of Jew Watch web site. Levin's film draws its inspiration from an encounter he had in a New York taxi not long after 9/11, in which his driver, an Egyptian immigrant, made the claim that the Jews had been warned not to go to work at the World Trade Center on the day of the attack. He then said that "it's all written in the book," referring to The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a 1903 book purporting to disclose the Jews' master plan to rule the world. Discredited as a hoax by The Times of London in 1921, The Protocols provided a crucial influence on Hitler's world views, and had fuelled hatred, violence, and ultimately genocide attempts through the first half of the twentieth century. Let’s Make Money is an Austrian documentary by Erwin Wagenhofer released in 2008. It is about aspects of the development of the world wide financial system, claiming that elitists economically exploit the rest of society, especially in the developing world, but also in western nations. India’s Toxic Tanneries is a 2013 short documentary film produced by Sean Gallagher. Vigilante Vigilante: The Battle for Expression is a 2011 documentary film directed by Max Good. The film profiles several anti-graffiti vigilantes throughout the United States, including Jim Sharp, Joe Connolly, and Fred Radtke. The Indeserian Tablets is a 2010 short film directed by Peter Rose. One Billion Rising is a 2014 documentary film directed by Eve Ensler and Tony Stroebel. Journey to the Outer Limits is a 1973 American documentary film directed by Alexander Grasshoff. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Monkey in the Machine and the Machine in the Monkey is a part of a film series written and directed by Adam Curtis. The Revelator Collection DVD is a mix of music videos and concert footage of singer-songwriter Gillian Welch and her musical partner David Rawlings. All of the video was filmed in black and white by still photographer Mark Seliger. The first three tracks were recorded at RCA Studio B in Nashville, Tennessee and document the recording of these songs for Welch's 2001 album, Time. The remaining songs are all filmed before live audiences. Tracks 4-8 were shot at the Cat's Cradle in Carrboro, North Carolina on November 10, 2001, and Tracks 9-11 were filmed the following day at the Bijou Theater in Knoxville, Tennessee. These eight tracks include several songs from the Time album, one previously unreleased Gillian Welch song, "Wichita", and several covers. The duo cover Bob Dylan's "Billy", Neil Young's "Pocahontas" and Townes Van Zandt's "White Freight Liner Blues" as well as Bill Monroe's "I'm on My Way Back to the Old Home" with Rawlings singing lead. The clip of Welch and Rawlings performing "I Want to Sing that Rock and Roll" from the concert film, Down from the Mountain is added as a bonus. Town Bloody Hall is a documentary film directed by Chris Hegedus and D.A. Pennebaker. The Yasukuni Shrine, Earthquakes and the Emperor is a documentary film directed by Nobuyuki Ohura. Into the Unknown is a 2009 documentary and short film directed by Deimantas Narkevicius. Red Army is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Gabe Polsky. Acetate Diary is a 2014 biographical and experimental documentary animation short film written and directed by Russell Sheaffer. Featuring archival footage, eyewitness accounts, historical analysis and revealing interviews, this three-part documentary recounts the Japanese attack on the American military base of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. In addition to the chapters "Win First, Fight Later," "Day of Infamy" and "Waking a Sleeping Giant," this program also features legendary filmmaker John Ford's Oscar-winning documentary short, "December 7th." Pink Or Blue? is a 2012 short, documentary, drama, family film directed by Barbara Bedont. The Colón Ring - Wagner In Buenos Aires is a 2013 documentary film directed by Hans Christoph von Bock. The Guardian and His Poet is a 1978 documentary drama film written and directed by Percy Adlon. Grand Deception is a 2012 documentary war film directed by Rachel Milton and Steve Emerson. Apa Khabar Orang Kampung is a 2007 Malaysian documentary by Amir Muhammad. It was produced by Da Huang Pictures. Like its predecessor The Last Communist, it was banned in its home country but screened in several international film festivals. It premiered at the Berlinale in 2006. The title is a reference to a famous song by Sudirman Arshad that is used in both the opening and closing credits. It literally means "How are the villagers doing?" Electrocuting an Elephant is a 1903 short documentary film. Descending With Angels is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Christian Suhr. Hit So Hard is a 2011 American documentary film directed by P. David Ebersole. The film details the life and near death story of Patty Schemel, drummer of the seminal '90s alternative rock band Hole, and charts her early life, music career, and spiral into crack cocaine addiction. The film weaves together Hi8 video footage Schemel recorded while on Hole's 1994-95 world tour with contemporary interviews with her, bandmates Courtney Love, Eric Erlandson, and Melissa Auf der Maur, as well as her family members. The film also features interviews with other female drummers and musicians, including Nina Gordon, Kate Schellenbach, Gina Schock, Debbi Peterson, and Phranc. The film's score is written by Roddy Bottum of Faith No More. It was produced by Todd Hughes and Christina Soletti and was released theatrically in North America in 2012 by Well Go USA via Variance Films. It also screened a series of film festivals, including South by Southwest, the Marché du Film at Cannes, the Seattle Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, The Portland Queer Documentary Film Festival, and Outfest. The title is a reference to a song on Hole's 1998 album Celebrity Skin. Niente Paura is a 2010 documentary film directed by Piergiorgio Gay and co-written with Piergiorgio Paterlini. Scoicile nu au vorbit niciodata is a 1962 short documentary film written by Sergiu Nicolaescu and directed by Virgil Calotescu and Sergiu Nicolaescu. Don't You Forget About Me is a 2009 Canadian documentary film about screenwriter, director, and producer John Hughes. Directed by Matt Austin, the film was named after the 1985 hit song by Simple Minds, which in turn was the theme song for Hughes' film The Breakfast Club. The film specifically focused on Hughes' fade from prominence in the early 1990s. A Good Day To Die is a 2010 documentary film written by David Mueller and Lynn Salt and directed by Lynn Salt. Just Like Heaven is a 2008 film directed by Filip Marczewski. Barzan is a 2013 biographical documentary film written by Sarah Stuteville and directed by Bradley Hutchinson and Alex Stonehill. Families Like Yours is a 2012 documentary film directed by Rodolfo Moro. Sun Come Up is a 2010 documentary film on the effect of global warming on the Carteret Islands. The film showed at the 2010 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival on April 8. It was named as a nominee for the Academy Award for Best Documentary at the 83rd Academy Awards on January 25, 2011 but lost to Strangers No More. Undressing My Mother is a 2004 documentary short film written and directed by Ken Wardrop. La cuarta casa, un retrato de Elena Garro is a 2002 short biographical documentary film written and directed by José Antonio Cordero. Rising From Ashes is an independent film about the development of a national cycling team in Rwanda, a country still affected by 1994 Rwandan Genocide where an estimated 500,000–1,000,000 Rwandans were killed. "A battle of the sexes told with myth and magic: Gustav Deutsch's erotically charged epic, crafted from extraordinary archive footage. Taking its cue from DW Griffith via J-L Godard, the latest instalment of the FILM IST series is a five-act drama in which reclaimed footage is interwoven with aphorisms from ancient Greek philosophy. Beginning with the birth of the universe, it develops into a meditation on the timeless themes of sex and death, exploring creation, desire and destruction by appropriating scenes from narrative features, war reportage, nature studies and pornography. The Earth takes shape from molten lava, and man and woman embark upon their erotic quest. For this mesmerising epic, Deutsch applies techniques of montage, sound and colour to resources drawn from both conventional film archives and specialist collections such as the Kinsey Institute and Imperial War Museum. Excavating cinema history to tease new meanings from diverse and forgotten film material, he proposes new perspectives on the cycle of humanity. The film's integral score by long-term collaborators Christian Fennesz, Burkhardt Stangl and Martin Siewert incorporates music by David Grubbs, Soap and others." Quoting Mark Webber Where Are You Bucharest? is a 2014 documentary film directed by Vlad Petri. Buy Nothing New Land is a short documentary film written and directed by Bryony Stokes. It Ain't Over is a 2011 short biographical documentary drama written by David Michael Phelps and directed by Caleb Slain. Flying Anne is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Catherine van Campen. Bradley Manning Had Secrets is a 2011 short, biography, drama, animated and documentary film written and directed by Adam Butcher. Canícula is a 2011 documentary film written by Sebastián Hoffman and Jose Álvarez and directed by Jose Álvarez. Why Wal-Mart Works; and Why That Drives Some People C-R-A-Z-Y is a 2005 independent documentary film by Ron and Robert David Galloway. It investigates the reasons behind the financial success of the Wal-Mart Corporation. The documentary suggests that many criticisms of Wal-Mart arise from feelings of jealousy over the company's success. The documentary Wal-Mart: The High Cost of Low Price was released on the same day as Why Wal-Mart Works. Director Ron Galloway was quoted as saying, "I started making my film with no agenda, with no set outcome in mind. With the $85,000 of our own money my brother Robert and I spent to make my film, I couldn't afford an agenda. Why Wal-Mart Works positive tone is solely a product of my experience making it. My brother and I made Why Wal-Mart Works with almost no cooperation from Wal-Mart. I say "almost" because Wal-Mart—after several failed attempts—did finally allow me into their stores and to interview some of their associates. They had no editorial oversight and I solicited no input from them. They're not even going to sell my movie in their stores!" Rocky Marciano and Muhammad Ali were the two greatest heavyweight champions in the history of boxing. In 1969, a boxing promoter who had arranged a series of fantasy radio bouts between the greatest heavyweight champions from every era convinced Marciano and Ali to fight on film, with a computer picking the winner. Marciano, who had retired undefeated at 49 and Ali, stripped of his title at 27, were intense competitors eager to prove Who Was the Greatest.The fight was filmed on 35mm and was shown in early 1970 in over 1,500 packed theatres in North America and Europe, and once on ABC in the USA. All prints were then destroyed except for one given to the US copyright office - the fight has never been shown since. Remastered, it is now available for audiences to enjoy worldwide "A trans guy post his reconstructive surgery tries to figure out how he fits into society, not as female or male but in a space in between." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site Opus Dei: Decoding God's Work is a 2006 spiritual documentary film written by David Naglieri and directed by Marc Boudignon and David Naglieri. Mural on Our Street is a 1965 American short documentary film directed by Dee Dee Halleck. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Aliens Among Us is a 1976 documentary film directed by Densey Clyne and Jim Frazier. Children of the Wind is a 2012 documentary film directed by Daphne Schmon. Bob Burns' Hollywood Halloween is a 2009 documentary film written by Bob Burns, Kathy Burns and D.C. Fontana and directed by Lindsey Keith Jackson. Merchants of Doubt is a documentary film directed by Robert Kenner. Mitgefühl, Weisheit und Humor is a 2009 documentary film directed by Boris Penth. Kontinuasom is a 2009 documentary film. Children at Work is a 1973 Irish short documentary film produced by Louis Marcus. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. 17 years later, Jo Tuffnell faces the man who killed her father with an IRA bomb. Directed by Paul McGuigan, this 66-minute English documentary revolves around the healing journey of a teenager whose father was killed in an IRA bombing. After years of coping, she finally comes face to face with the man who set off the bomb. I Am Jesus is a 2010 film directed by Valerie Gudenus and Heloisa Sartorato. Genesis is a 1978 short documentary film written by George Casey and Tom McGrath and directed by George Casey. Darkon is an award-winning feature-length documentary film that follows the real-life adventures of the Darkon Wargaming Club in Baltimore, Maryland, a group of fantasy live-action role-playing gamers. The film was directed by Andrew Neel and Luke Meyer. Darkon premiered and won the Best Documentary Audience Award at the 2006 South By Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas. Darkon is an official selection playing at Hot Docs, Maryland Film Festival, Silverdocs, LA Film Festival, Britdoc and Melbourne International Film Festival. The film was produced by Ovie Entertainment and SeeThink Films. John Hodgman was hired to write a scripted film adaptation of the documentary. However plans fell through, but an excerpt of the unproduced screenplay was read on his podcast Judge John Hodgman. Shades of Gray is a 2009 documentary directed by Bob Wilkinson about Gray Barker, a writer whose work and life was influential in the growth and promotion of Ufology. It tells the story of his life through interviews with friends and acquaintances and archival footage. The film was produced by Allegheny Image Factory, the film production company headed by West Virginia natives Robert Tinnell and Jeffrey Tinnell. Secrets of the Code is a 2006 documentary based on Dan Burstein's New York Times best-seller of the same name in which experts explore topics put forth by Dan Brown's novel The Da Vinci Code. New Yorker essayist Arthur Krystal assisted Burstein in writing of the film, which was directed by Emmy Award winner Jonathan Stack, produced by Alchemist Films, LLC and distributed by SONY Pictures. The film is narrated by actress Susan Sarandon, with commentary by religious experts and authors Timothy Freke, Richard Leigh, Sean Martin and Elaine Pagels. The film has been described as having unusually high visual quality, spectacular imagery and an excellent review of the issues. Hit the Road: India is a 2013 sport adventure documentary film written and directed by Gor Baghdasaryan and co-directed by Mushegh Baghdasaryan. Lean a Ladder Against Heaven is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Jana Sevcíková. Gus sedates two magnificent Kalahari black-maned lions and flies them, uncaged, to his Tswalu Kalahari reserve. If either lion wakes, it can destroy the plane and everyone in it. Together, the Inside Noah’s Ark trilogy sounds a grim warning — that through human need, greed and ignorance even wildlife reserves are no longer truly wild but now have to be managed like huge ranches, giant zoos. Originally aired on Discovery, Animal Planet, PBS, and 15 international networks. Brooklyn Matters is a 2007 documentary film, produced and directed by Isabel Hill and edited by Marian Sears Hunter. The film describes the fight against the Atlantic Yards development project in Brooklyn, New York. Atlantic Yards is Bruce Ratner's Forest City Development and the Empire State Development Corporation's plan to build a New York Nets basketball arena and 17 office and apartment buildings along Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn, New York. The film includes interviews with Paul Goldberger, Bob Law, Councilwoman Letitia James and Julia Vitullo-Martin and shows the community input meeting for the project's environmental impact statement. Chuck Clifton, Director of Photography and Michelle Clifton, Sound Recordist were also involved in the making of the movie. The Children of Leningradsky is a 2005 Polish short documentary film about a community of homeless children living in the Leningradsky railway station in Moscow. Directed by Andrzej Celinski and Hanna Polak, it was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Bucuresti Experiment is a drama documentary film directed by Tom Wilson. Jerusalem: Center of the World is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Andrew Goldberg. Walk Tall is 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Kate Sullivan. Subway Busker is a 2010 music and documentary film written and directed by Richard Cummings Jr. Children of the Stars is a 2007 documentary about children with autism in the People's Republic of China. It was produced by Alexander Haase and directed by Rob Aspey. The title is an English translation of the expression "星星的孩子", a phrase used in Taiwan to describe autistic children. The documentary focuses on the Beijing Stars and Rain Teaching Institute, founded in 1993 by Tian Huiping. In 1992 Tian traveled from Chongqing, Sichuan to Beijing—a distance of 1460 km, or 907 miles—looking for help for her own autistic son but found nothing. She returned a year later to start the school. Funded solely through charitable donations, the Beijing Stars and Rain School was the first non-governmental educational organization in China dedicated to serving children with autism. It offers an 11-week educational program for families, based on applied behavior analysis. The documentary follows the progress of five-year-old Feng Jia Wei and his father and mother, Feng Lei and Hao Yue Chun, who traveled across China to enroll their son in the school. A People Uncounted is a 2011 Canadian documentary film directed by Aaron Yeger about the culture and history of the Romani people in Europe, with special emphasis on their plight during The Holocaust. The film also warns of the similarities in intolerance between the time of the Porajmos and the increasing intolerance and abuse of Roma rights in Europe today. It was nominated for a Producers Guild of America award in 2012. The film was featured in the New York Gipsy Festival and is part of Vanderbilt University's Holocaust Lecture Series. American Blackout is a documentary film directed by Ian Inaba. It premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival. The film chronicles the 2002 defeat, and 2004 reelection, of Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney to the U.S. House of Representatives; it also discusses issues surrounding alleged voter disenfranchisement and the use of voting machines in both the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections. The film focuses heavily on McKinney, and claims that her 2002 loss in a Democratic primary to Denise Majette was part of an effort to disenfranchise minority voters. McKinney claims that Republican voters in her district tipped the primary election to Majette. This itself is legal, as Georgia law opens primaries to all voters irrespective of party. After losing, McKinney filed a lawsuit claiming that open primaries are a violation of the 14th Amendment, but a court dismissed the case. The Shiranui Sea is a Japanese documentary made in 1975 by Noriaki Tsuchimoto. It is the fourth in a series of independent documentaries that Tsuchimoto made of the mercury poisoning incident in Minamata, Japan. Bells of Happiness is a 2012 documentary comedy film written and directed by Jana Kovalcíková and Marek Sulik. A ponte: uma história do ferryboat Bagamoyo is a Mozambican 2010 documentary film. Soldier of the Road: A Portrait of Peter Brötzmann is a 2012 documentary film directed by Bernard Josse. Arno is a 2012 film written by Tigran Petrosyan and Eduard Hambartsumyan, and directed by Eduard Hambartsumyan. Stardust: The Bette Davis Story is a TV movie. The True Story of the Civil War is a 1956 American short documentary film directed by Louis Clyde Stoumen. It won an Academy Award in 1957 for Documentary Short Subject. In The Company of Actors is a 2007 Australian documentary produced by Shark Island Productions and directed by Ian Darling. Great West End Theatres is a documentary series detailing the history, architecture and theatrical anecdotes of the 40 West End Theatres of London, released individually as All-Region DVDs and also as digital downloads and the first 10 episodes will be broadcast from 3 August 2013 in the UK by the BSkyB digital satellite channel Sky Arts 2 and was chosen as "Pick of the Day" by the London edition of Time Out magazine. Presented by Sir Donald Sinden and described by The Stage newspaper as "Promises to be the most definitive guide to Theatreland", it features many of the West End's star actors, actresses and practitioners discussing the theatres that they are associated with, such as Anthony Andrews, Steven Berkoff, Simon Callow, Charles Dance, Roy Hudd, Gillian Lynne, Sir Cameron Mackintosh, Sir Ian McKellen, Martin Shaw and Samuel West. Directed and narrated by Marc Sinden, written and researched by Shaun McKenna, it is produced by Jo Gilbert for Great Productions. In their review of the series, the British Theatre Guide said "This film is as close as one can get to standing on the stage taking an ovation. Legendary Sin Cities: Paris, Berlin and Shanghai is a TV series. La Isla: Archives of a Tragedy is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Uli Stelzner. Sweet Old Song is a 2002 documentary film directed by Leah Mahan. Love And Death In Shanghai is a 1997 film directed by Phil Agland. The Cradle of Storms is a short documentary directed by Bryce Lowe-White. I Think This Is The Closest To How The Footage Looked is a 2012 short family drama documentary film directed by Yuval Hameiri and Michal Vaknin. S.O.S./State Of Security is a 2009 film directed by Michele Ohayon. Amar Lenin is a 1970 black and white documentary film directed by legendary film director Ritwik Ghatak made for Government of West Bengal in the centenary year of the birth of Vladimir Lenin. The film was created by Ritwik Ghatak. It is based on the thoughts and views of Ritwik Ghatak on Lenin and communism. The movie was, for some time, not allowed to be released in India. God Speed You! Black Emperor is a 1976 Japanese black-and-white 16 mm documentary film, 90 minutes long, by director Mitsuo Yanagimachi, which follows the exploits of young Japanese motorcyclists, the "Black Emperors". The 1970s in Japan saw the rise of a motorcycling movement called the bōsōzoku, which drew the interest of the media. The movie follows a member of the "Black Emperors" motorcycle club and his interaction with his parents after he gets in trouble with the police. The Canadian post-rock band Godspeed You! Black Emperor took their name from the film. Kevin Hart: I'm a Grown Little Man is a 2009 documentary comedy film written by Kevin Hart and directed by Shannon Hartman. The Kill Team is a documentary film about the Maywand District murders during the War in Afghanistan. The film won first place in the category of Best Documentary Feature at the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival. Dangerous Living: Coming Out in the Developing World is a 2003 documentary film directed by American filmmaker John Scagliotti about the issues experienced by gay, lesbian and transgender people in developing countries. It was the first documentary film to explore these issues in non-Western countries. It is narrated by actress and comedian Janeane Garofalo. It was produced by Janet Baus and Dan Hunt, both of whom had worked with Scagliotti on his previous film After Stonewall. The film focuses in particular on Cairo 52, a group of 52 Egyptian men who were arrested on board a floating gay nightclub in 2001. It features interviews with gay-rights activists from countries around the world including Honduras, Namibia, the Philippines, Pakistan and Vietnam. Life's Fine in the Labyrinth is a 1991 film directed by Norbert Bunge and Christine Fischer-Defoy. I Am the Media is a 2010 French documentary film by Benjamin Rassat. Half a Life is a 1982 film directed by Romain Goupil, which won the Caméra d'Or and Award of the Youth at the Cannes Film Festival, and the César Award for Best Debut. Dear Dad, Love Maria is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Vince Mascoli. Urban Outlaw is a 2012 short/biography/sport/documentary film directed by Tamir Moscovici. The Original Mermaid is a 2002 documentary film written by Ana Kokkinos and directed by Michael Cordell and Ana Kokkinos. Lawrence Of Belgravia is a 2011 documentary film directed by Paul Kelly. Isingiro Hospital is a 1992 Dutch documentary film, made by directors Hillie Molenaar en Joop van Wijk about the patients of the Isingiro Hospital, located in the rural area of North West Tanzania. The documentary shows patients and doctors who are fighting a battle against HIV, malaria and meningitis. Everything you're about to read here seems impossible and insane, beyond science fiction. Yet it's all true. Scientists now believe there may really be a parallel universe - in fact, there may be an infinite number of parallel universes, and we just happen to live in one of them. These other universes contain space, time and strange forms of exotic matter. Some of them may even contain you, in a slightly different form. Astonishingly, scientists believe that these parallel universes exist less than one millimetre away from us. In fact, our gravity is just a weak signal leaking out of another universe into ours. For years parallel universes were a staple of the Twilight Zone. Science fiction writers loved to speculate on the possible other universes which might exist. In one, they said, Elvis Presley might still be alive or in another the British Empire might still be going strong. Serious scientists dismissed all this speculation as absurd. But now it seems the speculation wasn't absurd enough. Parallel universes really do exist and they are much stranger than even the science fiction writers dared to imagine. It all started when superstring theory, hyperspace and dark matter made physicists realise that the three dimensions we thought described the Universe weren't enough. There are actually 11 dimensions. By the time they had finished they'd come to the conclusion that our Universe is just one bubble among an infinite number of membranous bubbles which ripple as they wobble through the eleventh dimension. Now imagine what might happen if two such bubble universes touched. Neil Turok from Cambridge, Burt Ovrut from the University of Pennsylvania and Paul Steinhardt from Princeton believe that has happened. The result? A very big bang indeed and a new universe was born - our Universe. The idea has shocked the scientific community; it turns the conventional Big Bang theory on its head. It may well be that the Big Bang wasn't really the beginning of everything after all. Time and space all existed before it. In fact Big Bangs may happen all the time. Of course this extraordinary story about the origin of our Universe has one alarming implication. If a collision started our Universe, could it happen again? Anything is possible in this extra-dimensional cosmos. Perhaps out there in space there is another universe heading directly towards us - it may only be a matter of time before we collide. Black Gospel is a 2013 drama documentary film directed by hisMT Ministry. Win or Lose is a 2012 biographical documentary short film directed by Daniel Koehler. "Thirteen years, two radical activist all-stars — one conversation. Internationally renowned scholar Angela Davis and 88-year-old grassroots organizer Yuri Kochiyama have spent over a decade conversing intimately on why and how they became passionate about justice. Kochiyama moved to Harlem in 1960, immersing herself in an African-American neighborhood. Davis grew up in Birmingham, Alabama, and lived in one of the most segregated communities in the country. Illustrated with rarely-seen photography and footage of extraordinary speeches, demonstrations, marches, and life struggles in the ’60s and ’70s, the topics of this rich conversation range from the critical but often forgotten role of women in 20th century social movements to the importance of cross-cultural/cross-racial alliances; from American internment camps to Japanese comfort women; from Malcolm X to the prison industrial complex. A powerful and engaging documentary, Mountains That Take Wing invites — or reminds — current and future generations to, in the words of Kochiyama, “go out and tell truth everywhere.”" Quoting Nani Ratnawat from the 2010 Framleine 34 SF LGBT Film Festival site. Ibiza Occident is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Günter Schwaiger. Un beso a esta tierra is a 1995 documentary film directed by Daniel Goldberg Lerner. The House in the Middle was an American 1954 short documentary film produced by the Federal Civil Defense Administration and the National Clean Up-Paint Up-Fix Up Bureau, which attempted to show that a clean, freshly painted house is more likely to survive a nuclear attack than its poorly maintained counterparts. In 2001, the Library of Congress deemed the film "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" and selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry. Downloaded is a documentary film directed by Alex Winter about the downloading generation and the impact of filesharing on the Internet. A teaser of the film premiered at SXSW on March 14, 2012. The feature film made its world premiere at SXSW on March 10, 2013, and was shown at other film festivals around the world. VH1 has partnered with AOL to widely distribute the film. Financed in part by VH1, the film is scheduled to broadcast as a VH1 Rock Docs feature in the fall of 2014. Milyang, a Welcome Guest is a documentary film directed by Ha Saet-byul, Roh Eun-ji, Heo Chul-nyeong, Nung-cool, and Lee Jae-hwan. In 1968, Eddie Adams photographed a Saigon Police Chief, General Nguyen Nyoc Loan, shooting a Vietcong Guerilla point blank. Anna Vaazhigirar is a 1998 short documentary film directed and produced by Tamil Nadu Films Division. Up Against the System is a 1969 documentary film by Terence Macartney-Filgate. Follows the stories of four ultra-Orthodox women. Yentel from Mea Shearim, Jerusalem is the key figure in the film, and the personal stories of three other women are interwoven into her story. Fatigued is a 2013 short film directed by Kyle King. Same Old Story: A Trip Back 20 Years is a 2008 Japanese documentary film about a Japanese musician, Cheep Hiroishi who takes a look back at his life over the last 20 years. Traveling back to the place he had been two decades ago, he realizes how much time changes so many things. During the film, Hiroishi travels throughout Japan and even to New York to interview people who had known him or of him and what kind of affect his music had on their lives. Hiroishi travels back to New York to visit the Cove City Sound Studios, the place he recorded with his band 20 years before. He meets, once again, Richie Cannata the owner of CCSS. Richie invites him to a live jam session at The Cutting Room in Manhattan where they both "cut it up" with their saxophones. The film was directed by Kunio Yato, a Japanese graphic designer whose love for music and independent musicians, inspired him to make this documentary. The film had its international premiere in September at the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival on September 22, 2008. It won the Best International Music Documentary at the festival. In the late 1800's the father of submarines, Mr John Holland, hit upon the idea of powering a submarine with an internal combustion engine and an electric motor. For over a hundred years, since the first semi-successful attempts during the American Civil War, submarine warfare had been fraught with difficulties and failure. In 1901, the Holland I was launched as the first Royal Navy submarine and submarines have been an integral part of the Navy ever since. The Second World War showed the first widespread use of these underwater vessels and their major advantages. Today, nuclear submarines roam the waters all over the world for exploration and to keep the peace. Featuring rare archive footage and rare film of the last surviving submarines, this is a privileged glimpse into the world of submarine warfare. Defending Our Lives is a 1993 American short documentary film directed by Margaret Lazarus and Renner Wunderlich. It won an Academy Award at the 66th Academy Awards in 1994 for Documentary Short Subject. Packing Up the Wagon: The Last Days of Wagon Wheel Lunch is a 2013 short, documentary film written and directed by Mike Maryniuk. Love and Politics is a 2011 drama, documentary film directed by Azad Jafarian. Die Aussicht is a 1966 short documentary film directed and written by Kurt Krigar. The Panama Deception is a 1992 American documentary film that won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film is critical of the actions of the US military during the 1989 invasion of Panama by the United States, covering the conflicting reasons for the invasion and depicting the US media as biased. It also highlighted media bias, showing events that were unreported or misreported in the news. It was directed by Barbara Trent of the Empowerment Project and was narrated by actress Elizabeth Montgomery. The film asserts that the U.S. government invaded Panama primarily to renegotiate the terms of the Torrijos–Carter Treaties. Another allegation made by the film is that the United States tested some form of laser or energy weapon during the invasion. The film also includes footage of mass graves uncovered after the US troops had withdrawn, burned down neighborhoods, as well as depictions of some of the 20,000 refugees who fled the fighting. Mercedes Sosa: The Voice of Latin America is a 2013 documentary film eritten and directed by Rodrigo H. Vila. Real Talk: Hip Hop Comedy is 2006 documentary film directed by 'Rayzor' Raymond Davis. Romance of the Indian Coin is a 1961 documentary film directed by Govind Saraiya. A documentary about the struggle for survival of traditional art and culture in the face of a rapidly changing and modernizing world told from the perspective of time-honored Chinese Kung Fu masters.The story explores the history, the art of Kung Fu and asks important questions about how the cultural heritage can be kept alive in a world that prefers to forget about its origins.The sadness and tragedy conveyed in the personal stories and anecdotes of today's last surviving traditional Kung Fu masters, along with the majesty and beauty of their skills, serve as reminders of the frailty of even the deadliest of arts. Bending Sticks: The Sculpture of Patrick Dougherty is a documentary biographical film directed by Kenny Dalsheimer and Penelope Maunsell. Don't Ask, Shoot! is a 2011 documentary short film written and directed by Hendrick Dusollier. Beauty Culture is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Lauren Greenfield. Back on Board: Greg Louganis is a sports documentary biographical film directed by Cheryl Furjanic. Supermensch: The Legend of Shep Gordon is a 2013 American documentary film about talent manager Shep Gordon, directed by Mike Myers. The film is the account of Gordon's career and his clients such as Alice Cooper, Blondie, Teddy Pendergrass, and Pink Floyd. The film also addresses Gordon's personal life and his interest in cooking, producing films, and his Buddhist beliefs. The film was screened in the Gala Presentation section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. It won the audience award for best documentary at the 2014 Sarasota Film Festival, and also screened at the 2014 Tribeca Film Festival. It was released theatrically on June 6, 2014. Tales from the Script is a 2010 documentary film directed by Peter Hanson and distributed by First Run Features. It is a companion piece to a nonfiction book of the same name published in 2010 by IT Books/HarperCollins Publishers. Symphony Of The Soil is a 2012 documentary adventure music historical drama film written and directed by Deborah Koons. Uncharted Waters is a 2013 biographical sport document written and directed by Craig Griffin . Apariencias 1,2,3 is a 1977 short documentary film written and directed by Antonio del Rivero. Było sobie miasteczko... is a 2009 Polish historical documentary film about the 1943 Kisielin massacre in the village of Kisielin, located in the Wołyń Voivodeship in Poland before World War II,. The film, directed by Tadeusz Arciuch and Maciej Wojciechowski, was produced by Adam Kruk for Telewizja Polska. Było sobie miasteczko... tells the story of a small town which, until World War II, belonged to the Second Polish Republic Eastern region of Kresy. People of different nationalities used to live there in peace: Poles, Ukrainians, Jews, Germans, the Czechs. Kisielin was wealthy and prosperous. There was a publishing house and a library there, an oil pressing factory, and a distillery, a brickyard, as well as a dairy plant. Today, only the ethnic Ukrainian villagers remain. The old ruins of a Polish Catholic church serve as witness to the tragedy that took place there during the massacres of Poles in Volhynia. On 11 July 1943, a group of Ukrainian nationalists slaughtered the 60 to 90 Polish worshipers inside the Kisielin temple, and set it on fire. The rest of the Polish inhabitants escaped from Kisielin, never to return. Discordia is a feature documentary film directed by Ben Addelman and Samir Mallal. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, it chronicles life of three students during the aftermath of the Netanyahu Incident at Concordia University in Montreal in 2002. Alien Boy: The Life and Death of James Chasse is an American feature length documentary film, released in 2013 and directed by Brian Lindstrom. The film explores issues of police accountability in the case of James Chasse, a man with schizophrenia who was brutally killed by Portland, Oregon police officers in 2006. In Family of James Chasse v City of Portland, Judge Garr King added the film to the case gag order and was asked by Portland city attorneys for a change of venue based on teasers for Alien Boy. The case was settled in 2011 for $1.6 million and instructed an investigation by the Department of Justice which found the Portland Police Bureau "engages in a pattern or practice of excessive force" against persons with mental illness. Prior settlements in 2009 included $925,000 from Multnomah County and a reported $600,000 from American Medical Rescue. Members of Portland City Council agreed with DOJ findings in a settlement signed in November 2012. The film was produced by the Mental Health Association of Portland, a nonprofit advocacy organization and distributed by Breaking Glass Pictures. So, What's Your Price? is a 2007 documentary directed by Olallo Rubio about media, power, and the consumer culture in Mexico and United States. It debuted in Mexico on May 18, 2007, and had several screenings on the United States, the DVD version was released on October 16, 2007. Footage of an alien from a crashed UFO in Roswell, New Mexico and moved to Area 51 shocked the world. The time is coming for alien intervention on earth - ready or not. Stars Ray Santilli, Gary Shoefield. Aids, a Story That Knows No End is a 1994 documentary film directed by Bertrand de Solliers and Paule Muxel. De L'Autre Cote is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Chantal Akerman. Transvisible: The Bamby Salcedo Story is a 2013 documentary film directed by Dante Alencastre A Very British Gangster is a film documentary revealing Britain's most notorious and powerful crime family--the Noonan dynasty. The film follows the trials and tribulations of Dominic Noonan over three years, as he lurches from criminal trial to criminal trial. Wonder World of Ice is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Ilkka Rautio. Cinema 500 km is a Saudi Arabian documentary film which premiered in 2006. Directed by Abdullah Al-Eyaf, the film depicts the experiences of Tariq Al-Husaini, a 21-year-old Saudi who is a movie fan despite the fact that there are no cinemas in Saudi Arabia. Al-Husaini is shown applying for a passport and traveling 500 kilometers to Bahrain to see a movie in a cinema for the first time in his life. Abdullah Al-Eyaf secured permission from the Saudi Ministry of Culture and Information to shoot this documentary. The film premiered at the Emirates Film Competition in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates in 2006, but due to the lack of cinemas in Saudi Arabia there are no plans yet to show the film in its home country. Cazul D is a 1966 short film directed by Alexandru Boiangiu. A Boy Named Charlie Brown is an unreleased television documentary film about Charles M. Schulz and his creation Peanuts, produced by Lee Mendelson with some animated scenes by Bill Meléndez and music by Vince Guaraldi. Although never aired on television, this 30-minute 1963 documentary was instrumental in garnering commercial support and the creative teamwork that resulted in A Charlie Brown Christmas in 1965 and the ensuing series of Peanuts television specials. Portions of the film were used in commercials for A Charlie Brown Christmas in 1965. An album by the Vince Guaraldi Trio with music from the above documentary, originally titled Jazz Impressions of a Boy Named Charlie Brown, was released in by Fantasy Records in 1964. The documentary is available on DVD through the Charles M. Schulz Museum. Your Neighbor's Son: The Making of a Torturer is a documentary or docudrama directed by Jørgen Flindt Pedersen and Erik Stephensen in two versions, 1976 and 1981. The film documents the conversion of young Greek Military Police recruits into torturers and touches on the subject of the power of the institution to compel otherwise moral human beings to torture. The documentary examines the processes and methods of the military junta that ruled Greece from 1967 to 1974. Snow Crazy is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Laila Pakalnina. Ein Bild is a 1983 documentary film directed by Harun Farocki. If You Build It is a 2013 documentary directed by Patrick Creadon, produced by Neal Baer, and filmed on location largely in the town of Windsor and surrounding Bertie County, North Carolina, the state's poorest county. The documentary follows a year in the life of an innovative, design-based high school program, culminating with the design and sixteen-week construction of a farmer's market pavilion, the only farmers market pavilion in the U.S. designed and built by high school students. The film's title is a truncated reference to the catchphrase "if you build it, they will come," from the 1989 film, Field of Dreams. Practitioners of an exotic dance technique known as the Shake dance tell their stories against the backdrop of Atlanta’s notorious strip club scene. The Champagne Safari is a 1995 documentary film written by Harold Crooks, John Kramer and Steve Lucas, and directed by George Ungar. The Collaborator and His Family is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Ruthie Shatz and Adi Barash. Sogobi is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by James Benning. Mary Magdalene: Saint or Sinner? is a 2008 documentary film directed by Martin Kemp. Gimme the Power is a 2012 Mexican documentary film by Olallo Rubio about the band Molotov. Then the Wind Changed is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Celeste Geer. Beavers is a short documentary film directed by Stephen Low. The Underground Orchestra is a documentary, history, musical film directed by Heddy Honigmann. Dressing America is a 2009 documentary, biographical, and historical film directed by Steven Fischler and Joel Sucher. Bitter Pill: America and Healthcare in America is a documentary history film directed by Vivekanand Palavali. What’s New at Garet? is a 2004 documentary film directed by Raymond Depardon. The Arrieta Method is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jorge Gil Munarriz. Whatever Happened to Micheal Ray? is an American documentary produced in 2000 by NBA Entertainment about the rise and fall of All-Star point guard Micheal Ray Richardson. The film was written by Larry Weitzman and co-directed by Weltzman and Jim Podhoretz. The film is narrated by Chris Rock. Rock, a native New Yorker, is entranced by the arrival of Micheal Ray Richardson on the New York sports scene. Richardson was a relatively unknown collegiate basketball player from the University of Montana—nicknamed "Sugar"—who had been drafted by the New York Knicks with the 4th overall pick in the 1978 NBA Draft. According to the film documentary and first coach Willis Reed, Richardson could be compared favorably to Knick legend and man-about-town Walt Frazier. In his rookie year, Richardson performed better off the court than on, but in his second year, blossomed into an All-Star, leading the NBA in both assists and steals and bearing a strong resemblance not only to Clyde, but to Earvin "Magic" Johnson, another tall and versatile point guard. Johnson tells us clearly how difficult it was to play against Richardson. Ok Buckaroos is a documentary film directed by Patrick Tourville. Nat Turner: A Troublesome Property is a 2003 documentary directed by Charles Burnett. Death by Design is a 1995 science documentary directed by Peter Friedman and Jean-François Brunet of the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris which focuses on Cell biology, with an emphasis on cell death and why our lives depend on it. Featured are prominent biologists such as Nobel prize laureate, Rita Levi-Montalcini, Martin Raff, Polly Matzinger, Pierre Goldstein, Nobel Laureate Roert Horvitz, among others. The documentary is notable for its combination of a whimsical use of metaphors with scientific rigor, and incorporates animation, micro-cinematography, and scenes from old Hollywood films and stock footage, including Busby Berkley choreographed dance routines. The opening scene features the trailer from the '50s science fiction film It Came From Outer Space. The Day Before Disclosure is a 2010 documentary film directed by Terje Toftenes. "BETWEEN YESTERDAY & TOMORROW" Omnibus 2011-2012 for FUKUSHIMA is an anthology film of 12 short documentaris. Classic Albums: John Lennon: Plastic Ono Band is a 2010 documentary film directed by Matthew Longfellow. "The film portrays the fates of several youths who decided at an early age – some as young as eleven, twelve or thirteen years old – to leave home, only to end up living on the streets temporarily or permanently. Sunny, Toni, Krümel (“Crumb”), JJ, Stöpsel (“Plug”), Soja and Za are all physically and emotionally hurt, and could have already lived nine lives. Despite all this destruction, they are endowed with remarkable strength and talent, which forms the focus of the film. Rather than documenting their lives on the street, the film concentrates on how their personalities materialize as they discuss their lives in front of a neutral backdrop in a studio. In this manner, cinematic portraits come to light like in an exhibition or art space. Prejudices and clichés about “bums” and “punks” vanish as the remarkable uniqueness of the youths comes to the forefront. They become stars – rightly so." Quoting the description from the 2010 Vienna International Film Festival site. The lottery of birth is a philosophical argument that states: since no one chooses where they are born, they should not be held responsible for something that is beyond their control. The lottery of birth argument was sometimes used by philosophers such as John Locke, Thomas Hobbes, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. More modern day uses have been prompted by political theorists such as John Rawls, who explores the subject more in depth in his book A Theory of Justice. The Lottery of Birth is also the first episode in a documentary series called Creating Freedom, directed by Raoul Martinez and Joshua van Praag. All About Ann: Governor Richards of the Lone Star State is a historical fiction, comedy and documentary film directed by Keith Patterson and Phillip Schopper. In July 2005, NASA's Deep Impact probe collided with comet Tempel 1, providing the first-ever glimpse of the interior of one of these "dirty snowballs" and valuable insight into the formation of our solar system. NASA's brilliant, but risky, plan to send a tiny, copper-plated probe hurtling directly towards the city-sized comet at a speed of 23,000 mph was a smashing success. The resulting explosion of particles provided experts with new data about the composition of life-building materials that were present in the early solar system. Watch as state-of-the-art spacecraft animation and stunning location photography bring the mission to life, taking viewers behind the scenes of NASA's high-profile mission. Follow the entire journey of the doomed Deep Impact probe, from its initial design to the extraordinary challenge of building a spacecraft that's intended to be smashed to pieces. The ABC of Sex Education for Trainables is a 1975 short educational film hosted by Richard Dix. It was intended to inform people about the need to educate the mentally disabled about sex and sexuality. Reflecting the views held at the time, the film explains that "trainables" cannot learn in the same manner as those of normal intelligence, but must instead be trained through repetition. Roaming Wild is a 2014 documentary western film written and directed by Sylvia Johnson. The Legend of Ron Jeremy is a 2001 documentary, written and directed by Scott J. Gill, detailing the life of porn actor Ron Jeremy. The film alternates between clips of his performances in porn films and his prosaic home and family life as just another Jewish guy from Queens. His unfulfilled dream to become an actor in mainstream movies is a typical recurring theme in film. A Film Threat review says "The portrait drawn by this film is of a man loved and/or respected by nearly all that have known him." Tagline: The Story of America's Most Unlikely Sex Star. The Delhi Way is a 1964 documentary about Delhi produced, written, photographed and directed by James Ivory. It is narrated by Leo Genn. Ne me quitte pas is a 2013 documentary, comedy, drama film written by and directed by Sabine Lubbe Bakker and Niels van Koevorden. My Mother’s Voice is a 2012 documentary, short, biography, history and war film written by Kay Mouradian and directed by Mark Friedman. 400words is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ismail Basbeth and co-directed by Fajar Martha Santosa. Fortune Teller is a 2010 film directed by Tong Xu. Prodigal Sons is a 2008 American documentary produced and directed by Kimberly Reed. Nitrate Kisses is a 1992 experimental documentary film directed by Barbara Hammer. According to Hammer, it is an exploration of the repression and marginalization of LGBT people since the First World War. Saci Observers is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Issis Valenzuela. First is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Caroline Rowland. It’s particularly French and yet perfume is totally international. There’s almost nowhere on the planet where Dior, Chanel or Hermès is unknown and undesired. How do the famous brands create a successful perfume, what are the secrets of top-of-the-range perfumes? From France’s renowned Jean-Claude Ellena, Hermès’ exclusive in house perfumer, or "nose", to behind the scenes coverage of the harvesting by Chanel of raw materials in Grasse (South of France) and in Sicily. The documentary unmasks the stories behind the few drops of fragrance that embellish our lives. Death to the Camera is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Sayed Qasem Husseini. Mit Pyramiden is a 1990 film written and directed by Renate Sami. Road Dogs is a 2011 independent documentary film directed by Shane Aquino. Flyin' Cut Sleeves is a 1993 documentary film directed by Henry Chalfant and Rita Fecher. From the Tropics to the Snow is a 1964 Australian documentary film. It was one of the best known Australian films of the 1960s. It was produced under the auspices of the Commonwealth Film Unit, later reincorporated as Film Australia. It was co-directed by Jack Lee and Richard Mason, and featured a young Reg Livermore as one of the 'narrators'. One of the regular duties of the CFU at this time was the production of short films that were purpose-made for overseas distribution and were intended to promote Australia as an attractive destination for migrants and tourists. From the Tropics to the Snow marked a significant break with the traditional style of such features, and is noted for its subversive and satirical approach to its subject. Rather than using the stilted, authoritative single-voice narration that was typical of such 'promotion documentaries' at the time, Mason and Lee opted for a strikingly reflexive approach, using a lively multi-voice narration, which is introduced through the dramatic device of a production planning meeting between the film's Producer-in-Chief, the director and the screenwriter. The Burnt Theatre, or Les Artistes du Théâtre Brûlé, is a 2005 French-Cambodian docudrama directed and co-written by Rithy Panh. A blend of fact and fiction, based on the actual lives of the actors, the film depicts a troupe of actors and dancers struggling to practise their art in the burned-out shell of Cambodia's former national theatre, the Preah Suramarit National Theatre in Phnom Penh. The Burnt Theatre premiered at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival as an official selection in the out-of-competition main programme, and has been screened at several other film festivals. "From the producers of DOGTOWN & Z-BOYS and RIDING GIANTS comes the long-awaited documentary of Joel and Ethan Coen's THE BIG LEBOWSKI, the first cult film of the digital age. While vending at a tatoo convention in 2002, Will Russell and Scott Shuffitt began quoting lines from THE BIG LEBOWSKI and felt an instant bond with others who quoted back; in a matter of seconds the idea of a festival began. "The concept was simple: gather fans in a bowling alley and let them loose to bowl, drink White Russians, dress in costume and watch the movie together." The documentary chronicles the first festival and how this one day event became an international phenomenon attracting thousands and selling out venues from Louisville to London. Director Eddie Chung takes a five year look at the festival and its attendees, known as Achievers, a name which is self applied, chronicling the development of lifelong friendships and extraordinary behavior at the festival, which in itself has become a show. Told through a compelling combination of interviews, festival footage and clips from THE BIG LEBOWSKI, THE ACHIEVERS: THE STORY OF THE LEBOWSKI FANS is an engrossing and hilarious documentary film." Quoting the synopsis from the Official Site. The Sky Under the Heart is a 2012 Russian concert film of the rock band DDT directed by Victoria Kaskova. Scientology: The Fundamentals of Thought writteh by L. Ron Hubbard. Our Vinyl Weighs a Ton: This Is Stones Throw Records is a documentary, biographical and music film directed by Jeff Broadway and written by Robert G. Bralver. The Killer Instinct is a 1973 documentary directed by Dennis Azzarella. Adrenaline Cowboys: Eight Seconds to Glory is a 2004 documentary sports film written and directed by Steven Dieveney A Healing Art is a 2009 short documentary film from director Ellen Frick. It tells the story of two Ocularists, Christie Erickson and Todd Cranmore, who make custom prosthetic eyes. Their story is interwoven with the lives of their patients. A Healing Art was distributed by Ellen Frick and Seattle-based Fly on the Wall Films. Live at Donington is the DVD recording of the AC/DC show at Donington Park on 17 August 1991, and it was the band's third "Monsters of Rock" festival. The two hour show was performed before 72,500 spectators and included real cannons, the Hells Bell, an inflatable Rosie and an inflatable Angus. It was filmed in 35 mm Panavision and had 26 cameras that included one situated inside a helicopter. The DVD includes special features such as stereo and 5.1 surround sound, Iso-cam versions of certain songs for different band members, and audio commentary from Angus and Malcolm Young. Bonus features include audio commentary by Angus and Malcolm Young. Another option allows the viewer to focus on just one member for the length of a song. This option is available for Angus on "Thunderstruck", "Back in Black", and "Highway to Hell". The option is offered for Malcolm on "T.N.T.", Brian on "Whole Lotta Rosie" and Cliff on "Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap". One other feature is a full catalogue discography with audio interview of all international albums. What's love got to do with it? is a 2013 documentary, comedy, drama film written by Rohena Gera and directed by Rohena Gera. The Land of the Settlers is a five-part documentary series created by Chaim Yavin, who was described by the Arab News as "the Israeli version of America’s Walter Cronkite". With a handheld camera, Yavin traveled throughout his homeland of Israel and interviewed a range of Palestinians and Israelis in order to document the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Released in 2005, his series was too controversial to air on Israel's public TV station, Channel 1, despite the fact that he had helped to create the station and served as its lead anchorman. It ran instead on Channel 2, creating a stir for its sympathy towards Palestinians. Wholly Communion is a short documentary film made in 1965 by British filmmaker Peter Whitehead. It was filmed at the Royal Albert Hall, London, and documents a poetry event held on 11 June 1965 called the International Poetry Incarnation. It features poetry readings by Beat poets from the UK and U.S., including Allen Ginsberg, Michael Horovitz, Adrian Mitchell and Austrian poet Ernst Jandl. Flotsam & Jetsam is a 2013 short documentary biographical film written and directed by Jan Bednarz. Aus dem Protokoll einer Inszenierung: August Everding is a 1988 short documentary film directed by Werner Lütje. Arctic Monkeys At The Apollo is a 2008 music documentary film directed by Richard Ayoade. Dot Matrix is a 2013 short film directed by Richard Tuohy. Empires: Holy Warriors - Richard the Lionheart and Saladin is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Richard Bedser. Hitit Güneşi is a 1956 short film directed by Sabahattin Eyüboğlu and Mazhar İprişoğlu. Star Theatre is a 1901 short documentary film in which time-lapse photography is used to show the dismantling and demolition of New York City's Star Theatre over a period of about a month. Produced by the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company, it was produced and filmed by F.S. Armitage. It made the National Film Registry in 2002. Search for Paradise is a 1957 American documentary film shot in Cinerama. Earthecho Expedition: What Happens When We Build Cities? is a 2013 documentary film directed by Allie Toomey. March of the Penguins is a 2005 French nature documentary directed and co-written by Luc Jacquet, and co-produced by Bonne Pioche and the National Geographic Society. The documentary depicts the yearly journey of the emperor penguins of Antarctica. In autumn, all the penguins of breeding age leave the ocean, their normal habitat, to walk inland to their ancestral breeding grounds. There, the penguins participate in a courtship that, if successful, results in the hatching of a chick. For the chick to survive, both parents must make multiple arduous journeys between the ocean and the breeding grounds over the ensuing months. It took one year for the two isolated cinematographers Laurent Chalet and Jérôme Maison to shoot the documentary, which was shot around the French scientific base of Dumont d'Urville in Adélie Land. The documentary won the 2005 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, Awake, My Soul: The Story of the Sacred Harp is a 2006 documentary film directed by Matt and Erica Hinton, and narrated by Jim Lauderdale. It follows the folk tradition of Sacred Harp singing, a type of shape-note singing, kept alive by amateur singers in the rural American South. The Enduring Enigma of Susanna Moodie is a TV Program. Grace Around the World is a DVD/CD by Jeff Buckley compiling live, international performances from his album, Grace. It was released in two packages. The Standard Edition includes a live DVD and an accompanying CD counterpart. The Deluxe Edition includes a bonus DVD of the documentary, Amazing Grace: Jeff Buckley. Umbrellas is a 1994 film directed by Henry Corra, Grahame Weinbren and Albert Maysles. An exploration of the Black Label Bicycle Club and the wider tallbike subculture that has grown up around it. Comprised mainly of artists driven by anti-materialism and a belief that the impending apocalypse will render cars useless and bicycles in power, BLBC battles mainstream consumer culture and rival gangs for its vision of a better tomorrow. The film chronicles the trials of co-director Anthony Howard as he tries to become a member of the club. Wittstock, Wittstock is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Volker Koepp. Tough Love is a 2014 family documentary drama film directed by Stephanie Wang-Breal. A Letter to True is a 2004 film directed by Bruce Weber. Downeast is a 2012 documentary drama film directed by David Redmon and Ashley Sabin. Nearly Normal Nimbin: Part One is a documentary film directed by Jeni Kendall and Paul Tait. Manuel Chaves Nogales: El hombre que estaba allí is a short biographical documentary film written and directed by Daniel Suberviola and Luis Felipe Torrente. Watermarks is a 2004 documentary co-written and directed by Yaron Zilberman, in his directorial debut, that features women from the Viennese Hakoah swim team during the rise of fascism in 1930's Austria. The film describes the women's success as athletes leading up to the Anschluss of 1938 when the swimmers fled Austria to disparate locations in Palestine, England, and the United States. The documentary ends with some of the women from the swim team returning to Vienna sixty-five years later for a reunion at their old swimming pool. One of the women featured in the film, Judith Haspel, was a record-setting swimmer who was selected to represent Austria in the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. She refused to go and was stripped of her records and banned from competition. Her records were reinstated in 1995. A biographical documentary on the short-lived career of brilliant jazz musician Charlie Parker. Features his only television appearance and rare concert footage. Includes cameos by such greats as Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonius Monk, and Charles Mingus. Kagamijishi is a documentary film directed by Yasujirō Ozu. Organization of Dreams is a 2009 thriller film written and directed by Ken McMullen. Women Reply is a 1975 short documentary film written and directed by Agnès Varda. Popular Science is a 1949 film written by George Brandt. Shake Hands with the Devil: The Journey of Roméo Dallaire is a 2004 documentary film about the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. It was directed by Peter Raymont and inspired by the book Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda, by now-retired Canadian Lieutenant-General Roméo Dallaire. It was co-produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the Société Radio-Canada, White Pine Pictures, and DOC: The Documentary Channel. Flight of the Snow Geese is a nature documentary from the Survival series. Mein Bruder. We'll Meet Again is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Heise. Rules of the Game - Delimitation of Space is a 2005 documentary film directed by Vít Janeček. Titans of the Ice Age is a documentary film directed by David Clark. Statues Also Die is a 1953 French essay film directed by Chris Marker and Alain Resnais, about historical African art and the effects colonialism has had on how it is perceived. The film won the 1954 Prix Jean Vigo. Because of its criticism of colonialism, the second half of the film was censored in France until the 1960s. Cambodian Son is a 2014 documentary film about the journey of Kosal Khiev from prisoner in America to world-class poet in Cambodia. Volcanic Sprint is a 2007 documentary film produced by Steve Dorst and Dan Evans about a grueling mountain race in Africa and the mostly local competitors who compete against tough odds to overcome dire poverty. Tongue Twister Variations is a 2013 short documentary family film written & directed by Dan Boord and Luis Valdovino. Lichter aus dem Hintergrund is a 1998 documentary film written by Helga Reidemeister and Guntram Weber and directed by Helga Reidemeister. How to Draw a Bunny is a 2002 British documentary film following Ray Johnson. Bonjour Mr Lewis (folge 3 Und 4) is a 1982 film directed by Robert Benayoun. Red Hollywood is a historical documentary film directed by Thom Andersen and Noël Burch. Eskrimadors is a 2010 Philippine documentary film about the Filipino martial arts eskrima, written and directed by Kerwin Go, a Los Angeles trained cinematographer. "It was winter. My father called us urgently. My uncle’s naked body had been found on the floor. There was a crowd of people standing about. The police dispersed the curious onlookers. My relatives were there. They asked me to go inside and choose the clothes in which he would be buried. I opened his wardrobe: it was empty. When I asked them what he died of they told me: of sadness. That answer contradicted all my memories of his life. I think my parents made a mistake when they told me as a child: “You must not enter your uncle’s house.” From that moment on, everything he did attracted my attention. Rodolfo was different. He wore flashy clothes, listened to Elvis and danced at every birthday party. The strange thing was that the chair by his side was always empty. He was the only one of my father’s brothers who didn’t want to be a blacksmith like my grandfather. In Paraguay in the eighties, under Stroessner’s dictatorship, he wanted to be a dancer. In my film I search for traces of his life, and discover that he was included in one of the ‘108 lists’, and was arrested and tortured. Even today in Paraguay when someone calls you ‘108’ they mean ‘hooker, faggot.’ For more than one generation, the time the dictatorship lasted, men who came under suspicion of being homosexual or against the regime were the favourite target of collaborators. When he was released, my uncle hid in his corner until his wounds healed. Rodolfo's story reveals a part of the hidden and silenced history of my country." Quoting director Renate Costa from the program notes of the 2010 Berlin Film Festival site. Il Sangue Verde (The Green Blood) is a 2010 documentary film directed by Andrea Segre. One Nation Under God is a 2009 American documentary film. It is directed by Will Bakke, produced by Michael B Allen, and stars Michael B Allen, Lawson Hopkins, Austin Meek, and Will Bakke. This is Will Bakke's first film. Original Production began in March 2008 in Dallas, Texas and completed in March 2009. The film has had limited screening around the US since it premiered on April 11, 2009, and was released on DVD August 31, 2009. THE DIGITAL BOMB is a rollercoaster-ride through the land of digital creativity. Internet-celebrity Tron Guy presents the past, present and future of the digital galaxies of the Internet.In the social galaxy, Bernard Stiegler (Centre Pompidou) introduces us to the age of the amateur. We discover webstars like technical evangelist Justine Ezarik and Leslie Hall, the "diva-deal" on the Internet.In the commercial galaxy we experience why digital creativity holds the key to future of creativity. We meet the digital creatives that are actually taking advantage of the new medium that is open and free and full of discourse.The media galaxy is about the death of traditional media. The cartel of the major networks and big content owners have made things more expensive than they need to be. And the Internet is all about free distribution and egalitarian information sharing.In the modern web there is no distinction between our online life and our offline life. We experience the discrepancy of the Net being a great platform where everybody can be creative and its threat to privacy. Where is it all going to? We cannot rip the wires out of the ground. So we better start swimming or we sink like a stone, as Bob Dylan used to say. Altyapı is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Fatih Akın. Die Kunst des Trauerns is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Werner Boote. Imelda is a 2003 documentary film directed by Ramona S. Diaz about the life of Imelda Marcos, former First Lady of the Philippines. Beginning with her childhood, the film documents her marriage to future President of the Philippines Ferdinand Marcos, her rule under the dictatorship, her exile in Hawaii and her eventual return to the Philippines. Reviews were largely favorable and it won the Excellence in Cinematography Award Documentary award at Sundance Film Festival in 2004. Imelda outsold Spider-Man 2 in the Philippines, but only took US$200,992 at the US box office with an additional US$300,000 worldwide. Reviews from critics are favorable with a 94% fresh rating from Rotten Tomatoes and a 69/100 from Metacritic. Neil Young Journeys is a 2011 American concert documentary film produced and directed by Jonathan Demme, featuring Neil Young and produced for Sony Pictures Classics. It is, along with Neil Young: Heart of Gold and Neil Young Trunk Show, part of a Neil Young trilogy being created by Demme. Dance Grooves is a 2001 documentary film. Ash Runners is a 2010 documentary film directed by Bertrand Loyer. How Democracy Works Now: Twelve Stories is a 12-part documentary film series that examines the American political system through the lens of immigration reform from 2001–2007. The films were directed and produced by award-winning filmmaking team Shari Robertson and Michael Camerini. How Democracy Works Now premiered on HBO with the broadcast debut of The Senators' Bargain on March 24, 2010. A directors' cut of The Senators' Bargain was featured in the 2010 Human Rights Watch Film Festival at Lincoln Center, with the theatrical title Last Best Chance. The second story in the 12-part series, Mountains and Clouds, opened the festival in the same year. The films are touring the United States as part of the Human Rights Watch traveling film festival, and have been exhibited in special events at Columbia University, the Five College Consortium, Georgia College and State University, CUNY and other universities. Since its debut the series has become an important resource for advocates, policy-makers and educators. The Women of Brukman is a film directed and written by Carole Poliquin and Isaac Isitan. Streets Is Watching is a musical film in which Jay-Z compiles many of his unreleased music videos into a continuous film. The film takes place in Jay-Z's old neighborhood in Brooklyn, New York. The film uses music from Jay-Z's albums Reasonable Doubt and In My Lifetime, Vol. 1. The film is noteworthy because it contains Jay's first two videos, "In My Lifetime" and "I Can't Get Wit That", both released without a major label contract. No se olvida (1965-1969) is a 1993 short documentary film written by Salvador Plancarte and directed by Manuel Martínez. In Time's Shadow, The Hegis is a 1999 short documentary film directed by Rudy Buttignol and David Way. American Dreams is chock full of concrete, discrete elements that comprise an American iconography of the past three decades. The film encourages a kind of perverse nostalgia for 'the good old days': Nixon's 'you don't have Nixon to kick around any more'; Elvis' response to questions about his gyrating style and the rumour that once he shot his mother; Patty Hearst's 'Tania' statement; Senator Ribicoff's reference to 'Gestapo tactics in the streets of Chicago'. All of which is punctuated by the music of the period and set against a composite image of Hank Aaron memorabilia (arranged chronologically, 1954-76, the span of the champion home-run hitter's major league career), and the sordid diary jottings of the would-be assassin, Arthur Bremer. Everywhere you look in Southern Louisiana there's water - rivers, bayous, swamps, the Mississippi River, the Gulf of Mexico. And everyone in Cajun Country has a water story, or two or three or more. Its waterways support the biggest economies in Louisiana - a $63 billion a year oil and gas industry, a $200 million a year fishing business, tourism and recreational sports.They are also home to some insidious polluters: The same oil and gas industry, 200 petrochemical plants along a 100-mile-long stretch of the Mississippi known "Cancer Alley," the world's largest Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico and erosion that is costing the coastline twenty five square miles of wetlands a year. At the same time SoLa is home to one of America's most vital and unique cultures; if everyone who lives there has a water story they can also most likely play the fiddle, waltz, cook an etouffe and hunt and fish. In The Blood is a 2013 Short Family Sport Biography Documentary film directed by Brian Harrington. No One Said It Would Be Easy is a feature-length film about and featuring the band Cloud Cult that was released in stores on April 21, 2009. It's an in depth look at Cloud Cult, including live footage, behind the scenes footage and exclusive interviews. The film was created by John Burgess and Scott West and includes footage gathered over the past ten years. The DVD is packaged with a compostable card containing plantable seeds and information on how to download five free mp3 live Cloud Cult songs, including: "Son Is Watching", "Everybody Here is a Cloud", "Take Your Medicine", and "Transistor Radio". No One Said It Would Be Easy envelops viewers into the story and people behind Cloud Cult. Serving as both an introduction and introspection meant for newcomers to the music and fans of the band alike, the film explores the emotional and philosophical underpinnings on which Cloud Cult was founded and continues to operate, namely those of love and hope. The Church of Saint Coltrane is a short documentary film produced by Alan Klingenstein and directed by Jeff Swimmer. It was filmed in 1996. Its subject is the famous jazz saxophonist John Coltrane, who became deeply religious after overcoming his addictions to alcohol and heroin in 1957. Posthumously, he was made the patron saint of the St. John William Coltrane African Orthodox Church church in San Francisco, which holds jam sessions every Sunday that are "five-hour jam sessions interspersed with liturgy, sermons, and fellowship." The 26 minute documentary film received awards at seven film festivals. In 1998, it was shown on BRAVO, then sold to cable networks in Europe and Asia. For My Children is a documentary film directed by Michal Aviad The Arrivals (French: Les Arrivants) is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Claudine Bories and Patrice Chagnard. The 50 Year Argument is a documentary film by Martin Scorsese and co-directed by David Tedeschi about the history and influence of the New York Review of Books, which marked its 50th anniversary in 2013. The documentary premiered in June 2014 at the Sheffield Doc/Fest and was soon screened in Oslo and Jerusalem before airing on the British Arena television series in July. It was also screened at the Telluride Film Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival and was seen at the New York Film Festival, among others, in September. It first aired on HBO on September 29, 2014 and is expected to be screened at the Tokyo Film Festival in October. The film uses a combination of archival footage, quotes from the Review and contemporary interviews to give a view of the coverage of the journal over its half-century of publication, focusing on how its writers and editors have approached the larger issues of the day. Reviews of the film have been mostly warm. A Year and a Half in the Life of Metallica is a two-part documentary about the process of making the Metallica album, and the following tour. It was produced by Juliana Roberts and directed by Adam Dubin. A Year and a Half in the Life of Metallica was released as a double VHS pack. Both parts are available on a single DVD, but only in region 1. Pa Rubika Celu (On Rubik's Road) is a short documentary film directed by Laila Pakalnina. Sickfuckpeople is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Rechinsky Juri. Grandfather Cheno... and Other Stories is a 1994 short film and documentary written and directed by Juan Carlos Rulfo No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson is a 2010 documentary film produced by Kartemquin Films for ESPN's 30 for 30 series and directed by Steve James. No Crossover details the February 14, 1993 bowling alley riots of then high school basketball player and future NBA sportsman, Allen Iverson, and how the incident, trial and eventual conviction of Iverson divided the town of Hampton, Virginia. The documentary features camcorder footage from the February 14, 1993 riots at a bowling alley where Iverson and his young friends were accused of attacking adults with chairs. The incident allegedly stemmed from racial epithets said by the white adult high school students from neighboring Poquoson to Iverson and his friends. Iverson was specifically accused of striking a white woman. While vital to the prosecution, the videotape of the incident is unclear and it is difficult to make out any of the individuals involved. Despite punches thrown by both parties involved, only Iverson and his friends Melvin Stephens, Samuel Wynn and Michael Simmons, were charged in the incident. Flow: For Love of Water is a 2008 documentary film directed by Irena Salina produced by Steven Starr and co-produced by Gill Holland and Yvette Tomlinson . The film features interviews with water and community activists Maude Barlow, Peter Gleick, Ashok Gadgil, Rajendra Singh, and Vandana Shiva. The film won the Grand Jury Award at the Mumbai International Film Festival and the Grand Jury Award for Best Documentary at the United Nations Film Festival. The film deals with attempts at privatization of water infrastructure. Major businesses depicted in the film are Nestle, The Coca-Cola Company, Suez, and the International Monetary Fund. It competed in the Documentary Competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. FLOW launched a Right To Water campaign to add a 31st article to the Universal Declaration Of Human Rights, Article31.org. FLOW was released theatrically by Oscilloscope Labs in September, 2008, and then invited to screen for the UN General Assembly on the 60th anniversary of the signing of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, where the first 50,000 signatories to Article31 were presented to the President of the General Assembly, Father Miguel D'Escoto Brockmann. The Ball of the Actresses is a 2009 French film directed by Maïwenn. The title is a reference to a movie by Roman Polanski, The Fearless Vampire Killers. Dancing With Style is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Xander De Boer. The Boxing Girls of Kabul is a 2012 Canadian documentary film directed by Ariel Nasr which follows young women boxers and their coach, Sabir Sharifi, at Afghanistan’s female boxing academy, as these athletes face harassment and threats in their efforts to represent their country in international competition and attempt to qualify for the 2012 Olympic Games. Training takes place at Ghazi Stadium, Afghanistan’s national stadium, which had previously been the site of executions by the Taliban. The 52-minute documentary was produced by Annette Clarke for the National Film Board of Canada. Julia Kent composed music for the film. Here Be Dragons is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mark Cousins. "A situation report from the Gaza Strip in February 2009, just one month after the end of Israelʼs military offensive. Destruction everywhere. The bombs did not even spare the theme park. The ghost train is out of order. But hasnʼt Gaza itself become a ghost town? Yes and no. Amid ruins, grief and despair, there are people who refuse to give up. Calmly and unspectacularly, without analysis or agitation, this film shows what it means to rebuild oneʼs life and daily common existence in a destroyed region that is cut off by an ongoing blockade. It transmits diverse impressions and voices from Gaza: children who have lost their relatives and young people who do not feel like taking a compulsory vacation, clowns who despite the nearby rocket fire still manage to make children laugh, and the politically-committed Darg Team rappers whose music is polarizing. It not only shows places such as the border crossing into Egypt, the hospital, the UN Food Distribution Center, the smugglersʼ tunnels and the refugee camps, but also the beach and the zoo. Thatʼs where the skeleton of a whale is being reconstructed. A beautiful image, despite everything." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Berlin Film Festival site. Biquefarre is a 1983 French documentary film written and directed by Georges Rouquier. The film entered the competition at the 40th Venice International Film Festival, where it received the Special Jury Prize. Inorganica is a 2013 documentary/biographical short film directed by Valerie Mellon. South Africa Belongs to Us is a 1980 documentary film directed by Chris Austin. Prisoners of a White God is a documentary about the Akha people, produced and distributed by Twin Star in September 2008. The documentary is about a Czech researcher, Tomáš Ryška, who goes to the Thai and Laotian mountains in order to search and document the causes of wrongdoing and violence done to the indigenous peoples and their children by Christian missionaries. Starsuckers is a 2009 British documentary film aiming to expose the "shams and deceit involved in creating a pernicious celebrity culture". Directed by Chris Atkins, director of the 2007 documentary Taking Liberties, it shows the production team planting a variety of celebrity-related stories in the UK media, such as a claim that the singer Avril Lavigne had been seen asleep in a nightclub. A variety of tabloid newspapers accepted the stories without corroboration or evidence. It launched as part of the British Film Institute's 53rd Film Festival. Thirty minutes of footage from the film were shown to the Leveson Inquiry as part of the evidence presented by the film's director, Chris Atkins. Atman is a 1997 documentary film by Finnish director Pirjo Honkasalo about two Indian brothers on a pilgrimage. It is the final installment of Honkasalo's "Trilogy of the Sacred and the Satanic", preceded by Mysterion and Tanjuska and the 7 Devils. Atman received the Joris Ivens Award at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam. SuperFly is a 15 minute short documentary film. The Doors: Dance on Fire is a 1985 music documentary film directed by Ray Manzarek. Letters from the Desert (Eulogy to Slowness) is a 2010 documentary film written by Michela Occhipinti, Simona Coppini and Pau Mirabet. Music for the Movies: Toru Takemitsu is a 2007 musical documentary film directed by Charlotte Zwerin. Snake Man is a 2010 documentary film written by Eric Flandin and directed by Eric Flandin. Winning New Hampshire is a documentary film on the New Hampshire primary for President of the United States. Traditionally, the state of New Hampshire holds the first primary election of the presidential nominating process, and the New Hampshire primary is famous for its strong influence over the selection process of each party's Presidential nominee. Produced during the beginning of the 2004 Presidential election, the film highlights the importance of this one small New England state in determining the eventual nominees, as exemplified by John Kerry's unexpected political comeback against then frontrunner Howard Dean in 2004. His victory in New Hampshire secured his nomination and faced him against incumbent President George W. Bush. The film covers several topics, including the political youth movement, the media, third party candidates and the voter’s decision-making. Known for their fiercely independent political spirit, New Hampshire voters appear throughout the film and present themselves as political aficionados, attuned to every candidate’s position on every issue. A Paradise is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jayisha Patel. Super Duper Alice Cooper is a 2014 music documentary film written and directed by Sam Dunn, Reginald Harkema and Scot McFadyen. Gene Kelly: Anatomy of a Dancer is a documentary on the life and death of Gene Kelly. It was shown on American Masters on PBS in 2002. Xochimilco, historia de un paisaje is a 1989 documentary film directed by Guita Schyfter. In Their Own Words is a video by heavy metal band Black Sabbath. The video features interviews with past and present members of the band. Rosa's Letters - Telling a Story is a 2006 film directed by Pia Rnicke. Precious Knowledge is a 2011 political documentary centered on the banning of the Mexican American Studies Program in the Tucson Unified School District of Arizona. It was directed by Ari Palos and produced by Eren Isabel McGinnis; both are founders of Dos Vatos Productions. The film follows the lives of four students and several teachers in the Mexican American Studies program at Tucson High School. It follows the progression of local legislation put into place by the Arizona Department of Education Superintendent of Public Instruction, Tom Horne, in order to ban the Mexican American Studies program. The film was awarded the Premio Mesquite for Best Documentary at the Cine Festival at the Guadalupe Cultural Art Center in San Antonio, Texas. Out of Orbit: The Life and Times of Marshall McLuhan is a 1999 documentary film directed by Carl Bessai. Florence: Days of Destruction is a documentary about the 1966 Flood of the Arno River and its catastrophic effect on the city of Florence. Directed by Franco Zeffirelli, it is Zeffirelli's only documentary, and features the only known footage of the flood. The film is 50 minutes long, and was produced by RAI. Released a month after the disaster, it reputedly raised more than $20 million for the reconstruction efforts. The film was narrated in English and Italian by actor Richard Burton, who had been making The Taming of the Shrew with Zeffirelli at the time. Variety described the film as a "magnificent, frightening document". A Summer Hamlet is a 2013 documentary comedy film written by Matthew Hussey and directed by Helen Lawson. Ethan is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Tamir Moscovici. Video Nasties: Moral Panic, Censorship & Videotape is a 2010 video documentary directed by Jake West. Weather Diary #3 is a 1988 documentary/short film directed by George Kuchar. Apartment in Berlin is a documentary film directed by Alice Agneskirchner. Dr. Atl is a 1981 documentary short film directed by Jaime Kuri Aiza. Ala-Arriba! is a 1942 Portuguese romantic docufiction set in Póvoa de Varzim, a traditional Portuguese fishing town. Dealing with ethnographic matters, it may be considered as an ethnofiction. The film was directed by Leitão de Barros, and stars real fishermen as themselves in order to give a realistic view over traditions and social behaviours of the community. Focusing the cultural context, it continuously shifts from documentary to drama, by means of a fictional narrative. Contemporary to Robert Flaherty, Barros is with him one of the first filmmakers to explore docufiction and ethnofiction as forms of dramatic narrative. It premiered at São Luis Theatre in Lisbon. Campaign 2 is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Kazuhiro Soda. Luanda, the Music Factory original title: Luanda, a Fábrica da Música is a 2009 documentary film about Kuduro directed by Inês Gonçalves and Kiluanje Liberdade. Progression is a 2009 documentary adventure sports film directed by Bret Lowell, Josh Lowell and Cooper Roberts. The Little Richard Story is a 1980 documentary film directed by William Klein. Camp Out is a 2006 documentary film directed by Larry Grimaldi and Kirk Marcolina. This taboo-breaking film is based on Manijeh Hekmat's long fieldwork among women prisoners in Iran. She depicts the lives of Iran's lost generation in the two decades since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, using the claustrophobic life of women behind bars as a metaphor for the entire society. Her protagonist, Mitra, is in prison for killing her violent stepfather. On the eve of a prison riot she confronts Tahereh, the new warden, whose dogmatic views she challenges fearlessly. Over the course of the next 20 years, Tahereh's attitude toward her prisoners changes and softens, which reflects the country's shifting political stance. Eventually, Mitra, aged and exhausted, is finally released, but Tahereh left behind, is now more like a prisoner herself. Chilling...controversial. A compelling sociological portrait. -Sense of Cinema "Scathing...Controversial...Hekmat is extremely courageous." –Variety "Women's Prison" is an official selection of the prestigious, award-winning Global Lens Collection presented by the Global Film Initiative. In Farsi with English subtitles. Dai Nostri Inviati- La Rai Racconta La Mostra Del Cinema is a documentary film directed by Giuseppe Giannotti and Enrico Salvatori. The Flute and the Arrow is a 1957 Swedish drama film directed by Arne Sucksdorff. It was entered into the 1958 Cannes Film Festival. Girl or Boy, My Sex is Not My Gender is a 2011 documentary and biographical film directed and written by Valérie Mitteaux. Magic on Music Mountain: The Story of the Lambertville Music Circus is a 2013 biographical documentary music and history film directed by Gary P. Cohen and Michelle Massa. The Rime Of The Modern Mariner is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Mark Donne. "By 1983 John Zielinski was a well-known author and photographer. His work had appeared in Life Magazine, The New York Times, The Chicago Tribune and countless other publications. But in a devastating 1984 contract dispute, he lost $50,000 and his professional credibility. “This was the opening shot - turning me back into an investigative reporter.” Today Zielinski is the “most blacklisted author” in the history of Iowa. For 25 years he has dedicated his life to exposing human traffickers, pedophiles, drug dealers and Satanists. But as he says, “They don’t kill you unless you become effective.” Zielinski traces the rise and fall of a true American original who has sacrificed everything in his quest for justice. Filmmakers Chase Thompson and Ryan Walker tell the story without voice over, using 47 years of source material, new interviews and music by Mark Speckman." Quoting the description from the 2011 Slamdance Film Festival site. Bound by Flesh is a 2012 documentary written and directed by Leslie Zemeckis. Al Corazón is a 1996 Argentine documentary musical film dancing directed and written by Mario Sábato. The film starred Libertad Lamarque and Alberto Castillo. The film explores the history of tango dancing in Argentina, and was filmed in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Dylan Moran Live: What It Is is a 2009 documentary, comedy film written by Dylan Moran and directed by Randall Churchill. Iskuracha is a 1977 short documentary film written by Birgitta Bjorstrom and directed by Lisskulla Moltke-Hoff. Feu: Crazy Horse Paris is a musical documentary film directed by Bruno Hullin. Banished is a documentary film about four U.S. cities, which were part of many communities that violently forced African American families to flee in post-reconstruction America. In incidents which took place in Texas, Missouri, Georgia and Indiana between 1886 and 1923. Date America is a 2013 documentary adventure comedy film written and directed by Bob Murray and Amy Neuenschwander. A documentary on the Austrian-Jewish architectural engineer who became a Nazi hunter after surviving the Holocaust. Broken Pieces is a 1993 documentary film directed by Joerg Taszman. Peyote Queen is 1965 short documentary film directed by Storm de Hirsch. Artifact is a 2012 American documentary film. It was directed by Jared Leto under the pseudonym of Bartholomew Cubbins, and produced by Leto and Emma Ludbrook. Artifact chronicles the modern music business as it charts the legal dispute between American rock band Thirty Seconds to Mars and record label EMI, which filed a $30 million breach of contract lawsuit against them in 2008, after the band tried to exit its contract over a royalties dispute. Thirty Seconds to Mars is shown working with producer Flood to create the 2009 album This Is War, meeting with lawyers between recording sessions. Artifact had its world premiere at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival where it received the People's Choice Award for Best Documentary. Critics praised the examination of the state of the modern music industry and its focus on the relationship between artists and record companies. The film received a limited theatrical release beginning November 23, 2013, before being released digitally on December 3, 2013. "Three men talk about their experiences with adult circumcision in this candid and funny story about a small transformation with big consequences." Quoting the description from the 2010 Uppsala International Short Film Festival site. First To Fall is a 2013 documentary, action, adventure, drama, war film written by Rachel Beth Anderson and Timothy Grucza and directed by Rachel Beth Anderson. Captive Radio is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Lauren Rosenfeld Monsieur Le President is a documentary adventure mystery biographical film directed by Victoria Campbell. Mapa is a 2012 documentary and biography film written and directed by León Siminiani. A Place at the Table is a 2012 documentary film directed by Kristi Jacobson and Lori Silverbush, with appearances by Jeff Bridges, Raj Patel, and chef Tom Colicchio. The film, concerning hunger in the United States, was released theatrically in the United States on March 1, 2013. Sydney on the River Wupper is a 1982 film directed by Bettina Woernle and Meryl Tankard and written by Bettina Woernle. Thorns and Silk is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Paulina Tervo. Zielen Van Napels is a documentary film by director Vincent Monnikendam that was first released in the United States in a special preview at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. in 2005. The film covers the many aspects of the diverse and socially terraced Neapolitan society and is filmed primarily in local dialects and Italian. English subtitles were available during the opening preview at the NGA. This documentary has frequented a number of the more renowned film festivals, including the International Film Festival Rotterdam and the 2004 Toronto Film Festival. The Horse Boy is the title of an autobiographical book and a documentary feature film that follow the quest of Rupert Isaacson and his wife to find healing for their autistic son Rowan. After discovering that Rowan's condition appears to be improved by contact with horses and other animals, the family leave their home in Texas on an arduous journey to seek help from the traditional shamans in Mongolia. The book and film follow the family as they travel via the UK by plane, van and on horseback in an attempt to treat the boy's condition with shamanic healing. Sputnik Mania is a 2007 documentary film written by David Hoffman and Paul Dickson and directed by David Hoffman. Eno is a 1973 documentary short film. Its subject is musician Brian Eno, shortly after his departure from Roxy Music. Negative Space is a 2000 short documentary film written by Manny Farber and Christopher Petit and directed by Christopher Petit. TOPS & bottoms is a 1999 historical documentary film written by Cristine Richey and John Kramer and directed by Cristine Richey. A Local is a 2001 film directed by Kornelijus Matuzevicius and Diana Matuzeviciene. In the Year of Hip Hop is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Boris Petkovic. Much as Buena Vista Social Club revealed a rich and unexplored world of music and culture, Cool and Crazy introduces us to a group of men who find purpose, companionship and even fame, as members of a male choir in Berlevag, Norway. Tschadari Buz Kaschi is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Elke Jonigkeit. Vienna Waits For You is a 2012 short comedy horror film written by Sarah Wassermair and directed by Dominik Hartl. Fall of Berlin – 1945, The Fall of Berlin, or just Berlin is a Soviet propaganda documentary film about the Battle of Berlin, titled in Russian Битва за Берлин 1945 г., literally The Battle for Berlin – 1945. The film was directed by Yuli Raizman and Yelizaveta Svilova. The film begins with an animated map of Eastern Europe with Soviet soldier double exposed on the bottom. The narrator lists the names of the rivers that the Red Army crosses as they march west: Volga, Don, Desna, Dnieper, Bug, Dvina, Neman, Vistula, and finally, Oder. The Soviet arrival at the Oder river is shown, along with the broken bridges across it. The undeterred men of the Red Army are shown as they cross the river while under German fire. The use of missile artillery by the Soviet forces is showcased. After the Oder is crossed, the assault on Berlin itself begins. Footage of the actual battle is shown, as the Red Army fights German troops, street by street and building by building. This is interspersed with shots of Nazi propaganda films showing parades in the same areas, providing a sense of irony. Mounam Sowmanasyam is a 1997 documentary film directed by Ravindran. Memory Books is a 2007 film directed by Christa Graf. Ibo, o sangue do silêncio is a Mozambican 1981 short documentary film. The Devil Operation is a 2010 documentary film directed by Stephanie Boyd. Her Cinema Love is a 2011 short documentary film directed by David-Jan Bronsgeest and Nejra Hulusic. Jayshree Janu Kharpade was born to an indigenous family (aka tribals) that have been disenfranchised at the very bottom of India’s poverty ladder. With a strong courage to learn and conviction to give back to others, Jayshree illuminates the tenacious efforts of the tribal union for the equal rights to education. Hardcore El Picante is a 2013 short, documentary, western and musical film written and directed by Dariel Hernandez. The Way Bobby Sees It is a documentary film directed by Wendy Todd and Jason Watkins. In Washington D.C., one church becomes the symbol of a local community dedicated to one another. The Fight for the Sky is a short propaganda film commissioned by the US government to highlight the victories of the Allied air forces over Europe prior to the Normandy invasion. Opening with shots of aerial combat over Europe the film turns to footage of the airmen acting casually in their base in East Anglia, reading newspapers, playing ping pong, and listening to the radio. However, they are soon called for a debriefing about their next mission, a strike deep into Germany's industrial region, the Ruhr. They ready their planes and arrive over their targets like clock work, shooting down some German Luftwaffe planes in the process. None of the missions have failed due to enemy resistance alone, the narrator informs the audience, though some haven't succeeded because of weather conditions. Captured German footage is shown to prove that the enemy was just as determined to stop the attacks as the Allies were to carry them out. In February 1944 a new bombing initiative is begun. Instead of waiting to be attacked by the Germans the Americans will seek them out, targeting German airfields. Ceux de la colline is a 2009 Burkinabé documentary film. This documentary is about the "World's Largest Trivia Contest" held in Stevens Point, Wisconsin. Eight questions per hour are asked over 90FM, the student radio station at the University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point, for 54 hours straight. This film highlights several trivia teams and how very differently they play the contest from the more serious teams to the teams who just get together to party. For most teams, Trivia is like an annual reunion where they can get together with family and friends and have fun doing something they all love. Something Becomes Evident is a 1982 film directed by Harun Farocki. A Pestering Journey is a documentary film directed by K.R. Manoj. A voyage through two similar pesticide tragedies in post independent India, Pestering Journey interrogates the legitimate forms and technologies of killing available in a culture. In an atypical move it challenges and changes the idioms of pesticide and genocide. It is a journey which takes a pestering turn and blurs the boundaries of nature and culture, of self and other, of life and death and many other comfortable binaries. Room to Breathe is a 2012 documentary drama film directed by Russell Long. The Dogmatic is a 2012 short film directed by Lance Oppenheim. We Are Dad is a 2005 documentary film chronicling the story of two male pediatric AIDS nurses who have taken in a number of HIV positive infants as their foster parents. The film outlines the couple's struggle to provide a stable and loving home to their children. When one child, who tested HIV-positive at birth, is discovered to be HIV negative, the state of Florida determined that the child should be adopted, but refused to allow his foster parents, a gay couple, to adopt him. The fight over this decision thrust this family into the center of the debate over gay adoption. Everything Is Relative is a 2008 documentary film written by Mogens Rukov and directed by Mikala Krogh. The Passionate Industry is a 1971 historical documentary film written and directed by Joan Long. Chop Suey is a 2001 documentary biographical film written by Maribeth Edmonds and Bruce Weber and directed by Bruce Weber. The Spirit of America is a 1963 American short documentary film produced by Algernon G. Walker. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. 50 Greatest Harry Potter Moments is a 2011 documentary film directed by Chris Hill. The Great Global Warming Swindle is a polemical documentary film that suggests that the scientific opinion on climate change is influenced by funding and political factors, and questions whether scientific consensus on anthropogenic global warming exists. The program was formally criticised by Ofcom, the UK broadcasting regulatory agency, which upheld complaints of misrepresentation made by David King. The film, made by British television producer Martin Durkin, presents scientists, economists, politicians, writers, and others who dispute the scientific consensus regarding anthropogenic global warming. The programme's publicity materials assert that man-made global warming is "a lie" and "the biggest scam of modern times." Its original working title was "Apocalypse my arse", but the title The Great Global Warming Swindle was later adopted as an allusion to the 1980 mockumentary The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle about British punk band the Sex Pistols. The UK's Channel 4 premiered the documentary on 8 March 2007. The channel described the film as "a polemic that drew together the well-documented views of a number of respected scientists to reach the same conclusions. Alechinsky d'apres nature is a 1970 French documentary short film directed by Luc de Heusch. Märkische Fahrt is a 1942 film directed by Kurt Rupli. Speed Racer: Wonderful World of Racing - The Amazing Racer Family is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Josh Oreck. Vasya is a 2002 American documentary film written, directed and produced by Andrei Zagdansky. The film tells the story of Russian underground artist Vasily Sitnikov, who was declared insane in early 1940s by the Soviet authorities. A man without a passport, in and out of mental asylums, he was the key and often "larger than life" figure of the nonconformist art movement in the Soviet Union. In 1975 fearing prosecution and another involuntary commitment to a mental asylum he immigrated to Austria and then to the United States. He died virtually unknown in 1987 in NYC. A number of prominent artists appear in the film, such as Dmitri Plavinsky Vladimir Titov, Kevin Clarke, poet and publisher Konstantyn K. Kuzminsky and art collector Norton Dodge, who has amassed one of the largest collections of Soviet-era art outside the Soviet Union. The Bowler and the Bunnet was a Scottish television documentary programme on STV, directed and presented by Sean Connery. It is the only film ever directed by Connery. The documentary, filmed in black and white, was a critical examination of the new working practices introduced by Sir Iain Stewart at the Fairfield shipyard in Glasgow. It was released onto DVD by the British Film Institute as part of their Tales from the Shipyard boxed-set in February 2011. The title comes from the tradition where bowler hats were worn by managers within the shipyards while bunnets were worn by the workers. The Saimaa Gesture is a 1981 music documentary film directed by Aki Kaurismäki and Mika Kaurismäki. Café Ta'amon is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Michael Teutsch. Below the Row is a 2013 documentary biography film directed by Glen Travis. Janis is a 1974 Canadian documentary film about the rock singer Janis Joplin. The film was directed by Howard Alk with a lot of assistance from Albert Grossman, Janis' manager. It was available on videocassette in the United States in the 1980s and 1990s, but DVD versions have been released only in France, Belgium and the Netherlands. In late 2011, it was added to Hulu's movie collection for online viewing. Part of the film soundtrack is included on the 1975 album Janis. The film consists entirely of archival footage of Joplin. It includes rehearsals, her June 25, 1970 appearance on The Dick Cavett Show, footage from her Woodstock performance in 1969, and another television segment videotaped in black & white in April 1967 before she became famous. A lot of screen time is devoted to Janis' 1969 European tour, including an interview with Janis during her stay in Stockholm and the ecstatic reaction of a clean-cut female fan in Frankfurt when she sees Joplin through the window of her tour bus before the concert starts. Berlin: Live At St. Ann's Warehouse is a concert film and live album by Lou Reed released in 2008. The concert film was directed by Julian Schnabel, live at St. Ann's Warehouse in Brooklyn during five nights in December 2006. Background shots of the characters Jim and Caroline were done by Lola Schnabel. The Berlin tour was the first time Lou Reed had played the full album live in over 30 years, after the original album was a critical and commercial flop. Individual songs had been played, but not the whole thing. The concert film and album both feature three additional songs, "Candy Says", "Rock Minuet" and "Sweet Jane", not from the original Berlin. The Village of Peace is a 2014 historical biographical documentary film directed by Niko Philipides and Ben Schuder. An American Thanksgiving is a film directed by David Mckenzie. Hava Nagila (The Movie) is a 2012 documentary, comedy, historical and musical film written by Sophie Sartain and directed by Roberta Grossman. The Last Trapper is a film from 2004. Paraíso al Camino is a 2008 short documentary film written by Yeniffer Rojas and Evelyn Vera and directed by Yeniffer Rojas. Hard Knocks: The Chris Benoit Story is a 2004 documentary / biographical / sports film directed by Kevin Dunn. Ten Minutes Before the Flight of Icarus is a 1991 documentary film written and directed by Arūnas Matelis. My Stolen Revolution is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Nahid Persson. Savana violenta, also known as This Violent World and Mondo Violence, is a Mondo film directed by Antonio Climati and Mario Morra. The film documents various scenes of graphic behavior in an attempted exposé of worldly violence. It is narrated by Giuseppe Rinaldi. The film is the second collaborative feature between Antonio Climati and Mario Morra in their series of Mondo films called the Savage Trilogy, following Ultime grida dalla savana. The Double Life of Ernesto Gomez Gomez is a TV episode/documentary film directed by Gary Weimberg and Catherine Ryan. Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory is a 2014 American documentary film directed and produced by Michael Rossato-Bennett. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. It won the Audience Award: U.S. Documentary at the festival. The film deals with the subject of people suffering from Alzheimer's disease and how music therapy can help and ease their suffering. After its premiere at Sundance Film Festival, BOND/360 acquired distribution rights of the film. The film was released on July 18, 2014 in United Sates. Der VW Komplex is a 1989 film directed by Hartmut Bitomsky. "Set against a vivid backdrop of American rural landscapes, Alex Mar's meditative documentary artfully weaves together the stories of three young Americans exploring alternative religion: a pagan priestess in California mining country, a Spiritualist in upstate New York, and a Native American father and sundancer in South Dakota, all yearning for fulfilling spirituality in disparate but often strikingly similar ways." Quoting the description from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Img is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Malik Roberts. Crayons and Paper is a documentary short, featuring Dr. Jerry Ehrlich, a pediatrician who has worked with Doctors Without Borders. To document the effect of war on children, Dr. Ehrlich has the children draw pictures of their lives. The film features drawings made by children in Sri Lanka and Darfur. The film is a follow-up to the documentary Facing Sudan. It premiered at The Dam Short Film Festival in February 2009 and is currently being broadcast on DOC: The Documentary Channel. The film was produced, directed and edited by Bruce David Janu. The soundtrack was composed by Tom Flannery and Lorne Clarke. Rat Women is a 1997 short documentary film written and directed by Minkie Spiro. Circunstancias Especiales is a 2006 film directed by Marianne Teleki. "In 2008 Sebastian Junger (The Perfect Storm) and Tim Hetherington dug in with the men of Second Platoon for a year. Afghanistan's Korengal Valley, a stronghold of al Qaeda and the Taliban, has proven to be one of the U.S. Army's deadliest challenges. It is here that the platoon lost their comrade, PFC Juan Restrepo, and erected an outpost in his honor. Up close and personal, Junger and Hetherington gain extraordinary insight into the surreal combination of backbreaking labor and deadly firefights that are a way of life at Outpost Restrepo. Ever wonder what it's really like to be in the trenches of war? Look no further. Restrepo may be one of the most experiential and visceral war films you'll ever see. With unprecedented access, the filmmakers reveal the humor and camaraderie of men who come under daily fire, never knowing which of them won't make it home." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. In 2010, several epic earthquakes delivered one of the worst annual death tolls ever recorded. The deadliest strike, in Haiti, killed more than 200,000 people and reduced homes, hospitals, schools, and the presidential palace to rubble. In exclusive coverage, a NOVA camera crew follows a team of U.S. geologists as they enter Haiti in the immediate aftermath of the tragedy. The team hunts for crucial evidence that will help them determine exactly what happened deep underground and what the risks are of a new killer quake. Barely a month after the Haiti quake, Chile was struck by a quake 100 times more powerful, unleashing a tsunami that put the entire Pacific coast on high alert. In a coastal town devastated by the rushing wave, NOVA follows a team of geologists as they battle aftershocks to measure the displacement caused by the earthquake. Could their work, and the work of geologists at earthquake hot spots around the U.S., one day lead to a breakthrough in predicting quakes before they happen? NOVA investigates compelling new leads in this profound scientific conundrum. The Wilderness Downtown is an interactive multimedia video coded in HTML5 and was published to show off the capabilities of the new Google Chrome browser. Directed by music video director Chris Milk and involving the work of a number of Google employees led by Aaron Koblin as well as digital production company B-Reel, it features the We Used to Wait song from the Arcade Fire album The Suburbs. It was one of three Grand Prix winners at the 2011 Cannes advertising awards in the Cyber category. Long Shot: The Kevin Laue Story is a 2013 documentary film directed by Franklin Martin with Dutchmen Films and Cinipix. A teenager, Kevin Laue, pursues his dream to become the first one-armed man to play NCAA Division I basketball. Martin documents the daily struggles of a young man coming to terms with his need for his deceased father’s approval while battling obstacles to fulfill his dream. Fame High is a 2012 documentary film directed by Scott Hamilton Kennedy. The Boxing Kangaroo is an 1896 British short black-and-white silent documentary film, produced and directed by Birt Acres for exhibition on Robert W. Paul's peep show Kinetoscopes, featuring a young boy boxing with a kangaroo. The film was considered lost until footage from an 1896 Fairground Programme, originally shown in a portable booth at Hull Fair by Midlands photographer George Williams, donated to the National Fairground Archive was identified as being from this film. It was one of at least four boxing-themed films Acres produced in 1896, the others being Boxing Match; or, Glove Contest, A Boxing Match in Two Rounds by Sgt. Instructor F.Barrett and Sgt. Pope and A Prize Fight by Jem Mace and Burke. The following year, German filmmaker Max Skladanowsky made a similar film depicting a man boxing with a kangaroo, entitled Das boxende Känguruh. When John Forbes Nash Jr., first arrived at Princeton as a graduate student in 1949 he was amongst some of the most brilliant minds the world had ever seen. The 11th Day: Crete 1941 is a 2005 documentary film featuring eyewitness accounts from survivors of the Battle for Crete during World War II. The film was created by producer-director Christos Epperson and writer-producer Michael Epperson, and funded by Alex Spanos. Among the eyewitnesses are British S.O.E. operative and famous writer Patrick Leigh Fermor, and Cretan Resistance hero George Tzitzika. The non-veterans giving historical commentary include Chase Brandon of the CIA and Dr Andre Gerolymatos of Simon Fraser University. Sobral – O Homem que Não Tinha Preço is a 2013 Brazilian documentary film directed by Paula Fiuza. The film is a biography of the jurist Sobral Pinto, who faced the dictatorship in Brazil and became one of the greatest defenders of human rights in the country's history. Stephen Hawking and the Theory of Everything is a 2007 documentary film directed by Gary Johnstone. Tale Of The Tongs is a 2014 Documentary Adventure film written and directed by Judith Dwan Hallet. Hexing a Hurricane is a 2006 documentary film about the effect of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans. It has been billed as the "First Katrina documentary" released by a New Orleanian. The film is directed by Jeremy Campbell and distributed by the National Film Network. The film's score was orchestrated by New Orleans artist Eric Laws. The film begins back when life was "normal" in New Orleans- six weeks before Hurricane Katrina and the associated levee failures devastated the city. Hexing a Hurricane opens with a 9th Ward Voodoo Ceremony at the start of Hurricane Season asking spirits for protection from dangerous storms. After the ominous hurricane strikes a few weeks following the VooDoo service, the film follows locals affected. Someone Else’s Shinjuku East is a 2003 documentary film directed by Yang Li-chou and Michelle Chu. Dream of Light is a 1992 Spanish film directed by Victor Erice. Its Spanish title is El sol del membrillo, which translates directly to the English "The Sun of the Quince"; it was released in Hong Kong as The Sun of the Quince Tree, and internationally as Quince Tree of the Sun and The Quince Tree Sun. The film centers on Spanish painter Antonio López García and his attempt to paint the eponymous quince tree. López struggles to capture a perfect, fleeting moment of beauty on canvas, and the film meticulously chronicles his work. L'anime is a 2012 animated documentary film directed by Diego Urrutia. Tim Richmond: To the Limit is a documentary film directed by Rory Karpf that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. Bianchi pascoli is a 1948 short documentary film written and directed by Luciano Emmer and Enrico Gras. Senator Obama Goes to Africa is a 2007 documentary directed by Bob Hercules. A Box With A View examines the influence of cable television on the culture and traditions of rice villages in the Kerala Backwaters, located near the southern tip of India. There are 25 television channels, including many popular Western programs, which are viewed in the simple homes of rice farmers who live in an area accessible only by water transportation. The Kerala Backwaters has existed for a millennium, yet its culture is threatened, because the younger generations are more interested in monetary pursuits than in preserving their ancestors' traditions through rice farming; television is the catalyst for the change. A Box With A View presents the issue through the voices of the people living in the community. La sombra del iceberg is a 2007 documentary film, that claims the photograph The Falling Soldier by Robert Capa was staged, and that Federico Borrell García was not the individual in the picture. The documentary makes several claims: A 1937 Spanish anarchist publication claimed that Federico Borrell died behind a tree. A specialist in forensic science claimed after analyzing pictures of Borrell and pictures of the militiaman that the militiaman depicted is not Federico Borrell García. In 1975 a journalist named Gallaher said that Capa told him that the picture was staged. An astronomical study concludes that the picture was taken at 9:00 a.m., not at 17:00. No battle happened at 9:00. The Fighters is a 1974 biography documentary sport film directed by Rick Baxter and William Greaves. Jack Smith and the Destruction of Atlantis is a documentary film that premiered in the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival. It is a collection of interviews and clips by and about the revolutionary artist Jack Smith. It was directed by Mary Jordan and produced by Tongue Press Productions. The film was given a limited release in New York movie theaters beginning on April 11, 2007. Jordan is a Canadian-born filmmaker known for her documentary shorts resulting from extended visits to Africa and Southeast Asia. David Ebony, whose review of the film appeared in Art in America, had met Smith in the late 70s soon after moving to New York and at that time "attempted to assist him with a number of 'slide-show performances.'" Ebony's review, following the documentary, covers some of the difficult exhibition history of Flaming Creatures, Smith's best known film, and difficult collaborations with Jonas Mekas and Andy Warhol and others. John Betjeman Goes By Train is a 1962 short documentary film made by British Transport Films and BBC East Anglia. The 10 minute long film features future poet laureate John Betjeman as he takes a memorable journey by train from King's Lynn railway station to Hunstanton railway station in Norfolk, pointing out various sights and stopping off at Wolferton station on the Sandringham Estate and Snettisham station, where he extolls the virtues of rural branchline stations. An early example of a Betjeman travelogue film, a similar idea was later used for his 1973 documentary Metro-land. Wetback: The Undocumented Documentary is an 2005 Canadian documentary film. The film was funded by the Canada Council for the Arts and written and directed by Arturo Perez Torres. It was released by the independent studio Open City Works and distributed by the Ironweed film club. The filmmakers follow Nayo and Milton, migrants from Chinandega, Nicaragua as they cross through Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, and the United States in their attempt to reach Canada. Along the way, other migrants are interviewed as they are detained by Mexican authorities. Catholic human rights workers in Chiapas also offer their perspectives, particularly on the abuse of migrants by gangs such as the Mara Salvatrucha. It also features interviews with United States Border Patrol agents and Arizona Minuteman Project organizer Chris Simcox. Route One/USA is a 1989 film written and directed by Robert Kramer. The Two Faces of War is a documentary shot in Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde and Portugal that includes a series of interviews and testimonies of people who lived through the period of the anti-colonial war and liberation in Guinea-Bissau. This documentary, directed by Diana Andringa and Flora Gomes, sets the tone for a debate around the themes of reconciliation and historical memory in the post-conflict period of the Portuguese colonial war. The Starfish Throwers is a documentary drama film directed by Jesse Roesler. Oleg Kulik: Challenge And Provocation is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Yevgeni Mitta. Mr. Hayashi is a 1961 short documentary film directed by Bruce Baillie. Phoebe's Birthday Cheeseburger is a 2013 Short documentary comedy film written and directed by Will Lennon. The Day We Danced On The Moon is a 2011 documentary short drama film directed by Tristan Daws. Park Avenue: Money, Power and the American Dream is a 2012 Alex Gibney's film based on Michael Gross's book "740 Park: The Story of the World’s Richest Apartment Building" "In recent years, growing pressures from the outside world have posed unprecedented challenges for Tibetan nomads. Rigid government policies, rangeland degradation, and the allure of modern life have prompted many nomadic families to leave the pastures for permanent settlement in towns and cities. According to nomads, the world has entered duegnan -- dark times. Summer Pasture a.k.a. A Nomad's Life is a feature-length documentary that chronicles one summer with a young family amidst this period of great uncertainty. Locho, his wife Yama, and their infant daughter, nicknamed Jiatomah ("pale chubby girl"), spend the summer months in eastern Tibet's Zachukha grasslands, an area known as Wu-Zui or "5-Most," the highest, coldest, poorest, largest, and most remote county in Sichuan Province, China. The story of a family at a crossroads, Summer Pasture takes place at a critical time in Locho and Yama's lives, as they question their future as nomads. With their pastoral traditions confronting rapid modernization, Locho and Yama must reconcile the challenges that threaten to drastically reshape their existence." Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Independent Sprit Awards site. Continental is a film directed by Malcolm Ingram, which premiered at SXSW festival on March 10, 2013. The film is a documentary about the history of the Continental Baths, a historic gay bathhouse in New York City. It is also, notably, Ingram's first film since 1999's Tail Lights Fade not to have Kevin Smith on board as a co-producer. The film was funded with help from Kickstarter Prominent figures appearing in the film, either in archival footage or in new interviews, include Jaye P. Morgan, Holly Woodlawn, Michael Musto, Frankie Knuckles, Bette Midler and Sarah Dash. Paula Paulinka is a 1995 documentary film directed by Christine Fischer-Defoy, Daniele Schmidt and Caroline Goldie. War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State is a 66-minute documentary by Robert Greenwald and Brave New Foundation, released in 2013. Umoja: The Village Where Men Are Forbidden is a French documentary film about the Kenyan village Umoja. For nearly 30 years, hundreds of women living in Umoja say they were raped by British soldiers in northern Kenya. Accused of having brought shame on their community, they are beaten by their husbands and divorce. A handful of them created Umoja, the village prohibits men who became the refuge of Samburu women. Men jealous regularly attack the village and cause problems to its founder Rebecca Lolosoli. Target for Tonight is a 1941 British documentary film billed as filmed and acted by the Royal Air Force, all while under fire. It was directed by Harry Watt. The film is about the crew of a Wellington aircraft. The film went on to win an honorary Academy Award in 1942 and 'Best Documentary' by the National Board of Review in 1941. Bulgaria: Data Base is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Juliy Stoyanov. Wonderboy is a 2001 documentary film directed by Andrew Wiseman. What Did You Expect?, which made its film festival debut in June, 2012, is a live concert documentary capturing the Archers of Loaf reunion tour, directed by Gorman Bechard. Under a Jarvis Moon is a 2010 documentary film about the young men, mostly of Hawaiian origin, sent in the 1930s and 1940s to colonize the Line Island of Jarvis and the Phoenix Islands of Howland and Baker. The film is related to a 2002 Bishop Museum exhibition "Hui Panala'au: Hawaiian Colonists, American Citizens." "A black cloak of forgetting, suppressing and covering has descended on the events that took place in Bangkok in spring 2010. Black as the night of complete darkness in which the film opens. Two men are in a fishing boat talking. One feels more than one sees that the seawater around them is warm and smooth, teeming with brightly-colored fish. By night, the rubber plantation also comes across as enticing and full of secrets, until lurid reminders of the bloody massacre flash up. This film arose from of a state of shock – about the news, about the subsequent repression in the authoritarian kingdom but also about the debilitating passivity that followed the pro-democracy Red Shirt uprising. It is a radical personal assessment in 17 episodes. An angry protest in the form of a diary, where sexual resistance and erotic fantasies are juxtaposed with thoughtful rummaging through the director’s family album, creating a confusing pamphlet. As a young boy in the 1970s, Thunska was already forced to flee Bangkok for the south with his mother. The film poses questions without knowing the answers, providing an unusual insight into an extremely traumatized society." Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Primary is a 1960 Direct Cinema documentary film about the 1960 Wisconsin Primary election between John F. Kennedy and Hubert Humphrey for the United States Democratic Party nomination for President of the United States. Produced by Robert Drew, shot by Richard Leacock and Albert Maysles, and edited by D. A. Pennebaker, the film was a breakthrough in documentary film style. Most importantly, through the use of mobile cameras and lighter sound equipment, the filmmakers were able to follow the candidates as they wound their way through cheering crowds, cram with them into crowded hotel rooms, and to hover around their faces as they awaited polling results. This resulted in a greater intimacy than was possible with the older, more classical techniques of documentary filmmaking; and it established what has since become the standard style of video reporting. In 1990, this film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". The film's importance in the evolution of documentary filmmaking was explored in the film Cinéma Vérité: Defining the Moment. Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview is a 2012 documentary film written by Robert X. Cringely and directed by Paul Sen. One Way Boogie Woogie / 27 Years Later is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by James Benning. The Radio Sky is a 1966 short documentary film directed by Michael Crosfield. X Games 3D: The Movie is an action sports/documentary 3-D film released on August 21, 2009 for one week only. Produced by ESPN Films and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, the film captures the drama and spectacle that play out every annually at the X Games, highlighting the behind-the-scenes stories of the featured athletes and the sacrifices they make in pursuit of glory and the advancement of their sports on the industry’s biggest stage. Homage to Chagall: The Colours of Love is a 1977 Canadian documentary film directed by Harry Rasky. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Two Hands: The Leon Fleisher Story is a 2006 American short documentary film directed by Nathaniel Kahn. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. It tells the story of the pianist Leon Fleisher. Due to an injury, he lost the use of his right hand for some time, and performed using only his left hand. After years, he regained the use of his right hand and resumed two-hand performances. Molotov Alva and His Search for the Creator: A Second Life Odyssey, originally titled My Second Life: The Video Diaries of Molotov Alva, is a 2007 American documentary film created by Douglas Gayeton. Molotov Alva tells the story of a man's passage from his real life in Petaluma, California into a new existence inside Linden Lab's virtual world Second Life. The production was filmed entirely in Second Life using machinima, the use of real-time 3-D graphics engines to create animated films. Molotov Alva was commissioned in 2006 by VPRO, a Dutch television broadcaster, and by Submarine, a Dutch television and internet production company. The first dispatch, titled "Out of His Skin", was placed on YouTube in February 2007. A rough cut of the documentary premiered at Toronto's Hot Docs Film Festival in 2007. It subsequently appeared in festivals around the world, including the Tokyo International Film Festival, the Rome Film Festival and SXSW. The North American broadcast rights were purchased by HBO Documentary Films in August, 2007, marking the first time a US television network purchased a series which premiered on YouTube. Faster is a 2003 documentary film about the motorcycle road racing world championship, MotoGP. Filmed between 2001 and 2002 by director Mark Neale, it features cinematography by music video director Grant Gee and is narrated by Ewan McGregor. It was succeeded by a 2-disc "Ultimate Collector's Edition" re-release in 2004 which included "Faster '03-'04 The Sequel". In 2006, The Doctor, The Tornado and The Kentucky Kid was released, followed by "Fastest" in 2011. Community Acupuncture is a 2014 documentary film directed by Brian Lindstrom. We Were So Beloved is a documentary film by Manfred Kirchheimer about Jewish survivors of the Holocaust living in Washington Heights, Manhattan in New York City. It consists of interviews with family and friends interspersed with written and spoken quotes from Mein Kampf to remind the viewer of the evil that had preceded. The film received mixed reviews. Girl Rising is a global movement for girls' education, based primarily around a 2013 feature film, Girl Rising. India: Kingdom of the Tiger is a 2002 IMAX documentary, based on writings of Jim Corbett, directed by Bruce Neibaur, about man-eating tigers and the conservation efforts of the tiger in India. Diary of an Unknown Man - A Portrait of Jozef Nadj is a 2003 film written by Szabolcs Tolnai and Kornél Szilágyi and directed by Szabolcs Tolnai. Dolphin Boy is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Dani Menkin and Yonatan Nir. Notes on Blindness is a 2014 short biographical family documentary drama film written and directed by Peter Middleton and James Spinney. Beyond the Golden Compass: The Magic of Philip Pullman is a 2007 documentary film written by Jean-Pierre Isbouts and William A. Schwartz and directed by Jean-Pierre Isbouts. Notes on Blindness: Rainfall is a 2013 short biographical documentary drama film written and directed by Pete Middleton and James Spinney. MOZARTBALLS is a light-hearted tribute to Mozart and explores what he symbolizes in our age. The film features curious characters that embody the spirit of Mozart - from a retired Swiss school teacher obsessed by all things Mozart, to an ex-pop musician in Oklahoma who believes that her body is actually inhabited by Mozart's spirit; from a computer genius in California whose software has created a new Mozart cello concerto, to an Austrian astronaut who carried a score of "The Magic Flute" and delicious chocolate 'Mozartkugeln' into space. These are the individuals who inhabit MOZARTBALLS and through their strange and, at times, very moving stories, the viewer will be exposed to the liveliness, the magic and the obsession that Moart has become to so many music fans today. For them, Mozart defines the very essence of beauty in music, but he has become something more than that. Mozart is an icon, and for many he is still very much alive! Simon & Garfunkel's Old Friends: Live On Stage is a live documentary from their highly successful "Old Friends" reunion concert tour of 2003, with The Everly Brothers as special guests. Both the CD and DVD were released in December 2004. The CD and DVD were taken from a series of shows at New York's Madison Square Garden in early December 2003. Both the DVD and the double CD set include a new studio song, "Citizen of the Planet", written by Paul Simon in the 1980s and recently completed with Art Garfunkel. The DVD contains two Simon & Garfunkel songs that were omitted from the double CD set: "Keep the Customer Satisfied" and "The 59th Street Bridge Song". There are also two additional songs performed by The Everly Brothers, which are not included on the CD. The DVD includes a series of clips from Simon & Garfunkel's rarely seen 1969 television special Songs for America as part of its extra features. Both the CD and DVD are available separately and together as a package. Fire on the Track is a 1995 documentary film written by Ken Kesey, Erich Lyttle and Kenny Moore and directed by Erich Lyttle. Juror #5 is a 1999 documentary film directed by Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato. I Moltes al Tres Dones is a 2007 film directed by Sonia Trigo, Begoa Montalban, Nahxeli Beas, Andrea Corachn,Marta Muoz and Mara Romero. Electric Purgatory is a documentary that examines the struggles of black rock musicians and the industry's ambivalence towards them. Director Raymond Gayle spent the better part of a year traveling around the United States interviewing many of Black Rock's elite including Fishbone, Vernon Reid, Adam Falcon, Jimi Hazel and Cody Chesnutt.Distinguished journalists such as Flip Barnes, Darrell McNeil, Charlie Braxton, and Greg Tate, share their opinions and insight on the dilemma facing these artists. The film will explore the origins of the Black Rock Coalition and its relevance in the music industry. The project will also take a look at the stigma Black Rock musicians face in the Black community and more importantly how to bring the Black audiences back into the fold. When My Sorrow Died: The Legend of Armen Ra & the Theremin is a music documentary biographical film directed by Robert Nazar Arjoyan. Indonesia Calling is a 1946 Australian short documentary film directed by Joris Ivens and produced by the then Waterside Workers' Federation. The film gives a glimpse of immediate post-World War II Sydney as trade union seamen and waterside workers refuse to service Dutch ships containing arms and ammunition destined for Indonesia to suppress the country's independence movement. Ivens filming of the events taking place gradually became a symbol even for those who had not seen the film and had a growing following in Holland, long before the film had an audience. Joris Ivens suffered persecution from the telling of the truth about Dutch and Indonesia. Ivens had his Dutch passport seized by the Dutch authorities for a few months at a time in order to monitor his whereabouts. Finally in 1985 The Dutch government presented Ivens with a Golden Calf. At the ceremony the Dutch minister gave a speech and in his words, “Shortly after the war, your support for Indonesia’s right to self-determination and your film Indonesia Calling brought you into conflict with the Dutch government I can now say that history has come down more on your side than on the side of your adversaries”. La vida loca is a documentary film directed by Christian Poveda. Marcello Mastroianni: I Remember is a 1997 Italian documentary film about the actor Marcello Mastroianni and directed by Anna Maria Tatò. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1997 Cannes Film Festival. Danielson: A Family Movie is a 2006 documentary film about the Christian indie pop band Danielson. It was directed, filmed, produced, and edited by JL Aronson. Vietnam: The Last Battle is a 1995 Carlton Television documentary, written and presented by John Pilger, and directed by David Munro, which returns to Vietnam nearly twenty years after the Vietnam War had ended to review those two decades. Don't Change the Subject is a 2012 documentary film executive produced and directed by Mike Stutz, focusing on suicide and attempts to deal with the subject more directly through the use of humor and the arts as well as interviews. The film weaves in and out of three modes: 1) Stutz' experience with suicide in his family; 2) Candid interviews with suicide survivors and experts in fields such as mental health, religion, theater; and 3) Commissioning artists to create works for the film that tackle suicide in a unique way. Zero Percent is a documentary film directed by Tim Skousen Scena is a 2003 documentary film directed by Deimantas Narkevicius. 8 Bit Horror, 64 Bit Horror is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Rhys Carlton, Jessie Dhaliwall and Matthew Van Gennip. I Touched Her Legs is a 2010 documentary experimental short film directed by Eva Marie Rødbro. Aleister Crowley was a man of mystery and many talents, and this documentary hopes to reveal some of his secrets to the world. Veteran Actor Joss Ackland (the Hunt For Red October) lends his voice to the famed occultist who may have lived from 1875-1947, but whose influence extends into the 21st Century.IN SEARCH OF THE GREAT BEAST 666 features music from prog-rock pioneer Rick Wakeman. Welcome to Australia is a 1999 Carlton Television documentary, written and presented by John Pilger, which was directed and produced by Alan Lowery, and charts the history of injustice endured by indigenous Australians in the context of the build-up to the Sydney 2000 Summer Olympic Games. "Whatever one may think of Pilger's style," stated Richard Ackland of ABC's Media Watch, "his film reminded us of a shameful and tragic history." Benefit For Whom at Whose Cost? is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Dinesh Lakhanpal. The Substance: Albert Hofmann's LSD is a 2011 documentary film. The film brings the coincidental discovery of the drug LSD by the Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann in 1943. Rebel in Paradise is a 1960 American documentary film on the artist Paul Gauguin produced by Robert D. Fraser. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Art and Remembrance: The Legacy of Felix Nussbaum is a 1993 documentary directed by Barbara Pfeffer, which explores the life of Jewish artist, Felix Nussbaum. We Will Live Again is a 2013 documentary, sci-fi, short film directed by Myles Kane and Josh Koury. USS Cooper: Return to Ormoc Bay is a 2001 Philippine documentary film produced by Bigfoot Entertainment and directed by Daniel Foster. The film documents the fate of an American destroyer that was torpedoed during World War II. Trucker Patti is a 2014 short LGBT documentary biographical drama historical fiction film directed by Beau J. Genot. Iverson is a 2014 biographical, sports, documentary film directed by Zatella Beatty. Always for Pleasure is a 1978 documentary film by Les Blank about social traditions in New Orleans, Louisiana. The film has footage of musical events, Mardi Gras Indians, a funeral with traditional music, various second line parades, and cooking and eating red beans & rice and a crawfish boil. Events filmed include New Orleans Mardi Gras and St. Patrick's Day 1977. Local musicians perform and are interviewed, including Kid Thomas Valentine, Allen Toussaint, Danny Barker, Blue Lu Barker, Irma Thomas, the Neville Brothers and Professor Longhair. The film subtitles a Creole song as "Hey Legba" when the tune's title phrase is actually "Eh la bas", a formerly common Louisiana Creole phrase of greeting roughly translating as "Hey over there you". However, in New Orleans, Legba was often referred to as "Papa La Bas", and some scholars, such as Henry Louis Gates, believe that "Eh La Bas" was a covert reference to Legba. Unusually, the film includes looks at traditional predominantly white second lining organizations; many other films and documentarians have falsely assumed such traditions to exist only in predominantly black groups. Waxie Moon is a documentary directed by Wes Hurley, centered on the gender-bending Juilliard-trained burlesque performer, Waxie Moon. The film captures the burgeoning and mostly-queer neo-burlesque community in Seattle in 2000s. The film features interviews with dozens of performers and artists including the burlesque icons Miss Dirty Martini and Tigger!, author and performer Marya Sea Kaminski, drag superstar Ben DeLaCreme and many others. The film also includes the original song, titled "Waxie Moon" and inspired by James Bond scores. The song was composed by Eric Lane Barnes of Seattle Men's Chorus and performed by Sarah Rudinoff and Paul Rosenberg. Waxie Moon premiered in Austin and went on to screen at the Anthology Film Archives, Echo Park Film Center, and at many festivals around the world including a dozen screenings in Seattle. The film won Best Local Film at the Seattle Lesbian & Gay Film Festival, Jury Award for Best Film at Queer Fruits Film Festival in Australia, and Best Film, Best Director, Best Cinematography, Best Editing and Best Soundtrack at Love Unlimited Film Festival. The film is available on video from TLAvideo. The Forest is Like the Mountains is a 2014 documentary film directed by Didier Guillain and Christiane Schmidt. ANPO: Art X War is a 2010 documentary film directed by Linda Hoaglund. The film traces the public outrage that followed in the wake of the passing of Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan through Japanese parliament by the Nobusuke Kishi-led government on May 20, 1960. The main point of contention amongst hundreds of thousands of Japanese about ANPO was that it would allow U.S. military bases to remain on Japanese soil. The ratification of the ANPO Treaty led to a storm of public protests by members of Japanese labor unions, student organizations and also many everyday Japanese. The treaty was renewed in 1970 and just over 60 bases, offices, barracks and branches of the U.S. military still occupy Japan. ANPO: Art X War is not simply a historical or political documentary. Four Days in November is a 1964 American documentary film directed by Mel Stuart about the assassination of John F. Kennedy. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film includes Dallas radio and television coverage of: The President's arrival at Love Field Progression of the motorcade First local bulletin of shooting Reports at Parkland Hospital Official announcement of President's death from Malcolm Kilduff Amateur films and photos include: Scenes along the motorcade route Orville Nix's films of the motorcade entering Dealey Plaza, the fatal head shot followed by Secret Service Agent Clint Hill climbing on top of the limousine and the post-shooting confusion at the Plaza Mary Moorman's photo taken just a fraction of a second after the fatal shot Bob Jackson's photo of Jack Ruby shooting Lee Harvey Oswald at the Dallas City Jail Metropolis 2000: Scenes from New York is a VHS/DVD release by American progressive metal band Dream Theater. It was released on April 21, 2001 by Elektra Records. The live performance was the final concert of the Metropolis 2000 tour at the Roseland Ballroom, New York City on August 30, 2000. The VHS release of Metropolis 2000: Scenes from New York contains only the performance of Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory. Ballroom Dancer is a 2011 documentary drama film written and directed by Christian Bonke and Andreas Koefoed. Bonjour Mr Lewis (folge 5 Und 6) is a 1982 film directed by Robert Benayoun. 5 Girls is a documentary released in 2001 by Kartemquin Films for PBS's P.O.V. series. The film follows five strong young women between the ages of 13 and 17. Unlike the myriad reports, books and "specials" that focus on young women as passive and powerless, 5 Girls explores the ways these girls discover the resources necessary to successfully navigate the rocky waters of adolescence. It focuses on the positive ways girls learn to adapt to challenge in their lives by understanding and exercising choices, by believing in their strength when others do not and by resisting powerful cultural messages, which urge them to be silent. Directed by Maria Finitzo, 5 Girls made its television premiere on PBS's P.O.V. on October 2, 2001. At the time of the film's release, The New York Times praised 5 Girls for its "intimacy and candor". Reminiscent of Michael Apted's classic Up! series, the film unfolds into a bold "sociological portrait" showing the transformation of each girl into a woman. In 2002, 5 Girls was awarded the Henry Hampton Award for Excellence in Film & Digital Media from the Council on Foundations. As the world's eyes focus on whether the United States and NATO will finally break the two-year-long siege of Sarajevo, FRONTLINE goes behind the daily news images of this war to tell the story of the day-to-day lives of Sarajevo's beleaguered people. Yugoslavian-born filmmaker Radovan Tadic presents an intimate portrait of Sarajevans trying to live while deprived of almost everything--water, electricity, medicine, food, hope. Tadic's chronicle, filmed over a period of six months, ultimately becomes a meditation on the war, as well as a larger journey through the psychological and moral landscape of the besieged city. Filmmaker Colin Stryker journeys to Washington state, where he chronicles the lives of everyday citizens struggling on either side of a divisive issue: whether to remove a series of hydroelectric dams from the Snake River. While groups of American Indians, environmentalists and fishermen advocate for removing the dams to replenish the local salmon population, farmers and other locals rely on the dams as an inexpensive source of electricity. Gang Injunctions Under The Microscope is a 2014 short documentary film directed by YCM. The Grand Adventure is a 2013 documentary drama film directed by Cassandra Oliveira. Inheritance is a 2006 documentary film about Monika Hertwig a.k.a. Monika Christiane Knauss, the daughter of Ruth Irene Kalder and Amon Goeth, Commandant of Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp. Monika Hertwig was 10 months old when her father was hanged in 1946 for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. She discovered the truth about him only as a young adult, because her own mother told her in childhood that he was a good man and a war hero. The film was produced for PBS by James Moll, film director, documentary producer and the Founding Executive Director of the USC Shoah Foundation Institute focusing on testimonies of the Holocaust survivors. In 2009 the Inheritance was nominated by the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and received an Emmy Award in the category of Outstanding Interview. LennoNYC is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Michael Epstein about the life of John Lennon in New York City, after the breakup of the Beatles. The film premiered at the New York Film Festival and was shown at a free public screening in Central Park on October 9, which would have been Lennon's 70th birthday. It first aired on the PBS series American Masters on November 22 and received a Peabody Award in 2010. Interviewed in film are Yoko Ono, members of the Elephant's Memory band that played with Lennon and Ono in New York, Elton John, Dick Cavett, photographer Bob Gruen and Geraldo Rivera, who talks about a news report of his that inspired Lennon and Ono to stage the One to One benefit concert in 1972. However, the film also follows Lennon out of New York to Los Angeles during his co-called "lost weekend" period, when he briefly split from Ono. The Old Believers is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Jana Sevcíková. A Common Enemy is a 2012 documentary and thriller film written and directed by Jaime Otero. Under Torture is a 2012 Documentary film written by Alejandro Juárez Zepeda and Cristina Juárez Zepeda and directed by Cristina Juárez Zepeda. Parallel Lines is a 2004 documentary film directed by Nina Davenport. Yukon Kings is a 2013 short, biographical documentary film directed by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee. "Documentary film about Zagreb Film’s Studio for Animated Film." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Zagreb Animafest site. Stepping Into The Unknown is a South African film directed by Rowena Aldous and Jill Hanas-Hancock. John Cassavetes career as an independent filmmaker is told through his own words and from interviews with twenty artists and friends. The first half thoroughly examines Cassavetes' unique approach to character and performance. The second half brings to life Cassavetes' deep humanity in chapters about family filmmaking, storytelling, and the tools of transformation. CodeStars is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Lesley Chilcott. Pusu Qhuni is a documentary film directed by Tang Hsiang-chu. The Beat Generation: An American Dream is a 1986 documentary film written by Janet Forman and Regina Weinrich and directed by Janet Forman. Edward Hopper And The Blank Canvas is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jean-pierre Devilliers. Walls and People is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Dalila Ennadre. Catwalk, a documentary covering life on the fashion runways, was filmed in 1993 by director Robert Leacock and premiered in 1996. The film followed models Christy Turlington, Naomi Campbell, Yasmin Le Bon, Kate Moss, and Carla Bruni as they jetted around London, Milan, Paris, and New York during Spring Fashion Week, including behind-the-scenes footage. The film was shot in black and white and color, and featured many top designers at work, like a young John Galliano, Justin Thomas, Karl Lagerfeld, and Gianni Versace four years before his death. Broadway Musicals: A Jewish Legacy is 2013 documentary film directed by Michael Kantor. "Story of a transgender painter, who lived for colors." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site, Portrayal Of N. KrahÔ is a 2012 documentary film directed by Edu Ioschpe. Esta trabajoso is a 1978 short documentary film directed by Esta trabajoso. Good Girl Gone Bad Live is the first live long-form video by Barbadian recording artist Rihanna. It was first released on June 9, 2008 by Def Jam Recordings. The DVD and Blu-ray release features Rihanna's concert at Manchester Arena in Manchester, United Kingdom held on December 6, 2007, as part of her Good Girl Gone Bad Tour in support of singer's third studio album Good Girl Gone Bad. Most of the concert's set list originates from Good Girl Gone Bad; however, Rihanna also performed songs from her previous albums Music of the Sun and A Girl like Me. It also contains a special Documentary Feature that presents Rihanna discussing her experiences during the tour. Critics were divided on Good Girl Gone Bad Live; they praised the show, dancers, Rihanna's vocals and contrast levels of the video, however, there was some criticism towards some technicalities including the close-up frames. At the 2009 Grammy Awards, the video album received a Grammy nomination for Best Long Form Music Video. Commercially, Good Girl Gone Bad Live peaked within the top-ten in nine countries, including at number one in Austria and Switzerland. They were virtually unknown when they were cast in the first Harry Potter movie in 2000, but Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, and Rupert Grint have since become worldwide stars. When Radcliffe won the coveted role as Harry in The Sorcerer's Stone, he was plucked from almost compete obscurity. Grint was a fan of the books and wanted a part in the films so much that he sent a video of himself rapping about how much he wanted the role. Watson was just 11 and had almost no acting experience when the film was released. Today, all the Potter kids are grown, especially Watson, who has been named one of the world's sexiest women by the magazine "FHM". Blood into Wine is a 2010 documentary film about the Northern Arizona wine industry focusing on Maynard James Keenan and Eric Glomski and their Caduceus brand wine. It was released in February 2010 theatrically and on DVD and Blu-ray in September 2010. A soundtrack featuring remixes of Keenan's band Puscifer heard in the film was released, called Sound into Blood into Wine. Le Saut à la couverture is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Louis Lumière. The film formed part of the first commercial presentation of the Lumière Cinématographe on December 28, 1895 at the Salon Indien, Grand Café, 14 Boulevard des Capuchins, Paris. Retando Al Infierno is a documentary film. Shadow of the Holy Book is a 2007 film written by Kevin Frazier and Arto Halonen and directed by Arto Halonen. Lifestories: The Lost Boys of Sudan is a short documentary that explores the lives of eight Sudanese refugees. Displaced from their homes in the late 1980s due to a brutal civil war, the youngest boys were forced to flee alone. Pitted against an Arab Militia, wild animals, starvation, and thirst the boys survived a trek of 1,000 miles and twelve years in refugee camps before coming to the United States. Enduring such unimaginable hardships left them with many stories to tell. It is an under-reported and forgotten tale of survival and brotherhood. Directed by Jared D. Martin at the age of 14. Achternbusch is a 2008 documentary written and directed by Andi Niessner. Rapsodia Rustica is a 1945 short film directed by Jean Mihail. My Brother the Serial Killer is a 2012 documentary film directed by David Monaghan. Keep On Keepin' On is a 2014 documentary film written by Davis Coombe and Alan Hicks and directed by Alan Hicks. Invisible Nation is a film directed by Linda Lee Tracey. The River That Flows Through Us is a 2013 documentary film written by Emmanuel Chavez and Manuela White directed by Manuela White. Recsk 1950–53: Story of a Forced Labor Camp is a 1989 film written and directed by Géza Böszorményi and Lydia Gyarmathy. Recollections of Pavlovsk is a 1984 Soviet short documentary film directed by Irina Kalinina. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Homeless: The Motel Kids of Orange County is a 2010 documentary TV film directed by Alexandra Pelosi. In response to acts of delinquency and criminal offenses the US states of Texas, Tennessee, and Missouri have resorted to public humiliation in lieu of jail time. The basic idea in quite simple, once they have been arrested, the offenders must choose between jail or public humiliation. The public humiliation can take the form of walking with a sign explaining the reason why you were arrested or having your picture broadcast on the local television. The supporters site a decrease in the recidivism rate of those offenders, but detractors are not so sure. Do You Know What My Name Is? is a 2012 documentary film directed by Shigeru Ota and Naomi Kazama. Koko: A Talking Gorilla is a 1978 documentary directed by Barbet Schroeder that focuses on Dr. Francine 'Penny' Patterson and her work with Koko, the gorilla Patterson claims to have taught to communicate with humans using symbols taken from American Sign Language. The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1978 Cannes Film Festival. Fire in the Blood is a 2013 documentary by Dylan Mohan Grayabout the mass devastation brought about in Africa, Asia and other parts the global South due to intentional obstruction of low-cost antiretroviral drugs used for treatment of HIV/AIDS from reaching people in these countries, spearheaded by Western pharmaceutical companies armed with patent monopolies and the governments doing their bidding. The documentary also shows how the battle against this blockade, estimated to have resulted in ten- to twelve million unnecessary deaths, was fought and won. Fire in the Blood features contributions from former US President Bill Clinton, intellectual property activist James Love, global health reporter Donald McNeil, Jr. of The New York Times, HIV/AIDS treatment activist Zackie Achmat, pioneering generic drugmaker Yusuf Hamied, former Pfizer executive-turned-whistleblower Peter Rost, Ugandan AIDS physician Peter Mugyenyi, and Nobel Prize-laureates Desmond Tutu and Joseph Stiglitz. The film is narrated by Academy-Award winning actor William Hurt, who lent his voice to the film on a pro bono basis because he felt the story and subject matter were so important. The Hobart Shakespeareans of Hobart Boulevard Elementary School is a 2005 documentary film that tells the story of the inspirational inner-city Los Angeles school teacher Rafe Esquith whose rigorous fifth-grade curriculum includes English, mathematics, geography, and literature. The pinnacle of student achievement each year is the performance of a play by William Shakespeare; in the year of filming, that play was Hamlet. The Hobart Shakespeareans drew the attention of renowned Shakespearean actors Ian McKellen and Michael York, who pay a visit to the class to watch their performance of Hamlet. Delighted with the students, York calls the Hobart Shakespeareans "one of the great Shakespeare troupes" in Los Angeles. Rafe and the Hobart Shakespeareans work hard every year to achieve a beautiful Shakespeare play. The recent plays they have performed were As You Like It and The Merchant of Venice. The Hobart Shakespeareans aired on PBS' P.O.V. series in 2005. It was produced and directed by Mel Stuart. Man for a Day is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Katarina Peters A Bookshelf on Top of the Sky: 12 Stories About John Zorn is a documentary film on avant garde composer and musician John Zorn directed by Claudia Heuermann. It features performances of a range of Zorn's music and includes appearances by Joey Baron, Greg Cohen, Dave Douglas, Fred Frith, Ikue Mori, Mike Patton, and Marc Ribot. It won the Bavarian Documentary Award in 2002. Chica XX Mujer is a 2010 documentary short film written and directed by Isabell Suba. All I See Is What I Know is a 2000 short, family, documentary film directed by Zachariah Webb. Helicopter Canada is a 1966 Canadian documentary film featuring aerial photography of all of Canada's ten Canadian provinces, directed by Eugene Boyko. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 39th Academy Awards. Filmed in CinemaScope, the film was made for international distribution during the Canadian centennial. It received two awards at the Canadian Film Awards: Best Film in the General Information category and a Special Prize "For providing a superbly appropriate and inspiring opportunity for Canadians to view their country in the Centennial Year." Helicopter Canada took 18 months to produce and required Boyko to spend 540 hours aloft in a specially outfitted Alouette II helicopter. Dresden, Oktober 89 is a 1989 film directed by Roza Berger-Fiedler. What should we do with children who commit serious crime? Following the recall of Jon Venables who, along with his friend Robert Thompson, murdered two-year-old James Bulger in Liverpool aged just ten, it's a question that many experts are asking. Retired detective Albert Kirby, the man who brought Venables and Thompson to justice, goes on a journey to find out what happened to Jon, the system that was designed to rehabilitate him, and what led to him being returned to jail. Featuring experts, practitioners, and people who knew Venables, this thought-provoking, challenging documentary lifts the lid on the system of secure children's homes, and asks if more should be done for the next generation of serious child criminals. Millhouse: A White Comedy is a 1971 documentary by Emile de Antonio following Richard Nixon's political career from his election to the House of Representatives in 1946 to his election as President of the United States in 1968. It begins with Nixon's "last press conference" in 1962 after his loss in the race for Governor of California in which he famously said, "You won't have Dick Nixon to kick around anymore." Then a collage of videos show Nixon's trajectory from his House campaign to his involvement in the Alger Hiss case, election the Senate in 1950, election as Vice President in 1952 including the full Checkers speech, campaign for the presidency in 1960, campaign for Barry Goldwater's presidential candidacy in 1964, and his triumphant election as President in 1968 as the "New Nixon". The film featured interviews but no voice-over. Una isla rodeada de agua is a 1986 short, drama and fantasy film written and directed by María Novaro. Death Mills is a 1945 American propaganda film directed by Billy Wilder and produced by the United States Department of War. The film was intended for German audiences to educate them about the atrocities committed by the Nazi regime. For the German version, Die Todesmühlen, Hanus Burger is credited as the writer and director, while Wilder supervised the editing. Wilder is credited with directing the English-language version. Je suis une bombe is a 2008 documentary short film directed by Elodie Pong. Leonids Story is a 2011 animated documentary short film written by Rainer Ludwigs and directed by Rainer Ludwigs and Tetyana Chernyavska. Construccin de una ciudad is a 2008 film directed by Nstor Frenkel. The Boys: The Sherman Brothers' Story is a 2009 American documentary film about the Sherman Brothers The film is directed and produced by their sons, Gregory V. Sherman and Jeff Sherman, and released through Walt Disney Pictures. Ben Stiller acted as executive producer for the film. Vincent P. Falk is Fashion Man. Clad in brightly colored suits; Vincent twirls on Chicago's many bridges, performing fashion shows for passing tour boats. As he spins his way through the city, tourists and locals alike are left to wonder just who is this strange man. Over the course of one boat season, we follow Vincent and begin to unravel the mystery that surrounds him. We discover that the man behind the fashion, having come through the travails of life, has decided to do what makes him happy. And so, he spins on. The Journey to Metropolis is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Artem Demenok. The Truth Shall Make Us Free is a 1992 documentary film directed by Michael Schmidt. Günter Wallraff - At the Bottom is a 1985 documentary film written by Jörg Gförer and Günter Wallraff and directed by Jörg Gfrörer. Space Station 3D is a 2002 Canadian-American 3D short documentary film about the International Space Station written, produced, edited, and directed by Toni Myers. Narrated by Tom Cruise, it is the first IMAX 3D production filmed in space. Foresting Life is a 2013 biographical documentary and family film written and directed by Aarti Shrivastava. 7 Salamancas is a 2013 road movie documentary drama film written and directed by Marcos Pastor. Kings and Queens of Freestyle Volume I is a 2003 documentary/music film directed by Steve Race. Y Los Dioses Jugaron Fútbol, México 70 is a 1970 sports documentary directed by Alberto Isaac. The Green Girl is a 2014 American documentary film about Susan Oliver produced and directed by George Pappy. The Big Eden is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Peter Dörfler. "Turkish villagers' quest to fly to the moon in the 1950s becomes an engaging study of contemporary Turkish culture. Journey to the Moon, the new project from internationally renowned Turkish artist and filmmaker Kutlug Ataman, forms part of a series of works known as The Mesopotamian Dramaturgies, and was first exhibited in installation form in Linz earlier this year. Shown here in its single- screen version, the film takes a different approach from his narrative features, Serpent's Tail, Lola + Bilidikid, and 2 Girls. Set in a remote village in the Erizincan province in Eastern Turkey, it's the tale of four villagers' quest to travel to the moon during a period in the late 1950s when Turkey's villages were being encouraged to modernise. It is told through the use of found black-and-white photographs from the period, and the aid of a local narrator. Intercut with this, a wide range of established Turkish intellectuals offer their views and interpretations of the events. In Ataman's singular hands the assemblage of the images is evocative and often funny, and what the narrator lacks in first-hand experience, he makes up for in enthusiasm. Unsurprisingly to those familiar with any of Ataman's earlier work, this is no straightforward historical drama; rather in its retelling, the story becomes an engaging study of contemporary Turkish culture." Quoting Sandra Hebron Last Days in Vietnam is a 2014 American documentary film written, produced and directed by Rory Kennedy. The film had its world premiere at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. After its premiere at Sundance Film Festival, American Experience Films acquired the distribution rights of the film. The film had a theatrical release in New York City on September 5, 2014 before expanding nationwide in the United States during September and early October. "With the excuse of freedom, we lose so many things. — Silvio BarileO’er the Land is Deborah Stratman’s meditation on freedom and technological approaches to manifest destiny. She captures the marching-band battle cries of the country with a strong, controlled tone that proves its point but is extremely playful, too. Stratman documents the wild, wild worlds of gun shows—ones where you can fire machine guns in the forest and literally blow stuff up, reenactments of famous battles with historically accurate weapons and clothes (golf carts and Pepsi trucks in the wings), border disputes, and the organized frenzy of cheerleaders and motor homes. All are framed by the incredible experiences of Colonel William Rankin, who, in 1959, was forced to eject from his F8-U fighter jet at 48,000 feet without a pressure suit, only to get trapped for 45 minutes in the up-and-down drafts of a massive thunderstorm. Miraculously he survived.The scale of practicing war as a game is colossal and hard to grasp at times. Stratman captures the events she depicts with wonder rather than disdain. Her thoughtful framing of images and meticulous editing help us understand the absurdity in this dark path." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Across Europe in a Paperboat is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Julius Markevičius. Finding the Funk is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Nelson George. Breaking The Silence: The Generation After The Holocaust is a 1984 documentary film written by Eva Fogelman and directed by Edward Mason. Allergy to Originality is a 2012 animated short film written and directed by Drew Christie. Thats Life is a 2010 short documentary film written by Daniel Zielinski and Alex Pavlovic and directed by Daniel Zielinski. The Night The Blackbirds Fell is a 2013 short documentary film written by Brian Campbell and Gustav Carlson and directed by Will Scott. The Nomi Song is a 2004 documentary about the life of singer Klaus Nomi, written and directed by Andrew Horn. The film debuted at the Berlin International Film Festival in February 2004, where it won a Teddy Award for "Best Documentary Film." Miss HIV is a feature length documentary by Ethnographic Media, released to DVD on August 26, 2008. Written and directed by Jim Hanon, and produced by Mart Green, the film explores the international collision of HIV/AIDS policies while following the journey of two HIV-positive women who enter a pageant in Botswana. What is happening in Botswana, where half of all pregnant women are HIV positive, is set contrasted with the past successes of Uganda, which has experienced one of the largest reductions in HIV infections ever recorded. Der Sieg des Glaubens is the first propaganda film directed by Leni Riefenstahl. Her film recounts the Fifth Party Rally of the Nazi Party, which occurred in Nuremberg from 30 August to 3 September 1933. The film is of great historic interest because it shows Adolf Hitler and Ernst Röhm on close and intimate terms, before Röhm was shot on the orders of Hitler on the Night of the Long Knives in July 1934. All copies of the film were apparently destroyed on Hitler's orders, until a copy turned up in the 1990s in the UK. Its form is very similar to her later and much expanded version of the 1934 rally, known as Triumph of the Will. A few speeches are given, and are shown by translated subtitles in the Internet Archive version. It is pure propaganda for the Nazi party, which funded and promoted the film. The film celebrates the victory of the Nazis in achieving power with Hitler assuming the role of Chancellor of Germany in February 1933. We Work Again is a 1937 ephemeral film produced by the Works Progress Administration to promote its efforts at finding work for African-Americans during the Great Depression. Various jobs are shown, including construction, demolition, "domestics", school teaching, factory work and food preparation. We Work Again has gained considerable attention because it includes the only known footage of the famous all-black version of Macbeth staged by Orson Welles in 1936. This footage consists of the last few minutes of the play. A copy of the film is preserved by the National Archives and Records Administration. The film has also been released on DVD on the 4-disc box set Treasures from American Film Archives, compiled by the National Film Preservation Foundation. It is one of the very few films of its genre ever to be released on DVD or any other home format. The film is presumed to be in the public domain and as such has appeared on several websites, including the Internet Archive. Pezzi is a 2012 Documentary film directed by Luca Ferrari. The Revisionaries is a 2012 documentary film about the re-election of Don McLeroy, the former chairman of the Texas Board of Education. The film also details how the Texas Board's decisions on textbook content influence textbooks across the nation and affect the American culture war. The Revisionaries was directed by Scott Thurman and produced by Silver Lining Films, Magic Hour Productions and Naked Edge Films. The film generated a great deal of buzz prior to its premiere on April 20, 2012 at the Tribeca Film Festival. Texas Monthly reported that "[t]he film received rave reviews after its Tribeca premiere." The Revisionaries went on to win the Festival's Special Jury Prize. During the awards presentation, Michael Moore stated "I hope every American sees this film," and called The Revisionaries "a must-see film for anyone concerned about enforced ignorance and intolerance, and for those who still believe in science and in Thomas Jefferson." On July 18, 2012, Kino Lorber announced that it had acquired all North American rights to The Revisionaries. Nude Photos! is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Joann Self Selvidge. At night I Fly is a 2011 documentary film directed by Michel Wenzer. The Girls Next Door Workout is a 2007 documentary film. The People Speak UK is a 2010 documentary history film directed by Anthony Arnove, Colin Firth and Stuart McDonald. Close cousins to machines and tools, gadgets are mechanical or electronic devices that make life a bit easier. While they don't always fall into clear categories, we know one when we see one. We'll view the craziest, cleverest, and most brilliant gizmos, meet the often-quirky gadgeteers, and glimpse gadgetry of the future. Cosmic Station is a 2008 film directed by Bettina Timm. Zimmerleute des Waldes is a 1955 short documentary directed by Heinz Sielmann. Después del sismo is a 1991 documentary film directed by Eduardo Salazar Pérez. Simba: The King of the Beasts is an 1928 American black-and-white silent documentary film, directed by Martin and Osa Johnson, which features the couple's 4-year expedition to track the lion across Abyssinian and Kenyan veldts into his lair. The film, which went on nationwide general release on January 25, 1928, was premiered at the Earl Caroll Theatre in New York on January 23, 1928. Truth Has Fallen is a 2013 film directed by Sheila M. Sofian. Drehort Berlin is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Helga Reidemeister. In 2004, a trailer park was set up in a field on Charlotte County, Florida, after Hurricane Charley destroyed buildings and homes. Over 2,000 people moved into 551 mobile homes and the park too on the nickname "FEMA CITY." Once displaced, residents of Fema City found that returning to their homes and to normalcy would prove to be one of the greatest challenges of their lives. This powerful and educational documentary explores the issues created by a lack of affordable housing after one community is hammered by a natural disaster. No Cure for Cancer is a 1992 documentary comedy written by Bill Hicks and Denis Leary, and directed by Ted Demme. GET YER YA-YA’S OUT! is a chronicle of The Rolling Stones’ epic performance at Madison Square Garden in November 1969. Albert and David Maysles famously documented the Rolling Stones’ 1969 U.S. tour in the feature documentary Gimme Shelter, released in 1970. Now, Albert Maysles has put together never-before seen archive footage that shows the band - Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Mick Taylor and Bill Wyman - at its apogee, wowing New York audiences at Madison Square Garden over the Thanksgiving weekend of that year. Beyond the full-length performances of five Stones songs - presented in surround sound - the film includes a cover shoot, rare backstage footage, a mixing session and more. Le Parti Des Choses is a short documentary directed by Jacques Rozier on the making of Jean-Luc Godard's film Le Mépris. It is included on the Criterion Collection DVD of Le Mépris. Reno: Rebel Without a Pause is a 2003 comedy documentary written by Reno and directed by Nancy Savoca. Jango is a 1984 Brazilian documentary film directed by Sílvio Tendler. Imagens de uma cidade perdida is a 2011 film directed by Jon Jost. Sage Solutions - The Fourth Estate is a 2013 documentary film directed by Tae Jun-seek. Brothers is a 2011 documentary film directed by Emi Mazurkiewicz. Bob Hope: The First 90 Years is a 1993 television movie. Eye Over Prague (Czech: Oko Nad Prahou) is a 2010 documentary film directed by Olga Špátová and co-written with Eliška Kaplický Fuchsová. You Got Beautiful is a 2012 short animated documentary film directed by Lauren Orme. Jack Levine: Feast Of Pure Reason is a 1989 documentary film directed by David Sutherland. Dancin' Outlaw is a 1991 documentary film directed by Jacob Young. We Came Back To Chestnut Tree Avenue is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Leslie Lagier. "Michel's whole life has revolved around one thing: love. Seventy-nine years of romance later, he is trying to cope with his most recent breakup. This small incursion into a transgender person's heart touches upon universal themes of identity, sex, love, and growing old." - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Hello Anatolia is a documentary film directed by Chrysovalantis Stamelos. Aroused is a 2013 feature length documentary film directed by the photographer Deborah Anderson, in her directorial debut. Who Cares About Kelsey? is a documentary drama film directed by Dan Habib. Bohemia docta aneb Labyrint světa a lusthauz srdce (Božská komedie) or The Labyrinth of the World and the Lust-house of the Heart (A Divine Comedy) is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Karel Vachek. Kwaku Ananse is a 2013 short film directed by Akosua Adoma Owusu. It was screened at the Berlin International Film Festival and won the Best Short Film award at the 9th Africa Movie Academy Awards. Patrolman P is a biographical crime documentary film directed by Ido Mizrahy. R30: 30th Anniversary World Tour is a live DVD by the Canadian band Rush, that was released on November 22, 2005 in Canada and the U.S. and November 28, 2005 in Europe, therein documenting the band's R30: 30th Anniversary Tour. The DVD was released in a standard and deluxe set. The deluxe version features two audio CDs of the DVD content as well as various interviews and extra live footage. The released product saw the omission of songs "Bravado", "One Little Victory", "By-Tor And The Snow Dog", "La Villa Strangiato", "YYZ", "Red Sector A", "The Trees", and "Secret Touch" as these tracks were already featured on the Rush in Rio DVD, a full concert in Brazil on the last night of the band's 2002 Vapor Trails Tour. This was done to eliminate redundancy. This modified set-list is heard on both the DVD, as well as a deluxe edition audio soundtrack. "Red Sector A" would later be released on the Snakes & Arrows Live DVD, "Secret Touch" was featured on the Retrospective 3 compilation DVD released on March 3, 2009, and "One Little Victory" was released on the live CD DVD compilation Working Men. February One: The Story of the Greensboro Four is a 2003 feature film by Rebecca Cerese and Steven Channing. Nationally broadcast on Independent Lens on PBS, it tells the story of The Greensboro Four, four young college freshman, Joseph McNeil, David Richmond, Franklin McCain and Ezell Blair, Jr. now Jibreel Khazan, who staged a sit-in at Woolworth's in 1960 to protest segregation practices. Based largely on first hand accounts and rare archival footage, the documentary film February One documents one volatile winter in Greensboro that not only challenged public accommodation customs and laws in North Carolina, but served as a blueprint for the wave of non-violent civil rights protests that swept across the South and the nation throughout the 1960s. It won an award of excellence at the Global Peace Film Festival in 2004, Best Documentary Film at the Carolina Film and Video Festival, and the Human Rights Award at the RiverRun Film Festival. The documentary has also played at the King Center in Atlanta, the Smithsonian National Museum of American History and the National Archives in Washington, DC among many other places. The Mysteries of Amelia Earhart is a 1998 mystery documentary film written and directed by Robert Beemer. L' hypothèse du Mokélé-Mbembé is a documentary film written and directed by Marie Voignier. Goal! The World Cup is a 1966 documentary film directed by Ross Devenish and Abidin Dino. Food and Magic is a 1943 short documentary film commissioned by the United States Government during World War II. Food and Magic, was produced by the War Activities Committee of The Motion Picture Industry and it deals with food conservation and healthy eating. It stars Jack Carson as a sideshow barker who informs the crowd about proper wartime food consumption, including conservation and rationing. Trekkies is a 1997 documentary film directed by Roger Nygard about the devoted fans of Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek franchise. It is the first film released by Paramount Vantage, then known as Paramount Classics, and stars Denise Crosby. The film contains interviews with Star Trek devotees, more commonly known as Trekkies. The fans range from people who dress as Klingons to members of Brent Spiner fan clubs and includes a club that is producing a Star Trek movie of their own. Trekkies includes many Star Trek actors and fans including Barbara Adams, the Whitewater scandal trial juror who arrived in court in her Starfleet uniform. Another prominent profilee was Gabriel Köerner, who attained minor celebrity status as a result of his role in the film. In 2003, a sequel was released, entitled Trekkies 2. This documentary travels throughout the world, mainly in Europe, to show fans of Star Trek from outside the United States. It also revisits memorable fans featured in the previous film. Above All Else is a documentary film directed by John Fiege. Cirque du Soleil presents A THRILLING RIDE THROUGH KOOZA, a captivating documentary that looks at the creative process of KOOZA. Ich kenn keinen - Allein unter Heteros is a 2003 film directed by Jochen Hick. Ricardo Bär is a 2013 documentary biography film written and directed by Gerardo Naumann and Nele Wohlatz. Sounds for Mazin is a 2012 short documentary family/drama film written by Alwin Kuiken and directed by Ingrid Kamerling. NOW: In the Wings on a World Stage is a documentary film directed by Jeremy Whelehan. The Tight Rope is a 2009 documentary film directed and written by Nuria Ibáñez. We Have Seen Torture is a 2012 documentary directed by Cenk Örtülü and Zeynel Koç. Last folk singer Hitoshi Kaji is a documentary film directed by Hiroshi Horiuchi. Greetings from Washington DC is a 1981 film Lucy Winer. Les Frères Bapst, charretiers is a 1989 documentary short film written and directed by Jacqueline Veuve. Seventh-Gay Adventists is a 2013 documentary drama film directed by Daneen Akers and Stephen Eyer. Whales: An Unforgettable Journey is a short documentary film directed by David Clark, Al Giddings and Roger Payne. Audience of One is an award-winning 2007 documentary directed by Michael Jacobs that was premiered on 9 March 2007 at the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas. The Zimbers is a 1991documentary film written and directed by Peter Schreiner. Laßt uns auch leben is a 1953 documentary film. Fight Back, Fight AIDS: 15 Years Of ACT UP is a 2002 film directed by James Wentzy. Caifan is a 2013 documentary film directed by Lizzette Argüello Rocha. Trane Tracks: The Legacy of John Coltrane is a documentary film about saxophonist John Coltrane. Welcome to Fukushima is a documentary film directed by Alain de Halleux. The Agreement is the 2013 documentary film directed by Karen Stokkendal Poulsen. Do You Remember Sarajevo is a 2002 film written by Sead Kreševljaković and Nihad Kreševljaković and co-directed by Nedim Alikadić. Blood Relative is a 2013 family drama documentary film written and directed by Nimisha Mukerji. My Sweet Canary is a French-greek-Israeli documentary film from 2011 about the life of Jewish-Greek rebetiko singer Roza Eskenazi. Its director is the Israeli Roy Sher. In the movie, Martha Demeteri Lewis, Tomer Katz and Mehtap Demir, three young musicians, look for the most famous singers of rebetiko and especially with the intention of learning more about the music career of Roza Eskenazi, as they travel between London, Jerusalem, Corinth, Istanbul, Athens and Salonika. Guest is a 2010 documentary film directed by José Luis Guerín. Strand, Under The Dark Cloth is a 1989 documentary film written by Seaton Findlay and directed by John Walker. Lusitania is a 1998 TV Movie. Outback Fight Club is a 2011 tv movie. Fellini: A Director's Notebook is an Italian documentary directed by Federico Fellini shot in 16mm and first broadcast in the United States on NBC in 1969. Letters from Iran is a 2011 Documentary film directed by Manon Loizeau. The Exhibition is a 2013 drama crime documentary film written and directed by Damon Vignale. The Editor And The Dragon: Horace Carter Fights The Klan is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Walter E. Campbell and Martin M. Clark. Ottavio Mario Mai is a 2002 film directed by Giovanni Minerba and Alessandro Golinelli. What holds up the Astrodome? Why did the Romans leave a hole in the roof of the Pantheon? Tour the world and trace the 2000-year history of domes with award-winning author-illustrator--and captivating storyteller--David Macaulay (The Way Things Work). From Houston's Astrodome to Rome's St. Peter's Cathedral, meet ingenious designers, hear rarely told heroic stories, and revel in amazing triumphs. Forbidden Films is a documentary film directed by Felix Moeller. Princesitas de México is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Laure Egoroff. Hardwood Dreams is a 1993 basketball sports documentary written, directed and produced by Michael Tollin and narrated by Wesley Snipes. It follows five Morningside High School seniors during their last high school basketball season, as they dream of the National Basketball Association. Marion Brown - See The Music is a 1971 film directed by Theodor Kotulla. Titanica is 1995 documentary film directed by Stephen Low. Sex in a Cold Climate is an 1998 Irish documentary film detailing the mistreatment of "fallen women" in the Magdalene laundries in Ireland. It was produced and directed by Steve Humphries and narrated by Dervla Kirwan. It was used as a source for the 2002 film, The Magdalene Sisters. The film was produced by Testimony Films and aired on Channel 4 in March 1998. "Unraveling like a lush, gripping novel that constantly subverts expectations, The Oath is the interlocking drama of two brothers-in-law, Abu Jandal and Salim Hamdam, whose associations with al Qaeda in the 1990s propelled them on divergent courses. The film delves into Abu Jandal's daily life as a taxi driver in Sana’a, Yemen, and Hamdan’s military tribunal in Guantanamo Bay prison. Abu Jandal and Hamdan’s personal stories—how they came to serve as Osama bin Laden’s bodyguard and driver respectively—act as prisms through which to humanize and contextualize a world the Western media demonizes. As Hamdan’s trial progresses, his military lawyers challenge fundamental flaws in the court system. As charismatic Abu Jandal dialogues with his son, Muslim students, and journalists, he generously unveils the complex evolution of his belief system since 9/11. Exquisitely constructed so multiple threads and time periods commingle seamlessly, and gaining astonishingly intimate access to subjects and information, The Oath illuminates a realm too long misunderstood." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Mickey B is a documentary drama film directed by Tom Magill. New research has confirmed the unexpected, and what may have been known by civilizations throughout history, that the surface of the Earth has healing power—like a gigantic treatment table. In this breezy and uplifting film, National Geographic wildlife filmmaker, Steve Kroschel, takes a personal journey to test an outrageously simple and “too good to be true” healing concept: that bare-skin contact with the Earth has profound curative effects. Kroschel introduces this concept of “Earthing" or “Grounding” to his fellow residents of Haines, Alaska (population 1,700), where many endure common ills (arthritis, insomnia, paralysis) and suffer disabling pain. Starting with his own pain relief, Kroschel witnesses and films surprising, miraculous healings. Even an orphaned moose calf, named Karen, participates in the healing. Kroschel’s home-brewed movie turns into a serious chronicle of a local phenomenon and draws the attention of Apollo astronauts, doctors, scientists, researchers and skeptics—leading some scientists to proclaim grounding to be the “greatest health discovery of all time”. This eye-opening film may very well change the way you regard the earth beneath your feet. RKO Production 601: The Making of 'Kong, the Eighth Wonder of the World is a 2005 documentary film. Cesar's Grill is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Darío Aguirre. Florent: Queen of the Meat Market is a 2010 documentary film directed by David Sigal. Daughters of Wisdom is a documentary film directed by Bari Pearlman. "God Didn't Give Me a Week's Notice" is a 15 minute documentary by Richard Daily about Margaret Holloway, also known as "The Shakespeare Lady" of New Haven, Connecticut. Richard Dailey attended Bennington College at the same time as Margaret Holloway. He was three years behind her and their acquaintance was casual. She was very talented and well known on campus. When he found that she was homeless and panhandling on Whitney Ave in New Haven, Connecticut, he asked if he could record her performances and she agreed. He and Holloway worked two weeks to produce a 15 minute documentary. He then spent the next six months editing the material from his home in Paris. As reported in the Yale Daily News, December 7, 2001: "Set to jazzy music, the film features Holloway dramatically reciting several pieces from Euripides, Shakespeare and Chaucer. Dailey also recorded Margaret speaking about her life. Interspersed through the documentary are candid and telling stills of Holloway in various locations in New Haven." Daily made a hand-shake agreement with Holloway that any revenue produced by the film would be divided equally between the two of them. Maria lui Pascu is a 1985 short film directed by Felicia Cemaianu. Obey the Artist is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Ondi Timoner. Star Trek: Aliens is a 2009 short documentary film written by M. David Melvin. Toby and the Tall Corn is a 1953 film directed by Richard Leacock. Travelers Between Two Worlds is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Andrés Pineda. The Shaper is a 1995 short documentary film directed by Jochen A. Schliessler. It weighs 300,00 pounds, the equivalent of thirty African elephants. It can measure over 100 feet in length. Its powerful twenty-foot jaws take in 16,000 gallons of water in one gigantic gulp. It is the blue whale, nature’s largest, most magnificent animal. Pussy Versus Putin is 2013 documentary drama music film writen and directed by Gogol's Wives. Me, The Sea And... is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Lulzim Sula. Shoestrings is a 2013 short, documentary, sports, biographical film directed by Tim Jeffreys. American Shoeshine is a 1975 American short documentary film directed by Sparky Greene. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Virgin Tales is a 2012 documentary film written by Mirjam von Arx and Michèle Wannaz and directed by Mirjam von Arx. The Wild Bunch: An Album in Montage is a 1996 American short documentary film directed and edited by Paul Seydor. The occasion for the creation of this documentary was the discovery of 72 minutes of silent black-and-white 16 mm film footage of Sam Peckinpah and company on location in northern Mexico during the filming of The Wild Bunch. Todd McCarthy described it as, "A unique and thoroughly unexpected document about the making of one of modern cinema's key works, this short docu will be a source of fascination to film buffs in general and Sam Peckinpah fanatics in particular." Michael Sragow wrote that the film is "a wonderful introduction to Peckinpah’s radically detailed historical film about American outlaws in revolutionary Mexico — a masterpiece that’s part bullet-driven ballet, part requiem for Old West friendship and part existential explosion. Seydor’s movie is also a poetic flight on the myriad possibilities of movie directing." Seydor and Redman were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary. (Re)Trace is a 2013 documentary biographical film drama written and directed by Jonathan Lemieux. Wellang Trei is a 2012 documentary film written by Ro-mi Ju and directed by Tae-il Kim. Taylor Swift represents the next generation of country pop stars. Her stunning voice, great music, and radiant beauty have made her the top selling digital artist in music history. However her success is no coincidence. This is the story of how a girl from Pennsylvania turned her dream into reality. Movies Made from Home #15 is a 2013 short documentary drama film written and directed by Robert Machoian. Reverse Angle is a 1982 short documentary film written and directed by Wim Wenders. Contacts Nan Goldin is a 2000 short documentary directed by Jean-Pierre Krief. "Echoes of Creation" is a film that allows nature to speak to the viewer rather than one that speaks about nature. Freedom for Birth is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Alex Wakeford and Toni Harman. Coming Out Story is a documentary film directed by Kei Umezawa. Wattstax is a 1973 documentary film by Mel Stuart that focused on the 1972 Wattstax music festival and the African American community of Watts in Los Angeles, California. The film was nominated for a Golden Globe award for Best Documentary Film in 1974. Peace, Propaganda & the Promised Land is a 2004 documentary by Sut Jhally and Bathsheba Ratzkoff which—according to the film's official website—"provides a striking comparison of U.S. and international media coverage of the crisis in the Middle East, zeroing in on how structural distortions in U.S. coverage have reinforced false perceptions of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict" and which "analyzes and explains how--through the use of language, framing and context--the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza remains hidden in the news media". The film argues that the influence of pro-Israel media watchdog groups, such as CAMERA and Honest Reporting, has led to distorted and pro-Israel media reports. It features Noam Chomsky, Robert Jensen, Hanan Ashrawi, Sam Husseini, and Robert Fisk, among others. In its response to the movie, the pro-Israel JCRC criticized the film for not discussing the influence of "the numerous pro‐Palestinian media watchdog groups, including FAIR, whose spokesperson played a prominent role in the film". Uahat is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Julián Borrell, Franco González and Demian Santander. Going Where I've Never Been: The Photography of Diane Arbus is a 1972 documentary film written by Stephan Chodorov and directed by John Musilli. Good Garbage is a documentary film directed by Shosh Shlam and Ada Ushpiz. Jean Epstein, Young Oceans of Cinema is a 2011 documentary film directed by James Schneider. Detropia is a 2012 documentary film, directed by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady, about the city of Detroit, Michigan. It focuses on the decline of the economy of Detroit due to long-term changes in the automobile industry, and the effects that the decline has had on the city's residents and infrastructure. The film's name came from a portmanteau of the words "Detroit" and "utopia", and was inspired by an abandoned auto parts store, where the letter "A" in "AUTO" and the letters "R", "T", and "S" in "PARTS" were missing from the store's sign. The letter "I" had been painted into the appropriate part of the store front to make the sign read "UTO PIA". East of War is a 1996 documentary film directed by Ruth Beckermann. Black Coffee is a 2007 Canadian documentary film examining the complicated history of coffee and detailing its political, social, and economic influence from the past to the present day. The film details how coffee is the eighth most traded legal commodity in the world. It is also the fourth most valuable agricultural commodity. However, only one cent of a $2 cup of coffee goes to the grower. This inequality has helped shape the history of continents and the Cold War. The Bathhouse is a 1997 documentary short film directed by Rimantas Gruodis. Black Beauty Breed is a family action documentary directed by Angie Ruiz. The Curse Of The Gothic Symphony is a 2011 film written and directed by Randall Wood. Rocks at Whiskey Trench is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Alanis Obomsawin. Return to Manila is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Hubert Niogret. Out of the Shadows is a 2012 documentary produced by Sullivan Entertainment. The documentary features Dr. Joris Dik as he works toward re-attributing ‘Portrait of an Old Man with a Beard’ as a Rembrandt painting. The results of the process documented in the film were announced on December 2, 2011 as the Rembrandt Research Project classified the ‘Old Man’ as a Rembrandt. The film is narrated by Donald Sutherland. Sunday's Best is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Marlon Johnson,Chad Tingle and Dennis Scholl. Living With Fibromyalgia: A Journey of Hope and Understanding is a 2007 documentary film by Stephen Eyer and Daneen Akers from Trillusion Media, Inc. The documentary has been called the first feature-length film that explores the chronic pain condition known as fibromyalgia. Chile: When Will It End? is a 1986 Australian documentary film produced by David Bradbury. The film portrays the dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. A great two part TV Series that follows all three year of the Korean conflict from the beginning 1951 to the signing of the peace treaty in 1953. Robert Frost: A Lover's Quarrel With the World is a 1963 American documentary film directed by Shirley Clarke and starring Robert Frost. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for 1963. Crayons of Askalan is a 2011 documentary, animation, biography film written by Laila Hotait Salas and Tetra Balestri and directed by Laila Hotait Salas. Gabor is a 2013 docu-drama film written and directed by Sebastián Alfie. Babe's & Ricky's Inn is a documentary film directed by Ramin Niami about the famed blues club, Babe's & Rickey's Inn. The film premiered April 5, 2013 at Laemmle Monica in Santa Monica, California. Amazing Grace: Jeff Buckley is an hour-long documentary that celebrates the legacy of the late musician Jeff Buckley with specific attention given to fans he inspired. The film was officially sanctioned by Jeff's mother and estate. It is not a biography, but a tribute. Amazing Grace: Jeff Buckley screened at 25 film festivals around the world between 2004 and 2006 where it won several awards including, best film, best documentary and best music documentary. It was directed and produced by first-time filmmakers, Nyla Bialek Adams and Laurie Trombley, who was also hand-picked by Jeff Buckley to be his personal Fan Relations Manager. Originally scheduled for DVD release on May 22, 2007, alongside So Real: Songs From Jeff Buckley, the release of Amazing Grace: Jeff Buckley was initially delayed due to music licensing issues, but was finally released in June 2009 by Sony BMG Legacy as part of the Grace Around the World Deluxe Limited Edition. "Amar'e Stoudemire: In the Moment" reveals the world's most dominant basketball player's greatest fears, dreams, focus and challenges. Threads is a 1984 BAFTA award-winning British television drama, produced jointly by the BBC, Nine Network and Western-World Television Inc. Written by Barry Hines and directed by Mick Jackson, it is a docudrama account of nuclear war and its effects on the city of Sheffield in northern England. The primary plot centres on two families, the Kemps and the Becketts, as an international crisis between the United States and the Soviet Union erupts and escalates. As the United Kingdom prepares for war, the members of each family deal with their own personal crises. Meanwhile, a secondary plot centred upon the Chief Executive of Sheffield City Council serves to illustrate the British government's then-current continuity of government arrangements. As nuclear exchanges between NATO and the Warsaw Pact begin, the harrowing details of the characters' struggle to survive the attacks and their aftermath is dramatically depicted. The balance of the story details the fate of each family as the characters face the medical, economic, social and environmental consequences of nuclear war. The Lord's Ride is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Jean-Charles Hue. As autism has exploded into the public consciousness over the last 20 years, two opposing questions have been asked about the condition fueling the debate: is it a devastating sickness to be cured or is it a variation of the human brain just a different way to be human?LOVING LAMPPOSTS: LIVING AUTISTIC takes a look at two movements: the recovery movement, which views autism as a tragic epidemic brought on by environmental toxins, and the neurodiversity movement, which argues that autism should be accepted and that autistic people should be supported.After his son's diagnosis, filmmaker Todd Drezner, visits the front lines of the autism wars to learn more about the debate and provide information about a condition that is still difficult to comprehend. This film is a great learning tool. Spat! Bringing Oysters Back To The Chesapeake Bay is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Sandy Cannon-brown. Santa Rosa: Odyssey in the Rhythm of Mariachi is a 2013 Historical Fiction documentary film written by Piotr Piwowarczyk and Slawomir Grunberg and directed by Slawomir Grunberg. Bastion Point: Day 507 is a 1980 short film directed by Merata Mita, Leon Narbey and Gerd Polhmann. Eastwood Directs: The Untold Story is a 2013 documentary written and directed by Richard Schickel. Shakespeare Behind Bars is a 2005 indie documentary film directed by Hank Rogerson. Avatar: Creating the World of Pandora is a 2010 documentary film directed by Thomas C. Grane. A Journal of Insomnia is a 2013 web documentary about insomnia, produced by Hugues Sweeney and created by Bruno Choiniere, Philippe Lambert, Thibaut Duverneix and Guillaume Braun for the National Film Board of Canada. The production has its premiere on April 18, 2013, as part of the Tribeca Film Festival's first Storyscapes section for transmedia. Site users must register online for an appointment, after which they receive a phone call informing them that they've been emailed a link to enter site. Once inside A Journal of Insomnia, users can follow the stories of one of four protagonists who share their own experiences with sleeplessness as well as access close to 2000 contributions from other insomniacs that have been collected since the fall of 2012. It was nominated for the Sheffield Innovation Award at the 2013 Sheffield Doc/Fest. The Trail of Tears: Cherokee Legacy is a 2006 documentary by Rich-Heape Films. It presents the history of the forcible removal and relocation of Cherokee people from southeastern states of the United States to territories west of the Mississippi River, particularly to the Indian Territory in the future Oklahoma. The Eternal Sisters is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Hans-Joachim Bergmann. Starting Place is a 1993 documentary film directed by Robert Kramer. Project Cheonan Ship is a documentary film directed by Baek Seoug-woo. In 1978, Oakley Hall III, the brilliant and charismatic founder of the Lexington Conservatory Theater, had it all. Together, his merry band transformed the run-down Catskills camp where they worked and lived into their creative paradise. THE LOSS OF NAMELESS THINGS is the harrowing tale of Hall's fall from grace, a bittersweet look at what was recaptured and a heartbreaking reminder of what was lost forever.  "One of the best glimpses into the redemptive power of art we've seen."/Austin Chronicle.  "Marvelous and Haunting"/ Seattle Times "As eloquent as its title" /Kevin Thomas, Los Angeles Times "What a story this film has to tell" Robert Horton/Everette Herald "Beautiful and compelling" Richard von Busack/Metroactive The Courage to Care is a 1985 American short documentary film directed by Robert H. Gardner and produced by Dr. Carol Rittner, RSM, about non-Jews who rescued Jews during the Holocaust. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Dr. Rittner's book of the same name is a companion volume to the film, which also includes the personal narratives of the same persons in the film and many others. Nicht verzeichnete Fluchtbewegungen is a 1990 documentary film directed by Dietrich Schubert. Message of Stones: Budapest is a 1994 documentary film directed by Miklós Jancsó. Just Skate is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Brianna Garza and Alicia Tanguma. I Have Tourette's but Tourette's Doesn't Have Me is a documentary film featuring children between the ages of six and thirteen with Tourette syndrome. The film examines the lives of more than a dozen children who have Tourette's, and explores the challenges they face. The 27-minute television documentary was produced by HBO in conjunction with the Tourette Syndrome Association, and first aired on HBO on November 12, 2005. Ellen Goosenberg Kent is the director and producer, and Sheila Nevins is the executive producer. The Story of Wish You Were Here is a direct-to-video documentary about the making of Wish You Were Here album by Pink Floyd. After being shown on a few television channels, such as BBC Four, it was released on 26 June 2012, on DVD and Blu-ray. The film gives an extensive insight of concept, recording the songs and designing the album cover. It includes exclusive interviews with almost every key person, who participated in producing the album. It is the second Pink Floyd documentary by Eagle Rock, the previous being The Making of the Dark Side of the Moon. The band is represented by all three surviving members – David Gilmour, Nick Mason and Roger Waters. Other participating people include: Joe Boyd, Venetta Fields, Jill Furmanovsky, Roy Harper, Brian Humphries, Peter Jenner, Nick Kent, Aubrey Powell, Ronnie Rondell Jr., Gerald Scarfe, and Storm Thorgerson. The film is about 59 minutes long, with 25 minutes of additional interviews. These also include footage of Roger Waters and David Gilmour performing some excerpts from the original songs, while Brian Humphries, the album's sound engineer, plays back the original sound tapes from Abbey Road Studios archives. The Making of a President: 1964 is a 1966 documentary film written by Theodore H. White and directed by Mel Stuart. My God is a 2004 short documentary film written and directed by Galina Adamovich. All of the necessary technologies required to reach the Moon was first tested during Project Gemini, which comprised of ten missions in the mid-1960s. Escuela De Sordos is a 2013 documentary film written by Pablo Checchi and Ada Frontini and directed by Ada Frontini. The Photographical Congress Arrives in Lyon is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Louis Lumière and starring P.J.C. Janssen as himself. It was first screened on 12 June 1895. My Career as a Jerk is a film directed by David Markey. And You Don't Stop: 30 Years of Hip-Hop is a 2004 film directed by Richard Lowe and Dana Heinz Perry and written by Bill Adler. The film documents the development of hip hop culture since its inception in the 1970s. It was nominated for an IDA award in 2005. Frau Siebert und ihre Schüler is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Hans-Dieter Grabe. The Story of Bohemian Rhapsody is a 2004 documentary about the song "Bohemian Rhapsody", written by the lead singer of Queen, Freddie Mercury. Argentinísima II is a 1973 Argentine musical documentary film directed and written by Fernando Ayala and Héctor Olivera. It is the sequel to the 1972 Argentinísima. The film premiered on 21 June 1973 in Buenos Aires. Matt Alber with Strings Attached is a 2012 short musical documentary film directed by Greg Sirota. Gaze is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Kim Hye-jee. Alone Across Australia is a 2004 Australian documentary starring adventurer Jon Muir. The film produced by Shark Island Productions and directed by Ian Darling and Jon Muir has won more than 25 awards, and has screened at over 60 international film festivals. Fighting For Our Rights is a 1962 documentary film written and directed by Frans Buyens. When a gang of suburban teens stumbled across a bunch of abandoned instruments and formed The Fleshtones little did they know that 30 years later they'll still be struggling to rock - and pay the bills. This wonderful documentary is all about improvisation, and particularly the kind of improvisation the superb jazz pianist Keith Jarrett does. It was made with the full cooperation of Jarrett and there are many minutes of conversation with him as well as with such collaborators as Manfred Eicher, Jack de Johnette, Gary Peacock, his brother Scott, his wife Roseanne, Chick Corea, Gary Burton and many more. Interspersed are many performance clips going back to the very beginning of his career (and including some scenes from his childhood) right up to the present. His ordeal with chronic fatigue syndrome in the mid-1990s is touched upon (but, not surprisingly, given Jarrett's reticence about personal matters, not dwelt upon). There is a ten-minute uninterrupted clip from a concert by his Standards Trio (Jarrett, de Johnette, Peacock). There are also clips of the Köln Concert, concerts with Jan Garbarek (particularly gorgeous), with Miles Davis, and many others. Jarrett comes across as a hugely intelligent and deeply thoughtful man who is nonetheless humble in the face of his talent. The World According to John Coltrane is a documentary film about saxophonist John Coltrane. My Life Part 2 is a 2003 film directed by Angelika Levi. Jerusalem Is Proud to Present is a 2008 documentary film directed by Nitzan Gilady about the 2006 World Pride Festival, an LGBT festival held in Jerusalem. It follows the lives of members of the Open House, Jerusalem's LGBT community center, who are planning the events, the threats they and their families receive, but refuse to back down. The poster of the documentary features a young Israeli man who vows to lead the parade despite having been stabbed by a fanatic at a previous parade. The film relates the controversy over the festival, with orthodox Jews, evangelical Christians, and conservative Muslims united in their dislike of a gay festival being held in a city they consider holy. The film had its U.S. premiere at the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival on 29 July 2008, and showed in 60 film festivals winning prizes. Journey Into Amazing Caves: IMAX is a short documentary film directed by Stephen Judson. The Mothers of Plaza de Mayo is a 1985 Argentine documentary film directed by Susana Blaustein Muñoz and Lourdes Portillo about the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Boxing for Palm Island is a 2010 documentary film written by Adrian Russell Wills & Michaela Perske and directed by Adrian Russell Wills. The Buffalo Creek Flood: An Act of Man is a 1975 documentary film produced by Appalshop. The film is about the Buffalo Creek Flood, an incident that occurred on February 26, 1972 when the Pittston Coal Company's coal slurry impoundment dam in Logan County, West Virginia burst four days after having been declared 'satisfactory' by a federal mine inspector. The film includes interviews with survivors, mining officials, and union representatives, along with footage of the flood itself. In 2005, this film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Tears of Inge is a 2013 short documentary animation film written and directed by Alisi Telengut. Sex report films were pseudo-documentaries that had sexual life as their subject matter. Effectively sexploitation films, the genre was particularly popular in the early 1970s Europe. Elevation 2001: Live from Boston is a concert film by Irish rock band U2. It was released as a two disc DVD set by Island Records in the United Kingdom on 26 November 2001, and by Interscope Records in the United States a month later. The video documents three concerts by the band performed in Boston, Massachusetts during the first American leg of their 2001 Elevation Tour. It was the first of two video releases from the tour, the second being U2 Go Home: Live from Slane Castle, Ireland. Elevation 2001 has received certifications in several regions including Mexico, where it was certified gold based on imports alone, and the United States, where it became the band's best-selling video album. The first disc contains the concert footage shot in the normal perspective, while the second disc contains alternate camera feeds from a small recorder in Bono's trademark glasses, showing unique footage from the band while on and off stage. Several bonus features were also included on both discs. After Tiller is a 2013 documentary film directed by Martha Shane and Lana Wilson that follows the only four remaining doctors in the United States who openly perform late-term abortions. The title refers to George Tiller, a doctor who performed abortions and was murdered in 2009. The film was met with a positive response from critics and was an official selection for the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the Candescent Award. Poverty Outlaw is a 1997 documentary directed by Peter Kinoy and Pamela Yates. Marvel Renaissance is a documentary film directed by Philippe Guedj and Philippe Roure. When in 1998 Chilean judge Juan Guzmán was assigned the first criminal cases against the country's ex-dictator, General Augusto Pinochet, no one expected much. Guzmán had supported Pinochet's 1973 coup — waged as an anti-Communist crusade — that left the democratically elected president, Salvador Allende, and thousands of others dead or "disappeared." The filmmakers trace the judge's descent into what he calls "the abyss," where he uncovers the past — including his own role in the tragedy. The Judge and the General reveals one of the 20th century’s most notorious episodes and tells a cautionary tale about violating human rights in the name of "higher ideals." A co-production of Independent Television Service (ITVS) in association with Latino Public Broadcasting. Wretches & Jabberers is a documentary film directed by Gerardine Wurzburg, and produced by Gerardine Wurzburg and Douglas Biklen. The film is about two autistic men who embark on a global journey, helping other autistic people to break through their isolation. The film opened theatrically on July 30, 2010 in New York and California. The use of facilitated communication is shown throughout this film and promoted by the producers of the film. Despite controversy surrounded facilitated communication, Biklen continues to promote the theory through other media. It's Not a Movie, It's Real Life: The Making of 'Turistas' is a 2007 documentary film. My Father's Camera is a 2001 documentary film written by Bill Cameron and Karen Shopsowitz and directed by Karen Shopsowitz. Faust: Live at Klangbad Festival is the fourth film within the "play loud! music series". It features the German avant-garde pop band Faust. Filmmakers Dietmar Post and Lucia Palacios captured the group in the style of Direct Cinema at the Klangbad Festival in 2005. Hadashi no Gen ga mita Hiroshima is a documentary film directed by Yuko Ishida. Combat Report was a short dramatic propaganda film produced by the U.S. Army Signal Corps in 1942, and shows the anti-submarine efforts of a bombing crew. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1943. Strange Trains is a 2006 travel documentary film. B1 is a 2009 biographical sports documentary directed by Felipe Braga and Eduardo Hunter Moura. It Came from Kuchar is a 2009 documentary film about twin underground filmmakers George Kuchar and Mike Kuchar directed by Jennifer Kroot and produced by Tigerlily Films LLC. The film includes commentary by John Waters, Christopher Coppola, Wayne Wang, B. Ruby Rich, Atom Egoyan, Guy Maddin, Bill Griffith, and Buck Henry. Funding for the film came from the Andy Warhol Foundation, Creative Work Fund, The Fleishhacker Foundation, San Francisco Arts Commission, and Frameline. Yosemite: The World's Most Spectacular Valley is a 2001 documentary film written by Janet Arvia, Blair Brnicky, Marty Callaghan and Rolf Forsberg and directed by Gary Adams. The Whaling Industry is a 1916 documentary film. History of the Motor Car is a 1972 documentary film, written and directed by Bill Mason. Vers la mer is a 1998 documentary film directed by Annik Leroy. The Last Mogul: The Life and Times of Lew Wasserman is a biographical documentary directed by Barry Avrich. We the People: From Crispus Attucks to President Barack Obama is a 2010 documentary film directed by Terrell Taylor. The Beer Hunter: The Story of Michael Jackson is a 2013 documentary film directed by J.R. Richards. Babeldom is a 2012 animation, science fiction documentary film written and directed by Paul Bush. Stone Bird is a 2006 short documentary film produced and directed by Hazem Alhamwi. Symphony Kinsasha is a short documentary film directed by Dinta Wa Lusula and Diendo Hamadi. My Barefoot Friend is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Lee Seong-kang. Human Terrain: War Becomes Academic is a 2010 documentary film about the US Army's Human Terrain System, written and directed by James Der Derian, David Udris and Michael Udris. The film examines the history of the HTS program, the public controversy surrounding HTS, and the story of one academic's involvement in the program. Hamilchama al hashalom is a 1968 film directed by Jules Dassin. A version in French was released under the title Comme un éclair, and the English language release was titled Survival 1967. Savage Splendor is a 1949 documentary. It made a profit of $250,000 and was RKO's most popular film of the year. I nuovi angeli is a film directed by Ugo Gregoretti released on February 2, 1962. The Fighting Men's Chronicle: Erefanto kashimashi gekijouban is a documentary film directed by Nobuhiro Yamashita. Sitting high atop the food chain, these are the killers that even predators fear: the apex predators. These spectacular creatures have won the carnivore's lottery and are used to getting their way. A World Not Ours is a 2012 documentary, biographical and historical film written and directed by Mahdi Fleifel. Sousa and His Band is a 1901 short musical documentary film. In this stylistic documentary, director Vali Fugulin uses a series of vignettes and Japanese style anime to reveal ZED. Burt's Buzz is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jody Shapiro. Watch is a 2001 documentary written, directed and produced by environmental activist Briana Waters, who is serving a six-year sentence for charges relating to the University of Washington firebombing incident. The film portrays the cooperation between residents of the Washington logging town, Randle, and Cascadia Defense Network activists attempting to stop the clearcutting of old growth trees on Watch mountain and along the nearby Fossil Creek. The film served as Waters' senior project at Evergreen State College. Whatever Happened To Ultraman? is a 2010 animated documentary written and directed by John Walsh. Balthus Through the Looking-Glass is a 1996 French documentary film directed by Damian Pettigrew on the French painter Balthus. The film was honored in a cycle of film classics by Jean Renoir, Marcel Carné, and Jean Vigo at the Museum Ludwig in September 2007. Bureau 06 is a documentary film directed by Yoav Halevy. S Club 7: S Club Party is a 1999 music documentary film written by H. Atkins, Cathy Dennis, T.E. Hermansen, Eliot Kennedy, Tim Lever, Mike Percy, Hallgeir Rustan and Mikkel S.E. and directed by Hamish Hamilton. A Community Speaks is a 2004 feature-length documentary that looks at modern-day, land stewardship issues from all sides. The documentary was produced and directed by Bruce Campbell and his wife, Ida Gearon. Public Speaking is a 2010 HBO documentary film directed by Martin Scorsese, about the American author Fran Lebowitz, containing interviews and clips from speaking engagements. The film was nominated for Best Documentary in the Gotham Independent Film Awards 2010. It received favorable reviews, garnering 90% at Rotten Tomatoes and 75% at Metacritic. The Stone Carvers is a 1984 American short documentary film directed by Marjorie Hunt and Paul Wagner. It won an Academy Award in 1985 for Documentary Short Subject. Photos to Send is a 2002 documentary film directed by Dierdre Lynch. Cochengo Miranda is a 1975 Argentine documentary film by filmmaker Jorge Preloran. How a People Live is a historical documentary film directed by Lisa Jackson. Wukan: The Flame Of Democracy is a 2013 documentary film directed by Lynn Lee and James Leong. Disabled But Able to Rock! is a 2010 documentary film directed by Blake Myers. This is Not Your Life is a 1991 short film written and directed by Jorge Furtado. The Girlie Show: Live Down Under is a video album by American singer-songwriter Madonna. It was released by Warner Music Vision, Warner Reprise Video and Maverick Records on April 25, 1994 and included a date filmed at Sydney Cricket Ground on November 19, 1993 from The Girlie Show World Tour. The video was originally broadcast as a TV special on HBO in 1993 under the title Madonna Live Down Under: The Girlie Show. The concert was directed by Mark "Aldo" Miceli, who previously directed the TV specials Blond Ambition: Japan Tour 90 and the Barcelona TV special Madonna-Live! Blond Ambition World Tour 90. When re-released on DVD in 1998, the video was the first ever music video in this format along with another Warner Music title The Three Tenors in Concert. Uncommon Friends of the 20th Century is a 1999 documentary film on Florida businessman James D. Newton and the relationships he enjoyed with five key historic figures: Thomas A. Edison, Charles Lindbergh, Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone and Alexis Carrel. The film, which was directed by first-time filmmaker John Biffar and narrated by Walter Cronkite, included interviews with Newton, archival footage and dramatic re-enactments. The film had a brief theatrical release, and reviews were mostly negative. Lawrence Van Gelder, writing in The New York Times, called the film “a weak broth of biography, spiritual uplift and environmental concerns” and added “its generally uncritical and sometimes apologetic posture and its failure to distinguish between its authentic film images and its re-enactments of events.” Nico Baumbach, writing in The Village Voice, stated that Newton’s “anecdotes are so unspecific that his ostensible authority, the premise of the film, feels like a put-on.” Uncommon Friends of the 20th Century was broadcast on public television in 2000. To date, the film has not been available as a commercial DVD release. An Evening with the Dixie Chicks is a 2002 live music documentary featuring the Dixie Chicks and directed by Joel Gallen. As of March 2003, An Evening with the Dixie Chicks has sold 2 million copies in the United States and has been certified 2x Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America. The Sound of the Bandoneón is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jiska Rickels. Street Scenes, also known as Street Scenes 1970 is a documentary directed by Martin Scorsese. It documents two protest rallies against the Vietnam War that took place in May 1970: the Hard Hat Riot on Wall Street in New York City and Kent State/Cambodia Incursion Protest in Washington, D.C. The numerous camera operators do impromptu interviews with the protestors and the spectators. The New York protest turns violent as protestors were attacked by construction workers who supported the war. The Washington protest is peaceful. At the end, Scorsese, Harvey Keitel, Jay Cocks and Verna Bloom discuss the events and the current state of world affairs. Oliver Stone was one of the many camera operators. G Spotting: A Story of Pleasure and Promise is a 2011 documentary film directed by Gilles Boyon and Segolene Hanotaux. Rest in Pieces: A Portrait of Joe Coleman is a 1997 film written by Walt Michelson and directed by Robert Adrian Pejo. Journey to Palomar, America's First Journey Into Space is a 2008 documentary film directed by Robin Mason and Robin Mason. Minds in the Water is a documentary action advanture film directed by Justin Krumb. Tirich Mir til topps is a 1952 documentary film directed by Rasmus Breistein. Invisible Girlfriend is a 2009 documentary film directed by David Redmon. Sylvain Tesson is a writer and adventurer who has spent most of his life traveling the globe to live extreme adventures. In Alone, he spends six months alone on Lake Baikal, completely cut off from the outside world. From February to July, he films himself and his surroundings, and shares with us his feelings as he experiences silence, solitude and communion with nature. A Constant Forge is a 2000 documentary film directed by Charles Kiselyak about the life and work of John Cassavetes. It contains interviews with Cassavetes himself as well as recollections by actors who have worked with him and thoughts by admirers, including Lynn Carlin, Seymour Cassel, Peter Falk, John A. Gallagher, Ben Gazzara, Lelia Goldoni, Annette Insdorf, Carol Kane, Sean Penn, Gena Rowlands and Jon Voight. This is the story of three Bedouin women, struggling within a polygamous system. Living in the Negev desert in Israel, the story is told through the eyes of a wedding photographer, Miriam Al-Quader. She herself is living under constant fear that her husband will marry "over her" (the expression used when a man chooses an additional wife). The other two women are pushed into marrying already married men, and become "second wives", forced to cooperate within a structure they despise or are afraid of. The family tragedies presented in this film highlight the strength and survival of the social structures and their injustices, leaning usually on the victims' reluctant cooperation. This is most exemplified by the climax of a Bedouin wedding, wherein the groom showers upon his bride gold and jewelry in a gesture symbolizing her purchase. This is meant to be a great moment of joy for the bride, as she becomes a status symbol. However, as these women show, in the long run, it is the first moment in which they acquiesce to a life of silence and unwilling acceptance. Elevador is a 2013 Documentary film written and directed by Adrián Ortiz. Touch Life is a 2014 short film directed by Leo Bruges and Marcin Knyziak. Parliament-Funkadelic: One Nation Under A Groove is a documentary broadcast in the USA on PBS in October 2005 as part of the Independent Lens series. The documentary chronicles the development of the Parliament-Funkadelic musical collective, led by the producer, writer and arranger George Clinton. Parliament-Funkadelic: One Nation Under A Groove was developed by Brazen Hussy Productions, based in New York City and led by director Yvonne Smith. The documentary combines archival footage, contemporary interviews with P-Funk band members, and stylized animation. It follows the evolution of the band from the early days of doo-wop to its induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997. It is narrated by the comedian Eddie Griffin. It is notable for showing footage of P-Funk in 1969 from the WGBH series Say Brother. A documentary that takes a look into the life and career of veteran entertainer Sal Richards, with testimonials from Sid Ceaser, Don Rickles, Red Buttons, Jerry Stiller, and others. Boogie Stomp! is a 2012 Biographical film, Music, Historical Drama and Documentary film written and directed by Bob Baldori. Geeks is a 2004 film that examines why people acquire an interest in "geeky" subjects such as Japanese Anime, Star Wars, Star Trek and the film The Nightmare Before Christmas. Remembering Playland at the Beach is a documentary film directed by Tom Wyrsch. Price of Life is a short student-made documentary exploring the life of Robert Childs, a former Philadelphia, USA, drug dealer and gangster. Berlin · Bahnhof Friedrichstrasse · 1990 is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Lilly Grote, Ulrike Herdin, Julia Kunert and Konstanze Binder. Une vie comme rivière is a 1996 documentary film written by Diane Cailhier, Alain Chartrand and Simonne Monet-Chartran and directed by Diane Cailhier and Alain Chartrand. Human Remains is a 1998 short documentary film about the personal lives of Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Joseph Stalin, Francisco Franco and Mao Zedong. It was written and directed by filmmaker Jay Rosenblatt and won a Sundance Award. Prelude to War was the first film of Frank Capra’s Why We Fight propaganda film series, commissioned by the Office of War Information and George C. Marshall. It was made to convince American troops of the necessity of combating the Axis Powers during World War II. The film was based on the idea that those in the service would be more willing and able fighters if they knew the background and reason for their participation in the war. It was later released to the general American public as a rallying cry for support of the war. 66 Seasons is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Péter Kerekes. Daz Dillinger: Tha Row Killa is a 2003 music documentary film directed by Mossberg. "Rarely has anyone embodied contradictions as happily and harmoniously as octogenarian New York Times photographer Bill Cunningham. Obsessed with how people dress, he unfailingly dons the same shapeless jacket; a chronicler of ritzy charity events, he tools around Manhattan on a bike. Cunningham's two weekly spreads in the Sunday Style section form complementary opposites: "On the Street" features everyday Gothamites decked out in eclectic fashion statements, while "Evening Hours" captures the rich clad in haute couture. Whatever this Times-produced, TV-ready tribute lacks in tension is amply compensated by the pleasure of watching an enthusiast ply the craft he loves." Quoting Ronnie Sheib in Variety. Tondo, Beloved: To What Are the Poor Born? is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jewel Maranan. "Who Killed Chea Vichea? is a highly charged murder mystery and political thriller. In 1999, Cambodian garment workers demanding decent wages and working conditions found their leader in Chea Vichea. As president of Cambodia's free trade union, he stood with them despite beatings and death threats. On a sunny morning in 2004 as Vichea read the paper at a sidewalk newsstand, three bullets silenced him forever. Under intense international pressure, the police arrested two men and extracted a confession. They were sentenced to twenty years each. But did they have anything to do with the crime? What seems at first to be justice done starts to look like a frame-up, and the implications reach far beyond the police station and the courtroom. Who Killed Chea Vichea? is a co-production with ITVS, with funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Birthplace Unknown is a 1988 Dutch documentary film by director Karin Junger, featuring two South-Korean girls who were adopted by a Dutch family. The director follows the two young women as they visit South Korea, their country of birth. Claude Sautet or the Invisible Magic is a 2003 documentary film written by N.T. Binh, Dominique Rabourdin and directed by N.T. Binh. People of the Cumberland is a 1937 short film directed by Sidney Meyers and Jay Leyda and produced by Frontier Films. The film is designed to support the U.S. labor union movement and it mixes non-fiction filmmaking and dramatic re-enactions. The Holy Modal Rounders: Bound to Lose is a 2006 musical documentary film directed by Sam Wainwright Douglas and Paul Lovelace. Fugitive L(i)ght is a 2005 short film directed by Izabella Pruska-Oldenhof. Oh My God is a 2009 documentary by filmmaker Peter Rodger. The filmmaker asked people across the world the question "What is God?" Notable figures interviewed include Ringo Starr, Hugh Jackman, David Copperfield, Seal, Bob Geldof, Baz Luhrmann, Jack Thompson, Princess Michael of Kent and Lawrence Blair. The life and times of Mark Occhilupo. This is a celebration of a great surfer's life. Following Occy from Cronulla grommet to his amazing comeback, this is the "Surfer Magazine Video of the Year" award winner. Soundtrack featuring Foo Fighters, Michael Brook, Ed Kuepper, Powderfinger, OSM, and Yothu Yindi. Early footage as a kid, he amazing competitive efforts, his Pipe win at 15, thru to his first professional win on his comeback at Bells Beach. "... another one of those McCoy classics, entertaining enough to watch 10, 20 or 100 times. The bottom line: this video should be sitting alone, on a shelf, next to burning candles and your favourite photos of Occy ..." -Surfer Mag La Comédie-Française ou L'amour joué is a 1996 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. Come Back, Africa is the second feature-length film after On the Bowery written, produced, and directed by American independent filmmaker Lionel Rogosin. The film had a profound effect on African Cinema, and remains of great historical and cultural importance as a document preserving the unique heritage of the townships in South Africa in the 1950s. It may be classified as reportage, documentary, historical movie or political cinema, since it portrays real events and people. On the other hand, it reveals an interpretation of meaningful social facts and a strong ethical assumption towards human behaviors like racism. Nevertheless, it is a scripted film, based on fictional narrative, in which actors play invented roles. But, unlike mainstream films and against Hollywood traditions, its actors are street people, improvising lived experiences: they play their own lives or those of people like them. That is why Come Back, Africa is a fiction / non-fiction, a hybrid of fictional film and documentary: a docufiction. Besides, it is a rare specimens in film history of docufiction and political film in one. Flawed is a 2010 short animated documentary film and website by Halifax filmmaker Andrea Dorfman about body image, combining stop-motion animation and hand-painted images. Flawed was produced in Halifax by Annette Clarke for the National Film Board of Canada. According to Dorfman, the film was created to resemble a storyboard because it was based on a series of postcards that she has sent to a boyfriend while they were in a long-distance relationship. While Flawed is an autobiographical work, she also believes that it is universal because "I believe everyone has felt flawed at some point in their lives." In July 2012, the film version of Flawed received a nomination in the category New Approaches to News and Documentary Programming: Documentaries at the 33rd annual News & Documentary Emmy Awards. The film was nominated following its August 23, 2011 premiere on the PBS series POV. The film's awards also included an audience choice award at the New York City Short Film Festival. Festival selections included a premiere at the 2010 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival. Lack of Evidence is a 2011 short animated documentary film directed by Hayoun Kwon. Kumaré is an American 2011 documentary film directed by Vikram Gandhi. To record the documentary, American filmmaker Vikram Gandhi transformed himself into Sri Kumaré, an enlightened guru from a fictional village in India, by adopting a fake Indian accent and growing out his hair and beard. In the film, Kumaré travels to Arizona to spread his made-up philosophy and gain sincere followers. Kumaré premiered at the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival, where it received the festival's Feature Film Audience Award for Best Documentary Feature. Gandhi came up with the idea of a fictional guru while recording another documentary film about yogis and their followers. Ben Lee: Catch My Disease is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Amiel Courtin-Wilson. Charming, intelligent and iconoclastic, Ben Lee is an Australian singer-songwriter whose creative growth since his early adolescence has undergone almost relentless media scrutiny. This is a playful yet deeply intimate portrait of Lee, exploring his meteoric rise to pop stardom and the issues of celebrity and spirituality that arise when launched into the spotlight. Ex-girlfriend Claire Danes and long-time friends Jason Schwartzman, Michelle Williams, Mike D, Zooey Deschanel and Winona Ryder give insight to Lee’s almost impenetrable public persona, as well as to his private hopes and insecurities. Adventures in Perception is a 1971 Dutch short documentary film directed by Han Van Gelder. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short., and won the Best Short Film on Art at the 1971 Cork Film Festival. It is a study on the works of M. C. Escher My Reflection is a concert DVD by Christina Aguilera, released in 2001. The concert early before being released on DVD was shown in a one-hour special on ABC in around Christmas time in 2000. The televised concert took in 10.5 million viewers. The DVD was certified gold by the RIAA and platinum in Australia. The Other Brother is a documentary biographical family historical fiction film directed by Kristy Higby. Marlene Dietrich - Her Own Song is a 2001 German documentary film, written by Karin Kearns and directed by David Riva. The Portraitist is a 2005 Polish television documentary film about the life and work of Wilhelm Brasse, the famous "photographer of Auschwitz", made for TVP1, Poland, which first aired in its "Proud to Present" series on January 1, 2006. It also premiered at the Polish Film Festival, at the West London Synagogue, in London, on March 19, 2007. Himalayan Heritage is a 1962 documentary film directed by N.S. Thapa. Revolution ’67 is an illuminating account of events too often relegated to footnotes in U.S. history – the black urban rebellions of the 1960s. Focusing on the six-day Newark, N.J., outbreak in mid-July, Revolution ’67 reveals how the disturbances began as spontaneous revolts against poverty and police brutality and ended as fateful milestones in America’s struggles over race and economic justice. Voices from across the spectrum – activists Tom Hayden and Amiri Baraka, journalist Bob Herbert, Mayor Sharpe James, and other officials, National Guardsmen, and Newark citizens – recall lessons as hard-earned then as they have been easy to neglect since. A co-production of the Independent Television Service (ITVS ) and American Documentary | P.O.V. in association with WSKG. (packaged to 86:46) People Make Papers is a 1966 documentary film directed by Fred Schepisi. C’est La Vie: The Chris J. Melnychuk Story documents the award-winning animator’s (Alien, Zap Girl Makes Toast) battle with tongue cancer. March, March with Your Left! is a 2012 documentary film written by Natalia Montaña Ibañes and directed by Evgeniya Montaña Ibañes. Manpower was a short propaganda film produced by the US Office of War Information in 1942. Made early shortly after America's entry into World War II, the film addressed the problems associated with the labor market adjusting for war time, such as people with the wrong skills rushing to a town looking for war work, and labor shortages in essential industries. The film discusses how the Roosevelt administration dealt with the problem by the establishment of the Federal Employment Commission, which brought together representatives from labor, management, and the military to organize war production effectively, the test case being in the city of Baltimore. In spite of this action, there were labor shortages, and people had to be taken from other occupations and put into war work. Different examples are given and briefly dramatized: a man who has seniority working in a white collar profession is promised his position back when he returns to work after the war small businessmen are persuaded to sell their shops and go into war production Negroes are taken from menial jobs like custodians, and put to work welding Kevin, Joe, and Nick Jonas are clearly teen idols. They've sold millions of albums, and continue to sell out concert arenas all around the world. This is the inspirational story of how three brothers, from the shore region of New Jersey, became international super stars. Fred Rogers: America's Favorite Neighbor is a 2004 documentary film written by Rick Sebak. Tough Bond is a 2013 documentary drama film directed by Anneliese Vandenberg and Austin Peck. In Search Of The Unreturned Soldiers In Thailand is a 1971 documentary film directed by Shôhei Imamura. Champions Forever: The Latin Legends is a 1997 sport film written and directed by Lee Librado. O. J. Simpson: Juice on the Loose is a sports documentary, originally produced in 1974 by George A. Romero and re-released by Vidmark in 1994 during the O. J. Simpson murder case. It was referenced in the title to the Family Guy episode about Simpson, "The Juice Is Loose" and is included as an "Easter egg" bonus feature on the DVD release of the spoof film The Bogus Witch Project. The Last Waltz was a concert by the rock group the Band, held on American Thanksgiving Day, November 25, 1976, at Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco. The Last Waltz was advertised as the Band's "farewell concert appearance", and the concert saw the Band joined by more than a dozen special guests, including Bob Dylan, Paul Butterfield, Neil Young, Emmylou Harris, Ringo Starr, Ronnie Hawkins, Dr. John, Joni Mitchell, Van Morrison, Muddy Waters, Ronnie Wood, Neil Diamond, Bobby Charles, The Staple Singers, and Eric Clapton. The musical director for the concert was the Band's original record producer, John Simon. The event was filmed by director Martin Scorsese and made into a documentary of the same name, released in 1978. Jonathan Taplin, who was the Band's tour manager from 1969 to 1972 and later produced Scorsese's film Mean Streets, suggested that Scorsese would be the ideal director for the project and introduced Robbie Robertson and Scorsese. Taplin was the Executive Producer of The Last Waltz. The film features concert performances, scenes shot on a studio soundstage and interviews by Scorsese with members of the Band. Einstein on the Beach: The Changing Image of Opera is a 1985 film directed by Mark Obenhaus. Love. Love. Love. is a 2013 short biographical documentary film directed by Sandhya Daisy Sundaram. A harrowing exploration of the rapid rise of American religious fanaticism after 9/11. This film explores an emerging ultra Right Wing mass movement seeking dominion over all aspects of contemporary American society. The film weaves archival video, contemporary Christian Nationalist movement propaganda (recruiting videos, apocalyptic/military video game imagery, etc.) and original investigative material) to create an intense examination of the totalitarian mindset and its will to power. Camera, Camera is a 2009 documentary drama film directed by Malcolm Murray and written by Michael Meyer. Squadron 992 is a 1939 drama war documentary film written by W.D.H. McCulloch and directed by Harry Watt. Nirankush is a 1997 short documentary film directed by Venu Arora. Journey to the South Pacific is a 2013 IMAX Documentary film directed by Greg MacGillivray. It was narrated by Cate Blanchett. The film contains a strong message of marine conservation in the unique ecosystems of the Coral Triangle of Indonesia, while showcasing the island life of the native population. The Microprocessor Chronicles is a documentary by filmmaker Rob Walker. Walker, who cofounded LSI Logic, created the film to document the growth and history of Silicon Valley. The work includes interviews with persons famous among notables in the microprocessor world. It discusses technical evolution of the microprocessor and marketing of devices. The film is part of a series by Walker named Silicon Genesis. Another film in the series, The Fairchild Chronicles, talks about Mountain View's Fairchild Semiconductor. The series is supported by Stanford University. My Black Box is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Nicolas-Alexandre Tremblay. Da Vinci and the Code He Lived By is 2006 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Lighting Direction & Scenic Design nominated documentary aired on December 4, 2005 Handa Handa 4 is a 2013 documentary film directed by David Ofek. Here Was Cuba is a 2013 documentary film directed by John Murray and Emer Reynolds. Superstars and Cannonballs is a DVD/VHS released in 2001 after the Superstars & Cannonballs tour in Brisbane by Savage Garden. It predominantly consisted of tour footage, however also contained a short documentary, "Parallel Lives". The DVD is approximately 110 minutes in duration and, as well as the tour and short documentary, includes 3 bonus music videos. The footage of 11 cameras, eventually lent clips to the music video of the single "Affirmation". The name Superstars and Cannonballs is taken from a part of "The Animal Song" lyrics. The Street: A Film with the Homeless is a 78-minute 1997 documentary film about the Canadian homeless in Montreal. The film was directed by Daniel Cross and produced by him and Don Haig. The production houses were the National Film Board of Canada and Necessary Illusions Productions Inc. Made over 6 years, "The Street" is the result of the filmmakers' total immersion into the world of the homeless. It is a gutsy, raw, violent, sad, sexy, moving and intimate study of 3 homeless Montrealers who can be seen mostly near the city's Guy-Concordia metro station of Société de transport de Montréal. The unique approach of the camera is neither voyeuristic nor judgmental. Characters experience cycles of addiction and recovery, hope and despair - but rise above the street with a sense of dignity, humanity and community. Set in a context which sees our civil society disintegrating and the safety-net collapsing, "The Street" gets deep inside a very complex social issue, beyond mediated stereotypes. Breakup is a 2014 short film written and directed by Igor Slepov. Don't Tell My Mother is a television programme hosted by Diego Buñuel and shown on the subscription television channel Nat Geo Adventure. For the past ten years, Diego Buñuel has been a foreign correspondent for French Television covering countries like Iraq, Afghanistan, or the Congo. Every time he left for one of his stories, he would tell his production crew in the Paris office, "Don't tell my mother I am in Colombia, it makes her really nervous." After a few years of traveling repeatedly, Diego realized that the international news coverage, of which he was part of, only focused on the worst headlines possible. So Diego embarked on a rather unusual effort; to talk about countries that make headlines, but instead of focusing on the same three basic stories, he extended the reach of his eye to look at a more subtle vision of these countries, full of culture, people, interests that rise high above the daily news reports. Don't Tell My Mother criss-crosses the globe as Diego stops in burgeoning mega-cities – some plagued by the overwhelming demands that come along with housing millions of residents. RIDE FOR LIFE ~The Eigo Sato Story~ is a documentary film directed by Hitoshi Kajino. The Heroes of Desert Storm is a 1991 film that told the story of the Persian Gulf War's Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm from the point of view of several participants. Confluencias is a 1998 short documentary film written and directed by Pilar García Elegido. The American Scream is a documentary profiling three families in Fairhaven, Massachusetts, who transform their homes into extravagant haunted attractions for Halloween. Produced and directed by Michael Stephenson, the film premiered on the Chiller network October 28, 2012. The recent growth of the "home haunter" phenomenon is linked to the influence of the Internet as well as the Haunted Attraction National Tradeshow and Convention. Family in Frame is a 2010 short biographical drama film directed by Neelu Bhuman. Tango's Revenge is a 2012 documentary film directed by Francine Pelletier. Sertschawan - Upon My Eyes is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Beatrice Michel Leuthold and Hans Stürm. Okonokos is a live album and concert film by My Morning Jacket released on October 31, 2006. The album was recorded during the band's fall 2005 Z Tour, over two nights at The Fillmore in San Francisco, California. This is the first My Morning Jacket album for which frontman Jim James does not receive a production credit; he is credited for "concept/story". The Last Play at Shea is a 2010 documentary film written by Mark Monroe, directed by Paul Crowder, produced by Steve Cohen and Nigel Sinclair, in conjunction with Billy Joel's Maritime Pictures and Spitfire Films. The film is centered on Billy Joel's 2008 concerts of the same name that occurred at Shea Stadium. The shows were staged on July 16 and 18, 2008, before a combined 110,000 fans, and were the last performances ever to play the historic stadium before it was demolished. The film debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 26, 2010. The film was released on DVD on February 8, 2011. The CD and DVD from the show were released on March 8, 2011 by Sony. The film premiered on August 21, 2010 at Citi Field, Shea Stadium's successor, in front of around 20,000 moviegoers. Earlier that day, Joel watched it himself and there was an announcement from him that he liked it and said "I haven't puked from it," which was shown right before the film. Lou Barlow: Goodnight Unknown is a 2010 short documentary film produced and directed by Adam Harding. A legend in political reporting, Helen Thomas has covered every president since John F. Kennedy, earning the nickname "First Lady of the Press." Now in her 80s, the venerable journalist sits down to review her life and career in depth for the first time, engaging in a one-on-one interview with award-winning director Rory Kennedy, when Thank You, Mr. President: Helen Thomas at the White House Mindless Behavior: All Around the World is a 2013 American documentary film starring and based on the American boy band Mindless Behavior. The film was released on March 15, 2013, only through AMC Theaters. The film was released by AwesomenessTV Films. The film was directed and produced by Steven Goldfried, also produced by Walter Millshap. The film also has the same name as the second studio album, All Around the World. Broadway Idiot is a 2013 documentary film directed by Doug Hamilton. Granton Trawler is a 1934 documentary and short film written by John Grierson and directed by Edgar Anstey and John Grierson. Alegorias de la ciega y el sordomudo is a 1977 short documentary film directed by Javier Ortiz Tirado Kelly. I due Kennedy is a 1970 documentary film written and directed by Gianni Bisiach. Three Short Films About Chile is a documentary short film directed by Michael Chanan. Zoll zyn - Jiddish Culture in... is a 1992 film directed by Henryk Broder. The Eyes of Thailand is a 2012 documentary film directed and produced by Windy Borman and produced by Tim VandeSteeg. The film chronicles the work of Soraida Salwala, who opened the world's first elephant hospital in Lampang, Thailand and together with her team, created the world's first elephant prosthesis. An age-obsessed daughter of a plastic surgeon takes a journey through America's $60 Billion a year anti-aging world. In this Alice-in Wonderland tale, McCabe spends 2 years traveling across America visiting doctors, experts and lives with a cross-section of characters from Minnesota to Texas who've gone to varying lengths to "beat the clock", to paint a funny but troubling portrait of a country that desperately needs to stay young. Nations Cultures - Muslims, is a documentary film series. In these series, different countries were visited by the director group, the countries included: England, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Guinea, Mali and Senegal. The cultural, social and historical situations were considered and the life and culture of Muslims in their countries were analyzed. Chantal Akerman by Chantal Akerman is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Chantal Akerman. Brasslands is a 2013 documentary and music film directed by Alison Brockhouse, Bryan Chang, Sara Huneke, Dara Messinger, Eric Phillips-Horst, Adam Pogoff, Zara Serabian-Arthur, Jay Arthur Sterrenberg, Jeffrey Sterrenberg, and Karim Tabbaa. Golden Slumbers is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Davy Chou. Hiroshima Witness, also released as Voice of Hibakusha, is a documentary film featuring 100 interviews of people who survived the Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, also known as hibakusha. The Hiroshima Witness program was produced in 1986 by the Hiroshima Peace Cultural Center and NHK, the public broadcasting company of Japan. The Chemical Brothers: Don't Think is a documentary music film directed by Adam Smith. LChayim, Comrade Stalin is a 2002 documentary film written by Elizabeth Schwartz and directed by Yale Strom. The Hoaxters is a 1952 American documentary film written by Herman Hoffman, about the threat posed by communism to the American way of life. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Warner Home Video DVD release of the 1998 CNN documentary The Cold War in 2012 included this film as a special feature. Professor Norman Cornett is a 2009 documentary film directed by Alanis Obomsawin. The Last Customer is a 2003 documentary short film directed by Nanni Moretti. Věra 68 is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Olga Sommerová. CHARLOTTE is a film about an extraordinary boatyard, the Gannon & Benjamin Marine Railway, located on the island of Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. Ross Gannon and Nat Benjamin established the boatyard in 1980 with the purpose of designing, building, and maintaining traditionally built wooden boats, and in the process they transformed Vineyard Haven harbor into a mecca for wooden boat owners and enthusiasts.After a long career of designing and constructing boats for others, Nat embarks on building a 50 foot gaff rigged schooner for use by his family and friends - her name is Charlotte. Through close observation of the everyday activities of the boatyard, the film emerges as a meditation on tradition, craftsmanship, family, community, our relationship to nature, and the love of the sea. Tomorrow's Another Day is a 2011 documentary about Swedish film director Roy Andersson and his unique way of making films. Shot during the four year long filming Andersson's latest film "You, The Living", the documentary is a personal description of a surprising and different approach to the creative process. Roy Andersson has invented a working method of his own in order to achieve control over the work in process, but he is ultimately dependent on his young co-workers. The film was released in April 2011. A shorter version of the film has been shown at the Museum of Modern Art, in New York United States of America. 1972 is a 2008 short documentary directed by Sarah Morris. Against Wind and Tide: A Cuban Odyssey is a 1981 American documentary film about the Mariel boatlift, which was first broadcast on PBS the week of June 1, 1981. Written by John Brousek, the film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Discovering Mavericks is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Josh Pomer. Journal de rivesaltes 1941-42 is a 1997 film directed by Jacqueline Veuve. Inside Out in the Open is a 2001 documentary film directed by Alan Roth. Bob and the Monster is a 2011 documentary film by Keirda Bahruth which profiles musician and drug counselor Bob Forrest. Le Barbares is a 2010 short film directed by Jean-Gabriel Periot. Featuring purported proof of alien existence in the form of interviews with government scientists and astronaut Gordon Cooper, plus physical evidence from the Roswell Incident and the removal of an alien implant. Also includes over 250 UFOs caught on video, plus special appearances by Will Smith, Sigourney Weaver, Steven Spielberg, and more. Untold Stories is a 2013 war documentary film written by Obaida Zaiton, Hisham al-Zouki and directed by Hisham al-Zouki. Xenos is a 2014 documentary film written by Mahdi Fleifel and directed by Mahdi Fleifel. El trabajo is a short documentary film directed by Ignacio Duran. Brendan O'Connell is Blocking the Bread Aisle is a 2013 short documentary written by Julien Lasseur, Jamie Thalman and directed by Julien Lasseur. Them, Us and Skitskoj (A Dialogue in the Editing Room) is a 2008 documentary film directed by Zdeněk N. Bričkovský and co-rwritten with Taťána Černá. A Midwife’s Tale is a 1998 documentary historical drama film written by Laurie Kahn-Leavitt and directed by Richard P. Rogers. Apollo at 70: A Hot Night in Harlem is a 2004 documentary film written by Ruth Adkins Robinson. Qafqaz və Merkuri cəmiyyətinin paroxodunun limandan yola düşməsi is one of the earliest films ever produced in the Cinema of Azerbaijan directed by Azeri cinema pioneer Alexandre Michon. It was released in the summer of 1898. The film was shot on 35mm. Conversaciones de un matrimonio is a 2013 biographical and documentary film directed by Gil González. Yuri Gagarin, turns out not to be the first in space, but that he was preceded by another Russian cosmonaut who crash landed and was covered up for over 45 years by the former Soviet Union and the United States. Alive Day Memories: Home from Iraq is a 2007 documentary television film featuring interviews with Iraq War amputees. The veterans tell producer James Gandolfini of how they received their injuries, and the emotional effect that it has had on them. Anda Union: From The Steppes To The City is a 2012 musical film directed by Sophie Lascelles,Tim Pearce and Marc Tiley. Heklina is a 2013 short documentary film written by Brian Favorite and Fjord McKeuen and directed by Brian Favorite. Squeezed: The Cost of Free Trade in the Asia-Pacific is a 2007 film produced by Global Trade Watch and Scarab Studio. Squeezed was filmed in Thailand and The Philippines in July 2007, and publicly screened for the first time in September 2007, at events leading up to the 2007 APEC summit in Sydney, Australia. According to its producers, "Squeezed tells the story of how globalisation and free trade agreements are changing the lives of millions of people living in the Asia-Pacific region. . . . A short film of contrasts and contradictions, Squeezed is an emotional document of the impact of globalisation on people in the Asia-Pacific, and their responses to it." A review by international civil society organisation GRAIN declared that the film "captures the havoc that poverty wreaks on more and more people each day, from farmers to slum dwellers, from small dairy operators to the region’s tens of millions of children." Documentary about the life of the great pianist and composer Chopin and the story of the women whose voices inspired his music. It is undeniable that Chopin revolutionised the nature of music composed for the piano both technically and emotionally. What is less well known is that the actual musical instrument that provided his greatest source of inspiration was the female voice. To mark the 200th anniversary of Chopin's birth, this film follows young pianist James Rhodes on a journey to Warsaw, Paris and London to discover the real women who had such a powerful influence on the composer. Nachruf auf eine Bestie is a 1983 documentary film written by Michael Lentz and Rolf Schübel and directed by Rolf Schuebel. Camp Beaverton: Meet the Beavers is a 2013 documentary film written by Beth Nelsen and directed by Ana Grillo and Beth Nelsen. Met Onze Jongens Aan Den Ijzer is a 1926 documentary film directed by Germain Baert and Clemens De Landtsheer. Spirit Of Akasha is a 2013 documentary film written by Andrew Kidman, Chris Moss, Alby Falzon and directed by Andrew Kidman. The World According to Irving is a 2012 documentary biography film written by Hartmut Kasper and Claudia E. Kraszkiewicz and directed by André Schäfer. Transformer is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Billy Muñeca. Remembrance - A Small Movie About Oulu In The 1950s is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Peter von Bagh. Filmed in 16 mm, The September Sessions: The Tomorrowland Story Brought To Life In Brilliant 16mm Film is a 2002 documentary surf film directed by singer/songwriter Jack Johnson. Often called September Sessions, it is the second of The Moonshine Conspiracy film series. Following the release of Thicker Than Water, Kelly Slater asked Jack Johnson to accompany Kelly for a trip to Indonesia. With the cast living on a retired Japanese coastguard cutter, Neptune 1, Jack films Kelly and several other surfers including Rob Machado and Shane Dorian as they surfed flawless waves off the coast of Sumatra in the Mentawais of Indonesia. The film captures Kelly Slater during a major change of his life following his first retirement from the ASP circuit. Kelly had fallen into the trap of endless trade shows, store openings, and poster signings that became his life during his first retirement. By escaping both the trade shows and his former life of ASP competitions, Kelly sought to gain new levels in his spirit as he and his friends pulled into the keyhole at Hollow Trees in September, 1999. On the first morning, they awoke and stared at perfectly flawless waves. Never Been Done is a 2004 documentary, sports film written by Jon Comer, Agent Ogden and Matthew J. Powers and directed by Matthew J. Powers. Atlanta Symphony Golden Anniversary is a 1995 musical documentary film written by Abraham Lincoln. Sick: The Life and Death of Bob Flanagan, Supermasochist is a 1997 documentary film directed by Kirby Dick about Bob Flanagan, a Los Angeles writer, poet, performance artist, comic, and BDSM celebrity, who suffered from and later died of cystic fibrosis. The film premiered at the 1997 Sundance Film Festival, where it was awarded a Special Jury Prize. Iran: A Cinematographic Revolution is a 2006 documentary film written by Nicolas Bertrand and Nader T. Homayoun and directed by Nader T. Homayoun. My Body is a 2003 short documentary film written and directed by Margreth Olin. The Creator Of The Jungle is a 2014 documentary adventure biographical film written and directed by Jordi Morató. Derby & Groma** is a 2013 short, documentary, historical fiction film written by Becky Blake and Kara Blake and directed by Kara Blake. Men With Balls is a 2013 comedy,drama, documentary film, written and directed by Kristóf Kovács. Kherwal Parab is a 1998 short documentary film directed by Sankar Rakshit. Jaws of Death is a 2005 documentary by Gautam Saikia about animals at Kaziranga National Park being hit by vehicular traffic while crossing National Highway 37 in Assam state, India. The film is a winner of the Vatavaran Award. The Nature of Frédéric Back is a 2011 documentary film directed by Phil Comeau. Fairground Lady is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Maximiliane Mainka. Who are? The Lifeguards of Wavy Ghost Town is a biographical music history documentary film directed by Mark Sheridan Barrett. The Message of the Stones - Máramos is a 1994 documentary film directed by Miklós Jancsó. A Sort of Love is a 2012 documentary film directed by Dirk Schäfer. Whose Is This Song? is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Adela Peeva. Current (Reprise) is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Brian Doyle. The Space You Leave is a 2009 short documentary film directed by James Newton. ""We were abducted, my mother, father, sister and me. Then they killed my parents and separated me from my sister. I was five," Abouk tells us in a low voice. "I stayed with one of the men who kidnapped us and took care of his goats." Slaves is about Abouk, nine, and Machiek, fifteen. Like thousands of children they were taken by the government-sponsored militia in Sudan and used as slaves. They were later liberated by an organization headed by James Auger. Slaves—An Animated Documentary is based on an interview conducted in 2003 and is the second film in a series of animated documentaries with and about children in difficult situations by David Aronowitsch and Hanna Heilborn." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. The House That Shadows Built is a short feature film, roughly 55 minutes long, from Paramount Pictures, made to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the studio's founding in 1912. The film was a promotional film for exhibitors and never had a regular theatrical release. The film includes a brief history of Paramount, interviews with various actors, and clips from upcoming projects. The title comes from a biography of Paramount founder Adolph Zukor, The House That Shadows Built, by William Henry Irwin. You Don't Belong is a 2011 music documentary film directed by Spandan Banerjee. Street Ghosts is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Paolo Cirio. We Want to Know is a 2012 documentary film directed by Carol Mansour. This is the Life is a 2008 documentary film directed by Ava DuVernay, which chronicles the alternative hip hop movement that flourished in 1990's Los Angeles and its legendary center, the Good Life Cafe. Interviewees include Myka 9 and P.E.A.C.E. of Freestyle Fellowship, Chali 2na and Cut Chemist of Jurassic 5, Medusa, Abstract Rude, Pigeon John, 2Mex, Chillin Villian Empire, Busdriver and many others. The director Ava DuVernay, known at the time as Eve, was herself an MC at the Good Life open-mic as part of the group Figures of Speech. Marion's Triumph is a 2003 documentary that tells the story of Marion Blumenthal Lazan, a child Holocaust survivor, who recounts her painful childhood memories in order to preserve history. The film combines rare historic footage, animated flashbacks, and family photographs to illustrate the horrors she experienced. It is narrated by Debra Messing. About the Possibility of a Life is a 2005 documentary film written by Juliy Stoyanov & Asen Vladimirov and directed by Itzhak Finzi & Juliy Stoyanov. Video Greatest Hits – HIStory is a collection of Michael Jackson's music videos relative at the first disc of the double album HIStory released initially on VHS, Video CD and Laserdisc in 1995 by Sony Music Video Enterprises, and then on DVD in 2001. The DVD version contains extended versions of some videos in place of edited transmitted versions previously included on the VHS and Laserdisc versions, a Dolby 5.1 Surround mix and a discography. Seeing Red is a 1983 American documentary film directed by Jim Klein and Julia Reichert. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Ub2 is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Dan Goldes. The Boundless is a documentary film directed by Ferris Lin. The Battle Of The Sexes is a 2013 Documentary, Biography, History, Sport film directed by James Erskine and Zara Hayes. Angie & Jackie Final Cut is a 2012 LGBT, comedy, documentary film directed by Andrew David, Jackie Nunns and Angie West Law and Disorder in Johannesburg is a British documentary. It was a Louis Theroux documentary and ran for 60 minutes. Rewind This! is a 2013 documentary film directed by Josh Johnson about the impact of VHS on the film industry and home video, as well as about collectors of videotapes. Fidel: The Untold Story is a documentary released in 2001 by Estela Bravo. The film features interviews with: Phillip Agee Muhammad Ali Harry Belafonte Ramsey Clark Angela Davis Elián González Nelson Mandela Gabriel García Márquez Ted Turner Alice Walker A Hundred Miles to The End is a 2013 documentary, action, and sports film directed by John Beattie. Später Sommer is a 1988 film directed by Christoph Schrewe. Project Nim is a 2011 British documentary film. It has won 16 awards, as well as being nominated for a BAFTA. What the Bleep Do We Know!? is a 2004 film that combines documentary-style interviews, computer-animated graphics, and a narrative that posits a spiritual connection between quantum physics and consciousness. The plot follows the story of a photographer as she encounters emotional and existential obstacles in her life and begins to consider the idea that individual and group consciousness can influence the material world. Her experiences are offered by the filmmakers to illustrate the movie's thesis about quantum physics and consciousness. The 2004 theatrical release of the film was followed by a substantially changed, extended DVD version in 2006. Bleep was conceived and its production funded by William Arntz, who co-directed the film along with Betsy Chasse and Mark Vicente; all three were students of Ramtha's School of Enlightenment. A moderately low-budget independent film, it was promoted using viral marketing methods and opened in art-house theaters in the western United States, winning several independent film awards before being picked up by a major distributor and eventually grossing over $10 million. The 1 Second Film is an American non-profit collaborative art project being created by thousands of people around the world, including many celebrities. The film is built around one second of animation, and is followed by 1 hour of credits, listing everyone who participates. A feature-length 'making of' documentary will play alongside the credits. The project allows people around the world to participate online, and lists everyone who joins the crew a "Special Thanks" in the film credits. The production relies on crowd funding to raise the budget; everyone who donates or raises $1 or more gets their name listed as a Producer in the movie's credits. The production also gives a Publicist credit to crew members who refer at least one friend. The film currently has over 56,000 crew members from 158 countries. The 1 Second Film is the flagship production of The Collaboration Foundation, a 501 non-profit arts organization formed to create global collaborative art projects that address various social issues. Once finished, any profits raised by The 1 Second Film will be donated to the Global Fund for Women, an independent charity. Aniceto On A Manumission Day is a 1981 short documentary film directed by Zózimo Bulbul. Der Stummfilmpianist is a 2004 short film directed by Ilona Ziok. Battle For The Elephants is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by John Heminway. "With a simple “Hello, everybody,” television writer and stand-up comedian Louis C.K. opens his latest live show, Hilarious. This harmless salutation is the least-controversial thing that comes out of Louis C.K.’s mouth as he turns rants on everyday subjects (impatient people, his weight, fatherhood) into hilarious, expletive-laden diatribes where nothing is sacred—not even (gasp!) his children. Who else can name-check Ray Charles and Adolph Hitler in the same breath and elicit a chorus of raucous laughter? Louis C.K. says what’s on his mind, even at the risk of offending, but his “I don’t give a f**k” attitude makes his irreverent brand of humor especially endearing and relatable. His self-deprecating style elevates his filmed live show to a form of therapy, where we, too, can get comic relief from some pretty warped subjects. At one point, Louis C.K. asks, “Where do you draw the line?” With him, there is no line." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. The People of Angkor, or Les Gens d'Angkor, is a 2003 French-Cambodian documentary film directed by Rithy Panh. It was exhibited at the Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival in 2005. The film follows a young Cambodian boy around the temples of Angkor Wat as older men tell him about the legends depicted on the walls, and tourists tour the site. From Somalia with Love is a 1982 documentary film written and directed by Frédéric Mitterrand. Secret Life, Secret Death is a documentary, biographical and drama film directed by Genevieve Davis. I'm Just Anneke is a 2010 short film directed by Jonathan Skurnik. Playboy: Playmate Profile Video Collection Featuring Miss December 1998, 1995, 1992, 1989 is a 1998 documentary film. The Cold Rage of Makalu is a 2005 short documentary directed by Carsten Knoop. Carry Me Home: The Story & Music of the Nathaniel Dett Chorale is a 2003 TV movie directed by Gerald Packer and Liam Romalis. A Brother With Perfect Timing is a 1987 documentary, directed by Chris Austin, about musician Abdullah Ibrahim and his struggle for freedom with apartheid in South Africa. "“Petition – The court of the complainants”, directed by Zhao Liang, is a unique testimony about China today. Since 1996 Zhao Liang has filmed the “petitioners”, who come from all over China to make complaints in Beijing about abuses and injustices committed by the local authorities. Gathered near the complaints offices, around the southern railway station of Beijing, living in most cases in makeshift shelters, the complainants wait for months or years to obtain justice. Peasants thrown off their land, workers from factories which have gone into liquidation, small homeowners who have seen their houses demolished but received no compensation..., all types of cases are represented. Faced with the most brutal intimidation from the local authorities, the complainants who stubbornly continue despite everything find that their hopes are often vain. Zhao Liang has accompanied several of them, particularly a mother and her daughter, whose full story we follow over ten years. A film shot right up to the start of the Olympic Games in direct contact with realities, showing the persistent contradictions of China in the midst of powerful economic expansion." Quoting the description from the 2009 Cannes Film Festival site, The Holocaust: In Memory of Millions is a 1994 News & Documentary Emmy Award nominated tv program aired in 1994 in the USA. The Earth Wins is a documentary film directed by Jerry Grayson. Ufologist is a 2012 short documentary mystery film directed by Ewan McNicol and Anna Sandilands. Koko is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Imad Achkar. The Heartless Machine is a 2013 short music documentary film written and directed by Reid W. Connell. The arduous lifestyle of a traveling tent circus often contradicts the romantic notion of "running away with a circus." This film documents the daily routines of the small, family-owned Franzen Bros. Circus which performs in a new town each day. While focusing on those aspects of the circus which are not generally accessible to the circus audience, Cotton Candy and Elephant Stuff captures the magic and the banality of circus life. The Tallest Tree in our Forest is a 1977 documentary film directed and written by Gil Noble, about singer, actor and activist, Paul Robeson. The Tallest Tree was shot on 16mm film and was started shortly before Robeson's death at age 77 in 1976. The film features rare archival footage, interviews, and still photography throughout the twentieth century. The title is taken from a 1940s statement made by Mary McLeod Bethune describing Paul Robeson. The film was originally available in a three-part format for use on public-access television channels and in classrooms for ages fourteen and above. Tanzende Hände is a 1960 short documentary film directed by Hans Reinhard. nMatriarch Dottie says it all in the opening sequence: “If you don’t have family, you don’t have anything.” The phrase echoes as their story unfolds, rife with war trauma, teenage pregnancy, domestic and sexual abuse, and foster care. How can the debilitating cycle be broken? As father Don asks, “Is this the real me, or is this what I’ve been created as?” Spanning a year, from one October to the next, this bittersweet documentary chronicles the attempts of his family to answer such questions, desperate but seemingly powerless as they are to break free of the poverty trap. The Mosher family courageously opens their lives to us; as they bear their burden, we are in turn confronted with the unmistakable truth that , to quote Gandhi, we must all be the change we wish to see in the world." Quoting the description from the 2009 Starz Denver Film Festival Cakes Da Killa: NO HOMO is a 2013 short film directed by Ja’Tovia Gary. The Eternauta's Wife is a 2011 documentary film written by Adán Aliaga and Diego Ameixeiras and directed by Adán Aliaga. Adventuress Wanted is a documentary film starring Thomas McAlevey and Yoshiko Kino. It is written and directed by Thomas McAlevey, who founded Bandit Rock in Stockholm in 1995. Just for Kicks is a 2005 documentary film about the sneaker phenomena and history. It includes self-confessed "sneakerheads" like Grandmaster Caz, Reverend Run, and Missy Elliott. It tells the story of the legendary Nike Air Force One's, or as they are called in New York "Uptowns." Also about the beginning of Air Jordans. The documentary also tells the story of how hip-hop pioneers DJ Run, Jam Master Jay, and DMC had everyone wearing Adidas Superstars with their smash hit "My Adidas." Great Chicken Wing Hunt is a documentary, adventure and comedy film directed by Matt Reynolds. Kluge Leni und der Löwe is a 1969 film directed by Alf Brustellin. The Wizard of Oz in Concert: Dreams Come True was a 1995 musical performance based on the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz. The book and score of the film were performed on stage at Lincoln Center to benefit the Children's Defense Fund. The concert featured guest performers including Jackson Browne as the Scarecrow, Roger Daltrey as the Tin Man, Natalie Cole as Glinda, Joel Grey as the Wizard, Jewel as Dorothy, Nathan Lane as the Cowardly Lion, Debra Winger as the Wicked Witch, and Lucie Arnaz as Aunt Em. The Boys Choir of Harlem appeared as the Munchkins, and Ry Cooder and David Sanborn performed as musicians. That's Entertainment! is a 1974 compilation film released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to celebrate its 50th anniversary. It was followed by two sequels and a related film called That's Dancing!. The film, compiled by its writer-producer-director, Jack Haley, Jr., under the supervision of executive producer Daniel Melnick, turned the spotlight on MGM's legacy of musical film from the 1920s through the 1950s, featuring performances culled from dozens of the studio's famous films. Archive footage of Judy Garland, Eleanor Powell, Lena Horne, Esther Williams, Ann Miller, Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel, Jeanette MacDonald, Cyd Charisse, June Allyson, Mickey Rooney, Mario Lanza, William Warfield, and many others was featured. The various segments were hosted by a succession of the studio's legendary stars: Frank Sinatra, Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire, Peter Lawford, Donald O'Connor, Debbie Reynolds, Mickey Rooney, Bing Crosby, James Stewart, Elizabeth Taylor, and Liza Minnelli. Most of the hosts were filmed on MGM's famous backlot, which appears ramshackle and rundown in this film, because MGM had sold the property to developers and the sets were about to be demolished. Un vivant qui passe is a 1999 documentary film about an interview with a WWII Red Cross official who wrote a glowing report on a Jewish ghetto-cum-death camp. Film was written and directed by Claude Lanzmann. The Trail From Xinjiang is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Dongnan Chen. The Good Soldier is a 2009 documentary film directed and produced by American filmmakers Lexy Lovell and Michael Uys. Using interviews with five veterans from different generations of American wars, the film explores the definition of what being a 'good soldier' really means. Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States and a former bombardier in WWII, served as an advisor to the filmmakers. Deuda is a 2004 Argentine documentary film directed and written by Jorge Lanata with Andrés G. Schaer. The film premiered on 7 October 2004 in Buenos Aires . The film was nominated for a number of Silver Condor awards for Best Documentary and Best Screenplay, Feature-Length Documentary recognising directors Jorge Lanata and Andrés G. Schaer. At the 2005 World Soundtrack Awards the score musicians Andrés Goldstein and Daniel Tarrab were also nominated for an achievement award. You've Been Trumped is a 2011 documentary by British filmmaker Anthony Baxter. The film documents the construction of a luxury golf course on a beach in Balmedie, Aberdeenshire, Scotland by Real Estate Tycoon Donald Trump, and the subsequent struggles between the locals and Donald Trump and Scottish legal and governmental authorities. The film was briefly ranked as the highest rated British film of all time on the Internet Movie Database. The film used scenes from the movie Local Hero. When it was announced that the documentary was to be given its British television premiere on BBC Two on 21 October 2012, Trump's lawyers contacted the corporation to demand that the film should not be shown, claiming that it is "defamatory" and "misleading". The screening went ahead. The BBC defended its decision, noting that Trump had repeatedly refused to be interviewed in conjunction with the film. A follow up documentary called A Dangerous Game has recently been released. The film continues the story of the locals' struggle against Donald Trump but goes further afield also. Underdogs: A War Movie is the 1996 documentary, sport film directed by Doron Tsabari and Rino Tzor. Indian Relay is a 2013 documentary action adventure film written by M. L. Smoker and directed by Charles Dye. Krakatoa is a 1933 American short documentary film produced by Joe Rock. It won the Academy Award in 1934 for Best Short Subject. Educational Pictures was the film distributor of the film. This film was notable for overwhelming the sound systems of the cinemas of the time. In Australia, the distributors insisted on a power output of 10 watts RMS as a minimum for cinemas wishing to show the film. This was then considered a large system, and forced many cinemas to upgrade. A revised version was made in 1966 for the Library of Congress. Welcome Aboard Toxic Airlines is a 2007 British agenda-documentary film directed and produced by former airline captain Tristan Loraine on aerotoxic syndrome. Voice Of The Well is a 2013 documentary film, written and directed by Patricia Black. Secret Mysteries Vol. III focuses on the development of the new world as "The United States of America". This video will demonstrate that the history of America's government, and of its official symbols, is a history of secret societies. Examine America's much-talked-about dollar bill and the symbols it bears. Modern masonry claims that the all-seeing eye floating above the pyramid is not a Masonic symbol. But what did Freemason's President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and his Masonic Vice President, Henry Wallace, believe when they attached this symbol to our currency in 1935? How were these American leaders influenced by the Russian mystic, Nicholas Roerich? Does the all-seeing eye represent the Masonic Christ? Was the eagle originally a phoenix bird? And what do all these occult symbols mean? Follow the journey of the Secret Mysteries series as we unveil their influence through the 20th century. Many believe that the real purpose of the many "Wars and Rumors of Wars" has been to establish a commonwealth of nations to rule the whole world. With the North American Union on the rise, is America the victim of deception? Or is she THE instrument of Global Government? Jyanto Durga is a 2010 documentary film directed by Arin Paul for Anandautsab.com. Sunday Town Music Project is a 2012 film documentary written by David Wagoner and directed by Elvis Ripley. Shylock is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by Pierre Lasry. Fitna is a 2008 short film by Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders. Approximately 17 minutes in length, the film attempts to demonstrate that the Qur'an motivates its followers to hate all who violate Islamic teachings. The movie shows selected excerpts from Suras of the Qur'an, interspersed with media clips and newspaper cuttings showing or describing acts of violence and/or hatred by Muslims. The film argues that Islam encourages – among other things – acts of terrorism, antisemitism, violence against women, violence and subjugation of infidels and against homosexuals and Islamic universalism. A large part of the film details the influence of Islam on the Netherlands. The film was published on the Internet in 2008. Shortly before its release, its announcement was suspended from its website by the American provider because of the perceived controversy. It stirred a still continuing debate in the Netherlands as well as abroad, and a criminal prosecution for hate speech. The Arabic title-word "fitna" means "disagreement and division among people" or a "test of faith in times of trial". Hollywood High is a 2003 documentary television film about the depiction of drug addiction in film. It was directed by Bruce Sinofsky, and features appearances by Darren Aronofsky, Jared Leto and Hubert Selby Jr. It was originally aired on AMC on March 31, 2003. The Los Angeles Times said that the documentary "examines how the seductive highs and excruciating lows of drug use have evolved on-screen during the last 60 years" and that "it offers plenty for movie fans to think about." The Cincinnati Enquirer called it "a surprisingly well-crafted and honest documentary" containing interviews with "some frank people who have something to say." The Columbia Companion to American History on Film calls it "particularly acute in its analysis of Hollywood 'drug movies' from Reefer Madness to Requiem for a Dream." Hidden Universe 3D is a 2013 Australian documentary written and directed by Russell Scott. The film is narrated by Golden Globe winner Miranda Richardson and was released to IMAX 3D theaters in 2013. Dong is a 2006 documentary film by Chinese director, Jia Zhangke. It is the companion piece to Jia's Still Life, which was released concurrently although Dong was reputedly conceived of first. The film, which runs a relatively short 66 minutes, follows the artist and actor Liu Xiaodong as he invites Jia to film him while he paints a group of laborers near the Three Gorges Dam and later a group of women in Bangkok. The film was produced and distributed by Jia's own production company, Xstream Pictures, based out of Hong Kong and Beijing. Dong was screened at the 2006 Venice International Film Festival as part of its "Horizons" Program, and as part of the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival's "Real-to-Reel" Program. Dong was filmed in HD digital video. Sei Venezia is a 2010 documentary Italian film written by Carlo Mazzacurati, Marco Pettenello and Claudio Piersanti, and directed by Carlo Mazzacurati. 101 Rent Boys is a 2000 documentary film that explores the West Hollywood hustler scene. The producers recruited 101 hustlers from on and around Santa Monica Boulevard and paid each of them $50 for their time. The boys, who were from diverse ethnic, racial, regional and economic backgrounds, were interviewed in motel rooms on such topics as how they entered into prostitution, their sexual orientation, drugs and their first johns. The film focuses on a few of the boys more extensively while much smaller clips of other subjects are used. Each rent boy was assigned a number but not each one is so identified in the film. While some of the subjects are interviewed in various states of undress and the talk sometimes becomes sexually explicit, the film itself contains no sexual activity. The DVD release, however, has a feature where each of the interview subjects were left alone with the camera for five minutes to do whatever they choose. In this feature, several participants masturbate. A companion book, also called 101 Rent Boys, was released, featuring photos and excerpts from the interviews. Existir Sin Vos . Una Noche Con Charly García is a 2013 documentary film directed by Alejandro Chomski. En El Futuro is a 2010 documentary/experimental film written and directed by Mauro Andrizzi. Go Mickey Go is a 2013 documentary action biography history sport film written and directed by Yvonne Charneskey. A Beach Near Belfast is a 1996 short documentary film directed by Henri-François Imbert. 69: Love Sex Senior is a 2013 documentary drama written and directed by Menna Laura Meijer. Mysterious China: Marco Polo's Roof of the World is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Chris D. Nebe. Animation Hotline is a 2012 short animation film written and directed by Dustin Grella. Las Sufragistas is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Ana Cruz. Timber Craft is a 1984 short documentary film directed by Paul Humfress. Aarhus is a 2005 short documentary film directed by Jørgen Leth. "What are the issues at play when a LGBT community grows in a transitional area of a small city? The opening of a new lesbian-owned restaurant in the Hawley-Green neighborhood of Syracuse, New York challenges the definition and evolution of "community." This documentary from director Todd Cross takes us through the process of opening Laci’s Tapas Bar in the heart of this historic district – and shows what a strong, colorful community can accomplish when they put their hearts and minds together." Quoting the description from the 2011 Philadelphia QFEST site. Experience in Material 52:DUBHOUSE is a 2013 film directed by Suzuki Ryoji and Kei Shichiri. David & Me is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Marc Lamy and Ray Klonsky. Living Stars is a 2014 Argentine documentary film co-directed by Gastón Duprat and Mariano Cohn. The film had its premiere at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. The film later screened at 2014 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival on April 25, 2014. Niagara's Fury is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Benjamin R. Taylor. The Greening of Southie is a 2008 documentary film directed by Ian Cheney. The People vs. George Lucas is a 2010 documentary/comedy film which explores the issues of filmmaking and fanaticism pertaining to the Star Wars franchise and its creator, George Lucas. The film combines filmmaker and celebrity interviews with fan films which were submitted via the film's site. Interviewees include a variety of figures such as Neil Gaiman, MC Frontalot and Gary Kurtz. Lucas himself appears frequently in archival footage but is never interviewed directly. The film discusses the extent to which the Star Wars franchise is an artistic creation of Lucas and subject to his vision versus a social phenomenon that belongs to the general public of fans and their participatory/remix culture. The film is dedicated to interviewee Jason Nicholl, a blogger at nukethefridge.com who died before the film's release. The DVD was released on October 25, 2011. A sequel, titled The People vs. George Lucas - Episode II, is scheduled for a December 2015 release. Ein Naziprozess is a 1981 film directed by Lea Rosh and Michael Busse. Roosevelt in Africa is a film by Cherry Kearton, released in 1910. It is a documentary featuring Theodore Roosevelt in Africa. It is shot in silent black and white. One of the biggest headline-grabbing stories of 1910 was former president Theodore Roosevelt's safari into Africa. Landing in Mombasa in 1909, Roosevelt spent months in the wilds of East Africa, hunting big game in parts of what are now Kenya and Uganda. For some of this journey, he was accompanied by famed British bird-and-animal photographer Cherry Kearton, who shot wildlife and native scenes with a hand-cranked motion picture camera. Among the scenes captured by Kearton's camera were a number of Kikuyu and Maasai gatherings and dances – although the Maasai were incorrectly identified in the film's slates as "Zulus." Quick to cash in on the media frenzy, the Selig company of Chicago, actually released a fake documentary which it had shot at its own California game preserve, using a lookalike actor as a stand-in for Roosevelt when necessary. Motion Picture Patents Company, using Pathe as its distribution arm, responded by releasing the authentic Kearton footage under the title Roosevent in Africa. "Youth living in Toronto, who are also labeled as having intellectual disabilities, come together to shatter stereotypes and talk openly about sex, relationships, battling stigma and coming out." Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Africa Addio is a 1966 Italian documentary about the end of the colonial era in Africa. The film was released in a shorter format under the names Africa Blood and Guts in the USA and Farewell Africa on UK VHS. The film was shot over a period of three years by Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi, two Italian filmmakers who had gained fame as the directors of Mondo Cane in 1962. This film ensured the viability of the so-called Mondo film genre, a cycle of "shockumentaries"- documentaries featuring sensational topics, a description which largely characterizes Africa Addio. Parole de kamikaze is a 2014 documentary film directed by Masa Sawada. Belleville Baby is a 2013 documentary film directed and written by Mia Engberg. Science is a stand-up comedy show by British comedian Ricky Gervais. It was filmed in 2010 at the HMV Hammersmith Apollo, and released on DVD in November that year. The Hate That Hate Produced is a television documentary about Black Nationalism in America, focusing on the Nation of Islam and, to a lesser extent, the United African Nationalist Movement. It was produced in 1959 by Mike Wallace and Louis Lomax. My Kidnapper is a 2010 documentary film directed by Kate Horne and Mark Henderson. Bauerntanz zweier Kinder is an 1895 German short black-and-white silent documentary film directed by Max Skladanowsky. The film captures two children from Ploetz-Lorello, performing a dance. It was one of a series of films produced to be projected by a magic lantern and formed part of the Wintergarten Performances, the first projections of film in Europe to a paying audience. The film titles for the initial program were: Bauerntanz zweier Kinder, Komisches Reck, Serpentinen Tanz, Der Jongleur Paul Petras, Das Boxende Känguruh, Akrobatisches Potpourri, Kamarinskaja, Ringkampf and Apotheose. Each film lasted approximately 6 seconds and would be repeated several times. Bag It: Is Your Life Too Plastic? is a 2010 American documentary film exposing the effects of plastic bags and other plastic consumer merchandise, and its effects on land ecosystems, the marine environment and the human body. China Blue is a 2005 documentary film directed by Micha Peled. It follows the life of Jasmine Li, a young seventeen-year-old worker from Sichuan province, in a Chinese jeans factory, Lifeng Clothes Factory in Shaxi, Guangdong producing Vigaze Jeans, hence the title. Jasmine earned about half a yuan for one hour's work. The documentary discusses both the sweatshop conditions in factories in China and the growing importance of China as an exporting country on a global scale. At the 2005 Amnesty International film festival, it won the Amnesty International-DOEN Award. In April 2007 China Blue aired on the award winning PBS series Independent Lens. The Throwaways is a 2014 documentary film directed by Ira McKinley and Bhawin Suchak. "On December 9, 1991 Rick Walker was convicted and sentenced to twenty-six years in prison for a murder he did not commit. Linked to the crime by false testimony and questionable legal tactics, Walker would spend the next twelve years in some of California's most dangerous prisons. $100 a Day is a compelling story of gross injustice, political partisanship and the heroic struggle to prove Walker's innocence. Once exonerated, he would face yet another barrier to justice—the California State Legislature. Entitled to one hundred dollars for each day spent falsely imprisoned, Walker would become a pawn in the annual partisan battle over the California budget. Many aspects of our political, judicial and economic systems operate within a win at all cost mentality, considering the consequences only when taken to task or exposed for wrongdoing. This cultural dynamic has plunged our economy into a tailspin, exacerbated political partisanship and pressured the criminal justice system to emphasize win/loss ratios. Ultimately, $100 a Day is about hope—hope that in one man's quest for justice lays the inspiration for our elected officials to govern with the true strength of their convictions." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Mount St. Helens is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by A. von Wechmar. Paradise is Not for Sale is a 1984 documentary film written by Ole Henning Hansen, Teit Ritzau and directed by Teit Ritzau. Michel Ciment, the Art of Sharing Movies is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Simone Lainé. For the first time on film desert hermits, monks and nuns share their practices and invite us into their private cells, caves and sanctuaries in the Middle East, Mediterranean, Eastern Europe and Russia. The Central Park Effect is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jeffrey Kimball. Sentymenty is a 1977 film directed by Agnieszka Osiecka. Swan... One Man's Journey is a 2010 film documentary written by Zadrina Eisenmann and Ramin Nematollahi and directed by Trudy Sargent. Chattahoochee Unplugged is a 2013 film directed by Rhett Turner and Jonathan Wickham. Brian Wilson Songwriter 1962 - 1969 is a documentary film in which the rich tapestry of music written and produced by this brilliant 20th century composer is investigated and reviewed. With the main feature running at over three hours in length across two discs, the songs Brian wrote for and recorded with The Beach Boys during the 1960s are here re-assessed to quite startling effect. FEATURES INCLUDE - -Historical musical performances and rare and classic recordings re-assessed by a panel of esteemed experts -Obscure footage, rare archive interviews and seldom seen photographs -Exclusive contributions from fellow Beach Boys, Bruce Johnston and David Marks; Wrecking Crew musicians Carol Kaye and Hal Blaine; friend and Beach Boys manager Fred Vail; producers Russ Titelman and Bill Halverson; Wilson family friends Billy Hinsche and Danny Hutton, biographers Peter Ames Carlin and Domenic Priore and many others - Live and studio recordings of many Brian Wilson classics. For years, the focus of the Titanic disaster has been on the notorious iceberg that gouged the ship as it cruised through the North Atlantic in April 1912. But was the iceberg the only thing that contributed to the sinking of this legendary vessel? In this eye-opening program, follow the History(R) crew as it explores the explosive theory that the doomed liner may have had a fatal design flaw - one which could have caused it to sink even if it had not struck the iceberg. While examining data from the crew's pioneering 2005 expedition to the Titanic wreck site, marine architect Roger Long was shown a document from the Belfast shipbuilder Harland and Wolff, which illustrated a curious feature of the Titanic - a poorly designed expansion joint. If You Eat Garlic, You Get Full is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Tamim Abdullah. Teaserama is a 1955 American documentary film directed by Irving Klaw which follows the performance of a burlesque show. The Silence Of The Flies is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Eliezer Arias. Taking Liberties is a documentary film about the erosion of civil liberties in the United Kingdom and increase of surveillance under the government of Tony Blair. It was released in the UK on 8 June 2007. The director, Chris Atkins, said on 1 May that he wanted to expose "the Orwellian state" that now threatened Britain as a result of Mr Blair's policies. There is also an accompanying book. The Golden Land of Myanmar is a documentary film directed by Shoshana Cathy Korson. Autism Is a World is an American short subject documentary film written by Sue Rubin in 2004, an autistic woman with who learned to communicate via facilitated communication, produced and directed by Gerardine Wurzburg and co-produced by the CNN cable network. It was nominated in the 77th annual Academy Awards for Best Documentary Short Subject. Wurzburg previously won an Academy Award in 1992 for the film "Educating Peter." The subject of this film is Sue Rubin, an autistic woman with who was considered mentally retarded as a child. At the age of thirteen, she learned to express herself through a computer keyboard, otherwise known as facilitated communication, revealing that she was in fact highly intelligent. She went on to study history, specializing in Latin American History at Whittier College and to write speeches about her life as an autistic person. Director Wurzburg has called Rubin "the Helen Keller of her generation". Rubin's dialogue is narrated by actress Julianna Margulies. A look at the rise in retail crime and how the consumers' quest for the lowest discount price fuels the market for stolen merchandise. Leave The World Behind is a 2014 music documentary film directed by Christian Larson. Voena: Voices Of Eve'n Angels is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Derek Diaz. Punk: Attitude is a film by Don Letts. It explores the "punk" revolution, genre and following from its beginning in the mid-1970s up to its effect on modern rock music and other genres. The cast is a veritable list of alternative musicians and directors offering their opinions on what may have been the largest music revolution ever. The film was officially released on the 25th of April 2005 at the Tribeca Film Festival in the U.S.A. Reviews have generally been favorable with an average of 3.5 - 4 stars with many people commenting on the accuracy and approach of the film. Out of Time is a 2013 short documentary film written by Frédéric Favre and directed by Frédéric Favre, Jean-François Vercasson and Franck Hoursiangou. Impuls unserer Zeit is a 1959 documentary film directed by Otto Martini and written by Frank Leberecht. In the Pit is a 2006 documentary by Juan Carlos Rulfo. The film won several awards, including the Jury's Prize for Best International Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. It tells the story of several construction workers in Mexico City involved in the construction of the second story of the Periferico Freeway. RED WITHOUT BLUE is an artistic and groundbreaking portrayal of gender, identity, and the unswerving bond of twinship despite transformation. An honest portrayal of a family in turmoil, RED WITHOUT BLUE follows a pair of identical twins as one transitions from male to female. Captured over a period of three years, the film documents the twins and their parents, examining the Farley's struggle to redefine their family. The twins' early lives were quintessentially all-American: picture-perfect holidays, supportive parents who cheered them on every step of the way. By the time they were 14, their parents had divorced, they had come out as gay, and a joint suicide attempt precipitated a forced separation of Mark and Alex for two and half years. Through candid and extensive interviews with the twins and their family, RED WITHOUT BLUE recounts these troubled times, interweaving the twins' difficult past with their efforts to find themselves in the present. Most families have secrets - mysteries and mythologies, shared behind closed doors and passed down from generation to generation. Perhaps what is most remarkable about the documentary feature Nine Good Teeth is director Alex Halpern's insistence on ferreting out the most painful aspects of his family mythology in an irreverent, uncompromising fashion. In so doing, the film reveals many of the common truths hidden away in personal and communal histories as well as unexpected occurrences--late night visits from Jack Kerouac, illicit love affairs and the occasional murder.Nine Good Teeth unfolds through the stories of Halpern's 104-year-old Italian-American grandmother Mary Mirabito Livornese Cavaliere ("Nana"). In an intimate and often hilarious portrait, Mary, a fiercely independent woman, dispenses homespun wisdom in a series of unflinching conversations with her persistent and equally outspoken grandson. As she divulges family secrets and rivalries, Mary confronts her own mortality with candor and courage while remaining the rock on which the rest of her family relies.Nine Good Teeth uses family photographs, journals, home movies and historical archival material to trace the roots of Mary's family from the volcanic island of Stromboli, off the coast of Sicily, to Brooklyn, New York, where she was born on September 8, 1899, the second of thirteen children. We follow Mary's visits to post- World War II Europe as she returns to the land of her ancestors, chaperoning a free-spirited daughter. Following a tumultuous married life in suburban Long Island, she eventually rediscovers romance at age 68 with a long-lost suitor. Her daily life in present-day New York is captured against the backdrop of kitchens, living rooms, hospitals, and graveyards. Most recently, she was honored at the United Nations by having her hand imprinted in the center of the World Mandala Monument created by artist Neil Tektowski.In the process of capturing Mary's life and times, Halpern turns his camera on various members of the extended family and uncovers a multitude of conflicting viewpoints. Questions are asked, left unanswered and later revisited. We learn Mary was an inattentive mother with artistic aspirations who resented being trapped at home. Mary and daughter Maria's explosive and contradictory relationship is steeped in a shared revisionism of past events. Her younger sister Gladys blames Mary for her lost adolescence and refuses to see her before either die. Mary's desire, from an early age, to live her life equal to that of a man, was often in direct conflict with her roles as daughter, wife, mother, matriarch and first-generation American.An extraordinarily accomplished portrait emerges of a woman whose optimism, strength and heartfelt wisdom has helped her transcend the cultural boundaries of her immigrant heritage. Nine Good Teeth is a tribute to a remarkable "ordinary heroine" and a powerful celebration of life, love and family. El Sistema is a 2008 documentary music film written and directed by Paul Smaczny and Maria Stodtmeier. Stories Of Trust: Calling For Climate Recovery, Part 8: Trust Oregon is a 2012 short documentary biography film directed by Christi Cooper-Kuhn and Kelsey Juliana. Why would a dedicated Cold War strategist throw away his career, his friends, and risk life in prison for a chance to help end the Vietnam War? In 1971, Daniel Ellsberg, a leading military planner, concluded that America’s role in the war was based on decades of lies. He leaked the Pentagon Papers, 7,000 pages of top-secret documents, to The New York Times, a daring act of conscience that led to Watergate, President Nixon’s resignation and the end of the Vietnam War. The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers, nominated for an Oscar®, is a gripping tale told by Ellsberg with a who’s who of Vietnam- and Watergateera figures. A co-production of ITVS in association with American Documentary/POV. Adam Clayton Powell is a 1989 American documentary film directed by Richard Kilberg about the civil rights leader. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Swimming The Zambezi is a 2012 documentary film directed by Louie Greeff. We Iraqis is a documentary film written and directed by the Iraqi-French film director Abbas Fahdel. The film shows daily life in Baghdad, just before and after the 2003 invasion of Iraq. The fears and hopes of a people that is emerging from the nightmare of a dictatorship only to fall into chaos. French title: Nous les Irakiens Arabic title: نحن العراقيون Birdnesters of Thailand is a 1991 French short documentary film directed by Éric Valli. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Women Betrayed is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Sehjo Singh. Thomas, Thomas is a 2010 German short mockumentary film, directed by German film director Corinna Liedtke. The film participated in several German and European film festivals and won a few prizes. Rent a Family Inc. is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Kaspar Astrup Schröder. Naga Story: The Other Side of Silence is a 2003 documentary film by Indian film maker Gopal Menon. The film provides an introduction to the history of the Struggle by Naga people in North- East frontier of Indian subcontinent, and documents the human rights abuses suffered by the Naga people in more than 50 years of the existence of Independent India. The Naga political struggle is one of the oldest nationality movements in South Asia, continuing till present times. This flm, which took 5 years to complete, is the first comprehensive film about the Naga struggle for identity, self-determination, peace, and justice. This film is the Winner of the "Spirit of the Himalayas" First Prize at Netherlands Himalayas Film Festival, Amsterdam, 2004. This Film is withdrawn from Mumbai International Film Festival 2004 by Film Makers along with 6 other films as part of the Campaign Against Censorship by Indian filmmakers and screened at the Protest film festival Vikalp December 25 is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Wendy Dent. Roving Mars is an IMAX documentary film about the development, launch, and operation of the Mars Exploration Rovers, Spirit and Opportunity. The film uses few actual photographs from Mars, opting to use computer generated animation based on the photographs and data from the rovers and other Mars probes. The film has been released on Blu-ray disc by distributor Disney. Roving Mars has made over US$10 million as of January 25, 2009. Roving Mars is also the title of a non-fiction book by MER principal investigator Steve Squyres about the rover mission. Still, the Children are Here is a 2004 documentary film directed by Dinaz Stafford. Reconciliation: Mandela's Miracle is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Michael Henry Wilson. So Far is a music documentary video by the Grateful Dead. Directed by Jerry Garcia and Len Dell'Amico, it is intended to give a subjective view of the Grateful Dead experience. The soundtrack includes Dead song performances, largely from 1985. The visuals combine scenes of the band playing the songs, other Dead related material, computer animation, and found footage that has been altered and edited in various ways. So Far was released on VHS and laserdisc in 1987, and on DVD in 2012 in the All the Years Combine compilation box set. It has a running time of 55 minutes. Occupy: The Movie is a 2013 drama, documentary film directed by Corey Ogilvie. Neuland is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Anna Thommen. Ink&paper is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Ben Proudfoot. Brothers Hypnotic is a 2013 documentary film directed by Reuben Atlas. Pink Floyd: Live at Pompeii is a 1972 concert documentary film featuring the English progressive rock group Pink Floyd performing at the ancient Roman amphitheatre in Pompeii, Italy, directed by Adrian Maben. Although the band are playing a typical live set from this point in their career, the film is notable for having no audience. The main footage in and around the amphitheatre was filmed over four days in October 1971, using the band's regular touring equipment, including studio-quality 24-track recorders. Additional footage filmed in a Paris television studio that December made up the original 1972 release. The film was then re-released in 1974 with additional studio material of the band working on The Dark Side of the Moon, and interviews at Abbey Road Studios. The film has subsequently been released on video numerous times, and in 2003 a "Director's Cut" DVD appeared which combines the original footage from 1971 with more contemporary shots of space and the area around Pompeii, assembled by Maben. A number of notable bands have taken inspiration from the film in creating their own videos, or filming concerts without an audience. Going on 13 is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Kristy Guevara-Flanagan and Dawn Valadez. Behind the Music of Los Bandits is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Youth CineMedia. Camera Roll (for Taylor) is a 2008 film directed by Joel Schlemowitz. Love Addict: Stories of dreams, obsession and longing is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Pernille Rose Grønkjær. The comedy star takes the stage for his third HBO solo stand-up performance in an hour-long show full of sidesplitting material, including his insights on family, fatherhood and growing up! Wall: The Journey Up is a 2010 action adventure drama film directed by Tommy Baynard. Dylan is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Ania Winiarska. Women of Utopia is a 1984 short documentary film directed by Keith Gow. Abrazos: Tango in Buenos Aires is a 2003 musical documentary written by Adrián D'Amore, Cecilia Guerty and Diego Radivoy and directed by Daniel Rivas. Joey Dunlop 1952-2000 is a 1997 sports and documentary film. Finding Kraftland is a 2006 independent documentary from Richard Kraft productions starring Stacey J. Aswad, Richard Kraft, and Nicky Kraft. It premiered at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival on June 17, 2006 and continued to play in over 75 film festivals across the globe. Inside Björk is an official DVD released by Björk on August 23, 2003. The DVD contains a 2002 documentary outlining the career of Björk, from her early work in Icelandic bands, to joining The Sugarcubes to her solo work up to 2002. The documentary gives viewers a personal view into her private thoughts, views and motivations. Inside Björk also features interviews with Sean Penn, Lars von Trier, Thom Yorke, Beck, RZA, Elton John, Missy Elliott, the late Alexander McQueen and more on their thoughts of Björk and her impact on music and culture. The documentary coincided with the release of the Greatest Hits album, and had previously been seen on some television networks at the end of 2002. It was commissioned by One Little Indian to make up for the fact that Björk was beginning to do fewer interviews than had been previous. Two small new live performances are included in the documentary, "Generous Palmstroke" performed with Zeena Parkins and an organ version of "The Anchor Song" played in an Icelandic church. Alle Gefühle glauben an einen glücklichen Ausgang is a 2002 German documentary film directed by Angelika Wittlich. Generation Lost is a DVD documentary by the punk band Rise Against. It contains a documentary entitled How We Survive, directed by Davy Rothbart, Rachel Dengiz & David Meiklejohn and the songs "Injection", "Like the Angel", "Black Masks & Gasoline", and "Paper Wings" performed live at a show at The Troubadour in Los Angeles. It also contains music videos for "Heaven Knows", "Give It All", "Swing Life Away", "Ready to Fall", and "Prayer of the Refugee", as well as Making of videos for "Ready to Fall", and "Swing Life Away". It was released on December 5, 2006 and was named after the Rise Against song "Generation Lost", which appeared on Fat Music, Vol. 6: Uncontrollable Fatulence. It was released on iTunes on April 20, 2010. Dance of Outlaws is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mohamed El Aboudi. Out of the Woods: Life and Death in Dirty Dave's Homeless Camp is a 2012 feature documentary film by Michael E. Arth. It follows the life and death struggles of homeless people living in a camp in the woods for four years. Arth directed, shot and edited Out of the Woods by himself after meeting one of the subjects, Dean "Dino the Dinosaur" Bieber, in a former drug slum Arth had rebuilt and turned into "The Garden District" in DeLand some years before. The backstory of Out of the Woods is told in Arth's previous documentary, New Urban Cowboy: Toward a New Pedestrianism. Two prominent subjects in the film are David "Dirty Dave" Grimsley and his girlfriend, Allyson "Hottie" Manwarren, a former beauty queen and nurse who started drinking and lost her job after her divorce. About a year into the film shoot that took place over four years, Allyson was heading back to another camp returning from a beer run when she was accidentally hit and killed by a car. The film is punctuated with dark humor, including an interview with Allyson's homeless brother, "Vodka Scott" Curry, who says his sister's "skipping disease" caused her to skip in front of the car. "Sing China! offers a look behind-the-scenes at the Los Angeles Children's Choir, chronicling its groundbreaking tour of China. Following the chorus' sixty members, all between eleven and seventeen years old, Mock not only captures the excitement and drama of performance, but also paints a portrait of a changing China, one then on the cusp of hosting the 2008 Olympics. Internationally acclaimed, the Los Angeles Children's Chorus includes youth from over fifty diverse communities across Los Angeles and has traveled around the world, bringing its young ambassadors of American culture from Brazil to Australia. In the chorus' first trip to China, Mock captures the intimate moments of their rehearsals and performances, and also their interactions with host organizations and fellow Chinese singers." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Losing Our Sons is a 2012 American documentary film produced by Americans for Peace and Tolerance, a Boston-based education non-profit company. A.R. Maezav is its executive producer, director and co-writer; and Ilya I Feoktistov is its producer, co-director, and co-writer. The film was edited by Brian Keith. Losing Our Sons tells of two American families whose lives intersected through a shattering act of violence. Losing Our Sons was created as an educational tool for the public, meant to expose the threat to American civil society posed by Islamic extremism and the failure of American leadership to protect the public from this threat. Eclipse of the Man-Made Sun is a 1991 documentary film written and directed by Nicolette Freeman and Amanda Stewart. Let The Butterflies Fly is a 2012 documentary film directed by Gopal Menon. Em Busca de Iara is a 2013 Brazilian documentary film directed by Flavio Frederico about the guerrilla Iara Iavelberg, a woman who participated in the armed struggle against the dictatorship in Brazil. With the research of documents, archive footage and interviews, the documentary reconstructs the life of Iara and disassembles the official version, which assigns her death to suicide. The Way to the Sea is a 1936 documentary film about the London to Portsmouth railway line and its recent electrification. This is prefaced with an historical representation of Portsmouth and the London to Portsmouth road. It was produced by the Strand Film Company. Its music was written by Benjamin Britten and its commentary by W. H. Auden, who also wrote the music and words respectively for the similarly themed Night Mail that year. The music from both films was broadcast at 3pm on Saturday 1 September 2007 at the Cadogan Hall as a Proms Matinee concert, narrated by Samuel West. Parabeton - Pier Luigi Nervi and Roman Concrete is a prequel of the film Perret in France and Algeria, released in 2012. Ocana, an Intermittent Portrait is a 1978 Spanish documentary film directed by Ventura Pons. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1978 Cannes Film Festival. The Otherworld is a 2013 documentary film written by Scarlett Amaris and Richard Stanley, and directed by Richard Stanley. Another Hungary is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Dénes Nagy. Lesbians Do Not Exist is a 2012 documentary film directed by Laura Landi and Joan Selis. First Love: A Historic Gathering of Jesus Music Pioneers is a 2004 concert film and documentary that looks back into the Jesus Music of the 1970s. In 1997, a group of Jesus Music pioneers gathered in southern California for three days of music and fellowship. The event was both recorded and filmed, and was released in a 2-CD/2-DVD set simply titled First Love: A Historic Gathering of Jesus Music Pioneers. It was compiled and edited by the spouses of two of the artists who appear in the documentary: Dan Collins and Steve Greisen produced the project. The CD contains each of the 31 songs that were performed during the gathering, and the DVDs shows the live performances of the songs, interviews with the individual performers and groups, interviews with others who were involved in the roots of Jesus Music, and rare pictures and footage of the artists from the 1970s. Other artists who were interviewed for the documentary include pastor Chuck Smith, Pat Boone, Phil Keaggy, and Michael Omartian, among others. Infierno O Paraíso is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Germán Piffano. Bidesia In Bambai is a 2013 documentary, musical, social film written and directed by Surabhi Sharma. Discover what really turns on the uninhibited girls who venture into Boston's world renowned Kabloom Tattoo Parlor in this voyeuristic look into a world where clothes are shed and intricate ink designs are tattooed onto body-parts that rarely see the light of day Gnarr is a 2010 documentary film directed by Gaukur Úlfarsson. "You’ll never see politics the same after this raucous documentary. Following his country’s economic meltdown, acerbic Icelandic comedian Jon Gnarr launches his own political party, The Best Party. His platform? Free trips to Disneyland, more polar bears in the zoo, and refusing to work with anyone who doesn’t watch The Wire. But when support for Gnarr’s wacky mayoral bid surprisingly snowballs, what started out as a joke quickly captures the imagination of a nation desperate for a change." Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. Pine Ridge is a 2013 documentary-drama film directed by Anna Eborn. It's Better to Jump is a 2013 documentary and historical film directed by Gina Angelone, Mouna Stewart and Patrick Alexander Stewart. Fish & Onions is a 2011 ethnographic documentary film written by Bettina Herzner, Marc Brummund, Rene Fischer and directed by Marc Brummund. Thomas Sankara: The Upright Man is a 2006 documentary film about Thomas Sankara, former president of Burkina Faso. Sankara was known as "the African Che", and became famous in Africa due to his innovative ideas, his devastating humour, his spirit and his altruism. With a gun in one hand and Karl Marx's works in the other, Sankara became president at the age of 34 and served from 1983 to 1987. He immediately set out to shake the foundations of the country that he renamed from the French colonial Upper Volta to Burkina Faso, "Land of Upright Men." More than a classic biography, this film sheds light on the impact that this man and his politic made on Burkina Faso and Africa in general. Gay Man's Guide To Safer Sex is the name of a safer sex instructional documentary produced by Mike Esser and Tony Carne of Pride Video in association with the Terrence Higgins Trust in 1992. The film was directed by David Lewis and featured a soundtrack by John Balance and Peter Christopherson of Coil. The medical information included in the film is presented by Mike Youle, a British doctor specializing in HIV treatment. The film won in the Best Special Interest Category in 1992's British Videogramme Association awards. Telling Amy's Story is a documentary film directed by Joe Myers. Canned Dreams is a 2012 documentary film written by Katja Gauriloff, Joonas Berghäll, and Jarkko T. Laine and directed by Katja Gauriloff. Kanye West: College Dropout - Video Anthology is a music documentary directed by Fat Cats, Chike, Coodie, Michael Haussman, Chris Milk, Kanye West and Little X. Testimony: The Untold Story of Pope John Paul II is a 2007 biographical documentary film. Seven months after the end of the war, acclaimed BBC journalist and filmmaker Sean Langan (Behind the Lines, Travels of a Gringo) takes a brave and eventful trip through Iraq, seeking to shed light on the current situation. Men for Sale also known by its French language title Hommes à louer is a 2008 documentary film by Canadian director Rodrigue Jean, about male prostitutes working in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The film was shot over a one-year period in Montreal's Gay Village. The interviews for Hommes à louer are in French language. The English version Men for Sale has subtitles in English. Canadian National Film Board calls the documentary "an unflinching portrait with neither voyeurism nor false sympathy acknowledging those society prefers to ignore". The Home Front is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Phie Ambo. And the Pursuit of Happiness is a 1986 documentary film directed by Louis Malle about the experiences of immigrants in the United States during the 1980s. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival. Nio Fidencio... de Roma a Espinazo is a 2008 documentary film written by Curry Fernandez and directed by Juan Farr Rivera. Dante's Paradiso Documented is a 2014 film directed by Boris Acosta and based on the book written by Dante Alighieri. Southmost U.S.A. is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Trish Dalton. Brasil Bom de Bola 78 is a 1978 documentary film written by Oswaldo Caldeira & Carlos Leonam and directed by Oswaldo Caldeira. Running With Mum is a 2008 film directed by Martin Greaves. Time Exposure is a 2012 documentary short family film written and directed by Alfred Guzzetti. Who Needs a Heart is a 1991 documentary film written and directed by John Akomfrah. Dinosaurs is a 2013 drama, documentary and experimental film directed by Terra Long and written by Morgan I.P. Fics. "Zweig’s homage to John Cassavetes’ Husbands is a fusion of improvisation and cinéma vérité. A gang of guys hang out, drinking and shooting the shit. Conversations go nowhere and sing-a-longs erupt as they sit around trying to decide what to do, where to go, and who they are." Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Hot Docs site. Khiam is a 2001 film directed by Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige. Dreaming Nicaragua is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Marcelo Bukin. In "The 5 Keys to Mastery," author George Leonard explores the personality traits and mental attitudes that help people in different fields of expertise reach the top, and how one can train oneself to succeed. Leonard is joined by a handful of successful people who offer their own perspectives, including Carlos Santana, B.B. King, Linus Torvalds, Julius Axelrod, Wendy Rieger, and more. Alardearen Seme-alabak is a 2013 documentary film on the participation of women in the Alarde, a military parade commemorating the historical siege against french troops in the basque border villages of Irun and Hondarribia. Peter Martins: A Dancer is a 1978 documentary film written and directed by Jørgen Leth. Journey to Ostend is a 1989 film directed by Klaus Wildenhahn. Spencer Halpin's Moral Kombat is a 2009 documentary film, directed by Spencer Halpin, an American independent filmmaker. The title of the film is in part a reference to the Mortal Kombat series of video games, which are notable for their extreme violence. The title was changed from Moral Kombat to Spencer Halpin's Moral Kombat to avoid the risk of a lawsuit. High and Dry is a music documentary film directed by Michael Toubassi. Originally broadcast in May of 1977, this series of interviews between Sir David Frost and U.S. President Richard Nixon, delves into the various controversies of Nixon’s presidency, including (most famously) the Watergate scandal. Never before, nor since, has a U.S. President been so candid on camera. This historic meeting has been adapted into an award-winning major motion picture by Ron Howard. Bonjour Mr Lewis is a 1982 documentary written and directed by Robert Benayoun. Up the Ridge is a 2006 documentary film by Appalshop filmmakers Nick Szuberla and Amelia Kirby revealing injustices in the American Prison System. It especially highlights prisoners sent from urban areas to be incarcerated in rural supermax prisons, such as Red Onion State Prison and Wallens Ridge State Prison. The film delves into issues of parole reform, prisoner abuse, and prisoner suicide. Up the Ridge was created as a part of the Thousand Kites project, a nonprofit organization aimed at exacting prison reform through narrative means. In 1998, Szuberla was a volunteer DJ for a hip-hop show "Lights Out" on WMMT, an Appalachian region radio station when he received hundreds of letters from inmates transferred into nearby Wallens Ridge State Prison, the region’s newest prison, built to prop up the shrinking coal economy. The letters described human rights violations and racial tension between prisoner staff and inmates. Filming began that year. Through the example of Wallens Ridge State Prison, the documentary explores the United States prison industry and the social impact of moving hundreds of thousands of inner-city minority offenders to distant rural outposts. José and Pilar is a Portuguese documentary directed by Miguel Gonçalves Mendes following the last years of the Nobel Prize winner José Saramago, chiefly through his relationship with his resolute wife, Pilar del Río. Highly praised by the critics and the audience, the film seems to have accomplished to show the tenderness, the genuine integrity and the deeply concerned humanity behind such controversial figure and his spouse. It gathers sequences from Madrid to Helsinki to Rio de Janeiro and covers Jose and Pilar's life in Lanzarote, their trips around the world and their most simple, transient and quotidian moments, as for during the period José writes his "The Elephant's Journey". The film was produced by Miguel Mendes' JumpCut, Fernando Meirelles's O2 and Pedro Almodóvar's El Deseo. The Fuente Family: An American Dream is a 2003 documentary film directed by James Orr. Split: A Divided America is a documentary film about partisan divides in American society. It examines a perceived political divide from the perspective of cultural factors, the modern media, contemporary campaigning strategies, and the "deterioration of civil discourse in our political experience". Kelly Nyks directed, co-wrote, and co-produced the film with co-writer Peter Hutchison and Jeff Beard. The cast includes Al Franken, Jesse Jackson, Noam Chomsky, Norm Ornstein, Tucker Carlson, Bruce Bartlett, Thomas Frank, Robert Putnam and Sharon Pratt Kelly among others. The documentary was broadcast domestically on the Independent Film Channel and was distributed to classrooms nationwide in collaboration with the National Association of Secondary School Principals and the National Council for the Social Studies. Les Traces du Reve is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Jean-Daniel Lafond. The Path to Nazi Genocide is a short documentary film produced by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Magnetic Reconnection is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Kyle Armstrong. On Tender Hooks is a 2011 biographical documentary film directed by Kate Shenton. "THE DVD" is a 90-minute documentary following the rise of the Australian metal-core juggernauts Parkway Drive. The film follows the quintet from humble beginnings on the beaches of the NSW North Coast to storming stages all over the world. Part documentary, part extreme-sports video, part live footage...all metal! As an added bonus, the disc will also feature a full live set shot at Sydney’s Roundhouse in 2008. Basketball Guru: The Pete Newell Story is a documentary directed by Doug Harris. Out in East Berlin: Lesbians and Gays in the GDR is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jochen Hick and Andreas Strohfeldt. The Demons of Eden is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Alejandra Islas. Life Belongs to Us is a 1936 documentary propaganda film paid for by the Communist Party of France. Parts of the film was taken from newsreels mixed with new sketches about working population, the peasants and intellectuals. Here's To You, Mr. Robinson is a 1976 biographical documentary film directed by Peter Tammer. Thelonious Monk: Straight, No Chaser is a documentary about the life of bebop pianist and composer Thelonious Monk. Produced by Clint Eastwood, Bruce Ricker, and directed/co-produced by Charlotte Zwerin, it features live performances by Monk and his group, and posthumous interviews with friends and family. The film was created when a large amount of archived footage of Monk was found in the 1980s. The film, made by Malpaso Productions, is distributed by Warner Bros. Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story is a 2008 U.S. documentary on the campaign tactics used by Lee Atwater while working on the George H.W. Bush 1988 presidential campaign, and how those tactics have transformed presidential campaigns in the United States. In an independent release from InterPositive Media, the film was a Critic's Pick in both the New York Times and Washington Post, screened at the 2008 Democratic and Republican National Conventions, played 40 American cities in the fall of 2008 and was #7 in nationwide per-screen average the weekend of its release. It has been called one of the best political documentaries ever made. The Search for John the Baptist is a film directed by Mark Hufnail released on March 25, 2005. We Are Northern Lights is a 2013 Scottish documentary film about the Scottish people, which is being screened around Scotland. According to the BBC it was created using footage taken by over 100 members of the Scottish public during 2012. It is described as Scotland's first ever crowd sourced film project. It was shown at the Glasgow Film Festival in 2013 before being distributed to 5 Scottish Cineworld cinemas. It was also chosen as the opening film for the 2013 Glasgow Southside Film Festival. Change Is Gonna Come is a 2009 documentary film directed by Tasha Oldham and written by Stacey Martino. Amin Amir is a documentary film directed by Will Beauchamp. Rabbit à la Berlin is a 2009 documentary film, directed by Bartek Konopka. The script was written by Konopka and Mateusz Romaszkan, and the movie was a joint German-Polish production with the producers Heino Deckert and Anna Wydra. It was nominated for an Oscar in 2010 for "Best Documentary, Short Subjects". It has also won awards at the Kraków Film Festival and the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival. The movie tells the story of the Berlin Wall but from point of view of a group of wild rabbits that inhabited the zone between the two walls separating West Berlin from the East Germany during the Cold War. Bone Wind Fire is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Jill Sharpe. Symphonie Berbère is a 1947 documentary short film written and directed by André Zwoboda. Searching for Raoul Wallenberg is a 2001 documentary film directed by Robert L. Kimmel. The Popemobile is a 2010 short documentary history film directed by Grace O'Mahony. Diana's Hair Ego is an American documentary film about AIDS and one unconventional woman's efforts to educate her small, Southern community. While documenting an AIDS quarantine controversy in South Carolina with DIVA TV, filmmaker Ellen Spiro met DiAna DiAna, a local hairdresser who transformed her beauty parlor into a center for AIDS and safe sex information. Dubbed "the little video that could" on National Public Radio, Diana’s Hair Ego traveled the world, premiering at the American Film Institute and at International Public Television Conference in Dublin. It was the first small format video to be broadcast on national television. Diana's Hair Ego was reviewed in the New York Times as "addressing AIDS and sexuality with refreshing directness and humor without losing touch with its serious subject matter." The Atlanta Constitution called it "the activist documentary of the '90s” and The Boston Globe called it a “terrific portrait of a remarkable woman”. Alaska Sessions: Surfing The Last Frontier is a 2012 documentary sports adventure film written and directed by Frederick Dickerson and Mathew McNeill. Muktir Kotha is a 1999 Bangladeshi drama film directed by Tareque Masud and Catherine Masud. Muktir Kotha follows a group of young men and women began traversing the far corner of Bangladesh projectionists from 1996-1999, showing Muktir Gaan, a documentary on the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War. The film screenings prompted ordinary villagers to share their own stories of wartime suffering and resistance. Often the projection space would be spontaneously transformed into a folk concert. Through these interactions with village audiences, the young projectionist came to 'relearn' the wider history of the Liberation War, and the continuing struggle of ordinary people for a more just and democratic society. Testimonios Zapatistas is a 1987 historical documentary film directed by Adolfo García Videla. Melvin & Jean: An American Story is a documentary film directed by Maia Wechsler. Nine from Little Rock is a 1964 American short documentary film directed by Charles Guggenheim about the Little Rock Nine, the first nine African-American students to attend an all-white Arkansas high school in 1957. The film was commissioned by George Stevens, Jr. of the United States Information Agency. The film won Guggenheim his first Academy Award in 1965 for Documentary Short Subject. He was also nominated in the same category the same year for Children Without. The film is narrated by Jefferson Thomas, one of the Little Rock Nine, who died in 2010. The Great North Korean Picture Show is a 2012 documentary film directed by Lynn Lee and James Leong. Disorderly Conduct is a 1932 film directed by John W. Considine Jr. and starring Spencer Tracy. It was the seventh picture Tracy made under his contract with Fox Film Corporation, and the first to make a profit since his debut Up the River. Mordaunt Hall, in his review for The New York Times, praised the film's "racy dialogue and highly commendable performances", but bemoaned the "strained and implausible" story. Piccolo cabotaggio pittorico is a 1952 Italian film. Penguin Island, Western Australia is a 2013 documentary adventure film written and directed by Rob Nichols. Knucklebonehead is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Oskari Pastila. Misconception is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jessica Yu. Greening The Revolution is a 2010 action documentary film written and directed by Katie Curran. INSPIRED: THE VOICES AGAINST PROP 8 chronicles several people's lives in the wake of the passage of Prop 8. Arresting live footage follows individuals form all walks of life, inspired to action in ways they never dreamed. Experience the passionate rallies and defiant marches of the new gay rights movement as it swept through Southern California. Intimate interviews reveal all the ways the movement comes together, and the subtle and not-so-subtle ways it can be pulled apart from within. Don't Stop Believin': Everyman's Journey is a 2012 American documentary film of the band Journey and its new lead vocalist Arnel Pineda. Bombay: Our City is a 1985 Indian documentary film directed by Anand Patwardhan. From One Second to the Next is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Werner Herzog. New Kids on the Block: A Behind the Music Special is a 2008 TV documentary directed by Chris Berkenkamp. Emu Ritual at Ruguri is a 1967 documentary film directed by Roger Sandall. 4192: The Crowning of the Hit King, a 2010 documentary film, follows the exploits and achievements of Pete Rose, a baseball player. The film, Directed by Terry Lukemire, is narrated by J. K. Simmons. The film stars Marty Brennamen, Tony Pérez, Mike Schmidt, and Pete Rose himself, who relay the struggle and effort it took to make history through America's favorite past time. Boxing Match; or, Glove Contest is an 1896 British short black-and-white silent documentary film, produced and directed by Birt Acres for exhibition on Robert W. Paul's peep show Kinetoscopes, featuring a staged boxing match between Sergeant-Instructor Barrett and Sergeant Pope with a round, an interval and a knockout. The film was considered lost until footage from an 1896 Fairground Programme, originally shown in a portable booth at Hull Fair by Midlands photographer George Williams, donated to the National Fairground Archive was identified as being from this film. Ex Press is a 2011 drama film written and directed by Jet Leyco. "Projecting the Body reveals the forgotten history of gay film-maker, dancer, artist Stephen Cummins who lit up Sydney in the 1980s and early 90s. Saving the Boom follows a campaign to save a 60 year old gay bar under threat in Laguna Beach. Projecting the Body tells the story of a young experimental artist, filmmaker, dancer who lit up the 80s arts scene in Sydney. This is an apt memorial to the creativity of Stephen Cummins produced by friends and collaborators making extensive use of archive footage, home movies, photography and extracts from Cummins' own dazzling films. His most famous work Resonance (1992) was the first gay film funded by the Australian Film Commission and used dance to tackle anti-gay violence but there are many other pleasures in this beautiful and inspiring film. BR" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. Bronx Princess is a documentary short film directed by Yoni Brook and Musa Syeed. From the Bottom of the Lake is a 2013 documentary film directed by Clare Young. We Must Go is a sports documentary film directed by Dave LaMattina and Chad N. Walker. Silly Little Game is a film directed by Lucas Jansen and Adam Kurland. Crusade to a dream is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ramir Oliveira. Singleton - From The Earth is a 2012 documentary film directed by Robert A. Reid. Mysterion is a 1991 documentary film by Finnish directors Pirjo Honkasalo and Eira Mollberg about a convent of Russian Orthodox nuns who have dedicated their lives to serving God. It is the first part of Honkasalo's "Trilogy of the Sacred and the Satanic", followed by Tanjuska and the 7 Devils and Atman. The film won the main prize at the Balticum Film & TV Festival in Denmark in 1992. Lost Land is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Pierre-Yves Vandeweerd. This documentary reviews the changes in the Canadian culture, perceived from both at home and abroad, that has occurred since about 2001. From being a "boring" country that nobody really could say anything definitive about, to becoming one of the leading countries for freedom in the world. Canada is starting to stand up to the United States, and is thus getting a reputation for being "cool". Tom Petty: Going Home is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Jonathan K. Bendis. Chasing Ghosts: Beyond the Arcade is a documentary film directed by Lincoln Ruchti about the golden age of video arcade games. The film premiered January 22, 2007 at the Sundance Film Festival and has also been shown at the 2007 Los Angeles Film Festival, as well as other film festivals. Watch My Lips is the first and only video album by British pop singer and vocalist of the band theaudience, Sophie Ellis-Bextor. It includes Ellis-Bextor's concert at the Shepherd's Bush Empire, as part of the Read My Lips Tour; Read My Lips-era videos; Theaudience videos and extras. Gilaven! Sing! is a 2003 documentary film directed by Stephan Settele. Sterilisation of the Female is a 1964 documentary film directed by Govind Saraiya. Who Peter: A New Regeneration - 1989-2009 is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Chris Chapman. Notre Dame de la Croisette is a documentary / drama / fantasy film directed by Daniel Schmid. The Water War is a documentary movie about the Water conflict in Mozambique. It is directed by Licínio Azevedo. Barenaked in America is a 1999 documentary film about the Canadian band Barenaked Ladies filmed during the 1998-1999 Stunt tour. Directed by actor Jason Priestley, the film was first shown at the Toronto International Film Festival. The band and director introduced the film at the Winter Garden theatre. Barenaked in America was originally released in the United States through a distribution deal with Blockbuster Video, and was available only for rental in VHS format. Blockbuster put many of its remaining copies on the sale rack, in an effort to eliminate its inventory, after their exclusive deal had expired. Barenaked in America has since been released on DVD in territories outside of North America, with no word on a US or Canadian release. The film has run on premium movie channels in the US. Westray is a 2001 documentary film directed by Paul Cowan. Among Men - Gay in East Germany is a 2011 documentary film written by Ringo Rösener and directed by Ringo Rösener and Markus Stein. The Jewish Cardinal is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ilan Duran Cohen. My Freedom, Your Freedom is a 2012 documentary, drama film written and directed by Diana Naecke. The Sky Is The Roof is a 2013 short historical documentary film written and directed by Beth Nelsen. Brain Power: From Neurons To Networks is a 2012 short documentary family film written by Ken Goldberg,Tiffany Shlain and Sawyer Steele and directed by Tiffany Shlain. Into the Wind is a 2010 documentary film which chronicles the story of Terry Fox. At the age of 18, Fox was diagnosed with osteosarcoma. The cancer had taken over his right leg, which was then amputated six inches above the knee. However, three years later, Fox set out to raise funds for cancer research and raise awareness by running 30 miles a day from the Atlantic Ocean in Newfoundland to the Pacific Ocean in British Columbia, totaling over 4000 miles. The film was directed by the NBA star Steve Nash who grew up in Canada and followed Fox’s run across the country as a kid in 1980, and narrated by Taylor Kitsch. Two thirds across Canada, Fox was once again diagnosed with cancer, which had spread to his lungs. Fox died at the age of 22, inspiring the Terry Fox Foundation. The film aired on TSN2, in Canada on September 19, 2010, and on ESPN, in the United States on September 28, 2010, as part of the 30 for 30 series. You're Gonna Miss Me is an American documentary film by Keven McAlester. It focuses on Roky Erickson, the former frontman for the band The 13th Floor Elevators. The band is cited as pioneers of the psychedelic rock sound. The film covers Erickson's rise to rock-and-roll icon status, his overuse of LSD, struggles with schizophrenia, and his 1969 marijuana arrest that led to stays at Austin State Hospital and Rusk State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Erickson was irrevocably changed after the onset of his illness and he went long stretches with little interest in making or performing music. The film opens with Erickson who has been living as a total recluse for over a decade. What follows is a closer look at how "the great lost vocalist of rock and roll" came to live in poverty and isolation, struggles to receive effective treatments, and how he manages to return to music and life. The film takes its name from a single by the 13th Floor Elevators. The documentary was nominated for a 2007 Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary. Drill Baby Drill is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Lech Kowalski. Conspiracy: The Secret History: Mohamed Atta and the Venice Flying Circus is a 2003 documentary film. World's Most Incredible Hostage Rescues is a 1999 documentary written by Dan Perry. Who Will Watch the Watchman? Dalibor, or the Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin (Czech: Kdo bude hlídat hlídače? Dalibor aneb Klíč k Chaloupce strýčka Toma) is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Karel Vachek. Atenco 3. The Sentence is a 2008 documentary written and directed by Colectivo Klamvé. Waveriders is a 2008 documentary film. The film was produced by Margo Harkin and directed by Joel Conroy. Jak se žije zpěvnému svědomí národa is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Jan Hřebejk. The Tale Of An Phuc House is a 2013 family, war, documentary film written by Othello Khanh and Ivan Tankushev and directed by Ivan Tankushev. GMO OMG is a documentary family film directed by Jeremy Seifert. RocketKitKongoKit is a 1986 short documentary film directed by Craig Baldwin. The compelling documentary by the Scullion brothers follows a Calgary homeless soccer team, the Downtown Dawgs, from the beginning of their journey to the Homeless World Cup in Cape Town, South Africa. We meet seven people along the way - the players John, Mike, Adam, and Shawn, their counselor Esau Tamara, and their coach Kevin Scullion. We get to know each player and the circumstances that led them to homelessness, and we witness their failures and successes as they try to get off the street. The film gives a glimpse inside the Social Services system in the City of Calgary, and how it helps those in need. We also get the opportunity to share in the joys and sorrows of the players and the support crew as they face the problems associated with homelessness, and the attitudes of those living in Calgary. A must see for anyone concerned about social issues in urban environments and seeking solutions. Triple Divide is a documentary drama film directed by Joshua Pribanic and Melissa Troutman. Live 8: Rome is a 2005 music documentary film written by David Wild and directed by Bruce Gowers, Nick Hopkin, Michael Maier, Claire Popplewell, Geoff Posner, Richard Valentine, and Paul Flattery. Haiti Untold is a documentary film directed by Isabelle DePelteau and Dan Shannon. Transforming Family is a 2012 short documentary LGBT biograghical film directed by Rémy Huberdeau. Ryan is a 2004 animated documentary created and directed by Chris Landreth about Canadian animator Ryan Larkin, who had lived on skid row in Montreal as a result of drug and alcohol abuse. Landreth's chance meeting with Larkin in 2000 inspired him to develop the film, which took 18 months to complete. It was co-produced by Copper Heart Entertainment and the National Film Board of Canada, and its creation and development is the subject of the NFB documentary Alter Egos. The film incorporated material from archive sources, particularly Larkin's works at the NFB. The film is an animated interpretation of an interview of Larkin by Landreth, and includes interviews with Larkin's previous partner and coworkers, as well as Landreth. Development of the characters was partially inspired by the plastinated human bodies of the Body Worlds exhibition. The distorted and disembodied appearance of the film's characters is based on Landreth's use of psychological realism to portray emotion visually, and expression is modelled by use of straight ahead animation. The animation was created at the Animation Arts Centre of Seneca College in Toronto. High and Hallowed: Everest 1963 is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by David Morton, Jake Norton and Jim Aikman. Southern Crossing is a 1980 Australian documentary film directed by Robert Guillemot and produced by Richard Bradley. The film documents the 1980 International Music Festival, which was staged during the week of January 7-14, 1980 at the Regent Theatre in Sydney. The artists featured in the film were The Dave Brubeck Quartet, Herbie Mann and The Family of Mann, The Les McCann Band, Howie Smith and the Jazz Co-op, the Toshiko Akiyoshi – Lew Tabackin Big Band of Australian All Stars, Galapagos Duck, Judy Bailey Quintet with John Sangster, Ricky May and Friends and The Young Northside Big Band. The British American jazz critic and author Leonard Feather, who also attended the festival, provided the commentary in the film. The film also used locations around Sydney Harbour and featured surfing scenes with surfer Terry Richardson and a jam session at the famous Basement Jazz Restaurant in Sydney. Southern Crossing was financed by the Australian Film Commission along with sponsorship investment from Qantas and Peter Stuyvesant International. The film was released theatrically in Australia in 1980 and later in New Zealand in 1983. A Summer Day is a 1970 short, documentary, adult film directed by Shinkichi Tajiri. Shanghai Space is a 2009 documentary film written abd directed by Nanna Frank Møller. Manhunt: The Search for the Yorkshire Ripper is a 1999 film directed by Gwyneth Hughes. Beauty Is Embarrassing is a 2012 documentary film written by Chris Bradley and Kevin Klauber and directed by Neil Berkeley. Disco and Atomic War is a 2009 documentary film written by Kiur Aarma, Jaak Kilmi, and directed by Jaak Kilmi. Blessings: The Tsoknyi Nangchen Nuns of Tibet is a documentary film directed by Victress Hitchcock. The Whistle is a 2012 short drama film written and directed by Grzegorz Zariczny. Deshratna Rajendra Prasad is a 1977 short documentary film directed by M. Prabhat. Cousin Bobby is a 1992 American documentary film directed by Jonathan Demme. The film focuses on Demme's cousin, Robert W. Castle, an Episcopalian minister in Harlem, New York. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival. Nella terra di Don Chisciotte is an Italian-language documentary travelogue series about Spain, made by Orson Welles. It began filming in 1961, but did not air until 1964. The series follows Welles' travels around Spain, and was narrated by Arnoldo Foà. The series was made for Radiotelevisione Italiana. Co-starring with Welles were his Italian wife Paola Mori, and their young daughter Beatrice Welles. Jordan Rides the Bus is a documentary film directed by Ron Shelton that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. Extremely relevant, highly entertaining and utterly humanist, the critically-acclaimed film festival favorite TYING THE KNOT poignantly explores one of today's hottest issues, the political war between gay people who want to marry and those determined to stop them.If you lost the one you love, how would it feel to have your love placed on trial? After a bank robber's bullets ends the life of cop Lois Marrero, her wife of thirteen years, Mickie, discovers a police department willing to accept the women's relationship but unwilling to release Lois's pension. When Oklahoma rancher Sam loses his husband of 25 years, cousins of the deceased spouse challenge his will and move to evict Sam from his home. As Mickie and Sam take up battle stations to defend their lives, TYING THE KNOT digs deeply into the past and present to uncover the meaning of marriage today, focusing on such key issues as rights, privilege, and love.Passionately directed by Jim de Sève, TYING THE KNOT is an eye-opening examination of the institution of marriage, featuring amazing footage of gay hippies storming the Manhattan marriage bureau in 1971, plus inspired interviews with gay activists and right-wing politicos. Nervous Night is a 1986 film starring American rock band The Hooters and directed by John Charles Jopson. Sewing Hope is a documentary biographical drama film directed by Derek Watson. I Can Only Show You the Color is a 2014 drama, history, war documentary short film, written and directed by Fernando Vílchez Rodríguez. The Nanny Reunion: A Nosh to Remember is a one-hour special that reunited the cast of The Nanny. It originally aired on Lifetime on December 6, 2004. The cast members reminisce about the show and present exclusive blooper footage never shown on television, as well as an update on their current activities. The reunion took place at Fran Drescher's oceanside home in California. The entire cast was present except for Daniel Davis, who was performing in the musical La Cage aux Folles on Broadway at the time and was unable to attend. In the special, Daniel Davis, or "Danny", was said by Drescher to have gotten "lost". At the end of the special, “Danny”, makes an appearance. The Darkside is a 2013 Documentary film directed by Warwick Thornton. African Independence is a feature length documentary film. This is the first film from producer Tukufu Zuberi. African Independence premiered at the San Diego Black Film Festival in January 2013. African Independence tells the story of some of the most important events to happen on the African continent since the slave trade and colonization by the Europeans. The film focuses on the African Independence Movements and the problems confronted by these movements to win independence. The film tells the story through interviews with independence activists and leaders who helped achieve independence for the African people. By focusing on four watershed events-World War Two, the end of colonialism, the Cold War, and the era of African Republics, African Independence tells the story of African history, past and present. Tukufu Zuberi is also the host of the film. The Rise and Fall of English Montreal is a 1993 Canadian documentary film directed by William Weintraub and produced by the National Film Board of Canada in Montreal. The film deals with exodus of English-speaking Quebecers that began in the 1960s and was accelerated by the Quebec general election, 1976. Edo Maajka – Sevdah o Rodama is a 2007 documentary about Bosnian rapper Edo Maajka. Suite Varsovienne is a 1946 short documentary film written and directed by Tadeusz Makarczynski. Hell's Kitchen: A New York Neighborhood is a time capsule visit to one of the big Apple's most notorious parts, made famous in movies for decades. Through stories retold by painters, tattoo artists, barbers and other coloful characters we get the picture of a vibrant multi-ethnich neighborhood where people struggled to survive, get along and move ahead, at a time when real estate development and gentrification has started to push the low income housing residents away for the benefit of affluent professionals. Featuring a number of known people as themselves: John MIchael Boyer, Griffin Dunne, Lloyd Kaufmann, Charlie Sheen, Mira Sorvino, Ivy Supersonic and more. The film concludes with a revisit to the Hell's Kitchen of 2007, where the redevelopment transformation has all but been complete. Theodor Heuss is a 1961 short documentary film directed and written by Otto Erich Kress and Dietrich Schiller. Little Black Fish is a 2013 action drama short documentary film written and directed by Azra Deniz Okyay. Futuro - A New Stance for Tomorrow is a 2000 documentary short film written by Marko Home and Mika Taanila, and directed by Mika Taanila. Crisis: Behind a Presidential Commitment is a 1963 cinéma vérité documentary film directed by Robert Drew. The film centers on the University of Alabama integration crisis of June 1963. Drew and the other filmmakers, such as D. A. Pennebaker and Richard Leacock, were given access to all the key areas, including John F. Kennedy's Oval Office in the White House and the homes of Robert F. Kennedy and George Wallace. The film first aired on ABC television four months after the incident. In 2011, it was added to the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress. Vietnam POWs: A Story of Survival is a 1997 documentary written and directed by Brian Leonard. Die Thomaner - A Year In The Life Of The St. Thomas Boys Choir Of Leipzig is a 2012 music documentary film written by Günter Atteln and directed by Paul Smaczny and Günter Atteln. 161 Days: The Vita Cortex Workers Struggle is a 2012 documentary film directed by Declan O'Connell. Slag för slag is a 1958 film directed by Per Gunvall. Lubitsch, le patron is a 2010 documentary film written by N.T. Binh and directed by Jean-Jacques Bernard and N. T. Binh. My Father Evgeni is a 2010 American documentary film written, directed and produced by Andrei Zagdansky. The film tells the story of Evgeni Zagdansky, a World War II veteran, who became a filmmaker and head of the state film studio Kievnauchfilm in Kiev, Ukraine. The Resort is a 2012 documentary film written by Gary Brunson, Galina Kalashnikova, Mikhail Nemirovsky and directed by Galina Kalashnikova. Sibila is a 2012 historical and biographical documentary film written by Teresa Arredondo and Martín Sappia and directed by Teresa Arredondo. Yeah Right! is a skateboarding video by Girl Skateboards, directed by Ty Evans and Spike Jonze. Yeah Right! is notable for its soundtrack, length, and the extensive use of never-before-seen special effects. Tell Me What You Saw is a 1993 documentary film written and directed by Kiti Luostarinen. Teaching to See is a 2012 educational documentary film about graphic design and teaching of Inge Druckrey and some of her students and colleagues. Directed by Andrei Severny and produced by Edward Tufte, it was released in July 2012 and was screened in New York,Boston, Phoenix, Toronto, Reykjavík,Philadelphia,New Haven and was seen by thousands on the internet. The film covers various topics and principles of seeing, analyzing and executing. It provides insights into graphic design, typography, composition, form and visual arts education. In 2012 Matthew Carter wrote about the film: "This film is about patient and dedicated teaching, about learning to look and visualize in order to design, about the importance of drawing. It is one designer’s personal experience of issues that face all designers, expressed with sympathy and encouragement, and illustrated with examples of Inge Druckrey’s own work and that of grateful generations of her students. There are simple phrases that give insights into complex matters, for example that letterforms are 'memories of motion.' The BBC's flagship arts documentary strand Arena returns with the first ever documentary exploring the extraordinary life of Sir Jonathan Miller CBE. Jonathan Miller is usually described as a 'polymath' or 'Renaissance man', two labels he personally dislikes. But no-one quite like him has made such an impact on British culture through the medium of television, radio, theatre and opera. He has straddled the great divide between the arts and the sciences, while being a brilliant humorist, a qualified doctor and even a practising artist. With the man himself and a host of distinguished collaborators, including Oliver Sacks, Eric Idle, Kevin Spacey (who owes his first break to Miller) and Penelope Wilton, this Arena profile explores Miller's rich life and examines through amazing television archive - mostly from the BBC - how he makes these connections between the worlds of the imagination and scientific fact. Mad Hot Ballroom is a documentary film by director Marilyn Agrelo and writer/producer Amy Sewell about a ballroom dance program in the New York City public school system. In the film, Agrelo and Sewell reveal that the New York City public school system runs a ballroom dance program for fifth graders. Several styles of dance are shown in the film, such as tango, foxtrot, swing, rumba and merengue. To Touch the Soul is a 2007 documentary film, directed by Ryan Goble, and produced by Teresa Hagen. The film was written by Goble and Erin Henning, from a story by Hagen. The documentary is narrated by Cassandra Hepburn. A Ship Is Born is a 1942 short propaganda film produced by Warner Bros. about the U.S. Merchant Marine. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary in 1943. For my Baby - The Decision of an HIV infected Hemophiliac and His Wife is a 2001 International Emmy Award nominated documentary film. A Simpler Way is a 2012 short adventure documentary film directed by Michael Snyder. Here Is Mariah Carey, also known simply as Mariah Carey or Mariah's Thanksgiving NBC Special, was Mariah Carey's third DVD/video release. It presents Carey performing live at Proctor's Theatre in Schenectady, New York on July 18, 1993. The video was originally released in late 1993, and the DVD was released on September 12, 2006. First shown as a television special on Thanksgiving 1993 on NBC, the video presents Carey performing a concert to celebrate and promote her Music Box album. She performed four songs from Music Box: "Dreamlover", "Hero", "Without You", and "Anytime You Need a Friend"; this concert was the first public performance of these songs. Carey also performed five older hits: "Vision of Love", "Love Takes Time", "Someday", "Emotions", and "Make It Happen". In addition to the performances, an alternate version of the duet "I'll Be There" by Carey and Trey Lorenz was also shown. This song was also filmed at Proctor's Theatre with members of the Albany Police Athletic League on stage with Mariah. Much of this material would later be featured in Carey's late 1993 Music Box Tour. The video release comes with the music video of "Dreamlover". Headlines In History is a documentary film directed by Zobby Bresson. How to Live in the German Federal Republic is a 1990 Documentary film written and directed by Harun Farocki. Spitfire 944 is a short documentary in which an 83-year-old World War II pilot views 16mm footage of his 1944 Spitfire crash-landing for the first time, sixty-one years after the event. Doc Next: Media Deception is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Fatima Patel, Khadeejah Bepari, Nasaybah Hussain, Rumana All, Tayyaba Malik and Zarah Kanwal. Aquaporko! is a 2013 film directed by Kelli Jean Drinkwater and Anna Helme. Dean and Me: Roadshow of an American Primary is a 2008 documentary film about Howard Dean and his 2004 Presidential campaign. The film was directed by Heath Eiden, co-produced by Eiden, Iris Cahn, and Deanna Kamiel, and features Dean, Al Franken, Michael Moore, Ted Kennedy, Walter Mondale, Hillary Clinton, Alexandra Pelosi, and many others. The film has been shown at several film festivals, including the Vermont International Film Festival, the Hartford International Film Festival, and the SNOB Film Festival. La República perdida is the name of a series of Argentine documentary films about the history of Argentina. It is focused on the Coups d'état in Argentina, and uses photos and video tapes, while Aldo Barbero narrates it. It was directed by Miguel Pérez. The first documentary film was edited in 1983, after the end of the National Reorganization Process and the return of democratic rule. The second one, La república perdida II, was edited in 1986. Flag Wars is a poignant account of the politics and pain of gentrification. Working-class black residents in Columbus, Ohio fight to hold on to their homes. Realtors and gay home-buyers see fixer-uppers. The clashes expose prejudice and self-interest on both sides, as well as the common dream to have a home to call your own. Eruv - The Wire is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Kai Wiesinger. Le pacte des loups - Les entrailles de la bête is a 2001 documentary film directed by Pascal Laugier. Wild Ocean is a 2008 documentary 3D IMAX film about the annual migration of billions of sardines, the sardine run, up the South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal Coast and its human and animal impact. Island Life: Macquarie Island is a 2001 documentary film written by Karin Altmann. Norma Jean is a 1988 short documentary film directed by John Behnke. Susya is a 2011 short film directed by Dani Rosenberg and Yoav Gross. Heirlooms is a 2009 short animation film directed by Wendy Chandler and Susan Danta. Rainbow Man/John 3:16 is a 1997 documentary short film directed by Sam Green. It Will Come To Light is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Lucie Baudinaud. On the Run with Abdul is a 2009 short documentary film directed by James Newton and David Lalé. The Final Member is a 2012 documentary, comedy, drama film directed by Jonah Bekhor and Zach Math. Arvo Pärt 24 Preludes for a Fugue is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Dorian Supin. Wee Water Wonders is a 1953 documentary, short film directed by Jack Eaton. The Decline of Western Civilization is an American documentary film filmed through 1979 and 1980. The movie is about the Los Angeles punk rock scene and was directed by Penelope Spheeris. In 1981, the LAPD Chief of Police Daryl Gates wrote a letter demanding the film not be shown again in L.A. Over the years the film has gained cult status. The film's title is possibly a reference to famous music critic Lester Bangs' 1970 two-part review of The Stooges' Fun House for Creem magazine, where Bangs quotes a friend who had said the popularity of The Stooges signaled "the decline of Western civilization". Another possibility is that the title refers to Darby Crash's reading of Oswald Spengler's Der Untergang des Abendlandes. The film is the opening act of a trilogy by Spheeris depicting life in Los Angeles at various points. The second film The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years covers the Los Angeles heavy metal scene of 1986-1988. The third film The Decline of Western Civilization III chronicles the gutter punk lifestyle of homeless teenagers in the late 1990s. Art And Apathy is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jessica Habie. Before Flying Back to Earth is the first feature-length documentary film by the Lithuanian film director Arūnas Matelis. In a lyrical, yet unsentimental fashion, it shows the lives of children hospitalized with leukemia in Vilnius Pediatric Hospital - the same place where Matelis' daughter had battled and recovered from this disease some time before the start of production. The film is described as "a poetic, unsentimental Lithuanian documentary about the resilience of human spirit". Its laconic style and its formal simplicity have been likened to haiku by some critics. Before Flying Back to the Earth is the most highly acclaimed recent Lithuanian film and is considered one of the best documentary films of 2005 in the world; it has been shown in numerous festivals. The film is in the Lithuanian language. The idol group AKB48 continues to evolve, rewriting the record books. This documentary takes you behind the scenes of their success, and follows the young members as they pursue their dreams, experiencing both growth and anguish. The camera follows their concerts, and also focuses on the everyday lives of individual members as they experience joy, conflict, growth and the fulfillment of their dreams. The Irresistible Rise Of Moïse Katumbi is a 2013 documentary biographical film written and directed by Thierry Michel. We Are Living on the Edge is a 2002 short film directed by Victor Asliuk. The Movement: One Man Joins an Uprising is a 2011 sport documentary film written by Greg Hamilton and directed by Greg Hamilton and Kurt Miller. American Faust: From Condi to Neo-Condi is a documentary film by British filmmaker Sebastian Doggart that portrays the life and career of former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. JFK: The Case for Conspiracy is a 1993 documentary written and directed by Robert J. Groden. Mondial 2010 is a 2013 documentary, short, drama and historical film written and directed by Roy Dib. Friends & Enemies is a 1987 historical documentary film written and directed by Tom Zubrycki. UNCOVERED: THE WAR IN IRAQ chronicles the Bush Administration's determined quest to invade Iraq following the events of September 11, 2001. The film deconstructs the administration's case for war through interviews with U.S intelligence and defense officials, foreign service experts, and U.N. weapons inspectors -- including a former CIA director, a former ambassador to Saudi Arabia and even President's Bush's Secretary of the Army. Their analyses and conclusions are sobering, and often disturbing, regardless of one's political affiliations. Produced and Directed by Robert Greenwald. My Class is a 2013 drama documentary film written by Gino Clemente, Daniele Gaglianone and Claudia Russo, and directed by Daniele Gaglianone. Kahl is a 1961 West German short documentary film about the Kahl Nuclear Power Plant. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Of Time, Tombs and Treasures is a 1977 American short documentary film about the discovery the Tomb of the Tutankamun. Produced by James R. Messenger, the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters is a 2007 American documentary film. Highlighting the popular 1980s arcade game Donkey Kong, it follows Steve Wiebe in his attempts to take the world high score for the arcade game from Billy Mitchell, who the film presents as reigning champion. The film premiered January 22, 2007, at the 2007 Slamdance Film Festival and has been shown at the Newport Beach Film Festival, the Seattle International Film Festival, the SXSW Film Festival, the TriBeCa Film Festival, the True/False Film Festival, the Aspen Comedy Festival, and the Fantasia Festival. The film opened in limited release in the United States on August 17, 2007 in five theaters, and by September 9, 2007, the film had expanded to 39 theaters in the U.S. The film's original title was simply The King of Kong but later received the subtitle A Fistful of Quarters. A scripted film adaptation is also in the works. Director Seth Gordon has said that the movie might be a sequel instead of a remake, telling the story of how the documentary changed both men's lives, as well as their continuing rivalry. The film's DVD release was on January 29, 2008. From Deep is a 2013 documentary sport film directed by Brett Kashmere. Battle: Change From Within is a 2013 Telly Award winning film, created for University of Missouri Extension. What does it mean to own a penthouse apartment in poverty-plagued Brazil?HIGH-RISE (Um Lugar ao Sol) examines this topic in a hypnotic and revealing examination, blending interviews with nine penthouse residents, owners of enviable killer views of Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo and Recife, and a look from below, an overcrowded world that seems to be building on every square inch of land, with nowhere to go but up.This feature-length documentary presents an analysis of the dominant Brazilian class through dialogue. Each resident opens up their home to reveal their thoughts on social inequality, politics, and the world that surrounds them, as well as discussing their intimate desires, fears, insecurities, prejudices and personal histories.Through these interviews and a poetic visual and sound narrative, HIGH-RISE provides an evocative insight into the "verticalization" of the Brazilian cityscape, deepening our understanding of what drives people to live in penthouses.HIGH-RISE is a film about height, status and power that questions the elite in a way never before shown in Brazilian cinema. The Announcement is a 2012 documentary film written by Aaron Cohen and directed by Nelson George. Britain In A Day is a crowdsourced documentary film that consists of a series clips of footage shot by members of the public in Britain on 12 November 2011. Scott Free Films and the BBC are producing, and the film was made in conjunction with YouTube. The film is 90 minutes long and includes shots from 314 different perspectives out of the 11,526 submitted onto the video sharing website YouTube. The film was premiered in cinemas and broadcast on BBC2 on 11 June 2012 for a general audience, as part of the Cultural Olympiad. Billed as a follow up to the 2011 documentary film Life In A Day, the film was similarly executive produced by Ridley Scott and Kevin Macdonald. The film was directed by Morgan Matthews. A Voice for the Wilderness is a 1983 documentary film written by Joan Bean and Richard Dennison and directed by Michael Balson and Christina Wilcox. NASCAR: The IMAX Experience is a 2004 short documentary film directed by Simon Wincer. Which Direction To Go? is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Dirbdil Assefa Akriso. Meet Magick Balay, a man who works for a New York City magic shop by day, while performing his own brand of legerdemain at night. This documentary follows Magick as he plies his trade through the streets of Manhattan, leaving his spectators shocked.  Along the way, Magick describes his philosophy on life, the theories behind his magical techniques, and the satisfaction of bringing amazement into the everyday lives of ordinary people.Why would a man dedicate his life to magic and mystery?  How did he get started?  Why does he go by the name Magick?A MAN NAMED MAGICK is a close-up portrait of a charismatic guy whose greatest magical feat might just be how he has transformed himself through his art. John Philip Sousa is a 1900 short musical documentary film. Kids of the Majestic is a 2009 documentary film made in Bangalore, India. It was directed by Dylan Verrechia, and co-produced by Suhas Radhakrishna that follows a group of orphans in the Majestic railway station of Bangalore. Kids of the Majestic won the Artivist Award for Best Feature in Children's Advocacy Category at the 2010 Artivist Film Festival & Awards, and the Directing and Writing Insight Awards of Recognition at the National Association of Film and Digital Media Artists. Rembrandt's J'Accuse is a 2008 Dutch, German, Finnish documentary directed by Peter Greenaway about criticism of today's visual illiteracy argued by means of a forensic search of Rembrandt's painting The Night Watch. Greenaway explains the conspiracy about a murder and the motives of all its characters who have conspired to kill for their combined self-advantage. The film came out in 2008 a year after Peter Greenaway's Nightwatching a narrative film about Rembrandt featuring most of the same actors and sets. The Mystery of Animal Behavior is a 1969 documentary TV movie written by Bud Wiser and directed by Walon Green and Heinz Sielmann. Bad Blood: A Cautionary Tale is a documentary film about contaminated hemophilia blood products. The film was co-written by Marilyn Ness and Sheila Curran Bernard, produced and directed by Marilyn Ness, with cinematography by David Ford, editing by Marion Sears Hunter, and original music score by Joel Goodman and David Bramfitt. The film premiered on July 28, 2010 in New York City. The Fashion Side of Hollywood is a 1935 short documentary directed by Josef von Sternberg. Yaloms Cure is a 2014 documentary biography film written and directed by Sabine Gisiger. The International Space Orchestra is a 2013 film written and directed by Nelly Ben Hayoun. You Are What You Were Born For is a 2002 short documentary film directed by Roberto Berliner. "In the current frigid national climate facing economic migrants, Carlos Sandoval and Catherine Tambini enter the traumatized world of Farmingville, a previously unassuming Long Island suburb that witnessed the beating and attempted murder of two Mexican day laborers. What the filmmakers find is the very dangerous, two-edged sword of a growing national crisis: on the one side, the community's increasing population of undocumented aliens, who are crowding into single-family dwellings and assembling on early morning street corners, hoping to grab a day's wage; on the other, Farmingville's home-owning families, many of whom have lived there for generations and are watching what they envision as a bucolic little village slipping away. Amid a conflict pitting the providence of dreams against the privileges (and rights) of property, Sandoval and Tambini resist the urge to make agitprop, almost agonizingly presenting both sides of the conflict while, at the same time, chronicling how a small town in upheaval can get co-opted into a national nightmare. Anti-immigration groups, racist hatemongers and even local figures with specialized agendas rise and fall throughout the telling of the Farmingville tale. More than a story about suburbs, property values, immigration, and racism, Farmingville is ultimately about the conflicted concept of what being American means." Quoting Diane Weyermann from the 2004 Sundance Film Festival site. Secret World Live is a film of a Peter Gabriel concert in 1993, as part of his Secret World Live tour to support his sixth solo album, Us. The show is performed across two stages: a square and a circular stage, bridged by a conveyor belt. It was released on VHS, LaserDisc and DVD. An album of the same title with a similar track listing was also released. The film received the 1996 Grammy Award for Best Long Form Music Video. The film has been remastered and became available on DVD and Blu-ray on 2 July 2012 in the UK and 24 July 2012 in North America. The new release also contains the song Red Rain that was not present on the original releases. Eyes In The Forest: The Portraiture Of Jim Lawrence is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Miriam Needoba. Loving the Bony Lady is a 2012 documentary/short/biography film directed by Scott Elliott. Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat is a 2002 stand-up comedy film starring Martin Lawrence, and directed by David Raynr, also responsible for Whatever It Takes. Lawrence also has producing and writing credits for the film. It is Lawrence's second stand up comedy film after You So Crazy was released in 1994. Shot on location at the DAR Constitution Hall in Washington D.C., the film was released in August 2002 and went on to gross nearly $20 million at the box office, almost seven times its production cost of $3 million. After a number of personal crises, Lawrence returns to the stage telling about his stinging social commentary and very personal reflections about his life. Hogan is a 2011 short animation film directed by Peter Millard. Terror's Advocate is a 2007 French documentary film about Jacques Vergès. Guilty 'Til Proven Innocent is a documentary drama film directed by Jeffrey Theman. Popatopolis is a 2009 documentary film directed by Clay Westervelt about the making of Jim Wynorski's soft-core horror film, The Witches of Breastwick. The documentary features B-Movie icons Roger Corman, Andy Sidaris, Julie Strain, Julie K. Smith, Stormy Daniels, and more. Roman Polanski : A Film Memoir is a 2011 documentary film directed by Laurent Bouzereau. Arthur and Lillie is a 1975 American short documentary film directed by Jon Else. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. This is a biographical documentary about Arthur and Lillie Mayer - their own lives and their adventures in the formation of "Hollywood" from its earliest days. The Lithium Revolution is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Andreas Pichler and Julio Weiss. La Bare is a 2014 documentary film directed by Joe Manganiello. Da Silva is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Patrícia Travassos. William Francome is a fairly typical, white middle-class guy. Typical except for the fact that he is about to embark on a journey into the dark heart of the American judicial system; the tangled world of renowned Death Row prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal.The connection between these two characters is a simple one, and the pretext for this film, as Will explains:"I was born in London on December 9th 1981. Over 3000 miles away Mumia Abu-Jamal, a Black Panther and radical journalist, was arrested for the murder of a police officer in Philadelphia. He claimed he was innocent but was sentenced to death and has been awaiting execution ever since. Over the years, he has attracted massive international support from organisations like Amnesty International and world leaders like Nelson Mandela amongst others. I'm now 24 years old and in that time Mumia has become the most famous and controversial death row inmate in America".Despite his situation, and against all odds, Mumia has managed to penetrate the consciousness of people like Will. Through his writings and his web and radio broadcasts from Death Row, he has become known to many as "the Voice of the Voiceless".IN PRISON MY WHOLE LIFE takes us to some surprising places and brings us into contact with some of America's most original minds. Never-seen-before footage and brand new evidence create a prevailing case for reasonable doubt while exploring the socio-political climate of America's past and present. Angela Davis, Mos Def, Noam Chomsky, Alice Walker, Snoop Dogg, Steve Earle, Amy Goodman and many others take us through a decades-old struggle for equality, fairness and respect that so many Americans strive for to this day.Mumia's cause has created a political storm but after the politicians have said their piece, after the court papers have been filed and the protestors have gone home, we are left with a film about a man, a father, a son, an inspiration and a pariah - who faces his twenty-fifth year on Death Row.Extraordinary though Mumia's story is, he is only one of 3,350 people currently on death row in the United States. This film allows him not only to speak to us, but also on behalf of those others who cannot find a voice. Die mit dem Bauch tanzen is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Carolin Genreith. Spin is a 1995 documentary film by Brian Springer composed of raw satellite feeds featuring politicians' pre-appearance planning. It covers, not only the presidential election, but also the 1992 Los Angeles riots as well as the Operation Rescue abortion protests. Using the 1992 presidential election as his springboard, Springer captures the behind-the-scenes maneuverings of politicians and newscasters in the early 1990s. Pat Robertson banters about "homos," Al Gore learns how to avoid abortion questions, George H. W. Bush talks to Larry King about Halcion—all presuming they're off camera. Composed of 100% unauthorized satellite footage, Spin is a surreal expose of media-constructed reality. The film documents behind the scenes footage of Larry Agran who unsuccessfully sought the Democratic Party nomination for President. Agran was generally ignored by the media during his candidacy, a topic covered in the documentary. The media did not report his polling numbers even as he met or exceeded the support of other candidates such as Jerry Brown. Party officials excluded him from most debates on various grounds, even having him arrested when he interrupted to ask to participate. It Was Rape is a documentary film directed by Jennifer Baumgardner. Sting: Inside the Songs of Sacred Love is a 2003 music documentary film directed by Jim Gable. The World Is Watching is a 1989 documentary film written by Harold Crooks and Peter Raymont and directed by Jim Munro and Peter Raymont. A Tokyo Fusebox is a 1998 documentary short film directed by Susanna Salonen. Good News: Newspaper Salesman, Dead Dogs and Other People from Vienna is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Ulrich Seidl. I Am the Ripper is a 2004 action horror documentary-style film directed by Eric Anderson. Blow Job is a silent film, directed by Andy Warhol, that was filmed in January 1964. It depicts the face of an uncredited DeVeren Bookwalter as he apparently receives fellatio from an unseen partner. While shot at 24 frame/s, Warhol specified that it should be projected at 16 frame/s, slowing it down by a third. Despite the salacious title, the film shows only the expression on the young man's face; the implied sexual act itself is not seen. It is not stated whether it is a male or a female performing the act, and the viewer must assume that fellatio is occurring. It has also been speculated that the salaciousness is entirely in the title, and that no fellatio was actually being performed. The Trials of Muhammad Ali is a 2013 documentary, biography, sport, war film directed by Bill Siegel. A State of Vine is a 2007 American documentary film about winemaking. It is directed by Don Scioli. With insight and commentary from many members of the wine world – including Two Buck Chuck’s Fred Franzia, champion racecar driver and winery owner Mario Andretti, award winning winemakers, Bob Foley of Pride Mountain Vineyards, Daniel Barron of Silver Oak Cellars and Randy Pitts of Harvest Moon Estate Winery, along with many others. A State of Vine was produced by Marin County based film company Zan Media that also produced The Beckoning, a historical thriller. Scared Straight is a documentary film directed by Daryl Smith. Küchengespräche mit Rebellinnen is a 1984 film directed by Karin Berger, Elisabeth Holzinger and Lotte Podgornik. Mr. Mack's Kitchen is a 2009 documentary directed by Mike Attie. Blood Money: Switzerlands Nazi Gold is a 1997 documentary film written by Gaylen Ross and directed by Stephen Crisman. Buckle Brothers is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Marquette Williams. Elizabeth R is one of the documentary films about Queen Elizabeth II. It was produced by BBC and directed by Edward Mirzoeff in 1992. It was the second documentary about the British Royal family that was approved by them after the 1969 documentary Royal Family. Elizabeth R is followed by a BBC/RDF documentary, Monarchy: The Royal Family at Work. Algérie, histoires à ne pas dire is a 2007 documentary film. This film is the story of a mother's enduring love and a boy's journey from the darkness of brain damage, coupled with what would eventually be diagnosed as autism to the light that is his life today-as an acclaimed artist. It is also the story of mental illness in one Irish-American family, the devastating damage it caused, from one generation to the next, and ultimately the triumph of the human spirit. When Janice Murray, first saw her newborn son Christopher in a New York City hospital in 1960, she knew immediately that something was wrong. "The whites of his eyes were completely scarlet," she said. "That's a sign of oxygen deprivation." The initial diagnosis confirmed her observations. It was only later that another battery of tests determined that he was also autistic. Virtually every medical expert that was consulted concluded that the prospects were bleak: Several even suggested putting Chris in an institution. But Janice refused to even consider the impossibility of reaching her son. There was something in his eyes that convinced her that there was hope for Chris, that he was more aware than he was letting on. "He never looked vacant or dull," she said. "It was more a look of bewilderment or pain." At the same time that Janice was embarking on that daunting challenge, her husband Tommy Sr. was beginning a long, sad slide into depression, debt and divorce that devastated his family. He died young, drowning off the Southampton, NY beach where he and all of his children grew up. He was 52. Like his father before him, he was bipolar and refused to even discuss being treated for it-never mind actually take the first step in that direction. Christopher was devastated by his father's death, but couldn't express his pain, confusion, grief and, yes, rage the way his mother, brothers and sisters could. He had to find another way-through his paintings, primarily of New York City's urban landscape, work that is created, in the words of one critic, "with obsessive, fastidious draftsmanship." The film is also about the beautiful irony that now exists in Chris' relationship with his brother Tommy, one that obliterates a commonly held belief that people with a mental illness are so much "different" than we "normal" people are: In the early days, when he was just a little boy, Tommy nurtured and sheltered Chris from the cruelties of the world and those who didn't understand or would mock him and his condition. A Great Concert of Peoples is a 1991 film directed by Semyon Aranovich. Prisoner of Paradise is a 2002 documentary film directed by Malcolm Clarke and Stuart Sender, and produced as a British-Canadian-American collaboration. The film tells the true story of Kurt Gerron, a German-Jewish cabaret and film actor in the 1920s and 1930s who was deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in Czechoslovakia during World War II. There he was ordered to write and direct a Nazi propaganda film. In addition to gaining positive reviews, the film was nominated for "Best Feature Documentary" in the 2003 Academy Awards. Clarke won the Directors Guild of Canada Award; he and Sender were together nominated for the 2003 Directors Guild of America Award. Housing First In The Artic is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Cory Gordon. Trembling Before G-d is an unprecedented feature documentary that shatters assumptions about faith, sexuality, and religious fundamentalism. Built around intimately-told personal stories of Hasidic and Orthodox Jews who are gay or lesbian, the film portrays a group of people who face a profound dilemma - how to reconcile their passionate love of Judaism and the Divine with the drastic Biblical prohibitions that forbid homosexuality. As the film unfolds, we meet a range of complex individuals - some hidden, some out - from the world's first openly gay Orthodox rabbi to closeted, married Hasidic gays and lesbians to those abandoned by religious families to Orthodox lesbian high-school sweethearts.Many have been tragically rejected and their pain is raw, yet with irony, humor, and resilience, they love, care, struggle, and debate with a thousands-year old tradition. Ultimately, they are forced to question how they can pursue truth and faith in their lives. Vividly shot with a courageous few over five years in Brooklyn, Jerusalem, Los Angeles, London, Miami, and San Francisco, Trembling Before G-d is an international project with global implications that strikes at the meaning of religious identity and tradition in a modern world. For the first time, this issue has become a live, public debate in Orthodox circles, and the film is both witness and catalyst to this historic moment. What emerges is a loving and fearless testament to faith and survival and the universal struggle to belong. The Big Question is a five-part science documentary television series broadcast in the United Kingdom on the Five channel, beginning January 2004 and continuing into 2005. In the North American market, it has been re-released on the Discovery Science network. Each half-hour episode is hosted by a renowned authority, and examines the following provocative questions: Part 1 - "How Did the Universe Begin?" presented by Stephen Hawking Part 2 - "How Did Life Begin?" presented by Harry Kroto Part 3 - "Why Are We Here?" presented by Richard Dawkins Part 4 - "Why Am I Me?" presented by Susan Greenfield Part 5 - "How Will It All End?" presented by Ian Stewart The series attracted controversy and criticism from creationists, as well as praise from other reviewers. Touba is a 2013 historical documentary film directed by Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi. Antonio + Silvana = 2 is a 2011 Documentary film written and directed by Simone Aleandri,Luca Onorati and Vanni Gandolfo. Naqoyqatsi, also known as Naqoyqatsi: Life as War, is a 2002 film directed by Godfrey Reggio and edited by Jon Kane, with music composed by Philip Glass. It is the third and final film in the Qatsi trilogy. Naqoyqatsi is a Hopi word meaning "life as war". In the film's closing credits, Naqoyqatsi is also translated as "civilized violence" and "a life of killing each other". While Koyaanisqatsi and Powaqqatsi examine modern life in industrial countries and the conflict between encroaching industrialization and traditional ways of life, using slow motion and time-lapse footage of cities and natural landscapes, about eighty percent of Naqoyqatsi uses archive footage and stock images manipulated and processed digitally on non-linear editing workstations and intercut with specially-produced computer generated imagery to demonstrate society's transition from a natural environment to a technology-based one. Reggio described the process as "virtual cinema". "Filmmakers David Weissman and Bill Weber co-directed the 2001 documentary, The Cockettes, chronicling San Francisco’s legendary theater troupe of hippies and drag queens, 1969–1972. We Were Here revisits San Francisco a decade later, as its flourishing gay community is hit with an unimaginable disaster. The first film to take a deep and reflective look back at the arrival of AIDS, We Were Here focuses on a small number of interviewees, all of whom lived in San Francisco before the epidemic hit.The stories they tell are not only intensely personal, but also address the much larger political and sexual complexities of that era. We Were Here explores what was not so easy to discern in the midst of it all — the parallel histories of suffering and loss. Despite legitimate fears of being forced back into the closet by AIDS, the gay community was in many ways greatly empowered by the challenges that the epidemic presented. Though this is a San Francisco-based story, the issues it addresses extend not only beyond San Francisco but also beyond AIDS itself. It speaks to our societal relationship to death and illness, our capacity as individuals to rise to the occasion, and the importance of community in addressing unimaginable crises." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Paul Soldner: Playing With Fire is a 2005 documentary and biography film written by Jessica Everleth and directed by Renee Bergan. Journey of the Heart: Henri Nouwen is a 2004 film written by William Finlay and directed by Karen Pascal. Grateful Dawg is a documentary film from 2000 which chronicles the friendship and musical relationship of musicians Jerry Garcia and David Grisman. Director and producer Gillian Grisman uses multiple videos, as well as live recordings, to help show this bond between two friends and musicians. It gives a view of Garcia outside the Grateful Dead. The film includes many live performances of Grisman and Garcia. The DVD has the following chapters: Start "Grateful Dawg" Early Pickin' "The Sweet Sunny South" Old and in the Way "Pig in a Pen" Sweetwater Reunion "Dawg's Waltz" "Sitting Here in Limbo" Sea Shanties "Off to Sea Once More" Not for Kids Only "Jenny Jenkins" "Arabia" Intro "Arabia" "The Thrill is Gone" Intro "The Thrill is Gone" The Living Room "Friend of the Devil" End Credits Moments, Israel is a 2002 Comedy/Drama Documentary film directed by Idan Alterman, Uri Bar-On and Rafi Bukai. Northern Spring is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Dovile Gasiunaite. Learn about this shocking story kept from the world for over 50 years from many of the actual people that lived it! This is NOT the incident often spoken about when people talk about Eisenhower meeting the Aliens at Edwards Air Force Base. William Shatner's Get a LIfe is a 2013 Telly Award winning film. Love Story is a 2011 New Zealand film directed by and starring Florian Habicht. Set in New York City, the film combines real-life scenes where members of the public dictate the love story with those of Florian and Masha Yakovenko as they act it out. The film's world premier was held at the opening night of the New Zealand International Film Festival 2011. Love Story has screened in numerous international film festivals, and won the Audience Choice Award at the Pluk de Nacht Outdoor film festival in Amsterdam 2013. Jarvis Cocker of Pulp saw the film during the London International Film Festival, and invited Habicht to make a film about his group. PARTY ON as Saturday Night Live celebrates Mike Myers' six awesome seasons as a regular on the show. Compiled by the producers of SNL, Mike Myers' lineup of characters totally rules: -Wayne Campbell of Wayne's World -Dieter, host of Sprockets -Linda Richman, hostess of Coffee Talk -Simon -Phillip, the Hyper-Hypo kid -Ron Wood Our Man in Tehran is a 2013 historical documentary film written by Drew Taylor and Robert Wright and directed by Drew Taylor and Larry Weinstein. The Great Grandmother Has Alzheimer's is 2012 documentary film written and directed by Iván Mora Manzano. Who Are the DeBolts? And Where Did They Get Nineteen Kids? is a 1977 documentary film about Dorothy and Bob DeBolt, an American couple who have adopted 14 children, some of whom are severely disabled war orphans. VHS and DVD releases use the shortened title Who Are the DeBolts? The film was narrated by Henry Winkler, who also served as executive producer, and won an Academy Award for Best Feature-length Documentary in 1978, as well as the Directors Guild of America Award and the Humanitas Award for producer and director John Korty in 1979. A 50-minute version of the film shown on ABC in December, 1978, earned a 1979 Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement - Informational Program and an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Informational Program for Winkler, Korty, and producers Warren Lockhart and Dan McCann. A sequel, Steppin' Out: The DeBolts Grow Up, was made in 1980 with Kris Kristofferson as host and narrator. The DVD edition typically includes the 46-minute sequel as a featurette. The family was also the subject of a book, 19 Steps Up The Mountain: The Story of The DeBolt Family, by Joseph P. Blank. Pushcarts and Plantations is a 1998 documentary about Louisiana Jewry from award-winning director Brian Cohen. The documentary combines interviews with historians and locals to tell the 300-year old history of different Jewish communities found in the North, South, and New Orleans. The documentary shares anecdotes about local heroes, little known facts, and personal accounts. vrai faux passeport is a 2006 documentry film written and directed by jean luc godard The Children from Jordbro is a 1996 documentary film directed by Rainer Hartleb. Fighting for Our Lives is a 1975 documentary film produced by Glen Pearcy. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Bradley Wiggins – A Year In Yellow is an in-depth, no-holds barred documentary that explores the life of one of Britain’s brightest sport starts. Cameras follow Wiggins as he takes on some of Europe’s toughest races and tries to balance his professional and personal life. With exclusive access to those closest to him, the film captures the man behind all the headlines and sporting achievements, from his arduous training schedule that sees him taken away from his family for months at a time to struggling to cope with enormous media pressure. Stay Where You Are is a 2013 short documentary drama film written and directed by Tijana Petrovic. Far from Afghanistan is a 2012 documentary war film directed by John Gianvito, Jon Jost, Minda Martin, Soon-Mi Yoo and Travis Wilkerson. The Old Soldier's Ballad is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Vinícius Reis. Is Bible prophecy really being fulfilled in this generation? Could Armageddon and the end of the age be just around the corner? Skeptical investigative reporter Steve Stone sets out to find the truth in this incredible new docu-drama. Back To The Roots is a 2012 documentary film directed by Gonçalo Cardeira. The Lost Colony is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Astrid Bussink. One Love: The Bob Marley All-Star Tribute is a 1999 music documentary written by Lewis Friedman and Terence Dackombe. Shot In Bombay is a 2008 documentary film directed by Liz Mermin. #chicagoGirl: The Social Network Takes on a Dictator is a 2013 documentary, action, drama film written and directed by Joe Piscatella. Occupy Love is a 2012 documentary film about the Occupy movement by Velcrow Ripper. The film, which premiered at the 2012 Vancouver International Film Festival, argues that the Arab Spring, Occupy movement, Indignados and other movements all form part of a single global movement. Occupy Love features figures including bell hooks, Naomi Klein, Bill McKibben, Judy Rebick and Rebecca Solnit. This film tells the story of two sets of grandmothers – one in a battered township of Johannesburg, the other in a quiet rural corner of Canada. This film is about how the extraordinary bonds of friendship between these two groups of women is helping to win the fight against AIDS. Victory Through Air Power is a 1943 Walt Disney Technicolor animated feature film based on the 1942 book Victory Through Air Power by Alexander P. de Seversky. De Seversky appeared in the film, an unusual departure from the Disney animated feature films of the time. The film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture. "Filmed over four years, from the dilapidated cement courts of Senegal to upscale American prep schools, ELEVATE documents the extraordinary personal journeys of four particularly tall West African Muslim teenagers. Recruited for both their physical and academic skills they accept basketball scholarships to schools in the United States--and face the daunting challenges of alienation, a foreign language, American-style basketball and an unfamiliar American culture rife with African stereotypes. But with courage, humor, and remarkable resilience, they relentlessly pursue their dreams--to obtain an education and a shot at the NBA." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. Rwanda pour mémoire is a 2003 documentary film about the Rwandan Genocide. Fabrik / Leben is a 1998 film directed by Alfred Behrens. Only Image Remains is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Roya Akbari. La línea paterna is a 1995 documentary film written by José Buil and directed by José Buil and Marisa Sistach. Gaea Girls is a 2000 documentary film directed by Kim Longinotto and Jano Williams. Rocksteady: The Roots of Reggae is a 2009 music documentary directed by Stascha Bader. Breathing Lessons: The Life and Work of Mark O'Brien is a 1996 American short documentary film directed by Jessica Yu. It won an Academy Award at the 69th Academy Awards in 1997 for Documentary Short Subject. Mark O'Brien was a journalist and poet who lived in Berkeley, California. The documentary explored his spiritual struggle coping with his disability; he had to use an iron lung much of the time due to childhood polio. Mark died on July 4, 1999, from post-polio syndrome. "Since it first became widespread in the early 1970s, and especially since the video explosion of the 1980s, pornography has played an integral part of the sexual lives of a many gay man. From its humble, single-take hotel room romps of yesteryear to today’s big-budget, Southern California, star-laden productions, the making of adult films has evolved significantly. This video amusingly captures this glossy era with its cool peep at the men behind and in front of the cameras. Highly graphic, one learns the fine points of douching, fluffing, "gay for pay" straight stars, Hitler mustaches, stunt dicks and generally just how difficult it can get on the set. Superstar porn directors Chi Chi LaRue and Gino Colbert are featured as the camera reveals the behind-the-scenes preparations and on-screen tensions and successes. Also featured are bevies of creamy porn stars including Bryan Kidd, Joshua Sterling, Rip Stone, Adam Rom and Blue Blake. Whether the talk is about the late Joey Stefano having been the industry’s most popular bottom or the ins-and-outs of the filming process, this funny and eye-popping documentary will certainly disappoint those expecting titillation. But for those who are curious about the making of their two dimensional dream lovers, this documentary should prove enlightening." Quoting a review by Keeneye Reeves Yumen is a 2013 documentary film written by Xu Ruotao, Yinyan, J.P. Sniadecki and Huang Xiang and directed by J.P. Sniadecki, Xu Ruotao and Huang Xiang. Chapopote is a 1979 documentary film written by Carlos Cruz and Carlos Mendoza, and directed by Carlos Mendoza. War Photographer is a documentary by Christian Frei about the photographer James Nachtwey. As well as telling the story of an iconic man in the field of war photography, the film addresses the broader scope of ideas common to all those involved in war journalism, as well as the issues that they cover. The documentary won a 2003 Peabody Award, and was nominated for an Academy Award in 2002 and an Emmy Award in 2004. It also won or was nominated for more than 40 other awards internationally. Gillespiana is a 1961 short documentary film directed by Enrique Dawi. Youth and Occupation is a 2013 short and documentary film written by Rede Jovem de Cidadania and directed by Associação Imagem Comunitária. Pictures of the Old World is a 1972 documentary film written and directed by Dusan Hanák. Inquiring Nuns is 1968 Kartemquin Films production directed by Gordon Quinn and Gerald Temaner. In the film, two young nuns visit a variety of locales in the city of Chicago, asking people the question, "Are you happy?" They meet a variety of individuals ranging from hippie musicians to intellectuals, whose responses are everything from the mundane to the spiritual. The film was directly influenced by Jean Rouch's Chronicle of a Summer. An Official Selection of the 1969 Chicago International Film Festival, Inquiring Nuns features music by the then relatively unknown composer, Philip Glass. Recently re-released on DVD, Entertainment Weekly graded Inquiring Nuns an 'A' and applauded the film's "reaffirmation of the virtue of conventional wisdom". Behind the Camera is a 2013 documentary film directed by J-Yong E. Eye of the Day is a Dutch/Indonesian documentary from 2001 directed by Leonard Retel Helmrich. The documentary released on 1 March 2001. The documentary is the start of a trilogy and follows the family Sjamsuddin, existing of three generations in the slums of Jakarta Indonesia. The Dutch name is Stand van de Zon. Apollonian Story is a family biographical documentary film written and directed by Ilan Moscovitch and Dan Bronfeld. "Article 12 presents a sharp look at the current state of privacy and the rights and desires of individuals and governments, within the increasing use of surveillance. The film adopts the twelfth article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights to chart privacy issues worldwide, arguing that without this right no other human right can truly be exercised. It brings together the world’s leading academics, cultural figures and technologists to highlight the devastating potency of surveillance, the dangers of complicity, and presents a growing movement fighting for the upkeep of this crucial right. Article 12 provides a wake-up call as we sleepwalk into a worldwide surveillance society." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Locarno International Film Festival site. Blames and Flames is 2012 historical fiction, documentary, short film written and directed by Mohammadreza Farzad. Maybe I Should Have is an Icelandic documentary film by Gunnar Sigurðsson about the causes and effects of the 2008–2012 Icelandic financial crisis. The film touches on a variety of subjects including finance, corruption, cronyism, nepotism, the privatisation of the Icelandic banking system, tax havens, connections between politics and business, the Kitchenware Revolution, the Citizens' movement, and how the Icelandic government reacted to warning signs leading up to the collapse of the banking system in 2008. People who are interviewed include Björgólfur Thor Björgólfsson, William K. Black, Robert Wade, employees at Transparency International, Eva Joly and Jón Baldvin Hannibalsson. In their search for answers the filmmakers travel extensively and among the locations they visit are London, Guernsey, Luxembourg and Road Town in The British Virgin Islands. Musicians who contributed to the film include Fjallabræður, Magnús Þór Sigmundsson, Hjálmar and KK. The film has been generally well received by critics. Rights & Reactions is a 1987 documentary film directed by Jane Lippman and Phil Zwickler. Bustelli, ein Spiel in Porzellan is a documentary short film directed and written by Carl Lamb. Ten Minutes Older is a 1978 short film directed by Herz Frank. Man-Horse is 2008 documentary film written and directed by Audrius Mickevicius. The Die-Hard "The Legend Of Lasseter's Lost Gold Reef" is a documentary film directed by David A. Crocker. Starshaped is a 1993 documentary film on the British band Blur. Conceived as a fly on the wall documentary, it became a collection of live performances, videos and festival footage, and band interviews. Highlights include the band's performance at the 1991 Reading Festival and a brief interview with the late John Peel, and the band's 1992 appearance at the Glastonbury Festival when singer Damon Albarn lunges into a PA speaker which falls on his foot and severely injures him. The band are regularly captured in drunken states through the film, sometimes arguing and even vomiting. The majority of the music in the film comes from the band's first two albums, Leisure and Modern Life Is Rubbish, although the non-album tracks "Popscene" and "Day Upon Day" are also included. Several fans give their verdict on Blur, particularly on how the band have perfected their live act. The band's manager also appears in some scenes, although his face is blanked out. Two German fans seem obsessed with the band and Damon Albarn in particular, having followed the group from New York to England to Germany. Ranch: The Alan Wood Ranch Project is a 1985 documentary short film directed by Steve Denure and Chris Lowry. Aghet – Ein Völkermord is a German 2010 documentary film on the Armenian Genocide by the Young Turk government of the Ottoman Empire during World War I. It is based on eyewitness reports by European and American personnel stationed in the Near East at the time, Armenian survivors and other contemporary witnesses which are recited by modern German actors. The visual material partly consists of secretly shot photographs of the death marches, Turkish atrocities and suffering of the Armenian deportees. Aghet – Ein Völkermord was awarded the 2010 Deutscher Fernsehpreis and the 2011 Grimme Award, two of the most prestigious awards of German television. According to its director, German journalist Eric Friedler, the documentary was presented to many members of the US Congress and US Senate who have expressed astonishment on how well documented the genocide actually is. An official presentation at Capitol Hill took place in July 2010. Aghet won the 2010 Armin T. Wegner Humanitarian Award in Los Angeles and received international recognition on the Montreal World Film Festival the same year. It was set to be shown before large audiences at Harvard and Columbia University. Karen Black: On Acting is a biographical documentary film directed by Russell Brown. Punk's Not Dead is a 2007 documentary film directed by Susan Dynner, an American hardcore punk fan. The film claims to infiltrate American clubs, malls, recording studios, etc. where it sets out to claim hardcore punk and pop punk music is "thriving" from an American perspective. Its content features performances largely from 1980s hardcore bands and MTV skate punk and pop punk/rock acts. It also includes various interviews and behind-the-scenes footage with the bands, labels and fans. Kokonor - An Endangered Lake is a documentary film directed by Dorje Tsering Chenaktsang. Karosta is a 2008 historical documentary film directed by Peter King. KJ: Music and Life is a 2009 documentary film directed by King-wai Cheung. Happiness ... Promised Land is a 2011 documentary film written by Laurent Hasse and directed by Laurent Hasse. Captain Gervasio's Family is a 2013 silent documentary short film written and directed by Kasper Akhøj and Tamar Guimaraes. Fallen Champ: The Untold Story of Mike Tyson is a 1993 film made by acclaimed American documentary filmmaker Barbara Kopple. Though Tyson was in jail serving a sentence for rape, Kopple used existing interviews with the boxer, as well as her own extensive interviews with those closest to Tyson, to explore the man's history. The film traces Tyson's story from his troubled and tumultuous upbringing, through his rapid ascendancy in the ranks of the boxing world and his subsequent struggle with the trappings of fame. Fallen Champ earned Barbara Kopple a Directors Guild of America award as Best Documentary Director of 1993. `199 Lives' is the incredible story of one of the greatest action sport heros of all time. Beginning with rare footage of Pastrana in his early dare devil years, and introducing the family who made him the thrill seeker he has become, 199 Lives' is a thrilling, intense and intimate account of a living legend. At the age of 22, Travis is a champion multi-talent: a motocross racer, FMX rider, action sports hero, film maker, and rally car driver. He is adored by his fans and feared by his competitors. No matter who you are, when Travis gets on his bike, straps himself into a car or steps up to attempt the biggest stunt you never thought imaginable, you will undoubtedly lose yourself in the thrill. The Legend of Dolemite is a 1994 comedy and documentary film written by Duane LaDage, Rudy Ray Moore and S. Leigh Savidge and directed by Foster V. Corder. Sunday at Five is a 2008 documentary film written by Oiol Corrtacans and Marc Roma and directed by Joan Lpez Lloret. Fathers of the Sport is a 2008 sports documentary film written by Julie Dole and Xavier Mitchell and directed by Xavier Mitchell. Ballymun Lullaby is a 2011 documentary film directed by Frank Berry. Wundkanal is a 1984 film written by Yvette Biro and directed by Thomas Harlan. Mademoiselle Kiki Et Les Montparnos is a 2013 short, animation and biographical film written and directed by Amélie Harrault. Forgetting Dad is a 2008 documentary film directed and written by Rick Minnich and Matt Sweetwood. "Forza Bastia" is a 26-minute film documenting a UEFA Cup match between PSV Eindhoven and French club SC Bastia at the Furiani Stadium in 1978. Jacques Tati directed the piece at the request of friend Gilberto Trigano – the President of the Bastia club at that time. It was subsequently shelved and kept in storage until Tati's daughter Sophie Tatischeff eventually assembled the footage for release in 2002. If These Knishes Could Talk: The Story of the NY Accent is a documentary biography comedy directed by Heather Quinlan. I Am an Asiacan is a 2011 short biographic documentary film written and directed by Jesus Olvera. Big Boys Gone Bananas!* is a 2011 documentary film, directed by Fredrik Gertten. The film is about how Gertten's film company was sued by Dole for the 2009 documentary film Bananas!*. 13 jours en France is a documentary about the 1968 Winter Olympic Games in Grenoble. Punk the Vote! is a 73-minute 2006 Canadian documentary about the Canadian elections, and a hilarious and at the same time a critical take on Canadian politics punk-rock style, when two punks decide to run as independent candidates for the Canadian elections. The film is directed by Eric "Roach" Denis of EyeSteelFilm, a Montreal-based documentary production company. It was produced by EyeSteelFilm in association with Canal D Canadian specialty channel specializing in documentaries. The film was shown in 2006 in the at the Festival du Nouveau Cinéma in Montreal and in 2007 at Les Rendez-vous du cinéma québécois in Québec City and Montréal Colors of Math is a 2012 adventure documentary film written and directed by Ekaterina Eremenko. A Simple Rhythm is a 2010 documentary film written by Tess Girard and Ryan Noth and directed by Tess Girard. "Late in the twentieth century, in response to horrific atrocities igniting increasingly around the world, more than 60 countries united to launch the International Criminal Court (ICC)—the first permanent home for prosecuting perpetrators (no matter how powerful) of crimes against humanity, war crimes, and genocide.Pamela Yates's The Reckoning follows charismatic ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo for three years across four continents as he and his team tirelessly issue arrest warrants for Lord’s Resistance Army leaders in Uganda, put Congolese warlords on trial, challenge the U.N. Security Council to help indict Sudan’s president for the Darfur massacres, and shake up the Colombian justice system. As you can imagine, building cases against genocidal criminals is no cakewalk. Moreno-Ocampo has a mandate but no police force. At every turn, he must pressure the international community to muster political clout for the cause. Like a deft thriller, The Reckoning keeps you on the edge of your seat, in this case with two riveting dramas—the prosecution of unspeakable crimes and the ICC’s fight for efficacy in its nascent years. As this tiny court in The Hague struggles to change the world and forge a new paradigm for justice, innocent victims suffer and wait. Will Moreno-Ocampo succeed? Will the world ensure that justice prevails?" Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. From Dachau with Love is a 2002 film directed by Bernd Fischer. King of Comics is a 2012 documentary, LGBT and comedy film written and directed by Rosa von Praunheim. Burning Questions: The Poisoning of America is a 1989 Emmy News and Documentary Award winner for Outstanding Background/Analysis of a Single Current Story - Programs. The Field of Magic is a 2011 documentary directed by Mindaugas Survila. Jean Taris, Swimming Champion is a 1931 French short documentary film directed by Jean Vigo, about the French swimmer Jean Taris. The film is notable for the many innovative techniques that Vigo uses, including close ups and freeze frames of the swimmer's body. Kinshasa Superband is a 2012 documentary film directed by Pierre Laffargue. Water and Power is a 1989 film directed by Pat O'Neill. Peking 2008 is a year 2008 short film written and directed by Dagmara Drzazga. Bakhmaro is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Salomé Jashi. PanDaemonAeon is a DVD by extreme metal band Cradle of Filth, originally released on VHS in 1999, and surfacing on disc in 2002. It is primarily a showcase for the band's first ever promo video for the song From the Cradle to Enslave, taken from the EP of the same name. The video was directed by Alex Chandon, who would go on to produce further promo clips and DVD documentaries for the band, as well as the full-length feature film Cradle of Fear. This DVD contains two versions of the video: uncensored with graphic nudity and gore, and a supposedly MTV-friendly "clean" version. Also included are a "Making-of" documentary and a short live show, recorded at the London Astoria on 5 June 1998. Who Does She Think She Is? is a 2008 American documentary film about the societal push for women to choose between art and motherhood and the struggle a group of female artists face in attempting to reconcile both parts of their lives. Pamela Tanner Boll, who co-executive produced the Academy Award-winning documentary, Born Into Brothels, directed this film. A Place for Paedophiles is a British documentary that was televised on 21 April 2009. Produced and presented by Louis Theroux, the documentary ran for 60 minutes, and took place at Coalinga State Hospital, a hospital for paedophiles. Theroux was the first film-maker to be allowed to film and interview the inmates at the hospital. The Wall That Heals is a 1997 documentary film about the Vietnam Veterans Memorial narrated by Louis Gossett, Jr. Unbroken Glass is a documentary family film directed by Dinesh Sabu. Mr. Symbol Man is a 1974 documentary film directed by Bob Kingsbury and Bruce Moir. Black In America is a multi-part series of documentaries hosted by reporter Soledad O'Brien on CNN. The series is about various issues regarding blacks which includes panel discussions on issues facing the black community, and a look at the culture of black families in America, men and women. It features exclusive commentary by music mogul Russell Simmons, Grammy Award-winning rapper Lupe Fiasco, comedian D.L. Hughley, award-winning filmmaker Spike Lee, and actress/comedian Whoopi Goldberg. The program has been extremely successful. CNN.com’s interactive section for "Black In America" garnered over 2.4 million page views. The "Black In America" iReport.com assignment received over 1,000 submissions. Several viewers of the first episode were so inspired by the program that they launched BlackInAmerica.com, an online community and social network for black Americans who want to address the issues and challenges of Black America. The success of the program also led to CNN producing additional episodes and making it a series. Grass Whisper is a 2001 documentary short film written and directed by Algirdas Tarvydas. The Forest for the Trees is a documentary film directed by Bernadine Mellis. The Buck-Tick Syndrome II is a documentary film directed by Yuichiro Iwaki. 4 the Fans: Michael Jackson is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Johnny Diamond. Tunteyh or the Rumor of the Stones is a 2013 documentary film directed by Marina Rubino. A short life that ended in a hail of bullets is given an in-depth examination in this PBS documentary about stickup artist John Dillinger, who captured the American public's imagination and incurred J. Edgar Hoover's wrath in the 1930s. Covering the period from Dillinger's first brush with the law to his last, the program uses commentary from media photographers, film and FBI historians, and former top cops to chronicle a life dominated by myth. Killer's Paradise is a 2007 documentary exploring the high murder rate of women that has persisted unsolved in Guatemala since the end of the Guatemalan Civil War. The film is a co-production of the National Film Board of Canada and the BBC and was directed by Toronto-based journalist and filmmaker Giselle Portenier. It premiered on 8 March 2007 in Toronto and has been broadcast on multiple channels around the world, including DOC: The Documentary Channel in the United States. News from a Personal War is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by João Moreira Salles and Kátia Lund. Dynamic Earth is a short documentary film narrated by Liam Neeson. Farewell My School is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ucu Agustin. Fuzzy Baby Animals is a 2010 documentary film directed by Greg Passmore. Travelogue is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Mahnaz Mohammadi. The Mountain Meadows Massacre is a 2001 documentary film about the Mountain Meadows massacre. It was produced by Eric Young with Dave Chase, Jan Walker and Larinda Wenzel and distributed through The Studio, Inc. Arranged Happiness is a 2011 documentary romance drama history film written and directed by Daniela Dar-Creutz. Tongues Untied is a 1989 semi-documentary film directed by Marlon Riggs. The film seeks, in its author's words to, "...shatter the nation's brutalizing silence on matters of sexual and racial difference." Vuela Angelito is a 2001 short documentary film directed by Christiane Burkhard. Women of Faith is a 2009 documentary by Rebecca M. Alvin, which examines women’s decisions to lead religious lives in the Roman Catholic tradition in the post-feminist era. It asks the question, "why would a woman choose a nun’s life today?" Individual interviews with seven women provide answers—and explore how rebellion can happen within and outside the Church, how women in the Church reconcile conflicting, religious, personal, and political beliefs, and how they view official Church positions on contraception, homosexuality, and women’s ordination as priests. The diverse group includes Poor Clares, contemplative nuns who spend most of their days in prayer, Maryknolls who have served in Central America, a lesbian former nun, and a Roman Catholic Womanpriest. The film is distributed by Women Make Movies. It has a running time of 60 minutes. Viva Vietnam: A White Trash Adventure Tour was a comedy documentary that aired on Comedy Central in 1995 and was hosted by the channel's first spokesperson, comic Tom Rhodes. It was the first opportunity Rhodes had to film and travel internationally for a television station. Rhodes would later become a late night talk show host in Amsterdam, write travel blogs for The Huffington Post, and perform across five continents. Necessary Evil: Super-Villains of DC Comics is a 2013 feature-length documentary about DC Comics super villains. Kate Churchill is a filmmaker and a dedicated yoga practitioner who insists that yoga can transform anyone. Her plan: select a subject, immerse him in yoga and follow him until he finds a yoga practice that transforms him. Her subject is Nick Rosen: A skeptical journalist. Intrigued by the opportunity to peek behind the curtain of a 5.7 billion dollar “spiritual” industry, Nick signs on to investigate yoga for 6 months. Before he can say OM, he finds himself twisted up like a pretzel, surrounded by celebrity yogis, true believers, kooks, entrepreneurs and a gentle teacher from Brazil who leads his class with his feet behind his head. The more Nick investigates yoga the more contradictions he discovers. As he searches for concrete facts and discards the lofty spiritual theories of his yoga teachers, he strays further from Kate’s original plan. The two find themselves lost in Northern India, embroiled in a struggle between Kate’s expectations and Nick’s overt rejection of spirituality. Buying Sex is a 2013 documentary film written by Teresa MacInnes, and directed by Kent Nason and Teresa MacInnes. Lost in the Crowd is a documentary film by Austrian filmmaker Susi Graf about LGBT homeless youth in New York City. The film tells the story of a group of kids focusing on how they became homeless and their attempts to survive on the streets of New York. Most of the youth say the reason that they’re homeless in the first place is because they have been rejected from their families for being Gay or Transgender. Lost in the Crowd reveals a glimpse into the unknown world of homeless LGBT youth. Shelter Life is portrayed as well as finding "new" families in the ballroom scene featuring ballroom icon Willi Ninja who died shortly after being filmed for Lost in the Crowd. Sons of the Anzacs is a 1945 Australian documentary about the exploits of Australian soldiers during World War II. It covered nine campaigns up until the fall of Lae. It was later re-made and updated in 1968 to cover the entire war. Dom Hemingway is a 2013 British black comedy–crime drama film directed and written by Richard Shepard. The film stars Jude Law, Richard E. Grant, Demián Bichir, and Emilia Clarke. It was shown at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media is a documentary film that explores the political life and ideas of Noam Chomsky, a linguist, intellectual, and political activist. Created by two Canadian filmmakers, Mark Achbar and Peter Wintonick, it expands on the ideas of Chomsky's earlier book, Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media, which he co-wrote with Edward S. Herman. The film presents and illustrates Chomsky's and Herman's thesis that corporate media, as profit-driven institutions, tend to serve and further the agendas of the interests of dominant, elite groups in the society. A centerpiece of the film is a long examination of the history of The New York Times' coverage of the Indonesian occupation of East Timor, which Chomsky says exemplifies the media's unwillingness to criticize an ally of the elite. Until the release of The Corporation, made by Mark Achbar, Jennifer Abbott and Joel Bakan, it was the most successful feature documentary in Canadian history, played theatrically in over 300 cities around the world; won 22 awards; appeared in more than 50 international film festivals; and was broadcast in over 30 markets. Selma Rubin And Community Of Life is a 2014 historical documentary film written and directed by Beezhan Tulu A DVD documentary companion to the Wisdom photography book by Andrew Zuckerman. Inspired by the idea that wisdom is the greatest gift one generation can give to another, award-winning photographer and filmmaker Andrew Zuckerman interviewed, photographed and filmed 50 of the world’s great writers, actors, artists, designers, politicians, musicians and religious and business leaders of our time. He posed seven questions to each of his subjects—all over 65 years of age—and their candid responses offer uniquely inspirational and often surprising insights. Thoughts from Nelson Mandela, Frank Gehry, Judi Dench, The Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, Clint Eastwood, Ted Kennedy, Robert Redford, Vaclav Havel, Terence Conran, Buzz Aldrin, Lou Reed, Willie Nelson, Madeline Albright, Jane Goodall, Burt Bacharach, Andrew Wyeth, Vanessa Redgrave, Nadine Gordimer and many more reveal lifetimes of adversity and triumph, and present intimate insights into very public lives. Fourteen Days in May is a documentary directed by Paul Hamann and originally shown on television by the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1987. The programme recounts the final days before the execution of Edward Earl Johnson, an American prisoner convicted of rape and murder and imprisoned in the Mississippi State Penitentiary. Johnson protested his innocence and claimed that his confession had been made under duress. He was executed in Mississippi's gas chamber on 20 May 1987. The documentary crew, given access to the prison warden, guards and chaplain and to Johnson and his family, filmed the last days of Johnson's life in detail. The documentary argues against the death penalty and maintains that capital punishment is disproportionately applied to African-Americans convicted of crimes against whites. The programme features attorney Clive Stafford Smith, a noted advocate against capital punishment. Fourteen Days in May won a British Film Institute Grierson Award and a top prize at the Festival dei Populi. It has been shown in many countries but has only appeared in an abbreviated form in the United States, on HBO. Hamann disowned this shortened version. Arlington West: The Film is a 2006 documentary about the Iraq War by Peter Dudar and Sally Marr. The title refers to Arlington West, the "temporary cemeteries" in Santa Barbara and Santa Monica, California which serve as memorials to those who have been killed in Iraq. The film features 105 interviews, mostly with young soldiers who have served in Iraq, talking about their experiences there. It also features members of Gold Star Families for Peace, whose sons or daughters died in Iraq. Among these parents are Cindy Sheehan, Fernando Suarez, Jane Bright, Bill Mitchell, Vickie Castro, Nadia McCaffrey, and Karen Meredith. "Parents speak openly and candidly about their hopes and fears for their trans children." Quoting the description from the 2011 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival site. 100 + Eyes is a 2002 documentary animation short film directed by Dane Picard. Take a dazzling architectural journey inside those majestic marvels of Gothic architecture, the great cathedrals of Chartres, Beauvais and other European cities. Carved from 100 million pounds of stone, some cathedrals now teeter on the brink of catastrophic collapse. To save them, a team of engineers, architects, art historians, and computer scientists searches the naves, bays, and bell-towers for clues. NOVA investigates the architectural secrets that the cathedral builders used to erect their towering, glass-filled walls and reveals the hidden formulas drawn from the Bible that drove medieval builders ever upward. Psychohydrography is a 2010 documentary animation film directed by Peter Bo Rappmund. Raketa mena is a 2007 documentary film. Apostle of Ruins is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Audrius Stonys. Standards is a short documentary film directed by Maxime Pistorio and Julie Jaroszewski. The Light Penetrates the Dark is a 1930 documentary short film directed by Otakar Vávra and František Pilát. Who is this Kusturica? is a documentary film directed by Natalia Gugueva. Ben's Mill is a 1982 American documentary film directed by Michel Chalufour and John Karol. The film portrays how the energy from the river is used to drive the multitudes of leather belts used to drive the various machines. The film focuses on the steps one man, Ben, uses to make one of his white pine watering tanks, and then a horse-drawn sled for different members of the Barnet community. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. One Land, Five Nations is a documentary by Mahmoud Shoolizadeh, it introduces the cultural and social and geographical life of the people in Faridan in Isfahan Province of Iran. In this region, five different Nations: Armenians, Lors, Georgian, Turkish and Persian are living peacefully together, celebrating their own languages, customs and cultures. This film participated in The first short films festival in Tehran, Iran, where it became candidate for the best documentary film and best photography in 1990 Bj is a 2013 documentary biographical film written by William Vlieland and directed by Anthony Liechti. The Armenian Genocide is a 2006 television documentary film exploring the Ottoman Empire killings of more than one million Armenians during World War I. The documentary was broadcast by most 348 PBS affiliate stations on April 17, 2006. Because of the controversial nature of the subject in Turkey, PBS attempted to give both sides a voice and produced a four expert panel discussion to be aired immediately afterwards. However, due to an intense lobbying effort by Armenian groups and some members of Congress, the follow-up panel discussion was cancelled on a third of those stations broadcasting the documentary over concerns of offending human rights groups and the descendants of Armenian Genocide survivors. Produced in conjunction with Oregon Public Broadcasting, it was written and directed by Andrew Goldberg and narrated by Hollywood celebrities Orlando Bloom, Ed Harris, Laura Linney, Jared Leto, Julianna Margulies and Natalie Portman. Journey of the Childmen: The Mighty Boosh on Tour is a 2009 comedy documentary film directed by Oliver Ralfe. Six Day Run is a 2013 short film written and directed by Mika Taanila. Film Against All Odds is a documentary film directed by Reis Çelik. The Impermanence of the Ordinary is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Dale Sood. Stiller, Garbo & Me is a 1988 film directed by Claes Olsson, Alvaro Pardo. En el cuerpo equivocado is a 2010 documentary film directed by Marilyn Solaya. "In his short career, Jean-Michel Basquiat was a phenomenon. He became notorious for his graffiti art under the moniker Samo in the late 1970s on the Lower East Side scene, sold his first painting to Deborah Harry for $200, and became best friends with Andy Warhol. Appreciated by both the art cognoscenti and the public, Basquiat was launched into international stardom. However, soon his cult status began to override the art that had made him famous in the first place. Director Tamra Davis pays homage to her friend in this definitive documentary but also delves into Basquiat as an iconoclast. His dense, bebop-influenced neoexpressionist work emerged while minimalist, conceptual art was the fad; as a successful black artist, he was constantly confronted by racism and misconceptions. Much can be gleaned from insider interviews and archival footage, but it is Basquiat’s own words and work that powerfully convey the mystique and allure of both the artist and the man." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. E il Casanova di Fellini is a 1975 documentary directed by Gianfranco Angelucci and Liliane Betti. Strange Powers: Stephin Merritt and The Magnetic Fields is a 2010 documentary film directed by Kerthy Fix and Gail O'Hara. Say Goodbye is a 1971 American documentary film about the relationship between man and nature, directed by David H. Vowell. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It was narrated by poet Rod McKuen, and sponsored by the Ralston-Purina Corporation for its initial broadcast. The theme song, "Say Goodbye," was composed and performed by Dory Previn. The show depicted the plight of various animal species at the hands of man and his influence. Some segments included the clubbing of seals on the Pribilof Islands, the effect of DDT on brown pelican populations in Texas, and the plight of severely endangered animals. In one segment, various species were shown, with the narration reciting how many animals were left in the world. Included were black footed ferrets, prairie chickens, and many more. One was the Japanese Crested Ibis. A small flock of the bright white birds was seen from overhead against the backdrop of a beautiful, verdant forest. The narrator said, "there are 11 left in the world; you are seeing eight of them." In the decades since, a Chinese effort to preserve the species has resulted in about a fifteen-fold increase in their population. The Sacred Place Where Life Begins-gwich’in Women Speak is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Miho Aida. Electro Moscow is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Elena Tikhonova and Dominik Spritzendorfer. E poi venne il silenzio is a 2010 documentary written and directed by Irish Braschi. Viva Maria is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Agnieszka Smoczynska. Le Temps perdu is a documentary film directed by Pierre Schöller. I Am an American Soldier is a 2007 documentary film about the Iraq War, produced by John Laurence. "One Year in Iraq with the 101st Airborne." Kevin The Superhero is a 2009 short documentary film directed and written by Catherine Kunze. Devon, Montrey, Richard, and Romesh are just at that age — 12 and 13 years old — when boys start to become men. But in their hometown of Baltimore, one of the country’s most poverty-stricken cities for inner-city residents, African-American boys have a very high chance of being incarcerated or killed before they reach adulthood. The boys are offered an amazing opportunity in the form of the Baraka school, a project founded to break the cycle of violence through an innovative education program that literally removed young boys from low-performing public schools and unstable home environments. They travel with their classmates to rural Kenya in East Africa, where a teacher-student ratio of one to five, a strict disciplinary program and a comprehensive curriculum form the core of their new educational program. The Boys of Baraka follows along with their journey, and examines each boy’s transformation during this remarkable time. Winner of awards at the Newport, Chicago, Woodstock and SILVERDOCS Film Festivals. A co-presentation with the Independent Television Service (ITVS). Produced in association with P.O.V./American Documentary. Hip Hop: Beyond Beats & Rhymes is a 2006 documentary and music film directed by Byron Hurt. Superstitions is a 1949 short documentary film written and directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. Rachel is a 2009 documentary film by Simone Bitton detailing the death of Rachel Corrie. Rachel was an American peace activist, killed by an Israeli military bulldozer in 2003 during a nonviolent action against the demolition of Palenstinians homes in Rafah, Gaza. The premiere was at Berlin Film Festival in February 2009. "Rachel is an in-depth cinematic investigation into the death of an unknown young girl, made with a rigor and scope normally reserved for first-rate historical characters. It gives voice to all the people involved in Rachel’s story, from Palestinian and foreign witnesses to Israeli military spokespersons and investigators, doctors, activists and soldiers linked to the affair. The film begins like a classic documentary, but soon develops, transcending its subject and transforming into a cinematographic meditation on youth, war, idealism and political utopia. In the beginning, there is this: she was called Rachel Corrie. She was 23. She was convinced that her American nationality would be enough to make her an effective human shield, that her simple presence would save lives, olive trees, wells and houses." Kitty Hawk: The Wright Brothers' Journey of Invention is a 2003 TV documentary film written and directed by David Garrigus. Opera Fanatic is a 1990 music documentary film written and directed by Jan Schmidt-Garre. Union Maids is a 1976 American documentary film directed by Jim Klein, Julia Reichert and Miles Mogulescu. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film was based on the three women from Chicago in the labor history book Rank and File by Staughton and Alice Lynd. Three students died from drug overdose during the 2011-12 school year at Neuqua Valley High School in Naperville, Illinois. "Neuqua on Drugs" is a student-produced documentary film inspired by the classmates' deaths as well as the increasing use of drugs, including heroin, at the school. Including powerful interviews with over 20 current and former Neuqua Valley High School students who speak candidly about their drug use. Several provide an emotional recounting of the tragic events leading up to the deaths of the three students. The alarmingly growing trend of drug use in high schools across America makes this film relatable to audiences everywhere. This film is not affiliated with, or in any way funded by Neuqua Valley High School or Indian Prairie School District 204. The wonders of the Oregon landscape are revealed with a minimum of narration, letting the state's natural treasures speak for themselves. Scenic settings range from rivers and tide pools to the antelope herds of the Hart Mountain natural refuge. The photographers of "Oregon Field Guide" have spent decades exploring and capturing the state's diverse geographic features on film, moving from beaches to wind-swept mountain peaks. Tokyo Dreams is a 2013 experimental documentary film directed by Nicholas Barker. Rad Queers: Edie Fake is a 2013 short, biography, documentary film written and directed by Graham Kolbeins. The Naked of Saint Petersburg is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Ada Bligaard Søby. Freeze is a 2012 documentary film directed by Patrick Jolley. A Home on the Range: The Jewish Chicken Ranchers of Petaluma is a 2002 documentary by Bonnie Burt and Judith Montell about a group of Jews who fled from pogroms in Eastern Europe and prejudice in America to organized a socialist society in rural Northern California, where they relied on raising chickens to support themselves. The New Great Game is a 2012 drama film written by Alexandre Trudeau and directed by Alexandre Trudeau and Jonathan Pedneault. Behold the Earth is a feature-length musical documentary film that inquires into America's divorce from nature, built out of conversations with leading biologists and evangelical Christians, and directed by David Conover. Four Stones for Kanemitsu is a 1973 American short documentary film produced by June Wayne. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Faja Lobbi is a 1960 Dutch-Surinamese award winning documentary film, directed by Herman van der Horst. Its alternative titles include Fiery Love en Symphony of the Tropics and it was shown at the Film Festivals in Berlin and Adelaide. Lion Ark is a 2013 documentary action and adventure film written by Jan Creamer and Tim Phillips and directed by Tim Phillips. The Last Campaign of Governor Booth Gardner is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Daniel Junge. A Woman Like That is a 2010 documentary biographical histotrical film written by Melissa Powell and Ellen Weissbrod and directed by Ellen Weissbrod. Nashville 2012 is a 2013 documentary and drama film directed by Sean Clark and Jace Freeman. The Murder of Fred Hampton is a 1971 documentary film which began with the intention of portraying Fred Hampton and the Illinois Black Panther Party. During the film's production, Hampton was killed by the Chicago Police Department. In the wake of one of the worst natural and humanitarian disasters ever to visit American shores, nearly 600 African-Americans were airlifted to the almost entirely white state of Utah... without their knowledge. Desert Bayou seeks to examine whether two cultures can come together in a time of utter chaos, or whether their differences prove too great a challenge to overcome. In their own words, evacuees of Hurricane Katrina tell how they survived the storm of the century and, out of the rubble, ended up at a military installation in the Utah deserts. With interviews from recording artist Master P, celebrity Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, evacuees, political and military leaders, and community and social figures, the questions of race, politics and religion hurdle towards each other in this truly American story: a story of loss and reunion, of sorrow and rebirth, of anger and rejoicing, but most of all... a story of hope. Ghostride the Whip is a documentary film, executive produced by Academy Award nominee Peter Spirer of Rugged Entertainment, that takes the viewer into the world of this phenomenon that started in San Francisco's bay area several years ago. At times, through a historical perspective, the film brings to light the elements and trends that may have been responsible for the origins of ghostriding. The documentary also explores the demographic that most appeals to this art form and the lifestyles of those that regularly participate in it. In its most basic definition, ghostriding the whip involves a car in motion with no one operating it. The closest thing that can come to describing ghostriding the whip is perhaps the Chinese fire drill that was popular back in the 1950s. However, unlike the Chinese fire drill the car remains in motion with no urgency to get back into it. In fact, the driver and passengers will walk next to the car as it casually rolls down the street, with thumping music playing at extreme volumes as the riders participate in free-form dance within close proximity to the car. Over There is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Lu Zhang. Invitation To Dance is a 2014 documentary film directed by Simi Linton and Christian von Tippelskirch. Bones of Turkana is a 2012 documentary film directed by John Heminway. Suddenly, Last Winter is a 2007 documentary written and directed by Gustav Hofer and Luca Ragazzi. Dancing Darkies is an 1896 American, short, black-and-white, silent documentary film shot by William K.L. Dickson. Borrow my Crew is a 2005 Documentary written by Jamie Bryan and directed by Erica Forstadt. Thicker Than Water is a 2000 documentary surf film directed by singer/songwriter Jack Johnson and his film school friend Chris Malloy. It shows surfing footage from different locations like Australia, Indonesia, Hawaii, India, and Ireland in combination with a wide range of styles of guitar music. Surfers in the film include Kelly Slater and Shane Dorian. Lumumba, la mort d'un prophète is a 1990 documentary film by Haitian director Raoul Peck. It covers the death of Patrice Lumumba, the first prime minister of Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The film was critically acclaimed and won a number of awards. The Secret Policeman is a 2003 documentary TV movie written and directed by Toby Sculthorp. Lupe of the Cow is a 2011 documentary film written by Blanca X. Aguerre and Nicolenka Beltran, and directed by Blanca X. Aguerre The Day After Trinity is a 1980 documentary film directed and produced by Jon H. Else in association with KTEH public television in San Jose, California. The film tells the story of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the theoretical physicist who led the effort to build the first atomic bomb, tested in July 1945 at Trinity site in New Mexico. Featuring candid interviews with several Manhattan Project scientists, as well as newly declassified archival footage, The Day After Trinity was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature of 1980, and received a Peabody Award in 1981. The film's title comes from an interview seen near the conclusion of the documentary. Robert Oppenheimer is asked for his thoughts on Sen. Robert Kennedy's efforts to urge President Lyndon Johnson to initiate talks to stop the spread of nuclear weapons. "It's 20 years too late," Oppenheimer replies. After a pause he states, "It should have been done the day after Trinity." Luciernagas Por Linternas is a 2013 documentary film written by Stefano Martone and directed by Stefano Martone and Mario Martone. The Forgotten Frontier is a documentary film about the Frontier Nursing Service, nurses on horseback, who traveled the back roads of the Appalachian Mountains of the eastern United States. It was directed by Mary Marvin Breckinridge, and featured her cousin, Mary Breckinridge, who was a nurse-midwife and founded the Frontier Nursing Service. Shot with a hand-cranked camera, often in extreme climate. Also documented in stills that are available at the Library of Congress. and maybe at National Women's Arts Museum, who had a show of them in the late 80s, early 90s. Also featured, the people of Leslie County, Kentucky, many of whom reenacted their stories. A pseudo-hillbilly soundtrack was added in the 1990s by the Library of Congress. The film has been selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. Footage from the film was used in the 1984 documentary Frontier Nursing Service. Never Like the First Time! is an animated documentary short film written and directed by Jonas Odell. The 39th Canadian Parliament was in session from April 3, 2006 until September 7, 2008. The membership was set by the 2006 federal election on January 23, 2006, and it has changed only somewhat due to resignations and by-elections. The Parliament was dissolved on September 7, 2008, with an election to determine the membership of the 40th Parliament occurring on October 14, 2008. There were two sessions of the 39th Parliament: Are All Men Pedophiles? is a 2012 award-winning documentary film about pedophilia and hebephilia directed by Dutch media producer Jan-Willem Breure and presented by model Savannah van Zweeden. Apart from the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague the entire film was financed privately, mainly by the 23-year old Breure. Are All Men Pedophiles? had its world premiere at the Queens World Film Festival in New York City on March 2, 2012 and has been screened at a number of film festivals to considerable acclaim. Profiling the FBI's "profiling unit", which goes inside the minds of some of the country's most infamous serial killers. Elton John: Me, Myself & I is a 2007 documentary filmed after the death of Elton John's good friend Diana and other soul shaking events that caused him to reassess his life. It is a candid appraisal by Elton John of his fame, drug use, sexuality, and mistakenly taking his life for granted. It was filmed in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA Les années 80 is a 1983 documentary and musical film written by Chantal Akerman and Jean Gruault and directed by Chantal Akerman. Living Tiny is a 2011 short biographical documentary film directed by Paul Donatelli and Paul Meyers. Final Score is a 2007 Thai documentary film directed by Soraya Nagasuwan and produced by Jira Maligool. The film follows four Mattayom 6 students for one year as they take their university entrance exams. Hand Held is a documentary feature film about photojournalist Mike Carroll, one of the first photographers to travel to Romania after the fall of the communist regime of Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1989. When he arrived, he walked into one of the most horrific scenes of the 20th century. His photographs and heart wrenching stories of the pediatric AIDS epidemic in Romania ran in the Boston Globe and New York Times and opened the eyes of the western world to the plight of Romanian children. The film chronicles Carroll's twenty-year journey to bring aid to children in a country he hardly knew, through the organization he founded, Romanian Children's Relief. The film is directed by Academy Award nominee Don Hahn, the man famous for producing Beauty and the Beast and The Lion King for the Walt Disney Animation Studios. After a charity premiere at WGBH in Boston, the film was selected for participation in the Heartland Film Festival, and has been the official selection of the Boulder International Film Festival, Newport Beach Film Festival, and the Rhode Island International Film Festival. Hand Held's European premiere was in Bucharest in late 2010. Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream is a 2005 documentary written and directed by Stuart Samuels, based on his book on the subject. The film chronicles the period between 1970 and 1977 in which six low-budget films shown at midnight transformed the way films are made and watched: El Topo, Night of the Living Dead, The Harder They Come, Pink Flamingos, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and Eraserhead. Also portrayed in the film are the films Freaks and Reefer Madness, which gained notoriety and a huge cult following thanks to midnight showings. Providing interviews are filmmakers George A. Romero, Alejandro Jodorowsky, John Waters, Perry Henzell, David Lynch, and Richard O'Brien, as well as film critics Roger Ebert, Jonathan Rosenbaum, and J. Hoberman and Ben Barenholtz. The film was screened out of competition at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival. A Night of Ferocious Joy is a 2003 documentary musical war film written and directed by David Zeiger Jalanan is a 2013 feature-length Indonesian documentary film directed and produced by Daniel Ziv and featuring Jakarta street musicians Bambang "Ho" Mulyono, Titi Juwariyah and Boni Putera. The movie follows the three musicians as they perform songs on Jakarta's commuter buses, clash with the law and confront the tumultuous politics of modern-day Indonesia. It follows them back to their home villages in East Java and traces their quest for legitimacy, identity and love in their adopted city of Jakarta. Jalanan won the Best Documentary award at the prestigious Busan International Film Festival in October, 2013. Mr. Magdy, room number 17 please is a 2013 short film directed, produced and written by Carl Olsson. We the Monkeys is a 1971 documentary film written and directed by Edmund Valladares. Yu Guangyi’s stunning debut explores a grueling winter amongst loggers in Northeast China as they employ traditional practices through one last, fateful expedition. The Genius and the Boys is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Bosse Lindquist. It explores the limits of insight and the power of self-delusion, through one of the century's true geniuses - Daniel Carleton Gajdusek, who won the Nobel Prize for the discovery of Prions - a man prepared to defy convention and challenge people's most cherished beliefs, a man whose scientific brilliance seemed to blind many to his extraordinary personal failings. Mountains Will Move is a 2013 short film written and directed by Douglas McCann. Encuentros de medicina Maya is a 1987 documentary film directed by Juan Francisco Urrusti. Dillinger: Public Enemy No. 1 is a 1934 short crime fiction documentary film. Palme is a Swedish documentary film from 2012 directed, and written by Maud Nycander and Kristina Lindström. The film is a biographical portrait of the former prime minister Olof Palme, and covers his life from childhood to the role as a leading figure of Swedish politics. It has been shown as a 103 minutes long feature film in the cinemas, and as a 175 minutes long TV-movie in three parts on SVT at Christmas and New Year the same year. At the 48th Guldbagge Awards, the film was nominated in three categories: Best Documentary, Best Editing and Best music. It won in the latter two categories. A Little Life is a documentary film produced by Deborah Howlett. The Promoter is a 2013 independent feature documentary film made by Ragged Crow film production company. Produced by Sam Edwards and Directed by Ed Edwards, the film premiered at The London Independent Film Festival 2013. It went on to screen at the London United Film Festival 2013 where it won the Best Feature Documentary Award as well as the Audience Award, The Indie Gathering International Festival 2013 where it was Nominated Best Documentary and The Portobello Film Festival 2013 where it was also Nominated for Best Film. Half The Road: The Passion, Pitfalls & Power of Women's Professional Cycling is a sports documentary directed by Kathryn Bertine. El blues is a 1981 film and was nominated for 1982 Ariel Award for Best Educational, Scientific, or Artistic Short Film. My Name Is Jonah is a action drama documentary film directed by Phil Healy and Jb Sapienza. Ocean's Deadliest is a nature documentary hosted by Philippe Cousteau, Jr. and Steve Irwin. It was the final documentary made by Irwin by the time of his death, which occurred during filming. The Brussels Business is a documentary film by Friedrich Moser and Matthieu Lietaert about the lack of transparency and the influence of lobbyists on the decision-making process in Brussels, the European Union capital. The film has been very popular in Brussels and Austria and is going to be Screened in other European Union theaters. The Brussels Business is produced by Steven Dhoedt and Friedrich Moser. Stars of the Russian Ballet is a 1953 Soviet musical film directed by Gerbert Rappaport. It was entered into the 1954 Cannes Film Festival. "A foray into the lives of male impersonators as they compete in drag king competition and how the art of impersonation has transformed them both mentally and physically." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. We Don't Care About Music Anyway is a 2009 documentary film directed by Gaspard Kuentz and Cédric Dupire. The Paw Project is a 2013 documentary film that focuses on the declawing of both exotic and domesticated cats in America. The film follows the crusade of veterinarian Dr. Jennifer Conrad, who campaigns to have declawing bans enacted in a number of cities. U2 Go Home: Live from Slane Castle, Ireland is a concert video release by rock band U2 from the European leg of their Elevation Tour. Recorded on 1 September 2001 at Slane Castle on the band's featured stop in County Meath, Ireland, it was released on DVD in November 2003. Although Slane Concerts at Slane Castle are traditionally held once a year, U2 played two concerts. This was the final concert of the first European leg of the Elevation Tour. The film was the second of two concert releases from the tour, preceded by 2001's Elevation 2001: Live from Boston. Trial by Fire: Lives Re-Forged is a documentary film directed by Megan Smith-Harris. THE ABORTION PILL is a PBS News and Public Affairs special that tells the explosive story of RU486. This award winning program dramatically weaves the political history of the “abortion wars” with the decade long fight to bar RU486 from the U.S. for over a decade.Called “the moral property of women,” by supporters, and “the death pill” by opponents, the film features dramatic portraits of key players. From the pill’s inventor, Etienne Beaulieu, to his bitter foe, Ken Dupin, we travel from a pro-life boot camp in Florida to a French clinic, from India, to Brazil, to England, and finally, to the United States, where it’s introduction was heralded as a revolutionary development in the right to abortion. “New war zone, new tactics.” -New York Times. “Balanced treatments.” -USA Today Four Wives - One Man is a 2007 film directed by Nahid Persson. This Time Next Year is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jeff Reichert and Farihah Zaman. "Just about 40 miles north of the city exists an extremely gay friendly small town with residents that welcome people from all walks of life. Incorporating both the physical and social beauty of the area through interviews and footage, Embraceable You celebrates the open-mindedness of New Hope, PA and its charming and colorful citizens." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Philadelphia QFest site. Dalai Lama Awakening is a documentary film directed by Khashyar Darvich. Histoire Sans Visage is a short documentary film directed by Meriem Achour Bouakkaz. Sweet Honey in the Rock: Raise Your Voice is a 2005 television documentary. It was produced by Firelight Media for the PBS series American Masters. The film uses concert footage, archival stills and interviews, to chronicle the history and music of Sweet Honey in the Rock, a Grammy Award-winning African American female a cappella group with musical roots combining jazz, blues and sacred songs of the black church such as spirituals, hymns, and gospel. Dancing in Angel Shadows is a documentary film directed by Steve Childs. Living Dolls: The Making of a Child Beauty Queen is a 2001 HBO documentary on Child beauty pageants. It was directed by Shari Cookson. Pictura: An Adventure in Art is a documentary film directed by seven famous directors, and narrated by several famous Hollywood actors, including Vincent Price, Gregory Peck, Henry Fonda, Martin Gabel, and Lilli Palmer. The film attempts to give the general filmgoing public a taste of art history and art appreciation. The film won a Special Award at the Golden Globes in 1952. In DYING TO HAVE KNOWN, filmmaker Steve Kroschel went on a 52-day journey to find evidence to the effectiveness of the Gerson Therapy - a long-suppressed natural cancer cure. His travels take him across both the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans, from upstate New York to San Diego to Alaska, from Japan and Holland to Spain and Mexico. In the end, he presents the testimonies of patients, scientists, surgeons and nutritionists who testify to the therapy's efficacy in curing cancer and other degenerative diseases, and presents the hard scientific proof to back up their claims. You will hear from a Japanese medical school professor who cured himself of liver cancer over 15 years ago, a lymphoma patient who was diagnosed as terminal over 50 years ago as well as noted critics of this world-renowned healing method who dismiss it out of hand as "pure quackery." So the question that remains is, "Why is this powerful curative therapy still suppressed, more than 75 years after it was clearly proven to cure degenerative disease?" The viewers are left to decide for themselves. Opening the Lost Tombs: Live from Egypt is a 2009 documentary directed by Artie Kempner. A Mi Manera is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Sergio Martínez G. La vie au bout des doigts is a 1983 documentary, short film directed by Jean-Paul Jenssen. "A poetic documentary film about the exceptionally talented Brazilian filmmaker Mário Peixot (1908-1992). When Mário was a mere 21 years old, without any previous experience, he made the film Limit which was hailed by critics in 1998 as the most important work in Brazilian cinema of all time. He died at the age of 84 without having made any more films. The film At the Edge of the Earth sets off on the trail of this unique artist and gives audiences the chance to taste his mastery in several excerpts from Limit, a work which was way ahead of its time." Quoting the synopsis from the 2002 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival site. The Wisdomkeepers, Paqo Andino is a documentary and biographical film directed by Jeffrey Wium. Reel Models: The First Women of Film is a 2000 tv documentary produced by Jessica Falcon and Marc Juris. Wild by Law: The Rise of Environmentalism and the Creation of the Wilderness Act is a 1991 documentary film produced by Lawrence Hott and Diane Garey. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film is about the work of Aldo Leopold, Bob Marshall, founder of The Wilderness Society and Howard Zahniser. The film gives the philosophical and political underpinnings of the Wilderness Act of 1964. It was narrated by Linda Hunt. Space Travel According to John is a 2008 documentary animation film directed by Anders Jedenfors and Jamie Magnus Stone. The War on Britain's Jews? is a 2007 documentary film by British journalist, broadcaster, writer and Daily Mail columnist Richard Littlejohn. It was first broadcast on Channel 4 television on 9 July 2007. At Christmas-time We Had Our Ration Of Freedom is a 1990 short film directed by Catalina Fernoaga and Cornel Mihalache. Reclaiming the Blade is a documentary written and directed by Daniel McNicoll and produced by Galatia Films on the topic of swords. Notable interviewees from the film industry include Viggo Mortensen, Karl Urban, Richard Taylor, and Bob Anderson. Interviewed as an expert on swordmaking was bladesmith Paul Champagne. Narration is by British actor John Rhys-Davies. The documentary was produced with the support of Peter Jackson, Weta Workshop, Skywalker Sound and the Royal Armouries. Seven Western Martial Arts - WMA - groups located in five countries in Europe provide footage for Reclaiming the Blade: Arts of Mars, Boar’s Tooth Fight School, de Taille et d’Estoc, Ringschule Wrocław, ARMA-PL, Schola Gladiatoria, Stockholm’s Historical Fencing Society, The School of Traditional Medieval Fencing. Anderson is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Annekatrin Hendel. Bastards of the Party is a 2005 documentary film produced by Alex Demyanenko and directed by former Bloods gang-member Cle Sloan. The film explores the creation of two of Los Angeles’s most notorious gangs, the Crips and the Bloods, from the perspective of the Los Angeles community. The film also denounces gang violence and presents meaningful solutions from former gang-members to stop this problem. Breath Control: The History of the Human Beat Box is a documentary exploring the world of beatboxing, a form of music using the human mouth, throat and diaphragm to generate sounds that are usually produced by machines. Over 30 practitioners of this art form discuss their techniques and the evolution of their craft. The human beat box is one of the key elements in the development of Hip Hop culture, alongside Dj-ing, Graffiti, Breakdancing, and MC-ing. Unfortunately, its contribution has been largely overlooked, as has the fun, expressive, human, and spontaneous dimension of Hip Hop that it represents. As the first documentary of its kind, Breath Control: The History of the Human Beat Box uses interview's, live performances, archival footage, and animation to bring to light this important and neglected ingredient of Hip Hop's identity . With the help of Beat Box pioneers Doug E. Fresh, Wise, Biz Markie, and The Fat Boys, Breath Control traces this art form from its basic beat beginnings in the Eighties to its present day multi-layered, polyrhythmatic figurehead's Rahzel and Skratch of the Hip Hop group The Roots. But Breath Control isn't limited to Hip Hop. Glass: A Portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts is a 2007 documentary on the life of American composer Philip Glass directed by Scott Hicks. The film was nominated for Emmy Awards and AFI Award Odyssey 2050 is a film project that incorporates digital animation as well as documentary and live action sequences with the aim of motivating young people from around the world into taking constructive action on climate change. Odyssey 2050 is a registered NGO and the film is being produced in Costa Rica by Daniel and Miguel Bermejo of the Synchro Film company, Bruce Callow of the British Embassy in Costa Rica, and with the collaboration and assistance of various organisations, such as the Earth Charter Initiative and the British Council. Odyssey 2050 blends animation and graphics with real life images of environmental destruction, and aims to raise awareness, create positive change and to reach young people across the world. Odyssey 2050 is managed by the Odyssey 2050 Association, which enjoys the backing of the British Embassy in Costa Rica, and along with the production of the film, the team at Odyssey 2050 are engaged worldwide in running workshops at schools and universities, climate change conferences and businesses. Full Out is a 2011 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Camille Wilson. Talihina Sky is a 2011 documentary film which follows the Kings of Leon throughout their journey from obscurity to fame to the future. The film was named after the hidden track on their Youth and Young Manhood album. Bridge Over The Wadi is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Barak Heymann and Tomer Heymann. World Fair is a 2012 short documentary directed by Amanda Murray. A MultiMedia Life is a music dvd that was nominated for Music DVD of the Year in the 2009 Juno Awards. Small Family Business is a documentary film directed by Brian Moser. Abendland is a 2011 documentary film by Nikolaus Geyrhalter. The documentary, which has only scenes at night, explores European obsession with technology and security. It was released in Austria and Germany in 2011 and in the United States in 2012. Against Reason and by Force is a 1974 documentary film directed by Carlos Ortiz Tejeda. DeWolff is a 2011 documentary film directed by Carin Goeijers. The Land That Waited is a 1963 Australian film directed by Gilbert J. Brealey. Sons Of Africa is a 2014 film written by Robert Litz and directed by James Becket. Bad Coyote is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jason Young. Bringing It Home is a 2013 documentary film directed by Linda Booker and Blaire Johnson. La Belle Visite is a 2009 documentary biographical drama film written and directed by Jean-François Caissy. Pour une poignée de Kurus is a 1987 documentary, short film directed by Christian Raimbaud. This September, at the moment the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell (DADT) goes into effect, HBO will tell the strange-but-true tale of the U.S. military's ban on gays and lesbians from its implementation, through passionate protests and debates, and finally to its 2011 repeal.  A timely and historical look at the legacy of gays and lesbians in the military, THE STRANGE HISTORY OF DON'T ASK, DON'T TELL illustrates the tumultuous evolution of the controversial policy that fostered hate and intolerance within the military - and undermined the very freedoms American forces defend - by forcing many soldiers to lie and live in secrecy. Partie de cartes is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent film directed and produced by Louis Lumière and starring Antoine Féraud. Les Fils de la vie et de la mort is a 2007 documentary film. Speaking of Bunuel is a 2000 documentary film directed by osé Luis López Linares and Javier Rioyo. Go Far: The Christopher Rush Story is a 2013 documentary, biography and family film directed by Zack Arnold. The Will to Drill is a 2011 documentary film directed by Stephen Baldwin. Well here's a collection of some of the best Bomb Shells, Babes, Monsters, Murderers, Mad Men, and Mayhem ever assembled on one outrageous video! "BLOOD MONSTERS"... "NAUGHTY STEWARDESSES"... "BOBBY HATCH"... "SATAN'S SADISTS" and many more of your favorite Drive-In Classics including "NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD!" The Ride is a documentary on professional bull riders. It was produced by Vice Media and directed by Meredith Danluck, after originally being created for VBS.tv. It premiered at the SXSW Film Festival in 2010. MC5: A True Testimonial, also written as MC5 * A True Testimonial, is a 2002 feature-length documentary film about MC5, a Detroit-based rock band of the 1960s and early 1970s. The film was produced by Laurel Legler and directed by David C. Thomas; the couple spent more than seven years working on the project. Although MC5 are considered very influential today, they were relatively obscure in their time. To make the film, Thomas collected photographs and film clips of varying quality, including U.S. government surveillance footage of MC5's performance at the protests that took place outside the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. He interviewed the surviving members of the band and people closely associated with it. In the editing room, Thomas matched the band's recordings to the silent footage he had collected. MC5: A True Testimonial made its premiere on August 22, 2002, at the Chicago Underground Film Festival. Three weeks later it made its international premiere on September 11 at the Toronto International Film Festival. In November of that year, the film was awarded an "Honorable Mention" as a debut feature at the Raindance Film Festival. The Fall River, Northern California's Cold Water Oasis is a 2013 adventure documentary film directed by Darren Campbell. For Which We Stand is an upcoming documentary film in mid-production, scheduled for a 2015 release. The film, presented by OUTMusic, highlights LGBTQ and straight artists through numerous interviews with musicians and music-industry insiders, as well as live performances and behind-the-scenes footage. Among the participants announced so far include luminaries such as Michael Musto, Dolly Parton, Melissa Etheridge, Frenchie Davis, Diana King, Chely Wright, and transgender violinist and vocalist Tona Brown. The film is being directed by Sean Robinson, produced by Paul Warner and executive produced by Diedra Meredith, Chairwoman/CEO of the LGBT Academy of Recording Arts. Festliches Nürnberg is a short 1937 propaganda film chronicling the Nazi Party rallies in Nuremberg, Germany in 1936 and 1937. The film was directed by Hans Weidemann. Snow in Vienna is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Laurie Kwasnik. Expedition: Bismarck is a 2002 documentary film produced for the Discovery Channel by Andrew Wight and James Cameron, directed by James Cameron and Gary Johnstone, and narrated by Lance Henriksen. The film follows an underwater expedition to the German battleship Bismarck and digitally reconstructs events that led up to the ship's sinking during World War II. In 2003 the film was honored with an Emmy award for Outstanding Sound Editing for Non-Fiction Programming. Euzkadi été 1982 is a 1984 documentary film directed by Otar Iosseliani. Dear Fukushima is a 2012 documentary film written by Kirill Kurenkov and Kengo Otake and directed by Kengo Otake Pee Wee & Jackie: Pee Wee Reese & Jackie Robinson is a 2008 documentary film directed by Marino Amoruso. Beyond Ipanema: Brazilian Waves in Global Music is a 2009 documentary film about the influence of Brazilian music outside of the country, especially the USA. Produced by filmmakers Guto Barra and Béco Dranoff, it features interviews and performances by David Byrne, Devendra Banhart, M.I.A., Os Mutantes, Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Tom Zé, Seu Jorge, Thievery Corporation, Bebel Gilberto, CSS, Creed Taylor and many others. The film's World Premiere was at New York's Museum of Modern Art in July 2009. It was since shown in over 50 film festivals, including HotDocs, South By Southwest and the Chicago International Film Festival. It has also screened in venues such as the Institute of Contemporary Art, in Boston, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, in San Francisco, The High Art Museum, in Atlanta, and Haus der Kulturen der Welt, in Berlin. Beyond Ipanema was awarded Best Documentary and Best Sound Editing at the 14th Brazilian Film Festival of Miami and Best Film at the 3rd Brazilian Film Festival of Vancouver. According to The Hollywood Reporter, "Beyond Ipanema is a Vibrant and stylish look at decades of Brazilian music focuses on the reception it has received in the U.S." Juchitán is a 1984 short documentary film directed by Salvador Díaz. A young father struggling to make ends meet on a Depression-era salary can't afford to buy his 5-year-old daughter what she's expecting Santa Claus to bring her for Christmas. The surprise, uplifting ending is guaranteed to put even the most embittered Scrooge into the Christmas spirit. Van Cliburn: Concert Pianist is a 2004 documentary biography history film directed by Peter Rosen. Crime After Crime is a 2011 documentary film directed by Yoav Potash. "In 1983, Deborah Peagler, a woman brutally abused by her boyfriend, was sentenced to 25 years-to-life for her connection to his murder. Twenty years later, as she languished in prison, a California law allowing incarcerated domestic-violence survivors to reopen their cases was passed. Enter a pair of rookie land-use attorneys convinced that with the incontrovertible evidence that existed, they could free Deborah in a matter of months. What they didn’t know was the depth of corruption and politically driven resistance they’d encounter, sending them down a nightmarish, bureaucratic rabbit hole of injustice. The outrageous twists and turns in this consummately crafted saga are enough to keep us on the edge of our seats. Meanwhile, the spirit, fortitude, and love all three characters marshal in the face of this wrenching marathon is nothing short of miraculous. We fall in love with the remarkable triumvirate as they battle a warped criminal-justice system and test whether it’s beyond repair." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. 13th German Deer Calling Championship is a short documentary action film directed and produced by Andreas Teichmann, A Complete History of My Sexual Failures is a 2008 British documentary film directed by Chris Waitt who also starred as the main character and composed some of the music. The film was part of the "World Cinema Documentary Competition" at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. The Greatest Silence: Rape in the Congo is a 2007 documentary film directed by Lisa F. Jackson concerned with survivors of rape in the regions affected by ongoing conflicts stemming from the Second Congo War. Central to the film are moving interviews with the survivors themselves, as well as interviews with self-confessed rapist soldiers. The Greatest Silence was nominated for a Grand Jury Prize and won a Special Jury Prize at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. It was also nominated for two News & Documentary Emmy Awards in 2009. It aired on HBO in January & February 2009. Repatriation is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Dong-won Kim. Magritte is a 1960 documentary short film written and directed by Luc de Heusch; with writing credits by Jacques Delcorde and Jean Raine. A One Man Show is a long-form music video collection featuring American singer Grace Jones, released in 1982. The video mainly consists of music videos, with some concert footage filmed when Jones was touring with the eponymous tour. Tuned In is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Kevin Gordon. The Angelmakers is a 2005 documentary, the debut film of filmmaker Astrid Bussink, which provides insight into the epidemic of arsenic murders by women, known as The Angel Makers of Nagyrév, which brought worldwide attention to the area in 1929. The documentary won the First Appearance competition at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, as well as several other awards. The film is shot on location in the rural Hungarian village of Nagyrév, alternating between portraits of the surrounding landscape and first-hand narrations by the elderly inhabitants. Some women poisoned unwanted husbands based on their oppression, drunkenness or laziness, some because the wives had taken lovers, some because the husbands had returned home disabled from World War I. Unwanted babies were also poisoned. A web of stories unfolds through the characters' memories which recapture old but ever-lasting tales of life, death and the struggle between the sexes. One of them is the midwife's story as well as one of the narrators' revelation that the 'flypaper' murders were a widespread practice not only in the particular area but on a national level. Nine Lives of Alice Martineau is a 2003 documetary film direced by Oli Barry. No Burqas Behind Bars is a 2013 Swedish feature-length documentary film made by Nima Sarvestani on life in a women's prison in Afghanistan. In Takhar Prison, Afghanistan, 40 women are locked behind bars together with their 34 children. They all share four cells. Through the prisoners’ own stories, the film explores how "moral crimes” are used to control women in Afghanistan. The film shows that women fleeing from their husbands get a longer punishment than those who have committed murder. Outside the home, burqas cover the women of Afghanistan from head to toe, masking their identity, making them faceless and voiceless in society, except when they are in prison. Sima was forced to get married at the age of ten and had five children by the time she was 20 years old. She is locked away, together with her children, for 15 years. Her crime consists of fleeing from an abusive husband, who had already murdered one of his other wives and their child. Sara, one of the main characters of the film, is locked away because she fell in love. Night of the Bear is a 2012 animated short film written and directed by Frédéric Guillaume and Samuel Guillaume. Rivers of Fire and Ice, or African Safari as it was alternately titled, is a Crown International Pictures 1969 motion picture filmed in documentary format. Directed, written and produced by wildlife photographer Ron Shanin, the film is an account of a safari through "wildest" Africa and explores Africa's diversity ranging from scorching deserts to the frozen heights of Mt. Kilimanjaro, and the life of the continent's inhabitants. The movie culminates with the eruption of Mt Kilimanjaro. Flammend Herz is a 2004 film directed by Andrea Schuler and Oliver Ruts. Right There is a 2012 short family historical documentary directed by Florence Buchanan and Arthur Bijur. Neues Deutschland is a 1993 film directed by Dani Levy, Maris Pfeiffer, Gerd Kroske and Philip Gröning. Wings Over Everest is a 1934 British short documentary film directed by Geoffrey Barkas and Ivor Montagu. It won an Academy Award in 1936 for Best Short Subject. It described the 1933 Houston-Westland expedition, in which Douglas Douglas-Hamilton, 14th Duke of Hamilton, otherwise known as Lord Clydesdale, piloted a single-engined biplane on 3 April 1933, just clearing Everest's southern peak by a few feet, having been caught in a powerful downdraught. The Cat that Lived a Million Times is a 2012 documentary and drama film directed by Tadasuke Kotani. Tejiendo mar y viento is a 1987 documentary film written by Susana Garduño, Cecile Laversin, Luis Lupone, Teófila Palafox and Diana Roldan, and directed by Luis Lupone and Teófila Palafox. Master Hands is a 1936 sponsored documentary film short which shows what work is like in a Chevrolet automobile factory. Credits include original music by Samuel Benavie, cinematography by Gordon Avil, and film editing by Vincent Herman. It was produced by the Jam Handy Organization, a pioneer in industrial film production. In 1999, Master Hands was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". L'instant et la patience is a 1994 documentary film directed by Bernard Émond. Father, Son and Holy Torum is a 1997 documentary film directed by Mark-Toomas Soosaar. One Man's Road is a 1967 short documentary film directed by Bob Kingsbury. From state lotteries to Mississippi paddleboats to Indian casinos, America's obsession with the false promise of gambling can be seen everywhere. Americans spend over $50 billion a year on legal gambling alone, a phenomenal growth for this once maligned business. DREAMLAND takes a sharp but disarming approach in examining the romance of gambling, and reveals the decidedly unromantic reality. My Mother Said is a 2008 documentary and short film directed by Jessica Sison. "Victims and perpetrators of Sierra Leone's brutal civil war come together for the first time in an unprecedented program of tradition-based truth-telling and forgiveness ceremonies. Through reviving their ancient practice of fambul tok (family talk), Sierra Leoneans are building sustainable peace at the grass-roots level -- succeeding where the international community's post-conflict efforts failed. Filled with lessons for the West, this film explores the depths of a culture that believes that true justice lies in redemption and healing for individuals -- and that forgiveness is the surest path to restoring dignity and building strong communities." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. "In one of the smaller streets of the Austrian capital stands the old-time Bellaria cinema, whose repertoire consists of films from the years 1932-1948. Here, week in, week out, a group of passionate admirers of the good old days set out on a nostalgic journey into the past. After an introduction to this strange place, where time came to astandstill several decades ago, director Douglas Wolfsperger allows us a glimpse of these somewhat eccentric filmgoers whose engaging private lives and more or less fulfilled desires strangely correspond to the phantasmic world of the silver screen watched from the dusky rows of this antiquated cinema. The melancholic documentary Bellaria - As Long As We Live thus offers a fascinating sociological insight into this society of unusual aficionados of the tenth muse, perceiving the reality of contemporary Austria through the lives of their favourite film heroes." Quoting the synopsis from the 2002 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival site. Gravity Was Everywhere Back Then is a 2010 science fiction experimental fantasy animation film written by Brent Green,Donna Kozloskie and Michael McGinley and directed by Brent Green. Blue Road is a music dvd that won the award for Music DVD of the Year in the 2009 Juno Awards. Featuring pirated NASA transmissions, including recordings of events onboard the space shuttle. Startup.com is a 2001 documentary film that chronicles the dot-com start-up phenomenon and its eventual end. The film follows e-commerce website govWorks and its founders Kaleil Isaza Tuzman and Tom Herman from 1999-2000 as the Internet bubble was bursting. Chairman George is a 73-minute 2005 Canadian documentary film about the Greek Canadian musician / troubadour and statistician George Sapounidis. The documentary is directed by Daniel Cross and Mila Aung-Thwin and produced by EyeSteelFilm in association with CTV, BBC's "Storyville" series and TV2. Hammond Meets Moss is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mike Slee. Tabatô is a 2013 war documentary short drama experimental film, written and directed by João Viana. Fiction and Other Truths: A Film About Jane Rule is a 1995 short documentary biographical film directed by Lynne Fernie and Aerlyn Weissman. Sand Fishers is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Samouté Andrey Diarra. Godka Cirka is a 2013 documentary, short, drama, family film written by Àlex Lora, Amina Souleiman and Antonio Tibaldi and directed by Àlex Lora and Antonio Tibaldi. The Profession of Arms is a 1983 Canadian documentary film directed by Michael Bryans and Tina Viljoen. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film was the third film in the seven-part War series, hosted by Gwynne Dyer, examining modern warfare. Animals of the Savanna is a 2010 animated short film. Very Extremely Dangerous is a 2012 documentary,adventure and crime film directed by Paul Duane. Feeding Your Demons: The Life and Work of Lama Tsultrim Allione is a biographical documentary directed by Jaap Verhoeven. Emmanuel's Gift is a 2005 documentary narrating the life of Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah, a disabled man born in Ghana. It is narrated by Oprah Winfrey, and it follows Emmanuel as he attempts to overcome the stigma associated with physically disabled people in Ghana. Canto a la vida is a 1988 documentary film. Inequality for All is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jacob Kornbluth. The film examines widening income inequality in the United States. The film is presented by American economist, author and professor Robert Reich. The film premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival in the Documentary Competition section, and won a U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Achievement in Filmmaking. Reich distills the story through the lens of widening income inequality—currently at historic highs—and explores what effects this increasing gap has not only on the U.S. economy but also American democracy itself. At the heart of the film is a simple question: What is a good society and what role does the widening income gap play in the deterioration of the nation's economic health? The film was distributed by RADiUS-TWC in Fall 2013. Who's Afraid of Cris Negão? is a 2012 comedy drama biographical short documentary film written and directed by René Guerra. Siggi Valli on a Motorbike is a 1997 documentary short film from Iceland, written and directed by Bodvar Bjarki Pétursson. Quod erat demonstrandum is a 2012 short film written by Jean-Luc Godard and directed by Fabrice Aragno. Anatomy of t.A.T.u., is a documentary film directed by Vitaly Mansky, chronicling the lives of the group t.A.T.u. on their promotional tour in USA, but most of all, revealing the girls' true lives, including their sexuality. The movie's main selling point was the revelation that neither Yulia Volkova nor Lena Katina are, or were, lesbians. They stated that it was all just a marketing strategy; a brainchild developed by their manager, Ivan Shapovalov. Volkova said that before t.A.T.u., she had never thought about girls in that way, but during t.A.T.u. she had fallen in love with another girl, although the physical aspect had not developed beyond kissing. The film also showed that both girls are religious. Katina visits church and goes to confession regularly; she believes that her career forces her to do many sinful things. Volkova, on the other hand, is ready to do anything perceived as popular in the musical world. She isn't afraid of anything besides loneliness. Katina is shyer, and said that she wouldn't ever have sex with anyone on camera. Another aspect of the documentary was drug use. A Little Dream is a 60-minute documentary film in English capturing the journey of former President Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam's life from Rameswaram to Rashtrapati Bhavan. It was produced by Minveli Media Works and scripted-directed by P. Dhanapal, and unfolds in the form of a story-in-story. Importance of Education is the theme of the film, which also contains audio and video clips of important people associated with Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam. Noted dancer and actress Shobhana has played the lead role in the film. The short film concludes with a visual presentation of a poem A song of Youth, written by Dr Kalam. Read more at: http://news.oneindia.in/2008/01/21/documentary-on-kalam-launched-1200911675.html An inspiring life story of a great leader of our generation, Dr.APJ. Abdul Kalam, former President of India, this documentary will be preserved and shall benefit young minds for its motivational content. A trailer of the documentary can be downloaded from poduniversal. The DVD was released on January 21, 2008 at Chennai by noted Film Director K. Balachander in the Presence of Dr. APJ. Abdul Kalam, former President of India. The first copy was received by Prof. C.Ramaswamy, Secretary, Dr. Der Indianer is a 1987 film directed by Rolf Schuebel and written by Leonhard Lentz, Michael Lentz and Rolf Schübel. The Latin Skyscraper is a 2012 documentary film written by Sebastián Caulier, Leonel D'Agostino, Fernanda Ribeiz and Sebastián Schindel. The film was also directed by Sebastián Schindel. Most Valuable Players is a 2010 documentary film directed/produced by Matthew D. Kallis and written/produced by Christopher Lockhart, about The Freddy Awards, an annual awards ceremony recognizing outstanding high school musical theatre in the Lehigh Valley region of Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Lockhart was inspired to make the film after watching clips of a Freddy Awards production on YouTube. The film appeared in the International Documentary Association's DocuWeeks showcase in August 2010, as well as the Mill Valley Film Festival in California. The Oprah Winfrey Network has acquired the broadcast and video rights to the film. Nami no koe: Shinchi is a documentary film directed by Ryusuke Hamaguchi and Kou Sakai. African Hunting Holiday is a British documentary by Louis Theroux. Louis journeys to Limpopo Province in South Africa to join the holidaymakers who flock there to hunt big game. Songs from Tsongas is the video release of a concert by the progressive rock group Yes recorded live at the Tsongas Arena in Lowell, Massachusetts, on May 15, 2004. The video features the entire concert performed that night, which was part of the US leg of the band's 35th anniversary tour. The setlist features songs from all eras of the band's career, including a large number of progressive rock classics from their 1970s heyday, as well as a rare performance from the band's 1969 début album, two tracks from the band's 1980s pop rock era, and the first performance of the 1996 song "Mind Drive" from the Keys to Ascension albums. September 23, 2014 saw the release of a Deluxe Edition of the film on DVD, Blu-ray, and 3 CDs. The video features a 70 min edit of a previously unreleased concert held in Lugano, Switzerland on July 8, 2004 during the same tour. The japanese release includes the full Lugano show. Scenes from the childhood career of Shirley Temple: her films, her fans, her fame. Trains is a 1976 short documentary film written and directed by Caleb Deschanel. All Under Heaven By Force is a 1964 documentary film directed by J. B. H. Wadia. Carve Your Destiny is an inspirational film. It is the maiden project of Indian filmmaker Anubhav Srivastava. This film aims to throw light on how to become successful in life with the help of detailed interviews conducted by the filmmaker with real life achievers belonging to diverse fields and cultures. Camp 14: Total Control Zone is a 2012 German/South Korean documentary film directed by Marc Wiese. It features interviews with Shin Dong-hyuk who was born in the Kaechon internment camp in North Korea. The film details human rights abuses inflicted on him and witnessed by him as prisoner there. Wagner's Dream is a documentary film directed by Susan Froemke. It premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 25, 2012 and was shown in high definition in theaters across the United States and Canada on May 7, 2012. The subject of the film is the staging of a new production of Richard Wagner's four-opera cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen at the Metropolitan Opera beginning in 2010. Wer will krank sein auf der Welt? is a 1977 documentary film directed and written by Maximiliane Mainka. Illicit: The Dark Trade is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Helen Fitzwilliam. Witness: Libya is a 2012 documentary film directed by Abdallah Omeish. Mozart's Apples is a 2011 documentary film written by Meilė Jančorienė and directed by Aloyzas Jančoras. Brigid Berlin's story takes us on a journey through the life of a blueblood socialite turned Andy Warhol bad-girl. Hope Along the Wind: The Life of Harry Hay is the 2002 documentary film directed by Eric Slade Not Angels But Angels is a 1994 documentary film about young men in Prague working as prostitutes. The creator of the documentary, Wiktor Grodecki interviews the men, some of whom are underage, to find out more about their lives and how they came to be making a living by selling sex. The film also explores the hopes and fears of the young men, what they hope to be doing in the future, and coping with the possibility of being infected with HIV. Herb & Dorothy 50X50 is a documentary film directed by Megumi Sasaki. Troop Train was a 1943 short propaganda film produced by the Office of War Information. While the film's assumed purpose would be to educate the American public about the role of railroad transportation of military divisions, Troop Train takes a more stylistic approach, with absolutely no narration and little dialogue. The director uses images to tell the story. Footage of rows of war material, troops marching and locomotives are cleverly edited to create a montage propaganda film, something of a rarity in the United States. The film is also notable for its depiction of service men's life on the long trips across the country to unknown ports, and to unknown fronts in the war. Julien Temple is a 2009 documentary film written by Stephen Organ and directed by Julien Temple. "Julien Temple's latest conceptual rock documentary puts the case for Dr Feelgood, as 'four estuarine John-the-Baptists to Johnny Rotten's anti-Christ'. Pub rock is often derided as a movement that was in the thrall of rhythm and blues traditions and 'proper' musicianship, at best an unfashionable precursor to punk, devoid of the DIY attitude and the year-zero rhetoric. Yet both movements shared contempt for the mainstream, were reacting against the prog-rock sounds that dominated the era, and a number of punk's prime movers were inspired by or graduated from the pub rock scene. Julien Temple's latest conceptual rock documentary focuses on Dr Feelgood, who came from the 'Thames Delta', Canvey Island, and puts the case for Lee Brilleaux, Wilko Johnson, the Big Figure and Sparko as 'four estuarine John-the-Baptists to Johnny Rotten's anti-Christ'. What emerges is the great, and deeply moving, rock'n'roll history of one of Britain's finest and unfairly overlooked bands, with Canvey, a reclaimed island in the Thames estuary just off the Essex coast, lying entirely below sea level and dominated by the petrochemical industry, central to it. Enlightening interviews with band members and contemporaries are complemented by some fantastic archive footage, which, at the very least, confirms Brilleaux and Johnson as two of rock's great showmen, and justifies Dr Feelgood's reputation as an incredible live act." Quoting Michael Hayden Is the Crown at War with Us? is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Alanis Obomsawin. La Svolta. Donne Contro L'Ilva is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Valentina D’Amico. Kabitar Ananta Jatrapathe is a 1991 documentary film directed by Sanat Kumar Dasgupta. 2 1/2 Weeks in Paradise is a 1997 film directed by Yevgeni Solomin. Gee Atherton ripping the Worlds course the day after winning the race, Robbie Bourdon stomping a 70 ft. flat spin and Fabien Barel dropping an insane, near vertical line in Morocco, that's right New World Disorder is back with it's 9th installment, "Never Enough." Filmed exclusively in Super 16mm and High Definition, the world premiere will screen September 24th, during the annual Interbike trade show in Las Vegas. In conjunction with Nissan Sports Adventure and Kona Bikes, NWD 9 promises to live up to all you would expect from the award winning series. Showcasing the talents of the best known pros in the business; Darren Berrecloth, Cameron McCaul and Paul Basagoitia, the new kids like Brandon Semenuk, Alex Pro and everyone's favorites Andreu Lacondeguy, Wayne Goss and Ben Boyko. Finding new spots to "capture the goods" in China, Australia and Morocco, following the Qashqai contest series through Madrid, Munich and London and documenting the world cup races in Slovenia, Andorra, Scotland, Italy and Quebec, "Never Enough" will leave you with an uncontrollable urge to get out there and ride your bike! Piano Blues is a 2003 documentary film directed by Clint Eastwood as the seventh installment of the documentary film series "The Blues" produced by Martin Scorsese. The film features interviews and live performances of piano players Ray Charles, Dave Brubeck, Dr. John and Marcia Ball. In the documentary Eastwood explores his lifelong passion for piano blues and jazz. He interviews artists as Ray Charles, Dr. John, Marcia Ball, Pinetop Perkins, Dave Brubeck, Jay McShann, Henry Gray and shows archival performances of Fats Domino, Otis Spann, Art Tatum, Albert Simmons, Pete Johnson, Jay McShann, Big Joe Turner, Nat King Cole, Martha Davis, Professor Longhair, Charles Brown and Duke Ellington. Remarkable are two early performances of the Chess Records houseband with Otis Spann, Willie Dixon and, probably, Fred Below. Eastwood shows his interest in jazz music with an interview and performance of improvising musician Pete Jolly, who introduces Phineas Newborn. Also Oscar Peterson and Thelonious Monk are present in the film with several performances. La nudité toute nue is a 2007 French television documentary film directed by Olivier Nicklaus. It was first broadcast on 18 July 2007 on French television channel Canal+ during a special "all nude" day of programming on the channel presented by Mademoiselle Agnès. Great Genius and Profound Stupidity is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Benita Raphan. Sealed Fate is a 2011 documentary, Mystery, Crime Fiction, News film written by Matt Salzberg and directed by JD Leete. Les éclats (Ma gueule, ma révolte, mon nom) is a film written and directed by Sylvain George. Chuppan Chupai is a 2013 biographical documentary film directed by Saadat Munir and Saad Khan. Q.E.D. was the name of a strand of BBC popular science documentary films which aired in the United Kingdom from 1982 to 1999. Junket Whore is a 1998 documentary film directed by Debbie Melnyk and hosted by Lauren Hutton. This revealing documentary explores the relationship between Hollywood’s publicists and the entertainment journalists. It also stars many Hollywood artists including Sylvester Stallone, Martin Short, Alicia Silverstone, Charlie Sheen, Hugh Grant, Ed Harris, Gérard Depardieu, Jack Nicholson, Brooke Shields, Matthew McConaughey, Ashley Judd, Sharon Stone, John Travolta, Kelly Preston, Emma Thompson, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tom Cruise, Nicolas Cage, Clint Eastwood, Jim Carrey, Robert De Niro, Whoopi Goldberg, Robin Williams, Richard Gere, Antonio Banderas, Pauly Shore, Sean Connery, Julianne Moore, Madonna, and Anthony Hopkins. It was produced by Rick Caine. One Hour is a 1990 film directed by Robert Frank. "What prevents poor people from getting ahead? Banks refuse to give credit without collateral. Where commercial banks see insolvency, Nobel Prize–winning economist Muhammad Yunus sees opportunity. His groundbreaking Grameen Bank was built on the radical notion that if you loan poor women money within the context of peer support, not only will they repay and sustain the bank, but they’ll elevate their communities in the process. With millions of microloans to rural entrepreneurs in developing countries, Grameen is now audaciously importing its methods to the bastion of first-world capitalism: the U.S.A. First stop: Queens, New York. With an intimate camera capturing both buoyant and despairing moments, To Catch a Dollar chronicles the evolution of the tiny new branch. Will the solidarity principles translate to a diverse group of inner-city women? As the banking industry collapses, will these intrepid social-justice financiers succeed? One thing’s clear: we need new models to ensure prosperity for all." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Napoleon is a 2007 United Kingdom television film first broadcast on BBC One on 12 November 2007. It tells the story of Napoleon's part in the Siege of Toulon in 1793. It was filmed on Malta and Gozo from November 2006 to April 2007. The Beethoven-influenced musical score took a seventy piece orchestra and was not completed until mid-2007. Alice and Darlene is a 2013 short drama, documentary film directed by Raul Domingues. Marlene, also known in Germany as Marlene Dietrich - Porträt eines Mythos, is a 1984 documentary film made by Maximilian Schell about the legendary film star Marlene Dietrich. It was made by Bayerischer Rundfunk and OKO-Film and released by Futura Film, Munich and Alive Films,. A Thousand Suns is a 2013 documentary film directed by Mati Diop. Transgender Tuesdays: A Clinic In the Tenderloin is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mark Freeman. The American experience:Grand Central is a 2008 Documentary film written and directed by Michael Epstein. The Genius of Charles Darwin is a three-part television documentary, written and presented by evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins. It was first shown in August 2008 on Channel 4. It won Best TV Documentary Series 2008 at the British Broadcast Awards in January 2009. Irish Tour '74 is a film directed by Tony Palmer. It documents Rory Gallagher's tour of Northern Ireland in 1974. Gallagher toured at a time of great political turmoil and violence. Gallagher's band at the time was Gerry McAvoy on bass guitar, Lou Martin on keyboards and Rod de'Ath on drums. Collapse, directed by Chris Smith, is an American documentary film exploring the theories, writings and life story of controversial author Michael Ruppert. Collapse premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2009 to positive reviews. X-ray Man is a 2012 short drama war historical fiction documentary film directed by Kerri Yost. Journey to Beijing is a 1998 documentary film directed by Evans Chan. Trazando Aleida is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Christiane Burkhard. Hommage à Noir is a 1996 film/ visual poem set to music filmed to honor and highlight the culture of Africa. Director Ralf Schmerberg shot this film entirely in black and white, which is set to a soundtrack of African rhythms mixed with electronica. Bandas Tributo is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Alberto Hayden. Between two worlds is a 1999 documentary film by director Bettina Haasen. The film focuses on the conversations between director Haasen and members of the nomadic Woodabe tribe in Nigeria. The documentary has an ethnographical approach. New Order Story is a 1993 documentary on the English band New Order, featuring the majority of their music videos, as well as interviews with the band members, their manager Rob Gretton, producers, etc. It also features appearances from Pet Shop Boys' Neil Tennant, U2's Bono, Quincy Jones and Jon Savage. Written by Paul Morley, the film offers sometimes an eccentric setting. Though it's not visible in the documentary, the band was filmed at the brink of their separation that would last for seven years. The documentary starts off with the Joy Division days through its vocalist Ian Curtis's suicide to the formation of New Order. An edited version of the documentary was first broadcast on the ITV network on the night of 29 August, 1993, coinciding with New Order's headline performance at the Reading Festival. It was then released on VHS in October 1993, edited into a full version and a shorter American version. In 2005 the film was released both in UK and USA on DVD in its full version. It was also available as part of Item, a limited edition boxset available in the US that collected New Order Story and A Collection. Those Who Go Those Who Stay is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ruth Beckermann. North of the Sun is an adventure sport documentary film written and directed by Jørn Nyseth Ranum and Inge Wegge. Finding Our Voice is a 2012 short documentary drama film directed by Bayou Bennett and Daniel Lir. It Was Better Tomorrow is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Hinde Boujemaa. Hôtel des Invalides is a 1952 French short documentary film directed by Georges Franju. The Private Life of the Gannets is a 1934 British short documentary film, directed by Julian Huxley, about a colony of Northern Gannet on the small rocky island of Grassholm, off the coast of Wales. It received a special mention at the 3rd Venice International Film Festival in 1935 and won the Best Short Subject at the 10th Academy Awards in 1938. The title was chosen by producer Alexander Korda as a reference to The Private Life of Henry VIII, his breakthrough film of the previous year. The "truly landmark film," provides, according to WildFilmHistory, "an absorbing and atmospheric account," by combining, "close-up, slow motion and aerial shots." This, "groundbreaking footage," "Shot with the support of the Royal Navy," "reveals the incredible private lives of these birds as they squabble over territory, perform spectacular dives and regurgitate fish for their young." After-Crass is a film directed by Marian Wallace. The Camden 28 is a 2007 documentary film about twenty-eight members of the "Catholic Left" who were arrested in 1971 for attempting to break into and vandalize a draft board in Camden, New Jersey. Because the Camden 28 were not militant and did not plant bombs like the Weathermen, they provided a much greater threat to the U.S. government - the growing religious opposition to the Vietnam war could not be written off as extremist, so they had to be brought down. The Camden 28 was written, directed, and produced by Anthony Giacchino. In 2007, it was aired as part of PBS's Point of View series. The film was met with high critical praise and received an 88% "Fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes and a WGA Award nomination for Best Documentary Screenplay. Life After Death is a 2014 documentary comedy biographical film directed by Joe Callander. The Eternally Feminine is a 1969 short film directed by Ion Moscu. Jornaleros is a 1978 documentary film directed by Eduardo Maldonaldo. El cielo abierto is a documentary film directed by Everardo González. The Lie of the Land is a 2007 documentary film directed by Molly Dineen. Grandpa and Grandma is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Giedrė Beinoriūtė. La sierra is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Scott Dalton and Margarita Martinez. Scheherazade's Diary is a 2013 documentary crime drama film written and directed by Zeina Daccache. The Union: The Business Behind Getting High is a 2007 Canadian documentary film directed by Brett Harvey. Its theatrical run was limited to film festivals. Chaïm Soutine: 20th Century Expressionist Artist is a 2008 documentary film directed by Valerie Firla and Valerie Furla, and written by Murielle Levy and Valerie Firla. Bishops Castle is a film directed by Dakin Henderson. The First 70 is a short documentary adventure film directed by Jarratt Moody. Hephzibah is a 1998 documentary film directed by Curtis Levy. In December 2006, a torrential rainstorm hit Seattle. Tragic circumstances found Kate Fleming, a celebrated recording artist, trapped in her basement studio. Her spouse of nine years, Charlene Strong, returned home to find Kate sealed behind the studio door as the waters rose. Charlene's efforts to free Kate ended when the water reached the ceiling level. But Charlene's nightmare did not end once the firemen retrieved Kate's body and transferred her to the ICU of a nearby hospital.Emergency room staff barred Charlene from entry to be with Kate, as she lay dying. A "blood relative" was needed to grant the necessary permission. Precious time was lost as Charlene made frantic phone calls to Kate's family. Kate died that night, minutes after Charlene was finally given that permission. After facing this loss and the humiliation of a funeral director's bigotry, Charlene decided to take a stand. She contacted members of Washington's legislature, who at that time were debating Domestic Partnership rights, a cause that had failed in years past.Charlene Strong's dramatic congressional testimony is credited in the bill's passage. This event put Charlene on a new path, that of "activist," her cause - Marriage Equality for Lesbian and Gay Americans who lack the most basic of legal protections. Her story is one of courage and determination. It is one that inspires the activist in all of us, as it asks the soul-searching question: What would you do? A Change of Face is a 1988 film directed by Tracey Moffatt. Seaview is a 2007 documentary film directed by Nicky Gogan and Paul Rowley. The film chronicles the lives of a group of asylum seekers living in the former Butlin's Holiday Camp at Mosney, Ireland. The film takes an innovative approach to the use to sound and image in telling the stories of the Mosney residents. This has much to do with the past work of the directors, which has been focused on video art and gallery installation projects. The film premiered in the Forum section of the 2008 Berlin Film Festival and has since shown at many festivals internationally, including Hot Docs in Toronto, Silverdocs, Sheffield Doc-Fest, and the Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo Film Festivals. The film was nominated in the best feature documentary category at the 2009 Irish Film and Television Awards. Skinningrove is a 2013 short documentary biographical film directed by Michael Almereyda. Jacques Lacan responded to questions written by Jacques-Alain Miller. This was filmed and broadcast over two nights on French Television. Das Milliardenversprechen is a 2012 documentary film directed by Gisela Baur and Ralph Gladitz. Sedia Elettrica. Il Making Of Di Io E Te is a 2012 documentary film directed by Monica Strambini. Filmmakers vs. Tycoons is a 2005 documentary film written by Carlos Benpar & Ferran Alberich and directed by Carlos Benpar. Sexy Baby is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jill Bauer and Ronna Gradus. Born to Boogie is a 1972 concert film based around a concert at Wembley Empire Pool starring Ringo Starr, Marc Bolan and T. Rex. Directed by Starr himself, the movie was released on The Beatles' Apple Films label. Born to Boogie consists of concert footage; recording studio scenes with Ringo Starr and Elton John, filmed at the Apple Studios in Savile Row, London; and various vignettes reminiscent of The Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour, shot at Denham and Tittenhurst Park, Sunninghill. The Tea Party sequence was filmed at John Lennon's estate in the same spots as Lennon's "Imagine" video was filmed. The actor Geoffrey Bayldon of Catweazle fame was bemused to find that things were not going to plan when he arrived to play his role as a waiter at the Mad Hatter's Tea Party Scene. The planned orchestra had to mime as the whole thing had not been planned too well. The UK premiere was held at Oscar’s Cinema in Brewer Street, Soho on 14 December 1972, attended by T. Rex, Ringo Starr and Elton John. The film was rereleased on DVD in 2005 with many extras including features presented by Bolan's son, Rolan Bolan. There is no appearance on the extra material from director Ringo Starr. Sherman's March is a 2007 American Civil War television documentary film first aired on the History Channel. The film is directed by Rick King and the executive producer is Jason Williams. The production combines narration with reenacted dramatic sequences as its foundation. The film, narrated by actor Edward Herrmann, tells the tale of Union General William Tecumseh Sherman, called "Uncle Billy" by his troops, and his five-week assault from Atlanta to the Atlantic Ocean and then north to trap Confederate States Army General Robert E. Lee. Sherman's military campaign has become the mythic symbol of destruction during the Civil War. The opening sequence poses the question that reflects the film's theme: Sherman: Terrorist or Savior? Books under Fire is a 1983 Emmy News and Documentary Award for Outstanding Background/Analysis of a Single Current Story - Programs nominated tv program aired in September 1982 in the United States of America. Blast 'Em is a 1992 documentary film directed by Joseph Blasioli and Egidio Coccimiglio. Luck, Trust & Ketchup: Robert Altman in Carver County is a 1993 documentary film directed by John Dorr and Mike Kaplan. Gardel's Father is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ricardo Casas. Dika: Murder City is a 1995 documentary film by Michael D. Moore on the late-life punk rock career of composer/singer Dika Newlin. The film features Newlin, who was 74 years old when the film was shot, in concert at a Richmond, Virginia, club where she is wearing black leather garb and singing punk versions of Elvis Presley and Nancy Sinatra songs. Newlin also talks about her childhood musical training with Arnold Schoenberg, and she performs several of her original songs. She also offers a Gioachino Rossini aria in which she meows the entire number. A clip from the 1968 film Night of the Living Dead is included in the film. Not Who We Are is a 2013 documentary film by Carol Mansour. The Ghosts of San Berillo is a 2013 LGBT historical documentary film written by Edoardo Morabito and Irma Vecchio and directed by Edoardo Morabito. This is the story of how the music business was transformed in the 1980s by like-minded musicians who decided to self-publish their work. They formed a "network" before the internet or email made it commonplace.Today it is common practice for musicians to self-publish their work. But this is a recent development in music history, which began in the 1980s. It came in response to a music business with a narrow spectrum of music that was being released and promoted.Before the internet or email, there was a network of "Underground" musicians and bands who networked with each other by producing recordings at home, exchanging them with each other, and communicating with hand-written letters. They created their own "record labels." They produced independent magazines and the first generation of radio shows devoted to independently released music.In the 1980s the music industry was also transformed by numerous technological developments: the first affordable recording equipment, the first affordable synthesizers and affordable photo-copying. For the first time, musicians were able to record and distribute their music without a "major" record company.The network was supported by small, independent record stores (which have all but disappeared) where musicians could place their work for sale, as well as discover other like-minded artists and magazines. This created a sense of community in which artists were working locally with stores in their home towns. To a great extent, these stores helped build the network . The Patron Saints is a 2011 documentary film directed by Brian M. Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky. The Moody Blues: Live at Isle of Wight Festival is a 2009 concert film directed by Murray Lerner. Seen any good movies lately? One of America’s top research scientists hasn’t, so he heads to Hollywood to find out why! Join Ken and Jim on a hilarious road trip as they take an analytical look at the movie business in a futile attempt at finding order in a world of chaos. Is that screenwriter William Goldman once said, that Nobody knows anything about what makes a movie work is really true? Jenni Rivera, also known as "La Diva de la Banda" was known for her work within the banda and norte. Samba Fantástico is a 1955 documentary film written by Paulo Mendes Campos and Henri Persin and directed by Jean Manzon and René Persin. Su mercé is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Isabel Muñoz. Beatles Stories is a 2010 music documentary film directed by Seth Swirsky. Exilis is a 2013 documentary film written by Diego Meza and David Barón, directed by Diego Meza. Dystonia is a documentary film directed by Yûki Kawahata. On the Bridge is a 2010 documentary film directed by Olivier Morel. Vladimir Putin in Deep Concentration is a 2012 documentary comedy short film directed by Dana O'Keefe and Sasha Kliment. 33 Minutes to 34 Right is an investigative documentary. Nihonkoku kenpo the movie is a Documentary film directed by John Junkerman. Katatsumori is a 1994 short documentary film directed by Naomi Kawase. The True Glory: From D-Day to V-E Day is a co-production of the US Office of War Information and the British Ministry of Information, documenting the victory on the Western Front, from Normandy to the collapse of the Third Reich. Although many individuals, including screenwriter and director Garson Kanin, contributed to the film, British director Carol Reed is normally credited as the director. The film was promoted with the tagline, "The story of your victory...told by the guys who won it!" The film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The documentary film is notable for using multiple first-person perspectives as narrative voices, somewhat in the manner of Tunisian Victory. However, in The True Glory, instead of just an American G.I. and a British Tommy, the voices include a Canadian, a French resister, a Parisian civilian family, an African-American tank gunner, and several female perspectives including a nurse, and clerical staff. The film is introduced by General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe, and many other prominent individuals appear in it including General George S. Patton. "In 1972 graphic artist and advertisement professional Juan Fresán set out to make a film about the incredible story of Orélie Antoine de Tounens, the crazy French man who 90 years before had proclaimed himself as "King of Patagonia and Araucaria" with his own constitution, currency and ministers. The film was called La Nueva Francia but was never finished, first for lack of funding, and later because his author had to go into exile in Venezuela. If for many of you this sounds familiar, it's because in the 1980s Carlos Sorín made A King and His Movie inspired by that frustrated shoot where he worked as a cinematographer. In 2004, Fresán contacted Lucas Turturro to help him rescue the film footage that was preserved. Fresán died in July of that same year, but Turturro decided to follow the trail of that truncated film and recovering unseen material, going back to the original locations, and gathering testimonies to shed light on the two tales –one inside the other– that make up this true story, one that's stranger and more fascinating than any fiction." Quoting the description from the 2010 Mar del Plata Film Festival site. My Seven Places is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Boris Lehman. Los puños de una nación is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Pituka Ortega-Heilbron Victimes de nos richesses is a 2006 documentary film exploring the 2005 violence at the Ceuta and Melilla border fences. Bastardy is a 2008 documentary film directed by Amiel Courtin-Wilson. TPB AFK: The Pirate Bay Away From Keyboard is a documentary film released on 8 February 2013, directed by Simon Klose, based on the lives of the three founders of The Pirate Bay: Peter Sunde, Fredrik Neij and Gottfrid Svartholm. Filming began in Summer 2008, and concluded on 25 February 2012. The Price Of Survival is a 2003 documentary film by Dutch director Louis van Gasteren and a sequel to Begrijpt U Nu Waarom Ik Huil?. The documentary is about the impact of post-traumatic stress syndrome on the family of a Nazi concentration camp survivor named Joop. Joop cannot forget his experiences in a concentration camp during World War II and these emotions are transferred to his wife Dina and their three children. The eldest son and daughter have long since lost contact with their parents and respond in the documentary only by letter. The youngest son Reinier, together with his wife Hadelinde, stayed in contact with his parents. Joop died in 2000, yet the camp experiences are seemingly 'inherited,' as Joop's descendants continue to pay the emotional price of his survival. The Price Of Survival won a Golden Calf for Best Short Documentary. 56 minutes. Color. A Rustling Of Leaves: Inside The Phillippine Revolution is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Nettie Wild. Ola Svensson Superstar is a documentary film written and directed by Stefan Berg. Soldier in Art: Arthur Szyk is a 2014 documentary, animation and short film directed by James Ruxin. Watch Your Meters is a 1947 short film directed by John Waterhouse. Ever since 17-year-old Rachel Levy, an Israeli, was killed five years ago in Jerusalem by a Palestinian suicide bomber, her mother Avigail has found hardly a moment’s peace. Levy’s killer was Ayat al-Akhras, also 17, a schoolgirl from a Palestinian refugee camp several miles away. The two young women looked unbelievably alike. The impact of the blast that killed them both remains as powerful today as it was the moment of the explosion.The documentary film, To Die In Jerusalem, explores — through the two families’ personal losses and Avigail Levy’s search for answers — the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, mutual pain despite cultural differences and diverse perceptions of death; and ultimately, the hope for peace. The film’s most revealing moment is in an emotionally-charged meeting between the mothers of the two dead girls. Filmmaker David Bond attempts to disappear off the face of the earth for one month. But is it that easy when he lives in Britain, one of the most intrusive surveillance states in the world, where the average UK adult is registered on over 700 databases and caught daily on one of the four million CCTV cameras on almost every street corner? In what plays out like a Hitchcock thriller, Bond hires some of the UK¿s top private investigators to discover everything they can about him and track him down as he attempts to vanish. Is it still possible to live a private, anonymous life in the UK or do the state and private companies already know too much about ordinary people? Forced to contemplate the meaning of privacy and the loss of it, Bond¿s disturbing journey leaves him with no doubt that although he has nothing to hide, he certainly has something to fear as he discovers some alarming truths about what the state and private companies already know about ordinary citizens. Funkquaria Rising is a 2013 documentary short film written by Theo Williams and directed by Iwalani Venerable. Gesucht:Monika Ertl is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Christian Baudissin. "Farmers rely on their land for survival. However, in China, those who rely on their land have neither ownership of this land, nor the guarantee of land-use rights, Farmers have paid an especially heavy price in their efforts to protect their land-use rights in the face of accelerated industrialization and urbanization perpetuated by the government and business enterprises. This film documents the forced demolition and relocation of two villages over the course of 5 years, from 2005 to 2009. The stories take place in the Maying and Liyuan villages, both located just outside of Beijing. In the spring of 2005, an enterprise began construction of a factory on the Maying Village farmland, which resulted in the demolition of 54 farm houses. The farmers reacted fiercely. The Party Secretary of the village, Zhao Youcang, found himself struggling between his roles as an official and citizen, as the policy he implemented caused him to become one of the farmers whose house was to be destroyed. Under the leadership of farmer Zhao Jundong, protesting farmers began a tug-of-war with the local governing committee officials … Meanwhile, 3 kilometers away in the Liyuan village, more than 20 farmers endured the hardships of forced demolition and relocation. With the help of lawyers, they sued the development zone management committee in local court for the refusal to compensate farmers for their land after the demolitions, delayed relocation, and illegal breach of agreement during the construction of the ENN Art Avenue. In the Liyuan village, villager Zhang Lianzhong’s parents both lay paralyzed in bed. The changes in their living situations have caused the elderly much suffering. Zhang’s mother drinks heavily everyday to ease her sorrow, waiting for death. Zhang Liangzhong has fallen deeper and deeper into desperation, but must still take care of his more desperate parents. The huge waves of change caused by the demolition and relocation of these farmers has not only affected their physical living situations, but also their psychological well-being." Quoting the description from cnex.org.cn Corazon de Familia is a 2012 documentary film directed by QWOCMAP. Pushing Above the Highpoint is a 2011 short adventure sports documentary film directed by Benjamin M. Thomas. 12th & Delaware is a documentary film set in a crisis pregnancy center and a abortion clinic across the street from it in Fort Pierce, Florida. The film was produced and filmed by Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing and covers the center and its patients over the period of a year. The film shows interviews of staff at both facilities, as well as pregnant women who are going to them. 12th & Delaware premiered on January 24, 2010 at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival in the U.S. Documentary Competition. It won a Peabody Award that same year "for its poignant portrait of women facing exceedingly difficult decisions at a literal intersection of opposing ideologies." The Land of the Wandering Souls, or La terre des âmes errantes, is a 2000 French-Cambodian documentary film directed by Rithy Panh. The Journey of the Blind Musicians is a short documentary film directed by Nagisa Oshima and Kiyoshi Ogasawara. We Are Together is a British documentary film about the orphanage "Agape" in South Africa. Children, who live here, lost their parents to AIDS. The film is full of songs, both native and English. Eventually the children get a chance to visit New York and raise money by singing for the public. The film has won eight awards. El misterio de Eva Peron is a 1987 documentary film written and directed by Tulio Demicheli. The Basement Satellite is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Hyoungju Kim. Sunshine Cleaning: A Fresh Look at a Dirty Business is a 2009 documentary. Tank on the Moon is a French 2007 documentary film about the development, launch, and operation of the Soviet Moon exploration rovers, Lunokhod 1 and Lunokhod 2 in the period from 1970 to 1973. The film uses historical footage from American, Russian and French archives featuring Leonid Brezhnev, Yuri Gagarin, Lyndon Johnson, John F. Kennedy, Nikita Khrushchev, Sergei Korolev, Alexei Kosygin, Alexei Leonov, Sam Rayburn and many other contemporary figures. A special emphasis is placed on the Lunokhods' chief designer, Alexander Kemurdjian. Here's $20 - Stick It Up Your Nose is a documentary film directed by Brian Moser. La bête lumineuse is a 1982 Canadian documentary film directed by Pierre Perrault, about a group of hunters who gather annually to hunt moose near Maniwaki, Quebec. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1983 Cannes Film Festival. Stories Of Trust: Calling For Climate Recovery, Part 4: Trust Arizona is a 2012 short documentary biographical family film directed by Kelly Matheson and Sean Solowiej. Members of the Ballou Senior High School Marching Band rise above their violence-filled Washington, D.C., neighborhood in this documentary, which follows the group as they try to achieve their dream of winning the national marching band competition. Inspired by their tireless director, Darrell Watson, and helped by a dedicated team of volunteers, the musical teens put their heads, hearts and souls into making the band the best it can be. The Other One: The Long, Strange Trip Of Bob Weir is a 2014 documenatry film directed by Mike Fleiss. The Forgotten Woman is a 2008 Canadian documentary film directed by Dilip Mehta and written by Deepa Mehta. The film is about widows in India, and was inspired by Deepa Mehta's 2005 Academy Award-nominated film on the same subject, Water. The film was primarily shot in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh. A Tree a Man a Sea is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Lipika Singh Darai. We Don't Wanna Make You Dance is a 2013 documentary, biographical and musical film directed by Lucy Kostelanetz. Raíces is a 2001 film directed by Paloma Suau. The Great American West is a 1995 film narrated by Jason Robards and recorded in the IMAX film format depicting the period of the American West's development between the Louisiana Purchase and the start of the 20th century. Filmed on dramatic visual locations such as Monument Valley, Grand Tetons, the Olympic Peninsula, and the California Redwoods, this movie tells the stories of successive waves of westward emigration, feature the stories of Lewis and Clark, Hugh Glass, the Oregon Trail, Chinese laborers arriving by ship, and more. Jason Robards' narration is drawn from historical letters and journals. Life in Australia: Melbourne is a 1966 short film directed by Douglas White. "Each and every day, millions of kids tune in to Sesame Street to see one of the world’s most adored and recognizable children’s characters, a furry red monster named Elmo. Yet, with all of Elmo’s fame, the man behind the Muppet is able to walk down the street without being recognized. Meet Kevin Clash. As an average teenager growing up in Baltimore in the 1970s, Kevin had very different aspirations from his classmates—he wanted to be a puppeteer. More specifically, he wanted to be part of Jim Henson’s team of Muppeteers, the creative force responsible for delivering the magic of Sesame Street on a daily basis. With a supportive family behind him every step of the way, Kevin made those dreams come true. Combining amazing archival footage with material from the present day, filmmaker Constance Marks explores his story in vivid detail, chronicling the meteoric rise of Jim Henson’s Muppets in the process." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site, There Is Something In The Air is a film directed by Iram Ghufran. Maria Island is a 1971 documentary film directed by Judith Simpson. The Midland Mystique is a documentary film directed by Charlie Minn. Youthquake! is a 1976 documentary directed by Max B. Miller. It examines the influence of rock music on religious beliefs. It won the Golden Globe Award for Best Documentary Film at the 33rd Golden Globe Awards. People's Champion: Behind the Battle is a 2011 documentary film directed by Trent Babbington and Walker Warren. Šmejdi is a 2013 documentary film written by Silvie Dymáková and Romana Mazalová and directed by Silvie Dymáková. The Endless Summer II is a 1994 film directed by Bruce Brown and is a sequel to his 1966 film The Endless Summer. In The Endless Summer II, surfers Pat O'Connell and Robert "Wingnut" Weaver retrace the steps of Mike Hynson and Robert August. It shows the growth and evolution of the surfing scene since the first film, which presented only classic longboard surfing. O'Connell rides a shortboard, which was developed in the time between the two movies, and there are scenes of windsurfing and bodyboarding. The film illustrates how far surfing had spread, with footage of surf sessions in France, South Africa, Costa Rica, Australia, Bali, Java, and even Alaska. It also has a brief cameo appearance by morey surfer Felipe Zylbersztajn, Steve Irwin, and Mary, a crocodile from Irwin's Australia Zoo. In 2003, Dana Brown, Bruce's son, made what is seen as the "third movie", Step Into Liquid. It follows the evolution of surfing over the last 10–15 years from shortboarding to tow-in surfing. The special traces the history of the competition between Los Angeles Lakers immortal "Magic" Johnson and Boston Celtics great Larry Bird, which began 30 years ago when they led their midwest universities to the 1979 NCAA Championship game, through a decade of dominance, when the two won three NBA MVP awards apiece and a combined eight NBA titles.  Debuting on the eve of March Madness, the exclusive HBO presentation also examines the different cultures that helped shape them and contributed to their unique styles, as well as exploring their unlikely friendship. "Larry Bird and 'Magic' Johnson are basketball royalty," says Ross Greenburg, president, HBO Sports.  "Their accomplishments speak for themselves at every level, but their intersecting back stories are just as rich and compelling as their championship performances.  We will tell their full life stories and provide an in-depth portrait of their complicated and historic bond. Citizen Change is a 2012 short film directed by James Chambers. Not My Life is a 2011 American independent documentary film about human trafficking and contemporary slavery. The film was written, produced, and directed by Robert Bilheimer, who had been asked to make the film by Antonio Maria Costa, executive director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Bilheimer planned Not My Life as the second installment in a trilogy, the first being A Closer Walk and the third being the unproduced Take Me Home. The title Not My Life came from a June 2009 interview with Molly Melching, founder of Tostan, who said that many people deny the reality of contemporary slavery because it is an uncomfortable truth, saying, "No, this is not my life." Filming of Not My Life took four years to complete, and documented human trafficking in 13 countries: Albania, Brazil, Cambodia, Egypt, Ghana, Guatemala, India, Italy, Nepal, Romania, Senegal, Uganda, and the United States. The first and last scenes of the film take place in Ghana, and show children who are forced to fish in Lake Volta for 14 hours a day. The film also depicts sex trafficking victims, some of whom are only five or six years old. Ice, Sweat and Tears is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Michael McNamara. Days Of Human is a documentary film directed by Tae Jun-seek. Tommy and Quadrophenia Live is a 3-disc DVD box set that includes performances by The Who from their 1989 and 1996-1997 tours. Whilst the Tommy part of the set had been already released on VHS, material from the Quadrophenia Tour had not been commercially available previously. Both sets present a heavily augmented backing band supporting Roger Daltrey, Pete Townshend and John Entwistle. In 1989 the band featured Steve 'Boltz' Bolton on guitar, John Bundrick on piano and keyboards, Simon Phillips on drums, Jody Linscott on percussion, and Chyna, Billy Nicholls and Cleveland Watkiss on backing vocals, along with the Kick Horns brass ensemble. The 1996-97 band swapped Zak Starkey for Phillips on drums and Pete's Brother Simon Townshend for Steve Bolton on guitar. For both tours Townshend heavily relied on acoustic guitars for the main part of the show, only trading it in for his electric guitars on some of the older numbers. Welcome to North Korea is a 2001 documentary film directed by Raymond Feddema and Peter Tetteroo. "Chaz Bono was a male trapped in a female shell for as long as he can remember. Growing up as Sonny and Cher’s adorable golden-haired daughter in a body he felt wasn’t his own was a crucible it took years to transcend. Now, as he undertakes gender reassignment, he’s bravely decided to share the process on camera. Becoming Chaz invites us along on Chaz’s remarkable journey of transformation. As hormone shots give way to top surgery, down-to-earth, unflappable Chaz beams with a sense of liberation and goes public with his story to put a face on a misunderstood issue. Meanwhile, his gregarious girlfriend grapples with the realities of suddenly living with a man, and it’s clear sex change isn’t solely a physical transition. Intimate and nakedly honest, the film reveals the humanity and courage it takes for Chaz to ultimately embrace his true self. His moving struggle will reverberate profoundly for anyone to whom authenticity matters." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Ozualdo Candeias And The Cinema is a 2013 drama biographical film written and directed by Eugenio Puppo. LubaBen is a 2011 short film directed by Eva Pervolovici. The Record Breaker is a 2012 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Brian McGinn. Sacco and Vanzetti is a 2006 documentary film directed by Peter Miller. Produced by Peter Miller and Editor Amy Linton, the film presents interviews with researchers and historians of the lives of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, and their trial. It also presents forensic evidence that refutes that used by the prosecution during the trial. Prison letters written by the defendants are read by voice actors with Tony Shalhoub as Sacco and John Turturro as Vanzetti. Interviewees include Howard Zinn, Studs Terkel and Arlo Guthrie. Sacco and Vanzetti won the 2007 John E. O'Connor Film Award, the annual prize for the best historical film awarded by the American Historical Association. It was released nationally in theaters in March 2007 and later on DVD. A very special Top Gear Special, presented by Jezza and Capt. Slow Esq. In fact why don't we let them introduce this particular slice of petrol heaven? Everyone has an opinion on bad cars... Now it’s time to hear the ones that really count – ours... As it’s the worst car in the history of the WORLD, we’re on our travels ... to the North of England...to name and shame the most rubbish car from a manufacturer which, frankly, should have known better. But, it’s not all about hateful cars...Oh no. You have to revel in some good ones to appreciate the stinkers. There’s the Ferrari 458 spider, Toyota’s GT86 and the £340,000 Lexus LFA rubbing shoulders with a Mercedes SLS. Our guest driver, the Stig’s Yorkshire cousin, puts his whippet to one side and throws a BMW M5 round a gymkhana course before we have a go in a couple of Transatlantic challengers. Things don’t go well. We spend treasured leisure time on the golf course continuing our debate. That doesn’t go well either. We even put our own cars – past and present – into the reckoning. That ends badly too. We argue over the great and the awful from Peugeot, Ford, Mahindra, FSO, Alfa Romeo, Rolls Royce, Porsche, Citroen, Peugeot, Saab....and many more. And we have a special, surprise fate in store for the car we pick as our biggest loser... Enjoy .... Jeremy Clarkson James May Michael Scheibler and his wife, Betty, reside on 320 acres of land in the little town of Emo, Ontario, a property that serves as a welcoming sanctuary for droves of surrounding wildlife. Michael has, quite unpredictably, become closest to the most dangerous of these animal neighbors - a group of over sixty wild bears. Bruised by tragedy, Michael finds solace through his interactions with these unconventional healers, a life-altering discovery that soon leads him on an unexpected path to love and redemption. From Reel Productions, a rare film that shows how a surprise encounter with wild animals can teach a broken man to be human again. Ebola: The Plague Fighters: Nova is a 1996 documentary film written by Elliott Halpern and Simcha Jacobovici and directed by Ric Esther Bienstock. freedom2dance is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Ina Sotirova. Movement #1 is a 2009 film directed by Daniel Hopkins. Catalejo is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Ronnie Radonich. Dolce e selvaggio is a Mondo film directed by Antonio Climati and Mario Morra. The title "Sweet and Savage" refers to the juxtaposition of pleasant and violent imagery within the film. It is narrated by the producer and long-time Mondo film director Franco Prosperi. The film is the third and final entry in Climati and Morra's Savage Trilogy and is also the last collaborative feature between the two directors. Footage in the film was supplemented by scenes that originally appeared in their previous two films, Ultime grida dalla savana and Savana violenta. Morra went on to direct one final Mondo film, The Savage Zone, while Climati later made the cannibal film Natura contro in 1988. The film has gained notoriety for the inclusion of several scenes of human death. One of the scenes, in which a man is tied to two trucks that tear off his arm, is staged. The other scenes, which are genuine, include a corpse in Tibet that is hacked apart by monks and fed to vultures and the accidental deaths of tightrope walker Karl Wallenda and stuntman A.J. Bakunas. Behind the Flickering Light: The Archive is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Hafiz Rancajale. The Second Coming is a documentary video collection released by the band Kiss in 1998. The video is focused around the reunion of the original Kiss line-up and subsequent Alive/Worldwide Tour tour, which took place in 1996 and 1997. Video Fool for Love is a 1996 Australian documentary film by film editor Robert Gibson about his love life. War Comes to America is the seventh and final film of Frank Capra's Why We Fight World War II propaganda film series. The early part of the film is an idealized version of American history which includes mention of the first settlements, the American Revolutionary War, and the ethnic diversity of America. It lists 22 immigrant nationalities, 19 of them European, and uses the then-current terms "Negro", "Jap", and "Chinaman". This section of the film concludes with a lengthy paean to American inventiveness, economic abundance, and social ideals. The run-up to World War II is then described, beginning in 1931 with the Japanese invasion of Manchuria. The film examines how American public opinion gradually changed from one of isolationism to one of support for the Allied cause, and demonstrates this using a series of Gallup polls. In 1936, public opinion is firmly isolationist, with 95% of Americans answering NO to the question "If another world war develops in Europe, should America take part again?". Congress responded with an arms embargo and a "Cash and carry rule" when trading with belligerents in raw materials. The Road to Jenin is a 2003 documentary directed by Pierre Rehov, a French-Algerian film director of Jewish descent, whose documentaries mostly deal with the Middle East conflict. The Road to Jenin was produced to counter the Palestinian narrative in relation to the Battle of Jenin, a clash between the Israeli army and Palestinian militants in April 2002 which drew Palestinian accounts of a "Jenin Massacre". This film was also a response to Mohammed Bakri's film entitled Jenin, Jenin. People's Park is a 2012 documentary film directed by Libbie Dina Coh and J.P. Sniadecki. Victor Weisskoff: physicist, lover of music and citizen of the world. NOVA profiles the international statesman of science and learns that one of the giants of 20th century physics is also one of the country's greatest humanists. Facing Sudan is a documentary film released in 2007. It chronicles the situation in Sudan from independence in 1956, through civil war and the current crisis in Darfur. The narrative of Sudan is told through the eyes of activists from various segments of American society. Brian Burns—a young custodian who traveled to South Sudan in order to effect change there—supplies the arc in the film, and links the various stories together. The tagline of the film is "Ordinary people can do extraordinary things. Even in Sudan." The film premiered in March 2007 at the Longbaugh Film Festival in Portland, Oregon. It subsequently screened at fourteen film festivals and won "Best Documentary" awards at the Landlocked Film Festival and the Illinois International Film Festival. The film was produced, directed and edited by Bruce David Janu. The soundtrack was composed by Tom Flannery and Lorne Clarke. The film was released on DVD January 8, 2008. A follow-up to Facing Sudan was completed in July, 2008. This short documentary is entitled Crayons and Paper, tells the story of Dr. Jerry Ehrlich, a pediatrician who has administered to children in conflicts zones across the world. Ugly, Me? is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Helena Ignez. Point And Shoot is a 2014 documentary film directed by Marshall Curry. Lennon Legend: The Very Best of John Lennon was released on DVD in November 2003 as a series of remastered, remixed & new videos with Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound audio mixes. The DVD featured never-before-seen footage from the Lennon/Ono archive, rare newsreel and private footage, 15 new and newly remastered music videos, 5.1 surround sound, new animations of Lennon's drawings and an extensive photo gallery including rare and previously unseen images. Featuring 20 tracks in total, the DVD featured footage that was traced back as close to its original source as possible. In many cases this meant going back to the original film negative, which was then digitally re-transferred and remastered. With footage shot on video, it was necessary to go back to John Lennon’s original camera tapes and have them re-transferred. This has been a source of contempt for Lennon fans, as the wide majority of videos on the DVD were newly made, with the exceptions of "Imagine", "Instant Karma!", and "Woman." Both "Power to the People" and "Whatever Gets You Thru the Night" are the originals, albeit in extended form, and the video for "Stand By Me" has new footage inserted. Enter The Hive is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Maciej Kukulski. Portraits of German Alkoholics is a 2009 film directed by Carolin Schmitz. This hardcore adult feature takes a psudeo-documentary look at the life and career of Marilyn Chambers, who in 1976 was one of the biggest names in XXX cinema, following her success in Behind the Green Door and Resurrection of Eve. In Inside Marilyn Chambers, adult film pioneers Jim Mitchell and Art Mitchell offer an offstage portrait of their biggest star, as we take a close look at Marylin enjoying her favorite leisure time activity (here's a hint: it isn't bowling). The Price of Kings: Oscar Arias is a documentary film directed by Joanna Natasegara and Richard Symons. Four Short Films About Love is a 2003 short documentary film written and directed by Max Andrews,Rachel Barnett,Alex Baum,Maissa Chouraki,David Cohen,Hannah Lesser,Tamara Rosenfeld,Max Staley,Sophia Teper and Leah Whitman-Salkin. American Hardcore is a documentary directed by Paul Rachman and written by Steven Blush. It is based on the book American Hardcore: A Tribal History also written by Blush. It was released on September 22, 2006 on a limited basis. The film features some early pioneers of the hardcore punk music scene including Bad Brains, Black Flag, D.O.A., Minor Threat, The Minutemen, SS Decontrol, and others. It was released on DVD by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment on February 20, 2007. The Mask of Nippon is 1942 documentary film written by Stuart Legg and directed by Margaret Palmer. Il Blues della domenica sera is a 1951 Italian short documentary film directed by Valerio Zurlini. When the Song Dies is a 2012 short documentary history film directed by Jamie Chambers. The Folk Dance of Caucasus is one of the earliest Azerbaijani films produced and directed by the pioneer of Azerbaijani cinema, Alexander Mishon. It was released on August 2, 1898. The film was shot on 35mm. Andata e ritorno is a documentary-movie produced in 1985 by movie director Daniele Segre. It is located in Pazzano, a small town in province of Reggio Calabria among 1 November and 4 November 1985. The dialogues are in part in pazzanese dialect with Italian subtitles and part in Italian. There is not an English version or subtitled. The 30 June of the same year was broadcast by TV on Raidue. The 4,5 and 6 April 2008 it was shown at the Museum Museo Diffuso della Resistenza della Deportazione, della Guerra, dei Diritti e della Libertà in Turin. Coeurs d'athlètes is a 2003 sport documentary film directed by Patrick Montel and Régis Wargnier. Eco Challenge Borneo is a 2001 documentary film. 9 Days in Summer is a promotional documentary film made by Ford that tells the story of the development of the Ford-funded Cosworth DFV and Lotus 49, the title coming from the nine Formula One races the car took part in 1967, which are also extensively featured in the film. Surnupealuu sõdurid is a 2004 documentary film. The Gatekeepers is a 2012 documentary film by director Dror Moreh that tells the story of the Israeli internal security service, Shin Bet, from the perspective of six of its former heads. The film combines in-depth interviews, archival footage, and computer animation to recount the role that the group played in Israel’s security from the Six-Day War to the present. The film was nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the 85th Academy Awards. Deep Water is a documentary film, directed by Jerry Rothwell and Louise Osmond, produced by Jonny Persey, opening in the UK on 15 December 2006. It is based on the true story of Donald Crowhurst and the 1969 Sunday Times Golden Globe Race round the world alone in a yacht. The film has received critical acclaim. The official poster quotes The Daily Telegraph, "A movie which will reduce the hardest of hearts to a shipwreck". The film won the Best Documentary award at the 2006 Rome International Film Festival and a commendation in the Australian Film Critics Association 2007 Film Awards. Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills is a 1996 documentary film directed by Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky about the trials of three teenage boys who came to be known as the West Memphis Three in West Memphis, Arkansas. They were accused of the murder and sexual mutilation of three prepubescent boys. The boys on trial for the crime were Jessie Misskelley, Damien Echols and Jason Baldwin. The film was followed by two sequels: Paradise Lost 2: Revelations and Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory. Beyond the Boundaries is a documentary sports drama film directed by Yonatan Nir. Im Grunde sind wir Kämpfer is a 1987 film directed by Michael Aue and Peter Sieglar. Jim Loves Jack: The James Egan Story is a 1995 documentary film directed by David Adkin. The Restored Films of Jan Špáta is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Jan Špáta. Une Affaire de nègres is a 2006 documentary film. Riddle of the Polar Sky is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Mark Johnston. Paper Chasers is an American independent documentary film produced by Holly Becker and Yvette Plummer, and directed by Maxie Collier. "Around the world desperate people are on the move, driven from their homes by wars or poverty. Many assume life will be better in a wealthy place like Europe. But too often their hopes are shattered. This story leads to Greece where for many it is the end of a long road—and of their dreams. Eighteen-year-old Akhtar Azimi fled Afghanistan after being threatened by the Taliban. Leaving his widowed mother and young brothers, he came to Europe alone, seeking safety." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site, Tragedy: The Story of Queensbridge is a 2005 documentary film directed by Booker Sim for Juju Films. The film documents the streets of the Queensbridge Housing Projects of New York City, following the issues and struggles of Tragedy Khadafi aka Intelligent Hoodlum. Queens rappers Havoc, Prodigy, Capone and N.O.R.E., as well as producer Marley Marl among others appeared in the film. Brand is a 1996 film written and directed by Matthias Ehlert and Lutz Pehnert. Yo soy de mi barrio is a 2002 short documentary film written and directed by Juan Vicente Córdoba. Fräulein Berlin is a 1983 film written and directed by Lothar Lambert. Rocking the Foundations is a 1985 documentary film directed by Pat Fiske. Lee Towers: The Voice of Rotterdam is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Hans Heijnen. Promises is a 2001 documentary film that examines the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from the perspectives of seven children living in the Palestinian communities in the West Bank and Israeli neighborhoods of Jerusalem. The film follows Israeli-American filmmaker B.Z. Goldberg as he meets with seven Palestinian and Israeli children between the ages of nine and thirteen, seeing the Middle East conflict through their eyes. Rather than focusing on specific political events, the film gives voice to these children, who, although living only 20 minutes apart, live in completely separate worlds. The most important aspect of the film is that it allows "ordinary" kids to develop natural bonds of affection by simply playing games with each other - bonds which go beyond the clutter of prejudices that they have heard from their parents and others around them. Promises was shot between 1997 and 2000 and was produced in association with the Independent Television Service with partial funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The film has a running time of 106 minutes, and includes Arabic, Hebrew and English dialogue with English subtitles. Sandy Storyline is a 2012 documentary film. What does a family have to endure to create a future for itself? In April 2000, Alex White Plume and his Lakota family planted industrial hemp on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota after other crops had failed. They put their hopes for a sustainable economy in hemp’s hardiness and a booming worldwide demand for its many products, from clothing to food. Although growing hemp, a relative of marijuana, was banned in the U.S., Alex believed that tribal sovereignty, along with hemp’s non-psychoactive properties, would protect him. But when federal agents raided the White Plumes’ fields, the Lakota Nation was swept into a Byzantine struggle over tribal sovereignty, economic rights and common sense. A co-presentation with Native American Public Telecommunications. (packaged to 56:46) Memories Of A Morning is a 2011 documentary film directed by José Luis Guerín. Deep Blue is a 2003 nature documentary film that is a theatrical version of the 2001 BBC nature documentary series The Blue Planet. Alastair Fothergill and Andy Byatt are credited as directors, and six cinematographers are also credited. The film premiered at the San Sebastian Film Festival in Spain on September 20, 2003. It screened in over 20 territories from 2003 to 2005 and grossed over $30 million at the box office. Solen i ögonen är en dokumentär- och konsertfilm om Lars Winnerbäck, inspelad under succéturnén sommaren 2008. Vi möter honom backstage, på scen och t.o.m. på en låtskrivarresa till Berlin. På konserterna framför han en lång rad av sina mest kända låtar, inklusive den Grammisbelönade Om du lämnade mig nu tillsammans med Miss Li. Samtidigt visar filmen också en artist som brottas med sin roll som hyllad rockstjärna och som plågas av pressen inför konserterna. My Father the Genius is a 2002 documentary film directed by Lucia Small. Hackers in Wonderland is a 2000 documentary film, produced and directed by Russel D, about hackers in the United Kingdom. The documentary contains interviews with the hackers, revealing what drives them to hack, and their opinions about hacktivism. In 1933, Richard Hollingshead invented the drive-in movie theatre, a cinema for Americans infatuated with the automobile. For seventy years, the drive-in has asserted its place in American culture as a mecca for families and restless teenagers. Their popularity peaked in 1957 when 5000 drive-ins illuminated the American landscape. Today, the "passion pit with pix" has become a dinosaur. Drive-in Blues celebrates the drive-in and laments its decline. A blank white screen looms behind interviews with old-time theatre owners who reminisce about the heyday of the drive-in and confront the reality of a dying business. Laced with unusual archival trailers, the tone of the film swings between camp and nostalgia. The Legend of Billy the Kid is a 1994 television documentary film about Billy the Kid. It was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards. Narrator David Marshall Grant received an Emmy nomination for his work on the film. The film explores the Kid's wild life, the Lincoln County War, his team, and other issues. The Passion of Marina is a 2004 documentary film written by Odelsha Agishev and directed by Andrei Osipov. The Babilée Mystery is 2000 documentary directed by Patrick Bensard. Dambé: The Mali Project is a documentary film directed by Dearbhla Glynn, and produced by Vanessa Gildea. The film documents Irish musicians Liam Ó Maonlaí and Paddy Keenan embarking on a musical adventure to the Heart of Africa; Mali. Travelling over 3,000 miles they meet and collaborate with everyone from musicians to Nomadic Herders, culminating in a unique performance at the world's most remote musical festival; The ‘Festival au Désert’. The film premiered on the 16th of February, 2008, at the 2008 Jameson Dublin International Film Festival. The film was described as "Engrossing, visually rich and surprisingly moving" by Paul Whitington in the Irish Independent, and "A unique work, which is well-told and unexpectedly moving in parts" by Steve Cummins of RTÉ. Cirque du Soleil: Midnight Sun is a 2004 documentary family music film written by Michel Lemieux and Victor Pilon and directed by Victor Pilon and Mario Rouleau. Curaçao is a 2010 documentary film written by Sarah Vos and directed by Sarah Vos and Sander Snoep. As the first Muslim woman to lead an Islamic nation, former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto evolved from a pampered princess to a polarizing politician in one of the most dangerous countries on Earth. Accused of rampant corruption, imprisoned, then exiled abroad, Bhutto was called back to Pakistan in 2007 as her country's best hope for democracy. Struck down by assassins, her untimely death sent shock waves throughout the world. Life Is Love is a 2014 documentary film directed by Halfdan Hussey and Kathleen J. Powell. The Code is a Finnish-made documentary about GNU/Linux from 2001, featuring some of the most influential people of the free software movement. Jail Dogs is a 2012 short biographical documentary crime family film written by Marcia McIntyre and directed by Shante Paige. Rasayatra is a 1994 short documentary film directed by Nandan Kudhyadi. Mirror of Holland is a 1950 short Dutch documentary film about The Netherlands, directed by Bert Haanstra. It won the Short Film Palme d'Or at the 1951 Cannes Film Festival. Philippine New Wave: This Is Not a Film Movement is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Khavn dela Cruz. Wings of Life, known as Pollen in France and Hidden Beauty: A Love Story That Feeds the Earth in the United Kingdom, is a 2011 French-American nature documentary directed by Louis Schwartzberg and released by Disneynature. It was released theatrically in France on March 16, 2011 with narration by Melanie Laurent and in home media markets across the U.S. on April 16, 2013 with narration by Meryl Streep. Thunder and Mud is a 1990 film directed by Penelope Spheeris. The Heck With Hollywood! is a 1991 American documentary film about independent film, directed by Doug Block. Prinzessinnen sind wir nie gewesen is a 1979 short documentary film directed by Axel Engstfeld. Journey To The End Of The Night is a 1982 film directed by Peter Tammer. An Omar Broadway Film is a 2007 documentary film directed by Douglas Tirola and Omar Broadway. Anonymously Yours is a documentary film by director Gayle Ferraro, released in 2002. It documents widespread abuse and exploitation of women through sexual slavery in Myanmar. It was filmed secretly in November 2000 on location in Myanmar, with interviews with prostitutes, their families and social workers. The film was then smuggled out of the country. The film follows four women trapped in the sex trade. The film is notable also for describing the practice of dunking prostitutes into leech-filled pools for hours, then removing them and harvesting the leeches, which are sold as a delicacy. Women are used instead of animals for this practice because the animals are considered too valuable. In addition, under-age prostitution, sex slavery, sex tourism and human trafficking are also discussed. Creative Growth is a 2011 drama documentary short film written and directed by Matthew Zabb-Parmley, Julian Compagni-Portis and Stephanie Hwang. American Beatboxer is a 2011 musical and historical documentary film directed by Manauvaskar Kublall. BATAYAN is a documentary film directed by Tamura Motown. Graminoids is a 2014 Short Documentary film written and directed by Lars Koens and Demelza Kooij. Three films from the 1960s and 70s, a time when Formula 1 still took on the up-and-coming drivers on some of the best tracks in Europe. Stars such as Brabham, Clark, Hill, Hulme, Surtees, Lauda, Cevert and Peterson are featured. Films are: 'Formula Junior 1960', 'Formula 2 Racers 1966' and 'F2 Close-Up Heroes'. Bettie Page Reveals All is a 2012 documentary film about the life history and cultural influence of Bettie Page. Directed by Mark Mori, much of its narration is from audiotape interviews with Page herself. Individuals offering commentary on Page and her significance include Dita Von Teese, Hugh Hefner, Rebecca Romijn, Tempest Storm, Bunny Yeager, Paula Klaw, Jessicka, Mamie Van Doren and Naomi Campbell. Hospitals Don't Burn Down is an award winning 1978 short dramatised documentary film directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith about a fire at a hospital. Paul Kelly - Stories of Me is a 2012 Australian documentary directed by Ian Darling and produced by Shark Island Productions. The film sold out within 10 hours at the 2012 Melbourne International Film Festival and before its official theatrical release on 25 Oct 2012, the film went on a sold out National Tour as special event releases with Paul Kelly and director Ian Darling appearing on stage after the screening. ABC Broadcast date: 27 October 2012 Unfinished Symphony: Democracy and Dissent is a 59-minute documentary film about a protest against the Vietnam War divided into three sections, mirroring the movements of Henryk Górecki's Symphony No. 3, the Symphony of Sorrowful Songs, to which the film is set. Set primarily in Lexington, Massachusetts over Memorial Day weekend in 1971, the film focuses on the three-day protest in the form of a march, staged by newly returned war veterans. The film premiered in the Documentary Competition at the 2001 Sundance Festival and has screened extensively throughout the United States and in Europe. The documentary examines a local conflict that reverberated nationally. Following the reverse path of Paul Revere's famous ride of 1775, the protest mounted by war veterans focused on the deeply unpopular war. Nearly 400 veterans, some in wheelchairs, others leaning on crutches, arrived to take part in what they called Operation POW. Over the course of Memorial Day weekend, they marched, sang, distributed flyers, and participated in "guerilla theater," the dramatic reenactment of tactics used against the Vietnamese. All activities were peaceful. Freedom Summer is a 2014 American documentary film, written, produced and directed by Stanley Nelson Jr.. The film had its world premiere at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. It won the Best Documentary award at 2014 Pan African Film Festival. The film will have its U.S. television premiere at PBS on June 24, 2014. The Man Who Bought Mustique is a 2000 documentary film directed by Joe Bullman. This one of a kind documentary follows an Algerian reporter Mohammed Sifaoui over a period of four months as he infiltrated an Islamic Al-Qaeda network in France. Passing himself as a religious fundamentalist, who believes in the theories of Osama Bin Laden, he wins the confidence of the network members, who suggest that he do propaganda work, reconnaissance and information gathering for them on potential targets for terrorist attack. His inquiries led him to various mosques in Paris, and London, where he meets with leaders of the network, and then on to Madrid, where he is in contact with petty crooks dealing in false papers and credit cards whose job it is supply Islamic networks with fake documents. This unique and powerful program is produced in French and Arabic with English narration and English subtitles. What Have You Done with My Country? is a 1970 documentary film directed by Frank Heimans. 9 Gates City is a 1999 documentary and short film written and directed by Kristijonas Vildžiūnas. Living Afterwards: Words of Women is a 2000 film directed by Laurent Bécue-Renard. Hellbound? is a 2012 Canadian documentary film which details the current debate regarding various views about the existence and nature of hell. Zanj Revolution is a 2013 Documentary, Drama film written and directed by Tariq Teguia. The Soul is Greater Than the World is a 1985 documentary film directed by Stefan Jarl. Out of the Fire is a 2013 Documentary, Drama and Action film written by Courtenay Singer and directed by Courtenay Singer. John Wycliffe: The Morning Star is a 1984 film about the life and teachings of John Wycliffe. The film is set entirely on the later years of his life, and deals with his falling out with the Catholic Church, his translation of the Bible into English and propels the common argument that his teachings contributed to the later Protestant Reformation of the 16th century. This film was directed by Tony Tew. "A gritty and intimate portrait of one of boxing’s most polarizing figures, James Toback’s Tyson recounts Iron Mike’s rise to superstardom and subsequent fall from grace through the eyes of the man himself. Candid interviews with Tyson reveal an often-misunderstood persona that encompasses a broad spectrum of decidedly human instincts. He is at once gentle and animalistic, humane and violent, predator and prey.After a stint in a juvenile reform school, where his boxing skills took root, the 14-year-old Tyson was introduced to legendary trainer Constantine ""Cus"" D'Amato, who took the young fighter under his wing and served as one of the only positive figures in his life. D’Amato died before he was able to see his final protégé become the sport’s youngest heavyweight champion at 20 years old, an event that started a chain reaction in Tyson’s young life. His meteoric success in the ring collapsed under a sea of controversy—his ill-fated marriage to Robin Givens, who publicly maligned him as a violent beast; an arrest and conviction for the rape of Desiree Washington, a charge which he still denies; a highly publicized falling out with promoter Don King; and his infamous 1997 rematch with Evander Holyfield.Toback manages to crack Mike Tyson’s brooding exterior to expose both the best and worst of the most explosive and controversial enigma in the history of the sport." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Sylvia: Un portrait de Parvameh Navar is a 1983 documentary written and directed by Maria Klonaris. Notes For An Imaginary Biography is a 2010 documentary film directed by Edgardo Cozarinsky. Hard Way Home is a documentary adventure drama romance film directed by Kori Feener. Vive le Tour is a 1962 French documentary by filmmaker Louis Malle. It chronicles the Tour de France and focuses on issues such as providing food for the racers, dealing with injuries and doping. The New York Times describes the film as containing "ebullience, whimsy, jet black humor, awe and unspeakable tragedy" and as "a worshipful documentary of a sport made by a man who knew it intimately and loved it." Vive le Tour won the Dok Leipzig Golden Dove award in 1966. Jean Bobet, a cyclist himself and brother of the great Louison Bobet, is the voice-over in this documentary. The 18 minute film is available on DVD from the Criterion Collection as part of their Eclipse series. Heart of the Country is documentary film directed by Michal Aviad. The Tundra Book: A Tale of Vukvukai, The Little Rock is the 2011 documentary, adventure and drama film written and directed by Aleksei Vakhrushev. Es stirbt allerdings ein jeder, fragt sich nur wie und wie Du gelebt hast (Holger Meins) is a documentary film directed by Renate Sami. The Gleaners and I: Two Years Later is a 2002 documentary film directed by Agnès Varda Mabel is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Pia Clemente. Quello Che Resta is a 2013 short documentary adventure drama film written and directed by Valeria Allievi. Why We Ride: The Story of AIDS/LifeCycle is a 2012 short documentary drama directed by Erick Stoll and Chase Whiteside. Drive in Holy Motors is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Tessa Ouvrier-Perrin. Dawn in a City Without Name is a 2013 documentary drama short film written and directed by Knutte Wester. Britney: For the Record is a 2008 documentary television film of American recording artist and entertainer Britney Spears, following her return to the recording industry after her much-publicized personal struggles the year prior. The film was shot in Beverly Hills and New York City during the third quarter of 2008; main shooting began on September 5, 2008, two days before Spears's appearance at the MTV Video Music Awards. It was directed by Phil Griffin. MTV, one of the two official distributors of the documentary, posted on their website the first promotional trailer on October 9, 2008. Britney: For the Record premiered on MTV on November 30, 2008 in the United States, two days before the release of her sixth studio album, Circus, for which the documentary served as a promotion tool. It received mixed reviews from critics, but was broadcast to high ratings and positive fan reactions. Becoming Barack is a 2009 documentary written by Stuart A. Goldman and Robert Yuhas and directed by Robert Yuhas. "A moving story about the family; about loss and the mental maps of the personal experience of homelessness. Tomer Heymann’s film takes a look at the story of five brothers and their mother, the experience of living in exile, and the joy of family ties. One after the other, three of the Heymann sons and their families have left Israel in the hope of finding a ‘better’ life in the United States. They have made their dreams reality but, at the same time, have destroyed their mother’s hopes. Their mother, a divorcee, has stayed behind in Israel with her two unmarried sons; one of them is heterosexual and the other, Tomer (the film’s director), is gay. His documentary is about belonging, displacement and sexuality. In it, he explores the tough decisions that a family sometimes has to make, and the insoluble ties that bind its members in spite of those decisions. At the same time, the director is careful to take into account the larger social and political context, so that issues such as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the tensions between Arabs and Jews living in Israel, secular versus ultra-orthodox Israelis, but also the struggle for the right to determine one’s own sexual preferences, all play a role in his investigations. Making use of old Super 8mm footage and excerpts from his own films, Tomer Heymann demonstrates just how much his family’s strength depends on forces that are beyond its control." Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Globalisation is Good is a 2003 documentary film written and presented by Johan Norberg and produced by Freeform Productions for British Channel 4. The film, directed by Charlotte Metcalf, is based on Norberg's much celebrated book In Defense of Global Capitalism that shows his view of the impact of globalisation, and the consequences of its absence. In the film, Norberg travels to countries like Taiwan, Vietnam and Kenya promoting ideas of global capitalism and attempting to prove why he feels protestors entering the anti-globalisation movement are ignorant and dangerously wrong. The film was released on DVD in November 2006 by the Swedish think tank Timbro. Solange Giraud, née Tache is a 1981 short, documentary film directed by Simone Bitton. The Other Eye is a 1991 documentary film written and directed by Johanna Heer and Werner Schmiedel. Sticky Carpet is Melbourne's alternative Rockumentary of 2006, a passionate, community driven documentary film by Mark Butcher, co-produced by Glenn Waterworth and Pip Stafford. Bio : The long overdue cultural recognition to Melbourne’s much-loved independent music scene. This raw and vital filmed souvenir interviews the musicians currently leading the charge, today’s sonic explorers such as Robin Fox and Rod Cooper, and Melbourne scene stalwarts including Ross Knight, Bruce Milne, Ron Rude and Roland S. Howard. A veritable roll call of live performance footage comes from the likes of Dirty Three, The Stabs, Baseball, Bored!, I Spit on your Gravy, The Sailors, Love of Diagrams, Pisschrist and many more. Sticky Carpet instinctively conveys the ongoing drive behind the bands - and even gets a little political. Most importantly, it shares in the passion and experimentation of Melbourne’s music scene which is great. Bands include: Over the course of one long, hot summer, filmmaker Jyllian Gunther showed up on the doorsteps of her most significant Ex's to pose the question: What went wrong? From New York to San Francisco to Paris, PULLOUT pulls out all the stops-what happens along the way includes a rekindled romance, tattooing, rejection, a stakeout, tarantulas, sex, accusations, indifference, and a nostalgia that climaxes with the realization that the past is subjective and memory is selective. Across the Top is a 1968 documentary film directed by Malcolm Douglas and David Oldmeadow. Battle for Warsaw is a 2005 documentary film directed by Wanda Koscia. The Forgotten District is a documentary film directed by Oliver Dickinson. Between the Caribbean Sea and the Maya Mountains lies Toledo, known as The Forgotten District of Belize, Central America. For the last 20 years, the Maya have been promoting their own ecotourism programme in order to protect their rainforest and traditions. Despite constant opposition from the government and the tourist industry, Margarita, Reyes, Chet and their friends remain strong and optimistic. The film is a tribute to their tireless efforts. The film has been selected by numerous festivals throughout the world and has won several awards. Sunshine Daydream is a music documentary film starring the rock band the Grateful Dead. It was shot at their August 27, 1972 concert at the Old Renaissance Faire Grounds in Veneta, Oregon. Unreleased for many years, the movie was sometimes shown at small film festivals, and bootleg recordings of it circulated on VHS and DVD, and as digital downloads. A digitally remastered and reedited official version of the film was released on August 1, 2013, showing only one time in selected theaters. It was screened with Grateful Days, a new documentary short that includes interviews with some of the concert attendees. Sunshine Daydream was released on DVD and Blu-ray on September 17, 2013. Sunshine Daydream is also a live album containing the complete August 27, 1972 Grateful Dead concert. Produced as a 3–disc CD and as a 4-disc LP, it was released by Rhino Records on September 17, 2013. The name Sunshine Daydream is taken from the coda section of the Dead song "Sugar Magnolia". Takes an in depth look at the SCORE Baja 500 through the eyes of some of its biggest competitors. Stunning 3D visuals take us deep in to the race action to find out what it takes to compete at the toughest off-road race. One Year Lease is a 2014 documentary, biographical, comedy, short film written and directed by Brian Bolster. Glimpses of West Bengal is a 1966 documentary film. Desplazamientos is a 2013 documentary short drama experimental film written and directed by Manuel Alvarez Diestro. Something Beautiful for God is a 1969 documentary film directed by Peter Chafer. "In the early 1940s, 14-year-old Pnina disappeared nearby her house in what is now Israel. Years later, she started sending letters to her family. It turned out that she had married an Arab and had children with him, but it is never completely clear if she ran away or was kidnapped. Director Noa Ben-Hagai found her great-aunt Pnina's letters and asked her uncle, a retired colonel in Israeli intelligence, to find the unknown family in the Palestinian Territories. Blood Relation chronicles the various meetings between members of this Jewish-Arab family over the course of three years in both Israel and Nablus. Needless to say that these reunions do not go smoothly: the Arabs ask their family for help to get work permits, and the Israelis feel used. Conversations with family members from both sides illustrate how difficult it can be to bring people from such different and conflicting backgrounds together. The director begins to wonder if it was a good idea to have her uncle get in touch with their Arab family. And if reconciliation within just one family is so complicated, what does that mean for the reconciliation between the people of the Middle East?" Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. The Longest War is a 2009 documentary war film written by Nelson Rand and directed by Brett Mcewen. 10 Days to D-Day is a TV movie from History Channel. Bret "Hit Man" Hart: The Best There Is, The Best There Was, The Best There Ever Will Be is a documentary film released as part of a three-DVD set on November 15, 2005, by World Wrestling Entertainment. The documentary chronicles the career of popular WWE wrestler Bret Hart. Hart collaborated with WWE to make the documentary, contributing hours of interview content to the film. This collaboration marked the first time Hart had worked in an on camera capacity with WWE since the Montreal Screwjob, which was Hart's last in-ring appearance with the company until his return on January 4, 2010. Spirit of the House is a 2011 biography documentary short film directed by Ed Beck and David Mead. Mortal Remains is a horror documentary film directed by Mark Ricche and Christian Stavrakis. Collapsus is a project that combines animation, interactive fiction, and documentary film. This story follows how the impending energy crisis affects ten young people, while international powers battle with political dissension and a fearful population during transition from Fossil fuel to alternative fuels. Set in the near future, Collapsus was initialized to raise awareness of the global issue of peak oil. Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed is a 2008 documentary film directed by Nathan Frankowski and starring Ben Stein. The film contends that the mainstream science establishment suppresses academics who believe they see evidence of intelligent design in nature and who criticize evidence supporting Darwinian evolution and the modern evolutionary synthesis as a "scientific conspiracy to keep God out of the nation's laboratories and classrooms." The scientific theory of evolution is portrayed by the film as contributing to fascism, the Holocaust, communism, atheism, and eugenics. The film portrays intelligent design as motivated by science, rather than religion, though it does not give a detailed definition of the phrase or attempt to explain it on a scientific level. Other than briefly addressing issues of irreducible complexity, Expelled examines it as a political issue. Expelled opened in 1,052 theaters, more than any other documentary before it, and grossed over $2,900,000 in its first weekend. It earned $7.7 million, making it the 18th-highest-grossing documentary film in the United States. Modern Times: The Way of All Flesh is a 1997 documentary film directed by Adam Curtis. Fixing The Earth One Watershed At A Time is a 2013 educational documentary film directed by Thomas B. Dunklin. Araya is a 1959 Venezuelan-French documentary film directed by Margot Benacerraf and co-written by Benacerraf and Pierre Seghers. It depicts the lives of laborers who extract salt from the sea off the Araya peninsula in Venezuela. Their method for extracting salt, virtually unchanged for centuries, depends on grueling physical labor, but provides a dependable, if meager, living for the men and their families. The film ends with a recently built plant for mechanized salt extraction that could eliminate the community's traditional source of income. The film was entered into the 1959 Cannes Film Festival, where it shared the Cannes International Critics Prize with Alain Resnais's Hiroshima mon amour. In 2009, Milestone Films released Araya in North American theaters for the first time as well as rereleasing it internationally. Milestone also distributes a restored DVD version of the film. Collaboration Horizontale is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Ciaran Cassidy. The Prisoner of the Iron Bars is a documentary film directed by Paulo Sacramento. Under the Green Sun is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Chantal Lasbats. Jamie Cullum's live performance at Blenheim Palace is a concert documentary film directed by Danny O'Connor. The Hills of Disorder is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Andrea Tonacci. Power and Terror: Noam Chomsky in Our Times is a 2002 documentary film directed by John Junkerman. Megamall is a documentary film directed by Vera Aronow, Sarah Mondale and Roger Grange. Tsunami: 7 Hours on Boxing Day is a 2005 documentary film directed by Kevin Sim. I Am a Fine Musician is a a short music documentary film directed by Patrick Hummel. Crafting a Nation is a documentary film directed by Thomas Kolicko. Mixtaped is the first DVD release by British art rock group No-Man, consisting of a double DVD with a live performance filmed at the London's Bush Hall on August 29, 2008, and a retrospective documentary titled Returning directed by award winning journalist Richard Smith, amongst other features. The DVD takes its name from a song in Schoolyard Ghosts. Ballhawks is a 2010 sports documentary film directed by Mike Diedrich. The Lost Fish: The Struggle To Save Pacific Lamprey is a 2013 short drama documentary film written by Jeremy Monroe and directed by Jeremy Monroe and David Herasimtschuk. Keep the Promise: The Global Fight Against AIDS is a 2013 short documentary, biographical and historical film directed by Jörg Fockele and Marc Smolowitz. Place de l'étoile is a 1897 documentary short film. Niki de Saint Phalle is a 1995 documentary film written by Peter Schamoni and Niki De Saint Phalle directed by Peter Schamoni. Lost Boys of Sudan is a documentary film by Megan Mylan and Jon Shenk about two Dinka boys from Sudan, Santino Majok Chuor and Peter Nyarol Dut, who reached the United States after fleeing the civil war in their country. "Orphaned as young boys" in the Second Sudanese Civil War they "survived lion attacks and militia gunfire to reach a refugee camp in Kenya along with thousands of other children." The documentary's title “Lost Boys of Sudan” was originally the name given to the group of Southern Sudanese youth by United Nations aid workers who were monitoring their flight from Sudan. Wilmington 10 - U.S.A. 10,000 is a 1979 documentary film directed by Haile Gerima. Wilde Salomé is a 2011 American documentary-drama film written, directed by and starring Al Pacino. An exploration of Oscar Wilde's play Salomé, the film premiered at the 68th Venice International Film Festival. At the festival, Pacino was presented with the Glory to the Filmmaker! Award and the film won the Queer Lion award. The United States premiere of Wilde Salomé was held on March 21, 2012, at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco's Castro District. Marking the 130th anniversary of Oscar Wilde's visit to San Francisco, the premiere was a fundraiser for the GLBT Historical Society, with 1,000 tickets reserved for sale to the public. A new version of the film without the documentary elements, titled Salomé, is scheduled to be released in 2014. Creation Formula is a 2013 documentary film written by Nicolay Davtyan and Lilit Melkonyan; and directed by Nicolay Davtyan. The New Jersey shore is a popular destination for sunbathers, surfers and boaters; but what lies off the coast at the bottom of the ocean is what draws divers from all over the world. Waiting for the intrepid treasure seeker on the ocean floor is an abundance of shipwrecks teaming with fish, lobster, scallops...and hidden treasures. Svyato is a 2005 documentary short written and directed by Victor Kossakovsky. Font Men is a 2013 biographical and documentary film written and directed by Dress Code. Brother Number One is a 2011 documentary directed by Annie Goldson, starring Rob Hamill. And You Belong is a 2013 documentary and music film directed by Julia Ostertag. Io sono Tony Scott, ovvero come l'Italia fece fuori il più grande clarinettista del jazz is a 2012 Italian documentary directed by Franco Maresco. It is a documentary film about the life of the Italian-American jazz musician Anthony Joseph Sciacca, known to the public as Tony Scott, starting from his childhood and youth in the USA, until his death, following a long illness, in Rome in 2007. In the film, a great number of American and Italian musicians are interviewed, such as the legend of clarinet Buddy DeFranco, pianist Mario Rusca and drummer Tony Arco and, also, a few non-musician friends of Scott’s. Moreover, Scott’s three wives and the two daughters from his second marriage provided many details about Tony Scott's life and, also, about their own feelings. The documentary was shown at the 63rd Locarno International Film Festival and at the Vancouver International Film Festival in 2010. My Love Awaits Me by the Sea is a 2013 documentary, biography, fantasy film, written and directed by Mais Darwazah. Dover was a short 1943 film produced by the British Ministry of Information. It concerns the town of Dover, the most likely "frontline" in any potential German invasion and how it had persevered since 1940. The film, which stars Edward R. Murrow, opens with a look back at the circumstances of mid-1940, how the British had arrived there after Dunkirk, the continuous air raids during the battle of Britain, and the stoicism of the people as they prepared to "die with their boots on" when the invasion came. Now, two years later, Dover is still the front line, but not for defence, for offence. RAF planes control the skies and more Allied sorties are flown over German targets than German raids on Britain. The people have stoically and bravely gone on with their normal lives, while helping the war effort; most of the men are in the forces, while the women man the anti-aircraft guns. The film ends with the narrator promising that someday soon, barges will leave Britain's shore to liberate Europe. Elefanten is a 2000 film directed by Karl Kels. Play On, John: A Life in Music is 2009 documentary film written and directed by Rick King. Living in Emergency: Stories of Doctors Without Borders was among the 15 documentaries shortlisted for the Best Documentary Oscar by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for the 82nd Academy Awards. It is the first uncensored film about Médecins Sans Frontières and seeks to viscerally portray the real life of western doctors in the field as they confront the many difficulties and dilemmas of working in extreme conditions with limited resources. Although Living in Emergency is a cinema verité documentary film, it has been compared to fictional films like M*A*S*H and the TV series House. Historic Hospitality is a 2012 documentary, short, and family film written and directed by Geoffrey Brent Shrewsbury. Do Not Enter: The Visa War Against Ideas is a 1986 documentary film co-directed by Catherine Warnow and written and co-directed by Robert Richter. "Students from the University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire taped their experiences at the 40th annual Pride events held in San Francisco, CA, with an eye to create their own film festival" - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Siege is a 1940 documentary short about the Siege of Warsaw by the Wehrmacht at the start of World War II. It was shot by Julien Bryan, a Pennsylvanian photographer and cameraman who later established the International Film Foundation. Siege was nominated for an Oscar for Best One-reel Short at the 13th Academy Awards in 1941, and in 2006 it was named to the National Film Registry by the Librarian of Congress as "a unique, horrifying record of the dreadful brutality of war". A Matter of Taste is a 2010 documentary film directed by Sally Rowe. "In 2000, chef Paul Liebrandt was awarded 3 stars by the New York Times - at 24 he was the youngest to receive such acclaim. Post September 11th, however, no one was interested in such hyper-modern dishes as "espuma of calf brains and foie gras” and “eel,violets and chocolate.” A rare insight into the cutthroat world of haute cuisine, A MATTER OF TASTE charts Paul’s struggles over the next decade both in and out of the kitchen as he tries to make his way back to the top." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. Stirring is a 1974 documentary film directed by Jane Oehr. A sweet and lyrical documentary about a simple pen pal program, Brownstones to Red Dirt captures the growth of sixth graders from housing projects in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn and war orphans from Freetown, Sierra Leone. Though the kids know nothing about one another when they write their first letters, they learn that while their environments are vastly different, the struggles they face make them more alike than they realized. This revelation brings them closer together and teaches us all inspirational lessons about friendship, love and humanity.As the school year progresses, the children use their life experiences to teach one another simple lessons.   Yet in the midst of their day-to-day struggles, the children choose not to dwell upon the shortcomings of the societies that have failed them, instead focusing on their new friendships and how they can help one another.In the film’s climax, the kids are inspired to enact change themselves, and the kids in Brooklyn hold a grassroots fundraiser to raise money for their pen pals. But the change isn’t just in their actions, it’s in how they approach life as well. In the end, the lessons they learn of perseverance and love are uplifting messages of hope that dissolve boundaries and make the world a smaller—and perhaps friendlier—place to grow up in. The Smile of the Leader is a 2011 documentary film directed by Marco Bechis and written by Gigi Riva and Marco Bechis. Master Chefs - Test of a Lifetime is a 2003 JBF Awards nominated work for the Television Special Award. Our Forbidden Places is a 2008 documentary film. How Much Does Your Building Weigh, Mr. Foster? is a documentary film written by Deyan Sudjic and directed by Carlos Carcas and Norberto López Amado. Cinema português (...)? is a 1997 documentary film directed by Manuel Mozos. Film Belongs to the People is a 1945 documentary film Cinematographers of Film-Journal. People in White is a documentary film written and directed by Tellervo Kalleinen and Oliver Kochta-Kalleinen. Hija is a 2012 documentary, comedy and drama film written by María Paz Gonzáles and Francisco Hervé and directed by María Paz González. The film Five Men of Australia was revised and released by the National Film Board of Canada in August 1942 as part of its wartime propaganda series The World in Action. God, Give Freedom is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Garegin Zakoyan. Refugee Kids: One Small School Takes on the World is a 2013 documentary film by Renée Silverman and Peter Miller. After one of the most notorious sneak attacks in military history, join National geographic for an exploration of the still unsolved mysteries and startling true stories behind the "day of infamy" that plunged the United States into World War II. Set sail with Dr. Robert Ballard, discoverer of the Titanic, in search of a sunken Japanese midget submarine that could have changed history. Relive the momentous battle through American and Japanese eyewitness accounts, and see the haunting, first-ever images captured inside the sunken hull of the U.S.S. Arizona battleship. Experience the real story of December 7, 1941, as only National Geographic can tell it. Narrated by Tom Brokaw. Jamey's Fight is a 2013 year short drama film directed by Denise Janzée . The Elephant Will Never Forget is a 1953 short documentary film directed and written by John Krish. The Worlds of Bernice Bing is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Madeleine Lim. Le coccinelle - Sceneggiata Transessuale is a 2011 documentary film directed by Emanuela Pirelli. Bruno S. - Die Fremde ist der Tod is a 2002 film directed by Miron Zownir. Herschell Gordon Lewis: The Godfather of Gore is a 2010 documentary horror film directed by Frank Henenlotter and Jimmy Maslon. Symphony for the Spire is a 1992 British Academy Television Craft Award for Sound - Factual nominated tv program. Navajo is a 1952 documentary film directed by Norman Foster. It was nominated for two Academy Awards for Best Documentary Feature and Best Cinematography. Eazy-E: The Life and Timez of Eric Wright is a 2002 documentary film. Heavy Horse Pull is a 1980 short documentary film. Will My Mother Go Back to Berlin? is a 1993 film directed by Micha X. Peled. Atlantiques is a 2009 short, experimental and documentary film written and directed by Mati Diop. Corta is a 2012 history, documentary film written and directed by Felipe Guerrero. Das Wunder von Mailand is a 1966 German documentary film written and directed by Hans Rolf Strobel and Heinrich Tichawsky. Crack USA: County Under Siege is a 1989 American documentary film directed by Vince DiPersio and Bill Guttentag. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Urban Explorers: Into the Darkness is a documentary film about urban exploration. A Pension Payday is a 2008 documentary film directed by Kornelijus Matuzevicius and Diana Matuzeviciene. Root for Charles, John and Garnet as they try to buck the system of pills and procedures and outfox their heart disease and diabetes. When their doctors inform them they can't get better, our intrepid trio tells the doctors to think again. Charles, John and Garnet decide to take on their diseases by drastically changing their diets. We all know making resolutions is easy; sticking to them is the hard part. With lighthearted animation, piercing expert interviews and a feisty attitude, CHOW DOWN is the moving story of the success you can achieve when you rewrite the recipe for a healthy life. Marian Anderson: the Lincoln Memorial Concert is a 1939 documentary film which documents a concert performance by African American opera singer Marian Anderson after the Daughters of the American Revolution had her barred from singing in Washington D.C.'s Constitution Hall because she was black. Officials of the District of Columbia also barred her from performing in the auditorium of a white public high school. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt helped hold the concert at Lincoln Memorial, on federal property. The Easter Sunday, April 9, 1939, performance was attended by 75,000. In 2001, this documentary film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". The Loving Story is a 2011 documentary film written by Nancy Buirski and Susie Ruth Powell and directed by Nancy Buirski. Lunch Line follows six kids from one of the toughest neighborhoods in Chicago as they set out to fix school lunch -- and end up at the White House. Their unlikely journey parallels the dramatic transformation of school lunch from a patchwork of local anti-hunger efforts to a robust national feeding program. The film tracks the behind-the-scenes details of school lunch and childhood hunger from key moments in the 1940s, 1960s, and 1980s to the present, revealing political twists, surprising alliances, and more common ground than people might realize. 25x5: The Continuing Adventures of the Rolling Stones is a documentary on the rock group The Rolling Stones between 1963 and 1989. Bloody Daughter is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Stéphanie Argerich. Fox Walkers is a 2012 short documentary adventure film directed by Anabella Funk. Level 1 is stepping on the gas and dropping the clutch on their latest release, a fuel injected turbo-charged foray into the '08 Winter season, delivering the best skiing the world over from a record setting and truly unforgettable year. Tom Wallisch, Ahmet Dadali, Mike Hornbeck, and JF Houle get down to business with urban adventures across the Midwest and Quebec, redefining technical jibbing, and setting a new bar on what's possible. Tanner Rainville, Stefan Thomas, Wiley Miller, and Steele Spence shred neck deep pow and bring their brand of freestyle to technical terrain across North American's mountains - from minigolf in Wyoming to the real big mountain terrain of Alaska, and everything in between. Justin Dorey, Mike Riddle, Duncan Adams, and Adam Delorme steal the show at Level 1's trademark parkshoot progression sessions, boosting the biggest features this side of the Atlantic. House of love is a 2005 documentary film. Go Further is a documentary film by Ron Mann starring Woody Harrelson and a group of other environmental activists riding around in a large, bio-fueled bus. The tour was called the Simple Organic Living Tour and it was produced by cause-related marketers The Spitfire Agency. The film debuted at the South by Southwest Film Festival in March 2003, and at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2003, where it was first runner-up for the People's Choice Award. It was also nominated for a Genie Award for Best Documentary. The film features cameos of Dave Matthews, Natalie Merchant, Ken Kesey, Bob Weir, Michael Franti, Anthony Kiedis, Rob Heydon, Medeski Martin & Wood, and The String Cheese Incident. A hilarious and insightful documentary that tells the story of the bizarre California Recall Election. Documentary filmmaker Alex Cooke followed the campaign from the moment Arnold Schwarzenegger announced his candidacy through to his victory. With so many candidates --- from delusional hopefuls, to actors, porn stars, porn peddlers, self-promoters and performance artists, as well as seasoned politicians---the circus really did come to town. Filmmaker, or "Filmmaker: a diary by george lucas", is a 32 minute documentary made in 1968 by George Lucas about the making of Francis Ford Coppola's The Rain People. Himalayan Gold Rush is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Eric Valli. Olga - To My Friends is a 2013 documentary, biographical, drama film written and directed by Paul-Anders Simma. Open Letter is a 2012 short documentary biographical film directed by Theo Schear. Nobody’s Business is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Alan Berliner. I Think Of You Often is a 1983 short documentary film directed by Scott Barrie. Frontier is a 2011 documentary and short film directed by Michael Almereyda. Orquesta Tipica is a 2005 documentary film that tells the story of a tango orchestra which travels the world playing traditional Argentinian music. Nicolas Entel directed the film, which was mostly shot in Buenos Aires, though he filmed the Orquesta Típica Fernández Fierro during their first European Tour through the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland and Italy. He also filmed the group during a mini tour in Uruguay. By the beginning of 2004 the filming was finished and Nicolas Entel, together with the editor Pablo Farina, spent eight months in offline editing. The film appeared in theatres in Argentina and it won the Audience Award in the Beverly Hills Festival in 2006. It was selected to open the Saint Paul, Minnesota Wild River Music Film Festival in September, 2006. Also, presented in the Tandil Week of Cinema, Urban Tango Festival in Barcelona, Turks & Caicos International Film Festival, San Rafael Film Festival and Boston Latin International Film Festival, among others. Kings of The Wind & Electric Queens is a 2014 documentary western film written and directed by Cédric Dupire and Gaspard Kuentz. Le sculpteur parfait is a 1979 short, documentary film directed by Rafi Toumayan. The Restaurateur is a 2010 documentary film. Wer ist Helene Schwarz? is a 2004 documentary writen and directed by Rosa von Praunheim. "Esben Benestad runs his own doctor’s surgery in a small Norwegian town, he has written two books on sex education and contributes to a men’s magazine. He is also a transvestite working as an occasional actress and sex therapist under the name of Esther Pirelli. Young Norwegian director Even Benestad offers us a suggestive portrait of his father, conveyed with both warmth and irony. Using a combination of archive family footage and video recordings of interviews with his father and other members of the family, he creates an intimate mosaic of emotions, opinions and responses, complemented with images of Esben’s cross-dressing rituals, family arguments and stylised scenes. The director captures the history of an unusual family with an unconventional father, whose current wife supports him whole-heartedly in everything he does. In contrast, his former wife, daughter and son, in spite of their love and respect for him, criticise him mercilessly for his behaviour in a stubborn attempt to find an explanation for the events they experienced over the past quarter century. In its friendly openness and sensitive humour, the film acts as a tonic for the trauma of family life." Quoting the synopsis from the 2002 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival site. American Values, American Wilderness is a 2004 documentary film written by Christopher Barns and directed by Drury Gunn Carr, Doug Hawes-Davis and Christopher Barns. Vorrei ma non posso. Il film is a 2013 film directed by Enzo Facente. Cerro Rico, Tierra Rica is a 2011 documentary film directed by Juan Vallejo. Neil Young: Silver & Gold is a live video by Neil Young performing solo on acoustic guitar and piano. All but the last song were performed at Austin, Texas' Bass Concert Hall during his 1999 solo acoustic tour. Anima Mundi is a 1992 short documentary film directed by Godfrey Reggio. The film focuses on the world of nature and wildlife, particularly jungles, sealife, and insects. The movie was commissioned by Italian jewellers Bulgari for use by the World Wide Fund for Nature in their Biological Diversity Program. The film was scored by Philip Glass, who also worked with Reggio on Koyaanisqatsi, Powaqqatsi, and Naqoyqatsi. Anima Mundi features many of the techniques from the Qatsi trilogy, and was produced in between the release of Powaqqatsi and Naqoyqatsi, but is not considered to be directly related to the series. Huey Long is an American documentary film on the life and career of politician Huey Long. It was directed by Ken Burns, and produced by Ken Burns and Richard Kilberg in 1985. The film first aired on October 15, 1986. The film includes interviews with Russell B. Long and Robert Penn Warren. It was narrated by historian David McCullough. Heartworn Highways is a documentary film by James Szalapski whose vision captured some of the founders of the Outlaw Country movement in Texas and Tennessee in the last weeks of 1975 and the first weeks of 1976. The film was not released theatrically until 1981. The Elect is a 2011 short, documentary and news film directed by Dan Moore and Erin Zacek. Dust to Dust: The Health Effects of 9/11 is an documentary film that was broadcast on the Sundance Channel. It was directed by Heidi Dehncke-Fisher and produced by Bruce Kennedy in 2006. The Executive Producer was Hal Gessner of CBS News Productions. Associate Producers included Marisa Karplus and Josh Ravitz. It addressed the health effects on people in the vicinity of the collapsed World Trade Center following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in New York City. It also questions whether politics influenced federal Environmental Protection Agency statements asserting air safety in lower Manhattan. It includes interviews with ill victims of the Twin Towers' dust and health officials in New York City. It also includes quotes by government officials, such as a video of then New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani saying, "The air quality is safe and acceptable." Actor Steve Buscemi, a former New York City firefighter, is the narrator of the film. The day following the September 11th attacks, Buscemi volunteered and worked on relief efforts for one week, all the while shunning publicity for it. An Ordinary Devil is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Alicija Žukauskaitė. A Cow at My Table is a 1998 documentary film examining Western attitudes towards farm animals and meat. It covers the conflict between animal rights advocates and the meat industry, and their respective attempts to influence consumers. It was directed, shot and edited by Jennifer Abbott, who spent five years travelling across Canada, the United States, Australia and New Zealand to interview representatives on all sides. The film intercuts these interviews with images of farm animals and industrial farming operations. It explores what is sometimes popularly called factory farming. The filming of A Cow at My Table drew early criticism from the Canadian meat industry, with both the Ontario Chicken Marketing Board and the Dairy Farmers of Ontario publishing articles warning of Abbott's actions. Music for the film was performed by Oh Susanna. The Bather is a 2008 documentary short film directed by George Griffin. What makes an artist? What drives someone to create a painting, a composition or write a novel? While many academic categories of art exist, not every artist easily fits into prescribed meanings. Alan Russell-Cowan is one such artist. Afflicted with paranoid schizophrenia, Cowan struggles with the desire to be a great painter while battling delusions and auditory hallucinations. "My Name is Alan and I Paint Pictures" examines Cowan’s life, the role art plays in it, and how mental illness intertwines with artistic creation and perception. For Alan painting becomes a cure for his symptoms and the means of his release, yet for us his painting means much more. It is an alternative perspective on art and life, a world of mental illness visually reconstructed for viewers who will never experience this themselves Through Alan’s life and work, we can examine the wider art world, questioning the means and rationale behind contemporary critical judgment of art. The Florestine Collection is a 2011 animation documentary short film directed by Sam Helen Hill and Paul Gailiunas. Rushcart is a 2013 short film directed by Tom P. Chick and Rory Alexander Stewart. Beastie Boys Video Anthology is a 2000 DVD compilation of video clips by the Beastie Boys. The compilation was issued by The Criterion Collection as their 100th DVD title. Best known for releasing DVDs of foreign and arthouse films, The Beastie Boys Video Anthology is Criterion's first, and currently only, music video compilation. Each music video featured on this set contains numerous video angles and audio mixes which the viewer can mix-and-match with the DVD remote. Discovering 'The Last Airbender' is a 2010 documentary film. Metal of Honor: The Ironworkers of 9/11 is a documentary film about the ironworkers who worked on the World Trade Center after 9/11. It premiered on Spike TV on September 5, 2006. The Jim Rose Circus Show is a 1993 film directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris. Megacities is a 1998 documentary film from Austria written and directed by Michael Glawogger. Sinai Field Mission is a 1978 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. After the Fire is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Jacques Perconte. "A train is heading to the vanishing skyline; in perpetual colour metamorphosis, the landscape never ceases to stay still. A train journey through a rough mountain terrain taking the experimentation with colour and digital aesthetics to an effectual fragmented deconstruction of the vista into its building blocks. The railway line splits the ground and cuts through the image in perpetual motion as it struggles to reach the vanishing point ahead." Quoting the description from the 2011 International Film Festival Rotterdam site. But the Hour Is Near is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Juris Poskus. The Great Rift: Africa's Wild Heart is a British nature documentary series, which began airing on BBC Two on 24 January 2010. A BBC/Animal Planet co-production, the three-part series focuses on the landscape and wildlife of the Great Rift Valley in East Africa. At the end of each fifty-minute episode, a ten-minute featurette entitled Inside The Great Rift takes a behind-the-scenes look at the challenges of filming the series. The series received its US broadcast premiere in August 2010 on Animal Planet, where it was screened as a two-hour special under the shortened title Great Rift. Narration for both the BBC and Animal Planet versions was provided by Hugh Quarshie. Be Here To Love Me: A Film About Townes Van Zandt is a 2004 documentary film directed by Margaret Brown which chronicles the often turbulent life of American singer-songwriter Townes Van Zandt. The film includes interviews of Van Zandt's immediate family and contemporaries such as Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, Emmylou Harris, Lyle Lovett, Steve Earle and Guy Clark along with "... home movies, old TV performances and, especially, early Seventies footage originally filmed by James Szalapski for his outlaw country documentary Heartworn Highways." Pas assez de volume! - Notes sur l'OMC is a 2004 documentary film directed by Vincent Glenn. The Real Cancun is a 2003 American reality film released on April 25, 2003 in the U.S. Inspired by the reality television genre, this film followed the lives of sixteen Americans from March 13–23, 2003 as they celebrated spring break in Cancún, Mexico and experienced romantic relationships, emotional strife, or just had a good time. The film was nominee for Worst Picture at the 2003 Golden Raspberry Awards. It was also nominated for Worst Excuse for an Actual Movie. Film director Michael Tully argued that the timing of the film's release during the U.S. invasion of Iraq makes the film's depiction of young American hedonism "one of the more unintentionally brilliant statements of hypocrisy of the decade" and the film itself "a disturbingly relevant historical document". The film was released to movie theaters only a month after filming was completed, and was released on DVD and home video only a couple of months after that, marking one of the fastest turnarounds ever from production to theatrical release to home video. Ulrike Marie Meinhof is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Timon Koulmasis. Stratum 1: The Visitors is a documentary film directed by Cong Feng. Yes: Live – 1975 at Q.P.R. is a video release of a 1975 concert by the group Yes at Queens Park Rangers' Loftus Road stadium in England. Some of the footage was originally broadcast on The Old Grey Whistle Test. The performance was available for many years as a bootleg before former Yes manager Brian Lane co-ordinated a 1993 2-volume VHS release without any input from, or consultation with, the band members. In 2001 the video had a 2-disc DVD release. Intertwining stunning underwater footage with ancient legend, the film offers a glimpse into an centuries-old Australian tribal culture revolving around the magestic creatures, the whales, and suggests a reexamination of our relationship with nature. The Family Jams is a 2009 documentary film directed by Kevin Barker. Mamis: A Family Portrait is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Virginia Fuentes. The Barefoot Bandit Documentary is a 2013 documentary film directed by Carly Bodmer. In Their Room: Berlin is a 2011 documentary drama film written and directed by Travis Mathews. La vie après la mort d'Henrietta Lacks is a 2005 documentary short film written and directed by Mathias Thery. Herb Alpert: Music for Your Eyes is a 2002 American documentary film about the paintings and sculptures of musician and record producer Herb Alpert. It was written, produced and directed by Tom Neff. The soundtrack of the film is co-composed and performed by Alpert. Life Is a Banquet is a 2009 documentary film directed and written by Jonathan Gruber. Will He Conquer Dempsey? is 1923 short documentary film. American Babylon is a 2000 documentary film directed by Robert Stone. But... Seriously is a comedy documentary film directed by Jeff Lieberman. Get Real! Wise Women Speak is a 2011 documentary film written by Joni Steele Kimberlin and directed by Joni Steele Kimberlin After Porn Ends, is a documentary that not only examines the lives and careers of some of the biggest names in the history of the adult entertainment industry; but what happens to them after they leave the business and try to live the average lives that millions of others enjoy. They hailed from the rural South, steel towns, and the San Fernando Valley. As teenagers, and young adults, none of them thought that porn was in their future. They were artists, baseball players, child prodigies, and even Ivy Leaguers. Now, after their lives in porn; they’re television stars, bounty hunters, writers, and social activists. What happened in between? And now that they’ve moved on, can they really live a normal life after porn? Paris, Not France is a 2008 documentary film following American heiress and entertainer Paris Hilton. The 68-minute introspective documentary chronicles Hilton during her much-publicized professional successes and personal struggles. "One morning Devin Dearth went to the gym to work out, just like he did every morning. A few hours later he suffered a bleed in his brain stem – a stroke that is often fatal. After three weeks in an intensive care unit and 100 days in a rehabilitation center, his care is terminated due to insurance maximums. Even the doctor admits that patient goals are often driven by insurance coverage and an uninsured stay for in-patient care will cost $100,000-$150,000 per month for Devin. Formally a body builder and fitness freak, the condition Devin faces is unacceptable; not just to him, but also to his brother Doug (the film's director) who goes searching online to find other, more affordable treatment options. He discovers a Chinese stroke rehabilitation program based out of the First Teaching Hospital of Tianjin at the University of Traditional Chinese Medicine. Following a series of fundraisers, Devin, wife Stacey, and Doug head to China to begin the treatment. After the first day of acupuncture treatments and medicinal herbal baths, he sees more improvement than in many weeks of treatment in the United States. The integration of eastern techniques, including the use of 9,157 acupuncture needles, and western techniques seems to be the ticket. 9,000 NEEDLES is a personal, riveting, and moving story of a family’s powerful love and healing, and one man’s journey back from the brink." Quoting C.C.P. form the 2010 Cleveland International Film Festival site. The Girl and Chocolate Film is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Spike Jonze, Ty Evans and Cory Weincheque. Atalaku is a 2013 documentary, drama, historical fiction film written and directed by Dieudo Hamadi. Butoh is a documentary film directed by Constanza Sanz Palacios. Talking Sex: Making Love in the 90's is a 1995 News & Documentary Emmy Awards nominee. "Gay Pool Party – 1968 is an experimental short about a gay pool party set against the chaos of — you guessed it — 1968." Quoting the synopsis form the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Muscle Beach is a short documentary film directed by Joseph Strick and Irving Lerner, showing amateur athletes and bodybuilders at "Muscle Beach" in Venice Beach, California. The soundtrack consists of songs sung by Earl Robinson. This film and The Savage Eye were restored by the Academy Film Archive in 2008 and premiered in February 2009 at San Francisco Cinematheque. Moscow Pride '06 is a documentary movie of the 2006 Gay pride parade in Moscow. In this issue we look at the story of Lester Lloyd Coke. He was a community gangster that was feared by many and killed hundreds. An in depth History of Jamaican organized crime in America. Hurricane on the Bayou is an American 2006 documentary film that focuses on the wetlands of Louisiana before and after Hurricane Katrina. Hurricane on the Bayou is both a documentary of Hurricane Katrina's effects and a call to restore Louisiana's wetlands, rebuild New Orleans, and honor the culture of the city. The film is narrated by actress Meryl Streep and driven by a jazz-, blues-, Cajun-, and gospel-fueled soundtrack featuring Tab Benoit, Amanda Shaw, Mavis Staples and Allen Toussaint. It was originally a "what-if" scenario about a major hurricane impacting New Orleans prior to Hurricane Katrina. The film debuted at the Entergy IMAX in New Orleans, La., on the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, several months before being shown elsewhere. The Forth Road Bridge is a 1965 British documentary film directed by Gordon Lang about the Forth Road Bridge. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Hannes Jaenicke´s Wildlife Underground: Sharks is a 2009 film directed by Judith Adlhoch and Eva Gfirtner. Love Child is a 2014 South Korean-American documentary film written, directed and produced by Valerie Veatch. The film premiered in-competition in the World Cinema Documentary Competition at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. The film was theatrically released by HBO on June 18, 2014. "In the summer of 2007, just after the release of Icky Thump and in the lead-up to their tenth anniversary, The White Stripes set out on an ambitious and idiosyncratic tour, aiming to play in every province and territory in Canada, 'from the ocean to the permafrost', as Jack White put it. Given the band's heavy investment in creating mystique and managing their own image, it's intriguing to learn that film maker Emmett Malloy was invited along, and was able to record this beautifully shot and often very touching document of their journey on and off stage. The night-time gigs often have the feel of being big events in small towns, whilst during the day, Jack and Meg play a variety of 'secret' shows - in pool halls, schools, bowling alleys, even a flour mill - where their blues roots resonate with many of the communities they visit. This version of The White Stripes, best seen in a wonderful scene with a group of Inuit elders, is less the cool, successful rock and roll band, and more as curious if musically gifted duo in search of authentic experiences. Alongside this, the intimate moments between the acutely private Meg and her ersatz brother are fascinating, and ultimate poignancy of the film is every bit as haunting as the wide Canadian landscapes." Quoting Sandra Hebron Ore Thooval Pakshikal is a 1988 Malayalam film written, directed and produced by Chintha Ravi. The film, in a docu-drama style, depicts the last days of the British Raj. It stars Balan K. Nair, Tom Alter, Nilambur Balan and Mokeri Ramachandran in pivotal roles. The film features an original score composed by legendary filmmaker G. Aravindan. Journey into Life: The World of the Unborn is a 1990 American short documentary film directed by Derek Bromhall. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Historic Pubs of Dublin is a 2008 documentary film written by Debra Herbold and directed by Duane Huey. "This year, millions of Iranians poured into the streets to support reforming their government, and their protests elicited a violent response from a militia group known as the Bassidj. Director Mehran Tamadon had the prescience to explore the world of the Bassidj in 2007, before they recently made headlines. As an Iranian citizen who now lives abroad, Tamadon cultivated access to Bassidj members over several years. Without hiding his own secular liberalism, he got bassidjis to talk about their religious and political convictions. The resulting dialogue helps us better understand the opposition to the reform movement. In Persian, bassidj means “mobilized.” The label was adopted by volunteers who supported elite troops in the Iran-Iraq War of 1980 to 1988. Staunch in their dedication, bassidjis were known to march across minefields. After the war ended, the Bassidj remained active throughout Iranian society in mosques, schools and public services. Tamadon divides his film into two sections. The first half takes place at battle sites along the Iran-Iraq border. In the desert landscape, strewn with broken tanks and artillery, visitors come to pay their respects to the dead. Grief and post-traumatic stress are potent factors in the country's cult of martyrdom. The second half of the film takes place throughout the city of Tehran, from public streets to private meeting spaces. Tamadon, who trained as an architect, has a good eye for location. Among the characters we meet are Nader Malek-kandi, an avuncular forty-six-year-old who survived the war and now publishes religious propaganda, and Mohammad Pourkarim, a twenty-eight-year-old born after Ayatollah Khomeini's revolution who leads the Bassidj base in the upscale neighbourhood of Nasr. The bassidjis encourage Tamadon not to hold back with his questions. But this is a tricky proposition in a state where dissidents go to prison. Tamadon brings up the case of the academic Ramin Jahanbegloo, who was held by authorities for four months in 2006 and now teaches at the University of Toronto. The mention of Jahanbegloo threatens to disrupt the polite conversation. It reminds us what a delicate position Tamadon has put himself in. You wouldn't want to confront a room full of angry bassidjis." Quoting Thom Powers on the 2009 TIFF site. It Might Get Loud is a 2008 American documentary film by filmmaker Davis Guggenheim. It explores the careers and styles of prominent rock musicians Jimmy Page, The Edge, and Jack White. The film received a wide release on August 14, 2009 in the U.S. by Sony Pictures Classics. The Pipe is a 2010 documentary drama film directed by Risteard O'Domhnaill. Gagetown is a 2009 documentary film that looks into the massive defoliant spray program that was used at CFB Gagetown since 1956. The chemical herbicides used include 50/50 mixtures of 2,4-D/ 2,4,5-T, and Tordon 101, also known as Agent Orange and Agent White. These chemicals have been known to produce extremely toxic byproducts, including dioxins and hexachlorobenzenes. Exposure to these byproducts has been linked to increased cases in cancer and blood diseases, especially Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma and leukemia. According to a Canadian Department of National Defence document acquired through the Access to Information Act, over 3.2 million liters and kilograms of chemical defoliants were used at the base between the years 1956 to 1984. The Ocean of Tears is a 2012 Kashmiri short documentary film produced by Rajiv Mehrota under the banner of Public Service Broadcasting Trust of India. The film is a documentary of the crimes and human rights violations impositioned on the people of Kashmir especially on women. The film raises the issue of mass rape incident of Kunan Poshpora. The film supported by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting was stopped and banned from screening at the University of Kashmir. Fetishes is a 1996 documentary by Nick Broomfield filmed at Pandora's Box, one of New York City's most luxurious SM/fetish parlours. The film contains interviews with professional dominatrices and their clients including the New York filmmaker Maria Beatty. The documentary opens with black and white footage from an Irving Klaw film depicting models, including Bettie Page, wearing fetish attire. Nick Broomfield and his film crew then arrive at Pandora's Box on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue and are given a tour of the facility by Mistress Raven, including the dungeon and the medical room. The rest of the documentary consists of the following eight chapters: Slaves Mistresses Rubber fetish Wrestling fetish Corporal punishment Masochism Infantilism Socio-political fetishes The film was produced in the United Kingdom and was originally made for HBO. It was released in the United States on DVD, and more recently as part of Nick Broomfield's 'Documenting Icons' box set. A full, uncut version with additional archive material is also available in the UK. Last Clear Chance is a 1959 American short film produced and directed by Robert Carlisle. Sponsored by Union Pacific Railroad, Last Clear Chance is a safety film intended to warn young drivers to be careful at railroad crossings. The film's cast consists of William Boyett, Harold Agee, Mrs. Harold Agee, Tim Bosworth, William Agee, Christine Lynch, and Lou Spraker. Written by Leland Baxter, the film was shot in parts of Idaho. Wondsel, Carlisle & Dunphy Inc, based in New York City, served as the film's production company. The film centers on the Dixon family, in particular Alan Dixon, who has recently received his driver's license and is eager to begin driving a car. When local police officer Hal Jackson visits the Dixons and learns that Alan's license has arrived, he sits down and tells Alan ways to drive safely and avoid getting into accidents. Although the film is fictional, a real family served as the inspiration for the film's scenario. During production, assistance was provided by staff of the National Safety Council, along with the Idaho State Police and the Colorado State Patrol. The King of Instruments is a 2011 short documentary musical film directed by Ryan Cockrell. Tchoupitoulas is a 2012 documentary film directed by Bill Ross IV and Turner Ross. Saga of Service is a 1960 documentary film directed by Dilip Jamdar. Science of Horror is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Katharina Klewinghaus. Naked Under Leather is a 2004 documentary, musical and drama film written and directed by Victory Tischler-Blue. Keine Startbahn West - Eine Region wehrt sich is a 1982 film directed by Thomas Fricke and Regine Heuser. U.N. Me is a documentary film about the United Nations by first-time filmmakers Ami Horowitz and Matthew Groff, which premiered at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam in November 2009. The documentary – or "docutainment" according to Horowitz – which began production in 2006, is a critique that depicts the United Nations as an organization that has drifted from its founding principles to the point where it now "enables evil and sows global chaos." The film follows Horowitz and Groff as they travel and look to expose the numerous scandals and cases of abuse of the U.N. Through interviews with involved parties and archived footage, they provide a look into events such as a shooting that has gone forgotten, where UN soldiers opened fire on unarmed protestors and the “Oil-for-Food” program. Also featured is evidence of the use of UN funds and equipment to support terrorist activity through complacency or complicity, including video footage of insurgents loading assault rifles and RPGs into a UN vehicle to make an escape. Some scenes of U.N. Me were shot inside the United Nations headquarters building in New York City. Wild Dog Diaries is a wild life film portraying the behaviour of wild dogs. The film was directed by the photographer duo of Krupakar-Senani and mainly picturised in the Bandipur National Park and the Mudumalai National Park of India. Lodz Ghetto is a 1989 documentry film written by Alan Adelson and directed by Alan Adelson and Kate Taverna. Voices in the Tunnels is a 2008 documentary directed by Vic David, a New York City filmmaker and a graduate from New York University. This documentary explores the lives of people who lived in the New York City Subway tunnels. Toots is a documentary film which outlines the life of Toots Shor, Manhattan's premier saloonkeeper from the year 1940 to the year 1959. At 18, he relocated from South Philadelphia to New York and became a speakeasy bouncer. In 1940, he opened his restaurant, Toots Shor's at 51 West 51st St., which was frequented by sports heroes, actors, mobsters, cops, politicians, visiting dignitaries, and writers. The film is commentated by Shor's daughter, Frank Gifford, Peter Duchin, former sports writers, and others as the filmmaker mixes still photographs, archive footage, including an appearance on "This Is Your Life," and an audio-tape interview from 1975 to present a portrait of New York during and after Prohibition and of a lovable, larger-than-life, uniquely New York public figure. Synthetischer Film is a 1974 documentary film written and directed by Helmut Herbst. Pueblos Indígenas En Riesgo is a 2013 film directed by Guillermo Monteforte. Live in London is a live concert recording of George Michael's finals two concerts in London's Earls Court Exhibition Centre on 24 and 25 August 2008 as part of his 25 Live tour. This is the first live DVD of George Michael's career. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray formats on 7 December 2009 in the UK, Europe and Australia, and on 8 December 2009 in the USA and Canada. The DVD will have subtitles for spoken portions of the DVD in several languages. The highly anticipated shows on the DVD marked the end of George Michael's triumphant 25 Live Tour and were the last chance to catch Michael performing on a stage of this magnitude in London. Gizmo! is a 1977 documentary film produced and directed by Howard Smith about improbable inventions, and uses old newsreel footage about these inventions. Early examples of parkour and buildering are also featured, including footage of an urban acrobat, John Ciampa, and a stuntman, Arnim Dahl. Ich Liebe Dich is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Emine Emel Balcı. Barluschke is a 1997 film directed by Thomas Heise. Educating Peter is a 1992 American short documentary film directed by Gerardine Wurzburg about Peter Gwazdauskas, a special needs student with Down's syndrome, and his inclusion in a standard third grade classroom in Blacksburg, Virginia. It won an Academy Award at the 65th Academy Awards in 1993 for Documentary Short Subject. Wow was a 1969 Québécois film directed by Claude Jutra, produced by the National Film Board of Canada. Andre Williams has recorded hit records, written hit songs and worked with legends of the industry: Berry Gordy, Ike Turner and Stevie Wonder to name just a few. Andre has also struggled throughout his life with addiction, poverty, homelessness and the legal system. Throughout his 72 years, Andre has never stopped driving his creative visions forward, regardless of cost or consequence. The consequences turn out to be severe as his addictive history catches up with him. His decisions become a choice between life and death. Motherland or Death is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Vitali Mansky. Electoral Dysfunction is a 2012 documentary comedy historical film written and directed by David Deschamps, Leslie D. Farrell and Bennett Singer. The National Parks Project is a Canadian music and film project. Released in 2011 to mark the 100th anniversary of the creation of the National Parks of Canada system, the project sent three Canadian musicians and a filmmaker to each of 13 Canadian national parks, one in each province and territory, to create and score a short documentary film about the park. The project was commissioned by Parks Canada and produced by FilmCAN and Primitive Entertainment, in association with Discovery World HD. In addition to airing on Discovery World and on the web, the series was also screened at a number of film festivals, including Toronto's Hot Docs. Rossellini Seen by Rossellini is a 1992 documentary film directed by Adriano Aprà. Darkness and Hope is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Hubert Davis. Almendron Mi Corazon is a documentary film directed by Steve James. Ausrufung Der Deutsch-österreichischen Republik is a 1918 short documentary film. Defeating Oceans Seven is a 2013 Documentary Adventure Sport film written by Timm Koch and directed by Rouven Blankenfeld. Flying Solo: A Transgender Widow Fights Discrimination is a 2013 documentary film directed by Leslie Von Pless. Urban Struggle is a rare film made in 1981 that documents the hardcore punk scene at the Cuckoo's Nest nightclub. The black-and-white film features performances by T.S.O.L., Circle Jerks and Black Flag, and shows early slam dancing. It is not available on home video format, but portions of the film were used in the documentary American Hardcore. The Great Resistance is a 2007 documentary by Quebec film director Denys Desjardins. This length feature is produced by the National Film Board of Canada. Imaginary Witness: Hollywood and the Holocaust is a 2004 documentary film directed by Daniel Anker and narrated by Gene Hackman that examines the treatment of the Holocaust in Hollywood films over a period of sixty years and the impact of the films on public perception and thinking, and vice versa. The film was originally produced for the American cable network, American Movie Classics. Romeos & Juliets is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Moze Mossanen. SEX CRIMES UNIT (June 20) takes an unprecedented look inside the Manhattan District Attorney’s famed Sex Crimes Unit, the first unit dedicated to the prosecution of sexual assault to be established in the U.S. The film follows the day-to-day work of prosecutors as they deal with investigations, trials and plea bargains. Among other cases, it tracks The People v. Kevin Rios, in which a prostitute makes an accusation of rape, and follows one woman’s experience with the Cold Case Unit when her accused assailant, originally indicted on the basis of his DNA profile, is finally identified and brought to justice 16 years after the crime. Directed by Emmy® winner Lisa F. Jackson (HBO’s “The Greatest Silence: Rape in the Congo”). "With this absorbing three-part epic documentary, Zhao Dayong joins the ranks of the essential Chinese independent filmmakers, led by Jia Zhangke and Wang Bing. Zhiziluo is a remote village in China’s mountainous southwest, lined with empty shells of buildings and watched over by a Chairman Mao statue. In this dilapidated ghost town, the young filmmaker Zhao documents remarkable signs of life: father and son pastors, parsing the Bible and the teachings of long-departed missionaries; lovers whose relationships are reduced to a matter of economics; a 12-year-old boy, left behind by his parents and living a near-feral existence. Throughout, Zhao composes brilliant, haunting images that use the harsh beauty of the landscape as a counterpoint to a study of different forms of abandonment, and different modes of survival." Quoting the synopsis on the 2009 New York Film Festival site. One Life For Another is a documentary film directed by Zach Litwack. All Blossoms Again is a 2006 film directed by Aurélien Gerbault. King: A Filmed Record... Montgomery To Memphis is a 1970 American documentary film biography of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and his non-violent campaign for civil rights and social justice. It uses only original newsreel and other primary material, unvarnished and unretouched, and covers the period from the Montgomery bus boycott of 1955 through his assassination in 1968. The original newsreel segments are framed by celebrity narrators Harry Belafonte, Ruby Dee, Ben Gazzara, Charlton Heston, James Earl Jones, Burt Lancaster, Paul Newman, Anthony Quinn, Marlon Brando, Clarence Williams III, and Joanne Woodward. The movie was produced by Ely Landau. Richard Kaplan was the associate producer in charge of production. When first released, it was shown in theaters as a "one-time-only" event on March 24, 1970 for one night only. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary, Features. In 1999, this film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in its National Film Registry. Changing Our Minds: The Story of Dr. Evelyn Hooker is a 1992 American documentary film directed by Richard Schmiechen. The film, which chronicles the work of Evelyn Hooker, a psychologist who challenged the then-standard psychological view of homosexuality, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. 235.000.000 is a 1967 film directed by Uldis Brauns. Hawaiian Starlight: Exploring the Universe from Mauna Kea is an educative documentary directed by Jean-Charles Cuillandre. About Us: The Dignity of Children is a 1997 documentary directed by Merle Worth. Sea of Attractions is a 2005 documentary short film written by Pauls Bankovskis and directed by Dainis Klava. Marbre is a 2010 documentary film directed by Jérôme Schlomoff. When it comes to independent animators, Bill Plympton is the undisputed king. His illustrations have been featured in The New York Times, The Village Voice, Vogue, Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair, Penthouse, and National Lampoon. Since 1981, when his political cartoon Plymptoons was syndicated nationally, he has become a major force and inspiration in the animation world. Moving into motion pictures, Plympton earned two Academy Award nominations, has directed and animated over sixty animation shorts, live action features, music videos, commercials and documentaries. ADVENTURES IN PLYMPTOONS goes deep inside the method and madness of America's most independent animator, creatively incubated in his hometown of Portland, Oregon. Interviews with many of Plympton's collaborators offer candid and comic insights into the irreverent man who has become an international success by not selling out. Picture a cross-country road trip powered by vegetable oil in a 1981 Mercedes-Benz. Greasy Rider follows the two filmmakers, Joey Carey and JJ Beck, as they meet with fellow Greasecar drivers, friends, and critics. Storm Riders is a 1982 film by David Lourie, Jack McCoy and Dick Hoole, featuring some of the world's best surfers and the world's champion windsurfers. The film was produced by "Hoole/McCoy Films" in association with "Rip Curl Wetsuits", and "L.K. Communications". The documentary was filmed in Sumatra, Java, Bali, Africa, Hawaii and Australia. Storm Riders was digitally remastered and re-released in 2007 to celebrate the movie's 25th anniversary. Spanning four centuries on a joyful voyage of music and heritage, Seeking Salvation traces the history of the Black Church and considers its future in a changing society. The Flower Bridge is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Ciulei. The Show is a 1995 documentary film about hip hop music. It was directed by Brian Robbins and featured interviews with some of hip hop's biggest names. Def Jam founder Russell Simmons stars in and narrates the film. The film grossed $1,482,892 in its opening weekend and $2,702,578 during its theatrical run. Belgrade is a 2013 Serbian-Canadian documentary film directed by Boris Malagurski about Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. The documentary film had its world premiere on 19 October 2013 at Sava Centar in Belgrade. As the first feature documentary film about Belgrade, it presents the Serbian capital through the eyes of its inhabitants, presenting the history, culture, food and nightlife of the city. The film is presented in English and hosted by Boris Malagurski, who, according to his production company Malagurski Cinema, aims to capture the spirit of the Serbian capital. The author claims that Belgrade boasts a unique quality and energy, in spite of the fact that it was destroyed and rebuilt over 40 times in its history and that the greatest attraction of the city are the citizens themselves. The documentary features interviews with prominent Belgraders, such as tennis player Novak Djokovic, who was also featured in the official trailer of the film. The Devil's Miner is a 2005 documentary film directed by independent film directors Kief Davidson and Richard Ladkani. The film follows a fourteen-year-old Bolivian boy named Basilio Vargas who along with his twelve-year-old brother Bernardino work in the mines near the city of Potosí. The film includes many subtle realities of the miner's lives such as the need to chew coca leaves to numb the pain of hunger and the long shifts they work regardless of age. The film made its world premier at the Rotterdam film festival and its U.S. debut at the Tribeca Film Festival. The film concentrates on the concerns of local workers who have fear of what they call “Tio” or devil. In the film, an elder miner claims that over 8 million people have died in the unsafe mines. The workers believe this is because “Tio” controls the mine and that Christ has no power in the mine. The workers often give offerings such as coca leaves, alcohol, cigarettes and perform sacrifices, such as slaughtering a llama and applying its blood to the mine entrance to appease a makeshift statue of "Tio". Guión busca estrella is a 2010 TV documentary directed by Belén R. Casal del Rey and written by Miguel Parra. A Defeated People is a 1946 British documentary short film made by the Crown Film Unit, directed by Humphrey Jennings and narrated by William Hartnell. The film depicts the shattered state of Germany, both physically and as a society, in the immediate aftermath of World War II. The narration explains what is being done – and what needs to be done – both by the occupying Allied forces and the German people themselves to build a better Germany from the ruins. Orange Winter is a 2007 feature documentary by an independent Ukrainian-American filmmaker Andrei Zagdansky. The documentary deals with the fraudulent presidential election in Ukraine in November 2004 and ensuing days of mass protest, known as the Orange Revolution. Prometheus Bound: The Epidemic of Hepatitis C is a 2007 Documentary Film directed by Don Schroeder. Asier And I is a 2013 non-fiction documentary film written and directed by Amaia Merino and Aitor Merino. The Bookseller of Belfast is a 2012 documentary biographical film written and directed by Alessandra Celesia. Against the Grain: A Documentary on the Life of Tara Dakides is a 2008 documentary film directed by Josh Landan Kin Kiesse is a 1982 documentary film about "Kin", the capital of Zaire, and the capital of paradoxes and excesses, commentated on by one of its naïf artists, the painter Chéri Samba. We discover the "Kin" of night clubs, high buildings, bicycle-taxis, shoe shiners and hairdressers, the "Kin" of poor neighborhoods, but, above all, the “Kin” of music, where all the genres rub elbows, from beer party brass bands to the rumba to traditional dances, without leaving out the in-fashion bands of the time. According to the film's director, Mweze Ngangura, Chéri Samba was instrumental in the making of the film, convincing the French Ministry of Co-operation, France 2 and Congolese television that Ngangura could make a film on Kinshasa. Seis grados is a 2014 adventure documentary film written and directed by Bartosz Dombrowski. Journeys with George is a documentary by Alexandra Pelosi and Aaron Lubarsky that follows George W. Bush for more than a year on his campaign trail to the presidency in 2000. Working for NBC and as part of what she calls the "travelling press corps," Pelosi offers the only behind-the-scenes look at Bush's campaign. With light journalism, she achieves considerable access to the then-Governor of Texas. The film focuses on the relationship between the press and presidential candidates, the life of a traveling journalist in such a relationship, and Bush, usually in a humorous light, with less attention given to the issues. It earned six Emmy nominations including one win for Lubarsky's editing. It scored 48 out of 100 on Metacritic. In April 2007, it was shown on MSNBC. The last two seasons of The West Wing, which follow the presidential campaigns of Matt Santos and Arnold Vinick, were inspired in part by scenes in Journeys. "From Judy Garland to composing an opera entirely in French this excellent documentary explores the unique talent of Rufus Wainwright. From recreating Judy Garland's legendary Carnegie Hall concert to writing and composing an opera entirely in French, most musicians wouldn't be up to the task, but then Rufus Wainwright isn't like most musicians. Elton John has called him the 'best songwriter in the world' and this excellent documentary following Wainwright as he begins work on the opera is justification enough for such high praise. Exploring the flamboyant performer's past, his early career and the musical highlights of hit albums and tours which have all brought him to his most challenging composition to date. All the Wainwright clan are here talking candidly about their life growing up with such a musical tradition flowing through them. Home videos of the younger Wainwrights staging their own operas contrast against the mammoth task of getting his Prima Donna to its opening night. One for opera fans, Rufus fans and everyone in between. ES" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. Tesuque Grandmother Speaks is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Youth CineMedia. Odessa Odessa is a 2004 film directed by Michele Boganim. No Fire Zone: In the Killing Fields of Sri Lanka is an investigative documentary about the final weeks of the Sri Lankan Civil War. The documentary covers the period from September 2008 until the end of the war in 2009 in which thousands of Tamil people were killed by shelling and extrajudicial executions by the Sri Lankan Army including Balachandran Prabhakaran, the 12-year-old son of the slain Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam Chief Velupillai Prabhakaran. The Sri Lankan army has denied the allegations in the documentary In March 2013, the documentary was screened by its director, Callum Macrae, at the 22nd session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva. The film was not released in theatres in India as Central Board of Film Certification did not approved it. It was released online for free in India and Malaysia. Trip to Jewish Cuba is an American short documentary film, directed by Bonnie Burt, that follows an American-Jewish aid mission as it travels to Cuba to observe and help the island's Jewish community following a relaxing of the government's policies restricting religion. Like the young men in many small American towns during and after the Great Depression, the boys of Bedford, Virginia, joined their local National Guard unit. They were paid one dollar for every weekend training session - a lot of money in 1941 - and they were given a snazzy uniform to wear that pleased the ladies. Not a bad deal. What they couldn't have foreseen was that Japan would attack Pearl Harbor and draw the United States - and their little Guard unit - into a war that everyone hoped would end all wars. In no time at all, these fresh-faced soldiers were torn from the arms of their girlfriends and new wives and found themselves in training camps, learning to fight for their country. Eventually these boys who had not yet seen a minute of battle would become the first to hit the beaches of Normandy on what we now know as D-Day. An ocean away, their families gathered around radios listening for news. Eventually a wave of telegrams arrived informing Bedford how great a sacrifice it had made: on June 6, 1942, that small community lost more men per capita than any other in America. But Bedford's service to the nation continues. In 2004, for the first time since World War II, that same National Guard unit was called up again, this time to serve in Afghanistan. Soon after it went to Iraq. In BEDFORD: THE TOWN THEY LEFT BEHIND, The Johnson Group, producers of the acclaimed award-winning documentary PAPER CLIPS, presents a moving cross-generational story of innocence and bravery, of love and loss, of duty, honor and the costs of war. Recyclers is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by José Roberto Brito. Cruise Grand Mediterranean is a 2004 travel and documentary film. Lars Monsens ektreme villmarkstur. Han gikk 8252 kilometer og 947 dager gjennom noen av klodens mest øde villmarksområder, i ekstreme temperaturer, med selskap av ulv og bjørn. For Lars Monsen var dette den perfekte utfordring. I den Canadiske villmarken er man fullstendig overlatt til seg selv, hundrevis av kilometer fra nærmeste landsby. Ulveflokkene stryker forbi leiren og Monsen må forsvare seg mot bjørner. På vinteren kan gradestokken nærme seg 60 minus og vinden forsterker kulden ytterligere. Det er livsfarlig å bevege seg utendørs med mindre man er godt trent, har godt utstyr og stor respekt for naturen. Det er i dette terrenget Lars Monsen og hans huskyer skal tilbringe de neste årene. Til fots, på hundeslede, på ski eller i kano skal de ta seg fra nordøst-Alaska til Labrador-kysten. En nærmest umulig oppgave – men så er jo Monsens motto «alt er mulig». "Welcome to the tragicomic world of matchmaking in modern Taipei. The leading light in the Taiwanese marriage market is the energetic matchmaker Chen, who specializes in nudging notoriously intransigent bachelors. One of Chen’s many clients is Wu, the maker of this documentary. While Wu waits impatiently for Mr. Right (or is it Mr. Available?), she documents couples at various stages in their coupledom, post-Chen. Some are smitten with each other. Others tease and bicker openly about minor details. Others have more deep-seated problems, where reproaches about selfishness and cold-heartedness never stop. Rife with moments of both torturing silence and absolute enigma, this thoughtful documentary poses one central question: Is love a matter of fate or just a numbers game? With 50 percent of marriages ending in divorce, Taiwan provides ample business for matchmakers like Chen, who prides herself on grappling with the most difficult cases. Wu has the feeling she missed the boat, but Chen knows just what to do with “hopeless,” would-be spinsters. Her motto: There's nothing wrong with failing, as long as you know why you failed." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Taiwan Film Days festival site. Aguirre, the Wrath of God, known in the UK as Aguirre, Wrath of God, is a 1972 West German New Wave adventure art film written and directed by Werner Herzog. Klaus Kinski stars in the title role. The soundtrack was composed and performed by German progressive/Krautrock band Popol Vuh. The story follows the travels of Spanish soldier Lope de Aguirre, who leads a group of conquistadores down the Orinoco and Amazon River in South America in search of the legendary city of gold, El Dorado. Using a minimalist story and dialogue, the film creates a vision of madness and folly, counterpointed by the lush but unforgiving Amazonian jungle. Although based loosely on what is known of the historical figure of Aguirre, the film's story line is, as Herzog acknowledged years after the film's release, a work of imagination. Some of the people and situations may have been inspired by Gaspar de Carvajal's account of an earlier Amazonian expedition, although Carvajal was not on the historical voyage represented in the film. Other accounts state that the expedition went into the jungles but never returned to civilization. World War II: Attack Without Warning is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Chris D. Nebe. The Visual Language of Herbert Matter is a documentary film directed by Reto Caduff. Death in Arizona is a 2014 documentary drama film written and directed by Tin Dirdamal. Problema is a 2010 documentary drama film written by Joe Holden and directed by Ralf Schmerberg. Wonderful London is a 1924 short documentary film directed by Frank Miller and H.B. Parkinson. Hyperland is a 50-minute long documentary film about hypertext and surrounding technologies. It was written by Douglas Adams and produced and directed by Max Whitby for BBC Two in 1990. It stars Douglas Adams as a computer user and Tom Baker, with whom Adams had already worked on Doctor Who, as a personification of a software agent. In hindsight, what Hyperland describes and predicts is an approximation of today's World Wide Web. Unforgettable Fire: The Story of a U2 Tribute Band is a 2012 documentary, biography, music film directed by Michelle Regina. "Running in Heels follows Glendon “Anna Conda” Hyde on the campaign trail during his run for San Francisco District 6 Supervisor during the 2010 election season. This heartwarming documentary features interviews with campaign workers and community members, as well as real footage from the campaign trail, highlighting Hyde’s commitment to grassroots efforts in the city. Running in Heels is a flattering portrait of the drag queen and community organizer’s commitment to social change" - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Hauling is a 2010 documentary film on poor families who work as recyclers in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Two Years at Sea is a 2011 documentary film directed by Ben Rivers. Sacred Places is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Jean-Marie Téno. Battle of Berlin is a 1973 West German documentary film directed by Franz Baake and Jost von Morr. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. When Disco Ruled The World is a music documentary that aired on VH1 in 2005. Red on White is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Agne Marcinkeviciute. The Eleutheran Adventure is a 2006 film directed by Kareem Mortimer. Dust. A Sculptors Journey is a documentary film written by Jeanne Pope and Mariano Franco and directed by Jeanne Pope. Tupac: Resurrection is a 2003 American documentary film about the life and death of rapper Tupac Shakur. The film, directed by Lauren Lazin and released by Paramount Pictures, is narrated by Tupac Shakur himself. The film was in theaters from November 16, 2003 to December 21, 2003. As of July 1, 2008 it had earned over $7.8 million, making it the 21st-highest-grossing documentary film in the United States -. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 77th Academy Awards. Found Objects; Lobi Arts and Commerce is a 2003 documentary film. Frederic Remington: The Truth of Other Days is a 1991 documentary of American Western artist Frederic Remington made for the PBS series American Masters and produced and directed by Tom Neff It was written by Neff and Louise LeQuire. Actor Gregory Peck was the narrator of the film and Ned Beatty was the voice of Remington when reading his correspondence. The documentary was produced by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; NHK Corporation; and Polaris Entertainment, Nashville, Tennessee. It was the first documentary to be filmed in High Definition Television, but at the time it was years away from high-definition television broadcasting. The Linguists is an independent 2008 American documentary film produced by Ironbound Films about language extinction and language documentation. It follows two linguists, Greg Anderson of the Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages and David Harrison of Swarthmore College, as they travel around the world to collect recordings of some of the last speakers of several moribund languages: Chulym in Siberia; Chemehuevi in Arizona, U.S.; Sora in Orissa, India; and Kallawaya in Bolivia. Letters from Pyongyang is a 2012 documentary short film about the filmmaker's search for lost relatives in North Korea, directed by Korean-Canadian filmmaker Jason Lee. The film premiered at the Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montreal also known by its acronym RIDM on 13 November 2012. The international premiere in Doha, Qatar during the 9th Aljazeera International Documentary Film Festival garnered the film the top juried prize, the Aljazeera Golden Award, in the short film category. Letters from Pyongyang subsequently received the Best Documentary jury prize at the 23rd Palm Springs International ShortFest in Palm Springs, California and the Best Short Film jury prize at the Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival in Toronto, Canada. Moment by Moment: The Healing Journey of Molly Hale is a 2005 documentary film by filmmaker, Dorothy Fadiman, which is about Molly Hale, a woman who suffered a spinal cord injury so severe that attending medical professionals had little hope for the rehabilitation of feeling and movement below her shoulders. The film chronicles Molly's recovery process and the support from her partner and community of friends. In the Winter of 2002, Molly Hale was chosen to be an Olympic torchbearer by the Olympic Committee. In May 2010, CultureUnplugged.com showed the film as their main feature for their film festival: Spirit Enlightened. Molly was a student in Aikido as was shown in the film. She was chosen as a presenter and special trainer for the Self-Defense Instructors' Conference and Special Training of the National Women’s Martial Arts Federation in July 2011. ZA 05. Lo viejo y lo nuevo is a 2006 documentary film written by Fernando Birri, Julio García Espinosa, Gabriel García Márquez and Orlando Senna and directed by Fernando Birri. If You're Gonna Build a House: Community by Architecture is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Vincent Sassone and Steven Turley. Ndiphilela Ukucula: I Live to Sing is a musical documentary film directed by Julie Cohen. A Fighting Heart is a 2013 documentary, biographical, historical and sports film directed by Des Kilbane. "Setting out to make a film about street children, the filmmakers are hijacked by a 13-year-old street boy in Nairobi, Kenya. Emmanuel is running from hunger, police, his mother's death and a horrific life in Nairobi's most notorious slum. Alone, undocumented, a nobody, he stinks, eats garbage, is raped by the big boys, swept off the streets by police and sent to adult jail cells. Who will notice if this child's life is snuffed out?" Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. An American Journey is a 1984 News & Documentary Emmy Award winning work for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Cinematography. Aya: Awakenings is a documentary and mystery film directed by Timothy Parish and Rak Razam. The Carnival is a Stage, the Island a Feast is a 2012 documentary film directed by Rui Mourão. Bajarí: Gypsy Barcelona is a 2013 documentary music film written by Eva Vila and Cándido Álvarez and directed by Eva Vila. Jessica Watson: Another Challenge is a 2012 documentary film directed by Brian Andrews. Umareru is a documentary film directed by Tomo Goda. Follows the life and death of Faith Allen. Dawkins accuses the religious establishment of preying on people's desire to believe in a greater being; abusing reason and humanity in the process. Double Play is a 2013 documentary film written by Gabe Klinger, Eugenio Renzi and directed by Gabe Klinger. Serge Daney: Itinerary of a Ciné-Fils is a 1992 documentary film directed by Pierre-André Boutang and Dominique Rabourdin. Paycheck To Paycheck: The Life And Times Of Katrina Gilbert is a 2014 documentary film directed by Shari Cookson and Nick Doob. The Ten-Year Lunch: The Wit and Legend of the Algonquin Round Table is a 1987 American documentary film about the Algonquin Round Table, a floating group of writers and actors in the "Roaring Twenties" in New York City, which included great names such as Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley, George S. Kaufman, Edna Ferber, Marc Connelly, Harold Ross and Harpo Marx. It was produced and directed by Aviva Slesin and narrated by Heywood Hale Broun. The title refers to the fact that the members of the Round Table met over lunch at the Algonquin Hotel from 1919 until roughly 1929. The film shows how the group drifted apart once the 1920s ended, as Hollywood beckoned for some and as they grew older. In 1987, the film won Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Reel Injun is a 2009 Canadian documentary film directed by Cree filmmaker Neil Diamond, Catherine Bainbridge, and Jeremiah Hayes that explores the portrayal of Native Americans in film. Reel Injun is illustrated with excerpts from classic and contemporary portrayals of Native people in Hollywood movies and interviews with filmmakers, actors and film historians, while director Diamond travels across the United States to visit iconic locations in motion picture as well as American Indian history. Reel Injun explores many stereotypes about Natives in film, from the Noble savage to the Drunken Indian. It profiles such figures as Iron Eyes Cody, who as an Italian American reinvented himself as a Native American on screen. The film also explores Hollywood's practice of using Italian Americans and American Jews to portray Indians in the movies and reveals how some Native American actors made jokes in their native tongue on screen when the director thought they were simply speaking gibberish. Film-Essay on the Euphrates Dam is a 1970 short documentary and historical fiction film directed by Omar Amiralay. Flying Paper is a 2013 animated family documentary film written and directed by Nitin Sawhney and Roger Hill. In Search of Avery Willard is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Cary Kehayan. Croc-A-Dyke Dundee, The Legend of Dawn O'Donnell is a 2014 Documentaries film directed by Fiona Cunningham-Reid. Superfly is a 2011 documentary film directed by Anthony Blasko. Esther Broner: A Weave of Women is a documentary film directed by Lilly Rivlin. "Still Around is a feature length compilation of 15 short films about HIV/AIDS that weaves a diverse slate of stories into one powerful video AIDS quilt of our times." - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Der Störenfried - Ermittlungen zu Oskar Brüsewitz is a documentary film written and directed by Thomas Frickel. Positive is a 1990 documentary film directed, written and produced by Rosa von Praunheim. The film follows Silence = Death as the second part of von praunheim and Phil Zwickler’s trilogy about AIDS and activism. This film documents New York City’s gay community’s response to the AIDS crisis during the 1980s as they were forced to organize themselves after the government’s slow response to stem the epidemic. Activist who are interviewed include New York filmmaker and journalist Phil Zwickler, playwright and gay activist Larry Kramer and musician Michael Callen who co-founded people with AIDS Coalition. Framing the individual stories of these three men is a chronicle of the creation of the Gay Men's Health Crisis, ACT- UP and Queer Nation as the gay community confronted the AIDS epidemic. Here Comes Frank Capra is a 1986 documentary film directed by Gianfranco Mingozzi. Tigrero: A Film That Was Never Made is a 1994 documentary film directed by Mika Kaurismäki. "On a pleasant 2007 summer night in Sydney, Shane Brennen and his partner Craig Gee went strolling, holding hands, through the gay-friendly district at Oxford and Crown Streets. Two hooded figures assaulted them, calling them “faggots” and demanding money. When Shane reached Craig, he thought his lover was dead — Craig’s head had been stomped several times against the pavement, covered with blood. His leg was broken, jaw shattered and eye socket fractured in three places, necessitating reconstructive surgery to prevent his eyeball from falling out. Vicious homophobic messages from Craig’s stolen cell phone went out to Craig’s conservative family, who refused to see him and ostracized him for embarrassing them. If that weren’t bad enough, the local police station rebuffed all efforts to find the assailants. When lurid photographs of Craig’s battered face appeared in the gay weekly Sydney Star Observer, the gay community watched as one of their own stood up and exposed the real-life consequences of gay-bashing. This moving documentary, a recipient of completion funding from Frameline, tracks the aftermath of the assault and proves how even a happy, loving couple can break down under the strain of homophobic violence. Hearteningly, it’s also about how a community rallied around an appalling tragedy and came out stronger, safer and more unified. As drag star and Oxford Street Safety Ambassador Maxi Shield says, “If everyone’s holding hands, what can they do?”" Quoting Frako Loden from the 2010 FRameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Le Théâtre National Populaire is a 1956 short documentary film written by Georges Franju and Jean Vilar and directed by Georges Franju. Lovelace is a 2013 American biographical drama film about Linda Boreman, better known as Linda Lovelace. It covers the part of her life when she was "20 to 32". Directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, the film was written by Andy Bellin and stars Amanda Seyfried, Peter Sarsgaard, Sharon Stone, Adam Brody, and Juno Temple. The film had its world premiere on January 22, 2013, at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival and opened in a U.S. limited release on August 9, 2013. Emptys is a 2012 short, drama, historical, biographical and documentary film written and directed by Josh Leake. Lo Zucco: The Wine Of The Son Of The King Of The French is a 2012 documentary written and directed by Lidia Rizzo. Left, Right, Forward is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Linda Jablonska. "An insightful and beautifully filmed study of one of France's foremost cultural institutions from one of the world's finest documentary makers. Frederick Wiseman, one of the world's greatest documentary makers, films the Paris Opera Ballet, one of the world's greatest ballet companies, and the result is an impressively fluid and insightful glimpse inside one of France's foremost cultural institutions. Wiseman wastes no time in taking us behind the scenes into rehearsals, placing dance itself at the heart of the film, and in sum we see preparations for and/or performances of seven ballets, including The Nutcracker by Rudolf Nureyev, Medea by Angelin Preljocaj, Romeo and Juliet by Sasha Waltz and Orpheus and Eurydyce by Pina Bausch. He also shows us how the company functions at every level, from administration and fundraising to the selection of the dancers and their pastoral care. The relationship between the beauty of the pieces and the sheer hard work that lies behind them is keenly but subtly drawn, and the struggle to maintain creative integrity in the face of commercial reality has a resonance far beyond the specific context. What is self-evident and makes La Danse so special is Wiseman's love of dance and understanding of how to film it (his previous films include Ballet, 1995), every bit as valuable as his vast accumulated knowledge of how institutions work." Quoting Sandra Hebron "Lesbian features the voices of four Muslim lesbians who are crossing barriers by speaking honestly about their sexual orientation and living their lives honestly while continuing to practice Islam"- Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Waking the Green Tiger is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Gary Marcuse. Epaves is a 1946 documentary short film directed by Jacques-Yves Cousteau. Pie Lady of Pie Town is a short documentary biographical film directed by Jane Rosemont. Hail the New Puritan is a fictionalized documentary about the Scottish dancer and choreographer Michael Clark. It was directed by Charles Atlas. Production design is by Leigh Bowery, who also appears. Much of the music is by The Fall, and Mark E. Smith and Brix Smith appear in a mock interview with Clark. Additional music is provided by Glenn Branca, Bruce Gilbert, and Jeffrey Hinton. Using a faux-cinéma vérité style, Atlas depicts a day in Clark's life as he and his Company prepare for a performance of New Puritans. The Company at that time included Gaby Agis, Leslie Bryant, Matthew Hawkins, Julie Hood, and Ellen van Schuylenburch. The film was broadcast on 21 May 1986 on Channel 4's "Dance on 4" program. It is distributed on DVD and VHS by Electronic Arts Intermix. Blank Canvas is a documentary film produced in 2009 which charts the creation of 'We Unfold', a contemporary dance work. The film was directed by Tim Slade and features Spanish-born choreographer Rafael Bonachela and the Sydney Dance Company. The film was made as Rafael Bonachela began his tenure at the helm of the company, after a period of instability due to the departure of long time Artistic Director Graeme Murphy and the sudden death of Tanja Liedtke, who was about to begin as his successor. The film touches on this transitional period, but structures itself around the chronological creation of the 'We Unfold', as well as around the movements of the musical composition on which it is based, the Symphony No.1 'Oceans' for cello and orchestra by Italian composer Ezio Bosso. Bonachela's strong personality and dynamism is at the heart of the film; and his journey from a small Spanish town, through studies in Spain and London, working with Rambert Dance Company, the singer Kylie Minogue and finally as the leader of his own company is a story marked with conviction and dedication. "Black lesbians raising children reveal the gift of family" - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. "We're Never Going Home" is the first DVD release of the Gainesville folk punk band Against Me!, produced by Jake Burghart of Transition Video Magazine and presented by Fat Wreck Chords. The feature presentation of the DVD follows the band on their United States tour that spanned from April 1 to May 2 of 2004 and, alongside Against Me!, featured the Illinois hardcore punk band Planes Mistaken for Stars and the United Kingdom native punk band No Choice. Jake Burghart focuses on the relentless pressure on the band coming from major record companies looking to produce the band's upcoming album as the band struggles to decide what steps to take. With the release of the widely successful As the Eternal Cowboy on Fat Wreck Chords the prior year, various record companies took notice of the commercial potential of the band and, as illustrated in the DVD, took to wining and dining with Against Me!. Oppositely, the film features brief interviews from those who oppose the band's signing to larger labels on DIY and anarchist principles, including a pair of interviews from DIY folk punk band Ghost Mice. Web Junkie is a 2013 American-Israeli documentary film co-written, directed and produced by Hilla Medalia and Shosh Shlam. The film premiered at the 2013 Jerusalem Film Festival on July 10, 2013. The film also premiered in-competition in the World Cinema Documentary Competition at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2014. After its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, Dogwoof Pictures acquired the worldwide distribution rights of the film. The film will be broadcast in UK at BBC Storyville, who has acquired the British TV rights of the film. The Charcoal People is a 2000 documentary film written by José Padilha and directed by Nigel Noble. Desfile deportivo is a 1936 Mexican film. It was directed by Fernando de Fuentes. Man from Plains is a 2007 American documentary film written and directed by Jonathan Demme, which chronicles former President of the United States Jimmy Carter's book tour across America to publicize his new book, Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid. For the book promotion, Carter grants interviews to selected newspapers, magazines, and television shows, such as CNN, PBS, Air America Radio, NPR, Chicago Life, Los Angeles Times, and The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. The Silent Poet is a film directed by Borun Thokchom. I Will Be Murdered is a 2013 documentary romance thriller film written and directed by Justin Webster. P-Star Rising is a 2009 music documentary film directed by Gabriel Noble. A third of Mauritania’s population lives from fishing with traditional methods. Bamba Fall, a fisherman involved in the trade union, invites us to witness the agitated activity of the port of Nouakchott: the tragic stories at sea, the hard labours of fishing, the art of ironworks made from imaginatively recycled materials, and the sale of fish by intrepid women. The story of the execution of Reinhard Heydrich, the only succesful assassination of a leading member of the Nazi elite during World War ll. This remarkable historical moment (which was hatched in London and exacted in Prague in 1942), is illustrated in reconstructions and authentic footage. Heydrich was considered by some to be as dangerous as Adolf Hitler. Fuck That is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Lawrence Côté-Collins. Bullet Proof Vest is a 2006 film directed by May Lin Au Yong. Backyard Bugs is a 2014 Documentary and Family film written by Oktay Ortabasi, Sean Roach and directed by Oktay Ortabasi. Food Matters is a 2008 documentary film about nutrition. The film presents the thesis that a selective diet can play a key role in treating a range of health conditions such as diabetes, cancer, heart disease and depression, often substituting for medical treatment. Furthermore, it tends to label the medical industry as a "sickness industry", which profits more from treating the symptoms of illness than curing the illness. The film accuses the medical and pharmaceutical industries of a general conspiracy to perpetuate poor health in order to maximize profits. "Look Who's Morphing writer Tom Cho reflects upon his experiences as a Chinese tomboy growing up in Australia who felt deeply the disappointment of his mother when he rejected dolls and pink walls in favor of Star Wars toys and Godzilla. Mind artfully incorporates archival, fantasy and interview footage to illustrate Cho's descriptions of transition as both a creative and destructive process." - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. William Kurelek's The Maze is a documentary film about the life of celebrated Canadian artist William Kurelek, "dramatically told through his paintings and his on-camera revelations." The film documents the artist's struggles with attempted suicide and what he called a "spiritual crisis." At the center of the film is Kurelek's work The Maze, which he describes in the film as “a painting of the inside of [his] skull which [he] painted while in England as a patient in Maudsley and Netherne psychiatric hospitals.” This painting depicts a man’s "unraveled head lying in a wheat field. A curled up laboratory rat, representing his spirit, is trapped inside a maze of unhappy thoughts and memories." On the outskirts of Cairo lies the world's largest garbage village. A labyrinth of narrow roadways camouflaged by trash, the village is home to 60,000 Zaballeen - Arabic for "garbage people." The Zaballeen have survived for centuries by recycling Cairo's waste. Members of Egypt's minority Coptic Christian community, these entrepreneurial garbage workers recycle nearly all the trash they collect, maintaining what could be the world's most efficient waste disposal system. Learn more about the film at http://www.garbagedreams.com North Korea: A Day in the Life is a 2004 documentary film directed by Pieter Fleury. Going Equipped is a short film created by Aardman Animations. Pedaling to Freedom is a 28-minute documentary directed by Vijay S. Jodha. The film shows how a simple thing, such as teaching women to ride a bicycle in a deprived part of the world, can have a life-changing impact. The documentary was made in English and Tamil. Matzpen is a 2003 Documentary film. Wildflower: The Legendary California Triathlon is a feature length documentary film produced and directed by Kristin Tegtmeier Higgins at River Place Productions, an independent film company located in Northern California. Dome Car Magic: A History of Railroad Dome Cars is a 2006 American television production that chronicles the history of the railroad sightseeing cars, from Burlington's 1945 Silver Dome to the full-length models operating today in Canada and Alaska. The 30-minute program, narrated by television actor and railroad owner Michael Gross, debuted in 2006 on the PBS television network. Designed with trainer-to-the-stars Michael Carson, Carmen Electra's FIT TO STRIP workout comprises volume two of her Aerobic Striptease series. Building on the striptease-inspired dance moves from volume one, FIT TO STRIP introduces a slightly more advanced routine. This total body workout will strengthen and tone from head to toe, while mini-routines work on target areas like the hips, but, and abs. This intense workout is really fun, filled with flirtatious moves that will bring out the inner seductress in everyone. Electra's bubbly, sexy personality makes her the perfect host for the program. Her easy to follow instructions and enthusiasm encourage women of all shapes, sizes, and ages to feel confident in their bodies. Parallel Trips is a 2004 Turkish-Greek-Cypriot documentary film, written, produced and directed by Derviş Zaim and Panicos Chrysanthou, in which the two directors, from opposite sides of the divided island of Cyprus, record the human dramas that unfolded during the war of 1974 and the legacy that remains today. The film was screened at the Istanbul International Film Festival and the 12th London Turkish Film Festival. Give Me The Colors is a 2003 short documentary film directed by Anri Sala. The White Station is a 1999 short documentary film directed by Seifollah Samadian. Bad Weather is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Giovanni Giommi. Report from the Aleutians is a 47-minute documentary propaganda film produced by the U.S. Army Signal Corps about the Aleutian Islands Campaign during World War II. It was directed and narrated by John Huston. In contrast to the other technicolor films made in the Pacific war, Report from the Aleutians has relatively little combat footage, and instead concentrates on the daily lives of the servicemen on Adak Island, as they live and work there while flying missions over nearby Kiska. The film opens with a map showing the strategic importance of the island, and the thrust of the 1942 Japanese offensive into Midway and Dutch Harbor. Photographs of the pilots who beat the Japanese back at Dutch Harbor are passed before the camera. "There is no monument to these men. If you want to see their monument, look around you." The American forces dug in at Adak Island, and there commenced daily bombing missions over the Japanese who had taken Kiska. The film focuses on their routine activities such as harbor patrols, messes, news boards and mail call. "Ask any pilot. He'd tell you he'd gladly fly an extra trip over Kiska to get just one letter." Strange things occur in the woods of northern Sweden. A film crew made up of three urbanised northerners return to the area where they grew up in order to build a recreational cabin high up in a pinetree. They slowly realise that many people share their love of trees and forests and that its roots go deeper into the soul of Swedish people than they first thought. Finding Home is a 2013 short family documentary written by Samantha Andre and directed by Samantha Andre, Margot Czeropski and Mike Agnew. That's Entertainment! III is a documentary film released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to celebrate the studio's 70th anniversary. It was the third in a series of retrospectives that began with the first That's Entertainment! and That's Entertainment, Part II. Although posters and home video versions use the title without an exclamation mark, the actual on-screen title of the film uses it. In order to provide a "hook" for audiences who by 1994 had become accustomed to viewing classic movies on home video and cable TV, the producers decided to feature film footage cut from famous MGM musicals. Many of these numbers were shown for the first time in That's Entertainment! III. Highlights include: An alternate version of Eleanor Powell's extended tap dance routine to "Fascinating Rhythm" from Lady Be Good, shot from a second camera that revealed the well-orchestrated, behind the cameras activity needed to keep the scene moving smoothly. "Ain't it the Truth", a Lena Horne performance from Cabin in the Sky which was cut before the film's release because Horne sang the song in a bubble bath. Alphabet is a 2013 documentary film written by Sabine Kriechbaum and Erwin Wagenhofer and directed by Erwin Wagenhofer. Babel - A Letter to My Friends Left Behind in Belgium is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Boris Lehman. Rex-patriates is a 2004 documentary film written by Tony Laue and directed by Nancy Bishop. Muloorina is a 1964 short documentary film directed by David Cobham. L'arbre vieux is a 1978 short, documentary film directed by Henri Moline. Solitary Plains is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Christian Jensen. Pitch People is a documentary film that focuses on the role the art of the "pitch" has played in society. It was produced in 1999 and includes interviews with many of the pitch industry's greatest salesmen, including Arnold Morris, Sandy Mason, Lester Morris, Wally Nash and Ed McMahon as well as a look at the Popeil family. At Night I Was Beautiful is 2010 short film directed by Steven Wilsey. Pope John Paul II: Story of a Holy Life is a 2004 documentary film. Such Great Heights is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jonah Tulis. Reindeer breeder Jon and his family live in Northern Scandinavia with the Sami people, a semi-nomadic community above the Arctic circle. For an entire year, Corto Fajal, the film director, follows the migration of Jon’s community and its 15,000 reindeers across the breathtaking landscapes of the Sarek Mountains. Taken by the apparent harmony of Jon’s daily life, the director wonders about the fragility of this lifestyle and its paradoxes. Samis search for a balance between life in nature and the comfort brought by technology. While this modernization eases their nomadism, it weakens the autonomy of their community. Dave Bidini: The Hockey Nomad is a tv movie directed by Mike Downie. The Holocaust Experience is a 2003 documentary by Oeke Hoogendijk that takes a serious, slightly critical, look at Holocaust museums around the globe. The film asks where the line between remembering the genocide and exploiting the dead lies and if it's already been crossed. A documentary surf film that explores the lives of female surfers who have chosen to paddle head first into the male dominated sport of surfing and along the way found a place of their own. Love City Jalalabad is a 2013 documentary film written by George Gittoes and Torstein Grude and directed by George Gittoes. Coffee and Pencil is a documentary film directed by Ayako Imamura. The Self-Destruction of Gia is a 2003 documentary film about model Gia Carangi and her death. It was directed and produced by J.J. Martin. Our Disappeared / Nuestros Desaparecidos is a documentary film about the desaparecidos in Argentina. Written, produced and directed by Juan Mandelbaum. It is in English and Spanish with English subtitles. Another version of the film exists in Spanish and English with Spanish subtitles. Its running time is 1 hour and 39 minutes. A History of the Blue Movie is a 1970 Graffiti Productions/Sherpix, Inc. documentary pornographic movie. Directed by Alex de Renzy, this compilation of early shorts combines blue movies, dating from 1915 to 1970, with an uncredited narrator. One of the first attempts to compile some of the oldest available American porn movies for a theater audience, A History of the Blue Movie includes scenes from Grass Sandwich, which is one of the earliest known blue movies in existence, along with several classics in their entirety, such as the controversial The Nun Story, Ever Ready, The Janitor, Peeping Tom, and Smart Alec with legendary stripper Candy Barr. Somewhere to Disappear is a 2010 documentary film directed by Laure Flammarion and Arnaud Uyttenhove. Truckies Don't Eat Quiche is a 2004 documentary short film written and directed by Ben Davies. Dislecksia: The Movie is a documentary film. It was created in 2009 by Captured Time Productions, LLC, a production company based in Litchfield, Connecticut. Dislecksia is the company's seventh film. It is directed by Emmy Award-winning director Harvey Hubbell V, who is a dyslexic himself. Arguing the World is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Joseph Dorman. Public Lands, Private Profits: Too Special To Drill is a 2012 Documentary short film. Kabul Dream Factory is a 2011 film written and directed by Sebastian Heidinger. Reindeerspotting: Escape from Santaland is a Finnish documentary film about drug abusers in Rovaniemi, Finland. It was directed by Joonas Neuvonen and produced by Jesse Fryckman and Oskari Huttu. The first screening of the film was in Tampere, April 2010, Finland. The documentary follows several young drug abusers, but focuses on Jani Raappana. Jani is a drug addict, whose drug of choice is Subutex taken intravenously. He is unemployed and he finances his addiction through thefts, burglaries, and welfare payments. The name of the movie is a direct allusion to the 1996 British drama film Trainspotting that treated the same theme from a Scottish point of view. The film was shown outside of Finland for the first time in Locarno International Film Festival in Switzerland. The Spirit of TV is a 1990 documentary short film written by Dominique Gallois and directed by Vincent Carelli. Eyewitness is a 1999 American short documentary film directed by Bert Van Bork. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The explored the lives of three artists forced to work in secret while living in Nazi death camps: Jan Komski, Dinah Gottliebova and Felix Nussbaum, and who witnessed and painted the horrors of the Holocaust. The Delano Manongs: Forgotten Heroes of the United Farm Workers is a 2013 documentary film directed by Marissa Aroy. Tonight We'll Become Women is a 2013 short drama and documentary film written by Josefien Hendriks and directed by Josefien Hendriks. Bye Bye Lugo is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Michel von Tell. Are Bigfoot creatures traveling to earth in UFO's, and being covered-up by Men in Black? Experience terrifying, real events as documented by top authorities, including: Aliens attacking a house; Alien Abductions to create a hybrid race; vortexes and more! Conspiracy: The Secret History: In Search of the American Drug Lords is a 2003 political cinema documentary film. Adventures in Voice Acting is a 2008 documentary DVD produced by Bang Zoom! Entertainment and was dedicated to Bob Papenbrook. The Impressionists: Renoir is a 2003 documentary film. Autoportrait is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Simone Fattal. Among the Rocks is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Alinda Dimitriou. "Rory Lepine gives a personal account of his fateful and infamous encounter with The Guess Who's legendary lead singer, Burton Cummings, in a Winnipeg 7-Eleven in 1985." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Matrjoschka is a film made and produced by the German artist Karin Hoerler in 2006. At 95 hours of playtime it is the one of the longest experimental films by time. The film consists of images and sequences based on a single photo. It shows a boy riding a bicycle, a street, houses, garages, and sky. Over time, the image changes, but those movements are very slow and not directly visible. The world premiere of the film was at the light spectacle Luminale 2006 in Frankfurt-Germany. Matrjoschka was publicly shown on an outdoor 100 m² LED-screen at the DrKW-building, starting on April 23, 2006 at 6:00am and ending on April 28, 2006 at 1:00am. During the night, there was a break from 1:00 to 6:00am. This film is available only in Windows Media Video format on DVD. Noam Chomsky: Imperial Grand Strategy is a 2006 documentary film written by Noam Chomsky Innere Blutungen is a 2013 documentary film written by Florian Sedmak and directed by Anatol Bogendorfer and Florian Sedmak. If contemporary views of ancient Athens, Greece emphasize the peaceful and harmonious nature of that polis's democratic system, historian Bettany Hughes begs to differ. Hughes asserts that the West's establishment of Athens as the platonic ideal of democracy is hugely ironic, for that classical society in fact employed rules, regulations and traditions deemed unthinkable, even barbaric, in our modern age - from the widespread practice of black magic; to the view of women as demonic, fourth or fifth-class citizens forced to wear public veils; to the proliferation of slavery. Perpetuum Mobile II is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Dora Juárez. The Great Happiness Space: Tale of an Osaka Love Thief is a 2006 documentary film by Jake Clennell, describing a host club in Osaka. The male hosts and their female customers are interviewed, and through the interviews we learn about the nature of hosts clubs and why the customers are coming there. Rage: 20 Years of Punk Rock, West Coast Style is a 2001 music documentary written and directed by Michael Bishop and Scott Jacoby. The Romance of the Far Fur Country, is an historical documentary film portraying Arctic fur trappers filmed in 1919 to commemorate the 250th anniversary of Hudson Bay Company in 1920. This documentary is being regarding as one of the earliest documentaries depicting the lives of the arctic fur trappers in 1919. 777 is the first DVD by American Christian metalcore band Underoath. It was released in the United States and other countries on July 17, 2007, with the intention of having the numbers of its release date coincide with the DVD title. The DVD is split into three sections: "Moments Suspended in Time"; the "MySpace Secret Show", which was played in St. Petersburg, Florida; and a music video section. The three music videos included are the final products of Underoath's video shoot in Skellefteå, Sweden with Popcore Films. The making of the music video for "You're Ever So Inviting" is exclusively recorded on the DVD as well. "Stealing Images’ protagonist is a reclusive and opinionated film director who roams the city, fascinated by its endless possibilities and potential encounters. This exploration of the filmmaker as unreliable narrator, searcher, fraud and failure feels more autobiographical than fictional." Quoting Angie Driscoll from the 2011 Hot Docs site. Madawaska Valley is a 1967 short documentary film written and directed by John Ormond. Afro-American Work Songs in a Texas Prison is American film released in 1966 by filmmaker Toshi Seeger, a specialist in films focusing on folk music. The film explores inmates in the U.S. state of Texas as they chop down trees while singing traditional, regional songs. Afro-American Work Songs in a Texas Prison has been archived and preserved by the Library of Congress. Noosfera is a 2011 film written by Arch Khetagouri and directed by Ileana Stanculescu and Arch Khetagouri. Passport to Nowhere is a 1947 American short documentary film produced by Frederic Ullman Jr.. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Soundbreaker is a 2012 musical and documentary film written and directed by Kimmo Koskela. From Script to Sand: The Skorponok Desert Attack is a 2007 short documentary film. Rita Dove: An American Poet is a documentary film produced, directed and edited by Eduardo Montes-Bradley. It is a biographical sketch of US Poet Laureate and National Medal of Arts winner Rita Dove. The film explores the poet's life beyond the otherwise extensive and readily available information in Internet and Social Media, exposing fundamental facts of Dove’s childhood and formative years growing up in Akron, Ohio in the 1950s and during the turbulent 1960’s. The film, distributed by Filmakers Library and Alexander Street Press, USA, premiered at The Paramount, on January 31, 2014, presented as a Martin Luther King Day headliner by the Office for Diversity and Equity, Lifetime Learning, Alumni and Parent Engagement and the Department of English, College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Virginia Opening remarks honoring Rita Dove by Boyd Tinsley. “Rita Dove: An American Poet” was shot in digital format, HD. Rabindranath Tagore is a 1961 black-and-white short film directed by an Indian director Satyajit Ray on the life and works of noted Bengali author Rabindranath Tagore. Ray started working on the documentary in the beginning of 1958 and it was released during the birth centenary year of Rabindranath Tagore, who was born on May 7, 1861. Ray avoided the controversial aspects of Tagore's life in order to make it as an official portrait of the poet. Though Tagore was known as a poet, Ray did not use any of Tagore's poetry as he was not happy with the English translation and believed that "it would not make the right impression if recited" and people would not consider Tagore "a very great poet", based on those translations. Satyajit Ray has been reported to have said about the documentary Rabindranath Tagore in his biography Satyajit Ray: The Inner Eye by W. Andrew Robinson that, "Ten or twelve minutes of it are among the most moving and powerful things that I have produced". Often regarded as polymath, author of Gitanjali and its "profoundly sensitive, fresh and beautiful verse", Tagore became the first non-European to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913. Ignasi M. is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ventura Pons. Sound That is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Kevin Everson. Surviving Cliffside is a 2014 documentary and drama film written and directed by Jon Matthews. 42: Forty Two Up is a 1998 biographical TV Documentary directed by Michael Apted. Journey Through Lithuania is a 2010 documentary film written by Vaidotas Digimas, David Ellis and Zivile Gallego and directed by Vaidotas Digimas. Himself He Cooks is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Valerie Berteau and Philippe Witjes. Citizen Marc is a 2013 documentary biography film written by Roger Larry and Sandra Tomc and directed by Roger Larry. The Queen of My Dreams is a 2012 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Fawzia Mirza. Bright Day! is a 2010 documentary, adventure, comedy film written and directed by Maggie Rowe and Andersen Gabrych. A Journey Into the Holocaust is a history documentary directed by Paul Bachow. Baring It All is a documentary film about fashion photographer David Jay and The SCAR Project, a series of photographic portraits of young women in various stages of breast cancer and other hormonal cancers. Directed by filmmaker Patricia Zagarella of Lost In Vision Entertainment, the film was picked up by the Style Network as part of their "Style Exposed" documentary series and first aired on Style on July 9, 2011. The film focuses the Jay and his motivations for embarking on the project, a departure from fashion photography work, as well as on four different women who chose to participate in The SCAR Project, posing for nude portraits revealing their scars from mastectomies, breast reconstruction and other surgeries related to their treatment. Peep Show & Tell is a 2010 documentary film directed by Michael Forte. The Second Journey (To Uluru) is a 1981 film directed by Arthur Cantrill and Corinne Cantrill. Nadia's ticks is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Laetitia Schoofs. In 1908, in a remote region of Siberia near the Tunguska river, a 40-megaton nuclear explosion of unknown origin literally vaporized and destroyed hundreds of square miles of forests and villages. This event, which took place over 30 years before scientists split the atom, has inspired heated debate as to what could have caused such massive destruction still evident today. No Circus is a 2006 documentary film directed by Astrid Schult. This definitive documentary exploration of The Da Vinci Code rounds up all the key players in the field, including DVC author Dan Brown and Holy Blood, Holy Grail co-author Henry Lincoln talking about the key topics in the novel. The Champagne Spy is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Nadav Schirman. "A documentary exploring issues faced by gay lesbian bi trans South Asian community in Bay Area, USA and an interesting dialogue with the straight South Asian community." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Bagnolo - Dorf zwischen schwarz und rot is a 1964 documentary film directed by Bruno Jori. Children 404 is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Pavel Loparev and Askold Kurov. The Origin of the Rings is a 2002 documentary film writted by David Menzies and directed by Sean Buckley. Scandalous Travelers is a DVD by Canadian rock band Billy Talent. It is a documentary which follows the band's first two year tour. It includes live footage of Edgefest and various radio station interviews in London, Ontario. The DVD holds bonus material which features live performances of "This Is How It Goes," "Cut The Curtains", "Line and Sinker", "Living In The Shadows", and rare acoustic sets of "Standing In The Rain," "Lies" and "Try Honesty." Cauby - I Would Try Again is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Nelson Hoineff. A Touch of Home: The Vietnam War's Red Cross Girls is an American documentary film produced and directed by Patrick and Cheryl Fries. The film tells the story of 627 young American women who served in the American Red Cross Supplemental Recreation Overseas program during the Vietnam War. It was screened in Dallas, Texas on April 21, 2007. Paragraph 175 is a documentary film released in 2000, directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, and narrated by Rupert Everett. The film was produced by Rob Epstein, Jeffrey Friedman, Janet Cole, Michael Ehrenzweig, Sheila Nevins and Howard Rosenman. The film chronicles the lives of several gay men and one lesbian who were persecuted by the Nazis. The gay men were arrested by the Nazis for the crime of homosexuality under Paragraph 175, the sodomy provision of the German penal code, dating back to 1871. Between 1933 and 1945, 100,000 men were arrested under Paragraph 175. Some were imprisoned, others were sent to concentration camps. Only about 4,000 survived; see Paragraph 175 for full details. In 2000, fewer than ten of these men were known to be living. Five come forward in the documentary to tell their stories for the first time, considered to be among the last untold stories of the Third Reich. The Devil’s Lair is a 2013 drama, crime and documentary film directed by Riaan Hendricks. The Last Season: The Life and Demolition of Baltimore's Memorial Stadium is a 2002 documentary film directed by Charles Cohen and Joseph Mathew. Sharkcallers of Korfu is a 1982 documentary film directed by Dennis O'Rourke. KOCHUU is a visually stunning film about modern Japanese architecture, its roots in the Japanese tradition, and its impact on the Nordic building tradition. Winding its way through visions of the future and traditional concepts, nature and concrete, gardens and high-tech spaces, the film explains how contemporary Japanese architects strive to unite the ways of modern man with the old philosophies in astounding constructions. In guns we trust is a 2013 documentary, short, biography, crime and historical film written and directed by Nicolas Lévesque. Minor/Major: The TV on the Radio Tour Documentary is a 2011 short documentary and music film directed by Chioke Nassor. The Lebanese Rocket Society is a 2012 Franco - Lebanese documentary film directed by Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige and released theatrically on 1 May 2013. Mussels in Love is a 2012 documentary film directed by Willemiek Kluijfhout. Southeast Passage is a 2002 film directed by Ulrike Ottinger. Just Like Anyone Else is a 1999 International Emmy Award winning documentary film. All.I.Can is a 2011 Documentary Sports film written by Dave Mossop and directed by Eric Crosland and Dave Mossop. In a Nutshell: A Portrait of Elizabeth Tashjian is a 2005 biographical documentary film directed by Don Bernier. La Funivia del faloria is a 1950 Italian documentary film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. The film takes the viewer on a cable car ride through the Dolomites. Much of the film was shot in Cortina d'Ampezzo. Terra de ninguém is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Salomé Lamas. Young Me/Now Me is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Ze Frank. Episode III : Enjoy Poverty is a film of the Dutch artist Renzo Martens. The film premiered as the opening film of the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam in 2008. Subsequently, the film was screened at numerous international film festivals and broadcast on thirteen different television channels. Renzo Martens won the Flemish Culture Prize in 2010 and was nominated for the Artes Mundi Prize in 2014. Family Nightmare is a 2011 short family drama documentary film directed by Dustin Guy Defa. Crazy White Foreigner is a 2003 sports documentary film directed by John Sullivan. Land of Silence and Darkness is a 1971 documentary film by German director Werner Herzog. Produced by Werner Herzog Filmproduktion. Cowspiracy: The Sustainability Secret is a documentary adventure comedy mystery film directed by Kip Andersen and Keegan Kuhn. The Last Wild Race is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ian Campbell. No More Road Trips is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Rick Prelinger. Kinder. Wie die Zeit vergeht. is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Heise. 10 Year Retrospective is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Youth CineMedia. Milkan is a 2003 short documentary film written and directed by Mino Kiani. A State of Mind is a 2004 documentary film directed by Daniel Gordon and produced by Nicholas Bonner. The film follows two North Korean child gymnasts and their families for over eight months during training for the 2003 Pyongyang mass games. The film won two awards at the North Korean Pyongyang International Film Festival in 2004 and was shown at 11 other film festivals worldwide before being released in a theatrical run in 2005. UK-based Dance band Faithless used clips from the documentary for the video to the single "I Want More." Founding Brothers is a 2002 documentary film. Doc Next: Laundrette is a 2011 short documentary directed by Alex Neville. Kissing the Devil`s Ass is a 1992 documentary film written by Margit Knapp and directed by Arpad Bondy and Margit Knapp. Dezember, 1-31 is a 1998 documentary film directed by Jan Peters. Miss Representation is a 2011 documentary film written by Jessica Congdon, Claire Dietrich, Jenny Raskin and Jennifer Siebel Newsom directed by Jennifer Siebel Newsom. "Like drawing back a curtain to let bright light stream in, Miss Representation uncovers a glaring reality we live with every day but fail to see. It’s clear the mainstream media objectifies women, but what most people don’t realize is the magnitude of that phenomenon and the way objectification gets internalized—a symbolic annihilation of self-worth—and impedes girls and women from realizing their full potential. While women have made strides in leadership over the past few decades, trivializing and damaging images continue to proliferate. In a society where media is the most persuasive force shaping cultural norms, the collective message that a woman’s value and power lie only in her youth, beauty, and sexuality is pervasive. Stories from teenage girls and provocative interviews with politicians, journalists, academics, and activists like Condoleeza Rice, Nancy Pelosi, Katie Couric, Rachel Maddow, and Gloria Steinem build momentum as the film accumulates startling facts and statistics that leave the audience shaken and armed with a new perspective" Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. The Sheik and I is a 2012 comedy, documentary film directed by Caveh Zahedi. A Wives' Tale is a 1980 documentary film written by Sophie Bissonnette and Joyce Rock and directed by Sophie Bissonnette, Martin Duckworth, and Joyce Rock. L'Inde fantôme: Reflexions sur un voyage is a 1969 French seven part television documentary miniseries about India, directed by Louis Malle. It was shown on BBC television as Phantom India. Malle later said that the film was his most personal work and the one he was most proud of, it is widely regarded as the crowning achievement of his career. It was initially inspired by a two-month trip to India in late 1967 that Malle made on behalf of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs to present a selection of "new French cinema" throughout the country. Filming took place between January 5, 1968 and May 1, 1968 with a crew of two, a cameraman and a sound recordist. Malle arrived in India with no particular plans and financed the trip himself. The resulting 30 hours of footage was then edited down to the 363 minutes of Phantom India. The 105-minute long Calcutta used the footage he had recorded over his three-week stay in that city. Phantom India was shown on French television and the BBC in the UK in 1969. Many British Indians and the Indian Government felt that Malle had shown a one-sided portrait of India, focussing on the impoverished, rather than the developing, parts of the country. France / tour / detour / deux / enfants is a 1977 film written and directed by Jean-luc Godard and Anne-Marie Miéville. Culture Clash in AmeriCCa is a 2005 documentary film directed by Emilio Estevez. It is an anthology of fun and thought-provoking skits and monologues portraying diverse American immigrants. Emlio Estevez doesn't appear in this documentary film. Inspiration came from thousands of interviews conducted nationwide during a period of 20 years, by Culture Clash. In the title, AmeriCCa's two big letter CC means "Culture Clash". Richard Montoya, Ricardo Salinas and Herbert Siguenze appeared as various roles. Some Kind of Monster is a 2004 documentary film featuring the American heavy metal band Metallica. It shares its name with the song "Some Kind of Monster" from Metallica's 2003 album St. Anger. The film shows many studio rehearsals and fragments of concert footage. It won the Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary Feature. The DVD release was handled by Paramount Pictures, whose 2000 film Mission: Impossible II featured "I Disappear" by Metallica. Metallica will re-release the film, including a bonus documentary, this year to celebrate its 10th anniversary. Fastpitch is a 2000 documentary and sports film written by Fred Kaufman, and also written and directed by Jeremy Spear and Juliet Weber. La terrapène is a 1984 short film. Anytown, USA is a 2005 documentary film produced by director Kristian Fraga on the mayoral race in Bogota, New Jersey. The mayoral race was among Republican Steve Lonegan, Democrat Fred Pesce and independent Dave Musikant. The film is described as a candid documentary on a small town that "serves as a perfect backdrop which provides a compromising look at our nation's political climate and proves that all politics is truly local". It was screened at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Film Festival on April 9, 2005, where it won the award for Best Documentary. Real Change is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Adam Michael Becker. Barnet Horse Fair is an 1896 British short black-and-white silent documentary film produced by Robert W. Paul. Given the age of this film the copyright has now expired. The Barnet Horse Fair had begun in the 16th century and was originally held twice a year before becoming an annual event. Up until the 20th Century it mainly involved the sale of horses and other livestock. Free the Butterfly is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Joanna Frydrych. Raquel: A Marked Women is a 2013 short documentary film written by Gabriela Bohm and directed by Gabriela Bohm. Whores or Hairdressers is a 2011 documentary film written by Monica Moya and directed by Monica Moya and José L. Sánchez. Hillary: The Movie is a 2008 political documentary about United States Senator and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. It was produced by Citizens United. The film was scheduled to be offered as video-on-demand on cable TV right before the Democratic primaries in January 2008, but the federal government blocked it. The blocking of the film's airing was the subject of the court case Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission. The documentary interviewed various conservative figures such as Dick Morris and Ann Coulter and reviewed various scandals which Hillary Clinton allegedly participated in, such as the White House travel office controversy, White House FBI files controversy, Whitewater controversy, and cattle future controversy. Hearts of Hate is a 1995 Canadian documentary film about the Canadian White Supremacist movement of the early to mid-1990s. It profiles the four most active groups in Canada at the time Heritage Front, Aryan Nations, Church of the Creator and Canadian Liberty Net. Directed and produced by Peter Raymont, the film primarily studies the involvement of young Canadians in the activities of these groups, which were making frequent headlines at the time in Canada. The documentary was intended for in-classroom viewing, though it aired nationally on CTV. Interviews in the documentary include Wolfgang Droege, the deceased leader of the Heritage Front, George Burdi, former lead singer of RaHoWa and Alicia Reckzin a former member of the Anti-Racist Action. The film erroneously claims that Dunbarton High School is located in Scarborough, Ontario when in fact it is located east in the neighboring city of Pickering. Amor America is a 1989 documentary film written and directed by Ciro Capellari. Soviets Plus Electricity is a 2001 documentary film from France, directed by Nicolas Rey. Act of God is a 2009 Canadian documentary film that investigates the "metaphysical" effects of being struck by lightning. It was directed by Jennifer Baichwal and distributed by Zeitgeist Films. The film's world premier was at the 2009 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto on 30 April 2009. It went on general release in Canada on 1 May 2009, and limited release in the United States on 31 July 2009. The film's European premiere was at the 44th Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in the Czech Republic on 11 July 2009. "Share the experiences of three resilient Latina immigrant mothers who explore the multigenerational impact of their children’s coming out process. " - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Ocean Monk chronicles the soul-searching of a group of monks living in New York City. Students of the late Indian teacher, Sri Chinmoy, who lived in Queens for over 40 years, this band of friends discovers the beauty and power of the nearby surfing beaches and incorporate their love for the ocean into their search for enlightenment. Includes appearances by Kelly Slater, Jack Johnson and Titus Kinimaka. Baroque Duet is a 1992 documentary and music film directed by Susan Froemke, Peter Gelb, Pat Jaffe and Albert Maysles. The Secret is a 2006 film produced by Prime Time Productions consisting of a series of interviews designed to demonstrate everything one wants or needs can be satisfied by believing in an outcome, repeatedly thinking about it, and maintaining positive emotional states to "attract" the desired outcome. The censored version of the film and the subsequent publication of the book of the same name attracted interest from media figures such as Oprah Winfrey, Ellen DeGeneres, and Larry King as well as criticism from the mainstream press. Ferry Tales is a 2003 American short documentary film written, produced and directed by Katja Esson. It follows the conversations of women in the powder room of the Staten Island Ferry during the morning commute from Staten Island to Manhattan. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject In the Land of Lepchas is a 1997 documentary film directed by Anjan Bose and Manas Kamal Chowdhari. Charcoal Burners is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Piotr Zlotorowicz. Fremd is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Miriam Fassbender. Justin is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Ian McDonald. Spirit of the Bluebird is a 2011 Documentary/Animation/Short film directed by Jesse Gouchey and Xstine Cook who also writes the film. Watashitachi ni yurusareta tokubetsu na jikan no owari is a documentary film directed by Shingo Ohta. Being Here is a documentary film directed by Mohamed Zran. Living Condition is a 2008 animated documentary film directed by Dee Hibbert Jones and Nomi Talisman. The Prison at the End of the World is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Lucía Vasallo. Between Life And Death is a 2010 documentary film directed by Nick Holt. "The Smiths of Salt Lake City may have America's most common surname, but their story is anything but ordinary. With two boys, a dog, a nice house and a strong commitment to the Mormon Church, Steve and Kim Smith believed they had achieved the American dream. But after nine years of marriage, shattering revelations of betrayal came — enough to test the strongest bonds of faith and love. When Steve confessed to infidelities with men, and they both find they are HIV+, Kim makes an unlikely choice. The Smith Family is a searing account of one family's struggle to preserve family and faith, while redefining forgiveness in the face of daunting tragedy." Quoting the synopsis from mayamusic.com Super Comet: After The Impact is a 2007 speculative documentary produced by ZDF and the Discovery Channel. It was directed by Stefan Schneider. The two-hour production hypothesizes the effects on modern-day earth of a large comet impacting in Mexico near the same location of the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, the ancient impact of a comet or meteor that is believed to have triggered the mass extinction of the dinosaurs. The film alternates between interviews with climatologists and researchers and dramatized scenes following several groups of people as they attempt to survive in the days and months after the disaster: a separated family in France, a pair of scientists in Hawaii, a man who manages to survive for a period of time near the ground zero impact in Mexico, and a tribe in Cameroon. Mzima - Haunt of the Riverhorse is a 2001 documentary film that won a Peabody award in 2001, written by Mark Deeble and Victoria Stone. An Apology to Elephants is a 2013 documentary that explores purported abuse and brutal treatment of elephants. It showcases elephant training and the alleged psychological trauma and physical damage done by living conditions in some zoos and circuses. It was premiered on HBO on April 24, 2013, also celebrated as an Earth Day. The documentary includes interviews with environmental activists and biologists, including Performing Animal Welfare Society co-founders Ed Stewart and Pat Derby. The film was dedicated to Derby, also known as an "elephant lady", who died on February 15, 2013. Narrator Lily Tomlin campaigned on the subject for several years, in the course of which she met Pat Derby. Later, she suggested that HBO make a movie about elephant captivity. HBO began work on the documentary in 2011. It was later joined by PETA, which offered pictures and video footage, including photos from a whistleblower depicting elephant training at the Ringling Bros circus. "Since the arrival of the Internet in the African republic of Cameroon, Internet cafés have mushroomed. In a country where nearly half the population lives under the poverty threshold, many young women who dream of escaping a life of misery by marrying a rich, white foreigner, surf the Internet for European marriage prospects at cybercafés such as Love.com, Affection.org, Flirt.net and Meeting.com. Set in the capital city of Yaoundé, North-South.com contains interviews with many of these young women who see Europe as a "paradise," and who express incredibly naïve beliefs about European men––that they are more masculine, more romantic, have lots of money and always tell the truth. The film also tells the stories of several Cameroonian women who married white Europeans, showing their current situations, the cultural differences with which they deal, and the personal sacrifices they made in exchange for economic security. We also learn of the tragedy of a 19-year-old woman who was lured to Paris by an Internet correspondent, taken captive and forced into prostitution for nine months before escaping. In relating these heartrending stories of dreams, hopes, disappointments and happiness that develop from on-line encounters between black women and white men, North-South.com also provides a provocative contemporary portrait of the relationship between the "developed" and "developing" worlds." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Tongpan is a 1977 Thai 16 mm black-and-white docudrama that re-creates a seminar that took place in Northeast Thailand in 1975 to discuss the proposed Pa-Mong Dam on the Mekong. Interwoven are sequences depicting a poor farmer, Tongpan, who had lost his land to another dam some years before, and his struggles to make ends meet. Because of the film's socialist message and suspected communist sympathies of the filmmakers, it was banned by the Thai government. The 63-minute film was released on VCD in Thailand in 2006. Les communes de Paris is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Simon Bouisson. Fedia, Three Minutes After the Big Bang is a 1999 short documentary film directed by Audrius Stonys. Man of Aran is a 1934 British fictional documentary film directed by Robert J. Flaherty about life on the Aran Islands off the western coast of Ireland. It portrays characters living in premodern conditions, documenting their daily routines such as fishing off high cliffs, farming potatoes where there is little soil, and hunting for huge basking sharks to get liver oil for lamps. Some situations are fabricated, such as one scene in which the shark fishermen are almost lost at sea in a sudden gale. Additionally, the family members shown are not actually related, having been chosen from among the islanders for their photogenic qualities. George Stoney's 1978 documentary How the Myth was Made, which is included in the special features of the DVD, relates that the Aran Islanders had not hunted sharks in this way for over fifty years at the time the film was made. Man of Aran is Flaherty's re-creation of culture on the edges of modern society, even though much of the primitive life depicted had been left behind by the 1930s. It is impressive, however, for its drama, for its spectacular cinematography of landscape and seascape, and for its concise editing. The Hollywood Ten is a 1950 American 16mm short documentary film. In the film, each member of the Hollywood Ten made a short speech denouncing McCarthyism and the Hollywood blacklisting. The film was directed by John Berry. Berry was blacklisted upon the film's release, and unable to find work, he left for France. The documentary is available on the DVD releases of Spartacus and Salt of the Earth. Breast Cancer: An African American Perspective is a 2009 documentary film directed by Jamie R. Balthazar. Real Super Heroes: Real Vigilantes is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Eric Matthies. Ringers: Lord of the Fans is a 2005 documentary film investigating the growth of the Tolkien fandom all the way from the release of The Hobbit book by J. R. R. Tolkien in 1937 to Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings trilogy. The film tells about the early days of the Tolkien fandom when it was part of the hippie culture and influenced many people in the pop world, some of whom became famous and are interviewed, including David Carradine, and Lemmy of Motörhead. Ringers includes Leonard Nimoy performing "The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins." The Mythopoeic Society and the Tolkien Society are mentioned. The film also tells the story of the cartoon version of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings animated films. The success of the Peter Jackson films is described through interviews with Jackson and the stars of the trilogy. The film is narrated by Dominic Monaghan. At The Landfill, Camera On Hand is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Angela Cristina, Miriam Conceição, and Roberto Silveira. The Session Is Open is a 2006 crime documentary film written and directed by Vincenzo Marra. Global poverty did not just happen. It began with military conquest, slavery and colonization that resulted in the seizure of land, minerals and forced labor. Today, the problem persists because of unfair debt, trade and tax policies - in other words, wealthy countries taking advantage of poor, developing countries. Renowned actor and activist, Martin Sheen, narrates The End of Poverty?, a feature-length documentary directed by award-winning director, Philippe Diaz, which explains how today's financial crisis is a direct consequence of these unchallenged policies that have lasted centuries. Consider that 20% of the planet's population uses 80% of its resources and consumes 30% more than the planet can regenerate. At this rate, to maintain our lifestyle means more and more people will sink below the poverty line. Filmed in the slums of Africa and the barrios of Latin America, The End of Poverty? features expert insights from: Nobel prize winners in Economics, Amartya Sen and Joseph Stiglitz; acclaimed authors Susan George, Eric Toussaint, John Perkins, Chalmers Johnson; university professors William Easterly and Michael Watts; government ministers such as Bolivia's Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera and the leaders of social movements in Brazil, Venezuela, Kenya and Tanzania. It is produced by Cinema Libre Studio in collaboration with the Robert Schalkenbach Foundation. Can we really end poverty within our current economic system? Think again. Mala Mala is a 2014 documentary film directed by Dan Sickles and Antonio Santini. I Am Micro is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Shumona Goel and Shai Heredia. The Original Latin Kings of Comedy is a 2002 stand-up comedy film directed by Jeb Brien, and the sequel to The Original Kings of Comedy. The film features the stand up routines of George Lopez, Cheech Marin, Joey Medina, Alex Reymundo, and Paul Rodríguez. Nayib Estéfan deejayed. The primary subject of jokes is the Mexican way of living, both in the US as well as in Mexico. This includes some oddities like the fact that Mexican people never teach their children of subjects like sex and that they encourage their children to continue with any wrong action they try to fail so "they can learn". Enter the world of amateur boxing at its most raw. A behind-the-scenes, in-the-locker room look at what goes on before, during and after a boxing match. Meet the determined Roberto ''The Rock'' Ortega as he defies the odds and battles back from a potentially career-ending industrial injury for a chance to compete at the world amateur championship. An immigrant from Honduras to Canada as a teenager, Ortega channels his rare passion for boxing and uses it to overcome obstacles both in and out of the ring. Omer is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Emma Strebel. Fried Fish, Chicken Soup and a Premiere Show is a 2012 news history documentary film written and directed by Mamta Murthy. Coral Sea Dreaming is a documentary film directed by David Hannan. Fragments of a Search (original title: Fragmentos de una Búsqueda) is a 2009 documentary film directed by Pablo Milstein and Norberto Ludín. Seeds of Destiny is a 1946 short propaganda film about the despairing situation faced by millions of children in the wake of the Holocaust who were homeless, parentless, orphaned, and in poor health. The film was produced by the Defense Department of The U.S. Army War Department to keep the world's attention focused on the suffering of displaced and orphaned refugee children in transit and displaced persons camps in Europe and to champion the work of UNRRA. It was the winner of the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject in 1946. It was directed by accomplished short film — and later feature film — director David Miller. In countries throughout Europe, as soon as an area had been liberated by the armed forces of the United Nations or as a consequence of retreat of the enemy, the U.S. Army Signal Corps filmed dramatic images of neglected and injured children in displaced persons' camps, refugee camps or wandering the streets in the rubble of bombed out cities. By 1944, the United States had joined with other nations as a signatory with the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. The Lessons of Hayti is a 2013 historical documentary film directed by Byron C. Hunter and Edward J. Harris II. Leonard Bernstein: Reflections is a 1978 documentary film directed by Peter Rosen. Jean-Louis Barrault—A Man of the Theatre is a 1983 short documentary film written by Helen Gary Bishop and directed by Muriel Balasch. Displaced is a 2010 documentary film directed by the Somali-American filmmaker Idil Ibrahim about the recruitment of Somali-American young men into the civil war in Somalia and the effect their disappearance has on their families. Her directorial debut, it was released as part of the Tribeca Film Institute's Tribeca All Access program. The Iranian-Canadian-American filmmaker Anna Fahr served as a producer on the project. The Fabulous Fifties is a 1960 documentary film written by Charles Eames, Ray Eames, A.J. Russell and Max Wilk and directed by Charles Eames, Ray Eames and Norman Jewison. Hungry In The West End is a 2013 short documentary social problem film directed by John Martin. Blossoms of Fire is a 2000 documentary film about the people of Juchitán, Oaxaca, Mexico. The I Heart Revolution: We're All in This Together is a documentary film by Hillsong United and the second of the three-part "The I Heart Revolution" project. The film was released in cinemas for one night only in the US and Canada on November 4, 2009. According to their website, part one, With Hearts as One, is about the confession of their lips, while part two, We're All in This Together, is all about their action. With Hearts as One debuted in Canadian theatres as a one-time show on May 21, 2008, because that was "the first place of [their] tour". The feature length documentary filmed over a period of 3 years, The I Heart Revolution: We’re all in this Together follows the worship band, Hillsong United, as they travel across 6 continents 42 nations and 93 cities in a cross-cultural journey of music, animation, interviews and live action documentary as they realise every story of hope, love, loss and sacrifice ultimately points to the one story. In November 2008, Hillsong United released a teaser for the DVD on their Facebook page "A classic of Russian documentary film he also stamps his typical hallmark on his latest film. Long shots fragmented with fade-outs, a sophisticated composition and the effective use of 35 mm black-and-white film. Loznitsa is able to raise seeming banality to the status of an artistic testimony indirectly reminiscent of the classics of Russian cinematography. On this occasion, he takes his camera along to record an attempt to catch fish in a frozen lake in the middle of the snowy Russian plains. In this harsh natural environment, four young men try to rip from the frozen depths of nature something which will provide them with a livelihood." Quoting the synopsis from the 2007 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival site. After Winter, Spring is a 2012 documentary film directed by Judith Lit that follows the lives of family farmers in the Périgord region of France. In addition to documenting their way of life, the film also depicts their struggles under pressure from real estate development, government agriculture policy, and large-scale agribusiness. The film has screened at a number of film festivals. Its awards include Best Documentary at the 2013 Arizona International Film Festival and the Audience Award for Best World Cinema Documentary at the 2012 Mill Valley Film Festival. Holkmannen is a 2014 documentary short biography comedy drama film written and directed by Mattias Olsson. A Sense of Reality is a 2010 short documentary biography film written and directed by Anne Milne. The Faux Real is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Suzanne Hillinger. Take Me to the River is a 2014 documentary film written by Rick Clark and directed by Martin Shore. "The Eternal Frame" is a video piece documenting the reenactment of the John F. Kennedy assassination in Dealey Plaza in a collaboration between two San Francisco-based artist collectives: T.R. Uthco and Ant Farm. The artists taking on the roles of Kennedy, Jackie, and others rehearsed extensively to ensure verisimilitude, and when they performed the reenactment, it was executed with a striking attention to detail. While part of the video shows the artists playing on America's obsession with the media, ultimately the video shows that the sacred images of the assassination cannot be mocked. This piece can be seen as a commentary on the pervasive media culture in America, as it explores how the Kennedy assassination itself became a new type of media event. The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus is a film released in 1996 of an 11 December 1968 event put together by The Rolling Stones. The event comprised two concerts on a circus stage and included such acts as The Who, Taj Mahal, Marianne Faithfull, and Jethro Tull. John Lennon and his fiancee Yoko Ono performed as part of a supergroup called The Dirty Mac, along with Eric Clapton, Mitch Mitchell, and Keith Richards. It was originally meant to be aired on the BBC, but the Rolling Stones withheld it. The Stones contended they did so due to their substandard performance, because they had taken the stage early in the morning and were clearly exhausted. Many others believe that the true reason for not releasing the video was that The Who, who were fresh off a concert tour, upstaged the Stones on their own production. "Artist and filmmaker Sharon Lockhart is known for creating beautiful, meditative films that incorporate subtle movement and a static, photographic gaze to examine her subjects. In this daring pair of new works, Lunch Break and Exit, Lockhart explores a new approach, an insisting sense of motion that produces more of what might be described as a photographic experience. In Lunch Break, the camera is entirely untethered, slowly moving in a single tracking shot through a long corridor where workers are enjoying their lunch hour at the Bath Iron Works, a massive shipyard in Maine. In Exit, the frame constantly fills with teeming workers as they head home after a long day’s work.Lunch Break and Exit are examples of Lockhart’s timely new film and photographic series about the present state of U.S. labor. The organic rhythm of workers in the shipyard receives a lyrical examination at a juncture in American economic history that may well make such scenarios obsolete. As viewers, we must completely surrender conventional narrative expectations and let ourselves be transported into the atmosphere and idiosyncratic details of life at the shipyard. We develop a sense of comfort and sentimental camaraderie with the workers as they enjoy restful moments amidst productive labor. When the final frame passes the shutter, we have become so enmeshed with shipyard life that we don’t want it to end." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. 31st Haul is a 2013 documentary film directed by Denis Klebeev. Tenacity on the Tasman is a 2009 documentary film about adventurer Olly Hicks’s attempt to circumnavigate the world in a rowboat. The film premiered at the ODEON Leicester Square on November 19, 2009, becoming the first independently distributed documentary to premiere at the theater. The film was produced and directed by independent filmmaker George Olver through his production company Pendragon Productions, and distributed globally as part of the Adventure Film Festival. "Two young women from Israel, who wouldn't be out of place in any cool café in the world, coming across just as smart and fashion-conscious as their contemporaries in Berlin or Buenos Aires. But blogger Sarah and photographer Shlomit have paid a high price to have arrived in the here and now as modern women. Both of them were cast out by their families after fleeing from the ultra-orthodox Haredi community. Over the last decade, the community has become more strongly fundamental, with girls and women feeling the pinch of this move towards radicalization in the form of heightened repression and extreme restrictions in their freedom of movement. Thus, in the so-called "Black Bus", women are only allowed to sit at the back, so that any sort of fleeting contact with men they do not know can be avoided. It is in these surroundings that Shlomit works as a photographer, documenting the daily moments of confrontation as they take place, while Sarah blogs about the consequences of this escalation of the gender conflict. Both Sarah and Shlomit are searching for a new identity, whether with the camera or the internet – the film creates a portrait of them as the protagonists of a largely unnoticed societal conflict in today's Israel." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Berlin Film Festival site. Vermeer: Master of Light is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Joe Krakora. Beautiful Losers is a 2008 documentary filmed by director Aaron Rose and co-directed by Joshua Leonard. It was produced by Sidetrack Films in association with BlackLake Productions, and stars several artists including Harmony Korine, writer of independent cult films Kids and Gummo and former graffiti artist Stephen Powers II It premiered at South by Southwest on March 9, 2008 and later in general release on August 8, 2008 at the IFC Center in New York City. Beast Wishes is a documentary film directed by Frank Dietz and Trish Geiger. The Flat Jungle is a 1978 documentary film directed by Johan van der Keuken. The Recording of Mr Beast is the name of a 2006 film starring Scottish post-rock band Mogwai. The film is also known as A Film I Was Pure In. The Diplomat is a 2013 documentary, sports film written and directed by Jennifer Arnold, Senain Kheshgi. Remains Quiet is a 2013 short film written and directed by Stefan Kriekhaus. The Real Revolutionaries is a 2009 documentary film directed by Paul Crowder and written by Mark Monroe. Black Buffalo Water is a 1970 documentary film directed by Youssouff Aidaby and Andrei Catalin Baleanu. Pelicans of the Ghost Lakes is a 2006 documentary film written by Nicholas Searle and directed by Gary Steer. En Handelsresande I Evigt Liv is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Anna Viola Hallberg and Björn Perborg. Unlocking the Mystery of Life is a 2003 intelligent design documentary film promoted and produced by the Illustra Media, a branch of the Discovery Institute, and Focus on the Family. The film's script was written by Stephen C. Meyer, who is director of the Center for Science and Culture at the Discovery Institute, and it includes fellows of the institute such as Jonathan Wells and Michael Behe arguing for intelligent design and against evolution. It is promoted by Focus on the Family and Campus Crusade for Christ is providing a free copy to every school in Australia. In 2005, Albuquerque PBS member station KNME originally declined to air the film because "The funders of this program have a clear and specific agenda that they openly promote" and the station did not want to take sides. However, on May 22, 2005, the film aired on a commercial Albuquerque station, KOB-Channel 4. Illustra Media states that after the film's release in September 2003, more than 40 PBS affiliates had aired the documentary. The film is widely criticized by scientists for its promotion of intelligent design. Elvis on Tour is a Golden Globe Award-winning American musical documentary motion picture released by MGM in 1972. It was the thirty-third and final motion picture to star Elvis Presley before his death in 1977. Trance and Dance in Bali is a short documentary film shot by Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson during their visits to Bali in the 1930s. The film was not released until 1952. In 1999 the film was deemed "culturally significant" by the United States Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry. Gender X is a 2004 documentary film directed by Julia Ostertag. Alvorada - Brazil's Changing Face is a 1962 West German documentary film directed by Hugo Niebeling. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and was entered into the 1963 Cannes Film Festival. My Brown Skin Baby, They Take 'im Away is a 1970 documentary film directed by Bill Steller. The little lady of the Capitole is a 2005 documentary film written by Jacqueline Veuve and Anne Pellaton, directed by Jacqueline Veuve. Alimentos provenientes de la selva is a 1987 short documentary film directed by Anthony Jolly. Hamburg Weekly News No. 8 is a 1984 film directed by Kai Wessel and Arne Steffen. About the History of Paper, Part 1 is one of the films pertaining to the series "Biographies of Objects" directed by Peter and Zsóka Nestler. The Capricorn Contract is a film directed by Edwin Scragg. Foudre is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Manuela Morgaine. Dyslexic days In case of Bin-chan is a 2012 film directed by Akira Tanimitsu. What Would Jesus Buy? is 2007 a documentary film produced by Morgan Spurlock and directed by Rob VanAlkemade. The title is a play on the phrase "What would Jesus do?" The film debuted on the festival circuit on March 11, 2007, at the South By Southwest conference in Austin, Texas. It went into general US release on November 16, 2007. Sex My British Job is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Nick Broomfield. The War: Soldados is a 2007 documentary film directed by Scott Gracheff. Role Model: Gene Wilder is a (2008) (Biography,Documentary) film written and directed by Robert Trachtenberg. Their Houses is a 2011 documentary short film written and directed by Cam Archer. Forensic Psychologists, Historians and Medical Engineers weigh in on 'Cannibal Possessions.' Stars Christian Tizya. I Remember: A Film About Joe Brainard is a 2012 short, documentary and biographical film directed by Matt Wolf. Alex Honnold has become known as the boldest soloist of his generation. In this dangerous game, how does he balance pure ambition with self-preservation? From highball boulder first ascents to 5.13 free solos, from far-flung trad climbing adventures, to speed records on The Nose, Honnold wrestles with this question in preparation for his biggest adventure yet - the Yosemite Triple. In under 19 hours he climbs Mt. Watkins, El Cap, and Half Dome, 95% of it free solo. The story of how one immigrant's determination and sweat created the most significant running event in the world. Run for Your Life touches the heart and soul of anyone who has a passion for running, and documents the inspirational life of Fred Lebow and the history of the New York City Marathon. 500 Years Later is the title of an independent documentary film directed by Owen 'Alik Shahadah, written by M. K. Asante, Jr. released in 2005. It won five international film festival awards in the category of Best Documentary. 500 Years Later has received praise as well as controversy, both for the genre of the film, and the social-political impact of the film as it relates to race study. The film opened on February 28, 2005, at the Pan-African Awards and won Best Documentary at its premiere. The film made its American television premiere on August 23, 2008 on TV One, and Ethiopian Television premiere on October 27, 2007. In 2010, the sequel Motherland was released. Poor Man's Process is a documentary film directed by Morgan Jon Fox. Zacharias is a 1986 documentary film directed by Irene Dische. About Everyday Things – In June for Example is 2009 short documentary film directed by Melanie Jilg. Odyssey in Rome is a 2007 documentary film directed by Alex Grazioli. African Violet is a 1997 documenary film directed by Koto Bolofo. Made In Madagascar - Avec Presque Rien... is a 2013 documentary film directed by Nantenaina Lova. Schwarz-Weiss-Malerei is a 1984 documentary film directed by Sophie Kotanyi. Breathing Underwater is a 2011 documentary film directed by Andri Hinnen and Stefan Muggli. The Pleasures of this Stately Dome is a 1975 documentary film directed by Geoff Winningham. The Public Square is a 2012 documentary film directed by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady. Recognized for her flamboyant videos, outfits, and performances, Lady Gaga is an international superstar. Lady Gaga has become on of the best-selling music artists of all time. In this riveting docu-drama, we explore the trials and triumphs of American icon Lady Gaga. Blessed Fruit Of The Womb is a 2013 short film directed by Charlene Music. "Danish master Jørgen Leth travels the globe in this sensual, provocative and sometimes autobiographical essay film about a man searching … searching the world for the nature of the erotic." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 TIFF site. Nowhere Home is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Margreth Olin. Crime Unpunished is a 2010 documentary film directed by Tamás Novák and Fruzsina Skrabski. Raul the Terrible is a 2006 documentary film written by Carlos Alperin and directed by David Bradbury. A look at how the media has changed since Natural Born Killers satirized, and a look at how a similar film could be made today. 9/11: The Day That Changed The World is a TV documentary directed by Leslie Woodhead. Remote Area is a 2005 documentary film directed by Alexandra Sell. Molodost Nasej Strany is a 1946 documentary film directed by Sergei Yutkevich. Las banderas del amanecer is a 1985 documentary film directed by Jorge Sanjinés and Beatriz Azurduy Palacios. East Timor: Birth of a Nation - Rosa's Story is a 2002 documentary film directed by Luigi Acquisto. James May at the Edge of Space is a British documentary in which television presenter James May came close to fulfilling his lifelong dream to be an astronaut by flying to the stratosphere in a Lockheed U-2 spy plane. It was first aired on BBC Four on 21 June 2009 as part of commemorations of the 40th anniversary of the first Apollo moon landing, and tied in with another May documentary an hour earlier on BBC Two called James May on the Moon. The programme followed May's three days of training with the United States Air Force at Beale Air Force Base in which he practised safety drills and learnt how to use a space suit correctly. With training complete, he was taken on a three-hour flight reaching an altitude of over 70,000 feet, piloted by instructor pilot Major John "Cabi" Cabigas. Cutting Loose is a documentary film made in the 1970s by James Lipscomb. It was funded in part by Cinema Center Films following the success of Blue Water White Death. The budget was around $700,000. However because of distribution problems the movie was never seen. Starboard Light is a 2013 documentary film directed by Nick Fitzhugh. For millions he's not so much a hero, more a Godhead, and almost from the day he entered the public domain huge swathes of fans have identified with his philosophy, his lifestyle and, most crucially, his music. Holy Ghost People is a 1967 documentary directed and narrated by Peter Adair. It is about the service of a Pentecostal community in Scrabble Creek, West Virginia, United States. The church service includes faith healing, snake handling, speaking in tongues and singing. This documentary has entered the public domain and is available at the Internet Archive. Classic Creatures: Return of the Jedi is a television documentary, first broadcast on CBS in 1983. It is a look behind-the-scenes of the creation of the various alien creatures from the third Star Wars film, Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi, which was released that year. The documentary was presented by Star Wars actors Carrie Fisher and Billy Dee Williams, and directed by Robert Guenette who had directed the previous television specials The Making of Star Wars and SP FX: The Empire Strikes Back. The Hand That Feeds is a 2014 documentary thriller drama film written and directed by Robin Blotnick and Rachel Lears. City of Pearls: A Tale of Neglected People is a 2011 Documentary film produced by the Hyderabad chapter of Students Islamic Organisation of India. The 38-minute documentary captures the paradox between the high-rise buildings, malls, flyovers and the abject poverty and lack of basic amenities in the slums of Hyderabad. The documentary was released by Dr. S.Q.R Ilyas, Secretary, Welfare Party of India in a special screening organised at Madina Education Centre, Hyderabad. Muslim intellectuals such as Hamid Mohammed Khan and leaders from various socio-political class were also present. This Bloody Blundering Business is a half-hour documentary film released in 1971. It examines the American occupation of the Philippines, following the Spanish–American War. The film is characterized by its ragtime music combined with dramatically understated revelations of the attitudes of the Americans towards the native Filipinos. Subverses is a 2011 film directed by Ella Raidel. Story of the bike, from its creation to its demise. RFK Must Die: The Assassination of Bobby Kennedy is an investigative documentary by Irish writer and filmmaker Shane O'Sullivan released in 2007. The film expands on his earlier reports for BBC Newsnight and the Guardian and explores alternative theories of what happened the night Bobby Kennedy was shot at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles on June 5, 1968. The title comes from a page of "free writing" found in Sirhan Sirhan's notebook after the shooting, in which he wrote "R.F.K. must die - RFK must be killed Robert F. Kennedy must be assassinated… before June 5 '68." Running on an anti-war ticket, Kennedy had just won the California Democratic primary and was confident he would challenge Richard Nixon for the White House. As he walked through the hotel kitchen pantry, shots rang out and he fell to the floor, fatally wounded by a bullet to the brain, fired from an inch behind his right ear. 24-year old Palestinian Sirhan Sirhan was convicted of murder as the "lone assassin" but witnesses placed Sirhan several feet in front of Kennedy and for forty years he claims he has never been able to remember the shooting. Defense psychiatrist Bernard L. Language of Love is a 1969 Swedish sex educational film directed by Torgny Wickman. It was an international success. It gained publicity when 30,000 people gathered on Trafalgar Square in London to protest against a nearby movie theatre showing it, one of the protesters being pop singer Cliff Richard. Lord Longford and Raymond Blackburn decided to pursue a matter of pornography classification for the film Language of Love into the Court of Appeal and lost the writ of mandamus against the Police Commissioner, who had refused to intrude upon the British Board of Film Classification remit. United States customs were known to have confiscated copies of the film. Following such events, it was marketed as a sexploitation film of the "white coater" variety in some places — a pornographic film masquerading as a documentary or scientific film. The film had two sequels, Mera ur kärlekens språk in 1970 and Kärlekens XYZ in 1971. In 1973 the three films were edited together into a new film, Det bästa ur Kärlekens språk-filmerna. Mera ur kärlekens språk had equally successful box office though it dealt more with alternate sexuality and lifestyles and also with the disabled. Ongka's Big Moka: The Kawelka of Papua New Guinea is a 1976 documentary film, part of Granada Television's Disappearing World Series which ran from 1969-1993. Code Gray: Ethical Dilemmas in Nursing is a 1984 American short documentary film directed by Joan Sawyer. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. This documentary shows four actual situations where nurses confront difficult ethical decisions, as they balance the often contradictory views of patients, family members, and other staff about what is best for their patients. Case 1: A newborn with probably fatal birth defects that is a ward of the state is in the Neonatal ICU and nurses must decide what level of care represents benefiecence, or "doing good." Case 2: The staff in a nursing home must decide between respecting a patient's autonomy and the need to restrain her to prevent injury. Case 3: The nurses in an ICU make daily decisions about allocation of nursing resources and bed according to the principles of justice. Case 4: A nurse caring for a terminally ill patient faces a conflict between fidelity to her commitment to relieve suffering and the promise made to the patient's family. Heist: Who Stole the American Dream? is a 2011 documentary film, which argues that government deregulation led to the Great Recession. It was directed and produced by Donald Goldmacher and journalist Frances Causey and narrated by Thom Hartmann. The documentary is partially based on Jeff Faux's 2006 book The Global Class War. The film traces the roots of the Great Recession to Virginia lawyer Lewis F. Powell, Jr., whose 1971 memo to the United States Chamber of Commerce urged corporate America to become more aggressive in molding politics and law. Filmmakers Goldmacher and Causey started work on Heist in 2006 after they had been investigating the exploitation of undocumented workers near the Arizona border. Heist explores the premise that Roosevelt's New Deal is being dismantled piecewise. It documents the aggressive push for free trade agreements such as the North American Free Trade Agreement as well as the deregulation of financial products as evidenced by the repeal of the Glass–Steagall Act and the passage of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000. Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo is a 2009 documentary directed by American filmmaker Jessica Oreck. The documentary shows how insects are entwined with Japan from past to present. A Japanese narrator reads poetry, reads legends, and give information about the insects. The film has shots of insects interspersed with shots of daily life in Japan. It has to do with how the Japanese treat insects of all types. The film screened within the 2009 South by Southwest Film Conference & Festival and the 2009 Maryland Film Festival. It was nominated for the Truer Than Fiction Award at the 25th Independent Spirit Awards. HHH: Portrait de Hou Hsiao-Hsien is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Olivier Assayas. In Search of Guru Dutt is a 1989 three-part documentary on the life and work of Indian actor, writer, director and producer of Hindi films Guru Dutt to mark his 25th death anniversary. This documentary is a three-part tribute to director Guru Dutt, who died in 1964 at the age of 39. The work traces Guru Dutt's personal story through many interviews with his family members and colleagues and observes his work through the use of extensive film excerpts. The documentary was produced by the British television network Channel 4 producer Nasreen Munni Kabir. The Joe Show is a 2014 documentary drama film directed by Randy Murray. The Ballad of Esequiel Hernández is a 2007 American documentary film that investigates the murky killing of Esequiel Hernández Jr by US Marines. It is written and directed by Kieran Fitzgerald and narrated by Tommy Lee Jones. One of the most unanimously acclaimed documentaries in recent years and winner of the coveted Sundance Film Festival Directing Award, this compelling film is an inspirational and uplifting portrait of a truly colorful and most unusual New York character. From Go Fish to Paris is Burning to The Watermelon Woman, this festival favorite goes behind the scenes to reveal seven successful lesbian directors. "A simple rainbow sticker elicits a hate crime when Erin Davies’s VW Beetle is spray-painted with the word “fag.” After the initial shock and embarrassment, Erin dubs her car “fagbug” and transforms the ugly incident into an opportunity to raise awareness about homophobia in American society. Armed with her besmirched bug and a video camera, she embarks on an impromptu 58-day, cross-country trip as both outreach and experiment, documenting her experiences as she takes her campaign through some of the country’s most conservative communities. Davies notes the way she and her car are treated at hotels and gas stations, on highways, and in residential areas. She travels to several towns where young men have been murdered for being perceived as gay. On her journey, epithets are shouted and rocks are thrown: bigotry lives on. But there are also countless Good Samaritans who attempt to remove the hateful word from her car or otherwise assist her on her provocative odyssey. Through it all, Davies finds friends, family, and allies offering their encouragement and support, even in the unlikeliest of places." Quoting the program notes from the 2009 Seattle Gay and Lesbian Film Festival site. Dalai Lama Renaissance is a feature length documentary film, produced and directed by Khashyar Darvich, and narrated by actor Harrison Ford. The film documents the Dalai Lama's meeting with the self-titled "Synthesis" group, made up of 40 Western "renaissance" thinkers who hope to use the meeting to change the world and resolve many of the world's problems. The meeting took place at the Dalai Lama's home in Dharamsala, India in September, 1999. The film won 12 awards, was the official selection in over 40 international film festivals, and played in cinemas in over 100 cities in the U.S., as well as other countries in the world like Germany, Austria, Switzerland. It was also released in theaters in Taiwan in June 2009. The film received positive front page Chinese language press in Taiwan. However, The People's Daily presented an article criticizing the film. Among the Western thinkers who meet the Dalai Lama are: quantum physicist Fred Alan Wolf, social scientist Jean Houston, and founder of Agape International Spiritual Center church in Los Angeles, Dr. Michael Beckwith. The Lost Steps? But They Dont Exist is a 1989 film written and directed by Norbert Jochum. Dani, Michi, Renato & Max is a 1987 film directed by Richard Dindo. Born to Trouble: Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a 2000 documentary TV Movie written by Jill Janows & Leslie Lee and directed by Jill Janows. Not Sacks is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Fiona Collins. Nuclear Savage is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Adam Jonas Horowitz. Colors of Absence is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Arun Khopkar. War/Dance is a 2007 American documentary film written and directed by Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine and produced by Shine Global's Susan MacLaury, a professor at Kean University, and Albie Hecht. It was nominated for the 2008 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and received the Emmy Award for Best Documentary and Best Cinematography in 2010. Clarisse is a 2012 short film documentary directed by Liliana Cavani. The Outer Edges is a 2013 documentary film written by Kieran Evans and Karl Hyde and directed by Kieran Evans. Army of One (Build Me Up, Break Me Down) is a documentary TV film written and directed by Sarah Goodman. Judgment In Hungary is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Eszter Hajdú. I, Tintin is a Franco-Belgian film which premiered in the Paris cinema as a feature presentation in 1975. Made in semidocumentary style and mixing interviews with The Adventures of Tintin creator Hergé with real historical events and news stories edited together with animated Adventures of Tintin clips, narrated by Belgian news correspondent, Gérard Valet. The film was produced by Belvision Studios and Pierre Films in cooperation with the Franco-Belgian Ministry of Culture. The Ploughman's Fatigue is a 1982 film directed by Jüri Müür, Enn Säde. An Intimate Evening with Anne Murray is a 1998 documentary written and directed by Bud Schaetzle. Muffinhead In Heaven is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Iselmer Martínez. D-Day to Berlin is a TV program. Perestroika is a 2009 film directed by Sarah Turner. Perestroika is a ghost story that exploits technologies of memory in order to explore what we forget and how we remember. Part psycho geography, part dream, imagery is limited to views from the window of the Trans Siberian train shot in 1988, and then again in 2008. The film culminates at the haunting visual expanse of lake Baikal. The filmmaker herself is the ghost: she is suffering from retrograde amnesia following a head injury caused by a cycling accident. She is repeating a journey to Siberia that she took 20 years ago with her best friend, and also where her best friend subsequently died, following a head injury caused by a cycling accident. The re-enactment of the journey is a memory work, a re-enactment of the past in the present through the process of filming. This is mediated by a continual referencing of the archive sounds and imagery which were shot on the original journey. The hope is that this return will precipitate another return, the return of memory through a re-enactment of trauma. However, this hope is derailed by extreme insomnia and the claustrophobic heat of the train, which ultimately produces delusion and a very different trauma. The voice over comments on the present but it also retreats into the past through the 'archive' footage. The prose starts to fuse what is being seen, what has been seen and what is seen internally. Although this is staged as a confusion between sleeping and waking states it is also a discussion of the status of the image, as the relationship here shifts from ‘truth’, ‘fact’ and ‘record’ to complete misrecognition, or, an experience of the uncanny. The work exploits tropes of documentary and autobiography in order to explore the idea that memory is a narrative response to affectual spaces; the experience of memory is always determined by the affectual filter of now as much as then. The journey to Siberia is as much a psychic voyage as a geographical one - the difference between place and its image in memory; between here and there, or between experienced physical space and imagined space. Ultimately, the work is a meditation on time, memory, association and dissociation; what we know and choose not to know, what we see and choose not to see. One reading suggests that memory is a construct, the truth of a moment or an event contingent on whichever narrative is framing it. Another reading suggests an explicit environmental allegory. Bophana: A Cambodian Tragedy, or Bophana, une tragédie cambodgienne, is a 1996 French-Cambodian made-for-television docudrama directed by Rithy Panh. Il Mercato delle facce is a 1952 Italian film. Farewell to Factory Towns? is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Maynard Seider. Where the Girls Are is a 2003 short documentary film directed by Jennifer Arnold and Tricia Cooke. Finding Sandler is a 2009 Documentary, Adventure, Biography film written and directed by David Seth Cohen. Bus 174 is a Brazilian documentary film released on October 22, 2002. It is the debut film of director José Padilha and co-director Felipe Lacerda. Sandro do Nascimento, a young man from a poor background, held passengers on a bus hostage for four hours. The event was caught live on television. The movie examines the incident and what life is like in the slums and favelas of Rio de Janeiro and how the criminal justice system in Brazil treats the lower classes. Within the film, Padilha interviews former and current street children, members of the Rio police force, the Rio BOPE police team, family members, and sociologists in order to gain insight into what led Nascimento to carry out the hijacking. Germany - Fifties' Style is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Manfred Breuersbrock, Wolfgang Dresler and Dieter Fietzke. President Mir Qanbar is a 2005 Iranian documentary film directed by Mohammad Shirvani. The film follows Mir Qanbar, an elderly Iranian man, as he campaigns in the country's presidential election. The film won the Award of Excellence at the Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival in 2005 and in 2007 won the Audience Favorite award at the Noor Iranian Film Festival in Los Angeles. Budo: The Art of Killing is an award winning 1978 Japanese martial arts documentary created and produced by Hisao Masuda and financed by The Arthur Davis Company. Considered a cult classic, the film is a compilation of various Japanese martial art demonstrations by several famous Japanese instructors such as Gozo Shioda, Taizaburo Nakamura and Teruo Hayashi. Martial arts featured in the film include: Karate, Aikido, Kendo, Sumo, and Judo among others. The only modern Japanese martial art not featured in the film is Kyudo. Appunti su un fatto di cronaca is a 1951 Italian documentary film directed by Luchino Visconti. Saltimbanco: Cirque du Soleil is a 1997 family documentary TV movie directed by Jacques Payette. Forgotten fires is a 1998 documentary film directed by Michael Chandler. Humain, trop humain is a French documentary film by Louis Malle about the operations of a Citroën car production plant. Nuclear Dynamite is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Gary Marcuse. Drops and Bubbles is a 1958 documentary film directed by Josef Pliva. Mystic Flower ・ Life Yukio Nakagawa is a documentary film directed by Akira Tanimitsu. BaadAsssss Cinema is a 2002 documentary film, directed by Isaac Julien. Julien looks at the Blaxploitation era of the 1970s in this hour-long documentary. Photographic Memory is a 2011 documentary film by independent filmmaker Ross McElwee about a voyage back to the roots of his involvement with the camera. Photographic Memory premiered at the 2011 Venice Film Festival. Africa, How Are You with Pain? is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Raymond Depardon. "Pat Tillman gave up his professional football career to join the Army Rangers in 2002—and became an instant symbol of patriotic fervor and unflinching duty. But the truth about Pat Tillman is far more complex, and ultimately more heroic, than the caricature created by the media. And when the government tried to turn his death into war propaganda, they took on the wrong family. From her home in the Santa Cruz mountains, Pat’s mother, Dannie Tillman, led the family’s crusade to reveal the truth beneath the mythology of their son’s life and death. Featuring candid and revelatory interviews with Pat's fellow soldiers as well as his family, Amir Bar-Lev’s emotional and insightful film not only shines a light on the shady aftermath of Pat’s death and calls to task the entire chain of command but also examines themes as timeless as the notion of heroism itself." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Au hasard Bresson is a 1967 short documentary film directed by Theodor Kotulla. Cyanosis is a 2007 film directed by Rokhsareh Ghaemmaghami. Mondays at Racine is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Cynthia Wade, about two sisters who open their Long Island hair salon to women diagnosed with cancer, every third Monday of the month. The film was nominated for the 2013 Academy Award for Best Documentary. After being nominated for an Academy Award the film was released along with all the other 15 Oscar-nominated short films in theaters by ShortsHD. Making Light In Terezin is a documentary, comedy and drama film directed by Richard Krevolin. Homens is a 2008 short documentary film written by Bertrand Lira and directed by Lúcia Caus Delbone and Bertrand Lira. The Blazing World is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Jessica Bardsley. Mom and Me is a 2011 animation and documentary film written and directed by Danic Champoux. Island of Lemurs: Madagascar is a 2014 nature documentary film directed by David Douglas about lemurs in Madagascar. The film was released through Warner Bros. on April 4, 2014. It is narrated by Morgan Freeman. My Name Is Negahdar Jamali and I Make Westerns is a 2012 documentary, biographical and Western film written and directed by Kamran Heidari. Girl in a Mirror is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Kathy Drayton. The Gender War is a documentary in two parts by journalist Evin Rubar on radical feminism in Sweden and its influence on Swedish politics. It was produced by Nordisk Film and broadcast by Sveriges Television in the series Dokument inifrån on 15 and 22 May 2005. The Gender War was also part of Evin Rubar being awarded the TV award Kristallen and Sveriges Television's equality award the same year. The documentary focuses on the national organisation for women’s and young women's shelters in Sweden, ROKS, an organisation helping young female victims of sexual abuse called Friends of Bella, former Minister of Gender Equality Margareta Winberg and Professor Eva Lundgren. Please Please Me is a documentary film directed by Tarou Aoishi. Small Potatoes: Who Killed the USFL is a documentary film directed by Michael Tollin for the ESPN documentary series 30 for 30. Stalking Pete Doherty is a rockumentary assembled from footage shot by Max Carlish, a BAFTA Award–winning film director. As the title suggests, it is about both attempts by Carlish to interview Pete Doherty. Max Carlish is a British documentary filmmaker and former lecturer in media studies, was born to Jewish parents in the city of Birmingham. Carlish helped produce an Emmy and BAFTA-award-winning television series about the Royal Opera House. He is most famous, however, for his attempts to produce a so-called rockumentary about Pete Doherty, singer and guitarist with The Libertines and Babyshambles. Doherty was charged with assault and blackmail of the filmmaker after Carlish sold photographs of Doherty taking heroin to Sunday newspapers. Carlish's footage was used in a programme entitled Stalking Pete Doherty broadcast on 17 May 2005, and then again on 11 March 2006 on Channel 4. In fact, the programme focused more on Carlish's apparent obsession with Doherty than it did with Doherty's life. Black Sun is a documentary film directed by Gary Tarn. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2005. Gary Tarn explores the story of Hugues de Montalembert, a New York-based artist and filmmaker who was blinded by a vicious, unprovoked attack by two young assailants in 1978. After the attack, Montalembert learned to cope with his despair and to go through life a new way, seeking to make ordinary things extraordinary. Defying expectation, this remarkable artist continued to travel the world alone, learning to navigate life in a new and beautiful way. Through creative imagery and philosophical narration, director and composer Gary Tarn creates an expressionist, poetic meditation both on an extraordinary life without vision, and on the idea of perception in general. The Future is Now! is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Gary Burns and Jim Brown. Dying to be Perfect is a 1988 short documentary film. Chaplin Today: City Lights is a 2003 documentary short film directed by Serge Bromberg. Choose Not To Fall is a short film directed by Matthew Marsh, and produced by Mummu. The film discusses the practice of parkour, featuring parkour practitioner Daniel Ilabaca. The film won Best Film from Filminute 2010, gold from the Pepsi Short Film contest and Best 1 minute film from the Azyl Film Festival 2011. The Other Side of Bollywood is a 2006 documentary film. Damned – The Strange World of José Mojica Marins is a 2001 Brazilian documentary film about the life and works of Brazilian filmmaker, director, screenwriter, film and television actor and media personality José Mojica Marins. The film features Marins and his associates and family members recounting episodes of his life and career from childhood to international recognition in later years. The film received the Special Jury Award in Latin American Cinema at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival. Canadian Diamonds is a 1960 short, documentary film written by Judith Crawley and Pierre Perrault and directed by René Bonnière. Arctic Dance: The Mardy Murie Story is a 1999 documentary film directed by Bonnie Kreps. Visionary Insight is a 2012 short documentary film directed and written by Lou Karsen and Tracy Rector. Andrew Jackson: Good, Evil and the Presidency is a 2008 documentary film directed by Carl Byker and Mitch Wilson. Impressions Of Time is a 2012 documentary film directed by Nina Hedenius. Our Day is a silent documentary short directed by Wallace Kelly in 1938, about a day in the life of the Kelly family in Lebanon, Kentucky. It starred his mother, wife, brother, pet dog, and Wallace himself. The film countered the contemporary stereotypes of impoverished Southerners eking out a living during the Depression, by documenting a modern home inhabited by adults with sophisticated interests. Our Day was selected for the National Film Registry by the Librarian of Congress in 2007 as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". It's Confirmed is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Jamshid Mojadadi. The Urethra Chronicles is a 1999 documentary film starring the American pop punk band Blink-182. The film, directed by former manager Rick DeVoe, is a behind the scenes look at the band's history featuring their usual toilet humor. The documentary includes exclusive live performance footage and music videos. The film was released on November 30, 1999 on VHS and May 2, 2000 for DVD. A sequel, The Urethra Chronicles II: Harder Faster Faster Harder, was released in 2002. Semper Fi: Always Faithful is a 2011 documentary film directed by Tony Hardmon and Rachel Libert. "Master Sergeant Jerry Ensminger's loyalty was always to the Marine Corps. But after his nine-year-old daughter died of a rare type of leukemia, Jerry¹s relentless search for answers leads to a shocking discovery exposing one of the largest water contamination sites in U.S. history. Living by the Marine creed, this drill instructor-turned-activist puts his own pain aside and takes on the top brass in an impassioned struggle for justice on behalf of his fellow soldiers and family" Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. 3 Minutes to Impact is a 1996 documentary film. Driving to the Edge is a 2012 documentary drama film written and directed by Paul Arcand. The Road to the Wall is a 1962 American short documentary film produced by Robert Saudek about the construction of the Berlin Wall. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Elephant Dreams is a 1987 documentary short film directed by Martha Davis. Vom Kiez zum Kap is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Joachim Bornemann. Are you a pilgrim? is a documentary film directed by Gian D. Ceccato. The Cutting Edge: The Magic of Movie Editing is a 2004 documentary film directed by filmmaker Wendy Apple. The film is about the art of film editing. Clips are shown from many groundbreaking films with innovative editing styles. Skersiela is a 1988 documentary film by Ivars Seleckis. Kalule is a 1979 documentary film directed and written by Jørgen Leth. Photograph of the City - Berlin Fragment is a 1997 film directed by Manfred Wilhelms. Gap in Our Memory is a 1982 film directed by Helke Sander. The Grove is a 2011 documentary film by Andy Abrahams Wilson. Hayedeh Legendary Persian Diva is a 2009 documentary film about the late Iranian iconic singer Hayedeh, made by the exiled musician and journalist Pejman Akbarzadeh in The Netherlands. The 100-minute documentary was filmed in France, Germany, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States. The language of the film is Persian. Hayedeh documentary was released on 20 January 2010, the 20th death anniversary of Hayedeh. The DVD was released by Persian Dutch Network in Amsterdam. Special When Lit is a feature length documentary film about pinball written and directed by Brett Sullivan. The film is produced by Steam Motion and Sound. Last Days of the Coliseum is a 2010 documentary film directed by Rich Hanley and narrated by Brian Smith that explores the history of the New Haven Coliseum and its role in southern New England culture. The Coliseum was officially closed on September 1, 2002 by Mayor John DeStefano, Jr., and demolished on January 20, 2007. Forces of Nature is an IMAX film about strong forces that shape the Earth's surface. It is produced by the National Geographic Society, and includes coverage of Earthquakes - a history of earthquakes in Turkey, by Ross Stein. Volcanoes - a volcanic eruption on the island on Montserrat, by volcanologist Dr. Marie Edmonds. Tornadoes - chasing tornadoes in the American Midwest, by Joshua Wurman and a team of tornado chasers. It is directed by Sean Casey and narrated by Kevin Bacon. Phil Collins And The Wild Frontier is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ben Powell. 4CHOSEN: The Documentary is a 2008 documentary film narrated by Montel Williams. It was written and directed by Jon Doscher, and produced by Doscher and Fran Ganguzza. The film is about the aftermath of an incident that occurred April 23, 1998 on the New Jersey Turnpike. Four young men from New York were traveling on the turnpike on their way to a basketball talent showcase in North Carolina when they were pulled over by two state troopers and shot at thirteen times. The film documents the court proceedings and the investigation of the New Jersey State Police, and interviews indicate government corruption during former Governor Christine Todd Whitman's administration. The four basketball players were represented by attorney David Ironman, and supported by Reverend Al Sharpton and Johnnie Cochran in a case that became known as "one of the largest racial profiling cases in American history". The film opened the 2008 Garden State Film Festival and premiered at the Paramount Theater in Asbury Park. Fighting Norway is a 1943 Canadian documentary film, produced by the National Film Board of Canada and directed by Sydney Newman. Ten minutes in length, the film examines the role of the free forces of occupied Norway during the Second World War. The film particularly concentrates on the training of Norwegian air crew in Canada, and the relationship formed between servicemen of the two nations. The film was narrated by the actor Lorne Greene. Some of the footage used had previously been seen in the British documentary All for Norway. Greenwich Village: Music That Defined a Generation is a documentary film directed by Laura Archibald. Ingredients: The Local Food Movement Takes Root is a 2009 documentary film about the shortcomings of America's industrialized food system against a rising local food movement, whose proponents are shrinking the gap between farmland and dinner table. The film is directed by Robert Bates, produced by Brian Kimmel and narrated by actress Bebe Neuwirth. Chefs Alice Waters, Peter Hoffman, Kathy Whims, and Greg Higgins share their views as growers, restaurateurs, and consumers around the country, from Willamette Valley, Oregon to the urban food desert Harlem, New York, discuss their methods for bringing food production back home. Other participants from the Portland, Oregon area include Will Newman and wife Susan Clark of Natural Harvest Farm, Ken Gordon of Kenny & Zuke's Delicatessen, and his wife permaculturist Leslee Lewis. Ingredients posits that concentrated animal feeding operations are causing worse and more frequent outbreaks of disease; the film also covers community-supported agriculture, biodynamic wine, and organic farming. Ingredients was shown at the 2010 Cleveland International Film Festival and at the 2010 Farm Aid. Britney Spears: In the Zone is the fifth video release by singer Britney Spears. Released by Jive Records on April 6, 2004, it accompanied the album of the same name. The DVD contains her ABC concert special Britney Spears: In the Zone, as well as footage from live performances to promote the album. It also includes the music videos for "Me Against the Music" and "Toxic" and their respective episodes of Making the Video, as well as unreleased material, such as several new tracks. The DVD received positive reviews from critics, with one describing it as "recommended for fans". Britney Spears: In the Zone was certified two-times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America for shipment of 200,000 copies across United States. It was also certified platinum in Argentina and France, and gold in Australia and Brazil. Here Is So Far is a 2013 documentary film written by Daniel Augusto and directed by Eliza Capai. Tehran Without Permission is a 2009 documentary film directed by Sepideh Farsi. Design & Thinking is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mu-Ming Tsai. Friends of God: A Road Trip With Alexandra Pelosi is an HBO television documentary about evangelicals in the United States that is written, directed, produced, and narrated by Alexandra Pelosi. The documentary first aired on January 25, 2007 on HBO. Lisa Heller was supervising producer and Sheila Nevins was executive producer. Jerry Falwell called this film "The Only Documentary that he and I ever watched and liked." In this documentary, Alexandra Pelosi visits several of the largest evangelical Christian church congregations in the country, such as Lakewood Church and New Life Church, and interviews their leaders and members. Pelosi also visits other Christian organizations like the Christian Wrestling Federation and Cruisers for Christ as well as others committed to spreading the Gospel through their own unique packaging and marketing. The documentary centers around the relationship between Christian evangelical churches and political activism. It also demonstrates how these organizations have shaped modern politics in regards to issues that include, but are not limited to, gay rights, abortion, and the creation-evolution controversy. Drowned in Oblivion is a 2007 film directed by Pierre-Yves Vandeweerd. Une Fenêtre ouverte is a 2005 documentary film. Pasolini’s Last Words is a 2012 documentary biographical film directed by Cathy Lee Crane. The Majestic Plastic Bag is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Jeremy Konner and written by Sarah May Bates and Regie Miller. Janine F. is a 2004 documentary film directed by Teresa Renn. Tally Brown, New York is a 1979 documentary film directed, written and produced by Rosa von Praunheim. The film is about the singing and acting career of Tally Brown, a classically trained opera and blues singer who was a star of underground films in New York City and a denizen of its underworld in the late 1960s. In this documentary, Praunheim relies on extensive interviews with Brown, as she recounts her collaboration with Andy Warhol, Taylor Mead and others, as well as her friendships with Holly Woodlawn, and Divine. Brown opens the film with a cover of David Bowie's "Heroes" and concludes with "Rock 'n' Roll Suicide." The film captures not only Tally Brown’s career but also a particular New York milieu in the 1970s. In the same year of its release, the documentary won the Film Award in Silver at the German Film Awards for Outstanding Non-Feature Film. The documentary is also noteworthy for being the first of Von Praunheim's many portraits of women, usually aging legendary performers, who have become cult figures among the LGBT community. Lost Children is a 2005 documentary film by Ali Samadi Ahadi and Oliver Stoltz about Military use of children in civil war in northern Uganda. The film premiered in February 2005 at the Berlin International Film Festival, where it received the third place at PANORAMA Audience Award. The film was awarded in October 2005, the UNICEF Prize and the Youth Award and ran for more than two dozen international film festivals. Lost Children was nominated for Deutschen Kamerapreis Köln Award in 2005 for Best Documentary and Deutscher Filmpreis in 2006 in the documentary category. The Human Dutch is a 1963 Dutch documentary film directed by Bert Haanstra, about the daily lives of people in the Netherlands. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It was also selected as the Dutch entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 37th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. The Carrier is a 2011 documentary film directed by Margaret Betts. "Young mother Mutinta is a Zambian subsistence farmer in a polygamous marriage who has just learned she is HIV positive. Newly pregnant, Mutinta does everything she can to protect her unborn baby while navigating complicated family dynamics and village politics. Newcomer Maggie Betts sculpts a sensitive observational portrait of one woman’s struggle leading up to her newborn’s birth. In Tonga with English subtitles." Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. Exile And The Kingdom is a documentary film written and directed by Frank Rijavec. PopMart: Live from Mexico City is a concert video release by rock band U2 from their PopMart Tour. Recorded on 3 December 1997 at Foro Sol on the band's featured stop in Mexico City, Mexico, it was released on VHS and Video CD in November 1998, and was re-released in September 2007 on DVD. It was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Long Form Music Video in 2000. Selected songs from the release were featured on the 2000 live album, Hasta la Vista Baby! U2 Live from Mexico City. The Hunting of the President is a 2004 English language documentary film about Bill Clinton. Clinton and his wife Hillary Clinton appear in archived footage. The film is based on the book The Hunting of the President: The Ten Year Campaign to Destroy Bill and Hillary Clinton, written by investigative journalists Joe Conason and Gene Lyons, and published by Thomas Dunne Books in 2000. Narrated by Morgan Freeman, the film premiered at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival. The book and movie explore Clinton friends Jim and Susan McDougal, former Associate Attorney General Webster Hubbell, and Arkansas Governor Jim Guy Tucker. Interviewed for the book and movie, Susan McDougal discusses legal threats from the independent counsel to pressure her to implicate the Clintons in something illegal. She told the independent counsel the Clintons did nothing wrong, and the independent counsel said they had statements prepared and she simply had to agree with the pre-written claims. Riverdogs is a 1982 short documentary film directed by Robb Moss. Exposing Homelessness is a 2006 American documentary film created by Kerri Gawryn. Master, A Building in Copacabana is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Eduardo Coutinho. Lord of the Dance 3D is a 2011 Musical film directed by Marcus Viner. 9 Scenes of Violence is a 2011 documentary directed by Michael Krotkiewski. "The 10 Conditions of Love is a love story—of a woman, a man, a family, a people and a homeland. It is the story of Rebiya Kadeer, a woman accused of inciting terrorism within China's borders. It is also the story of the 'other Tibet,' the country its Muslim people call East Turkestan, but which the Chinese call Xinjiang Province. Exiled in the US, Rebiya Kadeer is fighting for the human rights of her people, the Uyghur, China's oppressed Muslim minority. But Rebiya Kadeer's campaign condemns her sons to ongoing solitary confinement in a Chinese prison. Having done six years solitary herself, she understands the appalling consequences for them—but she will not relent." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. "In 1986, documentary filmmaker Ross McElwee made Sherman’s March, an epic deadpan journey through the American South, drawing a comic parallel between his romantic conquests and the destructive path made by the Union general. Now, 25 years later, Josh Freed begins his own firstperson camera-march through love lost and found but with a decidedly Jewish twist. Freed opens his comic essay with home video footage of his Chicago bar mitzvah. Oddly inspired by his adolescent obsession for Louis Malle’s My Dinner with Andre, the 12-year-old bespectacled boy toasts himself in an on-camera rant of self-loathing. Eventually, his insecurity and love for the movies lead him to pick up the camera and record his sometimes-embarrassing misfires with women. Freed’s filmed efforts at commitment falter until he meets the incredibly adorable and wise second grade teacher Paulina, who sees through Josh’s act but finds herself falling for him anyway. The sad and funny fact that Josh cannot understand what she sees in him—the classic Groucho conundrum of not wanting to join any club that would have him as a member—lies at the heartbreaking core of the film. Five Weddings and a Felony is a freewheeling portrait of friendship, family and love that manages to be charming, galling, funny, cringe-inducing, and always compelling." Quoting Thomas Logoreci from the 2011 San Francisco Jewish Film Festival site From the film's website:In a quiet Orlando, Florida, suburb three young men struggle to escape the wreckage of their pasts and create new lives for themselves. Their new home is CollegeBoysLive.com, a voyeur webcam house rigged with 32 cameras, where their every move is watched by thousands of paying members. The site’s creator claims CollegeBoysLive.com is simply about showing that “it’s okay to be gay.” But the neighbors insist it’s a pornographic whorehouse and sue to have them evicted. This intimate and provocative documentary examines a complex subculture, but at its heart is the universal search for family and acceptance. Bare As You Dare: Portland's World Naked Bike Ride is a 2013 short comedy adventure sports documentary film written and directed by Ian McCluskey. 9/11 State of Emerency is a 2010 documentary film directed by Neil Rawles. The Look of Love is a 2013 British biopic of Paul Raymond, directed by Michael Winterbottom. It stars comedian Steve Coogan as Raymond. Chavez 101 is a documentary short film written and directed by students for the Youth in Video Latino Film Festival San Francisco Bay Area. Amos Oz: The Nature of Dreams is an Israeli documentary film, written, directed and produced by Yonathan and Masha Zur. It is a portrait of Israeli author Amos Oz, author of the memoir A Tale of Love and Darkness, and his efforts toward peace in the Middle East. The film, released in May 2009, is Yonathan and Masha Zur’s second film. Amos Oz – The Nature of Dreams premiered at the Docaviv Documentary Film Festival in Tel Aviv. It was supported mainly by Arte ZDF and the Israeli Makor Film Fund, and also by YLE Finland and Radio Canada. Honoring a Father's Dream: Sons of Lwala is a 2011 documentary film. Directed by Barry Simmons and produced by Mitchell Galin, David Kiern, and Barry Simmons for Epiphany Documentary Films, it follows the story of two Kenyan brothers who build a health clinic in their home village. Bis fünf nach zwölf – Adolf Hitler und das 3. Reich is a 1953 West German documentary film directed by Gerhard Grindel. The film is also known as Adolf Hitler - Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Führer: Dokumente der Zeitgeschichte in West Germany, Adolf Hitler und das 3. Reich - Sein Untergang and Bis 5 nach 12. Silenced - Georgi Markov And The Umbrella Murder is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Klaus Dexel. Wordplay is a 2006 documentary film directed by Patrick Creadon. It features Will Shortz, the editor of the New York Times crossword puzzle, crossword constructor Merl Reagle, and many other noted crossword solvers and constructors. The second half of the movie is set at the 2005 American Crossword Puzzle Tournament, where the top solvers compete for a prize of 䀀. The movie focuses on the following crossword solvers: Ellen Ripstein: editor living in New York City and 2001 ACPT champion. She is also known for her baton twirling. Trip Payne: professional puzzlemaker living in South Florida and three-time ACPT Champion. He held the record as the youngest champion after winning the tournament in 1993 at the age of 24. Tyler Hinman: student at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York. At the 2005 ACPT, he challenged Trip Payne for the title of youngest champion ever. Jon Delfin: pianist living in New York City and seven-time ACPT champion. Al Sanders: project manager at Hewlett-Packard in Fort Collins, Colorado. He is a frequent finalist at the ACPT. Hang The DJ is a 1998 music documentary film debut by twin brothers Marco and Mauro La Villa. Featuring Roger Sanchez, Junior Vasquez and DJ Qbert the film presents the cult of DJs in the era that catapulted them into superstars from the inside. Performances from around the globe are intercut with commentary from fans and interviews with the DJs themselves. The name of the film comes from lyrics in "Panic" the 1986 song from The Smiths. The Current is a 2013 documentary and adventure film directed by Greg Cairns and Stephen Witherspoon. Los Angeles is now the country’s center for apparel manufacturing, but many of its factories bear an eerie resemblance to New York’s early 20th century sweatshops. Made in L.A. follows the remarkable journey of three Latina immigrants working in L.A.’s garment factories and their struggle for self-empowerment as they wage a three-year battle to bring a major clothing retailer to the negotiating table. This intimate film offers a rare and poignant glimpse into this “other” California, where immigrants in many industries toil long hours for sub-minimum wages, fighting for an opportunity in a new country. A co-production with the Independent Television Service (ITVS). A Diverse Voices Project co-production. A co-presentation with Latino Public Broadcasting. (packaged to 86:46) Phil Collins: Finally: The First Farewell Tour is a 2004 music documentary directed by Hamish Hamilton. Free at Last: Civil Rights Heroes is a 2000 documentary film written by Bill Brummel and Martin Kent and directed by Martin Kent "Follow the story of New York City native Randy Baron in Still Here. Infected with HIV for thirty years, Randy is an inadvertent witness to the AIDS epidemic and works to prevent a new generation of devastation" - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Before the Last Curtain Falls is a 2014 musical documentary film written and directed by Thomas Wallner. Welcome to Womanhood is a 1999 short documentary film directed by Charlotte Metcalf. The Sound of Old Rooms is a 2011 documentary film directed by Sandeep Ray. "Discriminated by her family, ostracized by her Indonesian society and trapped in a male body, Renita rebelled in the hope of finding freedom but soon she founds that it came at a cost!" Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. A Man Vanishes is a 1967 Japanese film by director Shohei Imamura. The Houses That Are Left is a 1991 melodrama film written and directed by Shelly Silver. Hombres De Barro is a 2013 biography documentary film written and directed by Luis Abraham Gonzalez Rocha. JFK: The Day the Nation Cried is 1989 TV Documentary written and directed by Bruce Halford Chaplin Today: Modern Times is a 2003 documentary film directed by Philippe Truffault. Technocalyps is an intriguing three-part documentary on the notion of Trans-humanism by Belgian visual artist and filmmaker Frank Theys. The latest findings in genetics, robotics, artificial intelligence, bionics and nanotechnology appear in the media every day, but with no analysis of what seems to be their common aim: exceeding human limitations and creating higher, trans-human forms of life. Technocalyps presents a thorough and critical enquiry into the scientific, ethical and metaphysical dimensions of technological development. The film includes interviews by top scientists and thinkers on the subject worldwide, such as Marvin Minsky, Ray Kurzweil, Terence McKenna, Hans Moravec, Bruce Sterling, Robert Anton Wilson, David Noble, Margaret Wertheim, the Dalai Lama and many others. Part 1: Trans-human - Leading scientists from the fields of genetics, artificial intelligence, brain research and nanotechnology explain and reflect upon their research. Their prognoses for the near future all share one common view: we are now on the verge of a trans-human era, faced with the options to either improve or to surpass human-kind as we currently know it. Part 2: Preparing for the Singularity - Advocates and opponents of a trans-human future are weighed against each other. Prognoses are made about when we can expect this trans-human revolution, and how people are preparing for it already now. Part 3: The Digital Messiah - This part covers the metaphysical consequences of the new technological revolution. Scientists start to use metaphysical concepts to describe the impact of their research. A surprisingly large number of scientific projects are inspired by religious aspirations and more and more theologians from various religious or spiritual orientations are becoming interested in these aspirations of new technology, making the debate inextricably complex. Born on Halloween, 1935, Dale Brown's fight for justice began the day his father walked out - two days before he was born. About how an overachiever from tiny Minot, North Dakota relentlessly fought his way to the top. The Savage Eye is a 1959 "dramatized documentary" film that superposes a dramatic narration of the life of a divorced woman with documentary camera footage of an unspecified 1950s city. In a 1960 review, A. H. Weiler characterized the film: ... it is from the photographic and sound-track concentration on the Hogarthian faces of Los Angeles that The Savage Eye derives most of its ferocity. The rabid wrestling-match audiences; the middle-aged and elderly ladies seeking improvement of gross bodies in beauty parlors; the sensuous writhings of Jean Hidey as she strips and teases in a burlesque joint, and, most effectively, the matter-of-fact faith healer who doles out wholesale blessings on the afflicted are the most striking glints in The Savage Eye. The film was written, produced, directed, and edited by Ben Maddow, Sidney Meyers, and Joseph Strick, who did the work over several years on their weekends. Benjamin Jackson has noted that Irving Lerner, Strick's collaborator on the earlier documentary Muscle Beach, "was part of the original group, but left in the middle of production." Imagined Landscape is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Josu Venero. Heaven on Earth: The Rise and Fall of Socialism is a three-hour PBS documentary film hosted by Ben Wattenberg and narrated by Henry Strozier. The series' Executive Producer is Andrew Walworth. The series was produced for PBS by New River Media, Inc. and first broadcast as a special edition of the television series Think Tank in June 2005. Heaven on Earth begins with the pronouncement: "This 3-hour documentary explores one of the most powerful political ideas in history. Socialism spread farther and faster than any religion. Then, in almost the blink of an eye, it all collapsed. What happened?" Holy Wars is a 2010 documentary written and directed by Stephen Marshall. In 2009 Marshall was inspired to make the film due to the prevalence of religious fundamentalism during this time period. Old Enough to Do Time is the 1985 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Videotape Editors nominated tv program aired on 1984 in U.S.A "In Their Room is about gay men, bedrooms, sex and intimacy. The film veers into the bedrooms of eight different men where you see them doing everything from the most banal to the most erotic. Complimenting the revealing nature of their everyday activities are confessional interviews about fantasies, turn ons and vulnerabilities. You never leave their bedrooms, but this is unmistakably San Francisco of the present. " Quoting the synopsis from the film's Official Site. Brick By Brick is a 2012 drama documentary film written and directed by Megan Durnford. Confessions of an Innocent Man is a 2007 biography, documentary film. Der Marsch zum Führer is a Nazi propaganda film released in 1940. It depicts the nationwide march of Hitler Youth to Nuremberg for the Nazi Party Rally. Unlike the earlier Leni Riefenstahl Nuremberg documentaries, it does not focus on the Party congress itself, or on Nazi leaders, who are not shown until the very end of the film. Instead, it follows HJ boys from various parts of Nazi Germany beginning their journey, camping along the route, being taken in by helpful families on the way and marching through cities in formation, saluting and carrying the swastika banner. The film is quite short compared to earlier Nuremberg films, at approximately 45 minutes. Calle 54 is a 2000 documentary film about Latin jazz by Spanish director Fernando Trueba. With only minimal introductory voiceovers, the film consists of studio performances by a wide array of Latin Jazz musicians. Artists featured include Chucho Valdés, Bebo Valdés, Cachao, Eliane Elias, Gato Barbieri, Tito Puente, Paquito D'Rivera, Chano Domínguez, Jerry Gonzalez and Michel Camilo. The film takes its name from Sony Music Studios, where much of the film was shot, which are located on 54th Street in New York City. La escalera is a 1972 short documentary film directed by Victor Ateneo. Sellebrity is a 2012 documentary film directed by Kevin Mazur. Terra Blight is a 2012 documentary / drama film directed by Isaac Brown. Derby, Baby! is a 2012 sport documentary film directed by Robin Bond and Dave Wruck. Theremin: An Electronic Odyssey is a 1993 documentary film directed by Steven M. Martin about the life of Leon Theremin and his invention, the theremin, a pioneering electronic musical instrument. It follows his life, including being imprisoned in a Soviet gulag, and the influence of his instrument, which came to define the sound of eerie in 20th Century movies, and influenced popular music as it searched for and celebrated electronic music in the 1960s. Shirouo: Genpatsu ricchi wo dannen saseta machi is a documentary film directed by Takahiro Kasahara. The Legend of Pale Male is a 2009 American documentary film directed by Frederic Lilien. It tells the story of Pale Male, a red-tailed hawk nesting near Central Park in New York City. The Occult: The Truth Behind the Word is a 2010 documentary film written by Brian Allan, James Earnshaw and O.H. Krill and directed by James Earnshaw. "Do you know the difference between B-Boying and Break Dancing? In this documentary, we will follow this craze through the eyes of Writer-Director-Producer B-Boy himself David Olivares to understand the competitive aspects, lifestyle, and how B-Boying can keep a young person fit and out of trouble." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. Strange Parallel is a documentary short film revolving around the American singer-songwriter Elliott Smith. The film was directed by Steve Hanft and released on October 15, 1998, and features interviews with Elliott himself as well as fans, friends and other acquaintances of his. Lana Del Rey represents the next generation of diverse performers. Her impeccable voice, great music, and youthful beauty has sold over 5 million albums worldwide. However Rey's success is no coincidence. This is the story of how a young girl from New York City turned her dream into reality. "Barry Levinson has covered a lot of ground in his film career – from Southeast Asia in Good Morning, Vietnam to Las Vegas in Rain Man – but he always comes back to Baltimore, from Diner to Tin Men to Avalon and more. In this Mavericks session, Levinson will present the world premiere of his latest work set in Baltimore, The Band That Wouldn't Die, an hour-long documentary about a marching band that kept hope alive for the city's football fans. You don't need to care about sports to be swept up in the film's emotional story about people fighting for something they love. Following the screening, Levinson will sit down for a long conversation about what draws him back to his hometown. The Band That Wouldn't Die is part of an extraordinary project produced by ESPN called 30 for 30. In honour of its thirtieth anniversary, the channel commissioned thirty renowned filmmakers to direct a personal documentary related to sports. It's the kind of carte blanche that filmmakers dream about. Stylistically, they were encouraged to pursue their own path rather than conform to a house style. The Festival is proud to present the first two completed works in this endeavour (see the other on the facing page). For Levinson, ESPN's invite meant a chance to explore a story that might be classified “only in Baltimore.” In 1984, the erratic and alcoholic owner of the Baltimore Colts, Robert Irsay, made a rash decision to move the team. One night in March, moving vans shipped the Colts' possessions to Indianapolis. The next morning, fans awoke to the news in stunned disbelief. The team's volunteer marching band was among the hardest hit. But the members dedicated themselves to bringing professional football back to Baltimore. Levinson writes, “They didn't stop until 1996 when Baltimore got the Cleveland team and renamed them the Ravens, after the Edgar Allan Poe poem. Poe didn't grow up in Baltimore, but according to folklore, he died drunk in a gutter there. Baltimore will take its heroes any way it can get them.” Quoting Thom Powers on the 2009 TIFF site. Horror in the East: Japan and the Atrocities of World War II is a BBC documentary film series that examines certain actions, including atrocities, and attitudes, of the Imperial Japanese Army in the lead up to and during World War II. The film also examines attitudes held by the British and Americans, toward the Japanese. It was written and produced by Laurence Rees and narrated by Samuel West. Daß ein gutes Deutschland blühe is an East German documentary film directed by Joop Huisken. It was released in 1960. Romeo Misses a Payment is a documentary film directed by Angelo Lobo. Phantombilder is a 1988 film directed by Frieda Grafe and Enno Patalas. HOGAR Varsovia Mexico is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ela Chrzanowska. The Men Who Would Conquer China is a 2004 documentary film written by Nick Torrens and directed by Mary Jane St. Vincent Welch. It's Always Late for Freedom is a 2007 film directed by Mehrdad Oskouei. Arctic Tale is a 2007 documentary film from the National Geographic Society about the life cycle of a walrus and her calf, and a polar bear and her cubs, in a similar vein to the 2005 hit production March of the Penguins, also from National Geographic. It was directed by Adam Ravetch and Sarah Robertson and is narrated by Queen Latifah. The animal characters named in the movie, "Nanu" the female polar bear and "Seela" the female walrus, are based on composites of animals in their species, as noted at the end of the film. Petra's Poem is a 2012 short documentary film written by Petra Tolley and directed by Shira Avni. Pelota is a 1983 documentary film written by Ebbe Traberg, Klaus Rifbjerg and Jørgen Leth and directed by Jörgen Leth and Ole John. The Stratford Adventure is a 1954 Canadian documentary film about the founding of the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, directed by Morten Parker. It was named Film of the Year at the Canadian Film Awards and nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 27th Academy Awards. Do Sanh - der letzte Film is a 1998 documentary film directed by Hans-Dieter Grabe. Branca's Pitch is a documentary historical film directed by Andrew J. Muscato. Radio Bikini is a 1988 American documentary film directed by Robert Stone. It was nominated for an Academy Award in 1988 for Best Documentary Feature. The film documents the nuclear tests performed around Bikini Atoll during Operation Crossroads in 1946, and their effects on the indigenous population and American servicemen involved in the testing. Soldiers Pay is a 2004 documentary film by David O. Russell. It takes its name from Soldiers' Pay, a novel by William Faulkner. In 2004, Warner Bros., feeling that Russell's 1999 film Three Kings, about a gold heist that takes place during the 1991 Iraqi uprising against Saddam Hussein following the end of the Gulf War had become relevant again due to the Iraq War, decided to re-release it in theaters and on DVD. Having no additional footage to add, Russell instead shot Soldiers Pay, a short documentary about the Iraq War, to accompany the film. Taking its name from William Faulkner's first novel of the same name about an airman's return home in World War I's aftermath, Russell said the documentary examined "both sides of the war, people who feel good about the war, who believe in the mission, people who feel bad." While making the documentary, Russell spoke with both Iraqis and U.S. troops, including SSG. Matt Novak, whom Russell tracked down with the help of his brother-in-law, a private investigator. Asked how the Iraqis he had interviewed felt about the war, Russell said: Every Iraqi I know is glad that Saddam is gone. I would completely disagree with Michael Moore about that. 14 Women is a 2007 documentary film that was directed by Mary Lambert and narrated by Annette Bening. The film released on June 14, 2007, and focuses on several female Senators at the 109th United States Congress. Die Kinder von Blankenese is a 2010 documentary drama film written and directed by Raymond Ley. Deutsche Polizisten is a 2004 film directed by Aysun Bademsoy. The Entertainers is a historical musical comedy documentary film directed by Nick Holle. The Other Chelsea - A Story from Donetsk is a 2010 documentary drama film written and directed by Jakob Preuss. The Omnivorous Family is a documentary film directed by Yun Hwang. The Refugees of the Blue Planet is a 2006 documentary film. Ray: A Life Underwater is a 2011 short documentary, adventure, historical and biographical film directed by Amanda Bluglass. Poetry, Passion, the Postman: The Poetic Return of Pablo Neruda is a 1996 documentary film written by Julie Goldstein and Shannon McIntosh and directed by Shannon McIntosh. Beaton by Bailey is a 1971 documentary film directed by Bill Verity. Classified X is a 1998 French-US documentary movie written by Melvin Van Peebles, directed by Mark Daniels and narrated by Van Peebles, that details the history of black people in American cinema throughout the 20th century. According to the review in Variety: "... Van Peebles' distinctive analyses and his ever-growing importance to new black helmers via 1971's breakthrough 'Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song' make this a package with shelf life for cinematheques, schools and select broadcaster webs.... Scaredy-cat comedy-relief types, jungle "savages," mammies and minstrels gave way after World War II to "The New Negro" -- a put-upon "keeper of conscience" for the white protagonists. Pic briefly exits Hollywood to consider the independent black cinema that flourished -- with strict low-budget bounds -- from silent days till the late '40s, supported by a network of blacks-only theaters." The documentary includes footage from the following movies: Africa Screams The Birth of a Nation Casablanca Cry Freedom The Defiant Ones Gone with the Wind Guess Who's Coming to Dinner Stone Reader is a 2002 documentary, drama film written and directed by Mark Moskowitz. The Spirit of Places is a 2006 documentary film directed by Catherine Martin. Eddie Adams: Saigon '68 is a 2012 short historical war documentary film written by Marc Kristal and directed by Douglas Sloan. Puolustusvoimain katsaus 52 is a 1942 documentary short film written by Topo Leistelä, Hannu Leminen and Yrjö Rannikko. Charging the Rhino is a 2007 Documentary film written by Simcha Jacobovici and Bruce Thorson and directed by Simcha Jacobovici and Bruce Thorson. A profile and examination of the recent findings of human settlements submerged at the end of the Ice Age when the sea level rose, giving credence to the notion that the story of Atlantis has its roots in actual historical events. SURFING FOR LIFE, a vibrant and award-winning one-hour documentary about inspiring well-spent lives, offers a totally fresh look at successful aging. Narrated by Beau Bridges, it profiles ten legendary surfers who model healthy aging by staying active and engaged into their 7th, 8th and 9th decades. Through interviews, contemporary day-in-the-life footage, and a wealth of rare archival material, the film provides an eloquent and powerful antidote to the negative images of aging presented in America's youth-obsessed culture. Two Oceans is a 1933 documentary film written and directed by Vladimir Shnejderov and Jakow Kuper. Room 237 is a 2012 American documentary film directed by Rodney Ascher about perceived meanings in Stanley Kubrick's film The Shining. The film includes footage from The Shining, and other Kubrick films, along with discussions by a number of Kubrick enthusiasts. The film has nine segments, each segment focusing on different elements within the film which "may reveal hidden clues and hint at a bigger thematic oeuvre." The film was produced by Tim Kirk. The film was screened in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival and the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. The film's distribution rights were acquired by IFC Midnight and was exhibited theatrically and on VOD on March 29, 2013. As Slow As Possible is a 2008 documentary film written by Maria Roeck and directed by Scott Smith. Red Obsession is a 2013 Australian documentary film which collects interviews with winemakers and wine lovers across the world. The film is narrated by Russell Crowe. Red Obsession was co-directed and co-written by David Roach and Warwick Ross. Dancing Dreams is a 2010 documentary film directed by Anne Linsel and Rainer Hoffmann. Wistful Wilderness is a 2009 documentary film directed by Digna Sinke. A Guest of Life is a 2006 animation documentary drama film written by László Sári and directed by Tibor Szemzö. Elvis: That's the Way It Is is a 1970 American documentary film directed by Denis Sanders. The film documents American singer Elvis Presley's Summer Festival in Las Vegas during August 1970. It was his first non-dramatic film since the beginning of his film career in 1956, and the film gives a clear view of Presley's return to live performances after years of making films. Peppimenarti is a documentary film produced by Ron Iddon. Times Like Deese is a 2011 documentary film directed by Maarten Schmidt and Thomas Doebele. Rodicas is a 2012 documentary comedy film written and directed by Alice Gruia. Samsui Women is a 2010 drama family biography short documentary film written and directed by Derrick Lui. Something in the Water is a 2008 Australian documentary film written and directed by Aidan O'Bryan. Using live, archival, and interview footage shot in Los Angeles, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney, and Windsor in Berkshire, England, it explores the history and environment behind the development of local and nationally acclaimed musical talent in Western Australia. The film was funded by Perth media production company WBMC, headed by screenwriter/director Aidan O'Bryan and producer Janelle Landers. The film follows the rise to fame of some of Western Australia's most successful musicians. Something in the Water features more than fifty interviews with bands including Little Birdy, The Waifs, The Sleepy Jackson, Eskimo Joe, End of Fashion, Jebediah, Le Hoodoo Gurus, The Panics and Red Jezebel. The film asks whether Perth's talented spawn can be attributed to the city's isolation, the environment or the music scene itself, or whether there is, in fact, something in the water. Something in the Water premiered at the Astor Theatre in Perth and had a limited theatrical run in that city. It later was shown at the FTI Fremantle Film Festival and the 2008 WAMi Festival. Fabulous! The Story of Queer Cinema is a 2006 documentary film directed by Lisa Ades and Lesli Klainberg. Ser e voltar is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Xacio Baño. Hey, You Slovaks is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Robert Kirchhoff. Chasing the Horizon is a 2006 documentary film. The film was written, produced, and directed by Markus and Mason Canter, popularly known as the Flying Canter Brothers. The film features a trio of men that are getting ready for the upcoming Tecate SCORE Baja 1000 off-road race. Families Under Attack is a 2008 documentary film directed by Lindokuhle Mnyandu. After ten years of constant touring, with four critically acclaimed albums under their belt, Wichita 'insurgent country' band Split Lip Rayfield had built up a dedicated legion of fans throughout the world. With their lively combo of guitar, mandolin, banjo, gas-tank bass, multi-part harmonies, and singing often bordering on screaming, Split Lip's music defied genres, described as too raucous to be bluegrass, too acoustic to be rock 'n' roll and too melodic to be punk. But in 2006, Kirk Rundstrom, the electric, hell-raising singer/guitarist of the band, was diagnosed with terminal cancer and given only two months to live. NEVER MAKE IT HOME is the inspiring story of what he chose to do next. Set across America's heartland, this moving documentary captures the rowdy, heart-wrenching, and ultimately joyous performances of Kirk Rundstrom's 'Final Tour' where each show was played as it would be the last. A Big Package for You: 1999-2003 is a DVD/CD by the pop punk band Simple Plan from Montreal, Canada. The band consists of five members Pierre Bouvier, lead singer, David Desrosiers, bassist and backing vocalist, Sébastien Lefebvre, rhythm guitarist and backing vocalist, Chuck Comeau, drummer, and Jeff Stinco, lead guitarist. Veil of Tears is a drama documentary film directed by Kenny Saylors and Kyle Saylors. Zur Besserung der Person is a 1981 film directed by Heinz Bütler. Paramedico is a 2012 documentary film directed by Gilmour Benjamin. Looking for Mom in Dad's Closet is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Perrin Kerns. The Legend of Pancho Barnes and the Happy Bottom Riding Club is a 2009 documentary film that chronicles the life of aviation pioneer Florence Lowe "Pancho" Barnes. Nénette is a 2010 French documentary film about a 40-year-old female orangutan living in the menagerie of the Jardin des Plantes,. The film, directed by Nicolas Philibert presents an intimate portrait of the ape, originally from Borneo, who has spent her most of her life in captivity. In accord with the Cinéma vérité style of Philibert's earlier works, the camera rests on Nénette and her son Tübo in their glass-fronted enclosure. We hear the conversations and see the reflections of the zoo visitors in the glass as they regard Nénette, a mother of four who has survived three mates. The Shetland Experience is a 1977 British short documentary film directed by Derek Williams, about environmental measures taken by the oil industry at the Sullom Voe Terminal in the Shetlands. It was a sponsored film, produced for the environmental advisory group of the Sullom Voe Association, to which the Shetland Islands Council and oil companies belonged. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Paddle to the Sea is a 1966 National Film Board of Canada short live-action film directed, shot and edited by Bill Mason, based on the 1941 children's book Paddle-to-the-Sea by American author and illustrator Holling C. Holling. The film follows the adventures of a child's hand-carved toy Indian in a canoe as it makes its way from Lake Superior to the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, through Canada's waterways. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film at the 40th Academy Awards. Louis Applebaum composed the musical score. The film differs from the children's book in its inclusion of problem of water pollution. While Holling's 1941 book focuses only on the geography and commercial importance of the Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence River, Mason's film includes a sequence where the tiny boat must endure polluted waters, shot on Lake Superior near Marathon, Ontario. Sriracha is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Griffin Hammond. Stories from Lakka Beach is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Daan Veldhuizen. Staedtebewohner is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Heise. Machine Gun Preacher Documentary is a 2014 documentary film written by Zac Simpson and directed by Kevin Evans and Zac Simpson. Diary of Pamplona is a 2011 short documentary biography family and romance film directed by Gonzalo Egurza. The Late, Great Planet Earth is a film by Robert Amram and Rolf Forsberg. Blank City is a 2009 film directed by Celine Danhier. "New York at the end of the seventies was a virtually bankrupt city. Poverty was on the increase – and with it, the crime rate. And yet New York was a city that had an extraordinarily rich contribution to make in cinematic terms, for here, on the Lower East Side of downtown Manhattan, something new was evolving: an independent, enduring cinema, made by young filmmakers, who, inspired by contemporary music such as punk and new wave, were discovering new topics and new forms of expression. ‘No Wave’ cinema or the ‘Cinema of Transgression’ also reveals the influence of the French Nouvelle Vague and American film noir; Andy Warhol was one of its proponents, as was John Waters. The East Village’s art and music scenes also left their mark on the work of filmmakers Jim Jarmusch, Eric Mitchell, Beth B, Charlie Ahern, Lizzie Borden and Amos Poe. Working on shoestring budgets, these filmmakers produced rough-and-ready, unwieldy works, which – short or long, in colour but more often in black-and-white – confidently expressed what it was like to live in districts that had been neglected by the authorities and the economy – and paved the way for an emergent independent cinema. Director Céline Danhier sees her film as a declaration of love to the city of New York; a portrait of Manhattan at a time when rents were low and drugs were cheap; a time before Ronald Reagan and the influx of megabucks that was to lead to the city’s gentrification. But, above all, her film is a tribute to all the filmmakers who made downtown Manhattan a breeding ground for the avant-garde." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Berlin Film Festival site. Law and Disorder in Lagos is a British documentary that was televised on 10 October 2010 by Louis Theroux. The documentary follows Louis Theroux through Lagos, Nigeria, as he follows the KAI task force and union leader MC as well as other gang members. Believing is a 1998 documentary directed and written by Lina Moreco. Silence = Death is a 1990 documentary film directed, written and produced by Rosa von Praunheim. The film centers on the response of some New York City artists to the AIDS epidemic. The interviewed includes East Village artist David Wojnarowicz, poet Allen Ginsberg, artists Keith Haring, Peter Kunz, Bern Boyle and many others. It is the first part of von Praunheim and Phil Zwickler's trilogy about AIDS and activism it was followed by Positive. The Story of the Weeping Camel is a 2003 German docudrama distributed by ThinkFilm. It was released internationally in 2004. The movie was directed and written by Byambasuren Davaa and Luigi Falorni. The plot is about a family of nomadic shepherds in the Gobi Desert trying to save the life of a rare white bactrian camel calf after it was rejected by its mother. Sky, Wind, Fire, Water, Earth is a 2001 documentary biographical film written and directed by Naomi Kawase. Only One Name in the Headlines is a 2008 documentary film written by Daniele Di Biasio , Alessandro Anselmi, Donata Carelli, Mariella Sellitti and directed by Daniele Di Biasio . Cinema in Sudan: conversations with Gadalla Gubara is a French 2008 documentary film. Amílcar Cabral is a documentary film directed by Ana Ramos Lisboa about African icon and martyr Amílcar Cabral. Gegenwart is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Heise. PoliWood is a 2009 documentary film directed by Barry Levinson and produced by Tim Daly, Robin Bronk and Robert E. Baruc. Atlantic Drift is a 2002 documentary film directed by Michel Daëron. Experience the life of Denis and Margaret Thatcher. Sir Denis Thatcher died in June 2003 aged 88. Despite his prominence as consort to his wife Margaret, he never spoke to the media, until he was persuaded by his daughter, Carol, to give his first, last and only TV interview to her, shortly before he died. From 1941 to 1945, the American motion picture industry geared itself up and marched into war. Van Johnson is your host in this feature-length special spotlighting some of Hollywood's greatest stars at the peak of their careers: from John Wayne taking on Japanese dogfighters; from Fred Astaire hoofing his way from civilian to soldier; to Bette Davis and Joan Crawford dazzling the troops at the Hollywood Canteen.THE WAR YEARS is a lively compilation of vintage feature-film clips along with original wartime documentary footage and interviews with several prominent stars of the era, including Joan Leslie, Evelyn Keyes, Gloria DeHaven, Jackie Cooper and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Enter the battle trenches with Robert Taylor and Dane Clark ... relive the days of the USO with Bob Hope and his entourage of sexy celebrities ... see how special effects created some of the most stunning battle footage ever shot ... hit the dance floor with Gene Kelly and Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers. From Carmen Miranda to Katherine Hepburn, from Pearl Harbor to the Allied Victory, THE WAR YEARS covers the range of experiences and emotions associated with the last "good" war. All the poetry and drama and humor and tragedy of the age is captured in this moving homage.For those who remember the war, or those who have parents or grandparents who lived through it, or those who simply want to know more about the one event that sent a young, innocent nation forward into the modern world, THE WAR YEARS is a must-see. Music Changes Everything is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Yoosup Lim and Grant McMurray. Kingerlee is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Colm Hogan and Martina Levitinia. Marry Me is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Uli Gaulke and Jeannette Eggert. Chiri is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Naomi Kawase. 66 Scenes from America is a 1982 documentary film directed by Jørgen Leth. Terror! Robespierre and the French Revolution is a 2009 documentary broadcast on BBC Two in July 2009. Fuck is a 2005 American documentary film by director Steve Anderson about the word "fuck". The film argues that the word is an integral part of societal discussions about freedom of speech and censorship. It looks at the term from perspectives which include art, linguistics, society and comedy, and begins with a segment from the 1965 propaganda film Perversion for Profit. Scholars and celebrities analyze perceptions of the word from differing perspectives. Journalist Sam Donaldson talks about the versatility of the word, and comedian Billy Connolly states it can be understood despite one's language or location. Musician Alanis Morissette comments that the word contains power because of its taboo nature. The film features the last recorded interview of author Hunter S. Thompson before his suicide. Scholars, including linguist Reinhold Aman, journalism analyst David Shaw and Oxford English Dictionary editor Jesse Sheidlower, explain the history and evolution of the word. Language professor Geoffrey Nunberg observes that the word's treatment by society reflects changes in our culture during the 20th century. David Francey: Burning Bright is a music DVD that was nominated the award for Music DVD of the Year 2012 Juno Awards. "Juxtaposing interviews of German gay men who lived through World War II but have since died with those of contemporary German lesbians, influential independent director Rosa von Praunheim creates a striking portrait contrasting men who spent their lives in silence with women whose voices are now at the forefront of today’s queer culture in Germany. DEAD GAY MEN & LIVING LESBIANS allows each story to stand on its own. Imprisoned and made to endure many indignities during WWII, Walter Schwartze states, “The way I am has always made me suffer.” Manuela Kay has confidently evolved from lesbian porn producer to the publisher of Germany’s first lesbian magazine. Ninety-year old Albrecht Becker became an extreme masochist, both enduring and enjoying his time in prison. Berlin-based Turkish DJ Ipec moves assuredly through the club scene and forges a cross-cultural relationship with her German partner." Quoting the description from the 2008 Seattle Lesbian & Gay Film Festival site. Three Hours, Fifteen Minutes Before the Hurricane Struckis a 2006 film directed by Christina Battle. The Clash: Up Close and Personal is a 2006 music documentary film. "German director and producer Jochen Hick creates a compelling portrait of successful male escort entrepreneur Tom Weise in The Good American. Through-out Europe and the United States, we follow Tom’s dreams and travails in the world of male prostitution over the course of several months. The man who gave us HustlaBall and rent-boy.com is many things, including a highly ambivalent gay male living in New York via London from Germany. His fast-talking, perfectly accented English is nearly New York; and he incessantly controls his lover, his parties, his HIV treatment, the business and his exasperations with true German tenacity. He’s also optimistic about life and love, and, at times, tempestuous and difficult to please. Hick approaches his documentary on gay male life organically, allowing unscripted moments to elicit the genuine human foibles and triumphs of his subjects. Over the course of the film, we experience Tom in all his splendor and insecurity as he navigates several major life choices: whether to return to Germany after living 15 years in the US, whether to pursue interferon therapy, and whether the escort business and the gorgeously garish sex positive parties are his true calling. But the one thing Tom is never unsure of is his resolute love for his life partner Keith." Quoting STEFANI CHARREN from the 2009 Frameline SF LGBT Film Festival site. Fair Trading? is a 2011 animated short film directed by Joeri Christiaen. The World Is Rich is a 1947 British documentary film directed by Paul Rotha. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. James Cameron's Deepsea Challenge 3D is a documentary film directed by John Bruno, Ray Quint and Andrew Wight. Under Control is a 2011 documentary film directed by Volker Sattel. Three Below Zero is a 2010 short, documentary film written and directed by Adam Barnick. God is American is a 2007 French documentary film written, directed and produced by Richard Martin Jordan. Magia Russica is an Israeli-Russian documentary film, written, directed and produced by Yonathan and Masha Zur. It depicts the untold story of Russian animation in Soviet times. The film, released in 2004, is Yonathan and Masha Zur’s first film. Magia Russica premiered at the 2004 Haifa Film Festival, and since then has been screened at 45 film festivals, animation festivals, and documentary film festivals around the globe. It was also released on DVD in the USA, Japan, France, and Israel. It was broadcast in 5 different countries. Divorce Corp is a 2014 book and American Documentary film produced and directed by Joseph Sorge and written by Joseph Sorge, James D. Scurlock, Philip Sternberg and Blake Harjes. The film is narrated by "Dr. Drew" Pinsky. The film explores corruption within the family court system of the U.S. Che Rise and Fall is a documentary film created by Eduardo Montes-Bradley. Che: Rise and Fall, was entirely shot in Cuba at the time the remains of Che Guevara were airlifted from Bolivia to his final resting place in Santa Clara, Cuba. The documentary brings out the testimonies of his brothers in arms in Sierra Maestra, Congo and Bolivia, also Alberto Granados with whom Guevara rode on a motorcycle out of Argentina on a trip that will end, tragically, sixteen years later in the jungles of Bolivia. Exploratorium is a 1974 American short documentary film about the Exploratorium science museum in San Francisco, produced by Jon Boorstin. The film explores the museum through imagery and sound, without voice-over. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Sid Bernstein Presents... is a 2010 feature-length documentary film by directors Jason Ressler and Evan Strome about music promoter Sid Bernstein. The film, which stars Lenny Kravitz, Tito Puente, Dick Clark, The Rascals, Paul Anka, Shirley MacLaine, and The Moody Blues, chronicles the life of Bernstein in a narrative that Ressler has described as "a film about the American Dream [seen] through the eyes of one of the greatest promoters in modern history." Bernstein is credited with bringing The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Herman's Hermits, The Rascals and a number of other prominent bands of the British Invasion to America. Bernstein also promoted musicians James Brown, Tito Puente, Ray Charles, The Dave Clark Five, Nina Simone, Jethro Tull and a number of other leading rock 'n roll, blues, jazz, and Latin artists. According to director Jason Ressler, he and co-director Evan Strome decided to begin the documentary project when they discovered in 2000 that Bernstein, then age 81, was being threatened with eviction from his New York apartment. You Are What You Eat is a 1968 American counterculture semi-documentary movie that attempts to capture the essence of the 1960s flower power hippie era and the Haight & Ashbury scene. The film features locally known personalities including well known and somewhat mythical pot dealer Super Spade and musicians of the day including Tiny Tim, David Crosby and Peter Yarrow etc. and radio disc jockey, Rosko. The film soundtrack features music by John Simon and by artists as diverse as Paul Butterfield, The Electric Flag, Eleanor Barooshian, Peter Yarrow, John Herald and Harpers Bizarre, accompanied by several members of The Band. Thirty Million Letters is a 1963 short documentary film directed by James Ritchie and made by British Transport Films. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. No More Fear is a 2011 documentary film directed by Mourad Ben Cheik. "Suffering from Tunisia’s ills, a character in the film says: “This revolution is not the result of destitution, but rather a cry of despair rising from a generation of graduates. It is neither the bread nor the jasmine revolution… Jasmine does not result in death, does not give rise to martyrs. It’s the revolution of a people’s devotion. We shall never again have any fear for this new Tunisia!” This comment perfectly summarizes Tunisian’s frame of mind. That of the youth who made the first revolution of the virtual era, as well as the older people who always defied fear in order to resist the yoke of dictatorship. " Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Cannes Film Festival site. Soul In The Sea is a documentary drama film directed by Amy Taylor. Show Girls is a 1999 documentary film directed by Meilan Lam. Dyngyldai is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Gerd Conradt and Daniela Schulz. Mending the Line is a 2014 documentary film directed by John Waller. The Great Flood is a 2012 documentary history and music film written and directed by Bill Morrison. Forest Dancing is a 2012 film directed by Seok-pil Kang and written by Hong Hyung-sook. Almost Married is a 2010 documentary film written by Sergio Fergnachino and Fatma Bucak and directed by Fatma Bucak. Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County is a found footage horror documentary directed by Dean Alioto. It is a larger-budget version of The McPherson Tape, and originally aired on UPN on January 18, 1998. Kristian Ayre plays Tommy, a teenager in Lake County, Montana, who is making a home movie of his family's Thanksgiving dinner when they are attacked and ultimately abducted by extraterrestrials. The film caused confusion and controversy among first-time viewers, many of whom believed it portrayed real events, and did not realize it was fictional. Die Wilde 13 is a 2013 documentary film written by Marco Antonio Reyes Loredo and Kerstin Schaefer and directed by Kerstin Schaefer and Paul Spengemann. Tokyo-Ga is a 1985 documentary film directed by Wim Wenders ostensibly about filmmaker Yasujiro Ozu. The film ranges from explicit focus on Ozu's filmmaking—Wenders interviews Ozu’s regular cinematographer, Yuharu Atsuta, and one of Ozu’s favorite actors, Chishu Ryu—to scenes of contemporary Tokyo such as pachinko and plastic food displays. Wenders introduces the film as a "diary on film." It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival. Kate! The Making of an Icon is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Nicola Graef. The Life and Times of Allen Ginsberg is a 1993 film by Jerry Aronson chronicling the poet Allen Ginsberg's life from his birth and early childhood to his thoughts about death at the age of 66. The film has been completed and released a number of times due to changing technologies and world events. The first release of the film was in 1993 at the Sundance Film Festival after which it enjoyed an international festival run and USA theatrical run. At the time, Allen was still alive. When Mr. Aronson showed the film to Ginsberg, the poet is reported to have nodded his head thoughtfully and said, "So, that's Allen Ginsberg." When Allen passed in 1997, Jerry Aronson decided to update the ending of the film to include the poet's passing, one shot of Ginsberg's headstone in New Jersey and a new recording of Paul Simon singing Allen's "New Stanzas for Amazing Grace" for closing credits. The new DVD, released on July 2007 by New Yorker Video, includes interviews with Bono, Paul McCartney, Yoko Ono, Johnny Depp, Hunter S. Thompson, Andy Warhol, Patti Smith, Joan Baez, Michael McClure, Norman Mailer, Amiri Baraka, Ken Kesey, William S. Backstage Pass is a music documentary video by the Grateful Dead. It was directed by Justin Kreutzmann, the son of Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann, and produced by Gillian Grisman, the daughter of musician David Grisman. It was released in 1992, and is 35 minutes long. RUSH Time Machine 2011: Live in Cleveland is a 2011 music documentary film directed by Sam Dunn and Scot McFadyen. Not By Sight is a 2013 documentary film directed by Sabrina McCormick. Comedy Is Pain is a 2009 documentary and short film directed by Joshua Kopple. No Lullaby is a 2014 documentary film written by Helen Simon, Katharina Köster and David Lindner and directed by Helen Simon African Safari is a documentary film directed by Ben Stassen. Content is a 2010 documentary film directed and written by Chris Petit. Cattle Callers is a 2005 documentary film directed by Marilia Rocha and co-written with Clarissa Campolina. Once Upon A Time In A Place Called Crack Zone is a 2012 documentary and short film written and directed by Paulo Sergio Silva. "Andy Warhol made him an underground superstar. Lou Reed immortalized him in “Walk on the Wild Side.” The Rolling Stones put a photo of his bulging crotch on the cover of Sticky Fingers and The Smiths used his image on their debut album. John Waters said he “forever changed male sexuality in cinema.” Little Joe is a fascinating documentary starring iconic actor and famed sex symbol Joe Dallesandro. The film spans his forty-year career, beginning with the films of Warhol protégé Paul Morrissey in underground classics such as Flesh, Trash and Heat trilogy. Dallesandro continued with roles in mainstream films such as The Cotton Club and Cry-Baby. What makes this doc truly unique is its singular focus on Dallesandro — interviewed extensively and openly — rather than a collection of interviews with famous friends and associates. Dallesandro’s chiseled face, muscular bod and sexually uninhibited attitude made him an object of lust for men and women alike. The actor’s portrayal of a teenage street hustler in Flesh established his provocative image and was immortalized in Reed’s lyrics, “Little Joe never once gave it away. Everybody had to pay and pay.” But Dallesandro says that described the film character, not him. He also never appreciated having his open sexuality defined by others. Now sixty, Dallesandro speaks frankly to the camera, discussing his career, three marriages, and his long working relationship with Warhol and the Factory. The film also includes animation, plus cult-classic film clips and photos with plenty of nudity." Quoting CHRISTOPHER KEECH from the 2009 Frameline SF LGBT Film Festival site. The French as seen by... was the title and subject of a series of five short films by notable directors. It was initiated and sponsored by the newspaper Le Figaro, as part of the 1988 celebration of the tenth anniversary of its magazine section. The directors and films produced were: Werner Herzog - Les Gaulois David Lynch - The Cowboy and the Frenchman Andrzej Wajda - Proust contre la déchéance Luigi Comencini - Pèlerinage à Agen Jean-Luc Godard - Le dernier mot The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, also known as Chávez: Inside the Coup, is a 2003 documentary focusing on events in Venezuela leading up to and during the April 2002 coup d'état attempt, which saw President Hugo Chávez removed from office for two days. With particular emphasis on the role played by Venezuela's private media, the film examines several key incidents: the protest march and subsequent violence that provided the impetus for Chávez's ousting; the opposition's formation of an interim government headed by business leader Pedro Carmona; and the Carmona administration's collapse, which paved the way for Chávez's return. The Revolution Will Not Be Televised was directed by Irish filmmakers Kim Bartley and Donnacha Ó Briain. Given direct access to Chávez, the filmmakers intended to make a fly-on-the-wall biography of the president. They spent seven months filming in Venezuela, following Chávez and his staff and interviewing ordinary citizens. As the coup unfolded on 11 April, Bartley and Ó Briain filmed on the streets of the capital, Caracas, capturing footage of protesters and the erupting violence. Michael Jackson: The Legend Continues is the 1988 film directed by Patrick T. Kelly. Venetia san no shiki no niwa is a documentary film directed by Kazuhiko Sugawara. 12 Directors for 12 Cities is an 1989 documentary television series. Tale of Two Bondage Models is a 2008 documentary short film directed by Brian Lilla. Otto Preminger. Ein Portrait is a 1999 documentary film directed by Wolfgang Jacobsen and Martin Koerber. Furever is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Amy Finkel. The Mexican suitcase is a 2011 documentary historical political drama film written and directed by Trisha Ziff. 80 Blocks from Tiffany's is a 1979 documentary directed by Gary Weis. It depicted the daily life of gangs within the context of the South Bronx. It dealt primary with two African American and Puerto Rican gangs known as the "Savage Skulls" and the "Savage Nomads". Suchitra Mitra is a 1992 documentary film directed by Raja Sen. Advanced Tie Dye Techniques: Making Shapes and Mandalas is a 2005 documentary film written by Tom Rolofson and Martine Purdy and directed by Tom Rolofson. The Magnum Story III - Close To The Edge is a 1989 documentary film directed by Patricia Wheatley. 50 Cent: The New Breed is a 2003 documentary by rapper 50 Cent. The Sky Above is a 2011 documentary drama film written by Sérgio Borges and Manuela Dias, and directed by Sérgio Borges. 1:42.08 is George Lucas's senior project at the University of Southern California in 1966. It was named for the lap time of the Lotus 23 race car that was the subject of the film. It is a nonstory visual tone poem depicting the imagery of a car going at full speed, and featuring the car's engine as the primary sound element. Shot on 16mm color film with a 14 man student crew, it was filmed at Willow Springs Raceway, north of Los Angeles, CA. The Lotus 23 was driven by Pete Brock. Note by Note: The Making of Steinway L1037 is an independent documentary film that follows the construction of a Steinway concert grand piano over a year, from the search for wood in Alaska to a display at Manhattan's Steinway Hall. The documentary film received its U.S. theatrical premiere at New York's Film Forum in November 2007. The pianists Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Kenny Barron, Bill Charlap, Harry Connick, Jr., Hélène Grimaud, Hank Jones, Lang Lang and Marcus Roberts are testing and talking about Steinway pianos in the film. The Steinway founder's great-grandchild Henry Z. Steinway talks about the company's history. Penumbra is a 2013 drama film written and directed by Eduardo Villanueva. Cotton for My Shroud is a film directed by Kavita Bahl and Nandan Saxena. Filming 'The Trial' is an unfinished making-of film by Orson Welles, made in 1981, which focuses on the production of his 1962 film The Trial. Longe é a cidade – Far is the city is a Portuguese documentary film directed and produced by Ricardo Costa. Mendez vs. Westminster: For All the Children/Para Todos los Niños is a 2003 American documentary film written, directed, and produced by Sandra Robbie. The film features Sylvia Mendez, Robert L. Carter, and others. Life Beyond Earth is a documentary by Timothy Ferris that first appeared on PBS in 1999. The Immortal is a 2005 documentary film directed by Mercedes Moncada Rodríguez. Wonderland or Human Beings Who Dance and Talk is a 2013 documentary/short film directed by Keith Norman and Kipp Norman and written by Keith Norman. Dreams in Copenhagen is a 2009 documentary film written by Dunja Gry Jensen and Max Kestner and directed by Max Kestner. Being Stavros is a 2013 short documentary biographical film directed by Jonothan McLeod. Shot from the Sky is a 2004 documentary film. Iwaki Note is a documentary film. Face 2 Face is a feature-length documentary directed by Katherine Brooks who traveled around the US to meet 50 of her Facebook friends she met online. These 50 people were chosen when Brooks posted a status update on her Facebook page that asked who was willing to spend a day with her and she would come to them and film the whole process. At the end of the project, 6 out of the 50 stories were edited into a film that was submitted to Sundance. Additional profits from the project were to be donated to the Trevor Project. Molson Canadian Rocks for Toronto was a benefit rock concert that was held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on July 30, 2003. It was also known as "Toronto Rocks", "Stars 4 SARS", "SARSStock", "SARSfest", "SARS-a-palooza", the "SARS concert", or, more descriptively, "The Rolling Stones SARS Benefit Concert". Estimated to have between 450,000 and 500,000 people attending the concert, it is the largest outdoor ticketed event in Canadian history, and one of the largest in North American history. The Hungry Tide is a 2011 film directed by Tom Zubrycki. Moses Pendleton Presents Moses Pendleton is a 1982 film directed by Robert Elfstrom and Lucy Hilmer. Hippies is a 2007 documentary film written by Dennis Kleinman and directed by Scott Reda. LIFE ACCORDING TO SAM explores the remarkable world of Sam Berns and his family. Now a high-school junior about to turn 17, Sam embraces his circumstances with admirable courage, showing wisdom beyond his years. “I didn’t put myself in front of you to have you feel bad for me,” he says at the beginning of the film. “I put myself in front of you to let you know you don’t need to feel bad for me. I want you to know me. This is my life, and progeria is part of it. It’s not a major part of it, but it is part of it. Dances of the Kwakiutl is a 1951 film directed by William Heick and produced by Robert Gardner. It was distributed by Documentary Educational Resources. The film is composed of sequences filmed in 1950 in Fort Rupert, British Columbia, featuring a performance by Kwakiutl people of their secretive Hamatsa ceremony. Five Roads to Freedom: From Apartheid to the World Cup is a 2010 documentary co-directed by Robin Benger and Jane Thandi Lipman that looks at South Africa's revolutionary transformation through the eyes of five men and women who lived under the shadow of apartheid. The documentary focuses on five individuals from across the social and political spectrum: ordinary people whose experiences are representative of the profound changes of the past 15 years and whose lives in 2010 reflect both the promise and the ambiguities of today's South Africa. Five Roads to Freedom is a deeply personal project for filmmaker Robin Benger. As a South African student leader in the late 1960s and early 1970s, he was arrested three times for anti-apartheid activities, and ultimately expelled from the country. The film is produced by Ian Ayres, Robin Benger, Eric Ellena, Jane Thandi Lipman, Joseph Oesi and Christopher Sumpton. THE TIJUANA PROJECT is a documentary film about the people who pick through the trash at the Tijuana garbage dump for survival and the lives of six children who live next to this immense mountain for trash. The stories that the children bring to light cover a range of pressing global themes such as garbage management, recycling, health issues, drug abuse, education, and family. This film is about creating vibrant, healthy bridges across borders in a community that was described by Mother Teresa as one of "the world's most destitute". It depicts a poverty stricken neighborhood just miles from the U.S. border that hangs beneath a virtual cloud of seagulls, scavenging alongside the workers. Ultimately, it tells the story of the heart, hope and humanity that somehow survive under heart wrenching conditions. The revolutionary acts of those building long-term solutions such as the hope of a school in the dump, has created an air of opportunity that is most effectively seen in this documentary by the enthusiasm of the children who live there. 20% of the net proceeds from THE TIJUANA PROJECT will be donated to educational programs for kids in dumps worldwide. Lenny Cooke is a 2012 documentary biography drama film directed by Ben Safdie and Joshua Safdie. If a Body Meet a Body is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Brian Davis. Black Theatre: The Making of a Movement is a 1978 documentary film directed by Woodie King Jr. Money and Medicine is a 2012 documentary film directed by Roger Weisberg. Gay USA is an American documentary released in 1978 and directed by Arthur J. Bressan, Jr. The documentary focuses on the gay rights movement. Composed of footage shot at a number of gay pride events around the United States in 1977, the film captures a time just as the gay rights movement began facing the first organized backlash in the form of Anita Bryant and her campaign to repeal anti-discrimination protection in Dade County. Roads is a 2002 German documentary film, written and directed by Marat Magambetow. "A hundred years ago the British Antarctic Expedition led by Captain Scott set out on its ill-fated race to the South Pole. Joining Scott on board the Terra Nova was official photographer and cinematographer Herbert Ponting, and the images that he captured have fired imaginations ever since. Ponting filmed almost every aspect of the expedition: the scientific work, life in camp and the local wildlife—including the characterful Adélie penguins. Those things he was unable to film he boldly recreated back home. Most importantly, Ponting recorded the preparations for the assault on the Pole—from the trials of the caterpillar-track sledges to clothing and cooking equipment—giving us a real sense of the challenges faced by the expedition. Ponting used his footage in various forms over the years and in 1924 he re-edited it into this remarkable feature, complete with vivid tinting and toning. The BFI National Archive—custodian of the expedition negatives—has restored the film using the latest photochemical and digital techniques and reintroduced the film's sophisticated use of color. The alien beauty of the landscape is brought dramatically to life and shows the world of the expedition in brilliant detail. A happy scene of Scott and his team in a tent demonstrating how they would cook and sleep on their race to the Pole—the same tent that would be their tomb—is particularly poignant." Quoting Bryony Dixon and Robin Baker, BFI National Archive Sons of the Wind is a documentary film directed by Bruno Le Jean. Kenji Comes Home is a 1949 documentary film produced by Paul F. Heard. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Notorious Mr. Bout is a 2014 documentary film directed by Tony Gerber and Maxim Pozdorovkin. The film focuses on the life of Viktor Bout, an international arms smuggler. It premiered on January 17, 2014 at the Sundance Film Festival. It was also screened at the 2014 True/False Film Festival. The film was shown in the UK on September 29, 2014, on the BBC Four channel. Without Country is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Theo Rigby. ""Undocumented immigrant" and "US citizen" are often polarizing phrases that carry a charged set of assumptions and stereotypes. The film Without Country attempts to get beyond the partisan politics and mainstream media's "talking point" approach to immigration issues by exploring one family's complex and emotional journey involving deportation. In 1992 Sam and Elida Mejia left Guatemala during a violent civil war and brought their one-year-old son Gilbert to California. The Mejias settled in Marin County and for the past seventeen years they have worked multiple jobs to support their family, pay their taxes and save enough to buy a home. They had two more children, Helen and Dulce, who are both US citizens. Two years ago, immigration agents stormed the Mejias' house looking for someone who didn't live there. Sam, Elida, and Gilbert were all undocumented and became deeply entangled in the US immigration system. After a passionate fight to keep the family together, Sam and Elida were deported. They returned to Guatemala, taking Dulce with them." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site, This gripping documentary takes an in depth look at the Colombian Drug war and the failed U.S. efforts to make an impact on the trafficking to America. The Shark is Still Working is a feature-length documentary film on the impact and legacy of the 1975 Steven Spielberg blockbuster film Jaws. It features interviews with a range of cast and crew from the film. It is narrated by Roy Scheider and dedicated to Peter Benchley. The documentary was produced by "Jaws" fans over a seven-year period, building on Laurent Bouzereau's 1995 documentary, The Making of Jaws, that has been included on some laserdisc and DVD releases. Throughout other documentaries over the years, such as Bouzereau's and the BBC's 1997 documentary In the Teeth of Jaws, actor Richard Dreyfuss has recounted tales about the troubled production of Jaws and the quote “The shark is NOT working” which Dreyfuss would hear constantly from members of the crew. Eventually, upon successful attempts to fix the malfunctioning sea monster, Dreyfuss would regularly hear the quote “The shark is still working”. Universal Studios announced that The Shark Is Still Working documentary would be included as a special feature on the Blu-ray edition of Jaws. The Emperor is a short film by George Lucas about the radio DJ Bob Hudson, made while Lucas was a film student at the University of Southern California's film school. The film was made in 1967 when Lucas returned to USC as a graduate student. A 20 minute documentary, the film was made in 10 weeks. Houri no shima is a documentary film directed by Aya Hanabusa. Documentarian Gayle Kirschenbaum captures the remarkable bond between dogs and their owners in this inspiring film. Searching for a spouse, Kirschenbaum equipped her shih tzu, Chelsea, with a canine cam (giving viewers a dog's-eye view of the world), and the duo roamed New York City's streets to find Mr. Right -- and stardom for the pooch. But the movie unexpectedly shifts gears after Sept. 11, when Chelsea discovers her calling as a therapy dog. "BECOMING SANTA is the story of one man entering the culture and character of Santa Claus for a single season. We follow Jack as he bleaches his hair, goes to Santa School and tries to do everything that Santa is asked to do. He works as a sidewalk Santa, does home visits, a Polar Express Train and a parade. Along the way, Jack collects children's wishes, learns about the benefits of belief, the history and origin of Santa and the ordinary people keeping the Santa spirit alive." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. The Venice Syndrome is a 2012 documentary drama news film written by Andreas Pichler and Thomas Tielsch, and directed by Andreas Pichler. Love Crimes of Kabul is a 2011 documentary film following select cases of inmates at Badam Bagh women's prison in Kabul, Afghanistan where half are jailed for moral crimes. "If they were good women, they wouldn't be here," says a prison guard at the beginning of the film. La vieja que arde is a 1985 documentary film written by Juan Francisco Urrusti and Lourdes de Leon, and directed by Juan Francisco Urrusti. "Filmed on a worksite in the center of Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province in western China, Chai-qian (Demolition) is a cinematic portrait of migrant labor, urban space, and the ephemeral connection between film-subject and filmmaker. Attending first to the transforming worksite – including the demands of physical labor and the relationship between human and machine – the film gradually shifts focus to the group of thirty men and women who have come from the countryside to work in this ever-changing urban landscape.? Quoting the description from the 2011 Spokane International Film Festival site. GASLAND PART II debuting 07.08 This is the provocative follow-up to Josh Fox’s 2011 Academy Award®-nominated “Gasland,” about the controversial method of extracting natural gas and oil known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. Employing his trademark dark humor, Fox’s new effort shows how the stakes have been raised on all sides of one of today’s most hotly debated environmental issues. "A journalist with no scruples and two Danish/Korean comedians—one a self-proclaimed "spastic"—travel to North Korea under the guise of a cultural exchange. On the pretext of being a small Danish theatre group, named The Red Chapel, they are allowed into the country, but unbeknownst to the North Koreans, cultural exchange is not really what they have in mind. Mads Brügger, the journalist; Simon, the straight man; and Jacob, the spastic, use humor to challenge one of the world’s most notorious regimes. The troupe rehearse under the watchful eye of government officials brought in to "collaborate" on their performance and make it more palatable for the Korean regime. They are shown the important historical sights by a female government employee, who smothers poor Jacob with motherly affection. Fusing elements of activist filmmaking with theater of the absurd, The Red Chapel is an acerbic romp, as subversive as it is wildly original." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance film Festival site. My Generation is a 2000 film by documentary filmmaker Barbara Kopple that looks at the links between young people who attended the original 1969 Woodstock music festival and those who attended the 1994 and 1999 Woodstock festivities. Despite the wide generational and cultural gaps between the original attendees and the newer ones, the film finds that there are more commonalities than there are differences. The movie also captured both the notorious mud-slinging performance of the band Green Day at 1994's festival and the chaotic fires at 1999's concert. The film features performances by such acts as Joe Cocker, Blues Traveler, DMX, and Limp Bizkit. My Generation premiered as a work-in-progress at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival. 30 años de la Filmoteca de la UNAM is a 1991 short documentary film written and directed by Eduardo Patiño. Invention Of Radio is a short documentary film that was directed by Burim Haliti. Live With The Sea is a 2013 short documentary drama written and directed by Yuichiro Nakano. Song-Do is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Emilija Škarnulytė. Love Letters from a War is a 2003 documentary drama romance film written and directed by Wain Fimeri. Zombie Girl: The Movie is a 2009 documentary that was directed by Justin Johnson, Aaron Marshall, and Erik Mauck. The film focuses on the making of the 2006 zombie film Pathogen that was directed by Emily Hagins, who was twelve years-old at the time. Pride In Blue is a 2007 documentary film directed by Kazuhiko Nakamura. Prologue: The Artist Who Did Not Want to Paint is a 1965 short biographical documentary written and directed by Vincenzo Labella. The Wolf Men is a 1969 documentary film produced by Irwin Rosten. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Weg in die Freiheit is a 1953 short documentary film directed by Alfred Weidenmann and written by Herbert Reinecker. Bravehearts is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Kari Anne Moe. The Bella Vista is a 2012 documentary, comedy, drama and family film written and directed by Alicia Cano. Dating Service is a 2003 short documentary film directed by Rudolfas Levulis. Liv Ullmann - Scenes from a Life is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Edvard Hambro. Trash-Out is a 2010 short documentary drama film directed by Maria Fortiz-Morse. This program provides an inside look at Janet "Damita-Jo" Jackson and her rise to female pop and R+B stardom! Find out how she transcended being the youngest girl of a famous family and took "control" of her life and music. In elementary school she began with singing and acting, then eventually moved on to collaborate with countless superstars. This DVD takes a look behind "The Velvet Rope" and exposes how this talented sistah is striving to stay on top in spite of divorce, family trials and Super Bowl "overexposure". Discover everyone and everything involved in Janet's comeback on this DVD expose! Reconvergence is a 2012 documentary film directed by Edward Tyndall featuring the lives and views of four characters: naturalist Eustace Conway, scientist Preston Estep, historian Waite Rawls, and poet Caleb Whitaker. The film features a wide exploration of their views on history, memory, consciousness, and the changes wrought by technologies. The film screened at various American film festivals and was distributed by Mobius Films. Typhoid Mary is a 1993 documentary film written and directed by Nancy Porter. Hey Watch This is a 2010 documentary film directed by Christian Charles. PotthillalOnchi is an Indian documentary film on the Telangana Movement. It is a film made on the sacrifices made by people for the separate statehood. It is directed by Rakesh Reddy and produced by Chicago Telangana Association. PotthillalOnchi means From the Womb. Tabarly is a 2008 documentary film directed by Pierre Marcel. The Green Prince is a 2014 documentary film directed by Nadav Schirman. Reckless Indifference is a 2000 film directed by William Gazecki. Sun Song is a 2013 short historical and science fiction documentary silent film written and directed by Joel Wanek. Language Says It All is a 1987 American short documentary film about deaf children and their caregivers, directed by Rhyena Halpern and produced by Halpern and Megan Williams. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Lie Back And Enjoy It: A Film About Joann Elam is a 2013 short, documentary and biographical film written and directed by Jessica Bardsley. Switzerland is a 1955 short, documentary film directed by Ben Sharpsteen. Les Avatars de la mort d’Empédocle is a 2009 documentary film directed by Jean-Paul Toraille. Romántico is a 2005 documentary film written by Arturo Arias and Carmelo Muñiz Sanchez and directed by Mark Becker. Finding Vivian Maier is a 2013 documentary film about the photographer Vivian Maier, written, directed and produced by John Maloof and Charlie Siskel. Maier's photographic legacy was largely unknown during her lifetime. The film documents how Maloof discovered her work and, after her death, uncovered her life as a nanny and a photographer in Chicago through interviews with people who knew her. Jeff Garlin was executive producer; Chris McKinley, Lars Mortensen and Mary Prendergast were associate producers. It had its world premiere at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival on 9 September 2013. It has won various awards. Bones Brigade: An Autobiography is a 2012 documentary film directed by Stacy Peralta. 101 is a live album and documentary by Depeche Mode released in 1989 chronicling the final leg of the band's Music for the Masses Tour and the final show at the Pasadena Rose Bowl. Group member Alan Wilder is credited with coming up with the name; the performance was the 101st and final performance of the tour. The film was directed and produced by D.A. Pennebaker. Mon île était le monde is a 1992 documentary film. That's Sexploitation is a 1973 documentary film. In the Dark Room is a 2013 Documentary Film written and directed by Nadav Schirman. A Visit to Ogawa Productions is a 1981 film directed by Junichiro Oshige. J.C. Chavez is a documentary about the life and career Mexican boxer Julio César Chávez. "In his previous film, 51 BIRCH STREET, director Doug Block examined the marriage between his parents and, in particular, his relationship with his father. In this film, the second of a planned trilogy, Block explores parenting from a different vantage point, turning the camera on his daughter, and only child, Lucy as she prepares to leave for college. The result is an intimate and poignant story of a family in transition, and a father learning to let go." Quoting the description from the 2010 Silverdocs site. Il pianeta azzurro is a 1981 documentary film written by Franco Piavoli and Neria Poli and direted by Franco Piavoli. "By focusing on the popular women's talk show Kalam Nawaem (Sweet Talk or Women Talk), this lively documentary explores how Arab satellite TV influences lifestyles and public opinion in the Middle East. Hosted by four women from different Arab countries, this hugely successful prime-time TV show brings the world seen from the vantage point of women to millions of Arab viewers worldwide. Discussing hot issues like homosexuality, terrorism and masturbation, Lebanese Rania, Egyptian Fawzia, Palestinian Farah and Saudi Muna are the controversial stars of a record-breaking television format, bringing in millions of dollars in advertising revenue for its Saudi owners. Who are these charming women breaking new ground? How do they use the power of media to change their world? And what does their talk bring about in Arab living rooms?" Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site, Dakar cherche de l'oxygène is a Senegalese 2006 short documentary film. Die neue Wohnung. Version SWB is a 1930 short documentary film written and directed by Hans Richter Classic Artists: Yes is a two-disc DVD documentary of the progressive rock group Yes produced by Image Entertainment and fully endorsed by the band. The video spans the band's entire career, beginning with their 1968 formation and going through their most recent studio album Magnification and the three years of touring that followed. The documentary features interviews with band members past and present, including the first official interviews with founding guitarist Peter Banks on an official Yes video release. In addition to a large amount of music to accompany the documentary, the video also includes rare and unseen photographs from personal collections, performance archive, music promos, and includes 20 page full colour booklet. No todo es permanente is a 1995 short documentary film directed by Fernando Eimbcke. Am seidenen Faden is a 2005 musical documentary written and directed by Katarina Peters Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine is a 2003 documentary film by Vikram Jayanti about the match between Garry Kasparov, the highest rated chess player in history and the World Champion for 15 years, and Deep Blue, a chess-playing computer created by IBM. It was coproduced by Alliance Atlantis and the National Film Board of Canada. Blood Calls You is a 2010 film directed by Linda Thorgren. Do You Believe in Miracles? is a Documentary History Sports film. The Mystery of Samba is a 2008 documentary film directed by Carolina Jabor and Lula Buarque de Hollanda. N Is a Number: A Portrait of Paul Erdős is a 1993 biographical documentary about the life of mathematician Paul Erdős, directed by George Paul Csicsery. The film was made between 1988 and 1991, capturing Erdős in various countries along with some of his numerous collaborators. It covers his unusual career, his personal life, and many of his recurring jokes and anecdotes, including that of Erdős numbers. The film won the Gold Apple Award, and the Gold Plaque Award. Carry Greenham Home is a 1983 documentary film directed by Beeban Kidron and Amanda Richardson. Mondo cane is a documentary written and directed by Italian filmmakers Paolo Cavara, Franco Prosperi and Gualtiero Jacopetti. The film consists of a series of travelogue vignettes that provide glimpses into cultural practices around the world with the intention to shock or surprise Western film audiences. These scenes are presented with little continuity, as they are intended as a kaleidoscopic display of shocking content rather than presenting a structured argument. Despite its claims of genuine documentation, certain scenes in the film are either staged or creatively manipulated to enhance this effect. Mondo cane was an international box-office success and inspired the production of numerous, similar exploitation documentaries, many of which also include the word "Mondo" in their title. These films collectively came to be recognized as a distinct genre known as mondo films. In addition, the film's success led Jacopetti and Prosperi to produce several additional documentaries, including Mondo cane 2, Africa addio, and Addio zio Tom, while Cavara directed La donna nel mondo, Malamondo, as well as the anti-Mondo drama Wild Eye. A Delicate Balance – The Truth is a documentary film created by Aaron Scheibner, released on 13 November 2008, outlining the effects of diet on health and the environment. Based on a large amount of research into these areas, it features interviews with doctors and other prominent figures on the public health scene, as well as world leaders such as Maneka Gandhi. Werner Schroeter is a 2012 documentary short film written and directed by Rosa von Praunheim. Last Chance is a 2012 documentary by Paul-Émile d'Entremont about five LGBT people seeking the right of asylum in Canada in order to escape persecution or homophobic violence in their homelands. Subjects in the film include a transgender woman who was institutionalized by her family in Lebanon, an LGBT person jailed in Egypt, as well as Trudi, a Jamaican lesbian who was "correctively raped" at gunpoint. Last Chance was produced by the National Film Board of Canada. D'Entremont conceived the idea for the film while in Jordan, working on his previous film, Reema, aller-retour. The film took ten years to make, including three years of principal photography. Trudi's was the last story to be filmed. Montreal immigration and refugee lawyer Noel St. Pierre was also among those interviewed in the film. Flies and Angels: Ilya and Emilia Kabakov is a 2009 documentary film directed by Niels Bolbrinker and Kerstin Stutterheim. A Few Notes on Our Food Problem is a 1968 documentary film directed by James Blue. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Lindsey Vonn: In the Moment is a TV documentary series written by Andrea Nix and directed by Sean Fine and Andrea Nix. In Tibet, many peaks are paved with legends and fire the imagination of millions of people. There is one, unique in the world, that is considered sacred by both Hinduists and Buddhists: the Mount Kailash. This massive rock attracts each year pilgrims in search of beauty and absolute. Fascinated by this mythical mountain, Florence and Simon will take us on their 900-kilometer journey and will make the pilgrimage of their lives. We Will Be Young is a 2012 film directed by Charlie Marois. Stemple Pass is a 2012 documentary film directed by James Benning. The Photo Man is a 2013 short documentary historical fiction drama biographical film directed by Ben Kitnick. Parradox is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by In-Soo Radstake. Maria Lionza, Aliento de Orquideas is a 2007 film directed by John Petrizzelli. The United States of Autism is a 2013 biographical documentary film directed by Richard Everts. "How did Cleveland teens Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster devise Superman, the first comics superhero, and, second to a certain mouse, the most popular fictional character in the world? Last Son tells the tale, uncovering a new source for the very first Superman story (which was rejected for years) and solving the mystery of the lovely Lois Lane. Among the never-before-seen home movies, there’s a beautiful bit from the 1941 World's Fair, which included a “Superman Day” with the first actor to play Superman—a high point for the two men who created, but would never own, the Man of Steel." Quoting the description from the 2010 IndieFest site. Samba Ladies is a 2013 documentary directed by Susanna Lira. Romans d’ados 2 – La Crise is a 2010 documentary film written by Béatrice Bakhti and Nasser Bakhti and directed by Béatrice Bakhti. The Unknown Known is a 2013 American documentary film about the life of former U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, directed by filmmaker Errol Morris. It premiered at the Telluride Film Festival on August 29, 2013. The film was screened in the main competition section at the 70th Venice International Film Festival. It has an 84% "Certified Fresh" rating on the critical review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes. In the review for Philly.com, Tirdad Derakhshani gives the film two out of fours stars and states, "Morris tries to hold Rumsfeld to account for the blunders, cover-ups, and atrocities critics say were committed during his watch.... Yet we get little in response from Rumsfeld but a demonstration of his cunning at parrying, dodging, and twisting queries." Die neue Wohnung. Version Atelier Richter is a 1930 short documentary film written and directed by Hans Richter Under the Sea 3D a new IMAX 3D adventure, transports moviegoers to some of the most exotic and isolated undersea locations on Earth, including Southern Australia, New Guinea and others in the Indo-Pacific region, allowing them to experience face-to-face encounters with some of the most mysterious and stunning creatures of the sea. It offers a uniquely inspirational and entertaining way to explore the beauty and natural wonder of the oceans, as well as the impact of global climate change. Directed by Howard Hall. 2009. A Yiddish World Remembered is a 2002 Emmy-award-winning documentary by Andrew Goldberg that uses archival photographs, never-before-seen archival videos, and survivor testimony to reconstruct the Jewish communities of Eastern Europe, which were destroyed by the Holocaust. Oscar nominated actor Elliott Gould narrates. The 1938 fight between Joe Louis and Max Schmeling and the political and social ideologies the world thought were represented by the boxers. The New Testament of Jesus Christ According to John is a documentary film directed by Nuno Leonel and Joaquim Pinto. Tango Salon, Confiteria Ideal is a 2004 musical documentary directed by Jana Boková. Start the Machine is a documentary that focuses on the break-up of Blink-182, the genesis of Angels & Airwaves, and the making of their debut album We Don't Need to Whisper. It was released on DVD on June 17, 2008. The film is named after the closing track on We Don't Need to Whisper. Return to Lisca Bianca Island is a 1983 short documentary film written and directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. Wüste is a 2000 film directed by Ebbo Demant. Baltasar, Historia de una Orquesta is a short documentary film directed by Luis Alonso López Cardona. The American Gangster is a 1992 American crime documentary film directed by Ben Burtt and written and produced by Ray Herbeck Jr. The documentary is narrated by Dennis Farina and explores the lives of America's gangsters like Pretty Boy Floyd, John Dillinger, Al Capone, and Bugsy Siegel. It was directly released on VHS in 1992 and later released as part of a DVD box set in 2006. Follow the journey of one of Hip Hops most talented and influential Grammy winning producers turned double platinum artist. Witness how this Chicago native made his mark in Hip Hop, in just a few short years. He has produced for Jay-Z, Nas, DMX, Brandy, Alicia Keyes, Janet Jackson, Jadakiss, John Legend, Lil Kim, Eve, Jamie Foxx, Jermain Dupri, The Game, Mary J. Blige, Twista and many more. See how this kid at heart with an old school soul survived and overcame a tragic accident that almost cost him his life. Blessed with a second chance at life, this Supa Dupa producer took advantage of this opportunity in more ways than one by turning tragedy into triumph. I for India is an English and Hindi language film released in the United Kingdom in August 2007. Directed by Sandhya Suri, it chronicles home movie footage and reel-to-reel tape recordings made by her father, Doctor Yash Pal Suri, starting from the 1960s. With the primitive state of telecommunications at the time, Dr.Suri sent the films and tapes to his family in India as a form of contact and information as to his new life in the UK with his wife and family. Dr.Suri reveals much of his innermost emotions,such as missing his family and home town, his difficulties at settling in a new country, and concern at the casual racism to which he was often subjected. The film also includes footage of various British TV programmes of its era regarding Asian emigrants, also incorporating part of an interview featuring Margaret Thatcher's views on emigration shortly before she became British Prime Minister. It was distributed by ICA Projects. It was released theatrically in both the U.K. and the U.S. Burroughs: The Movie is a 1983 documentary film directed by Howard Brookner about the beat generation writer William S. Burroughs. Exclusive, Uncensored Footage of Atrocities Gives Rare Insight Why America Had 'Moral Obligation' to Invade Iraq. After viewing, Americans will soon have a far better understanding of why it was the United States' unavoidable obligation to invade Iraq.BURIED IN THE SAND: THE DECEPTION OF AMERICA takes an unflinching look at the atrocities at Abu Ghurayb prison in Iraq and across this sand-blown country. Never-before-seen footage obtained from American military personnel, Islamic extremists and other sources put a face - the face of someone's parent, spouse, sibling or child - on the suffering, death and betrayal suffered by an entire society.BURIED IN THE SAND: THE DECEPTION OF AMERICA is hosted by Mark Taylor, a 25-year radio veteran and nationally known political commentator who has been a frequent guest on such prominent and influential shows as The O'Reilly Factor, Hannity & Colmes and Politically Incorrect, as well as on MSNBC and CNN news broadcasts. Puisi Tak Terkuburkan is a 2000 award winning Indonesian documentary/drama directed by Garin Nugroho in black and white. At the 2001 Singapore International Film Festival the film won the FIPRESCI Prize and the Silver Screen Award for Best Asian Actor which went to the poet Ibrahim Kadir, who played himself. The film was also nominated at for the Silver Screen Award for Best Asian Feature Film, while Nugroho won the Silver Leopard Video Award at the Locarno International Film Festival. The Dungans is a 2014 documentary film directed by Zunwas Arbudu. Because of That War is a feature-length 1988 Hebrew-language documentary about Yehuda Poliker and Ya'akov Gilad, two children of Holocaust survivors. It was written and directed by Orna Ben-Dor Niv. It was shown in Germany under the title Wegen dieses Krieges. Blame It on the Seagull is a 2013 short, drama and animated documentary film written by Julie Engås and Cecilie Semec and directed by Julie Engås. Marion Jones: Press Pause is a documentary film directed by John Singleton that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. Into the Middle of Nowhere is a 2010 documentary short film written and directed by Anna Frances Ewert. Seconds of Lead is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Seyed Reza Razavi. Return of the Tüdelband is a 2003 German documentary directed by Jens Huckeriede Particle Fever is a 2013 documentary film tracking the first round of experiments at the Large Hadron Collider near Geneva, Switzerland. The film follows the experimental physicists at CERN who run the experiments, as well as the theoretical physicists who attempt to provide a conceptual framework for the LHC's results. The film begins in 2008 with the first firing of the LHC and concludes in 2012 with the successful identification of the Higgs boson. A Boy Named Sue is a 2001 documentary film directed by Julie Wyman. It shows the life and transition of Theo, a young adult, born intersex, raised female, involved in a lesbian relationship, who undergoes various stages of a sex reassignment surgery to become male. The protagonist is filmed extensively throughout, gives a number of interviews, and eventually settles down as a gay male. The film's title is taken from the song A Boy Named Sue. The Use and Abuse of Vegetational Concepts is a part of a film series written and directed by Adam Curtis. American Hollow is a 1999 documentary film directed by Rory Kennedy. Bloody Beans is a 2013 drama documentary film directed by Narimane Mari Benamer. home is a 2008 film directed by Matt Faust. Walking With Cecilia is a documentary film directed by Michaela Krimmer and Friedrich Ofner. Wayfaring - A Jaunt Along The Camino De Santiago is a 2014 documentary film directed by Scott Herriott. The Mosuo Sisters is a 2012 documentary, biography and family film directed by Marlo Poras. La Mer De La Tranquilité is a 2010 short documentary adventure film written and directed by Antoon Cox. Western Approaches is a 1944 documentary war film directed by Pat Jackson. It is the fictional account of 22 sailors marooned in a lifeboat. Much of it was shot in the Irish Sea. Sailors rather than professional actors were used. Carpani, Life and Works is a 2006 documentary film written by Doris Carpani, Jerónimo Carranza, Roberto Ferro and Cristina Driga and directed by Doris Carpani, Jerónimo Carranza and Roberto Ferro. On the Objection Front is a 2004 documentary directed by Shiri Tsur. ...More Than 1000 Words is a documentary film written, directed, shot, and edited by Solo Avital. The film explores the relationship between the photographer Ziv Koren and his work covering the Israel-Palestine conflict. It depicts his involvement covering various events over a two-year period up to Israel's withdrawal from Gaza. Director Solo Avital seeks to shed light on how and why a man such as Koren would leave his wife and daughter to work as a photographer in a dangerous war zone. Connected: An Autoblogography about Love, Death and Technology is a 2010 documentary film directed by Tiffany Shlain. "With wonderful heart and an impressive sense of scale, Tiffany Shlain’s vibrant and insightful documentary, Connected, explores the visible and invisible connections linking major issues of our time—the environment, consumption, population growth, technology, human rights, the global economy—while searching for her place in the world during a transformative time in her life. Employing a splendidly imaginative combination of animation and archival footage, plus several surprises, Shlain constructs a chronological tour of Western modernization through the work of her late father, Leonard Shlain, a brain surgeon and best-selling author of Art and Physics and The Alphabet Versus the Goddess. With humor and irony, the Shlain family life merges with philosophy to create both a personal portrait and a proposal for ways we can move forward as a civilization. Connected illuminates the beauty and tragedy of human endeavor while boldly championing the importance of personal connectedness for understanding and coping with today’s global conditions." Quoting the description form the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. A Boat for Bangladesh is a 2013 documentary film written by David Conover and Lisa Genasci. Gretchen, Road Movie is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Eliane Brum and Paschoal Samora. He Makes Me Feel Like Dancin' is a 1983 documentary film directed by Emile Ardolino about Jacques d'Amboise, a noted former American ballet star who had dancing roles in such films as Seven Brides for Seven Brothers and Carousel, and who later became a New York dancing instructor. It won the 1983 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and a 1984 Emmy Award for Best Children's Programming after it was shown on television. It is one of the few theatrical films to win both awards. The Living Room is a short film written and directed by Roderick Hietbrink. Before The Law Was Equal - The Desegregation Of The Hillsborough County Legal Community is a 2013 biographical documentary film directed by Stan Arthur. Dummy Jim is a 2013 documentary biographical film written by Matt Hulse and directed by Matt Hulse, Tishna Molla. The Postwar History of Rural Medical Services is a 2011 film directed by Masayoshi Suzuki. The Art of Amália is a documentary by Bruno de Almeida on the artistic career of Amália Rodrigues, the celebrated Fado singer from Portugal. This 90-minute film is based on a previous five-hour made-for-television mini-series on the singer that dealt with her life and career; it was also de Almeida’s fourth cinematic project celebrating Rodrigues’ career. The film opens with an on-screen introduction by David Byrne, who praises the singer for “singing in these fado songs about the sadness of the universe, not only about a personal sadness or a tragedy in her own life or in the writer's life, but she was expressing the sadness of existence." The Art of Amália mixes rare film, television and concert footage from different periods of Rodrigues’ career. The film also presents a previously thought lost clip of a very rare appearance on U.S. television in 1953, where she performed her hit song Coimbra. The Art of Amália also includes the last filmed interview by Rodrigues, who died one week before production was completed. The film had its U.S. premiere in March 2000 at a United Nations benefit, and its theatrical premiere in New York in December 2000. The Greatest Places is a 1998 short documentary film written by Pamela Stacey and directed by Mal Wolfe. Un lugar en el cine is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Alberto Morais. Platinum-selling singer, A-list actress and new Mom, Beyonce Knowles is a superstar with no limits. From Destiny's Child to her relationship with Jay-Z - and birth of their baby Blue Ivy - she's become an ever-evolving woman who can seemingly do no wrong. Featuring exclusive interviews with her family and inner circle of friends, Beyonce: Baby and Beyond provides an in-depth look at what drives this diva's passion for life! Es El Chapo? is a documentary film directed by Charlie Minn. Blocking the Path to 9/11 is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by John Ziegler. O megalos erotikos is a 1973 documentary drama music film written and directed by Pantelis Voulgaris. Soccer's Hard Men is a 1992 football video by Video Vision, presented by then-footballer and current actor Vinnie Jones. The video featured footage of British players known for their ferocity, including Graeme Souness, Bryan Robson, Nobby Stiles, Norman Hunter, Jack Charlton, Steve McMahon, Tommy Smith, Peter Storey, Ron "Chopper Harris" and Billy Bremner. Publicity for the video described it as "the toughest football video in history". This and similar claims led to accusations that the video glorified foul play. Jones' commentary, in which he described tricks used by "hard man" players to intimidate opponents, caused particular controversy. The clubs of the players involved in the production were quick to distance themselves from the contents. Sam Hammam, chairman of Wimbledon, whose "Crazy Gang" featured heavily in the video, said the production was "nothing to do with Wimbledon", describing Jones as "a mosquito brain", and banning the sale of the video in the club shop. The Football Association formally charged Jones with bringing the game into disrepute on 30 September 1992, with the video still yet to be released. Bödälä – Dance the Rhythm is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Gitta Gsell. Carts of Darkness is a 2008 National Film Board of Canada documentary film by Murray Siple about a group of homeless men in the city of North Vancouver, who use shopping carts to collect bottles and cans to return for money and also race down the city's steep slope for thrills. The subjects in the film control the carts using only their weight and one foot, during descents that cross intersections, with top speeds claimed to be as high as 70 km/h. Siple, a former director of extreme sports videos and an avid skateboarder and snowboarder, became a quadriplegic after a car accident in 1996. His first film after his accident, Carts of Darkness allowed the filmmaker to regain the excitement he had experienced with extreme sports and to relate to a fellow group of outsiders. How to Die in Oregon is a 2011 American documentary film produced and directed by Peter Richardson. It is set in the U.S. state of Oregon and covers the state's Death with Dignity Act that allows terminally ill patients to self-administer medication prescribed by their physician to end their own life. Out Of This World is a 2014 documentary and short film written by Petter Brundell and directed by Viktor Nordenskiöld. Who Bombed Judi Bari? is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mary Liz Thomson. Harvest of Empire: The Untold Story of Latinos in America is a 2012 feature-length documentary film based on the book of the same name, written by journalist Juan González. The film was directed by Peter Getzels and Eduardo López, and premiered in New York and Los Angeles on September 28. The film examines the role of the United States military and economic interests in Latin American countries. It documents the relationship between United States' intervention in the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and El Salvador, and the unprecedented surge of migration from those nations. It links this exodus to the present massive Latino population in the United States. and the current immigration crisis. Also discussed are the wars fought for United States territorial expansion into Puerto Rico, Cuba, and over half of Mexico. It documents the covert actions by the United States to install dictatorships in the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and El Salvador. Pelotero is a 2011 documentary drama sport film directed by Ross Finkel, Trevor Martin and Jonathan Paley. Listen to Britain is a 1942 British propaganda short film by Humphrey Jennings and Stewart McAllister. The film was produced during World War II by the Crown Film Unit, an organisation within the British Government's Ministry of Information to support the Allied war effort. The film was nominated for the inaugural Academy Award for Documentary Feature in 1943, but lost against four other Allied propaganda films. It is noted for its nonlinear structure and its use of sound. "In this offbeat doc, we follow two West Philadelphians who travel to Iowa to fulfill their dreams and add some fire to the same sex-marriage debate raging in Pennsylvania. Amanda Kole and Rachel Turanski (two twenty-something lesbians), U-Hauled at five months and now want to take the extra step and officially tie-the-knot. With reams of tulle and a gold wedding jump-suit (commissioned from the Philly King of Spandex) packed, the brides, and their Chihuahua, are soon on a road-trip, to the heartland of America - Ames, Iowa - (the only State in the central heartland of the U.S. that recognizes same-sex marriage) to exchange wedding vows and rings, officiated by gold lamé devotee and lady rapper Leslie Hall. Tender interviews with Amanda’s parents show how far they have come embracing their daughter’s sexuality, but is the same-sex wedding too much of a step for the brides families? At a time when every same-sex wedding is seen as a political act can a lesbian wedding be all glitter and gold lamé?.You will have to judge for yourself as we unveil, on its home-turf, the World Premiere of Married in Spandex." Quoting Carol Coombes from the 2011 Philadelphia QFEST site. Broken Heart Land is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jeremy Stulberg and Randy Stulberg. Castles In Spain is a short film/ documentary by Pauline Horovitz. Rembrandt: A Self-Portrait is a 1954 short documentary film produced by Morrie Roizman. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Canta!Timor is a documentary film directed by Natsuko Hirota. Disfellowshipped - Stories From The Shadows Of The Watchtower is a 2013 documentary written by Noora Oja and directed by Iita Pirttikoski. The Roughnecks is a 2012 documentary, drama, family and sports film directed by Richard Cameron White and Chris Cook. No Bois Man No Fraid is a 2013 Documentary, Action and Biography film written and directed by Christopher Laird. Knuckleball! is a 2012 documentary film that follows the 2011 seasons of Tim Wakefield and R. A. Dickey, Major League Baseball's only knuckleball pitchers that year. It was released in theaters on September 20, 2012 and on DVD on April 2, 2013. Wakefield won his 200th game in 2011 and Dickey won the 2012 Cy Young Award. Leona's Sister Gerri is a 1995 film directed by Jane Gillooly. Marshall University: Ashes to Glory is a 2000 documentary about the November 14, 1970 Marshall University plane crash that killed 75 people, and the efforts of new head coach Jack Lengyel and the coaching staff, to rebuild the team and help heal the city of Huntington, West Virginia. Marshall University was given special permission by the NCAA to play incoming freshmen at the varsity level for the 1971 season. This team was dubbed the Young Thundering Herd and led by the few upperclassmen who didn't make the trip. Several players from other Marshall sports programs rounded out the team's roster. In the preseason "Green and White Game" versus the Marshall alumni, the Young Thundering Herd defeated the alums 26-0. The Young Thundering Herd went on to upset the Xavier Musketeers on the last play of the game: a 13-yard screen pass from quarterback Reggie Oliver to freshman fullback Terry Gardner, in their home opener. In their homecoming game later in the season, the team defeated the ranked Bowling Green Falcons. These were the only two victories of the year for the Thundering Herd. Another Day At The Office is a DVD of internationally known disc jockey D.J. Tiësto, he is filmed while on a tour of some of the most popular dance venues in the world. Also captured in this documentary is live footage from his performances, interviews, live appearances, and music videos. Symbiopsychotaxiplasm is a 1968 experimental docu-drama film written, directed, and conceived by African-American film director and documentarian William Greaves. The film, which is shot and presented in the style of a cinéma vérité documentary, attempts to capture and examine pure reality unhindered by the presence of the cameras all around. It is perhaps most memorable for the layers of metatextual storytelling inherent in the concept of the story: that of a documentary inside a documentary inside a documentary. Cocalero is a 2007 documentary film directed by Alejandro Landes. The Future's Getting Old Like the Rest of Us is a 2010 film directed by Beatrice Gibson. Wild Horse, Wild Ride is a 2011 documentary film directed by Alex Dawson and Greg Gricus. Wurlitzer oder Die Erfindung der Gegenwart is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Antje Starost and Hans-Helmut Grotjahn. Supermen Of Malegaon is a 2012 Hindi documentary film written and directed by Faiza Ahmad Khan. This documentary was released on 29 June 2012 in cinemas. Supermen Of Malegaon was never meant to be released as a movie and was originally made as a documentary for a Singapore TV channel. The project features Shakeel Bharati, Farogh Jafri, Akram Khan, Shafique, Nazir Shaikh. Classic Stand-Up Comedy of Television is a 1996 documentary film directed by Walter C. Miller. 17th Parallel: Vietnam in War is a 1968 French documentary film directed by Joris Ivens. The film sets out to show the effects of the American bombing campaign on the Vietnamese people, who were mainly peasant farmers. Johan Cruijff – En un momento dado is a 2004 documentary film by Ramon Gieling on the life of Dutch footballer Johan Cruijff. Cry of the Wild is a 1972 feature-length documentary film by Bill Mason and his second of three films about wolves. The film is a personal account of the two years Mason spent shooting his first film on wolves, Death of a Legend, incorporating footage from the earlier film. Cry of the Wild was shot in the Northwest Territories, British Columbia and Canadian Arctic, as well as near Mason's home in the Gatineau Hills, where he kept and observed three grown wolves and, eventually, a litter of cubs. A Writer Named Phil Hall is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Leszek Drozd. Mount St. Elias is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Gerald Salmina. Texas Tenor: The Illinois Jacquet Story is a 1991 documentary film directed by Arthur Elgort. Teenage is a 2013 documentary film written by Jon Savage and Matt Wolf and directed by Matt Wolf. Sea Monsters: A Prehistoric Adventure is a film by National Geographic which is set in the Earth's prehistoric past, 70 million years ago. The film features state-of-the-art three-dimensional photographic and computer-generated characters/animals, along with an ambient score. The setting alternates between prehistory and modern day times in which scientists study the fossilized remains of the creatures in the film. It is filmed in 3D and requires 3D glasses to view correctly. A personal profile of Fidel Castro and a view of the developments since the revolution a mere ten years before Fidel gives a rare glimpse into everyday life of the Cuban people and its leader. Whether listening to complaints at a collective farm playing baseball with the locals or discussing Marxist revolution, Castro's charisma is present in every frame and lends an understanding to why so many call him The Giant. Rape Culture is a 1975 film by Cambridge Documentary Films, produced by Margaret Lazarus and Renner Wunderlich. It was updated in 1983. In January 1975, Judy Norsigan outlined how the film illustrated "rape culture", through the voices of men and women, including rapists, victims, prisoners, rape crisis workers, and the media. The film featured prisoners of Lorton Reformatory, Virginia, "Prisoners Against Rape Inc", a not-for-profit organisation founded by William Fuller and Larry Cannon on September 9, 1973 in conjunction with women fighting rape. The prison administration "approved" self-help status. PAR was set up after Fuller wrote to the DC Rape Crisis Centre in 1973 and asked for assistance. The DC Rape Crisis Centre had opened in 1972 in response to the high incidence of rape against women of color. Fuller acknowledged his history of rape, murder, and prison rape. He wanted to stop being a rapist. This resulted in a co-operative effort. The women from the DC Rape Crisis Centre who initiated work with PAR were Loretta Ross, Yulanda Ward and Nkenge Toure. Voices of Iraq is a 2004 documentary film about Iraq, created by distributing cameras to the subjects of a film, thus enabling subjects to film themselves. To preserve its innovative filmmaking, Voices of Iraq was added to the permanent collection of Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences. Producer Eric Manes explained, "Without Iraqis as the directors, we would have seen Iraq and its people only through the filter of Western eyes. We certainly would not have had the access or the emotional intimacy that was captured in the film." Euphrates, an Iraqi Anglo hip-hop group, scored the soundtrack. The film was released theatrically in the United States and internationally and created a new genre of filmmaking. Screaming Masterpiece is a 2005 documentary film directed and written by Ari Alexander Ergis Magnússon about the music scene in Iceland. It attempts to explore the reasons why Iceland has such a rich variety of musical talent. The film itself shows mostly live performances and interviews by some of Iceland's biggest musicians, including Björk, Sigur Rós, Slowblow, múm, Ghostigital, Quarashi, Singapore Sling amongst others, over the backdrop of Icelandic scenery. It contains also interview clips with the musician and goði Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson of the Íslenska Ásatrúarfélagið, the official Ásatrú religious organization of Iceland. The Mona Lisa Curse is a 2009 winner in the International Emmy Award for arts programming. Like Water is a 2011 documentary film directed by Pablo Croce. Koppel on Discovery: Iran, The most Dangerous Nation? is a documentary about post-revolution Iran and Iran-United States conflicts, made by Ted Koppel Team in Iran. Although facts suggest otherwise, it is claimed in the movie that the Koppel team was the last group of American journalists allowed into Iran before the Iranian government stopped granting journalist visas in 2006. This was a direct response to claims that the U.S. blocked Iranian journalists from coming to the U.S. Koppel, whose groundbreaking coverage of the Iran hostage crisis morphed into ABC's "Nightline" in 1980, traveled throughout Iran for three weeks for the two-hour special. Koppel on Discovery is produced by Discovery Channel managing editor, Ted Koppel and executive producer Tom Bettag. Four Questions for a Rabbi is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Jay Rosenblatt and Stacey Ross. It's 'Hairspray'! is a 2007 short documentary film directed by David Noel. Theo Fleury: Playing With Fire is a 2011 biographical and documentary film written and directed by Matt Embry and Larry Day. One Peace at a Time is a film by Turk and Christy Pipkin. It was produced by The Nobelity Project and was premiered to a sold out audience at the Paramount Theatre in Austin, Texas, USA, on April 14, 2009. It is the sequel to the film Nobelity. It has been shown all across the United States and in multiple countries across the world. Robert Wilson and the Civil Wars is a 1987 documentary by Howard Brookner about Robert Wilson’s ambitious attempt to stage an epic, twelve-hour, multinational opera for the 1984 Summer Olympics. A Chance to Live is a 1949 American short documentary film directed by James L. Shute, produced by Richard de Rochemont for Time Inc. and distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox. It is part of The March of Time series and portrays Monsignor John Patrick Carroll-Abbing building and running a Boys' Home in Italy. The film won an Academy Award at the 22nd Academy Awards in 1950 for Documentary Short Subject. Pigskin Champions is a 1937 sports short subject documentary directed by Charles G. Clarke. Produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, it was a part of the "Pete Smith Specialties" series. It featured the then-World Champion Green Bay Packers in an exhibition of football skills. Industrial Light & Magic: Creating the Impossible is a 2010 documentary film directed by Leslie Iwerks. Words from the City is a 2007 documentary musical film written and directed by Natasha Gadd and Rhys Graham. Video Rewind by The Rolling Stones is a compilation of video clips recorded between 1972–1984. Instead of just presenting unrelated clips and videos just strung together, it uses a framing 'story', featuring Bill Wyman and Mick Jagger, directed by Julien Temple and includes some video directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg. It was first released in 1984 on the VHS, Laserdisc, and CED Videodisc format by Vestron home video. Counterfeit Coverage is a 1992 documentary film directed by David Shulman. Another Night on Earth is a 2012 documentary film, written and directed by David Muñoz. The Fabulous Ice Age is a 2013 documentary film directed by Keri Pickett. For the New World Order, a world government is just the beginning. Once in place they can exact their plan to end 80% of the population and help the select, 'chosen few' of the planet live forever, with the aid of advanced technology.In Endgame, documentary filmmaker Alex Jones chronicles the history of the global elite's bloody rise to power and reveals how they have funded dictators and financed the bloodiest wars using order out of chaos to pave the way for the first true world empire.Never before has a documentary assembled all the pieces of the globalists' dark agenda. Endgame's compelling look at past atrocities committed by those attempting to steer the future delivers information that the controlling media has meticulously censored for over 60 years, fully revealing the elite's agenda to dominate the earth and carry out the most wicked plan in all of human history. Price of Gold is a 2011 documentary film written by Sven Zellner and directed by Sven Zellner and Chingunjav Borkhuu. Your Native Country is a 2002 short documentary and biographical film written and directed by Jacek Blawut. Sacro GRA is a 2013 Italian documentary film directed by Gianfranco Rosi. It won the Golden Lion at the 70th Venice International Film Festival. It was the first documentary film to win the award at the Venice Festival. The film depicts life along the Grande Raccordo Anulare, the ring-road highway that circles Rome. Rosi spent over two years in filming, while the editing of the film required eight months of work. According to the director, the film was inspired by Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities, a novel in which the explorer Marco Polo is imagined describing his travels to the Emperor of China Kublai Khan. SEE: An Art Road Trip is an adventure documentary film directed by Glenn Holsten, Bo Bartlett and Betsy Eby. Adama is a motion picture produced in Palestine shortly before the establishment of Israel. It was directed by Hkielmar Lers and filmed during 1947-1948. The plot of the film focuses on the life of a Jewish boy, who was a Holocaust survivor, trying to rehabilitate himself from the traumas he experienced by working on the land and establishing social relationships while living in the youth village Ben Shemen. The initiator of the film was Dr. Siegfried Lehman the founder of Ben Shemen. He was motivated by a desire to show the world the educational system used in the village and he also had hopes of using the film as a tool for fundraising. The actors in the film were actual pupils in the village and the educational staff also participated in the production. He's been a producer to Elvis Presley and U2, an Arthur Murray dance instructor, best friend to Johnny Cash, Sam Phillips' right-hand man, a U.S. Marine, a slasher-film producer, and he discovered Jerry Lee Lewis, Charley Pride and Townes Van Zandt. This off-the-wall feature about legendary Nashville record producer/performer/artist Cowboy Jack Clement tells the story of his amazing career via home movies longtime friends Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, John Prine, Bono and many more.Riding the trail between Monty Python and Blazing Saddles, this film inspires with lessons of creativity, mortality, and the risk and glory of a self-made life. Featuring his very close friends Johnny Cash, Bono, Waylon Jennings and Charly Pride. Includes never before seen footage and commentary of legendary artists such as Elvis Presley, Kris Kristofferson and George Jones. Bonus features include a commentary with Cowboy Jack & Alamo Jones. This two disc documentary set gets behind the mystery that is Pink Floyd as it unravels the story of the band covering the post-Syd Barrett era and bringing the saga completely up to date with the group's first attempts at a re-union of sorts at Live 8. Festival! is a 1967 American documentary film about the Newport Folk Festival, directed by Murray Lerner. Filmed over the course of three festivals at Newport, the film features performances by Johnny Cash, Joan Baez & Peter Yarrow, Joan Baez, Pete Seeger, Peter, Paul and Mary, Odetta, Bob Dylan, Judy Collins, Mississippi John Hurt, Son House, Howlin' Wolf, Brownie McGhee and Sonny Terry, Buffy Sainte-Marie, Spider John Koerner, Theodore Bikel, Hobart Smith, the Osborne Brothers, The Staple Singers, Mimi and Richard Fariña, Donovan, Sacred Harp Singers, Georgia Sea Island Singers, Mike Bloomfield, Judy Collins, Ronnie Gilbert, Moving Star Hall Singers, Blue Ridge Mountain Dancers, and many others. It also features the infamous 1965 set by Bob Dylan at Newport. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. El Blues De Los Plomos is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Gabriel Patrono and Paulo Soria. Cees is a 2010 short documentary drama film written and directed by Viola Groenhart. Beginning as an observation of the music of Kurt Cobain and his Seattle/Portland contemporaries, Kurt and Courtney took a different turn when Courtney Love intervened. What emerges is a powerful examination of the destructive power of corporate America, economic depression and freedom of speech. The Shoemaker is a 2013 documentary, short, family and biographical film written and directed by Dustin Cohen. A PROMISE TO MY FATHER follows Israel "Izzy" Arbeiter as he returns to the sites of his darkest hours and relives the Holocaust's unimaginable horrors. Arbeiter’s incredible story of survival unfolds in Nazi-occupied Poland, where the teenager lived with his family in the Jewish ghetto of Starachowice. Following his separation from his family, he endured life as a slave laborer in a German armaments factory and later, in numerous concentration camps throughout Europe, including the infamous Auschwitz-Birkenau. With his grandson in tow, Izzy travels to Treblinka, Auschwitz and Stuttof, and various Holocaust memorials, with the hope of bringing closure to this painful chapter of his life. He also visits his childhood home, now condemned, in the Polish city of Plock. Cameras follow the 87-year-old into the basement of the home, where he attempts to unearth family heirlooms hidden for decades. Tell the Truth and Run: George Seldes and the American Press is a 1996 documentary film directed by Rick Goldsmith about the author and critic George Seldes. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Against All Odds: AMC's Tribute to Hollywood's Disabled is a 2000 tv documentary produced by David Browning, Jessica Falcon, Marc Juris, Suzanne Lacock Browning and Susan Stahman. Askoo is a 2011 documentary film directed by Mohammad Ali Hashemzehi. Nema Aviona Za Zagreb is a 2012 Dutch film by Louis van Gasteren. The film is a retrospective of events in the director's life from 1964 to 1969, filmed by him in that period and reflected on from his vantage point over 40 years later at the age of 90. It is also Jan de Bont's first film credit as cinematographer since 1992's Basic Instinct. In 1964 van Gasteren decided to film all his movements, both outward and inner. He narrates early in the film, "I wanted to make a film about my memories, my observations and experiences. As a filmmaker, I can make that visible." Explaining his idea to his wife in the film, he says, "I want to show everything, because every observation I make fits in with that. Look Jacq, every step I take – also inwards – everything I am involved in." The film crisscrosses the globe. Countries the film is shot in include the Netherlands, Switzerland, England, Yugoslavia, France, Canada, West Germany, the United States, India, and Spain. The film mixes documentary with enacted scenes, and is shot in both color and black-and-white. Undaunted... The Early Life of Josh McDowell is a 2011 biographical drama film written and directed by Cristobal Krusen. For one year, on the last Sunday of every month, the world's first and only satanic nightclub opened its doors in London to offer a series of shocking spectacles that ranged from playfully blasphemous to downright dangerous. Banned from two venues before it even got off of the ground, this depraved congregation reveled in such diabolical delights as satanic cheerleaders, Nazi Go Go dancers, defiled nuns, cannibalism, crucifixion, and, of course, a genuine black mass. In this release comprised of highlights from the Black Mass nightclub, curious viewers can experience all of the evil without having to scrub out those pesky bloodstains at the end of the night. La línea is a 1992 documentary film directed by Ernesto Rimoch. "In Mali, as in many countries in Africa, the ancestral custom of informal or "traditional" adoption was used to positively consolidate the ties within the family. Children would be sent away from home to live with relatives or friends who took on responsibility for their upbringing, and who considered it an honor. Nowadays, mentalities are changing and such beliefs are being lost. The effects of poverty mean that a child may be given away simply because the parents can't afford to raise them. As a result, adoption can become a nightmare for the child, as was the case for the film's director for about ten years of her life. In this film, Awa Traoré sheds light on what has remained unspoken for too long—the experience of a waliden who suffered mistreatments after being traditionally adopted." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. The Backyard is a 2002 American backyard wrestling documentary directed, produced and edited by Paul Hough and was scored by Seth Jordan. It features the appearance of current WWE and former TNA professional wrestler, Rob Van Dam. Although it had a limited theatrical release in the United States in 2002, the film was later released to Germany and Australia in 2004. Trains of Thoughts is a 2012 documentary musical film written and directed by Timo Novotny. Unarvinte Kalam - M.R.B. is a 1998 short documentary film directed by M. R. Rajan. Gergiev : A Certain Madness is a 2013 documentary directed by Alberto Venzago. A Big Country: Nariel Creek is a 1971 documentary film directed by Ken Dyer. We Will Rock You is a concert film by English band Queen. It was filmed in Montreal, Quebec, Canada at the Montreal Forum on 24 and 25 November 1981, ten years to the day before lead singer Freddie Mercury's death from AIDS. A new official release of the concert digitally remastered by Queen was released on 29 October 2007 on DVD double CD and triple vinyl LP. A special double DVD Queen Rock Montreal & Live Aid included Queen's performance at Live Aid as well as never before seen interviews and rehearsal footage. It is unclear if the royalties from the Live Aid section went to charity. HD-DVD and Blu-ray versions were released on 4 December 2007. 'Til Madness Do Us Part is a 2013 documentary film directed by Bing Wang. The Fame of Our Fathers is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Mike Church. The Al Qaeda Code is a 2008 documentary film written by Asiem El Difraoui and directed by Mark Johnston and Asiem El Difraoui. Life on Jupiter is a 2002 documentary film directed by Martin J. Spinelli. iROCK is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Lionel Brouet. Road to the Stars — Soviet science fiction film. Combines elements of science educational films and science fiction feature films. Grab is a 2011 documentary film directed by Billy Luther. Deep Blues: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads is a documentary film, released in 1992, and made by David A. Stewart in conjunction with his brother John J. Stewart, in collaboration with music critic and author Robert Palmer and documentary film maker Robert Mugge. The film provided insight into the location, cast and characteristics of Delta blues and North Mississippi hill country blues. The documentary locations were set in Memphis, Tennessee, and various North Mississippi counties. Palmer provided many of the insights into the background and history of the blues, as narrator of the story of the Mississippi blues. Fellinheli; Hefin And Als is a 2013 short animated documentary film directed by Chris Daykin. Termination is a 1966 short documentary and historical fiction film directed by Bruce Baillie. Dale is a documentary film about the life and career of NASCAR race car driver Dale Earnhardt. The film follows his career all the way to his death in the 2001 Daytona 500. Produced as a collaboration between CMT Films and NASCAR Images, the film premiered in theaters in selected cities in February 2007. A lot of the cities the film premiered in were cities where the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series was racing that week including Daytona. Dale made its television debut on CMT on September 4, 2007, setting a new ratings record for the network of more than 3.1 million total viewers. The film included interviews from legendary NASCAR drivers including Dale's rival Darrell Waltrip. The film is now available on DVD. Hempsters: Plant the Seed is a 2003 documentary film directed by Michael Henning. The Temple Mount is Mine is a 2003 two-part documentary by Emmy Award-winning director Willy Lindwer that looks at why Muslims, Christians and Jews all lay claim to one of the holiest sites in the world. Compound Eyes 3: Diptera and Lepidoptera is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Paul Clipson. You Cannot Learn How To Be Honest is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Jason Oppliger. Boxing Kangaroo is an 1895 German short black-and-white silent documentary film, directed and produced by Max Skladanowsky, which features a Kangaroo boxing against a man against a white background at the Circus Busch. The film, which premiered at the first public projection of motion pictures in Germany on November 1, 1895, was filmed on 35 mm film and is 18 feet in length. The "groundbreaking production," was, according to WildFilmHistory, "a huge success," which, "despite being intended for entertainment rather than as a scientific behaviour study," "revealed animal actions in a way that had never been seen before," and, "exposed the potential for future films concerning wildlife and natural history." LAbri is a 2014 documentary film directed by Fernand Melgar. Talent Competition is a 1963 documentary film written by Miloš Forman and Ivan Passer directed by Miloš Forman. "A fascinating locally produced documentary on the making of an original photo calendar: that of one openly gay man (Butch Cordora) and twelve different straight men — posing together in the nude. Local queer celebrity Butch Cordora (“In Bed with Butch”) came up with an intriguing idea for a calendar: recreate a famous photo image for each month and stage them with him (way openly gay) and a straight man…both in the nude. Apart from the creativity and titillation, the idea also promised to explore the often rocky and often uncomfortable relationship between gay and straight men. This documentary follows the behind-the-scenes making of each photo shoot, from Butch’s efforts to finding 12 willing men to the execution of each photo shoot. But more importantly, it captures the often insightful comments from his straight co-stars on both their willingness to bare all and pose with Butch. Working with different photographers, most notably Tony Ward, the results are striking and provocative – from the re-staging of the Cindy Crawford/kd lang Vanity Fair cover to John and Oko’s iconic nude embrace. But is it the unconventional straight men that provide the best insight and often humor – from the South Street tattoo artist, to the long-haired college student to a quietly tough video salesman." Quoting Raymond Murray from the 2010 Philadelphia QFest site No Apologies is the first DVD from United States rock band Bleed the Dream. It contains live footage from 2003 through 2005, and features songs from Awake and Asleep along with songs from the upcoming album. It was produced and edited by the drummer Scott Gottlieb. Meat Loaf: In Search of Paradise is a 2007 independent documentary film that captures rocker Meat Loaf and his life in rehearsals and on the road during his 2007 World Tour. It was directed by Bruce David Klein and produced by Atlas Media Corp. in association with Voom HD Pictures and 10th Street Entertainment. The film was an official selection of the Montreal World Film Festival in 2007 and of the USA Film Festival in 2008. In Europe, the film was included in the 3 Bats Live DVD. According to Allmovie, "as the stage show gets more and more involved, the singer battles ongoing health concerns." The film was theatrically released in 75 cities in the U.S. and Canada on March 12, 2008. The premiere was held at New York City's IFC Center. The New York Times called the film "amusing," and Variety said it was "revealing." It is now available on DVD from Universal and can be seen on television worldwide. Mémoire Battante is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Arthur Lamothe. Shades of Puffing Billy is a 1967 short documentary film directed by Antonio Colacino. The Long Ride Home is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Thomas Lee Wright. Speedy Delivery is a 2008 documentary film directed and produced by Paul B. Germain. The film follows the life story of David Newell, better known as Mr. McFeely from the children's television show Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. Shot in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Speedy Delivery is a character study of Newell, examining his mission to help save "The Neighborhood" following the passing of his close friend Fred Rogers. Made on a budget of $4,000, the film was funded by grants from two universities: Carnegie Mellon University and Pomona College. Currently, Speedy Delivery is airing regionally on PBS and has screened at The Feel Good Film Festival founded by Kristen Ridgway Flores, Flyway Film Festival, and screened at the 2009 Seattle Children's Film Festival. Wanting And Not Wanting The Same is a 1990 documentary film directed by Ingo Kratisch and Jutta Sartory. Distress Signals is the 1990 documentary film written by Steve Lucas and Tom Perlmutter and directed by John Walker. Adolescence is a 1966 French short documentary film directed by Marin Karmitz. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Riziko II is a 1988 documentary film directed by Dimitri Barschtschevskij. Captivated: The Trials of Pamela Smart is a 2014 American documentary film directed by Jeremiah Zagar. The film premiered in competition in the category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. The film premiered on August 18, 2014 on HBO. Genocide Revealed is a historical documentary film directed by Yurij Luhovy. Best of INTERCOM is a 2011 documentary film directed by Errol Morris. Martino Unstrung is a music documentary film directed by Ian Knox. Rush in Rio is a live DVD by Canadian band Rush, released in 2003. It is also available as a three CD set. It was the first concert DVD ever released by the band and is a two-disc set containing 28 songs. Bonus features include a tour documentary, multi-angle viewing options for certain songs and behind-the-scenes footage. The performance was recorded and filmed at Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and was the final night on the 2002 Vapor Trails Tour. It is the band's first live video that presents a single night's entire performance. The attendance at this show was 40,000, the second largest crowd at a show on the Vapor Trails Tour. The crew had such a difficult time driving from São Paulo to Rio de Janeiro that they were hours late when they arrived at the stadium, and no sound or video check was done because the crowd was entering by the time everything was set up. After this show, Neil's rotating drum riser was destroyed when it was being removed from the stadium by a flat-bed truck whose driver miscalculated the height of the exit. The Triumph is a documentary film directed by Sean Bloomfield. One hour documentary about the return of 1250 former political prisoners to the notorious Robben Island prison in South Africa -- led by President Nelson Mandela. The Power of Nightmares, subtitled The Rise of the Politics of Fear, is a BBC documentary film series, written and produced by Adam Curtis. Its three one-hour parts consist mostly of a montage of archive footage with Curtis's narration. The series was first broadcast in the United Kingdom in late 2004 and has subsequently been broadcast in multiple countries and shown in several film festivals, including the 2005 Cannes Film Festival. The films compare the rise of the Neo-Conservative movement in the United States and the radical Islamist movement, making comparisons on their origins and claiming similarities between the two. More controversially, it argues that the threat of radical Islamism as a massive, sinister organised force of destruction, specifically in the form of al-Qaeda, is a myth perpetrated by politicians in many countries—and particularly American Neo-Conservatives—in an attempt to unite and inspire their people following the failure of earlier, more utopian ideologies. The Power of Nightmares has been praised by film critics in both Britain and the United States. Ofir is a 2013 documentary/biography film directed by Mark McDannald. California Hope Spots is a 2013 documentary film written by Tierney Thys and directed by Kip Evans. The Conspiracy of Silence is a documentary TV film that was broadcast three times on PBS in the United States in 1995 and 1996. The title is formed from the assumption that there is a conspiracy of silence that surrounds domestic violence. The abuser has an unspoken pact with the victim to stay silent about the crimes committed and in return the victim believes this lack of action will result in the avoidance of further violence. Directed and written by Neal Marshad and Donna Olson, this documentary won the Silver Award at WorldFest Houston in 1996 Film & Video Production: Women's Issues and Honorable Mention in 1996 Columbus International Film & Video Festival: Health & Medicine. It focuses on the efforts of one organization located in East Hampton, New York called The Retreat. The goal of the Retreat is to help battered women and their children with safe shelter and counseling. With on camera scenes featuring actress Kathleen Turner and Denise Brown, The Conspiracy of Silence cuts through social class, economic privilege and racial lines to demonstrate that domestic violence is not limited to a certain group and that there is no standard profile for the abuser or the abused. Welcome Nowhere is a 2012 documentary/drama film directed by Kate Ryan. I Hälsingland driver den sjukskrivne viltvårdaren Örjan en kamp mot vargen och familjen Andersson åker och campar. When Boys Fly is a 2002 documentary film that explores the world of gay circuit parties. When Boys Fly played a number of gay and lesbian film festivals before being released on Region 1 DVD on November 26, 2002. Countdown to Armageddon is a 2004 History Channel documentary film that reviews the history of apocalyptic literature. The documentary is written and directed by David de Vries, produced by Craig Haffner and Glenn Kirschbaum, narrated by Edward Herrmann, and features archaeologist/historian Eric H. Cline, Orthodox Christian scholar John McGuckin, televangelist John Hagee, author Tim LaHaye, and author Gershom Gorenberg. "The End is Near" is a cry that has echoed throughout human history. Every religion has stories of the end of the world, and believers in every era have prophesized that the time was at hand. So far, these predictions have come to naught, but a rash of unusual events and the rise of fundamental faiths have led to a new golden era of doomsayers. Asteroids on a collision course with Earth, super volcanoes, global warming, killer viruses--all are potential catastrophes that threaten to wipe out life on our planet. Are these simply natural disasters that have been occurring since time immemorial? Or are these threats terrifying prophesies from the Bible that are at last coming true? Are our fears overblown? Giuliani Time is a 1999 documentary film by Kevin Keating about Rudy Giuliani, former Mayor of New York City. The Village Voice called the documentary "an incisive portrait of power seizure and class combat as it was performed, by the numbers, on the municipal level." The film contains several archival segments, as well as interviews with Village Voice writer and unauthorized Giuliani biographer, Wayne Barrett and radio journalist Doug Henwood. The documentary's title is a reference to a phrase that police officers allegedly uttered to Abner Louima when they tortured him in a Brooklyn police precinct house. Louima himself later recanted that statement, saying he had made it up. The phrase was also used by John Shaft in the 2000 remake of Shaft. As of late 2010, Giuliani Time has a rating of 85% positive at Rotten Tomatoes. Giuliani Time is distributed by Cinema Libre Studio. A special election version of the film was released on 2/5/2008. Cries from the Deep is a 1981 documentary directed by Jacques Gagné about Jacques Cousteau's exploration of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. Filmed in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Québec, Canada, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, St. Lawrence River, Québec and Ontario, Canada, and the St. Lawrence Seaway, Québec and Ontario, Canada. Black Metal: The Norwegian Legacy is a film. The Creators is a 2012 South African documentary film produced and directed by Laura Gamse which interweaves the lives of diverse South African artists including Faith47, Cashril+, Warongx, Emile Jansen of Black Noise, Markus Wormstorm and Spoek Mathambo of Sweat.X, Blaq Pearl and Mthetho Mapoyi. The full title of the documentary is The Creators: South Africa Through the Eyes of Its Artists. Blown in with the Wind is a 2000 documentary film directed by Andrey Osipov. Hospitality is a 2011 documentary film written by Irene ter Stege and Bogomir Doringer and directed by Bogomir Doringer. Master of Reality is a 2006 short documentary film directed by Matthew Killip. It's the Earth Not the Moon is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Gonçalo Tocha. The Great Composers: Mozart is a 1997 documentary/music film directed by Francesca Kemp. Pinne e arpioni is a 1952 Italian film. Mabina Maboko - Dance Of Hands is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by André St-Pierre. Riding Bicycles is a 2012 Documentary Short Adventure film written by Stacey Demartini and directed by Ace Aseltine III. Dita and the Family Business is a 2001 documentary film directed by Joshua Taylor and Ferne Pearlstein about the family behind the New York City department store Bergdorf Goodman. It was first released at the 2001 San Diego Latino Film Festival. The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kirk Marcolina and Matthew Pond. Cinema Komunisto is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Mila Turajlic. "Leka Konstantinovic was the personal film projectionist of Yugoslavia's President Josip Broz Tito for 32 years. Along with Yugoslav directors, film stars and studio bosses, he tells the story of how Marshall Tito (1892-1980) gave form to the post-war federal state of Yugoslavia, while at the same time setting up a productive film industry for his country. With the state supporting filmmakers, "no problem" was the standard answer for whatever a director needed - with soldiers serving their entire tour of duty as extras on war films, and even the blowing up of a real bridge to create an Oscar-nominated film. Tito followed these film shoots closely, watching one film a day in his private theater. After his break with the Soviet Union, he invited Hollywood stars to come to Yugoslavia, and soon Richard Burton, Orson Welles and Sophia Loren were commissioned to participate in massive productions, often about the heroic struggle of Tito and his partisans against the Nazis. Cinema Komunisto consists of clips from over 60 feature films, some great archive footage, and the bittersweet memories of the storytellers, with plenty of funny anecdotes and remarkable details. Upon Tito's death, the entire Yugoslav film industry crumbled, and a decade later the rest of the country followed suit. Today, nothing remains but the old studio complexes, which are rotting away, and the filmed memories of a country that no longer exists." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site. Living on the River Agano is a documentary film directed by Makoto Satoh. The American West of John Ford is a 1971 television special about movie director John Ford's career narrated by John Wayne, James Stewart, and Henry Fonda. Footage of Wayne, Stewart, and Fonda talking with the aging Ford are interspersed with an array of clips from Ford's films spanning more than five decades, including The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, The Searchers, and Stagecoach, each of which is dealt with at some length. The section on My Darling Clementine features Fonda and Stewart, both of whom played Wyatt Earp in Ford films, interviewing Ford about the director's claim that Earp himself had explained the strategy and chronology of the gunfight at the O.K. Corral to Ford and Harry Carey, complete with a sketched diagram, decades before Ford filmed a version of the melee with Fonda as Earp. Stewart's memorable poker scene as Earp in Cheyenne Autumn, which had nothing to do with the rest of the movie and has frequently been cut by exhibitors and television stations, is also discussed and illustrated with a clip. The hour long special was telecast on December 5, 1971 over the CBS television network. Tiny Bird is a short documentary film directed by Dane Komljen. Powering a Nation is a World Press Photo Award-winning interactive documentary by Chad Stevens and Don Wittekind. The Crusades: Crescent and the Cross is a documentary that tells the story of the battles between the Christian Crusaders and the Muslims for the city of Jerusalem. Gang Violence: Stop the Madness is a 2000 crime fiction documentary film. Greece: Secrets of the Past is a short documentary film directed by Greg MacGillivray. Capela is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Gustavo Rosa de Moura. Bohemian Villages is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Malte Ludin. Evolution of a Criminal is a documentary film directed by Darius Clark Monroe. Navy Cut is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Wolfgang Schmidt. The Ister is a 2004 film directed by David Barison and Daniel Ross. Cruise of the Zaca is a short documentary on 16mm about a trip taken by Errol Flynn in 1946 on his boat the Zaca to collect specimens with his father, Professor Flynn. The trip was done in association with the Scripps Institute of Oceanography of the University of California and took place off the east coast of Mexico and in the West Indies. My Winnipeg is a 2007 film directed and written by Guy Maddin with dialogue by George Toles. Described by Maddin as a "docu-fantasia,"," that melds "personal history, civic tragedy, and mystical hypothesizing," the film is a surrealist mockumentary about Winnipeg, Maddin's home town. A New York Times article described the film's unconventional take on the documentary style by noting that it "skates along an icy edge between dreams and lucidity, fact and fiction, cinema and psychotherapy." My Winnipeg began when Maddin was commissioned by the Documentary Channel, and originally titled Love Me, Love My Winnipeg. Maddin's producer directed "Don't give me the frozen hellhole everyone knows that Winnipeg is," so Maddin cast Darcy Fehr in the role of "Guy Maddin" and structured the documentary around a metafictional plot that mythologizes the city and Maddin's autobiography. Nocna zmiana is a 1995 Polish documentary film about the overthrow of Olszewski's government. It was directed by Michał Balcerzak. The Time Is Now - Jetzt ist die Zeit is a 1987 film directed by Eduard Schreiber, Rolf Richter. Miami Vice Uncensored! is a documentary film directed by Dan Goldman. Calvet is a 2011 biographical documentary film directed by Dominic Allan. Juvenile Liaison 1 and Juvenile Liaison 2 are documentary films by Nick Broomfield about a juvenile liaison project in Blackburn, Lancashire. The first film examines a series of children and their run-ins with the law, over minor wrongdoings such as apple theft. The second film revisits some of the characters from the first, in some sort of attempt to measure the success of the scheme. After its production, the first film was banned by the BFI for many years; Juvenile Liaison 1 revolved mainly around the activities of Sergeant Ray, whose preventative measures when dealing with young trouble makers fell mainly in the strong-arm category of approach. In Juvenile Liaison 2 Rey is contacted by phone but declines to make an appearance, hinting at misrepresentation and possible damage to his career. Still in the Game is a 2014 documentary film written by Michael Isaacson and directed by Emad Asfoury. The Decline of Western Civilization III is a 1998 documentary film directed by Penelope Spheeris that chronicles the gutter punk lifestyle of homeless teenagers. It is the third film of a trilogy by Spheeris depicting life in Los Angeles at various points in time. The first film The Decline of Western Civilization dealt with the punk rock scene during 1980-1981. The second film The Decline of Western Civilization Part II: The Metal Years covers the Los Angeles heavy metal movement of 1986-1988. Battlestar Galactica: Cylons - The Twelve is a 2009 short documentary film starring Jamie Bamber, Matthew Bennett and James Callis. Two on the Bridge is a 2004 short documentary film written by Marius Ivaskevicius and directed by Marius Ivaskevicius and Valdas Navasaitis. Namuch is a 2005 documentary film written by Idan Alterman and Yair Raveh, and directed by Idan Alterman. Lutah is a 2014 documentary film written by Kum-Kum Bhavnani and Ryan Pettey and directed by Kum-Kum Bhavnani. Carmencita is an 1894 American short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by William K.L. Dickson, the Scottish inventor credited with the invention of the motion picture camera under the employ of Thomas Edison. The film is titled after the dancer who features in it. This video is one of a series of Edison short films featuring circus and vaudeville acts. It features a dancer going through a routine she had been performing at Koster & Bial's in New York since February 1890. According to film historian C. Musser, Carmencita was the first woman to appear in front of an Edison motion picture camera and may have been the first woman to appear in a motion picture within the United States. Grand Canyon Adventure: River at Risk is a 2008 American documentary film directed by Greg MacGillivray and narrated by Robert Redford. It was released to IMAX 3D Theaters in 2008. Anthropologist Wade Davis and river advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr journey down the Colorado River on a two-week expedition to highlight water conservation issues. Traveling by rafts, kayaks and wooden dories, they are accompanied by their daughters and guided by Shana Watahomigie, a Native American National Park ranger. The film explores America's drought and freshwater shortages, the impact on the river of damming, and human water supply needs, such as that of the city of Las Vegas. Shot in four weeks almost entirely on the Colorado River, the challenging production, which features the first 3D IMAX images of the Grand Canyon, took the 350-pound 3D IMAX camera through its paces and involved the cooperation of three Indian nations, the National Park Service, film sponsor Teva’s team of kayakers and more than a dozen experienced river guides. We Are Ireland is a 2010 documentary film written by Ruth Lysaght and directed by Cathal Watters. Sobibór, October 14, 1943, 4 p.m. is a 2001 French documentary film directed by Claude Lanzmann. It was screened out of competition at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival. The title and date refer to the Sobibór revolt, one of only two successful uprisings at a Nazi extermination camp during the Second World War. Jig is a 2011 documentary produced and directed by Sue Bourne about the world of Irish dance and the fortieth Irish Dancing World Championships, held in March 2010 in Glasgow. A political satire which exposes the shape of totalitarianism in the presidency of Alexander Lukaschenka, admirer of Hitler. In charting the despot's rise to power, it is shown how Lukaschenka began by promising to root out all government corruption--then used his knowledge of the corruption to become president. I'm Very Good at Masturbating is a 2014 short documentary biographical family film written and directed by Anna Hammarén. Warrior Champions: From Baghdad to Beijing is a 2009 American documentary film directed by the Renaud Brothers. The films tells the individual stories of four American soldiers who lost limbs or suffered paralysis in Iraq, and of their training to try for a berth on the 2008 U.S. Paralympic team and their journey to the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing. The Ghosts of Jeju is a documentary, war and historical film directed by Regis Tremblay. The Red Dress Collection 2007 Fashion Show 2007 documentary film directed by Warith Niallah. Field Notes from a Mine is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Tom Tlalim and Martijn van Boven. Project Happiness is a 2011 documentary film created, narrated, and produced by Randy Taran and directed by John Sorenson. The documentary follows students on three continents as they search for the meaning of "lasting happiness". What Do You Know? Six to Twelve Year-Olds Talk About Gays and Lesbians is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Ellen Brodsky. Ebb and Tide is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Akile Nazlı Kaya. Playboy: 50 Years of Playmates is a 2004 documentary film written by Nancy Goodell, Frank Martin and directed by Scott Allen. PLAY dresse un portrait de l'humanité par le sport. Partout dans le monde, les hommes jouent. Pour se dépasser, se mesurer, s'unir, s'illustrer ou créer le spectacle... Le sport est l'un des plus petits dénominateurs du genre humain. Il se retrouve dans toutes les sociétés, toutes les cultures, toutes les classes sociales et à toutes les époques. D'une pulsion primitive au plus grand événement du monde, du sport le plus méconnu au plus mondialisé, des plateaux arides éthiopiens aux stades survoltés des mégalopoles, le film voyage au cœur de cette activité universellement partagée. Construit comme un film "opéra" avec les plus belles images de sport tournées en très haute définition ou des archives récentes de grande qualité, PLAY repose sur la parole conjointe et entrelacée de grands champions internationaux et d'athlètes anonymes de sports méconnus. Un film qui témoigne de notre diversité mais aussi de ce qui nous relie. Louis, Martin & Michael is a British documentary that was televised on 16 November 2003. After losing out to Martin Bashir for an opportunity to produce an official Michael Jackson documentary, Louis Theroux tries his best to obtain an interview with Michael, but cannot. In the process, Louis is seen meeting with Uri Geller and Michael's father Joseph Jackson. Louis is required to pay 倀 to interview Michael's father. The fee was negotiated through a person named Majestik Magnificent, who claims to be Michael Jackson's personal magician. Majestik participates in the second of two interviews, often prompting Mr. Jackson or interrupting Louis' questions. Majestik's own fee for securing the interview with Joseph was $500. Louis comments about Michael during the interview to Joseph "He is so much in the public eye, I don't think he has very much left for himself." Joe Jackson confessed in the documentary to often whipping Michael. After Theroux asks whether Michael would be happy settling down with a partner, an offended Jackson denies his son is gay, voices his disproval of homosexuality and ends the interview. C'était la dernière année de ma vie is a 1985 documentary, short film directed by Claude Weisz. Lover Other is a 2006 film written and directed by Barbara Hammer. Open’er Festival is a 2013 documentary film. Here One Day is a 2013 documentary film written by Kathy Leichter and Pola Rapaport and directed by Kathy Leichter. Bhavantarana is a 1991 documentary film directed by Kumar Shahani. Leaving Greece is a 2013 documentary war film written and directed by Anna Brass. The Rider and The Storm is a 2013 documentary biography short film written and directed by David Darg and Bryn Mooser. Ouled Lenine is a 2007 documentary film. Ein Film für Bossak und Leacock is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Klaus Wildenhahn. The Written Face is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Daniel Schmid. The Fight Of Their Lives is a TV documentary directed by Gabriel Clarke and John McKenna. Everything is Forever is a biographical musical documentary film directed by Victor Zimet. You've never seen cage fighting so up-close and personal! This Film follows some of the sport's most promising fighters as they follow their dreams for glory. Forbidden Lie$ is an Australian documentary released in September 2007. It was directed by Anna Broinowski. White Button is a 2010 documentary film written by Igor Stoimenov and Zoran Panjkovic and directed by Igor Stoimenov. Man & Machine: A Naked Robotic Love Story is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Jonathan Nowak and Jesse Roesler. Kampf um Norwegen – Feldzug 1940 is a 1940 Nazi propaganda film directed by Martin Rikli and Dr. Werner Buhre under orders of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht. The documentary film follows the Invasion of Denmark and Norway in the spring of 1940. Miyar House, is a Kannada language feature film in the documentary genre directed and produced by the Mumbai based director Ramchandra P. N.. It has been completed in 2011. It tells the personal story of the director as his ancestral house gets dismantled in a remote village called Miyar in Karkala Taluk in Udupi district in Karnataka, South India. The film has been produced by the director's own firm 'Sonk Films' and it features many of the members of the filmmaker's extended family. The film has a particular dialect of Kannada that is spoken by a few in that part of Karnataka. Fly High, Light Fly is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Beathe Hofseth and Susann Østigaard. Abbas Kiarostami: A Report is a 2013 documentary film about the Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami, produced and directed by Bahman Maghsoudlou. Out of the documentaries Maghsoudlou has made, this is the first of feature length. The film looks at Kiarostami's career, finding themes and stylistics that have reoccurred throughout his canon, from his early shorts to his later international successes, with a special focus on his first feature, 1977's The Report. The film features interviews with a number of people who worked on the film, including Academy Award-nominated actress Shohreh Aghdashloo, and commentary by, among others, Godfrey Cheshire III, Richard Peña, and the late Andrew Sarris, with whom Maghsoudlou studied and to whom the film is dedicated. The film is both the latest in a series of films produced and directed by Maghsoudlou, the Great Iranian Artists series, and the first installment in a new series, Iranian Cinema, Searching for the Roots. It had its world premiere at the Montreal International Film Festival. WAR SURGEONS details how experience on the battlefield has lead to major medical breakthroughs. From the first amputations, to the advent of anaesthetic, the mastery of plastic surgery and developments in neuroscience remote control operations, this series looks at how the operating theatre can keep pace with the theatrics of war. Shadows From My Past is a 2012 documentary film directed by Curt Kaufman and Gita Kaufman. Nepal Forever is a 2013 documentary comedy by Russian filmmaker Alyona Polunina. Indebito is a 2013 documentary music film written by Andrea Segre and Vinicio Capossela and directed by Andrea Segre. Split Estate is a documentary film directed by Debra Anderson. The Human Cargo is a 2012 documentary film written by Benni Atria, Antonella Gaeta and Daniele Vicari and directed by Daniele Vicari. Goodness In Rwanda is a 2013 documentary film directed by Gord Rand. A documentary about the adaptation of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban from the original novel. The Secret Disco Revolution is a 2012 documentary, comedy, history and music film written and directed by Jamie Kastner. Magnificent Desolation: Walking on the Moon 3D is a 2005 IMAX 3D documentary film about the first humans on the Moon, the twelve astronauts in the Apollo program. It is co-written, produced and directed by Mark Cowen, and co-written, produced by and starring Tom Hanks. My Playground is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Kaspar Astrup Schröder. Death Faces, also released as Death Faces IV, also 'Dying: Last seconds of Life', and 'Beyond Reality', is a mockumentary about cannibalism released directly to video originally in 1988. Narrated by "Prof. Bizarro Blackstone", the film is actually footage from various horror films about cannibalism, and newsreel footage of Bonnie and Clyde, John Dillinger, Adolf Hitler. One sequence involves the Kikuyu tribes people of Kenya, as well as various stock car crashes, and the John F. Kennedy assassination. The direction is credited to "Countess Victoria Bloodhart" and Steve White, the writing to "S. Sebastian Shock", the direction and production to "Damian B. Gravenhorse PhD.", with one segment credited to producer "Mink De Ronda". It was re edited and re released as Beyond Reality, which is credited to Steve White. There are no other technical credits given to the film. With the exception of a few brief scenes, the entire video is in black and white. Footage from this video was later edited into Banned from Facez, parts 3 and 4. A sequel was also released straight to video: 'Dying: Last Seconds of Life, Part II', also in 1988. Modulations is a 1998 documentary film written by Peter Shapiro and directed by Iara Lee. Chronicles the evolution of Christo and Jeanne-Claude's installation from concept to installation, ultimately overcoming public disapproval and transforming Central Park into a visual symphony of color, light, joy and beauty. Man Alive! is a 1952 American short documentary film directed by William T. Hurtz. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Out of the Convent is a 2012 documentary film directed by Thom Kishaba, Bridget Oliver and Andrea Van Haren. A Wife Among Wives is a 1977 film directed by David MacDougall and Judith MacDougall. Of All the Things is a 2008 music documentary film directed by Jody Lambert. This Is Not The Private Life Of Javier Krahe is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Ana Murugarren and Joaquín Trincado. The mysterious "muti" murders are an extreme form of occult belief: the body parts or blood of a killed person are ingested as a "muti medicine", in order to grant another person health, power, wealth or strength. We follow Scotland Yard's investigation and investigate the links between the historical, religious and criminological backgrounds to ritual murder. Our Latin Thing is a 1972 documentary music film directed by Leon Gast. A Force More Powerful is a 1999 feature-length documentary film and a 2000 PBS series written and directed by Steve York about non-violent resistance movements around the world. Executive producers were Dalton Delan and Jack DuVall. Peter Ackerman was the series editor and principal content advisor. Institutional support for the film included funding from the United States Institute of Peace and the Albert Einstein Institution. The film played in festivals worldwide and was broadcast nationally on United States television network PBS in September 2000. It was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Historical Program. The series explores 6 successful nonviolent movements in the 20th century starting with Gandhi's leadership of the Indian Independence movement, the U.S. civil rights movement, the boycotts in the Eastern Cape Province as part of the Anti-Apartheid movement in South Africa, the Danish resistance to Nazi Occupation, the Polish Solidarity Movement, and the Chilean democracy movement to oust Augusto Pinochet. A Force More Powerful is also the name of the companion book to the PBS series, authored by DuVall and Peter Ackerman,. Nora Noh is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kim Seong-Hee. Lordville is a 2014 documentary film directed by Rea Tajiri. Time Goes By Like A Roaring Lion is 2013 documentary film written and directed by Philipp Hartmann and Jan Eichberg. Who the Hell is Juliette? is a Mexican 1997 documentary film written and directed by Carlos Marcovich. The film is about Yuliet Ortega, a teenage prostitute who lives in Havana, Cuba and Fabiola Quiroz, a Mexican model. Marcovich intentionally misspelled the title character, "Yuliet Ortega", as "Juliette Ortega" in the credits. Marcovich met Fabiola Quiroz during the shooting of a music video. He met Yuliet Ortega in Cuba and decided that she would be the younger sister of Quiroz in the music video. Marcovich features the similarities of the two women: green eyes and persistent thoughts about their missing fathers. After shooting the music video, he filmed the two women over a period of three years and created the film, Who the Hell is Juliette? The film was filmed in Cuba, Mexico, and the United States. Cachao: Uno Más is a 2008 documentary film. Arising to Serve is a documentary about the 41 Baha'i Regional Conferences that took place around the world. The film had its world premiere at the Dawn Breakers International Film Festival in 2009 and was also released online. Fin de Siglo is a 1994 documentary film written by Szymon Zaleski, directed by Szymon Zaleski and Marilyn Watelet. Space Shuttle is a 2011 documentary film directed by Guy Noffsinger. Beyond Kokoda is a 2008 documentary film written by Adrian Flores, Shaun Gibbons and Stig Schnell. It is also directed by Shaun Gibbons and Stig Schnell. Vers Madrid (The Burning Bright!) is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Sylvain George. Os Caminhos do Sol is a 1966 short documentary film directed by Augusto Cabrita. Here and Elsewhere is a 1976 film by Jean-Luc Godard and Anne-Marie Miéville, made using footage from Jusqu'à la victoire, a 1970 pro-Palestinian film made by Godard and Jean-Pierre Gorin as part of Dziga Vertov Group. Ici et Ailleurs marks the beginning of Godard's transitional period, which found him experimenting with video and moving from political polemics to an examination of the way people perceive themselves and others; as such, it shares many of the traits of both his radical-era films and the video-centered work that followed while simultaneously providing a critique of the Dziga Vertov Group's ideas and methods. It is also one of his first projects with Miéville, who has remained the major collaborator in his life and work since. The Search for Kennedy's PT 109 is a National Geographic television special and video on DVD. It documents the original story of John F. Kennedy's PT-109 from World War II, and the project of Dr. Robert Ballard's successful search for the wreck of the boat. The wreckage of PT-109 was located in May 2002, when a National Geographic Society expedition headed by Dr. Ballard found a torpedo tube from wreckage matching the description and location of Kennedy's vessel in the Solomon Islands. The boat was identified by Dale Ridder, a weapons and explosives expert on the U.S. Marine Forensics Panel. The stern section was not found, but a search using remote vehicles found the forward section, which had drifted south of the collision site. Much of the half-buried wreckage and grave site was left undisturbed in accordance with Navy policy. During the expedition, they meet and interview Biuku Gasa and Eroni Kumana, the original two natives who found Kennedy's shipwrecked crew when the Navy had given them up for dead. Max Kennedy, JFK's nephew, who joined Ballard on the expedition, presented a bust of JFK to the two men. "Heart and Soul: The Life and Music of Frank Loesser" profiles the tough-talking, tempestuous, big-hearted musical genius who made an indelible imprint on American musical theater and popular song. Best known for his Broadway smash hits, "Guys and Dolls," "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," and "The Most Happy Fella," Loesser wrote songs for over 60 Hollywood film scores, including classics "Baby, It's Cold Outside," "On a Slow Boat to China," and "Heart and Soul." He also wrote the score for the MGM motion picture, "Hans Christian Andersen."Loesser's success at writing both words and music for Broadway puts him in the elite company of Irving Berlin and Cole Porter. One observer calls Loesser, "Cole Porter, without the martini in his hand," because of his ability to capture the flavor of everyday American life and speech in popular song.The film features performance clips from the golden age of Broadway and Hollywood musicals, and interviews with Matthew Broderick, Charles Nelson Reilly, Robert Morse, James Burrows, Stephen Schwartz, Jerry Herman, and Maury Yeston, among others. Loesser's widow, Jo Sullivan Loesser, and children Susan, John and Emily share insights and recollections."Heart and Soul" has it all: a fascinating subject, entertaining behind the scenes stories, and music that has a special place in Americans' hearts - and souls. Viva Saint John is a 2002 documentary film written by Emílio Domingos, Quito Ribeiro and Andrucha Waddington and directed by Andrucha Waddington. Beltracchi: The Art of Forgery is a 2014 documentary, biographical and crime fiction film written and directed by Arne Birkenstock. After the Axe is a 1982 Canadian drama film about executive firings, directed by Sturla Gunnarsson, nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film explores the experiences of managers getting fired and the emergence of a new industry specialized in handling such terminations. Despite its Oscar nomination in the documentary category, After the Axe is closer to a docufiction film, made with the cooperation of members of the Canadian business community, which provided locations and helped script scenes during filming. The film's protagonist, D.R. "Biff" Wilson, is a composite character based on the filmmakers' conversations with fired executives, while the other Canadian executives play themselves. Summoned by Bells is a BBC TV film of John Betjeman's verse autobiography of the same name - " a unique and touching account of an Edwardian middle-class childhood." It was first broadcast on Sunday 29 August 1976, the day after the Poet Laureate's 70th birthday. In the film Betjeman re-visits the places he knew as a child, the houses he grew up in, his schools, his holiday haunts in Cornwall, and his college in Oxford. The film ends with his being sent down from Oxford and enrolling in desperation as a cricket master at a private prep school. In an interview given to Radio Times Betjeman spoke about his verse autobiography and the making of the film : " I always had filthy reviews for it, and I didn't think it very good." He recalls that Joe Orton was arrested for defacing books in the public library - among them Summoned by Bells - on which he had stuck a pornographic picture. "I wrote it thinking it the best way to write about being young. I was thinking about Tennyson's English Idylls and I had been reading Wordsworth's Prelude and I thought why not put down being a schoolmaster and this kind of thing in to very plain blank verse. The Smashing Machine: The Life and Times of Extreme Fighter Mark Kerr is a documentary directed by John Hyams about the mixed martial arts career and personal life of Mark Kerr. The documentary is critically acclaimed for its sobering account of the brutal sport of early no holds barred fighting and the depths of addiction in which Kerr succumbs to and eventually overcomes. Xilonen: Ceremony of Tender Corn is a 2013 documentary short family film written and directed by Consuelo Alba. K2: Siren of the Himalayas is a 2012 documentary film written by Darren Lund, Andy McDonough, Dave Ohlson, and Jason Reid, and directed by Dave Ohlson. The Supreme Price is a 2014 documentary film directed by Joanna Lipper. Il mondo perduto is a DVD release of ten short documentaries films directed by Vittorio De Seta between 1954 and 1959. The series was restored by the Bologna Cinematheque in 2008. The Parking Lot Movie is an American documentary film directed by Meghan Eckman. It was filmed from 2007 to 2010 and premiered at the South By Southwest film festival in Austin, Texas, in 2010. It was purchased by PBS and aired nationwide on Independent Lens October 19, 2010, opening the series' 2010 season. Les Oubliées is a 1996 documentary film directed by Anne-Laure Folly of Togo and shot in Angola. Chantons sous l'Occupation is a French documentary film from 1976. It was directed and written by André Halimi, starring Pascal Mazzotti, Maître Naud, and Fabienne Jamet. The film does not recall the resistance or high military facts, it tells about artists and entertainers under the Nazi occupation of France. It presents the entire spectrum from resisters to semi-fascists. The Shadow of the Operator is a 2013 documentary film directed written by Alfred Behrens, and directed by Benjamin Dickman and Alfred Behrens. Al fin del desierto is a short documentary film directed by Sheila Altamirano. The Criminalization of HIV in Canada is a 2013 documentary film directed by Alexandra Lazarowich. Manhatta is a short documentary film directed by painter Charles Sheeler and photographer Paul Strand. Conquest of the Air is a documentary film or docudrama on the history of aviation, up until the early stages of World War II. The film features historical footage, and dramatic re-creations, of the developments of commercial and military aviation; including the early stages of technology developments in design, propulsion, and air navigation aids. The film was a London Films production, commissioned by the Air Ministry of the British Government. Blood in the Face is a 1991 documentary film about white supremacy groups in North America. It was directed by Anne Bohlen, Kevin Rafferty and James Ridgeway. It features many interviews with various white supremacist leaders, and archival footage of others. Con il cuore fermo Sicilia is a 1965 Italian documentary film directed by Gianfranco Mingozzi. The film discusses issues on Sicily. The Mulberry House is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Sara Ishaq. Ashish Mukherjee is a 1973 short documentary film directed by Ashish Mukherjee. Viva Paradis is a 2011 political documentary directed by Isabelle Tollenaere. The Age Of Aluminium is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Bert Ehgartner. Ruidos Molestos: Sonidos del Rock Porteño is a 2008 documentary film written by Eduardo Ledesma and Juan Luis Tamayo and directed by Viviana Seplveda Cataldo. The Basque Ball: Skin Against Stone is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Spanish filmmaker Julio Médem. The Waiting is a 2013 short documentary drama film written and directed by Mario Rizzi. Sick Birds Die Easy is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Nicholas Fackler. Beautiful Tree, Severed Roots is a biographical drama historical documentary film directed by Kenny Mann. Crisis In The Americas is a 2014 documentary film by Les Crater. I Missed Flight 93 is an hour-long documentary about people who missed United Flight 93 for various reasons. It originally aired on the History Channel around early 2006. The documentary focuses on three people who, through a twist of fate, missed the flight. The first interviewee was Frank Robertazzi, a businessman; the second was Daniel Belardinelli, a painter; and the third was Heather Ogle, a flight surgeon. 65 Revisited is a 2007 American documentary film by D. A. Pennebaker, made from footage the director shot for his famous 1967 film, Dont Look Back. Both films show Bob Dylan and entourage during their 1965 concert tour of the U.K. The newer film shows outtakes from its predecessor and contains several full-length song performances, something the first film did not provide. The film opened in theaters on November 28, 2007. It is also available as the second disc in a DVD reissue called Bob Dylan: Don't Look Back - 65 Tour Deluxe Edition. Besides Dylan himself, persons appearing in 65 Revisited include Joan Baez, Bob Neuwirth, and Nico. Sack Barrow is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Ben Rivers. The Two Rivers is a 1985 documentary film directed by Mark Newman. JFK: 3 Shots That Changed America is an American historical documentary about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. It premiered on The History Channel on Sunday, October 11, 2009 and was released on DVD on January 26, 2010. The Long Journey Home is a documentary film, winner of two Gold World Medals at New York Festivals of World's Best Television & Film 2014 in the categories Biography / Profiles and Current Affairs. It was made by Denisa Morariu (reporter), Cristian Tamas (cameraman), Liviu Dochiţa (cameraman), Mihai Dina (cameraman) and Adrian Robe (editing). The report tells the story of Petrică Câşlaru, the boy who grew up in the horror camp from Siret. Black Hills is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Michael Kuball. Kony 2012 is a short film produced by Invisible Children, Inc.. It was released on March 5, 2012. The film's purpose was to promote the charity's "Stop Kony" movement to make African cult and militia leader, indicted war criminal and the International Criminal Court fugitive Joseph Kony globally known in order to have him arrested by the end of 2012, when the campaign expired. The film spread virally. As of March 1, 2014, the film has received over 99 million views and 1.3 million "likes" on the video-sharing website YouTube, and over 21.9 thousand "likes" on Vimeo, with other views on a central "Kony 2012" website operated by Invisible Children. The intense exposure of the video caused the "Kony 2012" website to crash shortly after it began gaining widespread popularity. A poll suggested that more than half of young adult Americans heard about Kony 2012 in the days following the video's release. It was included among the top international events of 2012 by PBS and called the most viral video ever by TIME. The campaign resulted in a resolution by the United States Senate and contributed to the decision to send troops by the African Union. Titicut Follies is a 1967 American documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman and filmed by John Marshall, about the patient-inmates of Bridgewater State Hospital for the criminally insane, a Massachusetts Correctional Institution in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. In 1967 the film won awards in Germany and Italy. Later on, Wiseman made a number of such films examining social institutions in the United States. The title of the film is taken from a talent show put on by the hospital's inmates, which was named after the Wampanoag word for the nearby Taunton River. 70 Hester Street is a 2013 year short documentary biographical film written and directed by Casimir Nozkowski. Momentum Under the Influence is a surf movie distributed by Steelhouse Distribution and produced by Poor Specimen. It features all the best surfers in the world under 23 that surf places like Mentawai Islands, Australia, South Africa, France, Timor Island, Indonesia, Mexico, Hawaii and California. Surfers include CJ Hobgood, Damien Hobgood, Paul Roach Dan Malloy, David Rastovich, Mick Fanning, Taj Burrow, Joel Parkinson, Ben Bourgois, Bruce Irons, Andy Irons, and Dean Morrison. Timor Lorosae: The Unseen Massacre is a 2001 Brazilian documentary film directed by actress and director Lucélia Santos. The film shows the situation in East Timor, a year after the ballot that decided its independence. Magical Universe is a 2013 documentary and biographical film directed by Jeremy Workman. Famous Authors: Edgar Allan Poe is a 1996 documentary short film written and directed by Malcolm Hossick This Is Roller Derby is a 2011 Australian documentary by Daniel Hayward and features members from roller derby associations from Australia and the United States, primarily the Ballarat Roller Derby League. The DVD for the film released on February 20, 2013. A Year In Champagne is a 2014 documentary drama film written and directed by David Kennard. 'Against The Tide' examines the conflict that erupted in the American Jewish community over the best means to rescue the European Jews trying to escape the Holocaust. It tells the little known story of Peter Bergson, who tirelessly stood up against American Jewish leaders in the late 30's and early 40's in an effort to save the Jews of Europe. Know My Name is a 2013 documentary biography drama and sport film directed by Kristen Stevens and Inan Temelkuran. Sonic Outlaws is a 1995 documentary film directed by Craig Baldwin. Chasing Madoff is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jeff Prosserman. The film is based on the book by Harry Markopolos. Off The Floor is a documentary drama biographical film directed by Katherine Celia and Matthew Celia. Life Itself is a 2014 American biographical documentary film about film critic Roger Ebert, directed by Steve James and produced by Zak Piper, Steve James and Garrett Basch. The film is based on Ebert's 2011 memoir of the same name. It premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival and was an official selection at the 67th Cannes Film Festival. The 41st Telluride Film Festival hosted a special screening of the film on August 28, 2014. Magnolia Pictures released the film theatrically in the US and simultaneously via video on demand platforms on July 4, 2014. New Castle is a 2010 documentary film directed by Guo Hengqi. "One man, two missing limbs—a fascinating story of adaptation in a world fueled by the status quo. Winner of the Jury Prize at the 2007 Mexico City Film Festival, veteran director Eva Norvind (whose daughter completed the film after her death in 2006) pays loving tribute to the strength of the human spirit and our ability to overcome any odds." Quoting the synopsis from the 2008 Cinequest Film Festival site. Beirut Buenos Aires Beirut is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Hernán Belón and co-written by Grace Spinelli. House For Sale is a 2011 documentary family drama film directed by Atea Al Daradji and Mohamed Al Daradji. Yellow Sticky Notes: Canadian Anijam is a 2013 short animation documentary directed by Jeff Chiba Stearns. Hairkutt is a 2005 documentary film by Curtis Elliott and Ben Scholle. Capitalism at Crossroad Street is a 2013 documentary film written by Talivaldis Margévics and directed by Ivars Seleckis. Hand to Toe: An Exploration in the Art of Giving is a short documentary film directed by France Benoit. Life After Tomorrow is a 2006 documentary film directed by Gil Cates Jr. and Julie Stevens about the lives of the women who had once played Little Orphan Annie or one of the other orphans in the musical Annie. On March 24, 2006, the film was premiered at the Phoenix Film Festival where it won awards for both Best Documentary and Best Director. Meet the Fokkens is a 2011 documentary and biographical film written and directed by Gabrielle Provaas and Rob Schröder. "Shushan, a gay bar in Jerusalem, is the unlikely meeting place for the diverse cast of characters featured in Yun Suh’s award-winning documentary City of Borders. Sa'ar Netanel, a secular Israeli, owns the bar and also serves as the first openly gay member of the city council. Palestinian Samira Saraya and her Jewish-Israeli lover Ravit Geva navigate what the Israeli occupation means for their relationship, and what their relationship means for their families. Boody, a devout Muslim, risks his life by sneaking through razor wire from the West Bank and wonders whether it’s possible for him to remain in Ramallah. Settler and former Israeli soldier Adam Russo is stabbed by an Orthodox Jew while marching in Jerusalem's gay pride parade. Set during the construction of the separation wall between Israel and the Palestinian territories, Jerusalem’s gay community struggles to hold a gay pride celebration in the Holy City while the characters, and the country, contend with internal conflicts. The documentary explores the effort to find and share a sense of community in spite of differences of religion and nationality. Director Yun Suh, producer Simone Nelson, and subject Samira Saraya expected to attend" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Seattle International Film Festival. For the First Time is a 1967 Cuban documentary short film. It chronicles the events of April 12, 1967 in the village of Los Munos, in the Baracoa municipality of Cuba, where a mobile cinema truck shows the villagers moving pictures for the first time. The entire film was shot on April 12, 1967 in the village itself, and shows the cinema truck traveling to the village, as well as interviews with both the projectionists and several villagers. The film shown was the Chaplin feature, Modern Times, on a portable 16 mm projector in the back of the truck. As it happens, the film screening is well received. The film was made available in recent years for an international audience with it being included as a special feature in a MK2 DVD release of Modern Times, distributed by Warner Brothers. Las Versiones De Campanadas A Medianoche De Orson Welles is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Luciano Berriatúa. Great Directors is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Angela Ismailos. In the film, Ismailos interviews directors of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, including Bernardo Bertolucci, Catherine Breillat, Liliana Cavani, Stephen Frears, Todd Haynes, Richard Linklater, Ken Loach, David Lynch, John Sayles, and Agnes Varda. Lights, Action, Music is a 2007 documentary film written by Steve Cohen and directed by Dan Lieberstein. Carmen Miranda: Bananas is My Business is a 1995 documentary filmed and directed by Helena Solberg. This documentary chronicles the life and career of Carmen Miranda, Hollywood's symbol of Latin American spirit in the 1940s. The documentary tells her life story in a series of stages, beginning with her roots and rise to stardom in her home country of Brazil, her transition and development as a performer in the United States, first on Broadway in New York City, then in the film industry after she signed with 20th Century Fox in Los Angeles, and her later years in life, before her death and her return to Brazil. Helena Solberg uses two different film styles, biography and directorial reverie, in which Solberg uses actor Erick Barretos to “resurrect Carmen Miranda in several fantasy sequences. Helena Solberg's attitudes shift throughout the documentary from awe-struck child to empathetic and forgiving Brazilian woman, which she uses to represent the contradictory subplots of Carmen Miranda's life. CM101MMXI Fundamentals is a 2011 Turkish stand up comedy directed by Murat Dündar. The theatrical release for the show was made in 2013. In the first week of its release, the movie attracted an audience of more than 600.000 people. box office 37.301.066,36 TL. Fire-Eater is a 1998 Finnish film directed by Pirjo Honkasalo and written by Pirkko Saisio. It tells a story of two orphaned sisters who end up working in a travelling circus. The film received several international awards, including the Grand Jury prize at the American Film Institute International Film Festival in 1998. On June 18th, 1983 Dr. Sally Ride became the first American woman to fly in space. Her accomplishments came to symbolize women's achievements in an all male-dominated fields and overnight she became one of the most famous women in American History. The film is the story of Sally Ride a woman space pioneer, as told by herself and several family and friends who shared in her successes. Carlton + Godard = Cinema is a 2003 Australian documentary about the Carlton film scene of the 1960s, including the work of such directors as Giorgio Mangiamele, Brian Davies, . It includes excerpts from films such as: Il Contratto The Brothers Ninety-Nine Percent Clay Pudding Thieves Brake Fluid, The Girlfriends Hey Al Baby Nothing Like Experience Sympathy in Summer Yackety Yack It features interviews from filmmakers such as Antony I. Ginnane. Getting Gilliam is a 2005 documentary film directed by Vincenzo Natali about the making of Terry Gilliam's film Tideland. The Machine That Killed Bad People is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Steve Fagin. 77Boadrum is a documentary, music film directed by Jun Kawaguchi. Genetics and Plant Breeding is a 1968 short documentary film directed by David Morphet. Reconstruction is a 2001 documentary made by Irene Lusztig that investigates the Ioanid Gang bank heist committed in 1959 in Communist Romania. The film focuses on Monica Sevianu, Lusztig's grandmother, and the only female involved in the heist. The documentary gets its name from a propaganda film that was made by the Romanian government three years after the robbery was committed. The original Reconstruction was a strange blend of documentary and fiction, where the criminals played themselves in a crime-film whose plot was driven by clues that self-congratulatory detectives pieced together. The propaganda film was only screened to journalists and high ranking communist officials before being buried beneath government files. Lusztig managed to find a copy and incorporates clips into her documentary. The Trial of Jeffrey Dahmer is a 1992 documentary film written and directed by Elkan Allan. Osuto is a 2011 documentary adventure film written and directed by Fifer Garbesi. xxx ALL AGES xxx The Boston Hardcore Film, a Gallery East Production in association with Stone Films/NYC, is a documentary directed by Drew Stone, which had its world premier at the Independent Film Festival of Boston on April 27, 2012. The film features interviews, archival footage and the music of Boston’s early hardcore bands including Deep Wound, DYS, Gang Green, Impact Unit, Jerry’s Kids, Negative FX, SS Decontrol, The Freeze and The F.U.'s. Also featured in the film are interviews with renowned author Michael Patrick MacDonald, Actress Christine Elise McCarthy, Advertising Executive Jonathan Anastas, Thrasher Magazine Editor Jake Phelps, "American Hardcore" Director Paul Rachman, and Newbury Comics owner Michael Dreese. xxx All Ages xxx has been released on DVD with numerous extras and director's commentary. Tradition Never Graduates: A Season Inside Notre Dame Football is a 2007 documentary film directed by Paul Doyle Jr. As I Was Walking Down Bristol Street is a 1982 documentary film directed by David Lodge. A Letter to Elia is a 2010 documentary film directed by Kent Jones and Martin Scorsese that follows the life and career of film director Elia Kazan and how he influenced Scorsese. Made from clips from films, stills, readings from Kazan's autobiography, a speech he wrote on directing read by Elias Koteas, a videotaped interview done late in Kazan's life, and Scorsese's commentary on and off screen. The Buried Secret of M. Night Shyamalan is a 2004 film directed by Nathaniel Kahn. We Are Reds: kaimaku made no nanokakan is a documentary film directed by 金子 陽太 and 伊藤 衆人. Tommy Hancock: West Texas Muse is a 2012 documentary film directed by Dwight Adair. The Sea In Between is a 2012 documentary film written by Ryan Patch, Matt Porter, Jonathan Seale and directed by Matt Porter. You Have the Right to an Attorney is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Matt Bockelman. Al Helm: Martin Luther King in Palestine is a 2013 musical documentary drama film written by Dr. Clayborne Carson and directed by Connie Field, Kamel El Basha and Mik Kuhlman. In Bed with Ulysses is a documentary film directed by Alan Adelson and Kate Taverna. The Cross is a 2009 documentary film directed by Matthew Crouch, in his directorial debut. The film chronicles Arthur Blessitt's Guinness World Record-setting journey of 38,102 miles of forty years "into every nation and major island group of the world" while carrying a twelve-foot wooden cross. At the end of 2013 he has carried the cross over 40,600 miles in 321 nations, island groups and territories as he walks on. Kara Women Speak is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jane Baldwin. daKings is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Kenneth Elvebakk. The People’s War is a 1970 short documentary film directed by John Douglas, Norman Fruchter and Robert Kramer. Give Up Tomorrow is a 2011 documentary film directed by Michael Collins. "In 1997, Paco Larrañaga was arrested for the murder of two teenage sisters on a provincial island in the Philippines. Over the next 13 years, his case became the highest profile in the nation’s history, and the focal point in a far-reaching exposé of gross miscarriage of justice. At once an engrossing murder mystery, a courtroom drama, and a stunning indictment of national corruption, Give Up Tomorrow is an enraging true crime chronicle. In English, Spanish, Tagalog with English subtitles." Quoting the description from 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. Feine Leute is a 2012 German documentary film directed by Detlef Gumm and Hans-Georg Ullrich. This Is What Democracy Looks Like is a 2000 documentary directed by Jill Friedberg and Rick Rowley. "Marwencol is a fantasy world created by Mark Hogancamp. This website is dedicated to capturing the beauty of Mark's secret world. After being beaten into a brain-damaging coma by five men outside a bar, Mark built a 1/6th scale World War II-era town in his backyard. Mark populated the town he dubbed "Marwencol" with dolls representing his friends and family and created life-like photographs detailing the town's many relationships and dramas. Playing in the town and photographing the action helped Mark to recover his hand-eye coordination and deal with the psychic wounds from the attack. Through his homemade therapy, Mark was able to begin the long journey back into the "real world", both physically and emotionally - something he continues to struggle with today." Quoting the description from the Marwencol Official Site. Jolanda 23 is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Pim Zwier. The Death of Pinochet is a 2011 history, documentary film written and directed by Bettina Perut and Iván Osnovikoff. Entre Désir et incertitude is a Moroccan 2010 documentary film. The Black Candle is a documentary film about Kwanzaa directed by M. K. Asante and narrated by Maya Angelou. The film premiered on television on Starz on November, 2012. Extreme is a short documentary film directed by Jon Long. Death Makes Life Possible is a documentary drama film directed by Mark Krigbaum and Marilyn Schlitz. I Am Alive is a 1999 documentary film directed and written by Jørgen Leth. Suenos Lejanos is a 2007 documentary film written by René Weber and Alejandro Legaspi, directed by Alejandro Legaspi. Divorcio USA 2005/2012 is a 2012 short documentary experimental comedy film directed by Jacinto Astiazarán. Healing Words: Poetry and Medicine is a sixty-minute documentary filmed in 2008 primarily at Shands at the University of Florida. The production portrays individuals in personal quest to recover psychologically and physically from illnesses that have dramatically changed their lives. This film validates expressive art in medical settings can build doctor-patient relationships and be a supportive companion in the healing process. God Is Rain is a short documentary film directed by Rehad Desai. The Bogeyman-A Portrait Of Sergej Paradjanov is a 1991 film directed by Nariné Mkrtchian and Arsen Azatian. Making Sun-dried Red Peppers is a 2000 film directed by Hee-Sun Jang. The Price of Sex is a documentary crime fiction drama film directed by Mimi Chakarova. Asta e is a 2001 film directed by Thomas Ciulei. Six O'Clock News is a 1996 documentary film by Ross McElwee about television news in the United States, the randomness of fate, the anxiety of parenting, and the difference between representation and reality. Carga de rurales is an 1896 Mexican short black-and-white silent documentary film directed by Gabriel Veyre. The God Who Wasn't There is a 2005 independent documentary written and directed by Brian Flemming. The documentary questions the existence of Jesus, examining evidence that supports the Christ myth theory against the existence of a historical Jesus, as well as other aspects of Christianity. The Skyjacker That Got Away is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Philip Day. Las maestras de la Republica is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Pilar Pérez Solano. Queens of the Big Time is a 1996 documentary film directed by Adriana Trigiani. TV Man: The Search for the Last Independent Dealer is a 2013 documentary film directed by Steve Kosareff. Every Picture Is An Empty Picture is a 2014 film written by Thorsten Ernst and directed by Christoph Faulhaber. "This striking black and white from the NFB’s Candid Eye series follows the tobacco harvest in southwestern Ontario, from the point of view of the transient field workers who move in for a brief, back-breaking bonanza." Quoting the synopsis from the to 2011 Hot Docs site. Zela Trovke is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Asier Altuna. A Hebrew Lesson is a 2006 Documentary film written by David Ofek and Sari Ezouz and directed by David Ofek and Ron Rotem. How's Everyone at Home? is 2012 a short film directed by Kaja Šišmanović. À propos de Nice is a 1930 silent short documentary film directed by Jean Vigo and photographed by Boris Kaufman. The film depicts life in Nice, France by documenting the people in the city, their daily routines, a carnival and social inequalities. Vigo described the film in an address to the Groupement des Spectateurs d'Avant-Garde: "In this film, by showing certain basic aspects of a city, a way of life is put on trial... the last gasps of a society so lost in its escapism that it sickens you and makes you sympathetic to a revolutionary solution." À propos de Nice was Vigo's first film. It was followed by Taris, roi de l'eau, Zéro de conduite and L'Atalante in 1934, the year Vigo died. Wings Over the Rockies is a 2009 documentary film directed by Tod Williams. Valentino's Ghost is a 2012 war documentary historical drama film written and directed by Michael Singh. I Love Kuduro is a 2013 documentary film written by Mário Patrocinio and Coréon Dú and directed by Mário Patrocinio. Pearson Island: Mischief & Mayhem is 1994 documentary film directed by Wight Liz and Wes Skiles. Graham Parker: Don't Ask Me Questions is a 2013 documentary and music film directed by Michael Gramaglia. The North Canyon: An Exploration by Garrett Mcnamarais is a documentary sport film directed by Paulo Caldeira and Garrett McNamara. Eames: The Architect and the Painter is a 2011 documentary film about American designers Charles and Ray Eames and the Eames Office. It was produced and written by Jason Cohn, and coproduced by Bill Jersey. The film moves between a narrative about the husband and wife team to one about the Eames Office and its accomplishments, starting with chair design, but also moving through architecture, photography and film. Most of the period images are still photographs from the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, but there are several film clips. Audio clips are interspersed with narration by James Franco. The film uses extensive interviews to frame the story. There are eight subjects, including Richard Saul Wurman, the founder of TED, Irish architect Kevin Roche, and screenwriter Paul Schrader; Lucia Eames and Eames Demetrios, Charles Eames' daughter and grandson; and three former Eames office designers: Jeannine Oppewall, Gordon Ashby, and Deborah Sussman. Awesome; I Fuckin' Shot That! is a 2006 concert film of the Beastie Boys. It was created by giving camcorders to 50 audience members of a sold out concert at Madison Square Garden on October 9, 2004. The audience members were instructed to keep the cameras rolling at all times. For a low budget operation, all cameras were returned to the place of purchase for a refund. The film first screened on January 6, 2006 to the fans that shot the footage. Also that same month it was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. There was a one-night screening across the country on March 23, and the film was then given a general release on March 31, 2006. The DVD of this concert movie was released on July 24, 2006 in the UK and July 25, 2006 in the US. During a promotional performance on the Late Show with David Letterman, members of the audience were given camcorders to film the televised performance in a similar fashion to that of the film. The film also screened at South by Southwest, Wisconsin Film Festival, Dead Center Film Festival, Copenhagen Film Festival and Era New Horizons Film Festival in Poland. Cameo appearances during the show on and near the stage include Doug E. The Presence of Arnošt Lustig! is a documentary film written and directed by Eva Lustigova. Evicted is a 2006 BBC One TV documentary film directed by Brian Woods. Let the Daylight Into the Swamp is a 2012 documentary, short and drama film written and directed by Jeffrey St. Jules. Precious Life is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Shlomi Eldar. El Violinista de Auschwitz is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Carlos Hernando. City Out of Wilderness is a 1974 American short documentary film produced by Francis Thompson. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Produced by the United States Capitol Historical Society, City Out of Wilderness chronicles the history and evolution of Washington, D.C., from its very beginnings to the then-modern era of the 1970s. Great Plains: America's Lingering Wild is a documentary film. The Greatest TV Shows of the Noughties is a 2009 documentary film written by Ged Parsons. Flying Pyramids, Soaring Stones is a documentary about a team of engineers attempting to lift heavy obelisks using nothing but kites, and prove that the ancient Egyptians may have used wind power to erect their great monuments. The program ends with the team's successful raising of an 14-ton obelisk. It aired internationally on The History Channel in 2004. The documentary was produced by Beth Murphy of Principle Pictures. The obelisk raising mechanism was designed by Emilio Graff, then a student at Caltech, and built by many volunteers from the Los Angeles area, Lancaster, and Quartz Hill. Smile Pinki is a 39-minute documentary directed by Megan Mylan. The film shows the story of a poor girl in rural India whose life is transformed when she receives free surgery to correct her cleft lip. The documentary was made in Hindi and Bhojpuri, and won the 81st Academy Award for Best Documentary. Let Us Persevere in What We Have Resolved Before We Forget is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Ben Russell. The Life and Death of Owen Hart is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by Sally Blake and Paul Jay. Clouds of Smoke is a documentary directed and produced by Fatmir Terziu. It explores the recent phenomenon of global warming and asks several environmental questions. It mainly focuses on the environmental damage caused by Albania, especially its biggest industrial city, Elbasan. The documentary started as a collaboration with DEFRA, and it was created for the purpose of educating students at London South Bank University. It was chosen to be shown at Curzon, London, the first documentary directed by an Albanian director to be selected. "The Glass House skillfully examines the mostly hidden lives of young women, teetering on the fringes of Iranian society in modern Tehran. Marginalized by their families, these women have found a saving grace in a day center formed by an Iranian expatriate. Marjaneh Halati opened the center to give downtrodden young women a voice, thus empowering them with the life skills they need to succeed on their own. Many of these teens previously spent time in a jail, hospital, or state home because they had no other options. Sussan is 20 years old and suffers from memory loss and a stutter as a result of a blow to the head either from her sigheh (temporary husband) or her abusive brother. Mitra is learning how to avoid confrontation with her father, who takes out his frustration on his 16-year-old daughter. Nazila, 19, finds an outlet for her anguish by recording as a rap singer, which is forbidden by law. The young women see Marjaneh as both a mother figure and a mentor and cherish her frequent visits from London. In superb cinema vérité style spanning 18 months, The Glass House deftly portrays a spirit of hopefulness. These former victims are given the chance to express themselves and transform their difficult circumstances into new beginnings." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. A Tall Man is a 2010 short documentary written and directed by Jani Peltonen. No More Hiroshima is a 1984 National Film Board of Canada documentary about two survivors of the 1945 atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima, who are among a small group of Japanese who risk ostracism in their country by identifying themselves as hibakusha: survivors of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The 26-minute documentary by Martin Duckworth follows the survivors on their mission to New York City as part of the Japanese peace movement at the second United Nations Special Session on Disarmament held in June, 1982. This 26 minute film received the Genie Award for Best Short Documentary at the 7th Genie Awards. The idea for the film was originally suggested by Duckworth's father-in-law, an historian and activist who was in touch with the peace movement in Japan. Photos In The Wind, A Joplin Tornado Story is a short historical documentary family drama film directed by Abbey Hoekzema. Wrong Time Wrong Place is a 2012 Documentary film directed by John Appel. Reporters is a 1981 documentary film directed by Raymond Depardon. Almost as frightening as the tragic events it details, ON NATIVE SOIL is essential viewing for anyone seeking to understand how systemic failures in U.S. national security led to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. By focusing on 9/11 survivors, the surviving family members of 9/11 victims, and their passionate demand for an official investigation into the World Trade Center attacks masterminded by Osama bin Laden, this riveting documentary serves as a remarkable audio-visual companion to the 9/11 Commission's official report.Featuring alternating narration by Kevin Costner and Hilary Swank, the film contains much of the same material included in other 9/11 documentaries, but it's informed by an inspiring sense of moral outrage as we learn, step by step, how much the U.S. government and the Bush administration knew about possible terrorist attacks prior to 9/11, and failed to take any significant action against those threats. Beginning with former CNN reporter Peter Arnett's revealing interview with bin Laden in Afghanistan in 1997, and ending with the sobering observation that we're still inadequately prepared for another 9/11-like attack, ON NATIVE SOIL unfolds with a deeply personal perspective that's dramatically contrasted by the galling audacity of administrative spin control. Portrait of Zubin Mehta is a 38-min. documentary film by Terry Sanders about the life of the legendary conductor Zubin Mehta. The documentary has been filmed in Bombay and Los Angeles. In the film, the camera follows Zubin Mehta over a length of time - during rehearsals, meetings, performances and backstage activities, as well as on a tour with the orchestra during which he visited his birthplace, Bombay. The film has captured the remendous presence of the man and ends with a ten-minute rendition of the last section of the Ravel arrangement of Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an exhibition", during which the camera never leaves the conductor. Looking for Moshe Guez is a 2011 Israeli documentary film directed by Avida Livny, documenting his search for the Israeli director Moshe Guez, and his "lost" feature film, The Angel was a Devil. The Wayman Tisdale Story is the 2011 sport documentary film written and directed by Brian W. Schodorf. 13 Most Beautiful...Songs for Andy Warhol's Screen Tests is the third studio album by Dean & Britta. It was commissioned by the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust and The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and was written to accompany a collection of screen tests filmed in the 1960s by Andy Warhol featuring stars from The Factory including Lou Reed, Nico, and Edie Sedgwick. The album consists of 21 tracks, including several remixes, and is heavily influenced by the sound of the Velvet Underground. "Where Are You Go" is a documentary film about a group of bicyclists who participate in a 7,000 mile race across Africa. En route with Tour d' Afrique, directors Brian Vernor and Benny Zenga ride from Cairo, Egypt to Cape Town, South Africa over the course of 4 months. Traveling more than 70 miles per day, 50 racers and expedition riders experienced the boundless Nubian desert of Sudan, the great majesty of Victoria Falls, and finally the cold rush of the Atlantic Ocean. The 7,000 mile expedition is a constant adventure full of playfulness and mysterious beauty, and is testament to the endurance of human curiosity. Jaurès is a 2012 documentary biographical film written and directed by Vincent Dieutre. Jason Becker: Not Dead Yet is a feature-length documentary film directed by Jesse Vile about legendary guitarist Jason Becker and his 22 year-long battle with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. The film includes footage from Becker's childhood and his early days with guitarist Marty Friedman and the rock band Cacophony. The film was screened in various film festivals around the world including Hot Docs, Sheffield Doc/Fest, Full Frame Documentary Film Festival and the Hamptons International Film Festival. The film's distribution rights were acquired by Dogwoof Pictures in the UK and Kino Lorber in the US and was released theatrically in November 2012. Akruti is a film directed by B. Narsing Rao. Vinogradov And Dubosarskiy. Commissioned Painting is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Yevgeni Mitta and Aleksandr Sheyn. Fight for the Dardanelles is a British silent documentary film, directed by F. Percy Smith and produced and edited by Charles Urban. Percy Smith was known as a recorder of nature. He was a pioneer in the field of scientific documentaries. During World War I, however, he used his talents to support the Allied war effort. He shot aerial views of battlefields for British forces and made several animated films. One such was Fight for the Dardanelles. The film uses stop-frame animation to create maps on the screen, and showed the then-current military situation in the Dardanelles, using various maps to assist understanding. Small cardboard cut-outs show the deployment of men and ships. Intertitles explain tactics, and shelling explosions are illustrated by clouds of cotton wool. The techniques used in the film are considered primitive today, however, they satisfied a need at the time for details of the war. The film is currently available in 16mm film format. Shadowplayers is the title of both a 2006 documentary film and a 2010 book by James Nice of LTM Recordings, tracing the detailed history of Factory Records and the Manchester post-punk music scene between 1978-1981. Community of Gardeners is a 2011 film directed by Cintia Cabib. All Divided Selves is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Luke Fowler. Presspauseplay is a 2010 documentary film directed by David Dworsky and Victor Köhler. Valley of the Forgotten is a 2010 documentary film written by Maria Raduan and Felipe Braga, and directed by Maria Raduan. Our Spirits Don't Speak English is a documentary film about the Native American boarding schools, which youths attended chiefly from the mid-19th to the mid-20th centuries. It was filmed by the Rich Heape company and directed by Chip Richie. Native American storyteller Gayle Ross narrated the film. Ross is a descendant of John Ross, chief of the Cherokee Nation in the Trail of Tears period. The film deals with both the schools run by Christian missionaries and those run by the United States' Bureau of Indian Affairs. It addresses the schools' role of forcing cultural assimilation of the resident children into the ways of the majority culture of European Americans. The Perfect Turnover is a documentary film directed by Charlie Minn. Usps is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Jessica Farrell. Misère au Borinage is a 1933 Belgian documentary film directed by Henri Storck and Joris Ivens. The film opens with these words: "Crisis in the Capitalist World. Factories are closed down, abandoned. Millions of proletarians are hungry!" The Borinage is one of the most famous industrial regions of Wallonia because of its history of hard and long social strikes, for instance, a two-month long 1932 strike in this region, as well as Liège and Charleroi. It is considered one of the most important work of the Political cinema. "It is one of the most important references in the documentary genre." "The stridency of the work is exemplified by a short film Ivens made with Belgian cinema club leader Henri Storck portraying the cruel plunge into poverty resulting from a classic capitalist crisis of over production." For Philip Mosley, this film is linked to the history of Wallonia: "Matters worsened in 1956 with the Marcinelle disaster, whose victims included many immigrants, and then with release of initial closure plans for Walloon mines. In scene reminiscent of Storck's Borinage film of 1933, social unrest in the area near Mons escalated into general strike of 1960 and 1961." On the Seven Seas is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Johannes Holzhausen. The Last Week is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Curtis Briggs. Fists of Freedom: The Story of the '68 Summer Games is a television program. Children Of The Princess Of Cleves is a 2011 documentary film written by Anne Tesson and Régis Sauder directed by Régis Sauder. "Ah, the high school English class, where works of great literature are foisted upon students as required reading. Those great tomes filled with heady prose and characters from another era are supposed to be vitally important to every young person’s education, but how relevant are they to the realities of daily angst-ridden teenage existence? In a refreshing and inspired look at the lives of contemporary youth, director Régis Sauder attempts to make that elusive connection between classic literature and contemporary teenage life through the authentic voices and emotions of one Marseille high school class studying the 17th century French novel La princesse de Clèves. A tale of love and duty in the 16th century court of King Henri II, this classic text has been taught in French classrooms for decades. But Sauder gives it a new spin, juxtaposing its narrative with the lives of the students themselves, a diverse population of teens from predominantly working-class and immigrant families. As they gradually begin the stressful preparation for their baccalaureate exams, the students recite assorted passages from the book and speak candidly about their hopes and dreams, love and heartbreak, family and friends and their own place in today’s French society." Quoting Joanne Parsont from the 2011 San Francisco International Film Festival site. Experiments in the Revival of Organisms is a 1940 motion picture which documents Soviet research into the resuscitation of clinically dead organisms. It is available from the Prelinger Archives, and it is in the public domain. The British scientist J. B. S. Haldane appears in the film's introduction. The operations are credited to Doctor Sergei Brukhonenko. 7915 KM is a 2008 documentary film directed by Nikolaus Geyrhalter. Chronicling the changing fortunes of Red Hook, Brooklyn, A Hole in a Fence is a documentary that explores the complicated issues of development, class and identity facing one of New York City's most unique neighborhoods. Daughters of Dolma is a feature-length documentary about spirituality, modernity and gender issues as embodied by Tibetan Buddhist Nuns. It is directed by Adam Miklos and produced by Alex Co. As Goes Janesville is a documentary film written by Leslie Simmer and directed by Brad Lichtenstein. Redemption: The Stan Tookie Williams Story is a 2004 television film starring Jamie Foxx and Lynn Whitfield. The film was directed by Vondie Curtis-Hall. Other cast members in the film include Lee Thompson Young and CCH Pounder. Once a year, prom mania grips the entire population of Racine, Wisconsin. The city's extravagant celebration begins with a rowdy parade where students compete for the most outrageous form of transportation, driving fire engines, 18-wheelers, even riding elephant-back through the city streets. Prom-goers from seven city high schools converge on one citywide prom to make red carpet entrances bombarded by the flash of cameras and screams from bleachers filled to capacity. Meanwhile, in sports bars and living rooms across the city, residents keep their eyes glued to the live television coverage of the spectacular event. If the Academy Awards were moved to the heartland, this is what it would resemble. Artie Shaw: Time Is All You've Got is a 1986 documentary film about clarinetist Artie Shaw. It was written, directed and narrated by Brigitte Berman. It won Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, tying with Down and Out in America. Akrobatisches Potpourri is an 1895 German short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Max and Emil Skladanowsky and starring the Grunato family. It is one of the first German produced films. Filmed in the park of the Berlin-Moabit Public Theatre this short film shows the balancing act performance of this family of 8 performers. It was one of a series of films produced to be projected by a magic lantern and formed part of the Wintergarten Performances, the first projections of film in Europe to a paying audience. The film titles for the initial program were: Italienischer Bauerntanz, Komisches Reck, Serpentinen Tanz, Der Jongleur Paul Petras, Das Boxende Känguruh, Akrobatisches Potpourri, Kamarinskaja, Ringkampf and Apotheose. Each film lasted approximately 6 seconds and would be repeated several times. Letters from a Porcupine is a documentary style movie made up of footage from the musical career of the alternative rock band Blind Melon including music videos, interviews, live performances and home movie footage. Several pieces of footage were filmed by Shannon Hoon and his own video recorder which he was said to have brought everywhere. It also contains unreleased music by the band such as a song dubbed "no business". The Forgotten Village is a 1941 American documentary film—some sources call it an ethnofiction film—directed by Herbert Kline and Alexander Hammid. The film was written by John Steinbeck, narrated by Burgess Meredith, and with music by Hanns Eisler. The film was released by the film distribution partnership of Arthur Mayer & Joseph Burstyn. The New York State Board of Regents, acting as the state's board of censors, banned the film in New York due to the film's portrayal of childbirth and showing a baby at its mother's breast. The film depicts the conflicts between traditional life in a Mexican village, and outsiders who want to introduce modernization. One Inch from Victory is a 1944 documentary film. Le pacte des loups - Les coulisses du tournage is a 2001 TV documentary directed by Pascal Laugier. Noottantinte Sakshi is a 1992 short documentary film directed by Sasibhushan. The Organic Life is a 2013 documentary film directed by Casey Beck and written by Sara Ataiiyan, Casey Beck and Braden Marks. Dss 1813-2013 is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Joseba Ortega Sáez. American Music: Off the Record is a 2008 American documentary that features theorists Noam Chomsky and Douglas Rushkoff in an interrogation of the American music industry. The film covers a great deal of ground from the authenticity of live music to the circumvention of the corporate machine by indie distribution, to the demise of the privately owned music store. Han Kyung-jik is a documentary film directed by Cheon Jeong-hoon. Nearing completion, China's massive Three Gorges Dam is altering the landscape and the lives of people living along the fabled Yangtze River. Countless ancient villages and historic locales will be submerged, and 2 million people will lose their homes and livelihoods. The Yu family desperately seeks a reprieve by sending their 16-year-old daughter to work in the cruise ship industry that has sprung up to give tourists a last glimpse of the legendary river valley. With cinematic sweep, Up the Yangtze explores lives transformed by the biggest hydroelectric dam in history, a hotly contested symbol of the Chinese economic miracle. An official selection of the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. An EyeSteelFilm/National Film Board of Canada production in association with American Documentary | P.O.V. A co-presentation with the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM). Fillmore — also known as Fillmore: The Last Days, and as Last Days of the Fillmore — is a music documentary film, primarily shot at the Fillmore West auditorium in San Francisco, California, from June 29 through July 4, 1971. It was released on June 14, 1972. Fillmore documents the final run of concerts at the Fillmore West, which closed after these shows. It features performances by a number of rock bands that emerged from the San Francisco music scene of the late 1960s and early 1970s, including Santana, the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Hot Tuna, and Quicksilver Messenger Service. The film also contains extensive footage of concert promoter Bill Graham, who organized the concerts and ran the Fillmore West. Additionally, the film includes documentary footage shot several years earlier in and around San Francisco, showing the emergence of the music scene there amid the counterculture of the 1960s and the hippie movement. Fillmore was shot on 16 mm film and was released in a widescreen format with a 2.35:1 aspect ratio. It makes frequent use of split screen images. Off the Grid is a 2011 documentary film directed by Alexander Oey. "The essayistic documentary, No Gravity is a personal story as well as a broader take on the history of women in space and the relationship between gender and technology." - Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. Invisible Children: Rough Cut is a 2006 American documentary film which depicts the human rights abuses by the Lord's Resistance Army in Uganda. Yume ha ushi no oishasan is a documentary film directed by Yoshiaki Tokita. Hunter Wood is one of the best skiers in the world. Struggling for direction in his life he decides to test his limits on the most treacherous mountains in North America. With Richert Wood and Dan Petrus. Ursula oder das unwerte Leben is a 1966 documentary film from Switzerland, directed by Reni Mertens and Walter Marti. Hach Winik is a 1986 short documentary film directed by Juan Carlos Colín. Journeys in Black: Patti Labelle is a 2001 television movie from the television program Journeys in Black. Deng Xiaoping: A Legend is a 2002 biographical film directed by Yinnan Ding. A Month of Hungry Ghosts is a 2008 film about the seventh-lunar-month Hungry Ghost Festival in Singapore. A Month of Hungry Ghosts is directed by Singapore-based American film director Tony Kern and co-produced by Genevieve Woo, a Singaporean television news anchor and producer with Channel NewsAsia, and Tony Kern. The film was released locally in Singapore on 7 August 2008. The film is distributed by Golden Village Pictures, and premiered at Golden Village VivoCity, Golden Village Plaza and Sinema Old School. Armenian Rhapsody is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Cesar Gananian, Gary Gananian and Cassiana Der Haroutiounian. Breaking Up with the Joneses is a 2006 Channel 4 documentary film directed by Ursula Macfarlane. Solo, Piano - NYC is a 2011 short documentary music film directed by Anthony Sherin. Le confort et l'indifférence is a 1981 documentary film by Denys Arcand, offering an analysis of the 1980 Quebec referendum, in which "sovereignty-association" was defeated as a first step to eventual secession from Canada. The film takes the position that the referendum result was a failure of courage and that the Québécois were numbed by prosperity and the explicitly Machiavellian manipulations of federalist leaders. Rencontre Avec Fantômas is a 1966 documentary, short film directed by Georges Franju. Brooklyn Dodgers: Ghosts of Flatbush is a 2007 documentary film produced by HBO sports chronicling the last ten years of the Brooklyn Dodgers tenure in the borough of churches. The film documents how in 1947 Jackie Robinson broke the baseball racial barrier in previously segregated major league, the struggles to win what seemed an unreachable World Series title in 1955, and the issues and community feelings involved in the team's sudden departure to Los Angeles after the 1957 campaign. The documentary focuses on the Brooklyn community's identification with the ball club, and with the perennial "wait until next year" attitude of both players and fans associated with the Dodgers' repeated inability to defeat the "upper class" New York Yankees for the World Series title, despite winning several pennants. The Brooklyn players, many of whom lived within and held off-season jobs in the community, were identified with the working-class people. The film portrays the countless agonies, defeats, prayers and tension leading finally to the World Series title in 1955. The Kennedys: The Curse of Power is a 2000 documentary biography history film written by Patrick Bachmann. "Welcome to the New York City art world of the 1970s, where women are underrepresented in the MOMA, in publishing, in theaters, as well as in pretty much every other artistic institution. What’s a group of feminist woman artists — painters, filmmakers, designers, writers, architects — to do? Form an art collective, hold endless meetings and publish a progressive magazine called HERESIES: A Feminist Publication on Art and Politics. That’s what. Filmmaker Joan Braderman, a member of the collective, tracks down twenty-four other members who are now accomplished artists living around the globe. The women talk about the magazine that published Adrienne Rich, Alice Walker and Barbara Ehrenreich. They reminisce about what it was like to be a woman in a man’s world: from an instructor who praised Ida Applebroog, “That is good, you paint just like a man,” to Mark Rothko, who said to Lucy Lippard, “You’re too cute to be an art critic.” They also recall differences and disagreements; since editors changed for each issue, some women protested when it was determined that only self-identified lesbians would edit the magagzine’s Lesbian Art and Artists Issue. A collage of intimate interviews, archival footage and photographs, digital animation, contemporary art works, and music by women, this is far from an historical piece. Rather, The Heretics emphasizes that collective feminism is as relevant today as ever. It’s a call to action to transmit this “gift, this collective energy of woman’s togetherness” to the younger generation." Quoting Nani Ratnawati from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Sound It Out is a 2011 documentary music film directed by Jeanie Finlay. Paying for the Piper is a 1997 documentary film directed by Julia Redwood. Hellas ohne Götter is an East German film directed by Karl Gass. It was released in 1957. Hungarian Rhapsody: Queen Live in Budapest '86 is a concert film of English rock band Queen's performance at the concert in Budapest on 27 July 1986, starring Freddie Mercury, Brian May, Roger Taylor and John Deacon. The film had a limited release in theatres worldwide on 20 September 2012. The concert was released on DVD and Blu-ray for the first time on 5 November 2012 worldwide, except in the United States where it was released a day later. Sunday Muddy Sunday is a 1978 short documentary film directed by Lidsay Dale. THE LEAST OF THESE explores one of the most controversial aspects of American immigration policy: family detention. As part of the Bush administration policy to end what they termed the "catch and release" of undocumented immigrants, the U.S. government opened the T. Don Hutto Residential Center in May 2006 as a prototype family detention facility. The facility is a former medium-security prison in central Texas operated by CCA, the largest private prison operator in the country. The facility houses immigrant children and their parents from all over the world who are awaiting asylum hearings or deportation proceedings. The facility was initially activated with little media attention or public knowledge. Soon, however, immigration attorney Barbara Hines was contacted by detainees seeking representation, and she became increasingly concerned about the troubling conditions there. She joined forces with Vanita Gupta of the ACLU and Michelle Brané of the Women's Refugee Commission to investigate conditions and seek changes. Their efforts were initially hampered by a lack of openness and oversight within the Immigration & Customs Enforcement (ICE) organization. Undeterred, the three attorneys attempted to bring about changes in both policy and conditions, by making their findings public, encouraging involvement by activists and the media, and ultimately by filing a historic lawsuit. As these events unfold, the film explores the government rationale for family detention, conditions at the facility, collateral damage, and the role (and limits) of community activism in bringing change. The film leads viewers to consider how core American rights and values - due process, presumption of innocence, upholding the family structure as the basic unit of civil society, and America as a refuge of last resort - should apply to immigrants, particularly children. With Our King and Queen Through India is a British documentary. The film is silent and made in the Kinemacolor additive color process. The film records the 12 December 1911 celebrations in India relating to the coronation of George V, known as Delhi Durbar or The Durbar at Delhi. Surviving prints of the film are about two hours long, but the film may have originally been as long as six hours. One source states that one reel remains, showing a review of troops after the main ceremony. "Marie Rivière is a frequent cast member in the films of Eric Rohmer. In 1978, she made her feature debut in his Perceval le Gallois, a poetic adventure drama set in medieval times. Her first leading role was as the wife of a jealous young student in La Femme de l’Aviateur, the first of six films in Rohmer’s series known as Comédies et proverbes. In her documentary En compagnie d’Eric Rohmer Rohmer himself talks to artists such as Arielle Dombasle, Fabrice Luchini, Andy Gillet, François Ozon, Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, Rosette and Noémie Lvovsky about their relationship to him as a director and as a friend." Quoting the description from the 2010 Vienna International Film Festival site. Short Life is a 2012 romantic-drama music documentary film directed by Scott Levy. ¡Vivan las Antipodas! is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Victor Kossakovsky. Cinetrain Bishkek - Moscow is a 2009 film directed by Tomás Sheridan, Aziz Sattorov, Alexandra Marchenko, Ramune Cekuolyte and James Rogan. Valentina Postika in attesa di partire is a documentary film. Grand Canyon: The Hidden Secrets is a 34-minute American short documentary IMAX feature film that was theatrically released on June 16, 1984. The film was created, directed, and written by American filmmaker Kieth Merrill and was produced by Destination Cinema. The music is composed by Bill Conti. The IMAX film was followed by The Making of Grand Canyon: The Hidden Secrets, a 24-minute making-of documentary short released on January 11, 1999, but produced by Destination Cinema in 1993. NGC visualizes in spectacular HD the devastating ecological impact each single degree increase in temperature could have on our planet over the next century. Teoreem Tulest is a short film directed by Margus Paju. Heaven and Earth and Joe Davis is a 2011 documentary and biographical film written and directed by Peter Sasowsky. Civil War: England's Fight for Freedom is a 1997 documentary film directed by Paul Sen. Among the Great Apes with Michelle Yeoh is a 2009 documentary film made by National Geographic in cooperation with FINAS. The film is notable for showing how the Sepilok Orangutan Rehabilitation Centre in Sabah is fighting for the survival and well-being of each ape. The film was broadcast internationally and presented at the Eco-Knights Film Festival 2011 Rita Jahan Foruz is a documentary biography film directed by Ayal Goldberg. Goth Cruise is a 2009 British documentary television film directed by Jeanie Finlay. The film follows 150 American and British goths as they travel around the Caribbean in the 4th annual Goth Cruise. The documentary explores the enduring goth subculture, its allure, and what it really means to be goth. Border War: The Battle Over Illegal Immigration is a 2006 documentary film, written, produced and directed by Kevin Knoblock. The film tells the stories of five people whose lives have been affected by illegal immigration along the U.S.-Mexico border. They are J.D. Hayworth, a Republican congressman from Arizona, Teri March, widow of Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy David March, who was murdered by an illegal immigrant in 2002, U.S. Border Patrol agent Jose Maheda, illegal immigrant sympathizer Enrique Morones, and Lupe Moreno, a female Hispanic member of the Minuteman Project. The film was shown theatrically on approximately 20 screens in the US in September and October 2006. The DVD is being distributed by Genius Products, a video and DVD distributor majority owned by The Weinstein Company. The Los Angeles Times said: "As rhetoric, "Border War" is scattershot and anecdotal, featuring an awful lot of talking but surprisingly little for a viewer to latch onto besides a transmitted sense of general anxiety and outrage, and an insistence that an unspecified "something" must be done to solve this "problem." All Power to the People is a 1996 documentary by Lee Lew-Lee about American race relations and the 1960s Civil Rights Movement and covers slavery, civil-rights activists, assassinations and methods used to divide and destroy key figures. It moves beyond that era into covering Ronald Reagan-era events, privacy threats from new technologies, and the failure of the War on Drugs. It is composed primarily of archival footage and interviews. Interviewees include ex-Central Intelligence Agency officer Philip Agee, Life magazine journalist/filmmaker Gordon Parks, decorated FBI Special Agent M. Wesley Swearingen, and various 1960s political radicals such as Malcolm X and Martin Luther King. It covers both the virtues and faults of these civil rights leaders and activists. Broadcast in 24 countries on 12 networks in the U.S., Canada, Europe, Asia & Australia between 1997-2000. Ladhakh: The Forbidden Wilderness is a 1992 documentary film directed by Naresh Bedi. Waking the T. Rex: The Story of SUE is a 2010 documentary and short film directed by David Clark. Mister Gardenia Jones is a 1942 short, documentary film written by Carey Wilson and directed by George B. Seitz. Pray for Japan is a 2012 Japanese documentary film about the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. Stu Levy produced and directed the film. All of the crew, including Levy, volunteered to make it, and all of the profits from it will be donated to the non-profit organization JEN for their Tōhoku reconstruction projects. The film premiered in Tokyo on March 6, 2012, and showed for one night only in 15 North American AMC Theatres on March 14, 2012. American Revolution 2 is a 1969 documentary on the 1968 Democratic National Convention and its aftermath. Part of the film focuses on the creation of an alliance between the Young Patriots Organization and local Black Panthers. On its release Roger Ebert gave the film four stars, while New York Times reviewer Roger Greenspun was more critical. The film was released on DVD in 2007 and received generally positive reviews. The film was directed by Howard Alk and produced by Mike Gray. Ebert writes that the film was created as a collective effort by the Film Group, a local company that generally made commercials, and released without any individual credits. It has no narrator. Professional Revolutionary: The Life of Saul Wellman is a documentary about the life of Saul Wellman. Mysteries of the Deep is a 1959 short, documentary film written by Roy Edward Disney. Auschwitz: The Nazis and 'The Final Solution' is a BBC six-episode documentary film series presenting the story of Auschwitz through interviews with former inmates and guards to include authentic re-enactments of relevant events. It was first televised on BBC One on 11 January 2005. In the United States, this series first aired on PBS television stations as Auschwitz: Inside the Nazi State in early 2005 and was released, under that title, in a 2-DVD box set, by BBC Warner, on 29 March 2005. Eugenic Minds is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Pavel Stingl. The Making of the Mahatma is joint Indian - South African produced film, directed by Shyam Benegal, about the early life of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi during his 21 years in South Africa. The film is based upon the book, The Apprenticeship of a Mahatma, by Fatima Meer. Genocide is a 1982 documentary by Arnold Schwartzman concerning the Holocaust. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Because We Are Visual is a 2010 documentary film directed by Gerard-Jan Claes and Olivia Rochette. LOST Unraveling the Mystery, will take viewers on an unauthorized, interactive journey, audibly, visually, and MENTALLY, as hard core fans discuss and celebrate the aura and excitement of this classic TV show. From the smoke monster to all the characters you know and love (and hate!), LOST fans take on theories, conflicts and controversies as they attempt to unravel the mysteries of LOST. The Right to Love: An American Family is a 2012 documentary film directed by Cassie Jaye. This Land is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Dianne Whelan and Jeremy Mendes. Solo Entre Cuatro Muros is a 2007 film directed by Alexandra Westmeier. Afrikaner, I is a 2013 documanetary film written by Emma Bestall and directed by Annalet Steenkamp. Using archive sound, satellite footage and film taken by the astronauts, Patrick Moore presents the story of mankind's first journey to another world. The task of telling Apollo 11’s story from a British angle is a challenging one, since most of the domestic television presentation was not saved for the archives. However, Apollo 11, A Night to Remember, part of BBC Four’s Moon Night, has knitted together the remaining material into an effective two-hour documentary. Satellite pictures have been married up with amateur audio recordings, and linked with rarely-seen reports, background films, a couple of rediscovered studio clips, and some new explanatory pieces by Sir Patrick Moore, one of the presenters in 1969. The satellite images, which form the bulk of the programme, cover the main events in America, in the spacecraft, and on the moon. The source tapes are the BBC’s original 525-to-625 line live electronic standards conversions, but because they are derived from an international signal feed, they are lacking the domestic commentary and captions. However, it has been possible to reinstate much of the commentary from amateur off-air recordings, and thereby restore parts of the BBC’s television coverage. This technique has been applied in previous moon landing documentaries, but here it is used much more extensively than before, greatly enhancing the experience. The sound quality of the amateur recordings is not brilliant; usually it is perfectly intelligible, but occasionally becomes indistinct against all the interference from the space communications. A highlight of the programme comes near the start, when we can savour lengthy sections of what must be one of British television’s most compelling commentaries, as Michael Chartlon dramatically sets the scene at Cape Kennedy’s launch site, then guides us through the last 6 minutes of countdown. There are several technical glitches resulting from a poorish satellite link but these do not detract from the occasion. (Wobbly pictures from Cape Kennedy’s control room appear also on NASA’s recordings, so must have another cause.) The launch build-up also features James Burke demonstrating the rocket tower escape procedure, the first of several entertaining, but seldom-seen, colour film items that were played into the live programmes. The Burke / Moore Apollo 11 studio presentation, long thought to be totally missing from the archives, has acquired for itself a certain mystique, and a place among the top ten missing programmes. But now, perhaps for the first time since 1969, we can glimpse one of these famous broadcasts, made on 16th July 1969, as James Burke reviews the launch earlier that day. The minute-long clip, taken from BBC1’s Twenty-Four Hours current affairs programme, is a high quality, 625-line black-and-white video recording. The second of the recovered studio clips, 20-seconds long, is of much poorer technical quality than the first, and appears to be from an amateur recording. It shows Burke signing off for the night after a broadcast probably made in the early hours of Saturday 20th July 1969 (the days of the week are incorrect in the documentary). Michael Charlton’s contributions from Houston seem to have fared better in the archives than those of his London colleagues, and here we can view two examples: an interview with NASA’s George Hage shortly before the critical lunar orbit insertion manoeuvre on 19th July 1969, and a report to camera at 2am on 21st July 1969, about two hours before Armstrong steps onto the moon. It is hard to know why this colour material has been hidden away for so long, (although a very short Charlton snippet did appear in the film The Dish a few years ago). Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins made several telecasts live from the spacecraft on their outward and homeward journeys. Excerpts of these appear frequently in documentaries, but now we can gain a better insight, thanks to the inclusion of greatly extended sections, taken for the... Zzzzzzz is a 2013 short drama film written and directed by Tarik Karam. An Expert is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Giedrė Beinoriūtė. Summer In Narita is a 1968 documentary film directed by Shinsuke Ogawa. Winter ade is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Helke Misselwitz. Ernst Lubitsch in Berlin is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Robert Fischer. Zero Time Zone is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Audrius Juzėnas. Cityboy – The Life of Investment Banker Geraint Anderson is a 2009 International Emmy Award nominated TV documentary in Germany. Dance in the Desert is a 2009 documentary biographical film written and directed by Agne Marcinkeviciute. Triumph of the Nerds is a 1996 British/American television documentary, produced by John Gau Productions and Oregon Public Broadcasting for Channel 4 and PBS. It explores the development of the personal computer in the United States from WWII to 1995. The title, Triumph of the Nerds, is a play on the 1984 comedy, Revenge of the Nerds. It was first screened as three episodes between 14 and 28 April 1996 on Channel 4, and as a single programme on 16 December 1996 on PBS. Triumph of the Nerds was written and hosted by Robert X. Cringely and based on his 1992 book, Accidental Empires. The documentary is composed of numerous interviews with important figures connected with the personal computer including Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, Bill Gates, Steve Ballmer, Paul Allen, Bill Atkinson, Andy Hertzfeld, Ed Roberts, and Larry Ellison. It also includes archival footage of Gary Kildall and commentary from Douglas Adams, the author of the science fiction series, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Cringely followed the series with Nerds 2.0.1, a history of the Internet to 1998, when the series was made. Hunters and Bombers is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Hugh Brody and Nigel Markham. Right to Exit is a 2004 documentary film written by Arthur Babayan and directed by Anna Terean. Well Fished is a 2013 short/documentary/family film directed and written by Corinne Dunphy. Tilman in Paradise is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Julian Vogel. "Although Ny admits that it is very uncomfortable for a traditional Cambodian family to talk about its secrets publicly, Sokly “Don Bonus” Ny allows the audience access to his life during his senior year of high school in this simple, yet powerful video diary. After his father was murdered by Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge regime, Ny escaped to the United States with his mother, grandmother, and siblings. Ny’s family has faced hardship and disappointment in America —Ny struggles to finish high school after failing many classes, his family’s apartment in the projects is a frequent target of vandalism, and his troubled younger brother stands accused of attempted murder. This is not an uplifting story of triumph against the odds, but a harshly honest depiction of a troubled son of an immigrant family in crisis" Quoting the synopsis from ExEAS Krzysztof Kieslowski: I´m so-so... is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Krzysztof Wierzbicki. The Hands of Che Guevara is a 2006 documentary film made by Dutch film director Peter de Kock. The documentary is a search for the severed hands of the Latin American guerrilla fighter, Ernesto Che Guevara. After Guevara's execution in Bolivia in 1967, his hands were severed from his body for purposes of identification. After fingerprints were taken, the hands, and Guevara's body, disappeared. In 1997 the body was found buried under a landing strip in Vallegrande, Bolivia. Guevara's hands were not found in the grave, and it is not clear what became of them after his death, although some accounts indicate they were sent to Cuba by Antonio Arguedas. The film attempts to answer the question of their location once and for all. Vehicular Lunatics was the first Street and Track racing documentary that blurred the lines between legal and illegal motorsport by offering a realistic storyline of events to match the automotive and motorcycle stunt action. The guerrilla filmmaking used in producing this movie is also considered gonzo journalism due to its heavy reliance on sarcastic self-experience by its characters, production crew and Director. The filming and production took place from 2003-2005 in the college town of Gainesville, FL in Alachua County but quickly spread over a network of racers and enthusiasts across Florida, Texas, California and even Europe and Morocco. The film progresses from testosterone and adrenaline filled antics of beater car destruction and off road junk car rally, to enthusiast drag racing, street racing, Gumball 3000 Rally, motorcycle stunting, professional road racing, drifting and burnouts. Along the way, several characters are introduced with candor, intelligence and sarcastic humor - a fresh take on the generalized "Thug Life" or "Ricer" street racing attitude that was growing disproportionately after the release of The Fast and the Furious series. Fortunate Son is a 2011 autobiographical Canadian documentary film by Tony Asimakopoulos, a Canadian film director of Greek origin and produced by Mila Aung-Thwin, Daniel Cross and Bob Moore of the Montreal-based EyeSteelFilm film production company. The film is bilingual in English / Greek with subtitles in English and French. The film documents the complicated, painful relationship of the Greek-Canadian director with his overbearing mother Vassiliki and ailing father Aristomenis, and the patterns of dysfunction they share. After overcoming a severe drug problem, and motivated by a search for happiness with his new fiancee Natalie Karneef, filmmaker Tony Asimakopoulos turns to his roots, his childhood in Montreal, his Greek heritage to reach the process of universal sense of family bonding transcending generations. The film was shown at International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, Montreal's Festival du nouveau cinéma in 2011 and Thessaloniki International Film Festival, Rendez-vous du cinéma québécois and the Los Angeles Greek Film Festival. Public screenings started in Montreal on 1 June 2012. Mountaintop Removal is a 2007 documentary film directed by Michael O'Connell. The film explores how mountaintop removal mining in West Virginia has affected local communities. Filmed over a two-year period, Mountain Top Removal features community advocates, such as Ed Wiley, Larry Gibson, Julia Bonds, Maria Gunnoe, and Mountain Justice Summer volunteers, in their efforts to oppose the destruction of Southern Appalachia's natural landscape. The film includes commentary from Jeff Goodell, author of Big Coal: The Dirty Secret Behind America's Energy Future, geologists Dr. William Schlesinger and Dr. Peter Taft, and also Bill Raney, President of the West Virginia Coal Association. The film won the Reel Current Award at the 2008 Nashville Film Festival. Mountaintop Removal also received a Jury award at the 2008 Wild and Scenic Film Festival, Audience award at the 2008 Woods Hole Film Festival and was screened at The Lincoln Center on Earth Day April 22, 2008. The film is currently being distributed nationwide on PBS through NETA. The films soundtrack includes music by Jim Lauderdale, Donna the Buffalo, John Specker and Sarah Hawker. Eyes On The Stars is a 2013 biography documentary animation film directed by Mike Rauch and Tim Rauch. Dying to Live: The Journey into a Man's Open Heart is a documentary film by actor and filmmaker Ben Mittleman. The film is based on his experiences through open heart surgery while caring for his wife and his mother as they struggle with life-threatening illnesses. A rare and candid TV interview with Martin Luther King, Jr. - unseen in 40 years - is the centerpiece of this timely tribute, featuring exclusive interviews with such notables as Jesse Jackson and Colin Powell that provide fresh insight into the life and personality of the late civil rights leader. John Paul II: A Saint for Our Times is a 2008 biographical documentary film. The Message from Fukushima is a documentary film directed by Hirokazu Koreeda. Dutch Weed is a 2010 documentary film directed by Hans Pool and Maaik Krijgsman. The Finest Hours is a 1964 British documentary film about Winston Churchill, directed by Peter Baylis. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Ajax: Hark the Herald Angels Sing is a football documentary that goes behind the scenes at Ajax Amsterdam football club during the 1999/2000 season. It was sanctioned by the club as they were expecting a successful season but it was one of the worst seasons suffered by Ajax in recent history and the DVD did not show Ajax in good light. The documentary shows footage of the board room and meetings as well as the team's football camp in Ghana. "Who is the greatest swimmer of all time? Michael Phelps? Mark Spitz? If gold medals are your barometer, then maybe, but I'd like to see either of them drink two bottles of wine a day and still swim the length of the Amazon river. This feat is attempted by Martin Strel, an endurance swimmer from Slovenia, who swims rivers—the Mississippi, the Danube, and the Yangtze to date—to highlight pollution in the world. In his fifties and rather overweight, his treacherous journey brings him face to face with many obstacles, including water predators, rapids, and toxic pollution. Spearheading the expedition is Strel's son and manager, who also becomes the film's narrator. As the days go by, Strel's physical fortitude is strained, along with his relationship with his son and his grip on reality. Part world-class sporting event, part circus sideshow, the film follows the colorful characters 3,375 miles over 66 days on history's longest, most perilous swim.Director John Maringouin explicitly understands the many dimensions of Strel's journey and crafts an almost-expressionistic portrait of the event. Utilizing breathtaking and intimate cinematography, he captures the journey along the Amazon and into the heart of Strel's darkness. Big River Man is a psychological thrill ride that works as both a humorous character study and an enlightening environmental message; it has to be seen to be believed." Quoting the description on the 2009 Sundance Film Festival Site. John Paul II Vol 1: From Crakow to St. Peter's Chair is a 2006 biographical documentary film. Unsettled is a 2007 documentary feature film written, directed, and produced by Adam Hootnick, depicting the experiences of six young Israeli adults taking part in the Gaza disengagement of August, 2005. Its soundtrack features Matisyahu and other Israeli and Jewish pop music, and original music by Jon Lee. The movie had a limited theatrical release and received acclaim at numerous film festivals, most notably winning the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary Feature at the 2007 Slamdance Film Festival. Earth From Above is a 2004 documentary film written by Renaud Delourme, and directed by Renaud Delourme. Ears, Open. Eyeballs, Click is a 2005 documentary by Canaan Brumley, about the experiences of Marine recruits during bootcamp. Unlike many documentaries, this film offers no narration nor a focus on central characters, shooting from a fly-on-the-wall perspective. Despite this unusual approach, the film has received very positive reviews overall, especially from film festivals, such as the Los Angeles Film Festival and the San Diego Film Festival. Brumley began shooting of the film with four cameramen, but only a few weeks into production, they quit. Brumley ended up shooting most of the film himself. Brumley himself has handled distribution through DVD sales on his website. In addition, the film has been showing on the Documentary Channel. "Alcides Soares is a 16-year-old AIDS orphan, one of half a million living in Mozambique today. An American television writer Neal Baer and movie director Chris Zalla gave Alcides a movie camera and taught him how to shoot. The result is a moving chronicle directed by Alcides himself. His journey to find a family and make a new life in a country that has been ravaged by AIDS is a story repeated millions of times everyday throughout Africa. As Alcides's story unfolds, we meet the orphans of Reencontro, an organization in Moputo that provides these children with bare sustenance. The Reencontro orphans were also taught photography by a group of American and Mozambican photographers and provided with still cameras so they could tell their own stories about the impact of AIDS on their lives. Their pictures, sometimes tragic, often hopeful and always honest, appear throughout Home is Where You Find It as a reminder that these children's voices must be heard. In telling his story, Alcides finds an elderly woman to live with and, unexpectedly, is reunited with his younger brother whom he hasn't seen in ten years. AIDS tears families apart, but the resilience of children like Alcides can make new families out of tragedy." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Say Goodbye to the President: Marilyn and The Kennedys is a TV program. Our Curse is a 2013 drama, family documentary and short film written and directed by Tomasz Sliwinski. Lost Treasures of the Ancient World: Ancient Egypt is a 2000 documentary film directed by Chris Gormlie. Junked is a 2014 documentary short film written by Na Na and directed by Gus Berger. Sergej Eisenstein, Awtobiografija is a 1996 documentary film written by Oleg Kowalow and Sergei M. Eisenstein directed by Oleg Kowalow. Mrs. Judo: Be Strong, Be Gentle, Be Beautiful is a documentary biographical historical fiction sports film directed by Yuriko Gamo Romer. Lara-My Years with Boris Pasternak is a 1993 documentary film directed by Juraj Herz. The Hollywood Complex is a 2010 documentary film directed by Dan Sturman and Dylan Nelson. Wavumba is 2012 documentary film written by Jeroen van Velzen and Sara Kee and directed by Jeroen van Velzen. Brings to life the diaries of young people who witnessed first-hand the horrors of the Holocaust. Through an emotional montage of archival footage, personal photos, and text from the diaries themselves, the film celebrates a group of brave, young writers who refused to quietly disappear. Seven sexy girls compete in a series of physical challenges south of the border to be crowned the new MAXIMUM WOBBLE girl. All well endowed, the girls engage in X-Treme sports topless attempting to bounce their way to victory. Enjoy the thrills of topless bungee jumping, shirts versus skins Basketball, nude volleyball, the bouncy obstacle course, and many more ways for them to show off both their nerves and their curves as they complete to be crowned MS MAXIMUM WOBBLE. Enjoy the girls behind the scenes action as they complete and play hard in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico and dance nude on the beaches and enjoy the sultry nightlife. The Challenge of Rudolf Steiner is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jonathan Stedall. Entre Nos Mains (aka Into Our Own Hands) is a 2010 film written and directed by Mariana Otero. Tent City is set in the near future during a time of economic collapse. Unemployment is in the double digits, and block after block of businesses and homes have been foreclosed and abandoned. Only the powerful few live in homes, while the rest must survive in the tent cities cropping up everywhere.Matthew Ochoa, a renowned comic book artist in better times, has acquired a home at great personal cost: He has taken a job on a Resident Eviction Squad. Every day, he and his co-workers must forcibly evict unlucky homeowners who have fallen behind on their payments.But things aren’t much better at home. His relationship with his wife Sandra has become tense. Matthew’s 11-year-old son Ivan is clearly furious at him, but refuses to explain why. Despite this, Matthew persuades Ivan to play their favorite game, Trapezoid. Using three random words as building blocks, Matthew and Ivan create a science fiction tale — a story-within-a-story — about a hapless corporate worker who learns to his horror that he is not a human being but is, in fact, a robot created to serve the company’s nefarious purposes.Tent City interweaves Matthew’s life at his job with the story-within-a-story of the corporate robot. Matthew’s workplace becomes increasingly untenable, and he finds himself identifying more and more with the character in his Trapezoid story. One day he must evict an elderly man who will clearly die alone in Tent City. Another day, he and his co-workers burst into a home only to find that its resident has committed suicide rather than face eviction.One night, after finishing the next chapter in the story, Matthew learns from Ivan the real reason he has been upset. Ivan admits that he is ashamed of his father’s new job; that his own best friend at school was recently evicted, and Ivan has become a pariah at school due to his father’s profession. Deeply affected, Matthew must grapple with a painful choice: should he stay at his job and keep his family home, or quit the job and keep his family, even if it means living in Tent City? Kyung-gye Dosi is a 2002 film directed by Hong Hyung-sook. Brakhage is a 1998 documenatry film directed by Jim Shedden. Fuji gakutotai is a documentary and war film directed by Gakuya Nomura. Arrival of Tongkin Train is documentary silent film showing the arrival of a train in Tianjin, China. The film was made by American Mutoscope and Biograph Company in 1901. Gloria Estefan: Evolution Tour: Live in Miami is a 1996 TV movie directed by David Mallet. La faute des fleurs: A Portrait of Kazuki Tomokawa is a documentary film directed by Vincent Moon. Bring'Em Back! is a 2010 documentary film directed by Phillip Donnellon. Die Hüter der Tundra is a 2013 Documentary film directed by René Harder. Beautiful, majestic, powerful and deadly, the tiger has thrived on earth for millennia. But the great beasts have recently diminished to precious thousands in the forests of Asia. Stunning photography takes you into the tiger's realm where you can witness the great cats in their struggle for survival. The Story of Dr. Karve is a 1958 documentary film directed by Neil Gokhale and Ram Gabale. Island of Roses: The Jews of Rhodes in Los Angeles is a 1995 documentary about the dying Sephardic community in Los Angeles. The film shares interviews with some of the last surviving immigrants, who offer nostalgic memories of their lost home, and explores how the once vibrant community of Rhodes Jews in Los Angeles now struggles to preserve its traditions as younger, assimilated generations have to make a conscious effort to maintain the practices of their ancestors. Child 31 is a 2012 short documentary drama written by Cyndi Amaya and Michael Campo and directed by Charles Kinnane. MFI 754(1938) and MFI 812(1939) are Hungarian newsreels. Murder Capital of the World is a documentary film directed by Charlie Minn. The Song Remains the Same is a concert film featuring the English rock band Led Zeppelin. The filming took place during the summer of 1973, during three nights of concerts at Madison Square Garden in New York City, with additional footage shot at Shepperton Studios. The film premiered three years later on 20 October 1976, at Cinema I in New York and at Warner West End Cinema in London two weeks later. It was accompanied by a soundtrack album of the same name. The DVD of the film was released on 31 December 1999. Promotional materials stated that the film was "the band's special way of giving their millions of friends what they had been clamouring for – a personal and private tour of Led Zeppelin. For the first time the world has a front row seat on Led Zeppelin." A reissue of the film, including previously unreleased footage as a bonus, was released on DVD, HD DVD, and Blu-ray Disc on 20 November 2007, by Warner Home Video. Reed is a 2012 documentary short musical film directed by Dorian Warneck. Capo Dio Monte is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Pappi Corsicato. Get Your Finger Out is a 1987 film directed by Wolfgang Ettlich, Klaus Lautenbacher. Ginrin is Toshio Matsumoto's debut film. He made it in 1955 as an English Language PR film, although "a relatively avant-garde" one. The film score was the first by Toru Takemitsu. It was believed lost for many, many years, however a copy has been recently found. It is believed that a DVD of this lost film is forthcoming. Artist on Fire is a 1987 biographical documentary film directed by Kay Armatage. Let Me Die a Woman is a semi-documentary film by exploitation film director Doris Wishman. Coal Money is a 2009 documentary film directed by Wang Bing. UNFIT: Ward vs. Ward is a 2012 documentary film written by Penny Edmiston and directed by Katie Carmichael, Penny Edmiston and Edwin Scharlau. Where I Go is a 2013 documentary film directed by Neang Kavich. Dixie Chicks: Shut Up and Sing is a 2006 documentary film produced and directed by director Barbara Kopple and Cecilia Peck. The film follows the Dixie Chicks, an all-woman Texas-based country music trio, over a three-year period of intense public scrutiny, fan backlash, physical threats, and pressure from both corporate and conservative political elements in the United States after lead singer Natalie Maines publicly criticized then President of the United States George W. Bush during a live 2003 concert in London as part of their Top of the World Tour. Amazon Gold is a documentary film directed by Reuben Aaronson. When The Saint's Go Marching In is a 2012 documentary film directed by Tim Schwartz. Rihanna 777 Documentary... 7Countries7Days7Shows is the third live long-form video by Barbadian recording artist Rihanna. It was released on May 7, 2013 by Def Jam Recordings. An edited version aired on May 6 on the Fox Network. It will feature behind-the-scene look of the singer's 777 Tour, a seven-date tour where she performed seven concerts in seven different cities in seven different countries accompanied with a group of fans and more than 150 journalists. Promoting Rihanna's seventh studio album Unapologetic. Welcome to Durham, USA is a documentary about gang violence in Durham, North Carolina. Come Into the Garden is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Heinz Brinkmann and Jochen Wisotzki. Mahatma: Life of Gandhi, 1869–1948 is a 1968 documentary biography film, detailing the life of Mahatma Gandhi. The film was produced by The Gandhi National Memorial Fund in cooperation with the Films Division of the Government of India, and was directed and scripted by Vithalbhai Jhaveri. Jhaveri also provides the commentary throughout the film. The film is in black and white, contains 33 reels, and runs for 330 minutes. The film was made to seek to tell the life story Gandhi, and his incessant search for Truth. The film contains animation, live photography and old prints to provide an integrated image of his life. The story itself is narrated using mostly Gandhi's own words. There are several versions of the film. There is the 5 hour version in English, a shorter version which runs for 2 hours and 16 minutes, and an even shorter version which runs for an hour. A Hindi version exists, running for 2 hours and 20 minutes, and a German version at 1 hour and 44 minutes. "It’s not easy making a buck. But if you’re young and beautiful and willing to use your body, then Los Angeles is the best place in the world to ply your wares. With that thought in mind, German filmmaker Jochen Hick traveled to L.A. in search of the men who make their living by using their body as an object of desire or the subject of art. The men he interviews include successful sex workers, sex worker wannabes, models, a photographer, and performance artist. There is rough trade actor, model, and former Madonna boyfriend Tony Ward (Hustler White); body piercing performance artist Ron Athey; photographer Rick Castro (who picks up a Santa Monica hustler for a nude modeling session); and several gay porn stars including daddy top-man Cole Tucker, hunky Matt Bradshaw, and dreamy blonde bottom Kevin Kramer. Of particular interest is Ward, a former street hustler, whose cocky sexuality propelled him to modeling and a fling with Madonna, only to see it all destroyed, leaving him alone, masturbating in the tub while the camera coolly gazes. While certainly not hardcore gay porn, this is a fascinating, stimulating, and at times, erotically funny documentary." Quoting the description from the TLA Video site. Middle Sexes: Redefining He and She is a 2005 American television documentary film by Antony Thomas. Romanes is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Annja Krautgasser. Till Then: A Journey Through World War II Love Letters is a 2013 documentary film directed by Vic Del Regno. Leave It on the Track is a 2011 documentary action film directed by Benjamin Pascoe. I Shot My Love is a 2010 documentary film directed and written by Tomer Heymann. Pasion is a 2011 documentary, family, musical short film directed by Carlos P Beltran. The Harvey Girls: Opportunity Bound is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Katrina Parks. Temalørdag: Byfest og blokvogne is the 2000 TV documentary film written by Jørgen de Mylius. Stories of Change is a 2008 documentary film by Kamar Ahmad Simon. The sad truth is lies shape our world more than anything else! Every person on the planet walks around with opinions based on what they think they know, and those opinions direct how all of us act and react. But very few ever question the substance that forms those crucial opinions. From the very nature of truth to how our world began, from morality to religion, from population control to political correctness, from Israel to Islam, from atheism to God... our entire world runs on what we believe. Follow popular actor Kevin Sorbo as he introduces some of the world's leading scientists, historians, theologians, philosophers and authors, as they tackle the world's 12 Biggest lies. War Matters is a 2013 documentary written and directed by Chester Yang. The Same River Twice is a 2003 documentary by Robb Moss, described by the Sundance Channel as follows: “in 1978, filmmaker Robb Moss joined 16 free-spirited friends for a month-long rafting trip down the Colorado River. The excursion was captured in a short film, Riverdogs, a visual celebration of naked, exuberant youth set against the spectacular vistas of the Grand Canyon. Now, a quarter-century later, Moss tracks down five of his old comrades for a witty and insightful now-and-then portrait to see how they have fared after coping with children, careers, responsibilities, ageing and changing attitudes.” Two of the five are Jeff Golden and Cathy Shaw, shown in the 1970s as a young couple in love, and then in 2000, divorced with two children. The film debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in 2003 and was nominated for two awards, the Truer Than Fiction Award at the Independent Spirit Awards in 2004 and the Grand Jury Prize. The title refers to a traditional saying "you cannot step into the same river twice", which dates to Ancient Greek philosophy – see Panta rhei. The Last Kilometer is a 2012 Italian documentary film directed by Paolo Casalis. The film is portrait of road cycling made through 4 characters: Ignazio Moser and his father Francesco Moser, Davide Rebellin, Gianni Mura, Didi Senft. The film tries to answer to the question: Money, business, doping scandals and lack of epic and new champions: are we watching "The Last Kilometer" for cycling? The movie follows the story and an entire cycling season of “the old” Davide Rebellin, 41 years old and still fighting in the peloton after many victories and scandals, and “the young” Ignazio Moser, promising 20 years old son of cycling champion Francesco Moser. The famous Italian journalist Gianni Mura, Tour de France correspondent since 1967, helps us to discover what cycling was and what it has become today, after doping scandals, passion, epic, richness and decadence. Finally, a bit of madness and insane joy is brought into the movie by Didi Senft, better known as “El Diablo”, a living and metaphorical symbol of all cycling fans, with their passion and their enthusiasm. The Last Kilometer is a portrait of cycling. A worth having movie about cycling - PezCycling News Bitter Jester is a documentary starring Maija DiGiorgio, Kenny Simmons, Jody Del Giorno and Heather McConnell. It's a portrait of the comedy world that includes interviews with a multitude of stars including Richard Pryor, Richard Belzer and many others. Torn from the Flag is a 2007 documentary film about the international decline of communism and the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. The film encompasses the tense Cold War era and presents the rivalry of the superpowers during that time. It shows the 1956 Hungarian Revolution as the first catalyst for the future decline of the communist system, and as a remarkable turning point for the advancement of democracy. The film’s Hungarian title is A lyukas zászló. Torn from the Flag was made primarily for international theatrical release and television distribution, and participated in the 2009 Oscar competition in the ”Best Documentary” category. I Ain't Gonna Stand for It is a 2001 documentary short film directed by Jana Boková. Paradise and Fire Oven is a 1959 documentary film written by Herbert Viktor and Robert Vogel and directed by Herbert Viktor. Split Of A Second is a 2012 documentary, short, adventure, and biography film directed by John Boisen and Björn Fävremark. About The Land is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jane Darke. "As David Niven was speaking at the 1974 Academy Awards telecast, a long-haired naked man streaked past him and into Oscar legend. Niven’s riposte — “Probably the only laugh that man will ever get in his life is by stripping off and showing his shortcomings!” — proved wrong. Robert Opel got more than just laughs “stripping off” in his brief but colorful career in San Francisco’s pansexual underground arts world. First as a photographer for underground magazines and a performance artist, then as a gallery owner, Opel promoted the fusion of sexuality and politics in art too taboo for mainstream outlets. He moved queer art off gay-bar walls and into his pioneering gallery, FeyWay Studios. Here he mingled with and presented artists such as Tom of Finland, the Cockettes, Divine, Robert Mapplethorpe, Douglas Farmer and Camille O’Grady, his lover. It was an especially turbulent time for gays: Anita Bryant’s crusade, the Briggs Initiative, the Milk-Moscone assassination and the ensuing trial of Dan White. When Opel himself was shot to death in his gallery in 1979, many believed it was not due to the reported drug deal gone wrong but police retaliation for his performance just days before of a mock execution of murderer Dan White, by “Gay Justice.” Years after Opel’s death, his nephew and name-sake launched an investigation into his life and murder. In this riveting tribute, his findings, dramatized in re-enactments that pay homage to 1970s underground cinema, cry out for answers to mysteries never solved." Quoting Frako Loden from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Time Is on My Side is a 1995 documentary drama film written by Jacques Holender and written by Hugh Graham. 2016: Obama's America is a 2012 documentary film by conservative author and commentator Dinesh D'Souza. The film was produced by Gerald R. Molen. D'Souza and John Sullivan co-directed and co-wrote the film, which is based on D'Souza's book The Roots of Obama's Rage. Through interviews and reenactments, the film compares the similarities of the lives of D'Souza and President Barack Obama as D'Souza presents his theory alleging that early influences on Obama are affecting the decisions he makes as president. The film has grossed over $33.45 million in the United States, making it the fourth highest-grossing documentary since 1982. Reviewers from Time, Variety, and The New York Times have described the film as politically partisan, and unlikely to sway undecided voters or Obama supporters. As of 12 March 2013, the review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes has the film listed with a 26% rating by critics and 73% rating by viewers; it has however been well received in conservative circles. Some sources have also praised the film's production values. The Vanishing Prairie was a 1954 documentary film by Walt Disney. The theme music was given a set of lyrics by Hazel "Gil" George. It was rechristened as "Pioneer's Prayer" in Westward Ho, the Wagons!, a western film about pioneers on the Oregon Trail. Zac Goes Back is a 2009 short documentary film starring Zac Efron and Jason Filardi. Soul To Soul was a concert held in Accra, Ghana, on 6 March 1971, by an array of mostly American R&B, soul, rock, and jazz musicians. It is also the name of a 1971 documentary film recording the concert. My Yiddish Momme McCoy is a documentary made in 1991 by Bob Giges about his 90-year-old Jewish grandmother who fell in love and married an Irish-Catholic named Bernie McCoy. Interfaith marriage has always been an issue in the Jewish community, but in the early twentieth-century it was particularly taboo. My Yiddish Momme McCoy addresses the prejudices the couple faced and the challenges that their divergent cultures presented them. Un silenzio particolare is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Stefano Rulli. The human story behind the massive American effort to eliminate the debilitating effects of the polio virus and the truly untested nature of Salk's original vaccine. Live at Slane Castle is a Red Hot Chili Peppers concert video released in 2003, two years after the release of their last concert DVD, Off the Map. The concert taped was their second show at Slane Castle in Ireland, the Foo Fighters also played as the opening act, and have their own DVD footage of the concert. It was filmed on August 23, 2003 and the DVD was released on November 17, 2003. The DVD shows the full concert except for the Donna Summer song I Feel Love covered by guitarist John Frusciante and "Soul to Squeeze", because Frusciante broke a string during that song. Additionally, a mistake made by Frusciante during "Maybe" has been edited on the DVD. The DVD was received with mixed reviews, but most gave the live footage a seal of approval. Many were upset with the lack of pre-Blood Sugar Sex Magik songs. Nothing from the band's first four albums was performed. Upon release, Columbus Alive columnist Wayne King declared the DVD to be the "greatest live concert of all time." The DVD artwork is also noteworthy for its lack of quality photographs and 'thrown-together' packaging compared to similar live concert DVDs released by other artists. No Maps for These Territories is an independent documentary film made by Mark Neale focusing on the speculative fiction author William Gibson. It features appearances by Jack Womack, Bruce Sterling, Bono, and The Edge and was released by Docurama. The film had its world premiere at the Vancouver International Film Festival in October 2000. Furusato wo kudasai is a 2008 documentary film directed by Kenji Tominaga. Writer's Block is a 2013 sports documentary film written and directed by Ernesto Rodrigues. Adopting Haiti is a 2011 Telly Award winning documentary film directed by Timothy Wolfer. Freeway: Crack in the System is a 2013 documentary film directed by Marc Levin. I Wanted To Make A Movie About A Beautiful And Tragic Memphis is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Laura Jean Hocking Land With Bread is a film directed by Gabriel Broughton. My Voyage to Italy is a personal documentary by acclaimed Italian-American director Martin Scorsese. The film is a voyage through Italian cinema history, marking influential films for Scorsese and particularly covering the Italian neorealism period. The films of Roberto Rossellini make up for half the films discussed in the entire documentary, dealing with his seminal influence on Italian cinema and cinema history. Other directors mentioned include Vittorio de Sica, Luchino Visconti, Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni. It was released in 1999 at a length of four hours. Two years later, it was screened out of competition at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival. Fritz Lang is a 1990 film directed by Werner Dütsch. Ganges: River to Heaven, is a 2003 American documentary film by Boston filmmaker, Gayle Ferraro. The film document the culture and beliefs of the Hindu religion across the Ganges River which has been considered holy in India. Malcolm X, also known as Malcolm X: His Own Story as It Really Happened, is a 1972 American documentary film directed by Arnold Perl. It is based on The Autobiography of Malcolm X. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Marvin Worth and Perl started working on Malcolm X in 1969, four years after the human rights activist's assassination. The pair initially intended for the film to be a drama, but in the end they made a documentary when some people close to Malcolm X refused to talk to them. Worth recalled in 1993, "I mostly went for the public figure, rather than the private man. I aimed for showing the evolution of the man and what he had to say. I wanted to do it with the public speeches." Betty Shabazz, Malcolm X's widow, served as a consultant to the film-makers. She was so pleased with the resulting film, she took her six daughters—who ranged in age from six to thirteen—to see it. Afterwards, one of them asked, "Daddy was everything to you, wasn't he?" According to the Los Angeles Times, Malcolm X garnered "enthusiastic reviews". Time wrote: Roll Up Your Sleeves is an Irish documentary about do-it-yourself counterculture directed by Dylan Haskins. It also examines the relationship between DIY culture and the need for autonomous social spaces, looking at various projects across Europe and how these compare with the situation in Ireland. Utae machiguwâ is a documentary film directed by Yoshitaka Nitta. The Road to MSG: Z100's Jingle Ball 2010 is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Mitchell Stuart. Slide america is a 2006 documentary film directed by Andy Sapp. The Making of Mr. Buechner's Dream is the title of a DVD released in 2005 by the American rock band Daniel Amos on Stunt Records. The 90 minute film was edited together from over nine hours of randomly filmed home movies and footage made while the band was recording their epic 32 song album, Mr. Buechner's Dream. One of the most unusual things about this "making of" documentary, is that it actually shows you the band at work rehearsing the new songs and recording in the studio. Many "making of" documentaries, like The Beatles Let It Be do not actually show you a lot of footage of the band recording what is actually found on the album. For example, many of that film's performances are different takes or rehearsals. In this film however, much of what you see on the screen is the band recording exactly what is found on the album - from guitar solos, to vocals, to bass tracks. The film starts out letting the viewer roam around the band while it's rehearsing in drummer Ed McTaggart's house in California. The band is seen going through several of the songs from the album and working out chord changes. Nonstop is a 1998 documentary film directed by Olafur Sveinsson. Degenerate Art is a 2011 documentary on the art and culture associated with glass pipes used for smoking cannabis. Its title references the German expression degenerate art, an invective used to denigrate modern art during the Nazi regime. The film was featured at the SXSW Festival in Austin, Texas in 2012. Kid Beat Box: Twenty-two Tapes, Edit Nine is a 2012 short documentary and experimental film directed by Stephen Wetzel. Shanghai Fiction is a 2009 documentary film directed by Julia Albrecht and Busso von Müller. Miten Marjoja Poimitaan (How to Pick Berries) is a 2010 short documentary film written by Mauro Fariñas and Elina Talvensaari and directed by Elina Talvensaari. Gettysburg: Three Days of Destiny is a 2004 drama film written and directed by Robert Child. PROHIBITION is a documentary film series directed by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick that tells the story of the rise, rule, and fall of the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and the entire era it encompassed. From 1920-1933, the U.S. enacted a constitutional amendment (the Eighteenth Amendment) which implemented a nation-wide ban on the sale, manufacture and transportation of alcohol. During this period, referred to as “Prohibition,” millions of Americans reacted by turning away from the moralistic universe it apotheosised. Originally broadcast in October 2011 as a three-part, five-and-a-half-hour series on the U.S. PBS network, it was re-cut into a five-part 250 minute series for broadcast on the Australian SBS network. That re-cut version is described here. For the original three-part release, see series ID 251965 on TheTVDB. Interesting Times: The Secret of My Success is a 2002 documentary film by director Duan Jinchuan about China's contemporary politics of democracy and the realities of the one child policy. The director shows how this policy is being implemented in Fanshen, a rural village in Northeast China. This film is a part of the series 'Interesting Times', showing different aspects of modern life in China. 'Interesting Times' consists of four documentary films; ‘The secret of my success’ shows how Chinese politics are implemented in the countryside. 'The war of love' is a portrait of a marriage broker. 'Xiao’s long march' is about the People's Liberation Army. Finally, ‘This happy life’ aims to define the concept of political education in China. Skinhead Attitude is a 2003 documentary about the skinhead subculture, made by Daniel Schweizer. It outlines the history of 40 years of the skinhead subculture, beginning with the most recent versions of the culture. One of the topics it explores is the political component, which ranges from far left to far right. The film describes the transformation and radicalisation of this youth subculture. Arise: The Sri Lankan Metal Music Documentary is a 2010 feature film documentary about Sri Lankan metal music. The film was directed and produced by Naveen Marasinghe and Dinesh Guneratne. The film features four bands which play different styles within the metal music genre: Funeral in Heaven, Fallen Grace, Merlock and Cannabis. The filmmakers show the bands in performance, interview the groups about the music scene and their experiences in it. The film was shot on DV using borrowed equipment in clubs around Colombo and Kandy, Sri Lanka over a period of two years. The documentary was screened by Mathawaada Chithrapata on 15 May 2010, at the Alliance Française de Colombo. As of August 2010, the film has not been widely released to reviewers or the Internet - the filmmakers have stated that DVDs will be distributed at concerts presented by the bands. Unknown White Male is a 2005 documentary film directed by Rupert Murray, covering the life of his childhood friend Doug Bruce, a British resident of New York who appeared to suffer from sudden amnesia, who woke up on a subway train in Coney Island in 2003, not knowing who or where he was. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival 2005. It was nominated for a British Independent Film Award, a Grierson and a Directors Guild of America award. It was also shortlisted for a Grierson and an Academy Award. It was theatrically released in the US by Wellspring and shown on Court TV. In the UK it was released by Shooting People, the filmmakers community whose members made the film and shown on Channel 4 TV who had commissioned the film originally. During the film, medical experts opine that Bruce is suffering from a syndrome called retrograde amnesia, a form of amnesia where the sufferer cannot recall events from before the onset of the amnesia, although it remains unclear how or whether Bruce suffered a trauma which caused the amnesia. Golub is a 1988 documentary film, produced by Kartemquin Films, that examines the life and work of controversial painter, Leon Golub. Inspired by war, political oppression and the fight for Free Speech, Golub and his paintings are famous for their depictions of extreme violence. Also featured prominently in the film is his wife, anti-war feminist and artist, Nancy Spero. The documentary tracks Golub from starting with a blank canvas to a touring North American exhibition and eventually to an exhibition in Northern Ireland. In 2001, the filmmakers revisited Leon Golub in his final years with the 2004 documentary, Golub: Late Works Are The Catastrophes. With his previous work being more relevant than ever in the aftermath of September 11, Golub's later paintings have become less graphic and violent. At one point, Golub admits, "my work these days is sort of political, sort of metaphysical, and sort of smart-ass. I'm playful and hostile." With his wife Nancy Spero still by his side, the documentary captures the final steps of an artist's journey. "n 1978, Toronto poet Souvankham Thammavongsa was born in a Lao refugee camp in Thailand. Based on her book of poems inspired by her father’s discarded scrapbook, Found documents the fragile beginnings of her life. Interweaving photos, home video and animation with Thammavongsa’s compelling poetry, Found is a thoughtful meditation on connecting with one’s past and measuring its worth." Quoting ASD on the 2009 TIFF site. Come Closer, Candy (Czech-South African Dreams) is a 2005 documentary film directed by Pavel Koutecký. Sundance Skippy is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mark Finch Hedengren. When We Were Beautiful, also known as Bon Jovi: When We Were Beautiful, is a 2009 feature documentary of the American rock band Bon Jovi, marking the band's 25th year. Premiered at the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival as a work in progress production, the film documents Bon Jovi's Lost Highway Tour in 2007 and includes interviews with band members. The film is directed by Phil Griffin and produced by Jon Kamen, Jack Rovner and Justin Wilkes. The production company for the release is Radical Media. Chytilova Versus Forman - Consciousness of Continuity is a 1981 film directed by Věra Chytilová. Follow Me is a 1969 documentary film written by Stanley Ralph Ross and directed by Gene McCabe. The God of the Bible is still doing miracles today. Darren Wilson interviews Christians from various parts of the world to show how God is still working. López Street is a 2013 drama family documentary film written and directed by Gerardo Barroso and Lisa Tillinger. Empty Nest is a 2011 documentary film directed by Zaw Naing Oo. Ballad of the Little Soldier is a 1984 documentary film directed by Werner Herzog about children soldiers in Nicaragua. The film focuses on a group of Miskito Indians who used children soldiers in their resistance against the Sandinistas. Herzog made and co-directed the film at the request of his friend Denis Reichle, who himself served as a child-soldier in the Volkssturm at age fourteen in the aftermath of World War II. The film is often cited as Herzog's most explicitly political, though Herzog denies that he had any specific statement on the politics of the Sandinistas. Herzog has said that the film is about child soldiers, and could have been made in any of several countries where child soldiers exist. Alias Ruby Blade: A Story of Love and Revolution is a 2012 documentary film written by Alex Meillier and Tanya Meillier and directed by Alex Meillier. Forty hearts is a 1931 film written by Aleksandr Andriyevsky and directed by Lev Kuleshov. Muhammad Ali: Through the Eyes of the World is a 2001 documentary film directed by Phil Grabsky. Academy-Award® winning director, Oliver Stone delivers a candid, in-depth conversation with one of the most controversial world leaders of our time, Fidel Castro. Stone challenges Castro to explain actions following the execution of three political dissidents who attempted to hijack a ferry to the United States in April 2003. Castro's response and his actions were condemned worldwide, further isolating Cuba. Stone was given unprecedented access, interviewing not only Castro, but many of the prisoners, their wives, leading dissidents and human rights advocates -- all of whom express their views forcefully in the emotionally charged environment of Cuba today.Whether or not you accept Castro´s world view, Stone´s, tough but fair portrait helps to illuminate Cuba's unique and complicated place in the world. Is Castro a moral leader defending his small island against a superpower or is he an ironfisted tyrant who tolerates no criticism? Or is the truth somewhere in between? Private Dicks: Men Exposed is a 1999 HBO TV documentary on the human penis. The film was directed by Thom Powers and Meema Spadola who previously made HBO's 1996 Breasts: A Documentary, a similar documentary on the breast. Baptism of Fire is a 1943 American documentary film starring Elisha Cook Jr. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Tom meets Zizou – Not a Midsummer Night’s Dream is a documentary film by Aljoscha Pause made in 2011. The film deals with the life and career of professional soccer player Thomas Broich. Life? or Theatre? is a 2012 documentary biography history film written by Batya Wolff and Frans Weisz, and directed by Frans Weisz Our Garden of Eden is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mano Khalil. Teach Your Children Well is a 2010 documentary film written by Steven Roche and directed by Gary Takesian. Marmato is a 2014 American documentary film written, directed and produced by Mark Grieco. It is the debut feature film of Grieco. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014, where it won the Candescent Award. September 12 is a 2010 German-Turkish documentary film, written, produced and directed by Özlem Sulak, which documents the accounts of survivors of the 1980 Turkish coup d'état. The film was selected for the 16th Festival on Wheels and the 63rd Locarno International Film Festival, where it premiered. Tim and Susan Have Matching Handguns is a 2013 short documentary romance film written and directed by Joe Callander. Grandmothers is a 2011 short, animation and documentary film written by Afarin Eghbal and Francesca Gardiner and directed by Afarin Eghbal. Dmitriev is a 2014 documentary film written by Natalia Yakovleva and Ivan Tverdovsky and directed by Ivan Tverdovsky. Fuck Cinema is a 2005 documentary film directed by Wenguang Wu. Behind This Soft Eclipse is a 2004 short film directed by Eve Heller. So, Did You Buy It? is a 2012 documentary film directed by Agatha Helena Ascendino da Mata , Anne Aline Santos, Camila Fioravanti, Célia Natália Mietto and Luana Damiana de Almeida Pereira. Inside Mecca is a 2003 National Geographic documentary film by Anisa Mehdi that offers an intimate documentation of the annual pilgrimage to Mecca. Aside from providing insight regarding the universal principles of Islam, this production emphasizes the historical significance of Mecca to both the Muslim and non-Muslim population. Often constituting a journey of epic proportions, it follows several pilgrims throughout their trip, and highlight their physical and mental preparation, the strain induced by the journey itself, and the spiritual ecstasy experienced upon arrival. Back in the Hood: Gang War 2 is a documentary film directed by Marc Levin. Misafa Lesafa: From Language to Language is a 2004 Israeli documentary film that shares interviews with foreign-born Israeli artists and writers about the importance of language and asks how the struggle between their mother tongue and Hebrew has affected their art. The documentary shares interviews with some of Israel's more prominent thinkers and artists. The film won the Best Israeli Documentary award at the 2004 Docaviv Festival. A Tale of Two Cities was a 1946 propaganda/documentary film about the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, produced by the Army-Navy Screen Magazine. The film chronologically, and for the most part, neutrally, describes the testing and the use of the atomic bombs impact on Hiroshima, describing where the bomb was actually dropped, and the damage done to military industrial targets, as well as noting which edifices sustained less damage, like those built with reinforced concrete. An interview is shown with a Jesuit priest, who describes his experience, and notes that he believes that approximately 100,000 people died. Then the film moves on to Nagasaki, telling the audience that U.S. President Harry S. Truman warned the Japanese that he would use more nukes if they didn't surrender. The Nagasaki mission is described, showing the two plants that were the basic targets, and the valley that they planned to bomb, and then shows the mushroom cloud, "The baptism of the aggressor nation" Big Birding Day is a 2010 short adventure film written and directed by David Wilson. Shirome is a 2010 J-Horror, "found footage" film, presented in the form of a documentary. The movie was written and directed by Kôji Shiraishi. Shiraishi also appears in a starring role within the film, playing himself, as do the six then-members of Momoiro Clover. White Terror is a 2011 documentry film written and directed by Daniel Schweizer. Hvem var Christmas Møller? is a 1977 Danish TV documentary movie written and directed by Dan Tschernia. Facing Death: Elisabeth Kubler-Ross is a 2003 documentary film directed and written by Stefan Haupt. Au-délà de Cap-Noir is a 2008 documentary film. Beautiful Sin is a 2013 documentary film directed by Gabriela Quirós. For most of a century, their tragic fate was unclear, shrouded by a government obsessed with secrecy. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the final chapter of one of the most fascinating dynasties in history is finally revealed. Join authors Mark Steinberg (The Fall of the Romanovs) and Peter Kurth (The Tsar: The Lost World of Nicholas and Alexandra) for a riveting look at the end of an era. Go deep into the Soviet archives to see the historic documents that led to the discovery of the Romanovs' remains. In a moving interview, Prince Nicholas Romanov tells of his feelings at finally knowing the fate of his family. Stunning footage brings the glamour and opulence of Nicholas and Alexandra's long-ago reign to life, and their terrifying end is revisited through forensic evidence and declassified Soviet accounts. THE ROMANOVS is the final chapter of one of history's most fabled mysteries. Bicycle Dreams is a 2009 documentary film by director Stephen Auerbach about the Race Across America, a 3000-mile cross-country bicycle race. The film has won numerous film festival awards and had a successful screening tour. Tebraa, retratos de mujeres saharauis is a 2007 Spanish documentary film. Hope Dies Last in War is a 2007 documentary film directed by Supriyo Sen. Bean to Bar: A Film About Artisian Chocolate is a documentary, biographical and historical film directed by Bob Ridgley. King Kong 60th Anniversary Special: 'It Was Beauty Killed the Beast' is a 1992 documentary film directed by Scott Benson. Wicker Kittens is a 2014 sports comedy documentary directed by Amy C. Elliott. The House That Ananda Built is a 1968 Indian short documentary film directed by Fali Bilimoria. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Backs to the Blast: An Australian Nuclear Story is a 1981 film directed by Harry Bardwell. Sanyu is a 2005 short documentary film directed by Robert Frank. Harry Bridges—A Man and His Union is a 1993 biographical documentary film written by James Hamilton and directed by Berry Minnott. Revolutionary Greetings is a 2013 documentary film written by Jonas Newianda and Viktor Apfelbacher and directed by Viktor Apfelbacher. Carbon Nation is a 2010 documentary film by Peter Byck about technological- and community-based energy solutions to the growing worldwide carbon footprint. The film is narrated by Bill Kurtis. ASIN: B0055T46LA and B0055T46G0. Rather than highlighting the problems with use of fossil fuels, Carbon Nation presents a series of ways in which the 16 terawatts of energy the world consumes can be met while reducing or eliminating carbon-based sources. It contains optimistic interviews with experts in various fields, business CEOs, and sustainable energy supporters to present a compelling case for change while having a neutral, matter-of-fact explanation. Among those interviewed are Richard Branson, former CIA Director R. James Woolsey, Earth Day founder Denis Hayes and environmental advocate Van Jones. Much of the content of the film consists of interviews, some are listed above. The list of interviewees also includes Lester R. Brown President, Earth Policy Institute Sean Casten President & CEO, Recycled Energy Development Ralph Cavanagh Lead Attorney, NRDC Bob Fox, Partner Cook+Fox Architects Thomas Friedman, Author & NY Times Columnist Adventures Into Digital Comics is a documentary by Sébastien Dumesnil about the fall of the comic book industry in the 1990s and the emergence of webcomics since then. The film features interviews with various comic book and webcomic artists and authors. Vâyu is a 1994 documentary film directed by Velu Viswanadhan. The period 1914-1918 was a virtual catalogue of art movements: Impressionists, Expressionists, Realists, Cubists and Futurists all contributed images from the battlefields which were both accurate and intense. This unique documentary shows how the first World War transformed the world of art and changed the way images of war are portrayed. "Pablo Escobar, the most notorious and brutal drug lord in Colombia's history, was gunned down in Medellín in 1993. After his father's death, Juan Escobar fled to Buenos Aires, changed his name to Sebastián Marroquín, assuming a new identity to escape his father's dubious legacy. For the first time since Escobar's death, Marroquín comes forward to tell his father's story. With heartfelt honesty, he recounts what it was like to grow up loving a father that he knew was his country's number-one enemy. Unsatisfied with simply relating history, Marroquín requests a meeting with the sons of two celebrated Colombian political leaders who were among hundreds of victims that his father had killed in the 1980s. Filmmaker Nicolas Entel captures the powerful and historic moment when the son of Pablo Escobar and the sons of his victims come together to heal wounds that have haunted them all for decades." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Shadows of Liberty is a 2012 documentary film written by Jean-Philippe Tremblay and Daniel Cantagallo, and directed by Jean-Philippe Tremblay. Love stinks - Bilder des täglichen Wahnsinns is a 1982 experimental film directed by Birgit Hein and Wilhelm Hein. The Alchemical Dream: Rebirth of the Great Work is a documentary film directed by Maxine Rochlin and Sheldon Rochlin. Workingman's Death is a 2005 Austrian-German documentary film written and directed by Michael Glawogger. It premiered at the 2005 Venice Film Festival. The film deals with the extremes to which workers go to earn a living in several countries around the world. The film is composed of six differently titled chapters. The first five depict hazardous conditions of hard laborers around the world and the sixth shows contrasting scenes of youths in a former German industrial complex which had been converted into a leisure park: Heroes – Miners of Donets Basin, Ukraine Ghosts – Sulfur carriers in Ijen, Indonesia Lions – Butchers in an open-air market in Port Harcourt, Nigeria Brothers – Welders in the Gadani ship-breaking yard in Pakistan The Future – Steel workers in Liaoning, China Epilogue – Youths in Landschaftspark Duisburg-Nord in Germany Stocktaking Because Of Closing is a 1990 film written and directed by Bernard Mangiante. The Ways of Wine is a 2010 film written by Christoph Behl,Hernán Belón,Nicolás Carreras and Mauricio Albornoz Iniestra and directed by Nicolás Carreras. Enfants Forçats is a 2012 documentary film directed by Hubert Dubois. How The Kids Saved The Parks is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Robin Moore and Andy Miller. A Place Called Pluto is a 2014 documentary short film directed by Steve James. Global Metal is a 2007 documentary film directed by Scot McFadyen and Canadian anthropologist Sam Dunn. It is a follow-up to their successful 2005 documentary, Metal: A Headbanger's Journey. The film's international premiere took place at the Bergen International Film Festival on October 17, 2007. Global Metal aims to show the impact of globalization on the heavy metal underground as well as how different people from different cultures are transforming heavy metal music. A Long Run is a documentary film directed by Michael Anderson. Dorothy Day: Don't Call Me a Saint is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Claudia Larson. Blood in the Mobile is a 2010 documentary film by Danish film director Frank Piasecki Poulsen. The film addresses the issue of conflict minerals by examining illegal cassiterite mining in the North-Kivu province in eastern DR Congo. In particular, it focuses on the cassiterite mine in Bisie. The film is co-financed by Danish, German, Finnish, Hungarian and Irish television, as well as the Danish National film board. The film premiered in Denmark on September 1, 2010. During the making of the film Frank Piasecki Poulsen is working with communications professional and new media entrepreneur Mikkel Skov Petersen on the online campaign of the same name. The campaign is addressing Poulsen and Petersens notion of the responsibility of the manufacturers of mobile phones on the situation in war torn eastern Congo. The project is collaborating with NGOs like Dutch-based Make It Fair and British-based Global Witness who are also engaged in changing the conduct of Western companies regarding the industrial use of minerals of unknown origin. Flower in the Gun Barrel is a 2008 documentary film focusing on the process of reconciliation and forgiveness in post-genocide Rwanda. The film depicts both the current conditions in Rwanda and the buildup to the genocide in 1994. It is unique in that it illustrates the complex challenges of average citizens attempting to forgive the neighbors who slaughtered their families. It is a testament to what human beings are capable of. The topic of forgiveness, and the difficulty of coming to terms with those who have killed one's parents, siblings, children and neighbors, is a universal theme that comes to life through the example of Rwanda. Our Beautiful Secret is a biographical drama documentary film directed by Angela Peavey. Hell's Angels Forever is a 1983 documentary and music film directed by Richard Chase and Leon Gast. In Beaver Valley is a 1950 American short documentary film directed by James Algar. The film was produced by Walt Disney as part of the True-Life Adventures series of nature documentaries. Great American Desert is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Stephen Connolly. Australian sex worker Rachel Wotton works with many clients who have disabilities. Her work has become the subject of the latest documentary from award-winning director Catherine Scott and producer Pat Fiske. Filmed over a three-year period, Scarlet Road follows Rachel in her relationship with John, diagnosed with multiple sclerosis 26 years ago, and Mark, a client with cerebral palsy. It reveals the therapeutic aspects of human touch and sexual intimacy. This unique documentary gives voice to two men generously sharing moments of sexual self-discovery. Butterflies is a 2009 documentary film directed by Czech filmmaker Ester Brymova. The film won the Alan J. Bailey Excellence Award in Documentary Filmmaking at the Action on Film International Film Festival, Pasadena, California in the same year. Butterflies was the first feature-length film to explore the lives of viral video stars and one of the first indie films to be launched on YouTube for rental. The film stars Olga, Fred, SxePhil, Charles Trippy, KevJumba, Kicesie, Paperlilies, KatiesOpinion, Daxflame, Joe Satriani, Esmée Denters, Michael Buckley, Dave Foley, Renetto, ClipCritics, Nigahiga, and Chad Hurley. The full movie has been made available online on YouTube. Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten is a 2007 documentary film directed by Julien Temple about Joe Strummer, the lead singer of the English punk rock band The Clash, that went on to win the British Independent Film Awards as Best British Documentary 2007. The film premiered 20 January 2007 at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. It was also shown at the Dublin Film Festival on 24 February 2007. It was released in the United Kingdom on 18 May 2007 and in Australia on 31 August 2007. The film opened in limited release in the United States on 2 November 2007. Cigars: The Heart And Soul Of Cuba is a 2011 documentary film directed by James Orr. Stay Home! is a 2013 documentary film written by Chen Shuo and directed by Ai Weiwei. Yes, We Are is a 2011 LGBT, documentary film written and directed by Magda Wystub. "Fun, friskyand wildly entertaining are just a few adjectives that describe this luminous documentary that follows one of the most illustrious queer punk bands: Le Tigre! When the pulsating chords hit your ears, your legs start bouncing uncontrollably. Don’t worry; you are experiencing the vibrant, queer, politically-charged, electro-pop sounds created by a powerful punk trio Le Tigre. Like a rocket blasting off—symbolically and literally, Le Tigre: On Tour grabs a hold of you and doesn’t let you go. This riotous documentary follows the feisty musicians from New York City who make up this explosive band—Kathleen Hanna (formerly of Bikini Kill), JD Samson and Johanna Fateman—from their inception to their oscillating rise to stardom. Their candid interviews delve into how they navigated the rocky waters during the height of the underground feminist punk movement. Their empowering female and queer lyrics and political activism led to them being ostracized by other riot grrrl groups and the media. What makes this electrifying documentary so worthwhile is the often-times uproarious behind-the-scenes footage filmed during the height of their career while on their final concert tour for the album This Island.. Whether you are a fan or new to their music, Le Tigre: On Tour truly captures the heart and soul of three talented artists who transcended a musical movement in an inspirational yet amusing way!" Quoting Kelly Burkhardt from the 2010 Philadelphia Qfest site. From medieval France to present-day America, learn about the work and design that goes into these massive, Gothic structures, from the enormous buttresses to the towering gargoyles to the delicate stained glass windows. Explore the construction and engineering behind these religious monuments and see how little has changed over the past thousand years. Follow the progress of Washington's National Cathedral, the early planning stages as well as the final construction of the cathedral that is larger than Notre Dame and Chartres. Our Voice of the Earth, Memory and the Future is a 1981 film directed by Martha Rodriguez and Jorge Silva. Women's Basketball: The Road To Respect is a 2013 documentary film directed by Elva Bishop. My Mother's Name is Forest is a 2013 documentary film directed by Rachel Noël. Flowers Of Freedom is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Mirjam Leuze. Hannibal Buress Live From Chicago is a 2012 documentary and comedy TV film directed by Marcus Raboy. Most Shocking Celebrity Moments 2010 is a documentary film directed by Emma Clarke. Red-Hunt is a 1997 film directed by Chon Sung-Bong. Oisin is a 1970 Irish short documentary film directed by Patrick Carey. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The American Revolution is an upcoming feature-length documentary film for festival, theatrical, and broadcast release. Free-form, underground radio stations were a powerful medium that connected their listeners with the profound changes of the late 1960s and early 1970s. "The American Revolution" chronicles progressive rock radio station WBCN-FM in Boston, during the years 1968 to 1974, through the original sights, sounds and stories, and examines the station's role in both covering and promoting the dramatic social, political and cultural changes that took place during that era. The film is being produced by the Peabody Award-winning Lichtenstein Creative Media. World Cup: For Whom? is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Jorge Lazarini, Daiane Araujo, Vinicius Brasileiro, Adriana Patricio, Oficina Tá Ligado. My Nappy Roots: A Journey Through Black Hair-itage is a 2008 American documentary film directed by Regina Kimbell. The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom is a 2011 documentary film directed by Lucy Walker. The film was nominated for the 2012 Academy Award for Best Documentary. Never Apologize is a 2007 documentary film of actor Malcolm McDowell's one man show about his experiences working with film director Lindsay Anderson. Standing in the Shadows of Motown is a 2002 documentary film directed by Paul Justman that recounts the story of The Funk Brothers, the uncredited and largely unheralded studio musicians who were the house band which Berry Gordy hand picked in 1959. They recorded and performed on Motowns' recordings from 1959 to 1972. The film was inspired by the 1989 book Standing in the Shadows of Motown: The Life and Music of Legendary Bassist James Jamerson, a bass guitar instruction book by Allan Slutsky, which features the bass lines of James Jamerson. The film covers the Funk Brothers' career via interviews with surviving band members, archival footage and still photos, dramatized re-enactments, and narration by actor Andre Braugher. The film also features new live performances of several Motown hit songs, with the Funk Brothers backing up Gerald Levert, Me'shell Ndegeocello, Joan Osborne, Ben Harper, Bootsy Collins, Chaka Khan, and Montell Jordan. The impetus behind making the film was to bring these influential players out of anonymity. The Lady in Number 6 is an Oscar winning 2013 documentary film directed by Malcolm Clarke. The Lady In Number 6: Music Saved My Life tells the story of Alice Herz-Sommer, the world's oldest Holocaust survivor. She discussed the importance of music, laughter, and how to have an optimistic outlook on life. Herz died at age 110, one week before the Oscar ceremony. Stop Making Sense is a concert movie featuring Talking Heads live on stage. Directed by Jonathan Demme, it was shot over the course of three nights at Hollywood's Pantages Theater in December 1983, as the group was touring to promote their new album Speaking in Tongues. The movie is notable for being the first made entirely using digital audio techniques. The band raised the budget of $1.2 million themselves. The title comes from the lyrics of the song "Girlfriend Is Better": "As we get older and stop making sense...". The film has been hailed by Leonard Maltin as "one of the greatest rock movies ever made", and Pauline Kael of The New Yorker described it as "...close to perfection." Good Hair is a 2009 American comedy documentary film produced by Chris Rock Productions and HBO Films, starring and narrated by comedian Chris Rock. Premiering at the Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2009, Good Hair was released to select theaters in the United States by Roadside Attractions on October 9, 2009, opening across the country on October 23. The film focuses on the issue of how African-American women have perceived their hair and historically styled it. The film explores the current styling industry for black women, images of what is considered acceptable and desirable for African-American women's hair in the United States, and their relation to African American culture. What Happened to Esther is a 2013 documentary, animation, short film directed and written by Jenna Marks. Plastic Planet is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Werner Boote. Los Lonely Boys: Cottonfields and Crossroads is a documentary feature film by independent filmmaker Hector Galán. The film had its world premiere at the SXSW Film and Music Festival in Austin, Texas in the United States, in 2006. It tells the story of the music group Los Lonely Boys from San Angelo, Texas. Hector Galán started filming Los Lonely Boys in 2002 while the band was still performing in small venues in Austin and around Texas. The film tells the story of Los Lonely Boys from early childhood to the release of their album and their first Grammy win. The film focuses on Los Lonely Boys' cultural background, family, and musical influences. It follows their journey as they try to make it in the music industry. It also focuses on the Mexican American culture and history of San Angelo, Texas. The film was also shown at the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival in 2006 and at the Turks & Caicos Film and Music Festival in October 2007. It had a limited theatrical run in 2006 and 2007. It was released on DVD in February 2007 by Xenon Pictures. Birth of a Community: Jews and the Gold Rush is a 1994 documentary directed by Bill Chayes. The film traces the history of Jews and the experiences that tempted this group and others to the American West Coast by the prospect of being financially established by mining gold. Close Harmony is a 1981 American short documentary film directed by Nigel Noble, which won the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject at the 54th Academy Awards. The film chronicles a how a children's choir of 4th- and 5th-graders at the Brooklyn Friends School and elderly retirees at a Brooklyn Jewish seniors' center combine to give an annual joint concert. (2010) More at IMDbPro » ad feedback Before the Premier League and multi-million pound salaries, in England 'football' was a dirty word. The game was in disgrace, the fans, hooligans, the nation, it seemed, were all played out. Then there was Italia '90 - The World Cup - a shot at redemption. But this was no ordinary World Cup and no ordinary time. The manager, Sir Bobby Robson, was under intense media scrutiny, and his team described as 'donkeys'. Yet over six short weeks, through their heroic exploits they united a nation, coming within a heart beat of reaching the World Cup Final. Narrated by Gary Oldman, featuring match action - from Platt's last-gasp winner against Belgium to the silky skills of Gazza and the cool finishing of Linekar - and previously unseen footage, this is the definitive story of England's greatest footballing adventure on foreign soil....so far. The Red Elvis is a 2006 documentary directed by Leopold Grün. Stride, Soviet! is a documentary film directed by Dziga Vertov. The Second Meeting is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Zeljko Mirkovic. Tschernobyl is a 1986 film directed by Rolan Sergeenko. Ray: Life and Work of Satyajit Ray is a documentary film directed by Goutam Ghose. A Sarajevo Diary is a 1993 television documentary directed by Dom Rotheroe. In Tales of the Desert, Gus is hired to run the Tswalu Kalahari Reserve, the newest, largest, private wildlife reserve in all Southern Africa. His job is to “return the Kalahari to itself” by reintroducing indigenous wildlife. Among the animals are endangered cheetah, rhino, wild dogs and sable antelope. Originally aired on Discovery, Animal Planet, PBS and 15 international networks. The Lost World of Tibet is a BBC documentary film produced in conjunction with the British Film Institute. The 90-minute film was broadcast on BBC Two in November 2006. The film is presented by Dan Cruickshank and features footage shot in Tibet prior to the 1950s with commentary from the Tenzin Gyatso, 14th Dalai Lama, and other people featured. This is one of a number of BFI television series featuring footage from the BFI National Archive and produced in partnership with the BBC: The Lost World of Mitchell & Kenyon The Lost World of Friese-Greene The Lost World of Tibet Two Meters of This Land is a 2012 documentary drama film written and directed by Ahmad Natche. Al Otro Lado is a 2005 documentary film about illegal immigration and drug trafficking between Mexico and the United States, addressing issues facing people north and south of the border, though the film mostly focuses on Magdiel, a 23-year-old fisherman and aspiring composer who dreams of a better life in the United States. Al Otro Lado was produced and directed by Natalia Almada and was aired as part of PBS's POV series in 2006. It was met with critical acclaim and received a 71% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It also received the Special Jury Prize and the Best Editing Award at the Cine Ceará Film Festival and was nominated for the Gotham Award for Best Film Not Playing in a Theater Near You. Spine Tingler! The William Castle Story is a 2007 documentary film directed by Jeffrey Schwarz. The Targeted Village is a documentary film directed by Chie Mikami. Humanexus is a documentary animation short family historical fiction film directed by Ying Fang Shen. Albert Schweitzer is a German biographical documentary made in 1957, directed by Jerome Hill. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for 1957. The Making of 'Hatchet' is a 2007 documentary film directed by Sarah Elbert. We'll Always Have Dingle is a 2010 documentary/biography film written by Diane Namm and directed by Geoff Wonfor. The End and the Beginning is a 2006 film written and directed by Eduardo Coutinho. Behold Hawaii is a 1983 short film written by Alec Lorimore and directed by Greg MacGillivray. "At age 84, Alfredo Li Gotti is one of the main film collectors in Argentina. His passion has been intimately connected with friendship ever since he was a boy screening short films for the kids of La Boca with his very first projector, a gift from his uncle. With some sacrifice but also an unshakeable enthusiasm, he was able to fulfill a dream that came from his will to share his priceless collection (almost a thousand films; and more than five thousand movies in other formats): the dream of having a cinema in his own home. He’s been screening films for free in that incredible place for more than two decades. Featuring interviews with other cinephiles, film critics, and Li Gotti’s relatives, Gómez takes us to discover the fascinating world of film collection and to get deeply acquainted with Alfredo’s life: a life that –of course– seems to have been taken out of a movie, but is also one that transcends the screen and gets a universal and entirely human quality." Quoting the description from the 2010 Mar del Plata Film Festival site. Inside Iraq: The Untold Story is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Mike Shiley. Dholer Raja Khirode Natta is a 1973 Bengali documentary film directed and written by Buddhadev Dasgupta. Breast Cancer: The Path of Wellness & Healing is a 2009 documentary film directed by Nina Montée Karp. Smog City is a 2012 documentary film directed by Adam Leao and Mollie Tarlow. Rocked: Sum 41 in Congo is a 2005 film documentary directed by Adrian Callender describing the experiences of Sum 41, as they take a break from the music to join War Child Canada in traveling to the Democratic Republic of the Congo for a look at the African country where the rage of war has held a population in fear since 1998. Before being caught in the middle of a battle between rebel soldiers and government troops, band members Deryck, Steve, Cone, and Dave meet with Congolese children to whom death had become a way of life. Rocked is an unscripted account of an African country in turmoil as seen through the eyes of rock band, Sum 41. The war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has been characterized as one of the world's worst humanitarian crises and the most deadly war ever documented in Africa. The film crew follows the musical group, Sum 41, as they meet Congolese children and youth caught in the crossfire, including child soldiers and victims of assault. Forbidden Voices is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Barbara Miller. Los ltimos hroes de la pennsula is a 2008 film directed by J. M. Cravioto. Chimeras is a 2013 documentary historical drama film written and directed by Mika Mattila. Songs of Heroes is a 1932 black-and-white documentary film written by Iosif Sklyut and Joris Ivens, and directed by Joris Ivens. Nick Name and the Normals is a documentary film directed by Howie Skora. Refugee Diaries is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Hank Levine. Well-fed is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Anna Moot-Levin. Vicios en la cocina is a 1978 short documentary film written and directed by Beatriz Mira. Doula! The Ultimate Birth Companion is a documentary film directed by Toni Harman. Nicolas Vanier, a passionate explorer of the Great North, took on a bold challenge: to cross Siberia from east to west, from Lake Baikal to the Red Square in Moscow, with nothing more than a sled and ten dogs. Standard Operating Procedure is a 2008 documentary film which explores the meaning of the photographs taken by U.S. military police at the Abu Ghraib prison in late 2003, the content of which revealed the torture and abuse of its prisoners by U.S. soldiers and subsequently resulted in a public scandal. The film was directed by Errol Morris. Commenting on the relationship of his film to the notorious photographs, Morris has said his intent was "…not to say that these 'bad apples' were blameless… but… to say that they were scapegoats. It was easy to blame them because, after all, they were in the photographs… Photographs don’t tell us who the real culprits might be… They can also serve as a coverup, they can misdirect us… Photographs reveal and conceal, serve as [both] exposé and coverup". Offers a disturbing look at the lives of the addicted and exposes the dangerous, hilarious and outrageous effects of crack use. 'Rock Stars' is an honest, no-holds-barred look into the world of crack addicts. Anthony Quinn, the director who brought you "King of the Streets", now takes you into the life of "Rock Stars", which focuses on crack users in some of the most dangerous cities in New Jersey: Newark, East Orange, and Irvington. The film offers a disturbing look at the sobering and desperate lives of the addicted, and exposes the dangerous, hilarious and outrageous effects of crack use. Press: "If the streets were talking before, wait until they press play on this one." -The Black Spot, Content Producer for BET.com Flex is Kings is a 2013 documentary film directed by Michael Beach Nichols and Deidre Schoo. Charity Salesmen is a 2010 documentary film directed by Stefan Ludwig. The Odds Against is a 1966 American short documentary film directed by Lee R. Bobker. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Two Nil is a 2012 documentary sports film directed by Pavel Abrahám. Positivo is a 2002 short documentary film directed by Pilar García Elegido. In the Crease is a feature length documentary film that follows the real life story of a teenage hockey team's quest to win a national championship and also stars over a dozen NHL players sharing their own hockey triumphs. The film was produced and directed by Matthew Gannon and Michael Sarner, distributed by Stickmen Pictures LLC, aired on Versus on January 20, 2008 and was released on DVD on October 26, 2006. Quite Contrary! Mary Woronov, My Life as a Cult Queen - From Warhol to Corman is a 2011 documentary film written by Mary Woronov and directed by Francesca Di Amico. From the Heart of the World is a 1990 documentary film directed by Alan Ereira. 17000 Islands is a 2013 experimental documentary film directed by Thomas Østbye and Edwin. When the NASA rovers Spirit and Opportunity touched down on Mars in 2004, they weren't expected to last long—perhaps 90 days, or six months at most. But 90 days stretched into five years, and a short-term science mission searching for evidence of water has turned into one of the greatest adventures of the Space Age. The rovers have trekked miles across hostile plains, climbed mountains, ventured in and out of deep craters, survived dust storms and mechanical failures, and cheated death so often that no one will venture a guess as to how much longer they might last. Five Years On Mars follows this amazing story of two rovers that have explored vast reaches of Mars and may be among some of the greatest explorers in history. Hellfire: A Journey from Hiroshima is a 1986 American documentary film directed by John Junkerman. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Making of 'Away We Go' is a short documentary film. Gbanga Tita is a 1994 documentary short film written and directed by Thierry Knauff. Knitting Nannas is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Rani Brown. Life Stories is a 1980 film directed by Winfried Junge. Towards the Sun is the English title for Idę do słońca, a documentary film about Xawery Dunikowski released in 1955, directed by Andrzej Wajda. Passion & Poetry: The Ballad of Sam Peckinpah is a 2005 documentary film written, directed and produced by Mike Siegel. Don't Cry for Me Sudan is a documentary film directed by Soo-Hwan Koo. This House Believes is a 2009 documentary short film directed by Martin Ginestie. The Boy From Geita is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Vic Sarin. Patti Smith: Long for the City is a short documentary film directed by Jem Cohen. The Hot Shoe is a 2005 documentary film which also reveals the history and development of card counting. Director David Layton interviewed current and former card counters, including members of the MIT Blackjack Team, casino employees and gambling authors and combined it with behind-the-scenes footage of casino surveillance rooms and the MIT team preparing to hit the tables. Layton learned how to count cards and gambled with $5,000 of the film's budget as a "case study." The film reviews the mathematical aspects of card counting and key elements for winning blackjack. Blackjack players interviewed for The Hot Shoe include: Ian Andersen Andy Bloch Anthony Curtis Peter Griffin Tommy Hyland Max Rubin Ralph Stricker Edward Thorp Olaf Vancura Stanford Wong Creatures is a 2010 Tamil short film directed by B. Ilangovan. Desert For Ever is a 2013 film directed by Søren Aagaard. The Spag is a 1962 short documentary film directed by Giorgio Mangiamele. Tigullio minore is a 1947 documentary short film directed by Dino Risi. First Comes Loves is a 2012 documentary film directed by Nina Davenport. Hating Obama is a documentary film directed by Marquis Smalls. Sharaf is a 2012 animation, documentary and short film wtitten and directed by David Aronowitsch and Hanna Heilborn. Voices of the Children is a 1999 Emmy-Award winning documentary film written and directed by Zuzana Justman. It tells the story of three people who were imprisoned as children in the Terezin concentration camp. It was produced and shown on television in the United States. Darfur Now is a 2007 documentary film examining the genocide in Darfur, Sudan. It was written and directed by Ted Braun and produced by Don Cheadle, Mark Jonathan Harris and Cathy Schulman. Executive Producers included Jeffrey Skoll, Omar Amanat, Dean Schramm, Diane Weyermann, and Matt Palmieri. The film is a call to action for people all over the world to help the ongoing crisis in Darfur. Darfur Now premiered at the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival. The film was released in the United States and Canada on November 2, 2007. Granito is a 2011 crime, documentary film directed by Pamela Yates. Step into Liquid is a documentary about surfing directed by Dana Brown, son of famed surfer and filmmaker Bruce Brown. The film includes surfing footage from the famous Pipeline, the beaches of Vietnam, and some of the world's largest waves, at Cortes Bank. This film was Dana Brown's first solo project. Scottsboro: An American Tragedy is a 2001 American documentary film directed by Daniel Anker and Barak Goodman. The film is based on one of the longest-running and most controversial courtroom pursuits of racism in American history, which led to nine black teenaged men being wrongly convicted of raping a white woman in Alabama. The film received an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary Feature. Waterfire: Art & Soul Of A City is a 2012 documentary film directed by Joe Rocco. "In 1990 jeweler Soraida Salwala watched a news report featuring two Asian elephants that had fallen from a cliff in Kwia National Park. One had died. The other was injured. A member of a wildlife foundation, Soraida phoned a call-in number to insure the elephant would be rescued. When she was told it would not, she realized that her status as a supporter of an organization was little leverage in her efforts to help save an endangered species. Years later Soraida opened the world's first elephant hospital, and today leads campaigns against the government for their involvement in elephant trafficking." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. In 1492, there were more than ten million Native Americans in North America. By 1910, their numbers had been reduced to fewer than 300,000. In California, massacres of Indians in the 1860s and 1870s had nearly exterminated the Native peoples in the state.Therefore the sudden appearance in northern California in 1911 of Ishi, "the last wild Indian in North America," stunned the nation. For more than 40 years, Ishi had lived in hiding with a tiny band of survivors. When he walked into the white man's world, he was the last Yahi Indian alive.For young anthropologist Alfred Kroeber, Ishi's appearance was a windfall. Kroeber had been searching for years to find "wild, uncontaminated Indians" who could document their traditional way of life. Through Kroeber's invitation, Ishi left a jail cell and lived out the remaining four years of his life as an informant and teacher at the Museum of Anthropology in San Francisco.Ishi dedicated those years to relating Yahi stories and demonstrating the traditional way of life he knew so well. His quiet dignity and remarkable lack of bitterness toward the people who had destroyed his tribe greatly impressed everyone who met him. Fading West is a documentary film, shot during Switchfoot's 2012 World Tour, directed by Matt Katsolis of Interpret Studios. It follows the band to locations around the world, including the U.S., South Africa, Bali, Australia and New Zealand. In the official press release, it was described as "part rock documentary, part surf film, and part travelogue." In January 2013, Switchfoot released a teaser for Fading West. A new, extended trailer for the film was released onto YouTube on June 24, 2013. The film was released digitally on December 10, 2013. Beyond Bollywood is a 2013 biographical documentary drama film directed by Adam Dow and Ruchika Muchhala. Broken Rainbow is a 1985 documentary film about the government-enforced relocation of thousands of Navajo Native Americans from their ancestral homes in Arizona. The Navajo were relocated to aid mining speculation in a process that began in the 1970s and continues to this day. The film is narrated by Martin Sheen. The title song was written by Laura Nyro, the theme music was composed by Paul Apodaca, with other original music by Rick Krizman and Fred Myrow. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride: Hunter S. Thompson on Film is a 2006 documentary about writer Hunter S. Thompson directed by Tom Thurman. Boteco is a 2012 documentary film written by Henrique Cazes, Ivan Dias and directed by Ivan Dias. Leku Hutsak, Hitz Beteak is a 2012 documentary film written by Bernardo Atxaga and directed by Joxeanjel Arbelaitz Irastortza. MONUMENTAL MYTHS unveils the perpetuated myths told at several American monuments and historic sites. Carved in rock or cast in bronze, America's monuments are intended by those who commission them to impart a sense of authority and an unquestionable truth about the people and events they commemorate. Director Tom Trinley traveled across the country in a borrowed 1965 Airstream trailer and visited several sites to provide the untold, alternative viewpoint of those whose experiences have been left out of history and the landscape. Among others, he visited Fort Pillow in Tennessee, The Purchase of Manhattan monument in New York City, Lincoln's Birthplace Log Cabin in Kentucky, the Christopher Columbus statue on Chicago's lakefront and Mt. Rushmore in South Dakota. Along the way Tom interviewed local residents, tour guides, park rangers and tourists to better understand their perspective of American history and to find out who protects America's myths and why. Flamenco at 5:15 is a 1983 short documentary film directed by Cynthia Scott, taking audiences inside a flamenco dance class at the National Ballet School of Canada. Produced by Studio D, the women's studio of the National Film Board of Canada, the film won an Academy Award at the 56th Academy Awards in 1984 for Documentary Short Subject. The Family of Chimps is a 1984 Dutch documentary film directed by Bert Haanstra. The film is a study of the behaviour of a family chimps in Burgers' Zoo in Arnhem in the Netherlands. The documentary was inspired by a book called Chimpansee politiek written by primatologist and ethologist Frans de Waal. "Hamburg damals: Als die sexuelle Revolution nach Hamburg kam" is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jan-Peter Gehrckens. Rancho Texas is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Pencil Quincy and Justus Pasternak. Beny, Back To The Wild is a 2011 documentary film written by Claudine André, Philippe Calderon, Guillaume Enard, Alain Tixier and Guillaume Vincent and directed by Alain Tixier. Flying: Confessions of a Free Woman is a 2006 documentary film by Jennifer Fox. In six one-hour episodes, Fox travels from country to country with her camera recording numerous candid conversations, mostly with women. Its autobiographical dramatic narrative acts as a starting point to introduce reflections on various social and political issues of a modern female life, including marriage, reproductive rights, divorce, childbirth, sexual abuse, and female genital mutilation. The film is notable for its conversational "Pass the Camera" filming technique and is an example of cinéma vérité. Blue Gold: World Water Wars is a 2008 documentary film by Sam Bozzo, based on the book Blue Gold: The Fight to Stop the Corporate Theft of the World’s Water by Maude Barlow and Tony Clarke. It was produced by Mark Achbar and Si Litvinoff and was narrated by Malcolm McDowell. The film was first screened on October 9, 2008, at the Vancouver International Film Festival. Kocorono is a documentary film directed by Jun Kawaguchi. From Shtetl to Swing is a 2005 documentary film directed by Fabienne Rousso- Lenoir. Unearthing the Pen is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Carol Salter. Ming Tian Hui Geng Hao is a 2014 adventure drama documentary film written and directed by Hongjie Xu. Fixed is a 2011 documentary short action sport biography film directed by Johnny Rutter Impaler is a 2007 documentary film directed by W. Tray White. Stranger With A Camera is a 2000 documentary film by director Elizabeth Barret investigating the circumstances surrounding the 1967 death of Hugh O'Connor. Barret, who was born and raised in the region, explores questions concerning public image and the individual's lack of power to define oneself within the American media landscape. By contrasting multiple perspectives from locals and O'Connor's film crew, Barret weaves a tale of a complexly motivated crime with an insightful exploration of how the media affects the communities it chronicles. The film premiered at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival and later aired on the PBS series P.O.V. Last Days of the Maya, released to DVD under the title Royal Maya Massacre, is a 2005 television documentary film in the television series Explorer, which currently airs on the National Geographic Channel. The documentary tracks the discovery and excavation of two graves beneath the ruins of Cancuén, once a prominent Maya city-state. The archaeological finds documented are notable as the National Geographic magazine presents them as evidence of the beginning of the end of the Maya city-states. Zidane, A 21st Century Portrait is a 2006 French documentary film focusing on the playing style of the French football player Zinedine Zidane. Angola 3: Black Panthers and the Last Slave Plantation is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jimmy O'Halligan. Catedral is a French-Italian documentary film directed by Aliocha and by Alessio Rigo de Righi. The Best Damn Tour: Live in Toronto is a live music DVD from Franco-Canadian singer Avril Lavigne. It was shot at the sold-out Air Canada Centre concert, in Toronto, Canada on April 7, 2008 during the Best Damn Tour. It was released on September 9, 2008 in North America and on September 5, 2008 in Europe. In the USA there were clean and explicit versions of the DVD. As Time Goes By is a 1997 documentary film by the Hong Kong director Ann Hui. The film, part of the Taiwan-produced series "Personal Memoir of Hong Kong", is both a self-portrait and a depiction of Hong Kong during the 40 years preceding the handover by the United Kingdom to China. It Got Better is a 2014 documentary film directed by Heather Ross. Spaceship is a 2012 short documentary drama film written and directed by Alex Taylor. Vietnam: Ghosts of War is a 2004 documentary tv movie written and directed by Michael Maclear. Between Earth and Sky is a 2010 documentary film directed by Joseph Péaquin. LaDonna Harris: Indian 101 is a biographical film directed by Julianna Brannum. Lolita: Slave to Entertainment is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Tim Gorski. The moving story of the last generation of Holocaust survivors who travel to Poland with thousands of teenagers from around the world to revisit the sites of the Holocaust and retrace the Death March from Auschwitz to Birkenau. The Fantasy Film Worlds of George Pal is a documentary film about Academy Award winning producer/director George Pal. It was written, directed, and produced by Arnold Leibovit and released in 1985. The film was premiered at the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences as part of the annual George Pal Lecture on Fantasy in Film. It follows Pal’s career, beginning with his early life in Hungary and Germany, and covering his progression from cartoon artist to creator of stop-motion animated short films to full length feature motion pictures. Pal was a visionary and innovator in the world of motion pictures, especially in the area of stop motion animation, which he pioneered. His work earned him eight Academy Awards and served as an inspiration for Gene Roddenberry, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas, among others. The film includes interviews with Pal's cast members, crew, and peers, as well as Pal himself. It was released on DVD on August 29, 2000. If All Goes Wrong is a feature-length documentary about The Smashing Pumpkins, which chronicles the band's residencies at The Orange Peel in Asheville and The Fillmore in San Francisco in summer 2007. It was screened, in competition, at Ghent Film Festival in October 2008. It also screened in select theaters in the United States on November 6, 2008, as well as in other countries, including the United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, Australia and New Zealand. The documentary covers Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan's attempts to write and debut new music at the residencies, as well as the revival of the band with new members. Much of the documentary deals with the struggle to remain relevant as a band, both artistically and commercially. The documentary was released as part of a two-disc DVD set. The first disc contains the documentary, as well as Voices of the Ghost Children, a featurette about the band's fans, and an interview with The Who guitarist Pete Townshend. The second disc contains 15 songs recorded at various points during the residency, all mixed in surround sound with five songs recorded during rehearsals on the floor of the venue included. Deep City is a 2013 documentary film written by Dennis Scholl and directed by Chad Tingle, Dennis Scholl and Marlon Johnson. The Notebooks of Memory is the third documentary film in a trilogy by Anne Aghion examining the aftermath of the Rwandan Genocide. Arrival Of Prince M. And The 40th Birthday Of King Charles is a 1932 short documentary film directed by Tudor Posmantir. St-Henri, The 26th of August is a documentary film written by Shannon Walsh and Denis Valiquette and directed by Shannon Walsh, Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette, Richard Brouillette, Tracey Deer, Claude Demers, Halima Elkhatabi, Sylvain LEspérance, Caroline Martel, Amy Miller, Kaveh Nabatian, Denis Valiquette, Karen Vanderborght, Fabien Côté, Yanie Dupont-Hébert, Julien Fontaine, Paul Kell and Brett Story. My House Without Me is a 2012 documentary, short and drama film written and directed by Magdalena Szymkow. There Is No Direction is a 2005 short documentary directed by Sarah Bertrand. Man with a Movie Camera is an experimental 1929 silent documentary film, with no story and no actors, by Soviet director Dziga Vertov, edited by his wife Elizaveta Svilova. Vertov's feature film, produced by the film studio VUFKU, presents urban life in the Soviet cities of Kiev, Kharkov, Moscow and Odessa. From dawn to dusk Soviet citizens are shown at work and at play, and interacting with the machinery of modern life. To the extent that it can be said to have "characters," they are the cameramen of the title, the film editor, and the modern Soviet Union they discover and present in the film. This film is famous for the range of cinematic techniques Vertov invents, deploys or develops, such as double exposure, fast motion, slow motion, freeze frames, jump cuts, split screens, Dutch angles, extreme close-ups, tracking shots, footage played backwards, stop motion animations and a self-reflexive style. Time Apart: A History of Hope is a 2008 documentary film by Rachel Bower and Warren Brown. Principal photography was done in Romania, Israel and Ukraine. The film received press coverage by Breakfast Television, CBC radio, CTV News, and The Chronicle Herald newspaper. Every Everything: The Music, Life & Times of Grant Hart is a 2013 documentary film by Gorman Bechard that chronicles the life of Husker Du drummer/singer/songwriter Grant Hart. The film made its American festival debut in October 2013 at the Raindance Festival. Tal R: The Virgin is a 2013 documentary short biography film written and directed by Daniel Dencik. Wilco Live: Ashes of American Flags is a live performance DVD by the American alternative rock band Wilco. The film was released exclusively to independent record stores through Nonesuch Records on April 18, 2009, in coordination with Record Store Day. The wide-scale release of the DVD was April 28, 2009. Ashes was assembled by longtime collaborators Brendan Canty and Christoph Green of Trixie Films, who previously worked on frontman Jeff Tweedy's solo DVD Sunken Treasure: Live in the Pacific Northwest. The live performances were recorded in February and March 2008 at Washington D.C.'s 9:30 Club, Nashville's Ryman Auditorium, Mobile's Mobile Civic Center, New Orleans' Tipitina's, and Tulsa's Cain's Ballroom. The DVD also features a Weblink, which allows the owner to download MP3s of the all 20 tracks on the DVD. Prisoners of Beckett is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Mishka Saal. California State of Mind: The Legacy of Pat Brown is a 2011 documentary film written by Laura Nix and Sascha Rice and directed by Sascha Rice. Milosc is a 2013 documentary film written by Filip Dzierzawski, Anna Szymczak and directed by Filip Dzierzawski. Ghost Exchange is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Camilla Sullivan. The Most Dangerous Science is a 1995 documentary film directed by Wes Skiles. Borowitchi is a 1996 documentary film written by Victor Kossakovsky and directed by Viola Stephan. Tschuss DDR! is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Krzysztof Czajka. I Used To Be Happy is a 1990 documentary film directed by written by Rolf Richter and Eduard Schreiber and directed by Rolf Richter. WWII in HD: The Air War is a 2010 documentary history war film directed by Sammy Jackson and written by Bruce Kennedy, Alec Michod and Liz Reph. The Emblazoned Apparitions is a 2013 documentary film directed by Philip Solomon. A highly entertaining program which tracks the loveable, expressive mutt's rise from a California animal shelter to a long-running television program and finally, to phenomenal movie stardom! Mount Nemrud: The Throne of the Gods is a 2000 film written and directed by Tolga Örnek. The World Within: C.G. Jung in His Own Words is a 1990 documentary film directed by Suzanne Wagner. Moro no Brasil is a 2002 documentary film. Morning Sun is a 2003 documentary film by Carma Hinton about the Cultural Revolution in China. The film uses archival and propaganda footage from the era as well as interviews with Red Guard participants and victims to explore the events and effects of the Cultural Revolution. In the United States, the film garnered largely positive reviews. It won the American Historical Association John E. O'Connor Film Award in 2004 and was nominated or a finalist in regards to a handful of other awards and film festivals. Window of the Soul is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Walter Carvalho and João Jardim. War By Other Means is a 1992 documentary film by John Pilger and David Munro. See the eye-popping new giant-screen film Adventures in Animation 3D and be transported into the awe-inspiring world of virtual actors--animated, computer-generated, three-dimensional characters that are so true-to-life, they may be destined to be the movie stars of tomorrow. Hele Danmarks Otto is the 1994 TV Documentary film. Pony Excess is a documentary film directed by Thaddeus D. Matula that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. The Man with the Golden Soles is a Syrian documentary film by the director Omar Amiralay. The film is about the Lebanese Prime minister Rafic Hariri. At the time Hariri, a businessman and a multimillionaire, was the Lebanese opposition leader after serving as prime minister for 8 years. The film explores the paradoxes of power and the delicate relationship between with the critical intellectual. Amato: A Love Affair with Opera is a 2001 Documentary film directed by Stephen Ives. Featuring video footage of the KGB's bizarre psychic experiments and KGB ghost hunters and the complete story and facts surrounding the 1947 Roswell UFO crash. This DVD thoroughly explores the worldwide phenomenon that is the Black Eyed Peas. When discussing the characterization of the group, status-quo is a term that will more than likely NOT come up during the conversation. As a matter of fact, judging from their distinctive sound and style, one would probably be safe to assume that outside the box is the only place they feel comfortable. The Black Eyed Peas have been able to successfully dodge hip hop's many pigeon-holes and firmly establish themselves inside a personalized niche amongst the materialism and violence that often saturates rap music. Killing in the Name is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Jed Rothstein. "Ashraf Al-Khaled was celebrating the happiest day of his life when a suicide bomber walked into his wedding and killed his father and twenty-six other family members in front of his eyes. Now, he's rising from horrific tragedy to take an unprecedented step––breaking the code of silence in the Muslim community by speaking out against terrorism. Killing in the Name follows Ashraf's quest to understand what gives rise to terrorism and expose its true costs. From an Al-Qaeda recruiter, to a militant behind one of the world's worst terrorist attacks, to a madrassa full of boys ready for jihad, Ashraf takes us on a journey around the world to see if one man can speak truth to terror." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Love Free or Die: How the Bishop of New Hampshire is Changing the World is a 2012 documentary film directed by Macky Alston. Beyond The Echo Of The Drum is a 2012 short documentary drama music film directed by Lori Webster. The Seed of Faith is a 2005 biographical documentary film written and directed by Brian Messner. A Story of a Deportee Exiled by Her Own Father is a 2011 documentary short film written by Andrius Blaževičius and directed by Andrius Blaževičius and Mindaugas Sruogius. Apocalypse: A Bill Callahan Tour Film is musical documentary film directed by Hanly Banks. Traveller Ian Wright The Color of Moonlight is a 2013 short, biographical, documentary film directed by Naga Kataru. Body of God is a 2013 documentary biography film directed and written by Jouni Hokkanen. Directed by William Wyler is a 1986 documentary film directed by Aviva Slesin. A Crude Awakening: The Oil Crash is an award-winning documentary film about peak oil, produced and directed by Basil Gelpke and Ray McCormack. An Honest Living is a drama documentary film directed by Jordan Freese. I-ology is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Woody Woodward. The Runaway Troupe of the Cartesian Theater is a 2013 short documentary mystery film written and directed by Lior Shamriz. "In early August of 2006, three Mexican fishermen were rescued from the sea. They were found near the Marshall Islands in the Pacific Ocean, more than 5,000 miles from home. After an accident on their boat, they were swept away and drifted for nine months and nine days. Once their identity was established, their story went around the world. In 9 Months 9 Days, journalists and camera crews are waiting for them when they come ashore. They explain that they survived by eating raw fish and birds, and by drinking rainwater they collected in empty gas tanks -- not to mention their faith in God. They are received as heroes, but it does not take long for people to start doubting the truth of their story. While some say they are drug couriers, an American publisher is convinced that a miracle has occurred, and that God has called on him to adapt their story for the screen. The fishermen sign a movie deal and a new adventure begins, one in which the danger is coming from a very different perspective. With the help of archive footage and interviews, this documentary reconstructs their tale." Quoting the description from the 2009 IDFA site. True Way of Being is a 2010 film written and directed by Hugo Gamarra. ¡Ojalá que te mueras! is a 1997 documentary film directed by Karl Lenin González Davis. The Road to Bresson is a 1984 Dutch documentary film directed by Leo De Boer and Jurriën Rood. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1984 Cannes Film Festival. Todd McFarlane: The Devil You Know is a 2001 short documentary biography film directed by Kenton Vaughan. Drömmen Om Maremma is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jannik Splidsboel. Everest Unmasked is a 1978 documentary film directed by Leo Dickinson. Audrey's Beard is a 2002 short documentary film directed by Alec Butler. The Pied Piper of Cleveland: A Day in the Life of a Famous Disc Jockey is an American musical documentary film produced in the fall of 1955 documenting the career of disc jockey Bill Randle. Arthur Cohen directed the film, which was produced by Bill Randle himself. Included in the film was live footage shot at several live shows at local high schools and auditoriums on and around October 20, 1955. Performers featured included Elvis Presley, Bill Haley and His Comets, Pat Boone, LaVern Baker, Roy Hamilton, Johnnie Ray and others. This was the first film Presley ever appeared in, and is the "movie short" referred to by Randle when he introduced Presley on his first national TV appearance on Stage Show in early 1956. It was Bill Haley's second film appearance after his group appeared in the 1954 short film, Round Up of Rhythm. A plaque commemorating one of the filmed performances is located at Brooklyn High School in the Cleveland area of Ohio, and was installed by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The original forty-eight minute film was supposed to be cut down to a twenty minute "short" for national distribution, but never made it that far. The Sydney Convicts is a 2010 biographical sport drama documentary film written by Olaf Winkler and directed by Dirk Lienig. Horns and Halos, a documentary film directed by Suki Hawley and Michael Galinsky, is primarily about the difficult road the author and publisher travelled to bring Fortunate Son, a controversial biography of George W. Bush to bookshelves again. Everyday Sunshine: The Story of Fishbone is a 2010 documentary musical film written and directed by Lev Anderson and Chris Metzler. Femmes Fatales: Sharon Stone is a documentary biographical film directed by Briana Beukenkamp. Making Michael Jackson's Thriller is a 1983 documentary film. Four Short Films is a 2006 documentary film written by Jean-Luc Godard, Georges Bataille and Henri Bergson and directed by Jean-Luc Godard and Anne-Marie Miéville. Sitzfleisch is a 2014 film directed by Lisa Weber. Throughout the history of evolution, five great catastrophes have affected the earth’s surface. Each caused massive die-offs, with many species going extinct and, after each of them, life had to re-organize itself around the surviving species. Today, 27,000 species disappear each year, a figure that equals or exceeds the rate of die-offs that devastated the earth during the previous extinction processes. Are we facing the sixth extinction? Are human beings responsible for this ecological disaster? "Hasta la vista, Hollywood! Welcome to the wild and wacky world of Nollywood, Nigeria’s explosive homegrown movie industry, where Jesus and voodoo vie for screen time. Lancelot Oduwa Imasuen, known in Lagos as “Da Governor,” is one of the most influential men in Nollywood, a term coined in the early '90s for the world’s fastest-growing national cinema, surpassed only by its American and Indian counterparts. Undeterred by miniscule budgets, Da Governor is one of a cadre of resourceful filmmakers creating a garish, imaginative, and wildly popular form of B-movie that has frenzied fans begging for more. Among the bustling stalls of Lagos’s Idumato market, films are sold, and budding stars are born. Creating stories that explore the growing battle between traditional mysticism and modern culture, good versus evil, witchcraft and Christianity, Nollywood auteurs have mastered a down-and-dirty, straight-to-video production formula that has become the industry standard in a country plagued by poverty. Nollywood is tapping a national identity where proud Africans are telling their own stories to a public hungry to see their lives on screen. Peppered with outrageously juicy movie clips and buoyed by a rousing score that fuses Afropop and traditional sounds, Nollywood Babylon celebrates the distinctive power of Nigerian cinema as it marvels in the magic of movies." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Bodysong is a 2003 documentary about human life and the human condition directed by Simon Pummell. The entire film has no dialogue, and is set to a score composed by Jonny Greenwood. The Bodysong soundtrack album was Greenwood's first solo release as well as his first film score. Ladies in Blue is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Claude Demers. Take a walk through our Nation's Capital with Speaker Newt Gingrich and his wife, Callista Gingrich. From the National Archives to Arlington National Cemetery, this film illustrates the importance of our Creator to our nation's founders and their successors.Hear from best-selling author Walter Isaacson, Attornery General Edwin Meese III, authors and historians H.W. Brands and Douglas Brinkley, Ambassador and author Michael Novak and Wallbuilders President David Barton.Based on the New York Times bestseller, REDISCOVERING GOD IN AMERICA reminds us all that America is indeed "One Nation Under God." Michelle Steinberg is a 2014 documentary film directed by Michelle Steinberg. The Wisdom to Survive: Climate Change, Capitalism & Community is a documentary and hostorical film directed by John Ankele and Anne Macksoud. Battlestar Galactica: The Journey is a 2009 film documentary. Workers Leaving the Googleplex is a 2011 film directed by Andrew Norman Wilson. Stephen Fry: 50 Not Out was a one-off, one-hour documentary/biography about Stephen Fry released in 2007 by the BBC, celebrating Stephen Fry's fiftieth birthday. There were many people who were interviewed to talk about Stephen, some of them were Clive Anderson, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Kenneth Branagh, Jo Brand, Russell Brand, Ronnie Corbett, Richard Curtis, Alan Davies, Ben Elton, Phill Jupitus, Hugh Laurie, Nigella Lawson, John Lloyd, Michael Parkinson, Prince Charles, Jonathan Ross, J.K. Rowling, John Sessions, Michael Sheen, Imelda Staunton, Nick Symons, Emma Thompson, Robert Webb. The show was released as a part of a dedicated two nights of programming, called Stephen Fry Weekend to Fry on the 17th and 18 August 2007. 50 Not Out was on the first night. There was also a second night which was composed of programs selected by Fry, as well as a 60-minute interview with Mark Lawson and a half-hour special, Stephen Fry: Guilty Pleasures. Battle Spirit is a documentary biographical historical fiction film directed by Peter Tang. Take Us Home is a 2012 documentary film directed by Aileen LeBlanc and Orly Malessa. El Vals De Los Inútiles is a 2013 drama film written and directed by Edison Cájas. Inti-Illimani: Where Clouds Sing is a 2011 documentary film directed by Paolo Pagnoncelli and Francesco Cordio. Bangkok Girl is a documentary film that was both produced and directed by Jordan Clark. It is a low-budget film, having cost $10,000 to produce, and takes sex tourism in Bangkok as its subject. Bangkok Girl is 43 minutes long and focuses on Pla, a bargirl who is 19 years old and who guides Clark through the city. The film explores Pla's background and how she came to be where she is. Pla began working as a bargirl at the age of 13, and, while she had managed to avoid being prostituted up until the point that the documentary was filmed, the film suggests that she will eventually be forcibly prostituted. In November 2005, the film aired on "The Lens", a program on Canada's CBC Television. Sweden's Sveriges Television also aired the film. In 2011, Tara Teng, a Canadian contemporary abolitionist who was Miss Canada at the time, said that her first impetus to combat human trafficking came from watching Bangkok Girl. In one scene of the film, Pla looks into the lens of the camera and says "No one cares about me." Teng said that this line changed her life. Women/Pioneers is a 2013 documentary film directed by Michal Aviad. Lunch is a documentary and short film directed by Donna Kanter. Kaku Koto no Omosa – Sakka Satou Yasushi is a film directed by Hidetaka Inazuka. Switchfootage are two documentary DVDs based about the behind-the-scenes life of the alternative rock band Switchfoot. They were funded and distributed entirely by the band Switchfoot with help from E.E. Kennedy for the first one and Andy Barron for the second. O mestre e o Divino is a documentary historical fiction film directed by Tiago Campos Torres. The Garden Spider is a 1952 Italian short documentary film directed by Alberto Ancilotto. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Front Man is a 2014 documentary, biographical, comedy and musical film directed by Paul Devlin. The 78 Project Movie is a 2014 documentary and music film written by Alex Steyermark and Lavinia Jones Wright and directed by Alex Steyermark. Another Romance of Celluloid is a 1938 short documentary film, narrated by Frank Whitbeck, which goes behind the scenes to look at how film is developed and processed. The film was produced as a follow-up to the studio's Romance of Celluloid. 18-Foot People is a 1982 documentary film. Slippage is a 2007 short historical documentary film directed by Ali Cherri. Full-Time Ministry is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Helen Hood Scheer. Vodka Factory is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Jerzy Sladkowski. Samba On Your Feet is a documentary film by Eduardo Montes-Bradley. The documentary goes behind the scenes of Samba and Carnival to reveal the cultural clash that gave birth to a new tradition in Rio de Janeiro. Overdraft is a 2013 Telly Award winning film. Kookaburra Love is a 2013 romantic short film written and directed by Sjoerd Oostrik. Land of Giants: A 'Walking with Dinosaurs' Special is a short documentary film directed by Janes Harper. Mayor of the Sunset Strip is a 2003 documentary film on the life of Rodney Bingenheimer directed by George Hickenlooper, and produced by Chris Carter. History of Virginity is a 2012 short, documentary, animated film written by Michèle Wannaz, Martin Witz, Mirjam von Arx and directed by Sophie Haller. Gone is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Gretchen Morning and John Morning. "What would you do if you got a call that your grown son had mysteriously vanished while living abroad? In this riveting, confessional documentary, retired New York cop Kathy Gilleran describes her heartrending journey. In her search for her missing gay son in Vienna, Austria, Gilleran encounters a homophobic police force, unexpected discrepancies in the investigation, and suspicious circumstances. This is her story—a mother’s determination to find truth or simply an answer." Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. Thin Ice is a 2013 documentary film following geologist Simon Lamb on a search to understand the science behind climate change. This is achieved by traveling the world and meeting a range of scientists, from biologists to physicists, who are investigating the climate. The film's conclusion emphasises the scientific consensus on human-induced climate change. The film was a joint initiative between Oxford University and Victoria University of Wellington, and premiered around the world on 22 April 2013, which is Earth Day. New Scenes from America is a 2003 documentary film directed by Jørgen Leth. Sex Is ... is a 1993 documentary film directed by Marc Huestis. Half Life: A Parable for the Nuclear Age is a 1985 Australian documentary film directed by Dennis O'Rourke, concerning the American Castle Bravo nuclear testing at the Marshall Islands in 1954. The film features interviews with residents of the nearby Rongelap and Utirik Atolls who were affected by nuclear fallout from the tests. Unlike in previous nuclear tests and despite the considerably more powerful nuclear explosion involved, these residents were not relocated to a safer location. Declassified American military footage is included in the production. Mobilize: A Film About Cell Phone Radiation is a 2014 documentary film directed by Kevin Kunze, produced by Kunze and Devra Lee Davis, and featuring interviews with Mark Leno, Steve Wozniak, and many others. Mobilize investigates the cellphone industry and the issue of cellphone radiation and the long-term health effects. The includes interviews with Apple's co-founder Steve Wozniak and other major cellphone engineers and scientists. The film also examines politics and the cellular industry through accounts from California Senator Mark Leno and California Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, as well as Nick Mavodones, former mayor of Portland, Maine. Talking Guitars is a 2007 documentary music film written and directed by Claire Pijman. All My Life - Cartola is a 2007 documentary, bigraphical and music film written and directed by Lírio Ferreira and Hilton Lacerda. Incident by a Bank is a 2010 short crime film written and directed by Ruben Östlund. Beyond Metabolism is a 2014 documentary short film directed by Stefanie Gaus and Volker Sattel. Crimson Sails is a 2000 film written by Petr Forman and Alexander Green and directed by Petr Forman and Miroslav Janek. I Am Chicago is a photo and video documentary project by Adam Novak and Sara Collins started in 2009. It consists of full body portraits and video footage of pedestrians in over 30 neighborhoods of Chicago. The photographers used a rental moving truck as a portrait studio utilizing natural light from the translucent roof of the truck. The project attracted the attention of the Chicago Reader in early 2011, when NBC 5 Chicago used the words "We Are Chicago" for their advertising campaign. The Shock Doctirne: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism is a 2007 animated film directed by Jonas Cuaron. Broken Child is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Michael Mierendorf. A Film is a 2012 documentary film directed by Franziska Kabisch. Silent Snow is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jan van den Berg. First Position is a 2011 American documentary film. It follows six young dancers preparing for the Youth America Grand Prix in New York City, an annual competition for dancers ages 9–19 to earn a place at an elite ballet company or school. Directed by Bess Kargman, it features Michaela DePrince, Aran Bell, Miko Fogarty, Jules Fogarty, Joan Sebastian Zamora and Rebecca Houseknecht as they intensively train and prepare for what could be the turning point of their lives. Tiergestalt is an East German film. It was released in 1950. The Quiet One is a 1948 American documentary film directed by Sidney Meyers. The documentary chronicles the rehabilitation of a young, emotionally disturbed African-American boy; it contains a commentary written by James Agee, and narrated by Gary Merrill. In his 1949 review, Bosley Crowther characterized the film succinctly: Out of the tortured experiences of a 10-year-old Harlem Negro boy, cruelly rejected by his loved ones but rescued by the people of the Wiltwyck School, a new group of local film-makers has fashioned a genuine masterpiece in the way of a documentary drama. The still photographer Helen Levitt was one of the film's cinematographers and writers, along with the painter Janice Loeb. The neoclassical composer Ulysses Kay wrote the score for the film. The film's three writers - Meyers, Loeb, and Levitt - were nominated for the Best Writing, Story and Screenplay Academy Award; the film itself was also nominated for the Best Documentary Feature Academy Award. The National Board of Review named The Quiet One the second best film of 1949. L'Esprit de Mopti is a 1999 documentary film about the city of Mopti, directed by Moussa Ouane. As Is Their Wont is a 2006 documentary short film written and directed by Galina Adamovich. "12 children, 9 grandchildren, 4 cows, a few hectares of land, their own truck and a greenhouse full of cucumbers. Ivan and Tatyana lack nothing, even though they don’t stop from morning to night. Tatyana gets a break from work when she occasionally goes to church, where she falls asleep in her pew. After the harvest they organise the wedding of young Anna and Dmitri, followed by a splendid feast attended by all the neighbours. The women in their fashionable outfits make the sand rise as they dance in the courtyard, while the men fortify themselves with brandy. The special day is coming to an end; the next, ordinary day will be like all the others before it." Quoting the synopsis from the 2006 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival site. The Blo Norton Experience is a documentary film directed by Thomas Dowrie. Mati Manas is a 1985 drama film directed by Mani Kaul. Murderers, Mobsters & Madmen Vol. 2: Assassination in the 20th Century is a 1993 documentary crime fiction thriller film written by Nick Bougas and Tom Lavagnino and directed by Nick Bougas. A Man Who Planted The Jungle is a 2013 biographical documentary film written and directed by Piyush Pande. Warrior of Light is a 2001 German documentary film written and directed by Monika Treut. The Law in These Parts is a 2011 Israeli documentary film, written and directed by Ra’anan Alexandrowicz, about the court system operated by the Israel Defense Forces in the West Bank. It won the Best Documentary award at the 2011 Jerusalem Film Festival and the World Cinema Grand Jury Prize in Documentary at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. The documentary is divided into five chapters and reviews the legal history of Israel’s occupation of Arab territories. Alexandrowicz interviews a number of the judges who were responsible for carrying out the orders of military commanders. Only judges who presided over occupation-related cases are interviewed; as Alexandrowicz noted, “This film is not about the people who broke the law. It’s about the people who wrote the law.” Welcome To The Machine is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Avi Weider. Pioneers of the Deep is a 2010 film documentary directed by Bertrand Loyer. Children Before the Dawn is a documentary film directed by Hisao Yanagisawa. Enlarged to Show Detail 2 is the second documentary created by the Multi-genred band 311 in 2001. This is their second video documenting their experiences as a band promoting what they consider to be peace and a positive outlook on life. The video caries a Parental Advisory due to explicit lyrics and large display of adult content. Enlarged to Show Detail 2 was certified as a Gold selling video by the RIAA. Format: Explicit Lyrics Rated: NR Studio: Bmg/Volcano/Capricorn DVD Release Date: December 11, 2001 DVD Features: Number of discs: 2 Filmed on the stage of the world-famous Riverplate Stadium in Buenos Aires, Argentina, this rock documentary from filmmakers Jim Gable and Ann Kim captures the legendary band the Police during their monumental reunion tour in 2008. In addition to performances of classics like "Roxanne," "Message in a Bottle" and "Every Breath You Take," the program also features Jordan Copeland's behind-the-scenes documentary, Better Than Therapy. Exhibits or Stories from the Castle is a 2013 documentary film written by Palo Korec and Jozef Kulacik and directed by Palo Korec. The Pleasures of Being Out of Step is a 2013 documentary biographical history film directed by David L. Lewis. Lion, London Zoological Gardens is a 1896 French short black-and-white silent actuality film, produced by Auguste and Louis Lumière and directed by Alexandre Promio, featuring a male lion reaching through the bars of its enclosure at London Zoological Gardens to get at the meat thrown by its keeper. The film was part of a series, including Tigers and Pelicans, which were one of the earliest examples of animal life on film. Le Dossier 332 is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Noëlle Pujol. Lot 63, grave c is a 2006 documentary short film directed by Sam Green. Queen: Days Of Our Lives is a 2011 documentary film directed by Matt O'Casey . Small Wonders is a 1995 American documentary film directed by Allan Miller. The film follows a music teacher in East Harlem who teaches underprivileged children how to play the violin. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Tell Me Something About Yourself - Lada is a 1994 documentary film directed by Helena Trestíková. The New Ice Age is a 1974 film directed by Johan van der Keuken. Shark Sanctuary is a 2012 documentary film directed by Simon Christopher. Viewpoint '86: Afghanistan: The Agony of A Nation is a 1986 documentary film directed by Sandy Gall. Julie: Old Time Tales of the Blue Ridge is a 1991 documentary short film directed by Les Blank. Our Mr. Sun is a one-hour American 1956 television film in Technicolor written, produced, and directed by Frank Capra. It is a documentary that explains how the Sun works and how it also plays a huge part in human life. It was first televised by CBS in 1956. The film starred Frank Baxter as "Dr. Research", and Eddie Albert as "the writer", the other recurring character in the The Bell Laboratory Science Series. Marvin Miller voiced the animated sun. Sterling Holloway, who was uncredited, voiced an animated version of chlorophyll. The film marked the last project of Lionel Barrymore, who played the voice of Father Time. It was first shown on television two years after Barrymore's death. Our Mr. Sun, and a companion film Hemo the Magnificent, were popular favorites for showing in school science classrooms. The film is currently packaged on DVD with another Frank C. Baxter film The Strange Case of the Cosmic Rays. It's not every day that an average actor transitions from a TV teen idol to a mega rap star. In a few short years he has managed to garner an astronomical international following. This documentary film chronicles the fascinating life of Aubrey "Drake" Graham. Lagerfeld Confidential is a 2007 documentary directed by Rodolphe Marconi. The underground cult classic documentary of the psychedelic 1960s. Close ups of stars, including Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Ronald Reagan, Frank Zappa, Sean Connery, Brigit Bardot, Alfred Hitchcock, Bobby Beausoleil of the "Manson Family," imprisoned for life for murder, and Jay Sebring - victim of the Mansons. Personal insights by surfers, skydivers, LSD gurus, hippies, peaceniks, protest-singers, rightwing politicians, eccentric multi-millionaires and transvestites. Denounced as "bizarre prophecy" by the critics. Invited to open the 1968 Avignon & Venice Film Festivals, but banned by the French Ministry of Information as a "danger to mental health" and an "apology for certain perversities, including drugs and homosexuality." Characterized in CIA files as "pro-Communist." Refused exhibition in Communist nations as "glamorizing Capitalism - too many cars and swimming pools." Described by UNESCO social scientist S. Friedman as "...a vivid, warm & humorous image of people ... confronting the eternal American dream.... It may well be that we are at the eve of a profound social and moral revolution." Written, Produced & Directed by Robert Carl Cohen, renowned for pioneering documentaries INSIDE RED CHINA, INSIDE EAST GERMANY, THREE CUBANS, and COMMITTEE ON UNAMERICAN ACTIVITIES. The MONDO HOLLYWOOD Music Director, Mike Curb, was later elected Lt. Governor of California in 1978 despite being falsely accused of "singing falsetto in a bathtub scene in the film with two lesbians." Its original sound track performed by the Mugwumps & Davy Allen & The Arrows. [REC]³ Génesis: preparativos de una boda sangrienta is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Martin Samper. Jackpot Town is a 1972 short documentary film directed by Roger Whittaker. The Lost Village: The Dark Side is a 2012 short fantasy mystery and documentary film written by Víctor F. Muñoz Ramírez and directed by Manuel Jimenez. The Arrested Development Documentary Project is a 2009 film documentary directed by Jeff Smith. CITIZEN U.S.A.: A 50-STATE ROAD TRIP (July 4) follows director Alexandra Pelosi (HBO’s Emmy®-winning “Journeys with George”) as she travels across the U.S. to attend naturalization ceremonies in all 50 states and meets brand-new citizens to find out why they chose America as their home. Commemorating the Fourth of July, the documentary intersperses stories of newly naturalized citizens and interviews with notable first-generation Americans, including Madeleine Albright, Arianna Huffington, Henry Kissinger and Gene Simmons. "A fascinating documentary portrait of the legendary American photographer Annie Leibovitz, who introduced images of the Rolling Stones to the world and worked on the magazines Vanity Fair and Vogue. She took pictures of Mick Jagger, Hillary Clinton, Patti Smith, Demi Moore, Keith Richards and Arnold Schwarzenegger, to name a few. However, she also boldly documented the brutal apocalypses in Sarajevo and Rwanda. Over the last thirty years she has shared in forming an image of the contemporary world and today she is as famous as the celebrities she has worked with. Barbara Leibovitz captures her elder sister as a person who has always been able to protect her privacy and maintain her integrity even in dramatic and high-pressure situations. Down on the idyllic family farm, working on her latest book of photographs, Annie Leibovitz is always seen as a woman who never loses face. A fact confirmed by all the well-known personalities whom the director interviews." Quoting the synopsis from the 2007 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival site. Anything Else Than Air is a Mexican film documentary that plans to release in theaters in the autumn of 2012 in Mexico. The film is directed by Mexican director Carlos Hernández Vázquez and produced by E Corp Studio in association with Media Mac, and was shot in high definition digital cinema. Trudell is a 2005 documentary film about the life of author and American Indian activist John Trudell. The film traces Trudell from his childhood in Omaha, Nebraska, to his role in the American Indian Movement, and finally to his rebirth as a musician and spoken word poet. Heather Rae produced and directed the film, which took her more than a decade to complete. Trudell aired nationally in the U.S. on April 11, 2006 as part of the Independent Lens series on PBS. The African Lion is a 1955 feature-length documentary that was released by Walt Disney Productions as part of its True-Life Adventures series. The film, which was shot over a three-year period focuses on the life of the lions within the complexity of the Africa ecosystem. At the 6th Berlin International Film Festival it won the Silver Bear award. It was released on DVD in 2006 as part of the Walt Disney Legacy Collection. It can be found on the third volume of the True-Life Adventures series where it has been fully restored. 90 Miles is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Juan Carlos Zaldívar. The film is a recounting of the events that lead Zaldívar to become a Marielito and leave Cuba for a better life in Miami. It premiered in 2003 on PBS as part of its P.O.V. series. It won two awards: the Grand Coral, First Prize, for Documentary and the Memoria Documentary Award. 90 Miles recounts the strange twist of fate that took Juan Carlos Zaldívar across one of the world's most treacherous stretches of water. It is a journey of a family in search for healing and understanding. Probing and thoughtful, Zaldívar uncovers the emotional distance opened in thousands of families by the 90 miles between the U.S. and Cuba. Autism Every Day is a 2006 documentary film sponsored by Autism Speaks, and produced by Lauren Thierry, Jim Watkins and Eric Solomon. It follows mothers with autistic children which consists mainly of interviews with the mothers. A 13 minute version of Autism Every Day debuted at a fundraiser named "A New Decade for Autism" in New York City on May 9, 2006, and made its mainstream debut on Don Imus show on MSNBC the following day. It was selected by the Sundance Institute as a special screening film at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. A 7-minute version of the film can be found on Autism Speak's YouTube Channel. The New York Times said, "While the filmmakers capture hope, love and determination, the documentary also reveals the unrelenting stress and occasional despair in rearing children with autism." The New York Observer said the film was a "short documentary film ... about the lives of mothers of autistic kids. The film consists mainly of interviews with mothers, mothers whose lives have been utterly transformed. The situation of these mothers is just unrelieved, unrelenting." Monkey Spa is a 2011 a short/adventure/biography/comedy/documentary film written by Dragan Zivancevic and directed by Dragan Matic, Zeljko Piskoric and Dragan Zivancevic. Centravanti Nato is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Gian Claudio Guiducci. Love and Rubbish is a 2012 short documentary film written by Hanna Polak and Anne Dillon; and directed by Hanna Polak. Double Tide is a 2009 film written and directed by Sharon Lockhart. On the afternoon of September 16, 2004, a joyous 18-year-old, Lynn Gordon Bailey Jr., pledged Chi Psi Fraternity at the University of Colorado. The next morning he was found dead, a victim of an irresponsible hazing ritual involving alcohol. A sad situation, but made even worse because it was so preventable.Every year, a staggering 1,700 college students face the same fate. Another 100,000 are victims of sexual assault as a result of heavy drinking. But no one working on a national level to change a culture that puts our young people in peril. Until now.HAZE is a feature documentary, created with the intent of placing a focus on the issues of binge drinking, alcohol-laden hazing rituals, and rapid-fire drinking games. Simply stated, the film's goal is to save lives and prevent harm. Harm that would never have happened if a few crucial steps had been followed by friends, by fraternity brothers and sisters, family members or peers. HAZE won't end irresponsible drinking but it will be the first chapter in an educational process for parents and young adults--teaching us what to do and what to look out for in order to "save a life." American Autumn: an Occudoc is a documentary shot on the front lines and meeting spaces of the Occupy movement in NYC, Boston, and Washington, DC, from the earliest days through the end of January 2012. From Africa to Assen is a 2011 documentary film directed by Lieza Röben. Pope John Paul II in Poland is a 1981 News and Documentary Emmy Award winner for News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding News and Documentary Program Achievement - Programs & Segments. Get the Fire: Young Mormon Missionaries Abroad is a United States PBS-sponsored documentary, by the independent filmmaker Nancy du Plessis. It examines the experiences of some Mormon missionaries who questioned their religious beliefs after serving their missions. It premiered in December 2003 and was 60 minutes long. Some Mormon missionaries, including those serving missions in a foreign culture, may begin to question their religious upbringing and belief system. Get the Fire follows three LDS missionaries during their two-year missions in Germany. The documentary opens with the three future missionaries at their respective homes prior to knowing where they will serve. Surrounded by their family, each boy opens a mission call informing them they will serve in the Munich, Germany mission. The documentary follows them along the full two years of their mission from the Missionary Training Center until they leave the mission and return home. The film shows missionaries proselyting in public squares, knocking door to door, struggling with a foreign language, congregating in zone and district meetings, and meeting with the mission president. Winged Migration, is a 2001 documentary film directed by Jacques Cluzaud, Michel Debats and Jacques Perrin, who was also one of the writers and narrators, showcasing the immense journeys routinely made by birds during their migrations. The film is dedicated to the French ornithologist Jean Dorst. Los mundos sutiles is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Eduardo Chapero-Jackson. Imagine being surrounded by a vast and rugged wilderness. No town, no stores, no human contact – just you and your family plus 10,000 head of cattle. This episode explores the majestic and vast wilderness of Australia's outback. The WORLD OF DISCOVERY series takes you to the far corners of the globe to explore the secrets of nature and wildlife, the frontiers of science and technology, and the compelling questions of history and the world we live in. Inside Lara Roxx is a 2011 EyeSteelFilm Canadian documentary film by Canadian film director Mia Donovan. It covers the circumstances the 21-year-old Canadian woman Lara Roxx who in the Spring of 2004, left her hometown Montreal heading to Los Angeles to work in pornography. Within two months she contracted HIV after shooting an unprotected sex scene with two males. It was revealed that one of the two males, porn actor Darren James, was HIV positive. There was extensive press coverage of the situation at the time. The film did well critically. In 2012, it was nominated for a Claude Jutra Award for Best Documentary. Three Miles North of Molkom is a 2008 documentary film directed by Corinna Villari-McFarlane and Robert Cannan. It was nominated in the Best British Documentary category for the British Independent Film Awards 2008. It is about seven participants of the 2007 No Mind Festival at Ängsbacka, three miles north of Molkom, Sweden. This yearly New Age event lasts one or two weeks, has a thousand participants, and is claimed to be the largest alternative festival in Northern Europe. The activities shown in the film include tree hugging, firewalking, nude swimming, sweat lodge, hugging, Tantric sex, singing, dancing, talks in "sharing circles". There is also an exercise in defending oneself against a physical attack using psychic energy. The portrayed participants are: Siddhartha, a Swedish harbor master, who says he feels like a king in his nice house, but also that he is lonely, and longs for a woman. Peter, who has come with his two sons; his wife did not come along. Mervi, an older, female former career counselor from Finland. She suffers from a lack of saliva, but some activities are so exciting that it is produced. Grand Canyon is a 1958 American short documentary film directed by James Algar and produced by Walt Disney Productions. It was shown as a supplement during Sleeping Beauty's initial run, and it won an Academy Award at the 31st Academy Awards in 1959 for Best Short Subject. It is also included as a bonus feature on the 1997 laserdisc, 2003 DVD, and 2008 DVD & Blu-ray releases of Sleeping Beauty. According to the opening credits, Grand Canyon is "a pictorial interpretation of Ferde Grofé's Grand Canyon Suite", much as the animated segments in Fantasia are pictorial representations of music, and the film is strongly related to its soundtrack. The film has no live actors, no dialogue, and no narration, only musical accompaniment. Billal is a 1996 documentary film directed by Tom Zubrycki. In March 2002 an IDF tank ran over an explosive device in Gaza. Matan Berman, the dog handler that accompanied the unit became shell-shocked following the event. Weeks later he started to complain of horrendous pain in his leg, not triggered by any physical injury. The film reveals the soul of a man who fights for his life and keeps coming up against inner demons that give him no peace. The Autobiography of Nicolae Ceausescu is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Andrei Ujica. ""After all, a dictator is simply an artist who is able to fully put into practice his egotism. It is a mere question of aesthetic level, whether he turns out to be Baudelaire or Bolintineanu, Louis XVI or Nicolae Ceausescu." Andrei Ujica. From a formal point of view, The Autobiography of Nicolae Ceausescu proves that it is possible to only use existing images to yield films focused on recent history, yet with an epic vein similar to that of the historical fiction cinema - such as, most notably, the ample period pieces dedicated by American cinema to the Vietnam War generation. This is an eminently syntactic endeavor, where montage plays a twofold part: mise-en-scene, as it builds scenes that do not exist as such in the rushes, and classical editing, connecting scenes together. We may be witnessing the birth of a new film genre." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Cannes Film Festival site. The 21st-season opener features "Traces of the Trade: A Story From the Deep North," an exploration of filmmaker Katrina Brown's slave-trading ancestors, the Rhode Island DeWolfs. She and nine relatives (including Tom DeWolf, author of "Inheriting the Trade") retrace the old slave-trading route, including stops in Bristol, R.I., Ghana and Cuba. Hold on Tight - De Dijk is a 2011 Documentary film written and directed by Suzanne Raes. The Murmuring is a 1995 Korean film directed by Byun Young-joo. The Blood of Yingzhou District is a 2006 short film documentary directed by Ruby Yang and produced by Thomas F. Lennon. The film is about the effect of AIDS on orphans in Yingzhou District of Fuyang, Anhui, China. It won the 2007 Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. The film documents the plight of young orphans in Anhui whose parents have died after contracting AIDs as a result of infection while donating blood to earn income, and who sometimes do not receive care in their village since many people in the villages are terrified that they may be infected as a result of contact with the children. Silence Radio is a 2013 documentary film directed by Valéry Rosier. Maria in No Man's Land is a documentary film directed by Marcela Zamora. The Road To Livingston is a 2013 history drama documentary biographical film written and directed by Erik Mauck. Take a trip to a place where life is lived one bullet at a time in this documentary detailing the deadly daily lives of such notorious street gangs as the Bloods and the Crips. As cameras are offered unprecedented access to the inner most workings of these feared street gangs, the dark side of society is illuminated to reveal a place where violence lurks on every street corner and the smell of death and gunpowder fills the air with dread. Dead On: The Life and Cinema of George A. Romero is a 2008 documentary film directed by the filmmaker Rusty Nails. The film is about the life and career of the horror film director George A. Romero. Clips from his films are combined with interviews with Romero, his collaborators, and his admirers to show the whole story of his life. The film is currently in post-production and was expected to be released in late 2008 but has yet to be released as of July 2009. Now is a short documentary directed by Santiago Álvarez. Journey of Hanuman is a 2012 documentary adventure mystery film written and directed by Lola Creel. XXXY is a short documentary by Porter Gale and Laleh Soomekh. The film features two people born intersex: San Francisco bicycle messenger Kristi Bruce and clinical psychologist Howard Devore. The full movie is available online via the The Interface Project. Mit 22 Jahren wollte man noch nicht sterben is a 1987 film directed by Rainer Ritzel. Dancing Orpheus is a 1962 short documentary film directed by Ferdi Jenes. Gods of Metal is a 1982 American short documentary film produced by Robert Richter. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Mundial: The Highest Stakes is a documentary film written and directed by Michal Bielawski. Robert Blecker Wants Me Dead is an independent documentary film about retributivist death penalty advocate Robert Blecker and his relationship with Daryl Holton, a death row inmate who murdered his own four children. The film was directed by Ted Schillinger and produced by Bruce David Klein. The film was completed in November 2007 and made its world premiere on April 25, 2008, at the USA Film Festival in Dallas, Texas, as an official selection of the festival. The film was also an official selection of the 2008 Rhode Island Film Festival and the 2008 Cork Film Festival. It won a Gold Kahuna Award at the 2009 Honolulu International Film Festival. Robert Blecker Wants Me Dead was released theatrically on February 27, 2009. The New York Times said the film was "compelling" and Film Journal International called it "captivating." The Washington Post described it as a fascinating look at "the vast amount of wiggle room between being for the death penalty and being against it." The film made its television premiere on April 19, 2009, on MSNBC. It was released on DVD in 2010. Julian Bond: Reflections from the Frontlines of the Civil Rights Movement Heritage Film Project, 2012. Distributed to libraries and universities by Filmakers Library - Alexander Street Press, USA. Color and Black and White, HD, 34 min. This documentary- film is a portrait of social activist and former Georgia legislator Julian Bond approaches the story of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States from a personal perspective. “Bond's father was the first African-American president of Pennsylvania's Lincoln University, and the family hosted black luminaries in education and the arts, but Bond recalls growing up in the era of "separate but equal" laws”. Bond also talks about his early involvement with the Civil Rights Movement, his nomination at the age of 28 for vice president of the United States, and the Georgia legislature's efforts to prevent him from being seated as a representative on the grounds that he had not supported the Vietnam War. The film explores the 1963 March on Washington, Martin Luther King Jr., the assassinations of King and John F. Kennedy, and Lyndon B. Johnson's impact on U.S. race relations. Forensic experts investigate the most famous aviation mystery of World War 1. Have You Heard from Johannesburg? is a series of seven documentary films, with a total runtime of 8.5 hours, covering the 45-year struggle against South Africa's apartheid system. Produced and directed by Connie Field, it includes events such as the Sharpeville massacre, the Soweto uprising, the murder of Steve Biko, and covers the role of some people less well-known outside South Africa than Nelson Mandela, such as African National Congress leader Oliver Tambo. The title comes from the lyrics of the Gil Scott-Heron song “Johannesburg”. The series also won a Primetime Emmy Award for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking in 2012. Art Car: The Movie is a 2011 documentary film directed and written by Carlton Ahrens and Ford Gunter. Gaddafi is a 2013 documentary short film written by Panu Aree and Kong Rithdee and directed by Panu Aree, Kong Rithdee and Kaweenipon Ketprasit. Norman Catherine Curriculum Vitae is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Paulene Abrey. Citizen King: American Experience is a 2004 documentary film directed by Orlando Bagwell and Noland Walker. They Were Not Silent is a documentary about the Jewish Labor Committee's anti-Nazi movement in America before, during and after World War II. The film features rare archival footage and photographs along with interviews with labor veterans, Holocaust survivors and scholars. It explores how international Jewry worked to help Jews and non-Jews in Germany, Poland, and elsewhere in Europe. The JLC's role has changed over the years. A trade unionist who has focused on JLC history, Kenneth Burt, says he hopes that the documentary will encourage new interest in the organization. Small, Far Away: The World of Father Ted is a 2011 television documentary directed by Adrian McCarthy. Apeksha is a 1979 Sri Lankan film directed by H.D. Premaratne. Michael Jackson The One is the DVD release of a CBS special that aired in January 2004. Released by Epic Records, it includes interviews with other celebrities about Jackson's influence on music and pop culture, and also contains clips from Jackson's previous music videos. It was certified Gold in the US five months after release, with shipments amassing 50,000 units by that point. The certification body of the US—the RIAA—recognizes the DVD as an official Michael Jackson production. It was also released on Video CD format, in several Asian countries such as India and Thailand. The Lives Of Lamott Atkins is a 2013 short, documentary and biography film directed by Robert Philipson. Canary Bananas is a 1935 documentary short film written and directed by Richard Leacock. ‘X’ Years Later is a film directed by Hideaki Ito. High Hopes In South Africa is a 2014 documentary film documenting the first-ever South Africa concerts by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band with special guest Tom Morello during their High Hopes Tour in January 2014. The film was released in the Netherlands in May 2014 through Sony Music Netherlands and was also posted to YouTube. Footage from the band's pre-tour sound checks and press gatherings along with extensive interviews by Dutch journalists and filmmakers Leon Verdonschot, Art Rooijakkershad and Erik van Bruggen with Steven Van Zandt and Tom Morello are included. The film also followed South African fans at their homes, work and at the shows in Cape Town and Johannesburg. The Swenkas is a 2004 documentary film written by Jeppe Ronde and Kim Leona, and directed by Jeppe Ronde. Bumfights is a film series produced by Indecline Films. The videos feature teenagers, homeless men in the San Diego, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Las Vegas metropolitan areas fighting and attempting amateur stunts in exchange for money, alcohol, and other incentives. The first video, Bumfights: A Cause for Concern, was produced by Ryan McPherson, with friends Zachary Bubeck, Daniel J. Tanner, and Michael Slyman, as Indecline Films. Shortly after sales began to escalate, Indecline Films allegedly sold the rights to two investors, who went on to produce three sequels. The videos immediately gained criticism from mainstream organizations. The US-based National Coalition for the Homeless has stated that the Bumfights videos disseminate hate against the homeless and dehumanize them. In April 2006, the four original filmmakers agreed not to produce any more "Bumfights" videos or distribute videos already made, and to pay three homeless men depicted in the videos, under a settlement announced as a lawsuit was to go to trial. Soloveckaja vlast is a 1988 documentary film written by Viktor Listov and Dimitri Chukovsky and directed by Marina Goldovskaja. Minerita is a 2013 short biographical drama family and documentary film written and directed by Raúl de la Fuente. An Evening with Kevin Smith 2: Evening Harder is the second Kevin Smith Q&A DVD, released on November 28, 2006. The footage is taken from Kevin's Q&As at Roy Thomson Hall in Toronto on November 18, 2004, and the Criterion Theatre in London on March 7, 2005. A Special Edition 2-disc DVD set released in Australia on October 25, 2006, included An Evening with Kevin Smith since it had not yet been released in Australia. The subtitle is a humorous reference to Die Hard 2: Die Harder, as well as a play on the phrase "even harder". Smith would later play a supporting role in Live Free or Die Hard. The Tiger Next Door is a feature length 2009 documentary film directed and produced by Camilla Calamandrei. Finding Joe is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Patrick Takaya Solomon. Gaslight Follies is a 1945 documentary film written by Morton Friedman and Al Martin and directed by Albert Herman and Travers Vale. Michelangelo: Self Portrait is a 1989 documentary and biographical film written by Michael Sonnabend and directed by Robert Snyder. Venus Boyz is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Gabrielle Baur. Lovecraft's Fear of the Unknown is a documentary film that looks at the life, work and mind behind the Cthulhu Mythos. The film features interviews with Guillermo del Toro, Neil Gaiman, John Carpenter, Peter Straub, Caitlin R. Kiernan, Ramsey Campbell, Stuart Gordon, S. T. Joshi, Robert M. Price and Andrew Migliore. Written and directed by Frank H. Woodward. Produced by William Janczewski, James B. Myers, and Woodward. Lovecraft won Best Documentary at the 2008 Comic-Con International Independent Film Festival. It was the official selection at: Cinema Du Parc in Collaboration With The Fantasia Festival 2008; Erie Horror Film Festival 2008; Buenos Aires Rojo Sangre Festival 2008; Shriekfest Horror Film Festival 2008; The H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival 2008; TromaDance 2009 and Porto Alegre, Brazil's Fantaspoa Festival 2009. The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD in the United States on 27 October 2009. Most Shocking Talent Show Moments is a 2011 documentary film. Meeting David Wilson is a 2008 American documentary film. It is a 90-minute video produced for initial presentation on the MSNBC cable channel. Its focus is the encounter between David A. Wilson, a black American filmmaker who grew up in Newark, New Jersey, and David B. Wilson, a descendant of a white American tobacco-plantation owner who had owned some of the black Wilsons’ ancestors as slaves. The film was directed by Daniel Woolsey and David A. Wilson and produced by Barion Grant. The Wilsons and Barion founded an African-American News website at NBC News entitled The Grio. Jazz in Love is a 2013 documentary biographical family romance film written and directed by Baby Ruth Villarama. My Old School is a 2013 historical documentary created by Jason Allard and Scott Gabrielson. All This and World War II is a 1976 musical documentary that juxtaposes Beatles songs, performed by a number of musicians, with World War II newsreel footage and 20th Century Fox films from the 1940s. It lasted two weeks in cinemas and was quickly sent into storage. The British Guide to Showing Off is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jes Benstock, which follows the build-up and execution of the twelfth Alternative Miss World - artist Andrew Logan's pastiche of the Miss World beauty pageant. The Narcotic Farm is a 2008 documentary film written by J.P. Olsen and directed by J.P. Olsen and Luke Walden. Amerasia is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Wolf-Eckart Bühler. The Big One is a movie filmed in 1996—and released in 1998 by Miramax Films—by Michael Moore during his promotion tour around the United States for his book Downsize This!. Through the 47 towns he visits, Moore discovers and describes American economic failings and the fear of unemployment of the American workers. The Old Breed is a 2012 short adventure film written by Freddie Wilkinson and directed by Rufus Lusk and Freddie Wilkinson. Sound of Redemption: The Frank Morgan Story is a 2014 documentary,biographical,drama and music film written and directed by N.C. Heikin. Sodiq is a 2013 short true crime documentary film directed by Adeyemi Michael. The Bold Men was the first of three documentaries William Friedkin made for producer David Wolper. Beirut: The Last Home Movie is a 1987 documentary film directed by Jennifer Fox. It follows the life of Gaby Bustros and her family, who live in a 200-year old mansion in Beirut during the Lebanese Civil War. The Bustros family, one of the noble families of Beirut, remain in their ancestral home despite the endless war that surrounds them. Visiting Room is a drama, romance and documentary film written and directed by Radu Muntean and Alexandru Baciu. America's Heart and Soul is a 2004 film produced by Blacklight Films and released by Walt Disney Pictures. It is a documentary and was directed by Louis Schwartzberg. The film was nominated for two MovieGuide Awards, winning one. It was released on July 12, 2004, and grossed $314,402. Fourteen is a 2012 documentary film written by Cornelia Grünberg and Ingelore König, directed by Cornelia Grünberg. Herd in Iceland is a 2013 documentary short, adventure, documentary, sport film directed by Lindsay Blatt and Paul Taggart. General Report on Chile is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Miguel Littin. A Line a Day Must Be Enough! is a 2008 documentary film directed by Katrin Ottarsdóttir. It is a portrait of the Faroese poet, painter and performance artist Tóroddur Poulsen. He has been referred to as the "black punk poet" of the Faroes, though this epithet is probably too narrow, it is precisely his anarchistic, experimental and subtle approach to poetry as well as life, which characterizes his artistic work. Second Class Citizens is an upcoming 2014 documentary film written and produced by Ryan James Yezak. Yezak describes the film as "a comprehensive look at the unfair treatment of homosexuals by our society". The film examines the treatment of homosexuals by social and government standards in the United States. The Roots of Fundamentalism is a film of a discussion between world religion scholar Huston Smith and author, TV host, and film maker Phil Cousineau on the subject of Christian Fundamentalism. The modern emergence US Christian Fundamentalism promoted Smith to speak out and write articles on the subject. He addresses many misconceptions about the origins, motives, and goals of the movement that is both sympathetic and critical. The interview was also turned into an article for Parabola Magazine titled Why Fundamentalism Matters. Smith was featured in their very first issue, and the publication also wanted to feature him in their 30th anniversary issue. Lerchenlieder is a 1980 film directed by Jochen Kraußer. Fiddlin' Man: The Life and Times of Bob Wills is a 1993 documentary biography film written and directed by Gary Don Rhodes In Search of Memory is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Petra Seeger. Forward is a 2013 documentary film written by Matt Mullins and directed by Dusan Harminc and Matt Mullins A Healthy Baby Girl was a documentary. It won a Peabody award in 1997. Surrender! The Sudden Death of Alvira, Pennsylvania is a documentary film directed by Steve Huddy and Martha Huddy. Die Wiesenberger - No Business Like Show Business is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Bernard Weber. Destiny's Bridge is a documentary film directed by Jack Ballo. Scarred Lands & Wounded Lives is a 2008 war documentary film written and directed by Alice and Lincoln Day. Traveling Hopefully is a 1982 American short documentary film directed by John G. Avildsen. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Dance With A Serial Killer is a 2008 TV documentary directed by Nigel Williams. Michel Petrucciani is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Michael Radford. "Afflicted from birth by Brittle Bone Disease, Michel Petrucciani managed to dominate his handicap, becoming a gifted musician of international renown.In this documentary, Michael Radford draws forth a portrait of this great jazz pianist using interviews, archive films and photos, seeking to understand the nature of creativity. Where does this sublime inspiration come from and how is it brought to light? " Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Cannes Film Festival site. Word is a 2002 Documentary Film directed by Tony Greer. Maxime, McDuff & McDo is a 2002 documentary film by Magnus Isacsson that shows the attempt to unionize a McDonald's restaurant in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. They were successful, but McDonald's quickly shut down the franchise after the union won. Tänzer im Wassertropfen is a 1981 short film directed and written by Georg Schimanski. Braving Alaska is a 1993 adventure TV movie directed by Mark Stouffer and written by Nicolas Noxon. Invasion of the Scream Queens is a 1992 documentary film by American filmmaker Donald Farmer. The film interviews the women who have made a career out of starring in the B horror and science fiction genres are interviewed, and clips and trailers from their films are shown. It was produced by Mondo Video and released on VHS format. Contested Streets is a 2006 documentary film directed by Stefan Schaefer. Mysteries of the Freemasons is a 2006 Documentary film directed by Tug Yourgrau. Whiz kids is a 2010 documentary film directed by Tom Shepard. Namibia: The Struggle for Liberation is a 2007 epic film on the Namibian independence struggle against South African occupation as seen through the life of Sam Nujoma, the leader of the South-West Africa People's Organisation and the first president of the Republic of Namibia. The film is written and directed by Charles Burnett, the African American filmmaker, and stars Carl Lumbly and Danny Glover. The production was financed by the government of Namibia. Music composed by Stephen James Taylor won the award for Best Music Score at the Kuala Lumpur International Film Festival where the film also won for Best African Film and for Best Director. The film's dialogue is in English, Afrikaans, Oshiwambo, Otjiherero, and German. Revenge of the Electric Car is a 2011 feature documentary film by Chris Paine, who also directed Who Killed the Electric Car?. The documentary, executive produced by Stefano Durdic, and produced by PG Morgan and Jessie Deeter, had its world premiere at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival on Earth Day, April 22, 2011. The theatrical release to the public took place on October 21, 2011. Gang Cops is a 1988 American short documentary film following the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's special gang unit in South Central Los Angeles. Directed by Thomas B. Fleming, the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. It was produced in collaboration with the USC Center for Visual Anthropology and the School of Cinema/Television. Buddhas barn is a 2003 Danish documentary film directed and written by Christina Rosendahl. The film is about the reincarnation of one of Dalai Lama's most important teacher, Khunu Lama. As a child of a Danish young hippie-woman and a Tibetan lama, he was born in the early 80's and was brought up in the famous Tibetan monastery in exile Mindroling. The film was shot in color for the Danish public TV-channel DRTV and supported by the Danish Movie Institute and first shown on 18 August 2003. Idea and cosultation; Erik Meier Carlsen, Danish journalist and writer. The Joy of Life is an experimental landscape documentary film about the history of suicide and the Golden Gate Bridge, and the adventures of a butch lesbian in San Francisco, California. Since its January 2005 premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, this innovative feature film played a pivotal role in renewing debate about the need for a suicide barrier on The Golden Gate Bridge as well as garnering praise and earning awards for its unique filmmaking style. The film combines 16mm landscape cinematography with a lyrical voiceover to share two San Francisco stories: the history of the Golden Gate Bridge as a suicide landmark, and the story of a butch dyke in San Francisco searching for love and self-discovery. The two stories are punctuated by Lawrence Ferlinghetti's reading of his ode to San Francisco, "The Changing Light" and bookended by opening and closing credits music from legendary '50s icon Weldon Kees. Pablo's Winter is a 2012 documentary film directed by Chico Pereira. Nile Perch is a 2013 short documentary drama film directed by Josh Gibson. SAVE THE CLUB NOON is a documentary film directed by Moriro Miyamoto. Michael Jackson: The Last Photo Shoot is upcoming documentary film about Michael Jackson's last magazine cover-shoots in 2007. Film is unique story told through the eyes of Michael's closest friends, photographers, and stylists that had helped Jackson prepare for his 2007 United States comeback after several years of living in seclusion overseas. In September of that year, Photographer Bruce Weber and Vogue Fashion Editor as well as Jackson's personal stylist Rushka Bergman captured the magic of the King of Pop for the 25th anniversary reissue of his hit album Thriller, entitled Thriller 25. Later that month, Jackson did another shoot and an interview for Ebony Magazine's December 2007 issue. This would mark Jackson's first United States interview and magazine story in over a decade. Really is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Belterra. To the Shores of Iwo Jima is a 1945 Kodachrome color short war film produced by the United States Navy and United States Marine Corps. It documents the Battle of Iwo Jima, and was the first time that American audiences saw in color the footage of the famous flag raising on Iwo Jima. Fritz Kortner spricht Monologe für eine Schallplatte is a 1966 documentary film directed by Hans-Jürgen Syberberg. "A group of 13-year-olds in India rally against the use of plastics. A renaissance man in Africa teaches villagers to harness solar power. Self-described "hillbillies" in Appalachia battle the big business behind strip mining. Tilda Swinton beautifully narrates this rich and inspiring documentary—from the producers of An Inconvenient Truth—about a world of regular people taking action in the fight to save our environment. Executive produced by Participant Media and the Alliance for Climate Protection." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Abuelos is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Carla Valencia Dávila. Road to Paris is a 2001 documentary film showing the preparation of Lance Armstrong, then twice winner of Tour de France, and his team, US Postal Service Pro Cycling Team, for the 2001 Tour de France. The film was shot during April, covering races such as Circuit de la Sarthe, Gent–Wevelgem, Paris–Roubaix and Amstel Gold Race, mainly featuring Lance Armstrong and George Hincapie. The film was produced by Nike, Inc. Amjad Ali Khan is a 1990 documentary film directed by Gulzar. Volume One begins and ends with an extended look at the contribution of women to the public health of the United States: it tells the story of Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman to attend medical school, and of Alice Hamilton, Emily Dunning, and Esther Lovejoy. Abolitionists are a source of women leaders: the Grimke sisters, Harriet Tubman, Lydia Maria Frances Child, and Maryann Shad Carrie. Special attention goes to Anne Hutchinson's trial and then to writers: Harriet Beecher Stowe, Catherine Beecher, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Anne Bradstreet, Phyllis Wheatley, Hannah Adams, Abigail Adams, and Emily Dickinson. Historians comment throughout; Rita Moreno and Dee Wallace-Stone host. A Day On The Waters... Aboard The Enterprise Boats is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by David Everitt. Multiple Visions (The Crazy Machine) is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Emilio Maillé. Someone Else’s Abortion is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Carla Gallo. I Like to Hurt People is 1985 documentary film directed by Donald G. Jackson. The Bridge is a 2006 British-American documentary film by Eric Steel that consists of the results of one year's filming of the Golden Gate Bridge in 2004, which captured a number of suicides, and additional filming of family and friends of some of the identified people who had thrown themselves from the bridge. The film was inspired by an article titled "Jumpers", written by Tad Friend, that appeared in The New Yorker magazine in 2003. Friend writes that "Survivors often regret their decision in midair, if not before", and suicide attempt survivor Ken Baldwin explains “I instantly realized that everything in my life that I’d thought was unfixable was totally fixable—except for having just jumped.” Mia and Roman is a 1968 23-minute documentary film which was shot during the making of Rosemary's Baby. The title refers to Mia Farrow and Roman Polanski. The film features footage of Roman Polanski directing the film's cast on set. It was directed by Shahrokh Hatami. It was screened as a promo film at Hollywood's Lytton Center, and later included as a featurette on the DVD of Rosemary's Baby. It is described as a "trippy on-set featurette" and "an odd little bit of cheese". Zoo is a 2007 American documentary film based on the life and death of Kenneth Pinyan, an American man who died of peritonitis due to perforation of the colon after engaging in receptive anal sex with a horse. The film's public debut was at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2007, where it was one of 16 winners out of 856 candidates. Following Sundance, it was selected as one of the top five American films to be presented at the prestigious Directors Fortnight sidebar at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival. Global Home is 2012 documentary and adventure film written and directed by Eva Stotz. Lives In Hazard is a 1994 documentary film directed by Susan Todd and Andrew Young. Mondo Magic is a 1975 documentary film written by Alberto Moravia and directed by Alfredo Castiglioni, Angelo Castiglioni and Guido Guerrasio. Nefertiti and the Lost Dynasty is a 2007 documentary film written by Rob Goldberg and directed by Brando Quilici. Son, la antesala de la salsa is a documentary outlining the birth of Son in 1582, with the Quartet formed by Pascual de Ochoa, Pedro Almanza and the sisters Teodora and Micaela de la Mateodora. The video covers a well-organized narration of the trajectory of Son up to Ignacio Piñeiro's Septeto nacional with famous singer Abelardo Barroso and footages of Son dance. The Miracles of Jesus is a 2006 Documentary film written by Jean-Claude Bragard and Anna Cox, and directed by Jean Claude Bragard Inside the Mind of Leonardo is a 2013 documentary film directed by Julian Jones. Robert Mugabe... What happened? is a 2011 documentary film written by Llewellyn the Last and Ingrid Sinclair, and directed by Simon Bright. Coffee Futures is a short film. While I Run This Race is a 1967 American short documentary film directed by Edmond Levy about poverty in the United States. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Slingshot Hip Hop is a 2008 documentary film directed by Jackie Reem Salloum which traces the history and development of Palestinian hip hop, in the Palestinian territories from the time DAM pioneered the art form in the late 1990s. It braids together the stories of young Palestinian artists living in Gaza, the West Bank and inside Israel as they discover Hip Hop and employ it as a tool to surmount divisions imposed by occupation and poverty. Featuring artists; DAM, Palestinian Rapperz, Mahmoud Shalabi, and female artists Arapeyat and Abeer Alzinaty. The film premiered at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival, and was later shown on the Sundance Channel and has won over 13 awards. It has shown in film festivals around the world including; IDFA, ND/NF, Stockholm International Film Festival, Sensoria Music & Film Festival, Bonnaroo Music Festival, DOX BOX Syria, Dubai International Film Festival, Beirut International Film Festival, Boston Palestine Film Festival. In August 2008 Slingshot Hip Hop was shown to Palestinian youth in three of Lebanon's Palestinian refugee camps; Shatila, Bourj al-Barajneh, and Bedawi. I'm Still Alive is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Peter van Houten. Picture to Post is a 1969 short documentary film directed by Sarah Erulkar. Torine is a 1981 short documentary film written and directed by Aleksandar Ilic. Jean Rollin, Le Rêveur Égaré is a 2011 horror, erotica, documentary film written and directed by Damien Dupont and Yvan Pierre-Kaiser. In Cuba, Santo Domingo, and Cambodia, sexual tourism has become a booming industry. Men, women, and children prostitute themselves to survive in an economically ravaged country. This film looks at several cases. Lomax the Songhunter is a 2004 documentary film about Alan Lomax, a man who, after World War II, was determined to record folk music from United States and all over the world before it was blown away by mass consumer culture. Son of John Lomax, the man who discovered Lead Belly and introduced Woody Guthrie to the world, Alan shared his father's passion for music and was not intimidated by his massive accomplishments. The film, which finds Alan near death and barely able to make himself understood, traces Alan's journey across the globe, stopping to hear testimonials from many of the people or relatives of the people he recorded. It also contains interviews from Lomax's friends and colleagues, including Pete Seeger, who did some cataloging for Lomax. Lomax the Songhunter was written and directed by Rogier Kappers and aired on PBS's Point of View series in 2006. The documentary weaves original interviews, archival footage, and verite scenes to tell the story of how college sports became a billion dollar industry built on the backs of its unpaid athletes. NoBody's Perfect is a 2008 feature documentary produced and directed by Niko von Glasow. The film won the German Film Award for Best Documentary Film at the Deutscher Filmpreis in 2009, and has gone on to receive worldwide acclaim, resulting in a powerful campaign for the victims of Thalidomide. Under The Pillow is a short animated drama film written and directed by Isabel Herguera. The Stone of Glory is a 1938 film directed by Jiří Lehovec and Jan Libora. The Community is a 2012 short, documentary film, written and directed by Salomé Lamas. Botso is a music documentary film directed by Tom Walters. Guadalquivir is a 2013 documentary film written by Fernando López Mirones and directed by Joaquín Gutiérrez Acha. Black Swan: Metamorphosis is a 2011 documentary film directed by Niko Tavernise. Iberia is a 2005 musical film written and directed by Carlos Saura. A Fragile Dream is an intimate first hand portrayal of Rio de Janeiro's volatile favelas and how football is used as a moral and educational tool to provide stability to the lives of hopeful adolescents. Often poignant and ultimately uplifting, the film details the stories and motivations of those who represent each stage of this dream - from the children hoping to make the grade as professional footballers to former national team icons such as Jorginho and Josimar. Based around a series of interviews, and with rare access to the favelas, A Fragile Dream gives the viewer an opportunity to see behind the scenes of Brazil's most competitive industry. Narrated by award winning actor Peter Capaldi, A Fragile Dream underlines how the beautiful game forms such a fundamental part of Rio's culture and identity. And while football cannot always provide a financial escape route for the thousands of young hopefuls attempting to become Brazil's next big star, it can be used as a means to keep. The Big Shootout: The Life And Times Of 1969 is a 2013 documentary film directed by Mike Looney. Battle of the Bands is the second documentary/rockumentary/mockumentary musical comedy film and the eleventh and twelfth episode of the Nickelodeon TEENick series The Naked Brothers Band. It was released direct-to-DVD on September 4, 2007 and premiered on television on October 6, 2007. Athens, GA: Inside/Out is a documentary film about the mid-1980s music scene in Athens, Georgia, USA. The film features interviews and concert footage of local bands who were a part of the scene at the time of the documentation as well as local legends R.E.M., Pylon, and The B-52's. It also features an interview with famous folk artist Howard Finster. Among the bands featured are Kilkenny Cats, Flat Duo Jets, Time Toy, the Bar-B-Que Killers, Dreams So Real, and Love Tractor. Local legendary personality ORT's storytelling also features prominently in the film. A soundtrack was released on vinyl and cassette. The film was prominently featured on MTV's The Cutting Edge as well as the first six episodes of MTV's 120 Minutes which featured a contest "Win a Weekend in Athens, GA". It was named pick of the week video by People magazine in 1988 and named one of the Top Ten Films about Georgia by the New Georgia Encyclopedia. On June 18, 2008, Athens, GA: Inside/Out kicked off AthFest 2008, with a showing at Ciné followed by a panel discussion and question and answer session featuring ORT, members of Pylon, and other Athens, GA: Inside/Out cast members. Bringing Tibet Home is a 2013 documentary film about Tibetan contemporary Artist Tenzing Rigdol's art piece "Our Land Our people" directed by Tibetan filmmaker Tenzin Tsetan Choklay. The film premiered at the 2013 Busan International Film Festival in South Korea. Director Tenzin Tsetan Choklay won the 2014 Prix du Jury des jeunes Européens for the film Bringing Tibet Home at the 27th FIPA - Festival International de Programmes Audiovisuels in Biarritz, France. The film was invited to a number International film festivals and in Brisbane, Australia at the 22nd Brisbane International Film Festival it received standing ovation from the audience. Ray Harryhausen: Special Effects Titan is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Gilles Penso. Live at the Garden is the fourth DVD release by the American alternative rock band Pearl Jam, recorded on July 8, 2003 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. It was released on November 11, 2003. Kid Kingdom is a 2009 film directed by Tong dao Zhang. Roosevelt, New Jersey: Visions of Utopia is a 1983 documentary. Richard Kroehling served as director and producer. The film explores the story of an independent, farming community of Jews, which was developed on socialist principles and the belief that rural fresh air would benefit the working class population of New York City. It's a modern-day utopia that almost came true for one Jewish village. During the Great Depression, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt supported an order to transfer New York’s downstate garment workers to the Jersey Homesteads. It was the earliest settlement of its type in the fifty states of America: a community developed by the domineering leader of the United States, President Roosevelt. Its purpose was to bring serenity and a farm type lifestyle to a select group of the urban industrial workforce. The program was met with huge demand by impoverished factory workers looking for an improved way of life. Workers arrived in full force to take on the opportunity to fill out application forms for the project. Those selected worked together to build a community from scratch. Riphouse 151: Could've Been's & Wanna Be's is a 2008 retrospective documentary film. It chronicles the rise and fall of Riphouse, a thrash metal band from Rockland County, New York. The film was directed by Peter O'Brien and features interviews with Rob Dukes, Don La Greca of ESPN radio, Rob Moschetti, and several others. Bears is a documentary short film directed by David Lickley. A Man Called God is a 2014 biographical documentary film written by Kristoff St. John and directed by Christopher St. John. Religulous is a 2008 American documentary film written by and starring comedian Bill Maher and directed by Larry Charles. The title of the film is a portmanteau derived from the words "religion" and "ridiculous". The documentary examines and mocks religion and religious belief. Gilda Live is an American film released in 1980 starring Gilda Radner. It was directed by Mike Nichols and was produced by Lorne Michaels. Radner and Michaels and all of the writers involved with the production were alumni from the television program Saturday Night Live. Seeing Is Believing: Handicams, Human Rights and the News is a 2002 Canadian documentary film co-directed by Katerina Cizek and Peter Wintonick about the impact of camcorders and digital media on citizen media creation and grassroots democracy. The one-hour documentary focuses on Joey Lozano, a videographer helping a tribe in the rural southern Philippines where business interests are taking precedence over human rights. It also looks at Serb atrocities in Bosnia, skinhead activity in Prague as well as how portable cameras are used by police to film protesters. The film also explores the role of faxes in the Tiananmen Square uprising and the then-emerging use of text messaging in protests. Teached, Vol. 1 is a 2011 documentary, history film directed by Kelly Amis. Waiting for Fidel is a documentary film from the National Film Board of Canada, in which Joey Smallwood, former Premier of the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador; Newfoundland media mogul Geoff Stirling; and director Michael Rubbo document their visit to Cuba in an unsuccessful attempt to interview Fidel Castro. Much of the film consists of the progressive-minded Smallwood and free-market supporter Stirling debating the effects of the Castro regime. New York Times film reviewer Richard Eder observed that "It is about Cuba, in a way, but it is also about the difficulty in seeing Cuba for what it may be." Gary Evans, in his chronicles of the National Film Board, called the film "one of the most intriguing documentaries of the period". Super Mario is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Filip Topolovec. After The Tsunami is a 2014 documentary short biographical historical fiction film written and directed by Larry Foley. Free Libya is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Fritz Ofner. War Dogs: America's Forgotten Heroes is a 1999 war documentary film written by Tim Prokop and directed by William Bison. Sparrow Songs is a 2010 drama, documentary, short film directed by Alex Jablonski. Binty is a 2007 film directed by Armen Evrensel. Virtually every major Western leader has over the past several years expressed the view that Islam is a peaceful religion and that those who commit violence in its name are fanatics who misinterpret its tenets. This claim, while widely circulated, rarely attracts serious public examination.Through an examination of the Koran, other Islamic texts, and the example of the prophet Muhammed, this documentary argues, through a sober and methodical presentation, that violence against non-Muslims is and has always been an integral aspect of Islam. "Jihad," while best translated as "struggle," when represented in the life of Muhammad, meant organized warfare against non-believers.Relying on Islam's early texts, this documentary considers the violent, expansionary ideology within Islam that seeks the destruction or subjugation of other faiths, cultures, and systems of government. In No Great Hurry: 13 Lessons in Life with Saul Leiter is a 2012 documentary film directed by Tomas Leach. A Film About Coffee is a documentary film directed by Brandon Loper. Grandfather is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Phuong Thao Dong. Playboy Video Centerfold: Playmate of the Year Jenny McCarthy is a 1994 documentary film directed by Scott Allen. Heritages is a 2013 biographical drama and documentary film written and directed by Philippe Aractingi. The film was co-written by Diane Aractingi. The Short Life of José Antonio Gutierrez is a 2006 documentary film directed by Heidi Specogna about the second US Marine to die during the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Gutiérrez came from Guatemala and was a so-called 'green card soldier' i.e. he obtained American citizenship only after his death. He was killed by friendly fire. The film tells his childhood by interviewing people who had known him. Gutierrez had lived as a street child, like many other Guatemalan children who had lost their parents during a genocidal civil war in which the CIA and the KGB were actively involved. Later he found refuge in an orphanage and was able to find his sister. When he grew up Gutierrez decided to go to the United States because he wanted to became an architect. He was a talented draftsman and saw no possibility of realizing his dream in his home country. The film accompanies young women who, despite the risks of which they are aware, take the freight train as Gutierrez had done. In the USA Gutierrez was able to attend high school because he looked younger than he was. Because he was considered to be a minor he could not be deported. He received a green card. Japan, A Story Of Love And Hate is a 2009 film directed by Sean Mcallister. Simulacrum Praecipitii- A Visão Do Abismo is a 2013 short, documentary film, directed by Humberto Bassanelli and written by Tatiana Lohmann. Raise My Hands is a 2012 documentary, short, biographical film written by Elliot V. Kotek and directed by Frank Kelly. Joseph Giunta: A Silent Triumph is a 2002 documentary film directed by Pepita Ferrari. Hijacking Catastrophe: 9/11, Fear & the Selling of American Empire is a 2004 documentary film narrated by Julian Bond and directed by Jeremy Earp and Sut Jhally. It examines the possibility that neoconservatives used the September 11, 2001 attacks to usher in a new doctrine of expanding American power through military force under the guise of a "war on terror" and that the doctrine, known as the Project for the New American Century, had been laid out prior to 9/11 by its authors, which include Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, Donald Rumsfeld, Jeb Bush, and Dan Quayle. Talking With OZU is a documentary film directed by Kogi Tanaka. The Silly Bastard Next to the Bed is a 2013 short documentary comedy film written and directed by Scott Calonico. Our Holy War is a 1942 documentary film written and directed by Ion Filotti Cantacuzino. Red Tomb is a 2013 documentary film directed by Gu Jahywan. Amnesialand is a 2010 documentary , science fiction film written by Mark von Schlegell, Stefanos Tsivopoulos and directed by Stefanos Tsivopoulos. The Extraordinary Ordinary Life of José González is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mikel Cee Karlsson and Fredrik Egerstrand. Memoria negra is a 2006 documentary film directed by Xavier Montanyà. Beyond Borders: Personal Stories from a Small Planet is a series of short documentaries as a filmmaking project of Listen Up! Youth Media Network. AL MáS ALLá is a 2008 documentary short film written and directed by Lourdes Portillo. The Iron Ladies of Liberia is an independently produced documentary film that gives behind-the-scenes access to President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf's first year in government. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf is Africa's first female president. Hamburg damals: die Jahre 1990-1994 is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Christian Mangels. Yuban (Live Earth) is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Yaasib Alvaro Vazquez Colmenares. Malcolm and Barbara: A Love Story is a 1999 film directed by Paul Watson. Muleteers is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Juan Baldana. Cassa, Cassa is a documentary film directed by Elodie Lefèbvre. Hidden Führer: Debating the Enigma of Hitler's Sexuality is a documentary film based on the research of German Professor Lothar Machtan for his 2001 book The Hidden Hitler that claimed Adolf Hitler was a homosexual. Aired by HBO's CINEMAX Reel Life, the 90 minute documentary was directed by gay documentarians Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato and was produced by Gabriel Rotello. Other interviews in the documentary include those with: Geoffrey Giles, author of a study of gays in the Nazi party, professor at the University of Florida Brigitte Hamann, German historian and author Ron Rosenbaum, author of "Explaining Hitler" Ralf Dose, German gay historian and founder of the Magnus Hirschfeld Society Michelangelo Signorile, gay activist author Of the film, a Variety review called it "a platform for taking Machtan's argument seriously." Gay Latino Los Angeles is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jonathan Menendez. The Vanishing Spring Light is a 2011 documentary drama film directed by Xun Yu. Speaking in Code is a character-based documentary directed by Amy Grill about people who are lost in the electronic music lifestyle. Shot in 11 cities and 5 countries, Speaking In Code provides a glimpse into the techno world through the eyes of Modeselektor, the Wighnomy Brothers, Philip Sherburne, Monolake and David Day. The film documents these characters' successes and failures over a three-year period, including the director's struggle to complete the film. Each storyline illustrates how communities cope with different kinds of electronic music obsession. Woody Allen: A Documentary is a documentary film directed by Robert B. Weide. The 2006 cinéma vérité documentary film, Thin, directed by Lauren Greenfield and distributed by HBO, is an exploration of The Renfrew Center in Coconut Creek, Florida; a 40-bed residential facility for the treatment of women with eating disorders. The film mostly revolves around four women with anorexia nervosa and/or bulimia and their struggles for recovery. It premiered on HBO on November 14, 2006. THIN is the centerpiece of a multi-faceted campaign designed to explore issues surrounding body image and eating disorders, including a companion book, traveling exhibition of Greenfield's work and a website. Having already shot photographs at Renfrew for her book Girl Culture, Greenfield returned to the facility to direct THIN, her directorial debut, which she produced in collaboration with producer R.J. Cutler. Living at the center for six months, Greenfield and director of photography Amanda Micheli received unrestricted access, filming not just the therapy sessions, mealtimes and daily weigh-ins that construct the highly structured routine of inpatients' daily lives, but also exploring their turbulent interpersonal relationships with each other, with family and with staff. A German documentary about the then nascent Hip Hop culture as it existed the early 1980's USA, especially at the multi-racial hip hop club Radiotron, based out of Macarthur Park in Los Angeles. Many of the artists and dancers, including Ice-T (who makes his movie debut as a club MC) and Boogaloo Shrimp went straight from Breakin' and Enterin' to star in Breakin'. Ice-T has stated that he considers the film and his own performance in it to be "wack" Amal's Garden is a 2012 short, documentary, drama and music film written and directed by Nadia Shihab. Brian Wilson: I Just Wasn't Made for These Times is a 1995 biographical musical film directed by Don Was. The film is a biography of the American rock icon Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys. The documentary examines the ups and downs of Wilson's life, including the early years of the Beach Boys, his years of substance abuse, and his long road to recovery through interviews with Brian and the Wilson family. Currently, it is sold as a double feature, paired with the 1985 The Beach Boys: An American Band documentary. Into Great Silence is a documentary film directed by Philip Gröning that was released in 2005. It is an intimate portrayal of the everyday lives of Carthusian monks of the Grande Chartreuse, a monastery high in the French Alps. Plastic Paradise: The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a documentary advanture family film directed by Angela Sun. It's the Same World is a 1980 American short documentary film produced by Dick Young. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Paperland: The Bureaucrat Observed is a 1979 documentary film critiquing bureaucracy, written and directed by Donald Brittain and produced by the National Film Board of Canada and CBC-TV. One Night in Powder is a 2013 documentary comedy film written and directed by Jason Attar and Danny Wimborne. Concorde's Last Flight is a 2010 TV movie written and directed by Christopher Spencer. Gun Porn is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Brahm Rosensweig. Crazy Sexy Cancer is a documentary film created by actress/photographer Kris Carr. The film premiered on March 11, 2007, at the South by Southwest Film Festival, and had its US television premiere on August 29, 2007, on TLC. The film was edited by Pagan Harleman and Brian Fassett. The music was composed by Matthew Puckett. The film tells the story of Carr's battle with epithelioid hemangioendothelioma, a vascular cancer in the lining of the blood vessels in her liver and lungs so rare that only 0.01 percent of the cancer population has it. Around 200 to 300 cases are diagnosed in America every year - the cause is unknown. Kris Carr has also written two books, Crazy Sexy Cancer Tips, based upon the film, and Crazy Sexy Cancer Survivor. First Case, Second Case is a 1979 Iranian film directed by Abbas Kiarostami. How To Be Irish is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Kamil Krolak. Inside the Square is a 2009 documentary film directed by David Michod. It is a 30 minutes behind-the-scenes look at the making of 2008 neo-noir thriller film The Square directed by Nash Edgerton, with particular emphasis on the style and difficulties arose during the shooting and the experience of cast and crew during the making of film. It had a limited release in Australia on 5 March 2009. "Since their inception in 1979 to combat HIV and AIDS, the infamous Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence have established missions all over the world, ministering to the masses with glitter, wit and charity. As German filmmakers explore the Sisterhood in Berlin, Montevideo in Uruguay and San Francisco, we find out that Sisters everywhere hand out happiness, along with a healthy dose of tongue-lashing. From the Life Ball in Vienna to the organization’s archives in San Francisco to queer visibility in Montevideo, each group has their own goals and methods. As one German Sister remarks, it’s easier to hand out condoms when people know you aren’t hitting on them. In Uruguay, the Sisters face homophobia and persecution from a heavily Catholic public. There, the mask becomes more than a political statement — it’s a form of protection. As the Sisters gear up for a worldwide gathering in San Francisco for the group’s 30th anniversary, they reflect on what it means to be part of the movement, both personally and for their communities. For anyone who has ever wondered why the Sisters wear white faces (or faces at all), this documentary lifts the veil for an inside look at the organization committed to safer sex, LGBT rights and performance art. As one original Sister says, “We’re not really anti-Catholic at all. We’re just anti-guilt, anti-hate, anti-negativity.” This exuberant documentary lives up to that commitment, sparkles and all." Quoting the description from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Annie: It's The Hard Knock Life is a 2013 family music documentary film written by Christopher W. Czajka and directed by Joshua Seftel. The Case for a Creator is a 2006 documentary written and directed by Wayne Allen. Remembering Vietnam: The Wall at 25 is a 2008 News & Documentary Emmy Award nominated documentary. La Selva Tranquila is a short adventure documentary film directed by Christian Chapman, Paul Jason Hoffman and Cody Troyer. Here... I Mean There is a documentary, drama and family film directed by Laura Capatana-Juller. In Search of the Wallaby is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Alasdair Bayne and Andrew O'Connor. Nuchigafu is a 2012 documentary film directed by Pak Su-nam. The Magnum Story II- The Savage Years is a 1989 documentary film directed by Patricia Wheatley. The Other Side Of Her Path is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Feven Ghebremariam. Spaces: The Architecture of Paul Rudolph is a 1983 short documentary film produced by Bob Eisenhardt about the work of architect Paul Rudolph. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Witness: From the Balcony of Room 306 is a 2008 documentary short film created to honor the 40th annual remembrance of the life and death of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The film received a 2008 Academy Award Nomination in the "Documentary Short Subject" Category at the 81st Academy Awards. Our Need for Consolation is a 2011 short, historical documentary film directed by Dan Levy Dagerman. LINES is a documentary film about big mountain snowboarding in Alaska. It follows a crew for 6 weeks in the Chugach mountains and showcases what it takes to ride these unique mountains and film a snowboard video: the waiting, the stress, the dangers, everything that goes into it and is usually never shown. It also retraces some of the history of this unknown discipline and pays tribute to the pioneers. But the film really focuses on the human aspect and why these people do what they do. An accent is also put on the visual aspect of the sceneries and a more cinematic approach to the documentary. The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg is a documentary film directed, produced and written by Aviva Kempner about Hall of Fame first baseman Hank Greenberg of the Detroit Tigers. A Jewish player who chose not to play on Yom Kippur in 1934 during a heated pennant race, Greenberg experienced a great deal of antisemitism. He nearly broke Babe Ruth's 60 home run record by hitting 58 home runs in 1938. Like many players of the era, Greenberg's career was interrupted by military service. Initially, Greenberg was classified unfit for service due to flat feet. However, upon re-examination, he was cleared. Before Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, the United States Congress released men over age 28. After the attack, Greenberg immediately reenlisted in the United States Army Air Forces. In 1947, Hank Greenberg, as a member of the Pittsburgh Pirates and playing his final season, was one of the few ballplayers to give the Brooklyn Dodgers' Jackie Robinson, the majors' first black player in many years, a warm welcome. Robinson later said, "Class tells. It sticks out all over Mr. Greenberg". Star Trek: A New Vision is a 2009 short documentary film written by M. David Melvin. Shared Streets is a documentary film directed by Tae Jun-seek. Investigation into the Invisible World is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Jean-Michel Roux. A Song for You is a family drama documentary film directed by Sharon Karp and Silvia Malagrino. Nutrición is 1976 short documentary film directed by Eduardo Carrasco Zanini. The Monastery: Mr. Vig and the Nun is a 2006 Danish documentary film directed by Pernille Rose Grønkjær. In the Shadow of the Palms is a documentary produced and directed by the Australian filmmaker Wayne Coles-Janess. He filmed it in Iraq prior to, during and after the fall of Saddam Hussein after the United States invasion of 2003. An Arab-language film, it documents the changes in Iraqi society and the lives of ordinary Iraqis by focusing on a cross-section of individuals. Young@Heart is a 2008 British documentary film directed by Stephen Walker. Its focus is Young@Heart, a New England chorus of senior citizens that sings contemporary and classic rock and pop songs. One Mans Walk is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Charlotte Dolman. The Sarnos: A Life in Dirty Movies is a 2013 documentary and biographical film written and directed by Wiktor Ericsson. Tyres is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Kyaw Myo Lwin. En Attendant Oktay is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Émilie Beaulieu-Guérette. Monument to the Dream is a 1967 American short documentary film about the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial directed by Charles Guggenheim. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Herstory is a 2011 short documentary drama animated short film written and directed by Jun-ki Kim. Signs Of Gray, Olney's Battle Against The Dragon Of Evil is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Henrique Dantas. Family Values Tour '98 is the first live DVD by various artists, which was released on March 30, 1999 through Immortal Records and Epic Records. It was released on the same date as the CD version. Booker's Place: A Mississippi Story is a 2012 documentary film about Booker Wright, an African-American waiter who worked in a restaurant for whites only. In 1965, Wright appeared in Mississippi: A Self Portrait, a short NBC television documentary about racism in the American South. During his interview with producer Frank De Felitta, he spoke openly about racism, and his treatment as a waiter in an all-white restaurant. The broadcast of his remarks had catastrophic consequences for Wright. Booker's Place: A Mississippi Story was directed by the son of Frank De Felitta, Oscar-nominated, independent filmmaker Raymond De Felitta, and co-produced by one of Booker Wright’s four grandchildren, Yvette Johnson. It includes interviews with those who lived in the community. They discuss life at the time, and the restaurant Wright owned, which catered to African-American customers. The documentary premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 25, 2012. BMX Way of Life is a 2004 short documentary film directed by Tony Campos. The Age of Change is a 1983 short documentary film written by Maree Teychenne and directed by Ivan Gaal. A unique film, inspired by a series of photographs, taken by director Madeleine Farley in Los Angeles focusing on the homelessness. Includes interviews with the homeless, government officials, charitable foundation workers, mental health organizations etc. in a moving, well rounded look at a serious issue. Weaves together still photos with Super 8 and 16mm footage. Art Montana: Nancy Erikson is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Mark Shogren. Pillars of Faith: Celtic Saints is a 1999 documentary film directed by Chris Gormlie. Globe Trekker: Great Historic Sites is a 2002 film. Mustang: The House That Joe Built is a 1978 documentary film written and directed by Robert Guralnick. Re: Awakenings is a 2013 short historical documentary music biographical film written by Bill Morrison, Oliver Sacks, Lawrence Weschler and directed by Bill Morrison. Wham, Bam, mr Pam is a 2014 short LGBT, comedy, documentary, biography film written and directed by Nicolas Kazamia. 40,000 Years of Dreaming is an hour-long documentary film presented by George Miller and produced by the British Film Institute, as part of their Century of Cinema series. The film acts mainly as a collage of various pieces of Australian film, past and present, including Miller's own Mad Max series. In the film, Miller focuses primarily on Australian cinema as a vessel of public dreaming, creating a link between contemporary Australian cinema and ancient Aborigine dreamtime stories, while at the same time providing leigh-way to those elements that Miller posits make Australian film such a unique blend - the archetypal landscape, and the idiosyncratic Australian types, among them. Miller also places Australian cinema in the context of Joseph Campbell's monomyth, of which Miller has long been a proponent. Since its release in 1997, it—along with several of the other films in the Century of Cinema series, outside of Martin Scorsese's feature—has long been out of print, minus the occasional television showing. The Palace of the Peak: set in more than 1000 acres of glorious Derbyshire countryside, Chatsworth House is one of the most famous stately homes in England. This unique journey takes the viewer through the most spectacular of Chatsworth's 300 rooms which contain one of the nation's finest collections of antiques, furniture and works of art. In a time when even the most respected and mainstream hip-hop artists face charges of drug trafficking, assault, and money laundering, filmmaker Don Sikorski speaks with such prominent hip-hoppers as Snoop Dogg, Busta Rhymes, and Kanye West to find out why hip-hop moguls and law enforcement seem to be locked in a bitter and never-ending feud. Cezanne is a 1990 documentary film directed by Danièle Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub. En Un Barrio Viejo is a 1963 short documentary film directed by Nicolás Guillén Landrián. Keep Not Silent is a 2004 documentary film by Israeli director Ilil Alexander about three lesbians in Jerusalem. Lesbianism is generally viewed as forbidden in Orthodox Judaism. In Jerusalem, a number of Orthodox Jewish lesbians formed a group called OrthoDykes for mutual support and to learn the relevant issues in Jewish law. The film describes lives of three of them. One is Yudit, single and trying to have her same-sex marriage follow the Orthodox rules. Another is Miriam-Ester, who is married to a man and has ten children. She is suppressing her lesbian feelings in order to keep her marriage for religious reasons. Ruth, another married lesbian, keeps her marriage for the same reason, while her husband agrees to her seeing her lover regularly. Barberland is a 2002 documentary film written by A.D. Liano and directed by A.D. Liano and Robert Liano. Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony is a 1999 documentary by Ken Burns produced for National Public Radio and WETA. The documentary explores the movement for women's suffrage in the United States in the 19th century, focusing on leaders Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. It won a Peabody Award in 1999. It was released on VHS on November 9, 1999. Events covered in the documentary The revolution "I wish you were a boy" The status of women in the mid-1850s A drudge or a doll Connections to the abolitionist movement Temperance and reform Mental Hunger - the restrictions leading to activism The Seneca Falls Convention on women's rights "A caged lion" - Susan B. Anthony Women's Souls The Woman's National Loyal League and the American Civil War The 15th amendment and women's rights The Revolution Done It! Women's rights before the courts Spreading the Word Making History Division and unity - the National American Woman Suffrage Association and NWSA merge Self Sovereignty - a philosophy of freedom The Woman's Bible - a challenge to religion Anthony's death The franchise comes Quelli che soffrono per voi is a 1951 Italian short documentary film directed by Alessandro Blasetti. No Joke is a 2013 documentary feature film about three Canadian stand-up comedians who are "rejected as hopelessly unfunny by hometown audiences and thusly flee to America for a whirlwind comedy tour to determine once and for all whether they have any star potential. Their penultimate comedic judgement comes via private audition for Jamie Masada, owner of the World Famous Laugh Factory in Hollywood, California. The results are hilarious, heartbreaking, and completely unexpected." The film is directed by Matt Frame and is the follow-up to the 2004 film Baghdad or Bust. No Joke had its World Premiere in Vancouver, Canada on January 12, 2013. The Beijing Ants is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Ryuji Otsuka. The Shield Around the K: The Story of K Records is a documentary produced and directed by Heather Rose Dominic about the independent record label, K Records. The film profiles the birth and growth of the punk rock DIY label based in Olympia, Washington. Co-founders, Calvin Johnson and Candice Pedersen are interviewed along with over 20 K artists and peers including Michael Azerrad, Timothy Brock, Gerard Cosloy, The Crabs, Steve Fisk, John Foster, John Goodmanson, Toni Holm, Rich Jensen, Peter Kember, David Lester, Bret Lunsford, Ian MacKaye, Lois Maffeo, Patrick Maley, Rose Melberg, Slim Moon, Jack Rabid, David Raugh, Ira Robbins, Jean Smith, Winston Vidor, Wandering Lucy and Dean Wareham. Included are Super 8 music videos of Beat Happening, The Halo Benders, Lois, Mecca Normal and Tiger Trap directed by Patrick Maley and Lois Maffeo. The film also contains rare footage from the International Pop Underground Convention, a six-day festival held at the Capital Theater in Olympia, Washington in August, 1991. After uncovering the mummified and fossilized 'body of a dinosaur, scientists undertake a radiographic autopsy and make several astonishing discoveries including the creature's last meal and never-before-seen internal organs. In My Genes is a Kenyan 2009 documentary film directed, written, produced and edited by Lupita Nyong'o in her directing debut. Target-Invisible was an 1945 short produced by the First Motion Picture Unit. It follows a squadron of bombers from their base in the Marianas through their mission over Tokyo. Particular emphasis is given on the use of radar, and how it was instrumental in winning the war. At the end of the short, an announcer tells the audience that, while the war is over, Americans can now help win the peace sponsoring science through buying bonds. Prayers for Peace is a 2009 short film directed by Dustin Grella. "Prayers for Peace is a narrative stop-motion animation confronting the memory of the artist's younger brother killed in the current conflict in Iraq. Drawn entirely with pastels on a slate chalkboard, the materials used to create the animation become a metaphor for the impermanence of life." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Tennou gokko: Misawa Chiren tatta hitori no kakumei is a documentary film directed by Nobuyuki Ohura. New Americans is a 1944 American short documentary film directed by Slavko Vorkapić. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. See What I'm Saying: The Deaf Entertainers Documentary is a 2009 documentary produced and directed by Hilari Scarl. It focuses on the lives of deaf artists Bob Hiltermann, TL Forsberg, CJ Jones, and Robert DeMayo. The New York Times called it "Complex, candid and all-but-essential viewing for hearing audiences". Variety said it is "An outstanding documentary exploration of the travails of four deaf entertainers, Hilari Scarls' `See What I'm Saying' provides a glimpse into a performance circuit that few hearing-enabled Americans likely realize exists." Lyrical Nitrate is a 1991 collage film by Peter Delpeut. The film consists of clips from various silent films printed on decaying nitrocellulose film stock, including shorts, documentaries, and travelogues. There is no formal narrative. Delpeut followed the film with 1993's The Forbidden Quest, which also uses found footage; the two were released together on video and DVD. The films were drawn from the Desmets Collection of the Nederlands Filmmuseum, where Delpeut worked as deputy director for a decade. Jean Desmet was an early Dutch film distributor. After Desmet's death a cache of film prints was discovered in the attic of a theater he owned in Amsterdam, and subsequently added to the museum's collection. The Liberty of Norton Folgate is a 2009 documentary musical film written by Carl Smyth and directed by Julien Temple and Luke Cresswell. Sorrow: the Nazi legacy is a 1992 documentary film directed by Gregor Nowinski. Widerstand am Strom: Hainburg - der österreichische Weg is a 1987 documentary film directed by Roberto A. Epple. Wapsi is a 2005 documentary film directed by Ajay Raina. Danube Hospital is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Nikolaus Geyrhalter. Morikiki is a documentary film directed by Shohei Shibata. Mandelson: The Real PM? is a 2010 documentary film directed by Hannah Rothschild. Mighty Times: The Children's March is a 2004 American short documentary film about the Birmingham civil rights marches. It was directed by Robert Houston and produced by Robert Hudson. The film won an Academy Award in 2005 for Documentary Short Subject. The film was co-produced by the Southern Poverty Law Center and HBO. My Grandfather is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Ruta Buciunaite. The Romance of Celluloid is a 1937 short black and white documentary film, narrated by Frank Whitbeck, which goes behind the scenes to look at the manufacture of film and the making of motion pictures. The film was the first of the studio's Romance of Celluloid series, which also included; Another Romance of Celluloid From the Ends of the Earth: Another Romance of Celluloid Electric Power: Another Romance of Celluloid A New Romance of Celluloid: The Miracle of Sound A New Romance of Celluloid: Hollywood; Style Center of the World A New Romance of Celluloid: You Can't Fool a Camera A New Romance of Celluloid: Personalities A New Romance of Celluloid: We Must Have Music Twenty Years After: A New Romance of Celluloid Sinister organizations have achieved the ability to affect the thoughts, decisions, and perceptions of human beings across the globe. Stars Ian R. Crane. An Evening with Kevin Smith is a DVD featuring Question and Answer sessions that the writer and filmmaker Kevin Smith held with his fans at various American colleges in 2001/2002. The colleges were: Clark University, Cornell University, Indiana University, Kent State University and University of Wyoming. During the sessions, Kevin Smith answers questions regarding his movies, as well as his life. He discusses how he got started in the movie industry, how different films came about, his friendship with Jason Mewes, and his relationship with the media, fans, and various other celebrities. This film concentrates on Bon Jovi's startling rejuvenation during the past decade - their contribution to the music of the third millennium. The DVD features live and studio recordings of the band's finest tracks from this period, rare footage, interviews with the group and seldom seen photographs. One Day After Peace is a 2012 documentary film directed by Erez Laufer and Miri Laufer. Indefatigable is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Ruth Jarman and Joe Gerhardt. Ocean Men: Extreme Drive is a 2001 documentary film written by Mose Richards and directed by Bob Talbot. L'Affaire Chebeya is a documentary directed by Thierry Michel that was released in February 2012. The award-winning film explores the assassination of a human rights activist in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the subsequent trial. Shores of Silence: Whale Sharks in India is a landmark film by Mike Pandey that brought about major legislative changes to protect whale sharks worldwide. This documentary depicts the needless killing and harvesting of whale sharks by poor Indian communities. In response to the film, the Indian government introduced legislature to ban fishing of whale sharks, declaring them endangered species and protecting them under the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972. This gives whale sharks equal status to other endangered species such as tigers and rhinoceroses. Internationally, the film helped to bring the whale shark global protection under CITES. The film won 11 international awards including The Wildscreen Panda, also known as the Green Oscar. Recently, the film received four stars from the Hindustan Times. Mirror Mirror provocatively explores the relationship between a woman's body image and the quest for an idealized female form. Blending humor and candor, the film incisively illuminates the vagaries in the concept of an "ideal" body type. A tension exists between the visual statement created by masks and mannequins and the rich diversity of the thirteen women appearing in the film. These women, of varying age, size, and ethnicity, frankly reveal the ambivalence with which they regard their own bodies. Their comments on the size and shape of specific body parts are underscored by footage from the thirties depicting perfect body part contests for women. The Glorious Resolve: Death Before Disgrace is a 2011 Pakistani documentary film made by the Inter-Services Public Relations department of the Pakistani military. It was created specifically to counter Taliban and Al-Qaeda propaganda videos by depicting the army and the fight against terror in a positive light. Glorious Resolve won Jury special award in the recently held International film festival "Eserciti-e-Popoli" held at Bracciano, Italy. The festival saw the participation of NATO and 24 other countries with 60 films produced by renowned film makers which were evaluated by qualified and reputed jury. Glorious Resolve received the medal from the Chairman of the Italian Senate with the citation "A technically outstanding and emotionally powerful dramatization of the story of courageous soldier under fire in combat situation". Endless Day is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Anna Frances Ewert. A Place to Stand is a 1967 film produced and edited by the Canadian artist and filmmaker Christopher Chapman for the Ontario pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal, Canada. For the film, he pioneered the concept of moving panes, of moving images, within the single context of the screen. At times there are 15 separate images moving at once. This technique, which he dubbed "multi-dynamic image technique" has since been employed in many films, notably Norman Jewison's 1968 film The Thomas Crown Affair. Mr. Jewison has credited Mr. Chapman as the creator of the edit style. The technique may also be seen on television today in the series 24. It is said that most of the editing decisions were worked out in an accountant's spreadsheet book and the pencil edit plan resembled flow charts. Chapman has said that at one point in the editing process he stood there in the room, bits of footage hanging from clips all around him. He felt crushed by the force of his vision and he was a breath away from quitting. Even at the first screening, Chapman was exhausted and unsure but as he left the room, Steve McQueen watching at the back, grabbed Chapman and told him that he was blown away by the film. Gangrene is a 1994 film directed by Johann Feindt and Didi Danquart. Just Another Missing Kid is a 1981 documentary film about the search for a missing teenager and directed by John Zaritsky. Eric Wilson had left his native Ottawa in July 1978 in a Volkswagen camper on a trip to Boulder, Colorado. Somewhere in Nebraska he disappeared. The movie traces how his family and a private investigator work to find out what had happened. The film focuses on how little help the various police forces were and is an indictment of the apathy and bureaucracy of the legal system on both sides of the border. Raymond Hatch and Bertram Davis, hitchhikers Wilson had picked up, eventually confessed to the murder. The long-time criminal and drifter Hatch, who had committed the murder, was sentenced to 26 years in prison, but was released after serving 13. In 1994 he stabbed his girlfriend with a knife and was convicted of assault for which he served 9 months in jail. In a follow-up to the story from 1995, the fifth estate reported that Hatch had resumed his drifting. He died in 2000. Originally produced by CBC Television for the documentary news program the fifth estate, it was broadcast on CBC television to much acclaim in 1981. Time Is Illmatic is a 2014 documentary film written by Erik Parker and directed by One9. Sur les traces du Bembeya Jazz is a 2007 documentary film about the Guinean band Bembeya Jazz. Corn Mother is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Taylor Dunne. Bar25 is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Britta Mischer and Nana Yuriko. Ground-breaking discoveries are the basis of this new series on the civilization of Ancient Egypt. Designed as stepping stones to a happy afterlife, the great pyramids of Egypt were not isolated phenomena but rather representations of a religious and architectural evolution which stemmed from a tradition of elaborate tomb-building. By placing a symbolic "Mound of Creation" made of sand and stone above the tomb, the Egyptians believed that their kings would continually be resurrected and it was this belief that eventually led to the development of the Pyramid. Puzzles is a documentary crime fiction family film directed by David Pavlosky and Tami Gold. Station 58 is a documentary made by Pakistani documentary filmmaker Azfar Rizvi. The documentary after being broadcast on local channels has been accepted in international film festivals. When you can't muscle your way through life, what can you do? A CERTAIN KIND OF BEAUTY is Dan Aronie's response. Dan was a model and aspiring actor when he was diagnosed with a severe form of Multiple Sclerosis at 23. At an age where most people are just starting their lives, Dan is forced to contemplate an unsure future. With the support of family and friends, what he uncovers is an inspiration inner strength - a certain kind of beauty he never knew he had. As six years pass on Martha's Vineyard, Dan undergoes profound changes, transforming agony into depth; anger into love. Told through the eyes of people closest to him, and woven together into this stunningly intimate documentary by award winning filmmakers, this film tells the story of a man who is no longer built like a rock, but whose heart could move a mountain. The Trap: What Happened to Our Dream of Freedom is a BBC documentary series by English filmmaker Adam Curtis, well known for other documentaries including The Century of the Self and The Power of Nightmares. It began airing in the United Kingdom on BBC Two on 11 March 2007. The series consists of three one-hour programmes which explore the concept and definition of freedom, specifically, "how a simplistic model of human beings as self-seeking, almost robotic, creatures led to today's idea of freedom." Rebel Rebel Rebel is a short documentary film directed by Kyle Schneider. Cane Toads: An Unnatural History is a 47-minute documentary film about the introduction of Cane Toads to Australia. Cane Toads were introduced to Australia with the aim of controlling a sugar cane pest, the cane beetle, but they over-multiplied and became a serious problem in the Australian ecosystem. It is often humorous, and is used in high schools and colleges as a complement to curricula in biology, ecology, environmental science, anthropology, geography, and communication. It was filmed in Cairns and Gordonvale in Queensland. The film was nominated for a BAFTA Film Award for Best Short Film. It is distributed in the United States by Radio Pictures. Unusual for a film considered a cult classic, Cane Toads performed very well during its theatrical release. For almost 20 years Cane Toads: An Unnatural History held the title of top grossing non-IMAX documentary for the Australian box office. It remains easily in the top ten today even with the IMAX films included. Released in March 1988, it is recording as bringing in $613,910 Australian dollars. Ich bin nicht Gott, aber wie Gott is a 1994 documentary film directed and written by Claus Strobel. My America is a documentary film directed by Peter Hegedus. Psychiatry: An Industry of Death is a 2006 documentary film. Jam Docu Kangjung is a 2011 documentary film directed by Choi Jin-Sung, Choi Hadongha, Chon Seungil, Hong Hyung-sook, Jung Yun-seok, Kim Taeil, Kwon Hyo, Kyung Soon and Yang Donggyu. Mugshot is a 2014 historical documentary film written by Rob Ruzic and directed by Dennis Mohr. Facing Ali is a 2009 documentary directed by Pete McCormack about Muhammad Ali as told from the perspectives of some of the notable opponents he faced during his career: George Chuvalo, Sir Henry Cooper, George Foreman, "Smokin'" Joe Frazier, Larry Holmes, Ron Lyle, Ken Norton, Earnie Shavers, Leon Spinks and Ernie Terrell. Production is credited to Canadian producer Derik Murray and his company, Network Entertainment, Lions Gate Entertainment, and Spike Sports in association with Muhammad Ali Enterprises. The renowned pianist Alice Sommer is 104 years-old, and lives in London. She experienced and witnessed most of the significant events of the 20th century: World War I, The Inflation, World War II, the Holocaust, the Liberation, Communism, Emigration, and more. FROM HELL TO PARADISE documents what makes Alice Sommer so special, and how the spirit of music has shaped and inspired her life; how the music helped her to survive the ghetto of the Terezin (Theresienstadt) and recover mentally and physically from the loss of her husband and almost her entire family. Brought up in Prague; educated in German culture; living and working in Israel for 37 years, and currently living in London, Mrs. Sommer's passion for life is tremendous and admirable. True Tales is a 2013 documentary, crime fiction, biographical film written by Katie Dunn, Daniel Laabs, Martin Spirit and directed by Katie Dunn. Something Like a War is an Indian documentary by Deepa Dhanraj made in 1991. It examines India's family planning program centered on the gender it primarily affects: women. Panoplie is a 1979 short, documentary film written and directed by Philippe Gaucherand. The Providence Effect is a 2009 documentary film directed by Rollin Binzer about the transformation of Providence-St. Mel from a typical "inner city" school to a top tier institution. It had its world premier at the Dawn Breakers International Film Festival in Zurich. Green Magic is a 1953 Italian documentary film directed by Gian Gaspare Napolitano. I’m Black And I Think I Should Be Proud is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Samuel Kihagi. Waterwalker is a 1984 documentary film by Bill Mason, a Canadian outdoorsman, painter, canoeist and environmentalist, who made many films on the art of canoeing and on the appreciation of nature. Released theatrically in Canada in 1984, it was nominated for a Genie Award for "Best Documentary Feature." The film follows Mason as he canoes through whitewater rapids and along the coast of Lake Superior. It features a musical score by Bruce Cockburn. It was Mason's last film. The Mushroom Club is a 2005 documentary short subject, directed by Steven Okazaki. The short film is about the nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima and its effects on the residents of that city sixty years later. On January 31, 2006 it was nominated for the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. It lost to A Note of Triumph: The Golden Age of Norman Corwin. Secret Lives: Hidden Children and Their Rescuers During WWII is a 2002 documentary directed by Aviva Slesin. It deals with the complicated associations involving two groups of guardians and the children who are grateful to each pair. The Fallbrook Story is a short subject film that told the story of a water rights battle between the citizens of the Fallbrook, California area and the federal government. The government wanted to have exclusive rights to the water from the Santa Margarita river for the use of adjacent Camp Pendleton, a U.S. Marine Corps base, in conflict with the established use by local ranchers. At the time film director Frank Capra served on the Board of the local water agency, the Fallbrook Public Utilities District. He produced the short film to tell the story from the ranchers perspective, leading to front page publicity from the Los Angeles Times. As a result, the federal government subsequently withdrew their claim on exclusive use of the water. The film was introduced on camera by Cecil B. DeMille. A copy of the 16mm film is in the archives of the Fallbrook Historical Society. The Little Team is a 2011 short documentary sport film written and directed by Roger Gómez and Dani Resines. Diy is a 2014 short documentary, action film directed by Peter Baxter, Eric Ekman and Ben Hethcoat. Death of An Indie Label is a documentary & soundtrack about the independent record label Reel Life Productions, founded by James H. Smith and his younger brother, rapper Esham, in Detroit in 1990. The film, which was uploaded onto the label's YouTube channel, features appearances by James Smith, Esham and Mastamind.the soundtrack for the film features Seven the General and Poe Whosaine. This Is What Love In Action Looks Like is a 2011 documentary directed by Morgan Jon Fox. The Restorers is a 2003 documentary film by Adam White about restoration of vintage war planes ranging from the F4U Corsair to the B-17 "Yankee Lady". White interviewed dozens of people who have dedicated much of their lives and thousands of dollars to restore planes for museums, air shows, or their own personal collections. The subjects range from people who restore planes in their own garages to major corporations; the end results range from planes that are used in exhibitions and air shows to planes that are restored as racing vehicles. In 2005, White earned a regional 2004 Emmy Award for the film. The film had been released July 18–20, 2003 at the Neon Movies in Dayton, Ohio in conjunction with the Vectren Dayton Air Show. In February 2004, the film was made available in both DVD and VHS format. On March 3, 2004 it was screened at the Fargo Film Festival where it won Documentary Feature Runner-Up award. It debuted on television on Western Reserve Public Media April 13, 2004 and was reaired on June 16. Con Artists is a 2011 documentary film directed by Boris Kievsky. Carpe Diem: A Fishy Tale is a 2013 short documentary film written by Scott Dobson, Charlotte Engel and Charlotte Odele and directed by Scoot Dobson. Blood Type is a documentary action drama war film directed by Leeni Linna. Cragcam's Guide to Joshua Tree National Park is a 2006 travel and sports documentary film directed by Jeff Hess. The Seventh Walk is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Amit Dutta. Karl Hess: Toward Liberty is a 1980 American short documentary film about the anarchist Karl Hess, produced by Roland Hallé and Peter W. Ladue. It won an Academy Award in 1981 for Documentary Short Subject. The film was produced at Boston University's College of Communications, School of Broadcasting and Film, Graduate Film Program. Several students, faculty and others made a substantial contribution to creating the film. Perseverance: The Story of Dr. Billy Taylor is a documentary film directed by Daniel Chace and Bob Hercules. For the last 60 years, the term "Jewish boxer" has been an oxymoron. But Dmitriy Salita, a 25 year-old Russian immigrant is making history as a top professional boxer and a rigorously observant Jew. While providing an intimate, 3-year long look at the trials and tribulations faced by an up and coming professional boxer, ORTHODOX STANCE is a portrait of seemingly incompatible cultures and characters (boxing trainers, promoters and rabbis) working together to support Dmitriy's rare and remarkable devotion to both Orthodox Judaism and the pursuit of a professional boxing title. In the end, ORTHODOX STANCE is about more than just boxing and religion, but a young man's search for meaning in life. Kaze no mai is a documentary film directed by Nobue Miyazaki. Little Victorian Secrets is a 2010 documentary film written by Tristan Loraine and Sandra Skibsted and directed by Sandra Skibsted. Dark Days is a documentary made by Marc Singer, a British filmmaker. The film follows a group of people living in an abandoned section of the New York City underground railway system, more precisely the area of the so-called Freedom Tunnel. They Chose Freedom is a four-part TV documentary on the history of political dissent in the USSR from the 1950s to the 1990s. It was produced in 2005 by Vladimir V. Kara-Murza. The documentary tells the story of the Soviet dissident movement from its emergence in the late 1950s with the weekly public readings of banned poetry on Mayakovsky Square in Moscow. The development of samizdat, opposition demonstrations held in Moscow in 1965 and 1968, and the harsh repressions unleashed by Soviet authorities against dissenters, are all part of the film's narrative. The third episode deals with events leading to the collapse of Soviet dictatorship and the democratic revolution of August 1991. The final episode is dedicated to the period after 1991; in it former dissidents discuss why the emergence of democracy in Russia proved to be short-lived, and how it was possible that a former KGB officer, Vladimir Putin, was elected to the Russian presidency. "They Chose Freedom" is narrated primarily through the interviews of dissidents themselves. Ashlaa is a Moroccan 2010 documentary film. No Dumb Questions is a 2001 short documentary film directed by Melissa Regan. Grandpa Samvel is a 2012 documentary film written by Samvel Seyranyan and directed by Arsen Gasparyan. Are You Ready? is a documentary film directed by Heo Won. Lazy Hitchhikers' Tour de Europe is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Hojae Lee. Kennedy Johnson is a 2013 short art film directed by Ian Helliwell. À Hauteur d'homme is a 2003 Canadian political documentary directed in 2003 by Jean-Claude Labrecque about Bernard Landry and the 2003 general election in Quebec, Canada. It won a Jutra Award for Best Documentary in 2004. Its style belongs to the Quebec cinéma direct school of filmmaking. Focus Forward: DisplAir is a 2012 documentary short directed by Victor Kossakovsky. Top Gear Apocalypse is a 2010 sports documentary film directed by Phil Churchward. Agadez nomade FM is a 2003 film directed by Christian Lelong and Pierre Mortimore. My Name Is Albert Ayler is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Kasper Collin. Antwerp is a 2011 Documentary film written and directed by Peter Van Goethem. The Big Swell follows the life cycle of a massive winter swell from its birth in the heart of a violent storm in the North Pacific through to its death throes in the form of giant waves breaking at a notorious surf break in Northern California. Urbex is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Stephen MacLean. The Iran Job is a documentary directed by Till Schauder and produced by Sara Nodjoumi about Kevin Sheppard, a professional American basketball player, as he plays in Shiraz, Iran for the A.S. Shiraz team in the Iranian Super League. The documentary was filmed in Iran in the winter of 2008–2009, a few months before the uprising of Iran's Green Movement. Christiane Amanpour, Gloria Steinem, Maz Jobrani, Karim Sadjadpour, and executive producer Abigail Disney have expressed support for The Iran Job. In December 2011 the film was invited to a private, work-in-progress screening at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, D.C. moderated by Karim Sadjadpour. On January 9, 2012 The Iran Job completed a 50-day crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter that raised over $100,000. During its Kickstarter campaign, the film received press coverage from CNN International, The Washington Post, The Huffington Post, PBS FRONTLINE's Tehran Bureau, and IFP's Filmmaker magazine. Since the completion of its Kickstarter campaign, the film has received press from PBS' P.O.V. blog. Extraordinary Moms is a 2011 tv documentary film starring Julia Roberts. Ball and Chain is a 1967 short film directed by Robert N. Zagone. Dzukija's Bull is a 2012 documentary film directed and written by Linas Mikuta. Mission Congo is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by David Turner and Lara Zizic. Sir! No Sir! is a 2005 documentary by Displaced Films about the anti-war movement within the ranks of the United States Armed Forces during the Vietnam War. The film was produced, directed, and written by David Zeiger. The film had a theatrical run in 80 cities throughout the U.S. and Canada in 2006, and was broadcast worldwide on: Sundance Channel, Discovery Channel, BBC, ARTE France, ABC Australia, SBC Spain, ZDF Germany, YLE Finland, RT, and several others. Aftermath: The Remnants of War is a 2001 Canadian documentary film directed by Daniel Sekulich about the painful legacy of war, based on the Lionel Gelber Prize winning book of the same name by Donovan Webster. The film is co-written by Sekulich and Allen Abel, and co-produced by the National Film Board of Canada and Aftermath Pictures. Based on the award-winning book by Donovan Webster, this film exposes the human remains, environmental damage, and psychological trauma of military conflict which remain after the fighting stops and the troops go home. The program features interviews with individuals involved with the reparation of the residual devastation - people who destroy unexploded munitions at Verdun and in Sarajevo, recover and identify skeletons of battlefield casualties at Stalingrad, and help victims of Agent Orange in the Aluoi Valley, Vietnam. Archival footage sets each segment in its historical context. Serial Killers: The Real Life Hannibal Lecters is a 2001 crime documentary film written by Phil M. Rosenberg and directed by Sean Buckley. Battle for Tobacco Road: Duke vs. Carolina is a 2009 documentary film written by Erik Kesten. Differently, Molussia is a 2012 documentary film directed by Nicolas Rey. HomeGrown is a 2009 documentary film directed by Robert Mcfalls. The Infinite Border is a 2007 film directed by Juan Manuel Seplveda. Jerusalem, City of Heaven is a 1996 documentary film written by Cassian Harrison and directed by Tim Lambert. Shining Soul: Helen Keller's Spiritual Life and Legacy is a 2005 film directed by Penny Price. Nerdcore Rising is a documentary/concert film starring MC Frontalot and other nerdcore hip hop artists such as mc chris, Wheelie Cyberman of Optimus Rhyme and MC Lars, with contributors from artists such as "Weird Al" Yankovic, Prince Paul, and Brian Posehn. The film, directed and produced by Negin Farsad, was premiered at the 2008 South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas. It combines interviews about nerdcore and its origins with footage of MC Frontalot's 2006 Nerdcore Rising national tour. Live at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970 is concert film of The Who's concert at the Isle of Wight Festival 1970. While the concert occurred on 30 August 1970 at 2:00 am, a VHS was not released until 1996. A compact disc of the concert was also released in 1996. The concert was re-released on DVD in 1998 in the United States and 2006 in the United Kingdom. What's Happening! The Beatles in the USA is a 1964 documentary film directed by Albert Maysles and David Maysles. Lyoha Dostoevsky - A Descendant of a Genius is a 2001 short film written by Anastasija Matvjejeva and directed by Alexandr Kyseljev. Angam is a documentary film made in 2010 about Sri Lankan history and the survival of its traditional martial art, angampora. It was produced and directed by Rasanga Weerasinghe. The film explores the origins of Sri Lankan civilization, and the vital role Angampora has played in its history, up to the present day. The film was released in 2011 at Goethe Institute, Colombo, as a private screening organized by the filmmakers. Sobor on the Blood is a Ukrainian documentary film of 2006. Joint project of Ukrainian TV channel 1+1 and Studio Teleсon. In December, 1991 Ukraine became an independent state. However the young state, which has been held down with economical difficulties and political fights, could not give sufficient attention to learning its own history. The majority of usual citizens of Ukraine even today know almost nothing about greatness and tragedy of the Ukrainian national-liberation movement, and so any discussion about this theme remains at a level of stereotypes of the Soviet epoch. The series "Sobor on the Blood" for the first time comprehensively and fairly will tell viewer about the struggle for unity and independence of our country for the period from 1919 to 1949. This struggle is considered in the series as a part of the all-European history. In fact Yevhen Konovalets and Andriy Melnyk, Stepan Bandera and Andrey Sheptytsky, Taras Bulba-Borovets and Roman Shukhevych lived and acted in a difficult situation of the grandiose geo-political conflict between Hitlerite Reich, Joseph Stalin Empire and the western democracies. Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson is a documentary by filmmaker Ken Burns based on the nonfiction book of the same name by Geoffrey C. Ward. In Burns' signature style the 220-minute film serves as a biography of Jack Johnson, the first African-American Heavyweight Boxing Champion of the World, as well as a documentary of racism and social inequality during the Jim Crow era against which Jack Johnson lived in defiant opposition. The documentary was first broadcast on PBS in two parts on January 17 and January 18, 2005. The film is narrated by Keith David and features a soundtrack by Wynton Marsalis and Samuel L. Jackson as the voice of Jack Johnson. Alan Rickman also contributed his voice to the documentary. In 2005, the film earned Burns an Emmy Award for Directing for Non-Fiction Programming. David won an Emmy for Best Voice Over Performance. The film was produced by David Schaye, Paul Barnes and Ken Burns for Florentine Films. Flowers from the Mount Olive is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Heilika Pikkov. Once My Mother is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Sophia Turkiewicz. The Greatest Movie Ever Sold is a 2011 documentary film directed by Morgan Spurlock and written by Jeremy Chilnick and Morgan Spurlock. "Acclaimed filmmaker and master provocateur Morgan Spurlock (Super Size Me) returns to the Sundance Film Festival with tongue-in-cheek perfection as he examines the world of product placement, marketing, and advertising by making a film financed entirely by product placement, marketing, and advertising. We live in an age where it’s tough even to walk down the street without someone trying to sell you something. It’s at the point where practically the entire American experience is brought to us by some corporation. Utilizing cutting-edge tools of comic exploration and total self-exploitation, Spurlock dissects the world of advertising and marketing by using his personal integrity as currency to sell out to the highest bidder. Scathingly funny, subversive, and deceptively smart, The Greatest Movie Ever Sold shines the definitive light on our branded future as Spurlock attempts to create the "Iron Man of documentaries," the first ever "docbuster"! He may very well have succeeded." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Edward Said: The Last Interview is a 2004 documentary film written by Mike Dibb and Charles Glass and directed by Mike Dibb. Dad's Stick is a 2012 short film written and directed by John Smith. Memory of the Camp is a 1945 documentary film written by Colin Wills directed by Colin Wills and A. Hitchcock. Planet Ocean is a 2012 documentary film written by Lucy Allwood and Michael Pitiot and directed by Yann Arthurs-Bertrand and Michael Pitiot. Nadie es inocente 20 años después is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Sarah Minter. Manzan Benigaki (Red Persimmons) is a 2001 Japanese documentary film directed by Shinsuke Ogawa and Xiaolian Peng. I Do - And I Understand is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Derek Williams. Somm is a documentary film directed by Jason Wise. Il festival del proletariato giovanile al Parco Lambro is a 1976 documentary music film directed by Alberto Grifi. Lovable is a 2007 documentary film directed by Alan Zweig. Children of Violence is a 1982 documentary directed by Bill Jersey. My Mate Manchester United is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Stefan Valdobrev. Home Less Home is a 1990 documentary film directed by Bill Brand. The Search for Truth is a 41-minute film produced by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It explores the idea that science and religion are not incompatible, but instead are both means to coming to an understanding of absolute truth. The film is prefaced by a monologue from David O. McKay, then-president of the LDS church, and includes interviews with three prominent scientists: Wernher von Braun, the father of rocket science; Harvey Fletcher, the father of stereophonic sound; and Henry Eyring, prominent theoretical chemist. It also included several animations and historical anecdotes that illustrate the LDS position on the positive force of science. The film reel is currently located at Brigham Young University, and is keep in cold storage as part of the L. Tom Perry Special Collections of the Harold B. Lee Library. Edge Of The Deep is a 1958 documentary film. Memories without Borders is a 2012 documentary film written by Armen Sargsyan, Lusine Avanesyan and Harutyun Mansuryan and directed by Levon Kalantar, Mehmet Binay and Ayaz Salayev. Hélio Oiticica is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Cesar Oiticica Filho. African Adventure: Safari in the Okavango is a short documentary film directed by Ben Stassen. With Woman: A Documentary About Women, Midwives and Birth is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Knelly Dettinger. Sketches of Myahk is a documentary music film directed by Koichi Ohnishi. Neil Young: Heart of Gold is a 2006 documentary and concert film by Jonathan Demme, featuring Neil Young. The film was made in the summer of 2005 in Nashville, Tennessee, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, and was released to theaters on February 10, 2006. The film documents Young's premiere of his songs from his album Prairie Wind at the Ryman Auditorium. Auer Dult is a short documentary film directed by Werner Lütje. Finding Donn Fendler: Lost on a Mountain in Maine 72 Years Later is a 2011 historical drama documentary film directed by Ryan Cook and Derek Desmond. The Stone Roses: Made of Stone is a 2013 British music documentary on the acclaimed band The Stone Roses directed by Shane Meadows. The film stars band members Ian Brown, John Squire, Gary Mounfield and Alan Wren. The film was released on 5 June 2013 in the United Kingdom. The film follows the band reforming in 2012 after a 16-year split, capturing the band at work and in their everyday lives as they practice for their much-anticipated reunion on a tour across Europe, which culminated in three triumphant homecoming gigs at Manchester’s Heaton Park. The film has received very positive reviews from critics and fans alike. Jump Westminster is a 2007 Documentary film Written and Directed by Julie Angel Bergman Island is a 2004 documentary film about the Swedish director Ingmar Bergman directed by Marie Nyreröd. Sanford Meisner: The American Theatre's Best Kept Secret is an episode of the TV Series Documentary American Masters. Anou Banou or The Daughters of Utopia is a 1983 documentary film directed by Edna Politi. Training Rules is a 63-minute award-winning 2009 American documentary film co-produced and co-directed by Dee Mosbacher and Fawn Yacker. It is narrated by Diana Nyad. The documentary, subtitled as No Drinking, No Drugs, No Lesbians is a Woman Vision film. Director Mosbacher, a lesbian feminist activist filmmaker and psychiatrist established Woman Vision as a nonprofit organization, to promote tolerance and equal treatment of all people through the production and use of educational media, Training Rules examines how women's collegiate sports, caught in a web of homophobic practices, collude in the destruction of the lives and dreams of many of its most talented athletes. It focuses on the women's basketball program at Pennsylvania State University under head coach Rene Portland and her policy of discrimination on her players based on their sexual orientation over a 27-year period as coach of the university's basketball program, particularly from the 1980s to the late 1990s. "Thought provoking and provocative documentary on the past and present history and situation of the Italian cinema. A provocative, idiosyncratic and very entertaining documentary. Taking as its subject Italian cinema, past and present, it gives a particular and fascinating perspective on the political and industrial decisions which influenced Italian cinema in the postwar era, and features a range of remarkable archive footage, newsreel, clips from film masterpieces and great interviews with directors such as Fellini, that to most non-Italians will be completely unfamiliar. Yet, this is far more than another version of, say, Martin Scorsese's Voyage to Italy because the director is truly interested in why Italian cinema is what it is now. To this end, he looks at the multiplex boom, developing technology, changing political regimes and film funding; and interviews just about every major Italian filmmaker currently working, including Francesca Comencini, Marco Bellocchio, Giuseppe Piccioni and Paolo Sorrentino. For anyone remotely interested in Italian cinema, this is a genuinely must-see experience, as it puts the whole Italian film industry in a new frame of reference, and even if you don't necessarily agree with all of its ideas and suggestions, it is a remarkably clever and instructive experience." Quoting Adrian Wootton The New Saint is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Allard Detiger. The Children of Soong Ching Ling is a 1984 Canadian short documentary film directed by Gary Bush. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. It is about the humanitarian work in support of children by Mrs. Soong Ching-ling, or Madame Sun Yat-sen. In particular the short film features an orphanage she sponsored. Narrated by Dan Aykroyd. Tells the story of an individual who owns the largest private collection of World War II artifacts in the world. Over 50 interviews with veterans and survivors of the war help tell the story of the meaning of the over 7,000 individual items in the collection of Kenneth W. Rendell. Blinding is a 2011 biographical/historical documentary film directed and written by Steve Sanguedolce. Presidential Bloopers is a 1999 comedy short film written by Lorna Anozie and Mike Jerrick. 2Brothers is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Hilt Lochten. "Eleven-year-old Rino is a fanatical competitive swimmer. His nine-year-old brother Nik is his biggest fan, but he can't come to the pool very often to watch as the environment is too warm for him: Nik has a neuromuscular disease and is wheelchair-bound. Although this means the number of activities they can do together is limited, their bond is strong. As Nik says, "We are very special brothers!" Despite their obstacles, the boys look for ways to try and play together. But there are still times when they are at each other's throats. "We argue sometimes," explains Nik, "but that goes with the territory of being brothers, doesn't it?" Rino does his best to try to involve Nik in as many activities as possible. So when playing soldiers outside, since Nik can't be the sniper - he'd have to run for that - he can at least be the tank. He proves himself to be an excellent goalie, gifted fisherman and the best "spinner" around - according to Nik, "That's something only wheelchair users can do." Rino is rarely irritated by having to help, and Nik, in turn, almost never complains either. "I can think up plenty of things to do when some other wheelchair users would simply give up." This sweet story of two close-knit brothers proves that someone with less physical ability can play along with the best of them." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site. Comma is a 2011 documentary film directed by Amin Haghighizadeh. A filmmaker explores the life of her 100-year-old great-aunt, Jane Chung, an actress who made a career for herself at a time when Asian Americans faced widespread racism in Hollywood. Jane has had parts in over fifty films and TV shows including Chinatown, When Harry Met Sally, M.A.S.H. and I Love Lucy, yet most of her roles are uncredited. Through the story of Jane Chung’s life and career, More than a Face in the Crowd reveals a larger untold story of Asian American actors and extras in Hollywood. Say Amen is a personal documentary film by David Deri, an Orthodox Jew, who reveals his homosexuality to his parents and siblings. The documentary is named one of the best five documentaries of the year 2005 by Israeli Film Academy and appeared in many film festivals, including HOTDOCS-Toronto, the Leeds International Film Festival, the Cork Film Festival, and Inside Out Film and Video Festival. Frisbee: The Life and Death of a Hippie Preacher is a 2005 documentary film written, produced and directed by David Di Sabatino. It details American Pentecostal evangelist Lonnie Frisbee's lifetime. Finished in March 2005, Frisbee was first accepted to the Newport Beach Film Festival where it sold out the Lido Theater not far from where in the late 1960s the Frisbees ran the Blue Top commune, a Christian community of young hippie believers. The documentary was also accepted to the Mill Valley, Reel Heart, Ragamuffin, San Francisco International Independent, New York Underground and Philadelphia Gay & Lesbian film festivals. The edited movie showed on San Francisco's KQED in November 2006, and was released in DVD form in January 2007. A soundtrack featuring the music of The All Saved Freak Band, Agape, Joy and Gentle Faith was released in May 2007. A pre-release version of the DVD was produced that featured 21 recordings of songs by Larry Norman alone, as well as others by Randy Stonehill, Love Song, Fred Caban, Mark Heard, and Stonewood Cross. However, due to licensing issues most of the music was changed for the final release. Dazzle: The Donny West Story is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Donny West. The Hotel Hooker was once a quiet rooming house nestled in the suburbs of Connecticut. In the summer of 2003, the national media exploited it as a drug stop, a prostitution ring, and a dangerous place to live. Don't believe everything that you hear. Meet the residents of the Hotel Hooker, as they struggle to uncover the truth behind the controversy. This is the story of a town fighting back against their image. This is a story about the lies we read and listen to every day. This is the story about the labels we place and the stereotypes that exist around us. Through intimate and often hilarious interviews, HEROIN TOWN follows the residents of the hotel and the people of Willimantic, Connecticut as they try to restore the damage that destroyed their hometown. It is a story of hope, dedication, humor, and ultimately survival. Tango Macbeth is a documentary comedy drama romance film directed by Nadine M. Patterson. Uranium Drive-In is a documentary drama film directed by Suzan Beraza. A Talent for Life: Jews of the Italian Renaissance is a 1979 documentary film written by Marc Siegel and directed by Martin Hoade. Dominick Dunne: After the Party is a 2008 documentary directed by Kirsty de Garis and Timothy Jolley. Hollywood outcast, top-selling author and reporter, Dominick Dunne is a prominent columnist and society correspondent. This biographical documentary film reflects on his successes and tribulations as a big name in the entertainment industry. In the film, Dunne remembers his past as a World War II Veteran, falling in love and raising a family, his climb and fall as a Hollywood producer, and his epic comeback as a writer. Picture The Leviathan is a 2012 documentary film directed by Hal Clifford and Jason Houston. Views of a Retired Night Porter is a 2006 documentary short film written and directed by Andreas Horvath. The Blue Generation is a film directed by Garin Nugroho. The film is about the Indonesian rock band Slank. The group, known for its political lyrics, has been together for 25 years and has an enormous following throughout the country. "Slank" means minority and the community of fans make up something like a movement: the "Slankers" stand for peace, unity, and love, much like the American hippie movement in the sixties. Part of the film documents a musical by the band that grapples with Indonesia’s political history. It addresses the country’s severe problems and criticizes the government by exposing militarism, the abduction of dissidents, the death penalty, and torture as being the order of the day. The heroes of the musical are the cool winners, the “Blue Generation”, inspiring others with their positive values much like the characters in “Hair”. Nugroho also shows us concert clips and Slank fans and enhances his film with comic book-style animated sequences commenting on the political situation in Indonesia. The film paints a multifaceted picture of the Slanker movement and offers a portrait of Indonesian society that is as unusual as it is striking. El Hombre Detrás De La Máscara is a 2013 documentary written and directed by Gabriela Obregon. Finding Francis is a 2012 documentary adventure biography film directed by Johnny Greenlaw. Gut Renovation is a 2012 documentary historical film written by Su Friedrich and Cathy Quinlan and directed by Su Friedrich. Mostar Round-Trip is a 2011 Israeli documentary film, a Fisher Features Ltd. release directed and produced by David Fisher. The film follows his son, Yuval and his classmates who are studying in an international high-school, United World College, in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina.The film also exposes the recuperating city, which has been greatly damaged during the Bosnian War and is now geographically divided between the Bosniak and Croat populations. This is the second film in the family trilogy created by Fisher that started with the critically acclaimed Love Inventory and completed by Six Million and One. Barricades was one of the first documentary films created for Israeli television. It tells the story of two families, one Jewish and the other Palestinian, who both lost children during Israel's War of Independence, known to Palestinians as the Naqba, or "Catastrophe." The film, directed by Ram Loevy, caused considerable controversy when it aired on 1 August 1972. It was the first time that an Arab viewers had a chance to experience the emotional significance of the Holocaust for Jews, and it was also the first time that Israeli Jews had an opportunity to experience the emotional significance of the Naqba to the Palestinian people. Loevy first came up with the idea behind the documentary in 1968, while studying film in London. As a Hebrew-language broadcaster for the BBC, he had proposed creating a documentary about the social rifts tearing at Israeli society, with one episode focusing on the conflict between Jews and Palestinians. Although the BBC expressed interest in the project, Loevy returned to Israel soon after to help launch Channel 1, the country's first attempt at television broadcasting. He did not, however, abandon the idea, albeit in a more reduced format. Revolution OS is a 2001 documentary film that traces the twenty-year history of GNU, Linux, open source, and the free software movement. Directed by J. T. S. Moore, the film features interviews with prominent hackers and entrepreneurs including Richard Stallman, Michael Tiemann, Linus Torvalds, Larry Augustin, Eric S. Raymond, Bruce Perens, Frank Hecker and Brian Behlendorf. Naked Fame a documentary that follows Colton Ford's transition from the world of gay porn to that of a mainstream singer. It opened on February 18, 2005 in the United States to mixed critical reviews. Live Tape is a music documentary film directed by Tetsuaki Matsue. Down with the Germans is a 1984 documentary film directed by Dietrich Schubert. Inside Life Outside is a 1988 film directed by Sachiko Hamada and Scott Sinkler. The Suffering Grasses: When Elephants Fight, It Is the Grass that Suffers is a 2012 documentary film directed by Iara Lee. The Women and The Passenger is a 2012 documentary romantic drama film written and directed by Patricia Correa and Valentina Mac-Pherson. Ka'iulani: Crown Princess of Hawai'i is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Roy Tjioe. Babies, also known as Baby and Bébé, is a 2010 French documentary film by Thomas Balmès that follows four humans through their first year after birth. Two of the babies featured in the film are from rural areas: Ponijao from Opuwo, Namibia, and Bayar from Bayanchandmani, Mongolia, and two are from urban areas: Mari from Tokyo, Japan, and Hattie from San Francisco, U.S. The film was released in the United States by Focus Features on 7 May 2010. The movie has grossed over a million dollars, entering at the box office at number ten. Out Of America is a 1994 documentary film directed by Michael Klier. Playboy Celebrity Centerfold: Dian Parkinson is a 1993 documentary film directed by Scott Allen. 365 Days: A Year in Happy Valley is a 2013 documentary film written by Eric Porterfield and Erik Proulx and directed by Erik Proulx. King Gimp is a 1999 documentary that was awarded the 2000 Academy Award for Best Short Subject Documentary and 2000 Peabody Award. "King Gimp" followed the life of artist Dan Keplinger of Towson, Maryland, who has cerebral palsy. Filmmakers Susan Hannah Hadary and William A. Whiteford, of the University of Maryland Video Press and Tapestry International Productions produced the film. Just Eat It: A Food Waste Story is a 2014 documentary film written by Grant Baldwin and Jenny Rustemeyer and directed by Grant Baldwin. "Christopher Street parades have long since become a fixture in many cities. In 2005 such an event was scheduled to take place for the first time in the Latvian capital, Riga. A nice idea and certainly nobody could have predicted the sudden eruption of dramatic developments that ensued. But the pride parade rends deep divisions in Latvian society. Anyone taking part finds themselves subjected to a torrent of insults on the part of counter-demonstrators, who also spit at the parading throng, douse them in water and throw things at them. But this is not all: pride supporters are also threatened with being banned from their professions; priests are defrocked and subject to all kinds of oppression. As far as German Green Party MP Volker Beck is concerned, the Baltic States have long since become a “hot spot in the struggle for human rights for lesbians and gays in the EU”. In Lithuania, however, the Catholic majority of the population see things differently. According to a poll taken in 2010, three-quarters of the population would like to see the pride parade banned. HOMO@LV describes the history of the gay pride parade in Riga – from the first announcement of a Christopher Street event in 2005 to the organisers’ cancellation of last year’s parade in order to avoid violent clashes. In his film, Kaspars Goba takes a look at the role of individual politicians in this debate, exposes their manipulative methods and asks: what is their real goal?" Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Wotenick is a 1999 film directed by Axel Kalhorn. Carrière: 250 Meters is a 2011 documentary film written by Jean-Claude Carrière and directed by Juan Carlos Rulfo. Correcting The Chalkboard is a 2012 short documentary directed by Elisa Moar and Marie-Pier Ottawa. Mulheres Africanas – A Rede Invisível is a 2012 Brazilian documentary film written and directed by Carlos Nascimbeni. The documentary presents an overview of the achievements and struggles of women in Africa in the last century. The film includes testimony from five women who tell their life stories: Graça Machel, human rights activist and wife of Nelson Mandela; Mama Sara Masari, businesswoman, Leymah Gbowee, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize; Luisa Diogo, former Prime Minister of Mozambique and Nadine Gordiner, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature. Who Gets to Call It Art? is a 2006 documentary film directed by Peter Rosen. Free Throw is a 2012 documentary film directed by Court Crandall. The Five Cities of June is a 1963 American short documentary film directed by Bruce Herschensohn. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. This United States Information Agency-sponsored film details the events of June 1963 in five different cities. In the Vatican, the election and coronation of Pope Paul VI; in the Soviet Union, the launch of a Soviet rocket as part of the Space Race with the United States; in South Vietnam, fighting between Communists and South Vietnamese soldiers; in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States, the racial integration of the University of Alabama opposed by Governor George Wallace; and in Berlin, President John F. Kennedy's visit to Germany and Rudolph Wilde Platz. Hear and Now is a 2007 documentary film by Irene Taylor Brodsky, winning awards in 2007 at the Sundance Film Festival and the Heartland Film Festival; and garnering a Peabody Award in 2008. Contact Call - An Ornithologist's Diary is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Jana B'rgelin. Native Silence is a 2013 biographical, documentary and short film directed by Jane Wells. Encierro, Bull Running in Pamplona is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Olivier van der Zee. Documentary filmmaker Tim Schultz sets out on a 4-year journey for answers while exploring his own passion to know if an experience he had as a little boy could have been a ghost. He meets a cast of colorful characters including psychics, tarot reading wizards, paranormal investigators, skeptics, and scientists. His crew has journeyed into numerous haunted locations including the Stanley Hotel, which is famously known for inspiring the classic horror novel 'The Shining' and The Myrtles Plantation, which is said to be the most haunted house in America. American Water is a 2011 short film directed by Jacob Cartwright and Nick Jordan. Night Will Fall is a 2014 documentary film directed by Andre Singer. Funny: The Documentary is a 2010 documentary comedy film directed by J.D. Cohen. Life in Loops (A Megacities RMX) is a 2006 documentary film directed by Timo Novotny and written by Michael Glawogger and Timo Novotny. Far from You is a 1997 short documentary film written and directed by Sami Alkassim. Ruthie and Connie: Every Room in the House is a 2002 documentary film directed by Deborah Dickson. Live In Texas '78 is a 2011 documentary film about the recording of the The Rolling Stones 1978 tour of the USA in support of that year’s Some Girls. The re-edition of the movie marks the remastering of the album Some Girls on November 21, 2011. In the deluxe edition, the audio CD of the live was also put in. The Legend Of Damien Parer is a 1964 documentary film directed by Gilbert J. Brealey. Sinema is a concert DVD by the Dallas-based American heavy metal group Drowning Pool. It was released in 2002, and contained more than 2-and-a-half hours of concert footage, including their appearances at the 2001 and 2002 Ozzfest summer music festivals. The DVD title is a word play in correspondence with the name of Drowning Pool's debut album Sinner. The sales from Sinema fulfilled Dave Williams' dream to create a house for his parents, as he promised before his death that he would build one when he had the money. Ayn Rand: In Her Own Words is a 2011 documentary film written by Ayn Rand and directed by Robert Anderson and John Little. Red Terror on the Amber Coast is an American documentary film about the Lithuanian resistance to the Soviet occupation from the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in 1939 to the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. Two Dominican Order priests, David O'Rourke and Ken Gumbert, collaborated on the project with the intent to have it reach millions of American viewers through public broadcasting. During a year teaching at Vilnius University, O'Rourke was inspired by an accidental visit to the former KGB headquarters in Vilnius, calling it "one of the most chilling experiences of my life." He teamed up with Gumbert, who had been making a documentary about the Czechoslovak coup d'état of 1948. They gained access to Lithuania's film and photo archives. It took several years of work in the archives before they gained the confidence of those featured in interviews - including former prisoners and Forest Brothers. Lithuanian president Valdas Adamkus appears in the film. Red Terror was released in fall 2008. It was televised for the first time in January on Rhode Island PBS station WSBE-TV, Channel 36. Tales of Things is a 2012 short documentary film written by João Gomes and directed by Joana Peralta. Tovarisch, I Am Not Dead is a documentary film by Stuart Urban about his father Garri Urban, and also the title of an autobiographical book by Garri Urban describing his survival in, and escape from, Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union. The film was released in 2007. The book was originally published in 1980 by Weidenfeld & Nicolson and in paperback by Cyclops Vision in 2006. It was published in several foreign language editions. In 1992 Stuart Urban filmed Garri's journey to the former Soviet Union as soon as Communism disintegrated. The video diaries and interviews that were made by Stuart Urban over 14 years form the core of the film which documents the quest into Garri’s KGB records and the fate of his family in the Holocaust. Contributors to the film include Pulitzer prize-winning historian, Anne Applebaum. The film can be categorized as an example of the growing genre of "first person" documentary. The film was awarded the top prize, the Lancia Award, at the Biografilm Festival in June 2007. It also was nominated for the Raindance Award at the British Independent Film Awards, and won the World Silver Medal at the New York Festivals. First Clue is a 2014 documentary biographical comedy film written and directed by Susan Sullivan. This documentary explores the mysteries and origins of sexual desire. Soarin' Over California is the film used in the Soarin' Over California simulator attraction at Disney California Adventure From Ararat to Zion is 2010 documentary history film written by Mesrop Aramian and directed by Edgar Baghdasaryan. Nanga Parbat 1953 is a 1953 documentary film written and directed by Hans Ertl. Blind Encounter is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Kevin Andrews. From Unfinished Tales of Jerusalem is a 1996 short documentary film written and directed by Arunas Matelis. Bad Seed: The Truth About Our Food is a 2005 documentary film directed by Timo Nadudvari. In The Wake Of Stalin is a 2013 historical fiction, documentary film, written and directed by Thomas Johnson and Marie Brunet-Debaines. Rap in Tondo is a 2011 documentary film directed by Katsuya Tomita. 'Nothing Is Going To Happen' is the graduation project of Roeland van Doorn from the St. Joost Academy. It is a video installation with 3 projections. It reflects upon the obsessive way we want to monitor our environment. While walking in residential areas, I am capturing the wireless signals of security cameras that are placed in and outdoors by the residents using a camera and a receiver. With this I explore the boundaries between the public and the private. The video installation reflects on the changing attitude towards surveillance and safety. The project ‘Nothing Is Going To Happen’ consist of a video installation and a short film. A Fierce Green Fire is a 2012 documentary film written by Tom Turner and directed by Mark Kitchell. Haneen is a 2013 short film written and directed by Naser Al-Yaqoubi. Our Silent Traces is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by Sophie Bredier and Myriam Aziza. Marimbas From Hell is a 2010 musical comedy drama documentary world cinema film written and directed by Julio Hernandez Cordon. Breaking the Da Vinci Code is a 2005 documentary film written by Joseph Meier and directed by David Priest. OceanWorld 3D is a 2009 documentary by Jean-Jacques Mantello. Documentary 3D, which speaks of animal life in the ocean, spectacular shows scenes over the ocean. Californian kelp forests, the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, and Roca Partida Island off the coast of Mexico, Which is home to thousands of sharks and marine animals. The scenes of this film in 3D will be great and show most common animals that live in the ocean, like the manta ray's enchanting ballet, the noble procession of hammerhead sharks, the lion fish's relentless hunt, a group of young dolphins playing algae -football, the astonishing beauty of the Spanish dancer is slug, and a unique encounter with the largest cetaceans on the planet. Visual Acoustics: The Modernism Of Julius Shulman is a documentary film that explores the life and career of the much lauded architectural photographer Julius Shulman. His iconic photography shaped the careers of some of the great architects of the 20th century and helped define Modernism for the general public. The Nine Muses is a documentary film written and directed by John Akomfrah. The Courtesans of Bombay is a 1983 British docudrama directed by Ismail Merchant. A collaboration by Merchant, James Ivory, and Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, the film focuses on a Bombay compound known as Pavan Pool, where women aspiring to work in the entertainment industry dance for donations from a male audience by day and, it is broadly suggested although never specifically stated, work at the world's oldest profession by night. It was broadcast by Channel 4 in the UK in January 1983 and went into limited theatrical release in the United States on 19 March 1986. Merchant was aware of the courtesans at an early age "from the visits from them we used to have during weddings at home, celebrations of childbirth, and other festivities. They provided the entertainment of singing and dancing, and I used to watch them." His first visit to Pavan Pool at the age of sixteen left him with a vivid memory that inspired him to record the activities and experiences of the courtesans on film. Can't Go Anywhere is a 2012 documentary film written by Kiyoshi Tsujii, Ryûichi Shimada, Kazuo Ohsawa and directed by Ryuichi Shimada. The Real Bruce Lee is a martial arts documentary. It begins with a brief biography of Bruce Lee, and shows scenes from four of his childhood films, Bad Boy, Orphan Sam, Kid Cheung, and The Carnival, each sepia-toned and dubbed to English. Next, there is a three-minute highlight reel of Lee imitator Bruce Li. Finally, there is a feature-length film starring Lee imitator Dragon Lee, which is obviously modeled after Bruce Lee's Fist of Fury. The version of the film that is commonly distributed in the West on public domain-type DVD and video labels runs 93 minutes in length. The British VHS-version released in 1979 runs 118 minutes. Nadea e Sveta is a 2012 Documentary, Biography and Drama film written and directed by Maura Delpero. OsztálySORSjegy is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Péter Forgács. This colorful surfing documentary catches the waves from California to Hawaii as participants continue their endless search for the perfect wave. The surfers reveal their motivation and obsession with the sport that appears to be the highlight of their lives. Ecological concerns becomes more evident among surfers, but a disturbing trend of intolerance towards non surfers encroaching on their "territory" coincides. Imaginary lines are drawn between surfers and non-surfers. Moog synthesizer inventors Paul Beaver and Bernie Krause provide the soundtrack music along with Sky Oats, Colorado Purple Gang, Ashish Khan, Pranesh Kahn, Zakir Hussain, and David Crosby. Die Like An Egyptian is a 2012 short documentary drama film written and directed by Matt Mamula. The Lost Garden is a 1995 biographical documentary film directed by Marquise Lepage. What if roads and highways were solar, fueling enough energy to power electric vehicles as well as nearby communities? From The Ashes: The Life and Times of Tick Hall is a documentary film directed by filmmaker Scott Morris about the historic Montauk, New York home known as Tick Hall. The house was destroyed in a fire in 1997 but was rebuilt by its owners, Carrie Nye and Dick Cavett. Morris began filming in 1999, and the film premiered on WNET-TV in July 2003. The Global Assembly Line is a 1987 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Informational Cultural or Historical Programming - Programs nominated/winning TV film. Snow Tapes is a 2011 short, documentary, drama film directed by Mich'ael Zupraner. Atanasoff is a 2012 documentary film directed by Daniel Cross. Gods, Weeds & Revolutions is a 2012 documentary, drama, family, short film directed by Meryam Joobeur. Water Birds is a 1952 American short documentary film directed by Ben Sharpsteen. It won an Academy Award in 1953 for Best Short Subject. The film was produced by Walt Disney as part of the True-Life Adventures series of nature documentaries. It was shot in Technicolor by more than a dozen cameramen and was created in cooperation with the National Audubon Society and the Denver Museum of Natural History. All the Way is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Anne Delaney. "In May 2010, Sundance Institute was invited to participate in a global cinematic experiment. Oscar-winning director Kevin Macdonald was planning to direct a feature-length documentary shot in a single day, July 24. Fueled by the power and innovation of YouTube, the project enlisted a global community to capture a moment of their lives on camera. We worked together to spread the word, and the world responded with more than 80,000 submissions; over 5,000 hours of deeply personal, powerful film clips were uploaded from contributors from Australia to Zambia, from the heart of the bustling cities to the furthest and most remote reaches of Earth. Life in a Day is a compilation of the most compelling images honed by Macdonald, executive producer Ridley Scott and his team, and a crew of talented editors from the vast footage submitted. Their task was to create a unique cinematic experience: in beautiful and harrowing honesty, what it is to be alive on Earth today." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival Site. 101 Things Removed from the Human Body and 101 More Things Removed from the Human Body is a British "shockumentary" series directed by Eric Schotz, which is narrated by Mitch Lewis. The program features tales of foreign objects that have been removed from human bodies in the form of a countdown from 101 to 1. Items included are javelins, a boat anchor, a bicycle pump, a bag of nails, an ice pick, and an actual human body. The documentary series was first broadcast on Sky One in October 2003. When the show was re-broadcast on the terrestrial Channel 4 in July 2004, the British television watchdog OFCOM received complaints over the show causing offence. A one-off program of the same name was also broadcast on Fox in United States in July 2003. The show received high ratings, and was number one in its time slot. In 2006, 101 More Things Removed from the Human Body was released. It features items that have been removed from people such as tree boughs, a 3/4" drill bit, a pipe, a knife, a sword fish, and a maggot. All persons featured in the program who had items removed from their body survived. "Two years ago, Nora and Solveig’s five-year-old son, Vetle, died on a mountain hike. Their grief over his death has weighed heavily on their relationship ever since. For Nora, the child’s biological mother, the pain of her loss has caused her to become increasingly bitter. Although Solveig loved Vetle just as much, Nora begins to question the sincerity of Solveig’s grief. The boy’s death has changed Solveig and she now finds that she can’t imagine a life without a child any more. But how would Nora react? Would it ruin their relationship if Solveig were to have a child? Together, the two women set off on a journey to the mountain where their child died. Solveig hopes that the trip will set in motion a process of soul-searching that will help them to cope with their grief and give their relationship a chance. But although their plan sounds sensible, in reality, it proves to be a painful process during which all their pent-up bitterness, hurt feelings and fears gradually surface. The closer the women get to the site of the accident, the more they seem to be drifting towards the end of their relationship. Each night, Nora and Solveig roll out their sleeping bags next to each other and each morning they continue their hike. Will Nora be able to work through her grief and move on? And will the two women manage to save their relationship?" Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Babooska is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Tizza Covi and Rainer Frimmel. Un fin de semana en Alemania is a 2013 short biographical documentary film written and directed by Jan Soldat. Jack London's Adventures in the South Sea Islands is a 1913 documentary film. Hitler Lives is a 1945 American short documentary film directed by Don Siegel. The film won an Academy Award at the 18th Academy Awards in 1946 for Documentary Short Subject. In the same year, Siegel directed another short film Star in the Night which also won an Academy Award. Hitler Lives is based on the film Your Job in Germany, which was produced shortly before the end of the Second World War. Your Job in Germany was written by Theodor Geisel. While retaining some of the original film footage, Hitler Lives was written by Saul Elkins. The film warns that the defeated German population still contains Nazi supporters and that the world must stay ever vigilant against the prospect that a new Hitler will arise within Germany. The film combines dramatized content mixed with archive footage. The end of the film warns against fascism in America. We From Dallas is a documentary film directed by Teddy Cool. Life to Live is a 2003 short documentary film written and directed by Maciej Adamek. 3 Acres In Detroit is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Nora Mandray. The Rebel Jesus is a film about the life of Jesus Christ. It was made in 1972 to capitalize on the concurrent release of the film versions of Jesus Christ Superstar and Godspell. It was a long time passion project for Buchanan. Betting the Farm is a 2012 documentary drama and family film directed by Jason Mann and Cecily Pingree. Valentine Road is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Marta Cunningham. Killer Cops Off Our Streets is a 2014 documentary short film directed by YCM. Fested: A Journey To Fest 7 is an American documentary film filmed over two weeks around and during The Fest 7 in Gainesville, FL in 2008. The movie was directed by Reese Lester about The Fest and a group of about a dozen close friends' experience attending and performing at it. The film's title is a reference to one of the people in the film, David McMaster, referring to his highly intoxicated friend as "fested". The Lovers' Wind is a 1978 French documentary film directed by Albert Lamorisse about the landscape of Iran. Lamorisse was killed in a helicopter crash while filming the documentary, during a helicopter-tour of Iran. His widow and son completed the film, based on his production notes, and released the film eight years later in 1978. It was nominated for a posthumous Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. No Limit: A Search for the American Dream on the Poker Tournament Trail is a 2006 documentary film about the professional poker tournament circuit. The film follows producer Susan Genard as she enters several Seven-Card Stud Hi/Lo and Omaha poker tournaments across the country. Dozens of professional poker players appear in the film. No Limit features interviews with over 40 of the top players in the world. No Limit had its premiere screening at The Palms Hotel and Casino on July 27, 2006 and toured the film festival circuit. The film was released on DVD in October 2006. Interview subjects include: Amir Vahedi Annie Duke Barry Greenstein Bobby Baldwin Bonnie Damiano Charlie Shoten Chip Jett Chris "Jesus" Ferguson Chris Moneymaker Clonie Gowen Daniel Negreanu Dave "Devilfish" Ulliott David Sklansky Dean Shores Doyle Brunson Evelyn Ng Hendon Mob Howard Lederer James McManus Jennifer Harman Kathy Liebert Kenna James Larry Flynt Layne Flack Linda Johnson Lou Krieger Mark Seif Mel Judah Men "the Master" Nguyen "Miami" John Cernuto Mike Sexton Paul Phillips Phil Gordon Phil Hellmuth Puggy Pearson Ron Rose Scotty Nguyen Steve Lipscomb T.J. Cloutier Thor Hansen Allah Made Me Funny: Live in Concert is a 2008 American concert documentary film directed by Andrea Kalin and produced by Unity Productions Foundation. The live concert features American comedy troupe Allah Made Me Funny. Songs, Colours & Market is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Joshy Joseph. Trappeurs de volcans is 2010 documentary film directed by François de Riberolles and Bertrand Loyer. El Capitan is a film by filmmaker Fred Padula that captures one of the earliest ascents of The Nose on El Capitan in Yosemite Valley, California. It was screened at the Banff Mountain Film Festival in 1979 and won several awards at film festivals around the world. Land of the Mammoth is a 2001 discovery channel animation documentary. The Golden River is a 1954 documentary film directed by Pittamandalam Venktatachalapathy Pathy. The American - Israeli Connection is a 1983 Emmy News and Documentary Award for Outstanding Background/Analysis of a Single Current Story - Programs nominated tv program aired in 1982 in the United States of America. Les Cheveux Courts, Petite Taille, Ronde is a short documentary film written and directed by Robin Harsch. The Real Rocky is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jeff Feuerzeig and Mike Tollin. Dial H-I-S-T-O-R-Y, a 68 minute-long film by director Johan Grimonprez, traces the history of airplane hijackings as portrayed by mainstream television media. The film premiered in 1997 at the Musée National d'Art Moderne Paris); and at Catherine David's curated Documenta X(Kassel). "This study in pre-Sept. 11 terrorism" is composed of archival footage material — interspersing reportage shots, clips from science fiction films, found footage, home video and reconstituted scenes — the work is interspersed with passages from Don DeLillo's novels Mao II and White Noise, "providing a literary and philosophic anchor to the film." According to the director, "Dial H-I-S-T-O-R-Y's narrative is based on an imagined dialogue between a terrorist and a novelist where the writer contends that the terrorist has hijacked his role within society." The film`s opening line, taken from Don DeLillo`s Mao II, introduces the skyjacker as protagonist. Interplaying fact and fiction, Johan Grimonprez said that the use of archival footage creating “short-circuits in order to critique a situation”, may be understood as a form of a Situationist Détournement. "At seventy-five years old, David Suzuki shows no signs of slowing down. In this captivating documentary portrait, the passionate environmentalist's legacy lecture is entwined with candid interviews in which he reflects on his life and shares deeply personal stories, revealing a side previously unseen." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 TIFF site. "This breathtaking chronicle follows an ever-surprising group of modern-day cowboys as they lead an enormous herd of sheep up and then down the slopes of the Beartooth Mountains in Montana on their way to market. Call it an abstract Western or the last round-up. Filmmakers Ilisa Barbash and Lucien Castaing-Taylor spent three summers in Montana documenting the process by which sheep are raised, ranched, sheered, and driven hundreds of miles to graze in high pastures of Sweet Grass county. The mode is strictly observational, and there is plenty to see—and hear. Sweetgrass is routinely awe-inspiring and often hilarious. As David D’Arcy reported from the Berlin Film Festival where the documentary had its premiere, “the sheep aren’t just in the landscape, they are the landscape.” The Big Sky country has never looked more spectacular—or, thanks to the ranchers as well as their animals, sounded more cacophonous—and, after Sweetgrass, it will never look the same." Quoting the synopsis on the 2009 New York Film Festival site. Who is Dervla Murphy? is a 2010 documentary film directed by Garret Daly. Kokoyakyu: High School Baseball is a 2006 documentary film about high school baseball in Japan, the pastime that has turned into an obsession. The film follows two schools as they compete and head towards the 2003 tournament. Kokoyakyu: High School Baseball was directed by Kenneth Eng and written/produced by Alex Shear. It was aired on PBS in 2006 as part of its Point of View series. Melech HaRating is a 2002 documentary film directed by Doron Tsabari and written by Tali Helter-Shenkar. "Based in Manipur, the film deals with identity in general and the personal story of Tom Sharma, a transgender make-up artist. Tom feels he possesses a woman’s soul in a man’s body. The story is centered around Tom Sharma’s life in the backdrop of the turmoil in the Manipuri society owing to the long drawn problems of insurgency." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Ian Harvie Superhero is a 2013 comedy documentary film written by Ian Harvie and directed by Liam Kyle Sullivan. Substance is a 2014 documentary short film written and directed by Sebastian Mez. Jazz Seen: The Life and Times of William Claxton is a 2001 documentary film directed by Julian Benedikt. Kipp Normand is a 2012 short documentary biography film directed by Jonathan Frey. Kathy and Murray is a documentary film. e-Dreams is a 2001 American documentary film directed by Wonsuk Chin portraying the rise and fall of Kozmo.com, an online convenience store that utilized bike messengers to deliver goods ordered online within an hour. The movie follows Joseph Park and Yong Kang, 20-something Korean American investment bankers, whose company started in a warehouse with a small group of employees and grew to 3,000 employees and an 11-city network within a year. Kozmo.com raised $250 million in capital and attracted attention from Amazon.com and Starbucks. However, the lack of a sustainable business plan and the inability to raise additional capital due to the dot-com bust and stock market correction of the early 2000s forced the company out of business by 2001. Mulhapar is a 2014 documentary film written & directed by Paolo Poloni. Foreigners out! Schlingensiefs Container, alternately named "Wien-Aktion", "Please Love Austria—First European Coalition Week", or "Foreigners Out—Artists against Human Rights", is an art project and television show from 2000 that took place within the scope of the annual Wiener Festwochen. It was conceptually designed by Christoph Schlingensief and directed by Paul Poet, and was styled as a mockery of popular TV program format Big Brother. It was critically aimed both at certain forms of television entertainment and at a latent xenophobia still thriving in the whole world. i hate myself :) is a romance comedy drama documentary film directed by Joanna Arnow. La vida no vale nada is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Eduardo Gonzalez Ibarra. With a running time of over 5 hours, this extensive, in-depth documentary has been released to coincide with the Stones 40th anniversary. A vast array of friends, family, fellow musicians, biographers, and managers recollect the amazing career of the band in old and new interview footage. ROLLING STONES - JUST FOR THE RECORD is neither endorsed nor authorized by The Rolling Stones. Vaglietti's Third Round is a 1999 documentary film directed by Alfredo Knuchel. René is a 2008 film directed by Helena Třeštíková. "Steve James (Hoop Dreams) once lamented that “no one makes long-form documentaries anymore.” He’ll be happy to know that veteran documentarian Helena Trestíková has answered the call. Since 1989, she has followed 17-year-old René's development from pimple-faced juvie to tattooed convict to published writer in this incredible document, spanning twenty years of a life lived both inside and outside Czech prisons and politics. Intelligent and introspective, this multi-award-winning film is a fascinating study of cyclical bad behavior and the glimmers of hope that keep us all going." Quoting the description from the 2010 IndieFest site. Buddha's Lost Children is a 2006 documentary film by Dutch director Mark Verkerk. The feature film tells the story of Khru Bah Neua Chai Kositto, a Buddhist monk who has dedicated his life to orphaned children in the Golden Triangle area of Thailand. The film opened in Dutch cinemas in September 2006. My, No-Mercy Home is a 2013 documentary film directed by Aori. You Are on Indian Land is a 1969 documentary film about the confrontation between police and Mohawk of the St. Regis Reservation on a bridge between Canada and the United States, which stands on Mohawk land near Cornwall, Ontario. By blocking traffic from the bridge, the Mohawk sought to call attention to their grievance that they were prohibited by Canadian authorities from duty-free passage of personal purchases across the border. They claimed this right as part of their right of free passage across the border, as established by the 1794 Jay Treaty between Great Britain and the United States after the latter gained independence in the American Revolutionary War. The film portrayed the rising activism of the Mohawk and demands for self-determination, which has continued. VHS: Video Home System is a 2012 documentary drama directed by Salomé Lamas. Rainbow Bird and Monster Man is a 2002 Australian documentary film, directed by Dennis K Smith, telling the story of Tony Lock's childhood as a victim of sexual abuse and his attempts as an adult to escape his tortured past. Hoxie: The First Stand is a documentary which tells the story of one of the earliest, most important, and least remembered school integration battles in the South. This is a story of common men, disturbed by the Jim Crow culture in which they had been raised, who saw a chance to do the right thing and did it at great risk to themselves. It won a Peabody award in 2003. The Vanishing City is a documentary film directed by Jen Senko and Fiore Derosa. Heroes at Work is a 2008 film directed by Nina Pourlak. Samarang is a 1977 documentary, short film directed by Rafi Toumayan. Farewell Comrades! Interactive is a 2011 documentary film directed by Lena Thiele. Metallica Through the Never is a 2013 American IMAX thriller concert film featuring the American heavy metal band Metallica. The film title is derived from the song "Through the Never" off the self-titled 1991 album; the feature follows young Trip's surreal misadventures on what is supposedly a routine task intercut with concert footage in Vancouver and Edmonton, August 2012. The feature was released by the revived Picturehouse marquee, ceased since 2008. So Much So Fast is a documentary written and directed by Academy Award nominees Steven Ascher and Jeanne Jordan. This film premiered in competition at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival, and won the Audience Award at the Boston Independent Film Festival. Na Nai'a Legend of the Dolphins is a 3D documentary film about a fantastic story of their love, power, wisdom, and survival; is a true-life story. The story is told by a cast including Kate Winslet, Ellen Page, Gerard Butler, Megan Fox, James Franco, Julian Lennon, Diego Luna, Cheech Marin, Whoopi Goldberg, Isabella Rossellini and Daryl Hannah. An Essay on Matisse is a 1996 American short documentary film directed by Perry Wolff. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Earth's Golden Playground is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Andreas Horvath. Don't Expect Too Much is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Susan Ray. The Revolution That Wasn't is a 2008 documentary film by Russian filmmaker Alyona Polunina, on the National Bolshevik Party and the Dissenters' March. I Am A Man: Black Manhood & Sexual Diversity is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Cleo Manago. One Lucky Elephant is an American documentary film directed by Lisa Leeman that premiered December 1, 2011 on OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network as part of the OWN Documentary Club. The film focuses on the extraordinary human-animal bond between Circus Flora founder, Ivor David Balding, and Flora an endangered African elephant, and their journey to find her a permanent home that leads them to The Elephant Sanctuary. The film provides insightful research footage to further discussion of the human-animal bond as part of anthrozoology, a new academic field that examines the relationships between non-human and human animals. La montana is a sports documentary film directed by Tabaré Blanchard and Ivan Herrera. Short Cut to Nirvana: Kumbh Mela is a 2004 feature documentary film by Nick Day and Maurizio Benazzo about the 2001 Maha Kumbh Mela at Allahabad. The documentary premiered in the USA on May 11, 2004. The film won several awards on the festival circuit and played in theaters across the US and Europe. The Iverson Mallwalkers is a short biographical documentary family film written and directed by Thomas Rigler. Berlin at the Time of the Kaiser is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Irmgard von zur Mühlen. Every Little Thing is a 1996 musical documentary film written and directed by Nicolas Philibert. Portrait of Margaret Mead is a 1977 short film directed by Jean Rouch. Nadzieja umiera ostatnia is a 1992 film directed by Halina Birenbaum. An Angel in Doel is a 2011 documentary film directed by Tom Fassaert. The Story of Bran Nue Dae is a short-comedy documentary film directed by Adrian Russell Wills. Beats of the Heart: Spirit of Samba: Black Music of Brazil is a 1989 music documentary film directed by Jeremy Marre. The King of Arcades is a documentary film directed by Sean Tiedeman. Where My Heart Beats is a 2010 documentary film directed by Khazar Fatemi. All Together Now is a feature-length documentary that chronicles the making of The Beatles and Cirque du Soleil collaboration project Love. The film details the story behind the unique partnership between The Beatles and Cirque du Soleil that resulted in the creation and launch of the Love stage show and the double Grammy-winning album of the same name. The film is dedicated to the memory of Neil Aspinall, a former assistant to the band and head of Apple Corps. Evita is a documentary film on the life of Eva Duarte created by Eduardo Montes-Bradley. Conformed in its entirety with previously unseen historical footage and documents, the film reconstructs the life of the former Argentine first lady from an unbiased perspective. The film starts with meticulous examination of Evita’s origins, her relationship with her parents and her siblings. Evita goes on to reveal intimate aspects of Ms. Duarte's early childhood and adolescence, leading to her resolving to flee her home in the countryside for the capital city of Buenos Aires. The latter segments of the film are highlighted by interviews with former teachers from Evita’s elementary schooling in Junin, a small city in the province of Buenos Aires. Throughout the film, the director is steadily reminding the audience of the domestic and international context out of which Evita Duarte emerged, enhancing the viewer's understanding the facts. The second act of the film concludes with the funeral of Evita in Buenos Aires. Top of the Cops is a 2009 documentary film directed by Richard Mortimer. Mohawk Girls is a 2005 documentary film by Tracey Deer about the experiences of adolescent girls growing up on the Mohawk reserve of Kahnawake, across the Saint Lawrence River from Montreal. Deer, who was born and raised in Kahnawake, focuses on three young women: Felicia, Amy and Lauren, a mixed race teen. The film received the Best Documentary prize at the ImagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival. It was produced by Rezolution Pictures and the National Film Board of Canada in association with broadcaster Aboriginal Peoples Television Network. The film also aired in Canada on CBC Newsworld's documentary series The Lens on February 20, 2007 and February 24, 2007. Dralion is a touring production by the Canadian entertainment company Cirque du Soleil. The show combines elements of traditional Chinese circus with Western contemporary circus, complementing the "East-meets-West" theme implied in the title — the name is a portmanteau of "dragon" and "lion". It is Cirque du Soleil's 12th touring production and the first Cirque show since 1985 not to be directed by Franco Dragone. Fibershed is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sarah Berkovich. King of the Jews is a short documentary film directed by Jay Rosenblatt. The Gods of Times Square is a 1999 documentary film directed by Richard Sandler Paul Anka: Rock Swings: Live at the Montreal Jazz Festival is a 2005 music documentary film. Fitzgerald Marine Reserve is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Rob Cala. The Embryo Artist is a short documentary film directed by Josh Jarman. All American High is a 1986 documentary film directed by Keva Rosenfeld that chronicles the life of the 1984 senior class at Torrance High School. The film is narrated by the Finnish exchange student “Rikki” Rauhala and observes 1980’s high school culture from a foreigner’s perspective. The film was selected for competition for the 1987 Sundance Film festival. In 1988, PBS broadcast the film. The 2001 PBS reality series “American High,” produced by R.J. Cutler followed the film The film was independently financed with additional funds provided through an AFI/National Endowment for the Arts grant. The documentary was reissued in 2014 as All American High: Revisited, with added footage of the film's principal subjects being interviewed on the 30th anniversary of the original, and the various paths in life that they took. My Depression: The Up And Down And Up Of It is a 2014 animated film written and directed by Robert Marianetti, Elizabeth Swados and David Wachtenheim. Why Do These Kids Love School? is a documentary film directed by filmmaker, Dorothy Fadiman, which examines an independent school, Peninsula School, followed by visits to eight public schools around the country all of which have innovative programs. What emerges is the value of implementing humane values and programs that value creative thinking, self-directed learning, and first-hand experience more than memorization of facts. The schools in the film are Peninsula School, Graham and Parks School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Central Park East Secondary School in New York City, Clara Barton Open School in Minneapolis, Clement Gregory McDonough City Magnet School in Lowell, Massachusetts, Jefferson County Open School in Lakewood, Colorado, New Orleans Free School, Central Park East II in New York City, and Davis Alternative Magnet School in Jackson, Mississippi. Mary Anne Raywid wrote that the film "manages not only to produce a strong emotional impact but also to provide a remarkably intimate look at life inside nine different schools. A gripping portrait of one Puerto Rican family living in NYC. Roberto, 29, the eldest son gay and living in Greenwich Village. Marta the family matriarch, living in Brooklyn and raising the grandchildren that have, for the most part been abandoned by their parents. Danny, 23, returning from Riker's Island after spending yet more time in jail. Beatriz, vanishing periodically to indulge her crack cocaine habit. Hip-Hop and Latin music serve as the sound track to this honest but often painful portrait of an American family. Alfredo's Fire is a documentary film, directed by Andy Abrahams Wilson, about self-immolation victim Alfredo Ormando, who set fire to himself in January 1998 outside St. Peter's Basilica to protest the Catholic Church's condemnation of homosexuality. The film had its world premiere on February 2, 2014 at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. Stairs 1 Geneva is a film by Peter Greenaway. It is also a large-scale art installation, an exhibition, a catalogue and a CD album. Hannibal: The Man Who Hated Rome is a 2001 documentary film directed by Patrick Fleming. Seniors Rocking is a 2011 short, documentary, family and music film directed by Ruedi Gerber. All My Babies: A Midwife's Own Story is a 1953 educational film produced and directed by George C. Stoney which was used to educate midwives in the Southern United States. It was produced by the Georgia Department of Public Health, and written by Stoney. The film follows Mary Francis Hill Coley, an African American midwife from Albany, Georgia who helped deliver over 3,000 babies in the middle part of the 20th century. The film was produced as a method of educating "granny midwives," the term applied to African-American lay women who delivered the majority of both black and white women's babies in the rural south, and their patients. The film stresses the need for midwives to maintain scrupulous standards of sterility. This lecture comes from a doctor who is explaining the cause of a recent maternal death. The second message concerns the necessity of prenatal care and here Coley functions as the expert. The film follows her through two births, the first of which focuses on a woman who has had several successful deliveries, while the other woman has had two miscarriages due to lack of prenatal care. Broken Promises if a 1989 documentary film directed by John Zaritsky. I Love Hooligans is a 2013 animation biographical documentary short sports crime fiction lgbt film written and directed by Jan-Dirk Bouw . The True Story of the Bridge on the River Kwai is a 2001 TV Documentary written and directed by David Devries. Learn the Difference is a 2011 short biographical documentary film written and directed by India Wilson, Rebecca Hutman and Adam Yaron. Gustav Mesmer - Der Flieger is a 1981 film directed by Hartmut Schoen. The Beaches of Agnès is a 2008 French documentary film directed by Agnès Varda. The film is an autobiographical essay where Varda revisits places from her past, reminisces about life and celebrates her 80th birthday on camera. She has said that it will most likely be her last film. "Dreaming of winning the lottery is as American as apple pie. Millions of Americans spend billions of dollars each year hoping to come up a winner. But what happens to the lucky few who actually pull a winning ticket? Lucky crisscrosses the country, examining a handful of past lottery winners as they navigate their newly found riches and a couple of extremely determined hopefuls. The winners’ lives are undoubtedly changed forever but not necessarily in the ways we may expect. Life becomes complicated as attorneys, hired security guards, jealous friends, scheming family members, and desperate pleas for help from strangers pepper their new existence. Veteran director Jeffrey Blitz (Spellbound, Rocket Science—2007 Sundance Film Festival Directing Award winner) has skillfully crafted a revealing look at the way one’s identity is undoubtedly turned upside down after the big payout. Thoroughly involving, Lucky cleverly strips off the veneer and shatters our perceptions about the ultimate American dream." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Salt for Svanetia is a 1930 Georgian silent documentary film directed by Mikhail Kalatozov. As one of the earliest ethnographic films, it documents the life of the Svan people in the isolated mountain village of Ushguli in Svanetia, in the northwestern part of the Georgian Soviet Republic. Containing some propaganda, the climax of the film shows how a Soviet built road connects the previously isolated mountain village to Soviet civilisation. Many of the scenes of the film were staged, and the authenticity of some scenes has been disputed by the Svan people. The Absent Stone is a 2012 historical fiction, drama, adventure and documentary film written by Sandra Rozental and directed by Jesse Lerner and Sandra Rozental. This episode explains how politicians on the left, in both Britain and America, turned to the techniques developed by business to read and fulfil the inner desires of the self. Both New Labour, under Tony Blair, and the Democrats, led by Bill Clinton, used the focus group, which had been invented by psychoanalysts, in order to regain power. They set out to mould their policies to people's inner desires and feelings, just as capitalism had learnt to do with products. Out of this grew a new culture of public relations and marketing in politics, business and journalism. One of its stars in Britain was Matthew Freud who followed in the footsteps of his relation, Edward Bernays, the inventor of public relations in the 1920s. The politicians believed they were creating a new and better form of democracy, one that truly responded to the inner feelings of individual. But what they didn't realise was that the aim of those who had originally created these techniques had not been to liberate the people but to develop a new way of controlling them. The Knife Maker is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Keith "keef" Ehrlich. Mort à Vignole is a 1998 short, documentary and drama film written and directed by Olivier Smolders. Slasher: an IFC Original is a 2004 documentary directed by John Landis, produced by Chris Kobin, Stephen Cantor, and Daniel Laikind. The film chronicles the exploits of Michael Bennet, one of America's top used car salesmen, as he travels to Memphis, Tennessee to stage a slasher sale. The film is a compelling look at a conflicted man and a shady business. It premiered at the 2004 South by Southwest Film Festival before playing on the Independent Film Channel. Santa Quest is a 2014 documentary film that follows Canadian actor John Dunsworth as he rekindles his faith in Santa Claus and represents Canada at the Santa Winter Games in Sweden in an attempt to become the world's best Santa Claus. The film was produced by Tell Tale Productions Inc had its world premiere at the Atlantic Film Festival in September 2014. Strange Birds in Paradise - A West Papuan Story is a 2009 documentary film written by Charlie Hill-Smith and David Tiley and directed by Charlie Hill-Smith. "While the Indonesian army continues to dominate the indigenous inhabitants of West Papua, three friends gather in Melbourne to record outlawed folk songs with renowned Australian rock musicologist David Bridie. Donny Roem is a recent exile. With his two young brothers and forty-two other refugees, he crossed the Arafura Sea to Australia in a homemade canoe. Jacob Rumbiak was a child soldier in the West Papuan resistance movement. His moving story is one of oppression, torture and escape. Charlie Hill-Smith, an Australian writer, cartoonist and comedian, is their friend. His passion for contact across cultures has led him to forge close friendships with the Melanesians and the Javanese families he met as a teenage exchange student. Afloat in an extraordinary musical tradition from the West Papuan highlands, hearing stories of escape, oppression and exile from Jacob and Donny, listening to the defiant songs of murdered musician and independence hero Arnold Ap, Charlie confronts a basic question: how could these two vibrant cultures be at war and how can the rest of the world seemingly not care? Charlie travels again to West Papua and visits the places Donny and Jacob still call home. He records the fate of West Papuans trying to maintain village life while adapting to the Indonesian economy. He visits the battered, pitiful resistance and the refugee camps along the Papua New Guinean border. In the end, Charlie is inspired to blend his own journey of discovery with scenes of the studio recording to create an extended musical meditation." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. The Michael Nyman Songbook is a collection of art songs by Michael Nyman based on texts by Paul Celan, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, William Shakespeare and Arthur Rimbaud. It was recorded as an album with Ute Lemper in 1991, and again as a concert film in 1992, under the direction of Volker Schlöndorff, again with Ute Lemper, though many of the musicians had changed. The songs have been recorded by others and as instrumentals, and are published by Chester Music. The album has been issued by both London Records and Argo Records, though the covers are the same except for the logo. Murder Mouth is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Madeleine Parry. Paul Taylor Creative Domain is a 2014 documentary and biographical film directed by Kate Geis. This gang-directed documentary tries to find common ground between the rebellious teenagers of Sweden, Japan, Italy, and the United States. Italian homosexuals are more open than in other countries, while the relaxed attitudes towards pre-marital sex among Scandinavians is redundantly mentioned. Teens from the U.S. smoke pot and experiment with LSD, while Japanese and Italian teens fall victim to prostitution. Mike Curb provides the music to this low-budget exploitation feature that promises but fails to deliver. Nao-chan is a documentary film directed by Shinichi Ise. La Orilla que se Abisma is a 2008 documentary film written by Juan Laurentino Ortiz and directed by Gustavo Fontan. American Colour is a 2011 short film documentary directed by Joshua Bonnetta. Refrains Happen Like Revolutions In A Song is a 2010 drama film written and directed by John Torres. The Muslims Are Coming! is a 2013 American comedy documentary film co-directed and co-starring Negin Farsad and Dean Obeidallah. It follows a team of Muslim-American comedians as they tour the American South and Southwest performing free standup shows, and engaging in community activities, with an aim to "reach out to Middle America" and counter Islamophobia. Join Philip Coppens, star of the History Channel's 'Ancient Aliens' series, as he provides proof that UFO's helmed by Extraterrestrials from other worlds came to Earth millennia ago. To Love a Maori is a 1972 New Zealand film about an interracial romance. It was the seventh and last feature from Rudall Hayward. Andy Warhol: A Documentary Film is a four-hour 2006 documentary by Ric Burns about pop artist Andy Warhol. The film is Burns' cinematic argument that Warhol was the greatest artist of the second half of the 20th Century. Laurie Anderson narrates the movie. In one segment, Burns compares Warhol's portraits of such celebrities as Marilyn Monroe and Elizabeth Taylor with the icons of saints that Warhol saw in his boyhood Byzantine Catholic parish, where he spent many hours as a child. Burns follows Warhol through his meteoric rise in New York's commercial art world during the 1950s. Burns cites 1962, the year Warhol first exhibited his soup can paintings in Los Angeles, as the turning point in Warhol's career. Burns also describes in detail Valerie Solanas' near-fatal shooting of Warhol in 1968. Andy Warhol: A Documentary Film debuted in early September 2006 with a two-week theatrical run in New York City at Film Forum that charged no admission. The movie was televised in the United States over two nights, September 20–21, 2006, on PBS as part of its American Masters series. Awkward Family Photos is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Mike Bender and Doug Chernack. Shibuya - Tokyo is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Tomonari Nishikawa. Wildfire: Feel the Heat is a short documentary film directed by Mike Slee. An intimate observation of artists and the supporting cast hard at work building an original show, inspired by the beauty and movement found in the world of insects. Find out who's a prankster, who's a bad boy, and who's a ladies man as All for One goes behind the scenes of One Direction's everyday lives. Starring Andres Wiliams and Harry Styles. Solar Eclipse is a 2011 documentary adventure film written and directed by Martin Marecek. Germans Are a Bit Scared of Me is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Alban Muja. Etrangère is a 2010 short drama documentary film directed by Christophe Hermans. Styx affords an impressionistic view of the subterranean world of a metropolitan subway system. Joining an anonymous mass of commuters, the camera embarks on a journey across a decaying cityscape. No les pedimos un viaje a la luna is a 1986 documentary film directed by Maricarmen de Lara. Urge to Build is a 1981 American short documentary film directed by Roland Hallé. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Project is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Shawn Efran and Adam Ciralsky. Springsteen & I is a 2013 documentary-biographical film directed by Baillie Walsh documenting the life and career of Bruce Springsteen through the eyes and insights of his fans throughout the world. Dharavi Diary is a 2012 Short film written and directed by Nawneet Ranjan. We Live in Public is a 2009 documentary film by Ondi Timoner which profiles internet pioneer Josh Harris. It has as its theme the loss of privacy in the internet age. Souls in the Jungle is a 2013 documentary film written ad directed by Andrés Felipe Vásquez. In the Land of My Parents is a 1981 film directed by Jeanine Meerapfel. Return of the Sun is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Ben Hilton and Glen Milner. Doc of the Dead is a 2014 American documentary film written and directed by Alexandre O. Philippe that focuses on the zombie genre. The film had its world premiere on March 10, 2014 at South by Southwest, followed by a television premiere on Epix on March 15, and features several entertainers that have impacted, and been impacted by, the zombie genre and culture. Manifeste is a 2013 animation film directed by Sarah Quirion. Sheldon Leonard's Wonderful Life is a 2011 documentary film directed and written by Allan Holzman. Above All Else: The Everest Dream is a 1999 documentary film written by Leigh Clarke, Bruce Kirkby and Jim Sutherland and directed by Jamie Clarke and Leigh Clarke. AB is a 2013 documentary film written by Iván Fund, Andreas Koefoed, Santiago Loza and directed by Iván Fund and Andreas Koefoed. With These Hands is a 1950 documentary film directed by Jack Arnold. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Produced by the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, the film used actors to recreate the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire and compare working conditions of the early 20th century to that of the 1950s. White Illusion is a 1999 documentary film directed by Ramunas Greicius. In charting the mysterious expanse of space, both men and women pioneers risked their lives to further human kinds reach and influence. Some of these pioneer heroes never came back, while others experienced explosions, catastrophe, and injury. This film explosives the inherently dangerous occupation of astronauts and cosmonauts, who in the face of an unforgiving hostile environment, and relentless life threatening pressures, endured almost certain death in the pursuit to conquer the unknown. Forks Over Knives is a 2011 American documentary film directed by American independent filmmaker Lee Fulkerson that advocates a low-fat whole-food, plant-based diet as a means of combating a number of diseases. The film was created and executive produced by Brian Wendel and produced by John Corry. The DVD of Forks Over Knives was released on August 30, 2011. Cure for Pain: The Mark Sandman Story is a 2011 documentary written by Robert Bralver and directed by Robert Bralver and David Ferino. Lalai Dreamtime is a 1972 documentary film directed by Michael Edols. Coir Worker is a 1961 documentary film directed by Fali Bilimoria. Gentleman's Halt is a 1980 short documentary film directed by Jim Dale. Red Grooms: Sunflower in a Hothouse is a 1986 short film biography of the Nashville-born artist Red Grooms. It was written by Tom Neff, co-directed by Neff and Louise LeQuire, and produced by Neff and Madeline Bell. The film was funded by the Tennessee State Museum and was nominated for an Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. Self-Portrait with Cows Going Home and Other Works - A Portrait of Sylvia Plachy is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Rebecca Dreyfus. Sister Wife is a 2000 documentary that follows the Hebrew Israelites, an African American community that immigrated to Israel and practices polygyny. The men can have up to seven wives. The film follows a couple that's been married for 21 years as they decide to take on another wife. 10,000 Kids and a Cop is a 1948 documentary short directed by Charles Barton about the philanthropic work of the Lou Costello Jr. Youth Foundation in Los Angeles, California. The film features appearances by Abbott and Costello, James Stewart, William Bendix and Brenda Joyce, and it was originally distributed for free to U.S. film exhibitors. A restored version of the film was included as a special feature in the 2006 DVD release of The Abbott and Costello Show. Mysterious Object at Noon is a 2000 Thai independent experimental documentary film directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul. State Legislature is a 2007 American documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. It details the workings of the Idaho Legislature. Adventure in the Bronx is a 1941 American short documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Duck Beach to Eternity is a 2012 comedy, drama documentary film written and directed by Hadleigh Arnst, Stephen Frandsen and Laura Naylor. The Snake Fish Canoe is a 1984 documentary film written by Herbert Brödl and Jobst Grapow and directed by Herbert Brödl. Permeke is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Henri Storck and Patrick Conrad. Journey to Everest is a 2009 Christian adventure documentary film. Directed by David Kiern and produced by Mitchell Galin for Epiphany Documentary Films, it follows the story of six Americans as they trek to Mount Everest. Sugar And Fiji is a documentary film directed by Geoffrey Franklin Collings. Freundschaft siegt is an East German film. It was released in 1952. James Brown: Man to Man is a concert film recorded live at the Apollo Theater in March 1968. It was produced by Metromedia Television and broadcast as an hour-long syndicated television special, and is one of the first color recordings of James Brown performing with his revue. The concert footage is intercut with scenes shot in Harlem and Watts accompanied by Brown's reflections on the situation of blacks in America. Writing in The New York Times, Albert Goldman described Man to Man as "fascinating in detail and overwhelming in total impact" and hailed it as a breakthrough for "offering such a long and relatively unobstructed look at a great black entertainer on his home ground." Man to Man was released on DVD by Shout! Factory in 2008 under the title James Brown Live at the Apollo '68 as part of the box set I Got the Feelin': James Brown in the '60s. The Pad Piper is a 2013 documentary film directed by Akanksha Sood. Dracula's Shadow – The Real Story Behind the Romanian Revolution is a new documentary film that reveals the secret mission from Canada in March 1989 to tape a clandestine TV interview with Romania's biggest dissident, László Tőkés, that would later spark the Romanian Revolution. Two French-Canadians - Michel Clair and Réjean Roy worked together with Tőkés' brother - István - who was living in Montreal to help set up the trip. The mission succeeded, and the tapes of the interview got out to the West with the aid of underground couriers just before Clair and Roy were arrested by the Romanian secret police. The two Canadians were eventually released. That interview was then first broadcast on July 24, 1989, on the "Panoráma" TV show on Hungarian State TV which could also be seen in western Romania. In the interview László Tőkés, a member of Romania's large Hungarian minority, criticized the harsh living conditions in the country and the discriminatory policies against national minorities pursued by Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceauşescu. Because of the interview Tőkés was fired and after several court challenges was given the final deadline of Friday, Dec. 15, 1989 to leave his church. Operation Malaya is a 1953 British documentary about the actions of Engish troops during the Malayan Emergency. Herman Cohen was credited as producer in the US American Releasing Corporation, the forerunner of American International Pictures release. Angel Without Wings is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Tristan Loraine. Don't Follow Me: I'm Lost is a music documentary film directed by William Miller. Miquel Bauçà: poeta invisible is a 2005 documentary film directed by Agustí Villaronga. Mirada a Vapor is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Isidora Marras. Occupy The Farm is a 2014 Documentary Action Adventure Biographical film directed by Todd Darling. This one hour documentary profiles the first manned Mission to the Moon, and includes interviews with the astronauts and many of the NASA officials who were a part of this historic event. What's going on up there? is a one hour documentary film by film maker Dr. Maryanne Galvin explores the topic of why space and space exploration is important from a number of perspectives, by considering the question "What's going on up there?" Featuring a voice introduction by Leonard Nimoy and interviews with scientists and scholars at MIT, Yale, Sydney University, and UC San Francisco, attorneys, authors, entrepreneurs, economist, environmentalists, filmmakers, youngsters and average citizens—even a college student in Kuwait who wants to be the first Muslim woman in space—this in-your-face documentary offers conversations on all sides of the space debate. Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer is a 2003 feature-length documentary film about Aileen Wuornos, made by Nick Broomfield as a follow-up to his 1992 film Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer. The film focuses on Wuornos' declining mental state and the questionable judgment to execute her despite her being of unsound mind. The film climaxes in a final interview with Wuornos just one day before her execution. In the interview, she states that she was tortured while in prison and claims that the prison used sonic pressure to control or alter her mental state. In a fit of rage, Wuornos rails against a society that she says "railroaded my ass" before abruptly ending the interview. Broomfield comments that he finds it hard to understand how the same person in front of him was deemed "of sound mind" the day before by Florida governor Jeb Bush's psychiatric examiners. The film concludes with footage of a prison spokesman reading Wuornos' final statement at a press conference after her execution: "I'm sailing with the Rock, and I'll be back. Like Independence Day with Jesus, June 6, like the movie, big mothership and all. I'll be back." Iron City Blues is an award-winning independent documentary which chronicles the creation of a blues song about the town of Iron City, Tennessee. The Eyes of War is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Roberto Lozano Bruna. Hard Up In The 2000s is a rockumentary film of the Spring leg of the indie rock Boston band Aloud's Fan The Fury tour, which took place from March to April 2008. Direction and editing of the film was credited to Alan Smithee. The film is set against audio from radio interviews the band gave during and after the tour, primarily by Phil Fleming and Jamie Leigh Griffiths. The title for the film was taken from the song of the same name on Aloud's second album Fan The Fury. Faces of Death III is the second sequel to the 1978 mondo film Faces of Death. Once again, John Alan Schwartz directed and co wrote along with co writer Veronica Lakewood. Michael Carr again portrays Dr. Francis B. Gröss. This third installment focuses largely on serial killers, with lengthy re-enactments of police investigations of bodies being found in a dumpster, and a staged courtroom sequence with Schwartz again making a cameo appearance as the serial killer on trial for raping and murdering a girl, allegedly captured on video. Schwartz has identified the girl allegedly killed in the video as his then girlfriend, who he claims was a willing participant. Also, a man in Los Angeles high on PCP and a parachuter who accidentally fell into an alligator farm pond in Florida. A suicide jumper, also in Los Angeles, is shown partway into the film was portrayed by James B. Schwartz, John Alan Schwartz's brother. James B. Schwartz would later take over duties as narrator in the following films in this series. The Thin Blue Line is a 1988 American documentary film by Errol Morris, depicting the story of Randall Dale Adams, a man convicted and sentenced to life in prison for a murder he did not commit. Adams' case was reviewed and he was released from prison approximately a year after the film's release. Gerrie & Louise is a 1997 documentary film written by Steven Silver and directed by Sturla Gunnarsson. 9to5 – Days in Porn is a 2008 German documentary film about the United States porn industry written and directed by Jens Hoffmann. It is also known as The Porn Diaries. Action Boys is a 2008 South Korean documentary film directed by Jung Byung-gil. The film follows a handful of students-turned-graduates of the Seoul Action School as they try to find regular work as film stuntmen, with varying success. Released in South Korea on 28 August 2008, the film made its western debut at the Vancouver International Film Festival on 29 September 2008. Planet Utero is a 2012 Animation, Short, Drama, Fantasy and Sci-Fi film written and directed by Faiyaz Jafri. 311 Day: Live in New Orleans is a DVD release by the band 311. Late Winter to Early Spring is a 1954 short film. Living with Feral Cats is a documentary film directed by Etsuko Izumi. "Bloodied But Unbowed chronicles the late 1970s/early 1980s Vancouver punk rock scene. Susanne Tabata's documentary tells a tale of rebellion and music a fiercely independent scene created from nothing and played out in a microcosm of urban squalor. Told by its surviving stars - including members of DOA, The Pointed Sticks, Subhumans, the Modernettes and Young Canadians, as well as American west coast cohorts Jello Biafra, Penelope Houston and Ron Reyes - whose accounts are suffused with both humour and gritty realism. A brutally honest story from the streets and stages of the West Coast through interviews, music, photos, and archival performances. Overarching those halcyon days of poverty and excess is the MUSIC that moved its audience to their feet and seemed to validate their very existence." Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. A PUG'S LIFE- The "Dogumentary" is a fast and fun filled 45 minute film by award winning filmmakers Marilyn and Chuck Braverman. The "Dogumentary" covers pugs and their owners in California, New York, and London. Frank, the pug star in "Men In Black," is featured along with his trainers who tell us about pug training and what it takes to be a star in the world of Hollywood films. Lexi is a pug owned by a precocious nine year old girl who with her parents have taken their fawn around the world. The dog show scene is filmed featuring world renowned pug breeder Blanche Roberts and her award winning dogs. We learn some her show winning secrets and hear about importing pug semen from Sweden to breed the best dogs. "Ices" is the prize bitch stolen out of a handlers trailer during a dog show and the "Dogumentary" tells the dramatic rescue story. Citizen Juling is a 2008 film written by Ing K and directed by Kraisak Choonhavan, Manit Sriwanichpoom and Ing K. Human rights activist Kraisak Choonhavan photographer Manit Sriwanichpoom and artist Ing K direct this documentary that explores the violent uprising of Islamic fundamentalism which has plagued Thailand since 2004. An unfiltered examination of the effects of political corruption this arresting feature is inspired by the shocking murder of Buddhist teacher Juling Pongkunmul who was beaten to death by a mob of Muslim extremists in 2006. The Source Awards: From Behind is a 2004 documentary film written by Devaughn Hughson and Jason Staten and directed by Devaughn Hughson. The Secret of Nikola Tesla, is a 1980 Yugoslav biographical film which details events in the life of the discoverer Nikola Tesla. Tesla was born to ethnic Serb parents in 1856 Croatia. He arrived in New York in 1884, became an American citizen in 1891, made immense contributions to science and died in Manhattan at age 86 during World War II in 1943. This biography includes references to his amazing abilities of detailed mental visualization as well as the slowly intensifying personal habits, indulgences or eccentricities for which he became nearly as well known. The film portrays Tesla in a battle with Thomas Edison over the clear superiority of Alternating Current over Direct Current. It also depicts Tesla's dream of supplying consumers all around the globe with limitless free energy. Croatian director Krsto Papić assembled a cast which includes three American actors playing iconic personalities of 19th and early 20th century America, J. P. Morgan, Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse. Fast Ice: Rescue From Antarctica is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Laurence Topham. Death in Gaza is a 2004 documentary film about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, opening in the West Bank but then moving to Gaza and eventually settling in Rafah where the film spends most of its time. It concentrates on 3 children, Ahmed, Mohammed and Najla. The Sweet Century is a 1997 documentary film directed by Helena Třeštíková. Ciobanul Zburator is a 2008 documentary short film written and directed by Catalin Musat. The United States of Hoodoo is a biographical, documentary and music film directed by Oliver Hardt. Bronx Obama is a 2014 biography documentary film directed by Ryan Murdock. Mend And Make Do is a 2014 short drama documentary animation biographcal film written by Stefan Kaday and directed by Bexie Bush. Staging Hope is a 2011 documentary film written by Paul Freedman and directed by Bil Yoelin. Magic Radio is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Stephanie Barbey and Luc Peter. Julien is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Gaël Lépingle. This Year in Czernowitz is a 2004 film directed by Volker Koepp. Perpetual Movements: A Cine Tribute to Carlos Paredes is a 2006 musical-documentary film directed by Edgar Pêra. Weapons of Mass Addiction is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Sergio García de Leániz and Vicente Pérez. This sports documentary tells the remarkable story of the man voted the greatest boxer in history. Spanning his career from the early Depression-era days until his death in 1989, this special brings to light the may sides of Robinson: flashy public icon, womanizer, comeback kid, philanthropist, fighter. The Bonobo Connection is a 2012 Short, History, and Documentary film written and directed by Irene Magafan. Romeo Romeo is a 2012 comedy-drama and documentary film directed by Lizzie Gottlieb. Pabst wieder sehen is a 1997 documentary film directed by Wolfgang Jacobsen, Martin Koerber and Rene Perraudin EKV: As It Once Was is a 2009 documentary film written by Dusan Vesic and Sandra Rancic, and directed by Dusan Vesic. "This kinetic and fast-paced documentary will put you right on the Eisbach in the heart of Munich, where river-surfing was invented 35 years ago. Stunningly shot with cameras literally on the surfboards, you can sense the exhilaration as they take to the water. With cameos by surfing legends like Nick Carroll and Kelly Slater, Keep Surfing will make you want to hit the waves!" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Louis Lumière is a 66 minute filmed conversation between Henri Langlois founder and director of La Cinémathèque Française and the film director Jean Renoir It was directed by Éric Rohmer in 1968. The I Love Lucy 50th Anniversary Special is a Special Tribute TV Movie about "I Love Lucy". Paddle To The Ocean is a 2013 short documentary film written by Zac Crouse and directed by Kelsey Thompson. Doc Next: Draw Me a Crisis is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Alketa Ramaj. The African Twintowers is a 2008 documentary film directed by Christoph Schlingensief. Eat the Document is a documentary of Bob Dylan's 1966 tour of the United Kingdom with the Hawks. It was shot under Dylan's direction by D. A. Pennebaker, whose groundbreaking documentary Dont Look Back [sic] chronicled Dylan's 1965 British tour. The film was originally commissioned for the ABC television series Stage '66. Though shooting had completed for the film, Dylan's July 1966 motorcycle accident delayed the editing process. Once well enough to work again, Dylan edited the film himself. ABC rejected the film as incomprehensible for a mainstream audience. It has never been released on home video and prints are rarely screened in theaters. Some footage from Eat the Document was used in Martin Scorsese's 2005 documentary on Bob Dylan, No Direction Home. The Glamorous World of the Adlon Hotel is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Percy Adlon. SS United States: Lady in Waiting is a 2008 documentary film about the famed ocean liner SS United States, which was in service from 1952 to 1969. It features interviews of many past crew members and passengers about the background, construction, service and life on board the SS United States. The film also focuses on the lighting up of the vessel by artist Robert Wogan while also showing footage of her glamorous years in service. The documentary also includes excerpts of footage Wogan filmed while exploring the engine room of the United States, all of which the artist later released on a 55 minute long DVD. A charity screening of the documentary was held on March 11, 2010, the money raised going to the cause of saving the endangered SS United States. Kadhal Mannan is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ashok Kumar. Giran is an Egyptian 2009 documentary film. Fuel is a 2008 documentary film directed by Josh Tickell and produced by Greg Reitman, Dale Rosenbloom, Daniel Assael, Darius Fisher, and Rebecca Harrell Tickell. It won the audience award at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. The DVD was released on June 22, 2010. Deadly Deception: General Electric, Nuclear Weapons and Our Environment is a 1991 American short documentary film directed by Debra Chasnoff. It won an Academy Award at the 64th Academy Awards in 1992 for Documentary Short Subject. Metal: A Headbanger's Journey is a 2005 documentary directed by Sam Dunn with Scot McFadyen and Jessica Wise. The film follows 31-year-old Dunn, a Canadian anthropologist, who has been a heavy metal fan since the age of 12. Dunn sets out across the world to uncover the various opinions on heavy metal music, including its origins, culture, controversy, and the reasons it is loved by so many people. The film made its debut at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival, and was released as a two-disc special edition DVD in the US on September 19, 2006. A follow-up to the film titled Global Metal premiered at the Bergen International Film Festival on October 17, 2007, and saw limited release in theatres in June 2008. Dunn has also elaborated upon his "Heavy Metal Family Tree" in the VH1 series Metal Evolution, which focuses on one sub-genre per episode. Africa segreta is an Italian documentary film, released in 1969. Black Rodeo is a 1972 documentary by filmmaker Jeff Kanew. This Is My Land... Hebron is a film directed by Giulia Amati and Stephen Natanson. Operation 8 is a 2011 documentary directed by Abi King-Jones and Errol Wright. The Story of 1 is a BBC documentary about the history of numbers, and in particular, the number 1. It was presented by ex-Monty Python member Terry Jones. It was released in 2005. La Parade (Notre Histoire) is a documentary film written by Lionel Baier and Laurent Guido and directed by Lionel Baier. Jaimeo Brown's Transcendence is a historical documentary music drama film directed by Mario Lathan. Viewers get a special behind-the-scenes look at the show's long history, from how it first got on the air to the experience of being a guest host; writers, actors and guest hosts comment on the experience of working on the show; memorable skits. Classic Albums: Steely Dan: Aja is a 1999 musical documentary directed by Alan Lewens. Let's Talk About It is a 2006 Documentary film directed by Deepa Mehta. Corner Store is a documentary film about Yousef, an owner of a corner grocery store in San Francisco, produced and directed by Katherine Bruens and Sean Gillane, acting as both cinematographer and co-writer. Filming began in December 2009. Yousef Elhaj, an owner of a corner grocery store in San Francisco is the focus of Corner Store. The film is structured as a first-person narrative with an informal and intimate tone, and shot largely as cinema vérité. The camera introduces the audience to Yousef, who left Palestine ten years ago during the Second Intifada, and was forced to leave his wife and children behind as an economic refugee. During the interceding decade, Yousef has not only worked alone in the store but has also lived alone in the store's small back room, which also serves as the office and stock room. As his children have grown into young adults, he has only been to visit them once, and then for only ten days. Yet he has put everything into ensuring the success of his business working from eight in the morning until midnight or two in the morning seven days a week and 365 days a year – for ten years. Angels of Death is a 1998 Dutch documentary film by director Leo de Boer. During World War II, the Soviet General Andrey Vlasov was in control of the 2nd Shock Army. This documentary contains images of people studying the location near the city of Leningrad where the 2nd Shock Army was annihilated in 1942. Flamenco is a 1995 Spanish documentary film directed by Carlos Saura with camerawork by cinematographer Vittorio Storaro. The film is entirely musical and dancing vignettes, composed and photographed on a sound stage. Yoole is a Senegalese 2010 documentary film. Crips and Bloods: Made in America is a documentary by Stacy Peralta discussing the unique circumstances and factors that led to the creation of Crips and Bloods, two of the most violent gangs in all of United States history. The documentary goes beyond the general background of and discusses the external factors that fueled the African American youth to turn to gangs. It also raises many questions regarding the government responses/lack thereof to such minority conflict. The Birth of Light is a 1997 short documentary film directed by Abbas Kiarostami. Latcho Drom is a 1993 French documentary film directed and written by Tony Gatlif. The movie is about the Romani people's journey from north-west India to Spain, consisting primarily of music. The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1993 Cannes Film Festival. This Is Elvis is a 1981 documentary film directed by Andrew Solt and Malcolm Leo, based on the life of Elvis Presley. It combined archival footage with reenactments, and voice-over narration by pop singer Ral Donner, imitating Presley's speaking voice. It was screened out of competition at the 1981 Cannes Film Festival. The film grossed $2 million at the box office in the U.S./Canada, ranking #92 for 1981. For the reenactment scenes, Presley was portrayed in the film by four actors: Paul Boensch II as Presley at age 10 David Scott as Presley at age 18 Dana MacKay as Presley at age 35 Johnny Harra as Presley at age 42 Other narrators provided voice-over narrations for Vernon Presley, Gladys Presley, and Priscilla Presley. Presley's former road manager Joe Esposito and girlfriend Linda Thompson provided their own narrations. Presley receives credit only in the extended version prepared for cable and later home video release. RCA Records released a two-disc soundtrack album for the film in 1981, featuring the first official release of several of Presley's 1950s television appearances as well as other previously unreleased performances. El vágido is a 2008 short documentary film written by Eduardo Ledesma and Juan Luis Tamayo and directed by Juan Luis Tamayo. Lies of Love is a 1949 short Italian documentary film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. It was entered into the 1949 Cannes Film Festival. Faces of Death V, released in 1995, is a direct-to-video release consisting of highlights from the earlier films. It begins with the intro and opening credits from Faces of Death, before moving into more archive footage lifted whole from the earlier films, primarily from parts one and four. A noted scene, involving the killing of a monkey which is then prepared and served at an exotic restaurant, is lifted entirely from the first film, as is a blatantly staged heart-ripping scene by African elephants; the "head in a box" scene is taken from Faces of Death IV. Adolf Hitler is again briefly featured in archive footage. Aleksandrinke is a documentary film directed by Metod Pevec. Bibliografia is a 2013 film written and directed by João Manso and Miguel Manso. One Hundred Fires is a 2013 documentary family drama film directed by Isabelle Carbonell. Citizen Langlois is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Edgardo Cozarinsky. The First Olympian is a 2004 documentary film directed by Nick Copus. Stalin: le tyran rouge is a 2007 French television documentary film by Mathieu Schwartz, Serge de Sampigny, Yvan Demeulandre and the historic consultant Nicolas Werth about the government of Joseph Stalin in the Soviet Union. Soapbox Agitation #1: Proving Ground is a 2007 documentary film directed by Travis Wilkerson. The Greater Good is a documentary film about the risks vs. benefits of vaccines that originally debuted at the Dallas International Film Festival on April 2, 2011, and which then began playing in Los Angeles, California on October 14, 2011, which won awards from the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival as well as the cinematic vision award at the Amsterdam Film Festival. The three anecdotes around which the film is based on are those of: Gabi Swank of Wichita, Kansas, who received an HPV vaccine and attributes a number of adverse reactions, including a seizure, to this experience, Jordan King of Portland, Oregon, who regressed into autism following routine vaccination, and was one of the test cases for the autism omnibus proceedings and whose case was rejected by the Special Master, and Victoria Grace Boyd Christener of Tulsa, Oklahoma, who died at the age of 5 months after receiving a vaccine. Well-known vaccine experts who appear in the film include Paul Offit, Melinda Wharton, and Norman Baylor of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. Behind the Burly Q is a film documentary looking back at the golden age of Burlesque—one of America's most popular forms of live entertainment in the first half of the twentieth century. They Killed My Brother is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Cristiano Burlan. The Mystery of the Lagoons, Andean Fragments is a 2011 musical film written by Atahualpa Lichy and Diana Lichy and directed by Atahualpa Lichy and Wanadi Lichy. "12 Notes Down" (12 toner ned) is a documentary by Danish filmmaker Andreas Koefoed. Vostok 900 is a 1964 documentary film. Ride the Sky is a 2014 documentary, adventure and biographical film. The Art of the Steal is a 2009 documentary film about the effective theft of the Barnes Foundation, generally considered to be the world's best collection of post-Impressionist art and valued in 2009 to be worth at least $25-billion. The theft, carried out by the second and later generations of the foundation's board, was instigated when the Pew Trust, Annenberg Foundation, and Philadelphia politicians, including Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell, violated the clear intent of the written will of the collector and owner, Doctor Albert C. Barnes, who died in 1951. It describes the successful effort by Philadelphia's leading aristocrats to break Barnes's will and move the collection away from the setting and arrangement that Barnes had painstakingly established for it in Lower Merion Township, Pennsylvania. The will-breakers had the collection moved, in 2012, to downtown Philadelphia. The film presents a blow-by-blow account of the breaking of Barnes' will, a decades-long process that was initiated by Philadelphia aristocrats who were enemies of Dr. Barnes while he was alive, and that was continued by the heirs of those aristocrats. "I've often been asked whether I wouldnt like to make my own film. My usual response is, yes, if there were a film that only I could make. Since then I've made a couple of short films. It all began with dreams. When we sleep and dream a poet awakens within us, a poet that uses daring images and words to tell us all the things our conscious mind tries to hide. Based on brief sketches and notes, I relived several dreams, wide-eyed, in front of a rolling camera. The result was seven TRAUMPROTOKOLLE, of which I've chosen one. In HANNA HANNAH I'm in the open maze of the Holocaust memorial in the heart of Berlin remembering my namesake, the Hannah after whom my mother named me, at the last minute, just before I was christened. In MOI ET MON DOUBLE I'm trying to memorise a text by Witold Gombrowicz and I encounter a ghost. Its the self in search of another form of beauty and fulfilment long after the first beauty of youth is behind us. And finally, ALICIA BUSTAMANTE is a portrait of the legendary Cuban stage and film personality. We met almost twenty years ago, on a film set. The author of the real maravilloso wonderful reality series was Gabriel Garcia Márquez. Alicia has remained my companion ever since. She is herself a small, but very real, wonder particularly on account of the way she is able to connect to the genius of childhood in the midst of all the wisdom of her years of experience, and the way her infectious humour turns everyday life into a comedy." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Berlin Film Festival site. Contemporary Indian Sculpture is a 1987 Bengali documentary film directed and written by Buddhadev Dasgupta. It is a documentary on Indian sculpture. Passage Briare is a 2009 short film written and directed by Friedl vom Gröller. The Patterson–Gimlin film is a famous short motion picture of an unidentified subject the film makers purported to be a "Bigfoot", that was supposedly filmed on October 20, 1967, by Roger Patterson and Robert "Bob" Gimlin on Bluff Creek, a tributary of the Klamath River about 25 road miles north-west of Orleans, California. The film has been subjected to many attempts both to debunk and authenticate it. Most scientists who have studied the film have judged it to be a hoax with a man in an ape suit. Other scientists have done studies purporting to be scientific analyses concluding that the alleged creature is likely non-human. Both Patterson and Gimlin have always insisted they encountered and filmed a real Bigfoot, not a man in a costume. Patterson died of cancer in 1972. Patterson's friend and business associate, Gimlin, has always denied being involved in any part of a hoax with Patterson. Gimlin avoided publicly discussing the subject from at least the early 1970s until about 2000 when he began giving interviews and making appearances at Bigfoot conferences. Errances is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Gwennaël Bolomey. Vojta Lavicka: Ups and Downs is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Helena Trestíková. The Boy Mir is documentary film about ten years life of a Hazara boy in Afghanistan. This film was made after an international hit film The Boy who Plays on the Buddhas of Bamiyan by a British film maker Phil Grabsky. Once in the XX Century is a 2004 short and documentary film directed by Deimantas Narkevicius. They Planted a Stone is a 1953 British short documentary film directed by Robin Carruthers and produced by James Carr. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Documentarian Brian Gillogly tells the story of how this 15 year old girl from Brentwood almost inadvertently opened the door for women into a previously male domain, and became surfing’s first feminist, inspiring future champions like Layne Beachley, who was known exclusively as Gidget until she became a household name in her own right. Gidget truly embodies the title of her father’s first book “Gidget – A Little Girl With Big Dreams”. As The Palaces Burn is a 2014 documentary music film directed by Don Argott. Kassim The Dream is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Kief Davidson. One Way, a Tuareg Journey is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Fabio Caramaschi. Meerkats is a 2011 3D documentary film directed by Andrew Graham-Brown. Castilla y León, patrimonio de la humanidad is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Antonio Jiménez-Rico. Eden's Ark is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Marcelo Felix. The Last Ovation is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Wolfgang Pfeiffer. With his intensely autobiographical paintings depicting the day-to-day existence of African Americans in the segregated South, Winfred Rembert has preserved an important, if often disturbing, chapter of American history. His indelible images of toiling in the cotton fields, singing in church, dancing in juke joints, or working on a chain gang are especially powerful, not just because he lived every moment, but because he experienced so much of the injustice and bigotry they show as recently as the 1960s and 70s.Now in his sixties, Rembert has developed a growing following among collectors and connoisseurs, and enjoyed a number of tributes and exhibitions of his work. In "ALL ME: The Life and Times of Winfred Rembert," the artist relives his turbulent life, abundantly visualized by his extensive paintings and, in a series of intimate reminiscences, shows us how even the most painful memories can be transformed into something meaningful and beautiful. A glowing portrait of how an artist—and his art—is made, "ALL ME" is also a triumphant saga of race in contemporary America. Commune is a 2005 documentary film by Jonathan Berman. The film is about an intentional community located in Siskiyou County, California called Black Bear Ranch and features narration by Peter Coyote who himself once resided at Black Bear. Wildness is a 2012 documentary, biographical and historical film written by Wu Tsang and Roya Rastegar and directed by Wu Tsang. The House Without a Name is a 1956 short documentary film written and produced by Valentine Davies. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Writer with No Hands is an independent documentary film that follows a British academic, Matthew Alford, as he attempts to prove a Hollywood screenwriter, Gary Devore, was assassinated in 1997 over a script he had just written about the CIA. It premiered at Hot Docs film festival in the Future Cult Classics strand on 30 April 2014. Paradise Lost 2: Revelations is the 2000 sequel to the documentary film Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills, about the trial and conviction of three teenagers known as the West Memphis Three accused of murdering three young boys in a Satanic ritual abuse. Little Castle is a 2012 documentary, short, biographical film directed by Daniel Froidevaux. The Tale of the Princess Kaguya is a 2013 Japanese animated film produced by Studio Ghibli, and directed and co-written by Isao Takahata, based on the folktale The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter. This is Takahata's fifth film for Studio Ghibli, and his first in 14 years since his 1999 feature, My Neighbors the Yamadas. Ashes to Honey, is a Japanese documentary directed by Hitomi Kamanaka and released in 2010. It is the third in Kamanaka's trilogy of films on the problems of nuclear power and radiation, preceded by Hibakusha at the End of the World and Rokkasho Rhapsody. La última película is a 2013 western comedy film written and directed by Raya Martin and Mark Peranson. From The Sea to the Land Beyond: Britain's Coast on Film is a documentary feature film directed by Penny Woolcock, with an original soundtrack by British indie-rock band British Sea Power. The project was originally produced by Crossover and Sheffield Doc/Fest as part of The Space project from the BBC and the Arts Council England. The film was edited by Alex Fry. The world premiere was at the Crucible Theatre at Sheffield Doc/Fest in June 2012, with British Sea Power playing the soundtrack live. It has since been performed at the BFI Southbank, Latitude Festival, Sundance London, at Doc/Fest 2013, and under the hull of the Cutty Sark. The film with recorded soundtrack was shown on BBC Four's Storyville on 18 November 2012, and released on DVD on 21 January 2013. The soundtrack album was released on 2 December 2013. Capturing one of the most extraordinary concerts in the history of traditional American music, DOWN FROM THE MOUNTAIN goes onstage and backstage with the acclaimed soundtrack artists of the Coen Brother's hit film O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU?Filmed by the Academy Award® nominated creators of THE WAR ROOM, his fascinating documentary features behind-the-scenes encounters and dazzling performances from legendary names like Ralph Stanley, John Hartford, Alison Krauss, Emmylou Harris and other celebrated bluegrass and country music superstars in a once-in-a lifetime concert event! Como una pintura nos iremos borrando is a 1987 documentary film directed by Alfredo Robert. Over the Air is a 1999 documentary film directed by Peter Braatz. Best Boy is a 1979 documentary made by Ira Wohl. The film received critical acclaim, and won many awards including the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1979. The film follows Ira's mentally handicapped cousin, Philly Wohl, who at that time was 52 years old and still living with his elderly parents. Ira forces his aunt and uncle to realize that they will not be around to care for Philly forever, and that they must start making preparations for when that time should come. Philly then begins to attend classes in New York City to learn how to take care of himself and become independent. Philly's father, Max Wohl, dies during the course of the film. His mother, Pearl, died in 1980. Philly is now an octogenarian, and he lives in a group home where he has learned to basically take care of himself. A sequel entitled Best Man: 'Best Boy' and All of Us, 20 Years Later, was produced in 1997. Following the sequel, in 2006, Ira made 'Best Sister' which rounded off the trilogy by looking at the effect Philly's sister had on his current life. Tik And The Turkey is a 2013 documentary drama film directed by Lainey Richardson. Dirty Pictures (Hotel Diaries 7) is a 2007 documentary short film directed by John Smith. Iranian Cookbook is a 2010 film directed by Mohammad Shirvani. 100 Monkeys: Live and Kickin' Part Too is a 2010 documentary film directed by Rafael Hernán Gamboa. The Names is a 1996 documentary film directed by Maxim Yacoubson. Horrie is a 2013 documentary short biography war history film written and directed by Lucas LI. TT3D: Closer to the Edge is a British documentary film by first time director Richard de Aragues. The film is narrated by Jared Leto and charts the world-famous Isle of Man TT motorcycle race that takes place on the Isle of Man every year, and follows the leading riders in the 2010 race, most notably Guy Martin and Ian Hutchinson. It was shot in 3D, and charts the racers' dedication and the risks involved in their bid to become King of the Mountain. The film was released to the public in 2011 to critical acclaim and was a financial success. Grossing $2 million, it is the seventh biggest documentary hit of all time in the United Kingdom. Nadiezda is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Dali Rust. Interpretation of Dreams is a 1990 feature documentary film by Andrei Zagdansky, produced in the Soviet Union during the perestroika period. Using extensive quotes from several Freudian works still banned by the Soviet censorship at the time the documentary interprets the pivotal points of European history of the past century – the rise of Nazism and Communism - from a psychoanalytical point of view. The Golden Hour is a 2013 documentary, action, biographical, drama film written by Roma Sur and directed by Jessica McGaugh and Roma Sur. The Tailenders is a 2005 documentary directed, produced and narrated by Adele Horne, an American independent filmmaker based out of Los Angeles. It is in limited release and has been screened in the U.S., Mexico and Scotland. According to a P.O.V. press release, The Tailenders was broadcast nationally in the US on PBS on Tuesday, July 25, 2006. The film follows Gospel Recordings, an evangelical Christian missionary group founded by Joy Ridderhof in California in 1939 to make audio recordings of Bible stories in every language on Earth. The group is part of the umbrella network GRN - Global Recordings Network which has sister offices in over 30 countries. The film claims there are over 8,000 languages and dialects in the world and, as of the making of the film, Global Recordings Network has recorded Bible stories in 5,485 of them. It is mentioned in the film that their archive houses more spoken languages in one place than any other single area in the world. The significance of this lies in the notion that the Bible is not only the most published book around the world, passages from it are also translated into the most spoken languages as well. One California Day is a 2007 documentary film about surfing shot in six coastal regions in California. Directed by Mark Jeremias and Jason Baffa, the film looks at the experience of California surfing from Crescent City to Imperial Beach. The film was shot in super 16mm color film. "A student documentary film exploring the lives of four gay men in urban Mumbai." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Sound and Fury is a documentary film released in 2000 about two American families with young deaf children and their conflict over whether or not to give their children cochlear implants, surgically implanted devices that may improve their ability to hear but may threaten their deaf identity. The film was nominated for several awards, including an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Black Road is a 2005 Australian documentary by William Nessen. The film was shot on location in Aceh, and reports on the Province’s battle for independence from Indonesia. Although the film was originally a television documentary, produced for SBS in Australia, it has since been shown around the world at film festivals and presentations on the subject. The film is critically acclaimed and has received several awards, both Australian and international. The Black Road was among four films on the subject of separatism that the Indonesian Film Censorship Institute banned in the country. Piattaforma luna is a 2011 short, documentary, science fiction film written and directed by Yuri Ancarni. David Hockney IN THE NOW: in six minutes is a 2013 documentary, short and biography film written and directed by Lucy Walker. The Sarakasi Trust is a non-profit organization founded by Marion and Rudy Van Dijck in Nairobi, Kenya. It aims to improve the lives of impoverished people through arts and culture by supporting local dancers and acrobats. "Rising to the Top" tells the story of two of the many artists that have advanced their lives by being a part of this organization. Tender Feet is a 2013 documentary film directed by Fern Silva. Into the Storm or Churchill at War is a 2009 biographical film about Winston Churchill and his days in office during World War II. The movie is directed by Thaddeus O'Sullivan and stars Brendan Gleeson, who plays the British Prime Minister. Into the Storm is a sequel to the 2002 television film The Gathering Storm, which details the life of Churchill in the years just prior the war. Into the Storm had its first public premiere on HBO and HBO Canada on 31 May 2009. Into the Storm was nominated for 14 Primetime Emmy Awards. Brendan Gleeson won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie. Utopia Ltd. a 2011 documentary film written by Sandra Trostel and Thies Mynther and directed by Sandra Trostel. Still, We Believe: The Boston Red Sox Movie is a 2004 documentary/sport film documenting the Boston Red Sox' 2003 season and the team's relationship with its fans. It was directed by Paul Doyle, Jr. and was first released on May 7, 2004 at the Loew’s Boston Common Theater in Boston, Massachusetts. Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project is a 2007 documentary film about stand-up comedian Don Rickles, which first aired at the 2007 New York Film Festival and then on HBO. The documentary and its producers - Robert Engelman, John Landis, Mike Richardson, and Larry Rickles - earned a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Variety, Music, or Comedy Special in 2008. Don Rickles also won a Primetime Emmy Award for Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program for his appearance in the documentary. Butch Walker: Out of Focus is a biography, music, documentary film directed by Peter Harding and Shane Valdés. The Case of the Three Sided Dream is a 2013 music biographical documentary film written and directed by Adam Kahan. Russia's Wonder Children is a 1999 film directed by Irene Langemann. Here's Looking At You, Boy is a documentary film on the history of LGBT film. Good Ol’ Freda is a 2013 historical, musical, biographical and documentary film written by Jessica Lawson and Ryan White and directed by Ryan White. Golda's List is a 2001 International Emmy Award nominated documentary film. Bite Size is a 2014 documentary, drama, family film directed by Corbin Billings. Incredible Human Machine is a 2007 documentary film written by Chad Cohen and directed by Arthur Binkowski and Chad Cohen. Radical Islam: Terror in Its Own Words was a February 2007 Fox News documentary broadcast featuring commentary from counter-terrorism experts Steven Emerson and Walid Phares and footage from the The Investigative Project and the Middle East Media Research Institute. Rehje is a 2009 documentary film written by Anais Huerta and directed by Raúl Cuesta & Anais Huerta. Speaking in Strings is a 1999 documentary film directed by Paola di Florio. The film is based on the life of Italian-born violinist Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, and it received a nomination for Best Feature Documentary Film at the 72nd Academy Awards. Schäfer Christian is a 1987 short documentary directed by Helmut Barth. Totus Tuus is a 2006 spiritual documentary film. La donna di notte is a 1962 Italian film directed by Mino Loy. A Noble Fisherman is a 2013 short sports documentary film directed by Maxwell Geoffrey. A Family Underground is an American documentary film written and directed by Paul Andresen. Filmed at the 2008 Gathering of the Juggalos, the film focus on the event and the Juggalo fan base. Gathering of the Juggalos is a music festival hosted by Psychopathic Records every summer. Their fan base, known as Juggalos, have become an underground musical subculture. The film features concert performances and interviews about the event and fanbase by the entire Psychopathic Records roster and other artists which performed at the festival. Released direct-to-video in 2009, it is the second documentary produced by Psychopathic Records, after Shockumentary, released in 1998. The Man Who Saved the World is a 2013 feature documentary film about Stanislav Petrov, a former lieutenant colonel of the Soviet Air Defence Forces. "In 1961 segregation seemed to have an overwhelming grip on American society. Many states violently enforced the policy, while the federal government, under the Kennedy administration, remained indifferent, preoccupied with matters abroad. That is, until an integrated band of college students—many of whom were the first in their families to attend a university—decided, en masse, to risk everything and buy a ticket on a Greyhound bus bound for the Deep South. They called themselves the Freedom Riders, and they managed to bring the president and the entire American public face to face with the challenge of correcting civil-rights inequities that plagued the nation. Veteran filmmaker Stanley Nelson’s inspirational documentary is the first feature-length film about this courageous band of civil-rights activists. Gaining impressive access to influential figures on both sides of the issue, Nelson chronicles a chapter of American history that stands as an astonishing testament to the accomplishment of youth and what can result from the incredible combination of personal conviction and the courage to organize against all odds." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. No money. No home. No name.Some say he's a kook. Others, a blessing from God. Clad in a white robe, he's walked through 47 states [and 13 countries] on a 16-year mission that's captured media attention from 20/20, Time and the Wall Street Journal. Yet who is this solitary figure who inspires faith and attracts controversy?Director Sean Tracey traces the enigmatic odyssey of the anonymous, barefoot preacher known as The Jesus Guy. With the intimacy of single-camera filmmaking, we walk in his steps as he encounters both skeptics and believers, changing them for better, for worse, forever. Trial Watch is a 1991 crime documentary film. Cameraman: The Life and Work of Jack Cardiff is a 2010 documentary film that explores the work of the cinematographer Jack Cardiff. It reviews his work and, with the input of many of his contemporaries, examines his legacy as one of the most influential film makers of his generation and details how he became master of the Technicolor process. The film includes interviews with Cardiff as well as Martin Scorsese, Kirk Douglas, Charlton Heston, Lauren Bacall, Kim Hunter, Kathleen Byron, John Mills, Alan Parker, Richard Fleischer and many others. Among many anecdotes in the film, Jack Cardiff relates what it was like to work with Hollywood’s greatest icons: Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn, Humphrey Bogart, Katharine Hepburn, Sophia Loren, Alfred Hitchcock, Marlene Dietrich and Arnold Schwarzenegger. The film was released almost exactly one year after Jack Cardiff's death, and was shown at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival on 16 May 2010 as part of the "Cannes Classics". Wild Sky is a 2011 French autobiographical documentary film and cinematic essay/poem directed by Rachid B. and co-written by Florent Mangeot. Les frères des frères is a 1992 film directed by Richard Copans. The Long Lament is a 1973 film directed by Max Willutzki and written by Horst Lange, Aribert Weis and Max Willutzki. Google: Behind the Screen is a documentary film about Google, Inc. from 2006, directed by IJsbrand van Veelen. Public Enemy: Mother & Son is a 1998 documentary film. Four Hours in My Lai is a 1989 television documentary made by Yorkshire Television concerning the 1968 My Lai Massacre by the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War. The film includes interviews with soldiers at the massacre, and the later trials of those involved. The programme first broadcast on ITV as part of Yorkshire Television's First Tuesday documentaries. Michael Bilton and Kevin Sim, who created the film, based their book of the same name off of the documentary; after release, the book was met with mixed reception. Three Landscapes is a 2013 experimental, art and documentary film directed by Peter B. Hutton. Rhag is a 2011 short independent documentary film written and directed by Doug Walker. An Unreal Dream: The Michael Morton Story is a documentary, biographical and crime fiction film written and directed by Al Reinert. Peladão - Elf Freunde und eine Königin is a 2006 documentary film directed by Jörn Schoppe. Kfar Qar'a, Israel is a 1988 documentary film written by Eglal Errera and directed by Nurith Aviv. Sacrifice Area is a 1981 film directed by Ernie Damen and Otto Schuurman. Japanther In (3-D) Dino Deth Dans is a film directed by Nick Chatfield Taylor and Ian Vanek. "In an unprecedented insider first look, Thieves by Law is a front-row invitation into the living rooms and offices of some of the most controversial and elite head honchos in the Russian mafia. Rising through the criminal ranks, the balance of what's legitimate versus what's illegal, and the meaning behind those tattoos made so famous by Viggo Mortensen in Eastern Promises… it's all out on the table in this surprising documentary. " Quoting the description from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Whistle and I'll Come to You is the title of two BBC television drama adaptations based on the ghost story "Oh, Whistle, And I'll Come To You, My Lad" by the writer M. R. James. The story tells the tale of an introverted academic who happens upon a strange whistle while exploring a Knights Templar cemetery on the East Anglian coast. When blown, the whistle unleashes a supernatural force that terrorises its discoverer. The story was first published in 1904 in Ghost Stories of an Antiquary, the first collection of ghost stories that James published based on tales he had written as Christmas entertainments for audiences of friends and selected students at Eton and King's College, Cambridge, where he was provost. The first adaptation was made by the BBC in 1968. It was adapted and directed by Jonathan Miller and broadcast as part of the BBC arts strand Omnibus. This production inspired a new yearly strand of M.R. James television adaptations known as A Ghost Story for Christmas. A new adaptation of Whistle and I'll Come to You, written by Neil Cross and directed by Andy de Emmony, was made by the BBC in 2010. Heroic Deed Among the Ice is a 1928 Soviet silent documentary film. It is also known as Exploit on the Ice and Ice-Breaker Krassin. This film is the first collaboration between Georgi Vasilyev and Sergei Vasilyev. Capturing Reality: The Art of Documentary is a film and website about documentary filmmaking, directed by Pepita Ferrari. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, Capturing Reality explores the creative process of over 30 leading documentary filmmakers, combining interviews with excerpts from their films. The film had its world premiere at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam in November 2008. Ferrari began work on the project in 2007. The website features four hours of additional material that does not appear in the film. Too Tough to Care is an 18-minute educational film produced in 1964 to undermine teenage resistance to anti-smoking education. Unlike other films in its genre, Too Tough to Care used satire and humor to illustrate the misleading claims of cigarette advertising. The film garnered attention in both the mainstream press as well as academic journals. I AM. - SM Town Live World Tour in Madison Square Garden is a 2012 South Korean documentary film directed by Choi Jin-seong, that is about 32 SM Town K-pop artists on their journey to become the first Asian singers to stage their milestone SMTown Live '10 World Tour concert at Madison Square Garden in New York. The film was originally schedule for release in South Korea on 10 May 2012, but was postponed to 21 June 2012, due to audio issues. Me & My Dad is a 2001 documentary tv movie directed by Penny Jagessar. 12 Months is a documentary family film directed by Charysse Tia Harper. Magyar Stories is a 1988 documentary film written and directed by Pál Schiffer and Bálint Magyar. Danger Powerlines Overhead is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Mia Mullarkey. The Big Melt is a documentary film about the Sheffield steel industry which combines archive footage with a live soundtrack. It was made by Jarvis Cocker and filmmaker Martin Wallace for the 20th annual Sheffield Doc/Fest in 2013, to celebrate the centenary of the steel industry. The film was made using footage from the BFI National Archive. The film was commissioned by BBC Storyville and BBC North in association with the BFI, using public funding from the National Lottery through Arts Council England. Casas grandes: Una aproximación a la Gran Chichimeca is a 1986 documentary film written by Rafael Montero and Óscar Montero and directed by Rafael Montero. And We Play On is a film directed by Pramod Purswane. Growing People is a 2013 documentary directed, short, biographical and family film by Dana Forsberg. Yervand Kochar: Painting in Space is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Ruben Kochar. What Makes Us Queer is a 2011 short documentary biography film directed by Courtney Trouble and Tina Horn. The Inevitable Flight is a documentary film made by Pakistani documentary filmmaker, Azfar Rizvi. Ota Benga: A Pygmy in America is a 2002 documentary film directed by Alfeu França. Goethe in D oder Die Blutnacht auf dem Schreckenstein is a 1985 documentary film written by Almut Hielscher and Manfred Vosz and directed by Manfred Vosz. La Ley: MTV Unplugged is a music documentary film directed by Manny Rodriguez. Directives Are Directives is a 2001 short comedy documentary film directed by José Luis Rodríguez and Edgar Soberón Torchia. Vincent: The Life and Death of Vincent van Gogh is a documentary film by Australian director Paul Cox, exploring the last eight years of the artist's life. Cox was attracted to the project because of his personal admiration for Van Gough: I found him such a compassionate, wonderful human being. That attracted me above all. I found him always honest, always real, always doing his utmost, and I related very much to his type of loneliness. It's the loneliness, the dreadful loneliness that I've known all my life. That was still much stronger for me when I tried to become a film-maker - you know, up to 30, 35, I was terribly alone. I was not equipped for the world at all, and, at that level, that is a very similar background to Vincent. The screen images consist of a wide selection of the paintings and sketches, shown in a chronological sequence, supplemented by shots of the locations he lived in, and a number of dramatised reconstructions of biographical events. The voice-over narration by John Hurt employs the letters of Vincent van Gogh to his brother Theo. The film was a popular hit on the art house circuit and ran for two years in New York. American Job is a 1996 independent film directed by Chris Smith. Shot in a satirical pseudo-documentary style, the film follows Randy, a young man living in a Midwestern US town, as he tries one mundane job after another, including monitoring a machine at a plastics factory, working as a clean-up person at a fast-food restaurant, cleaning motels, and becoming a telephone solicitor. The film was directly inspired by the 1987 magazine "American Job" created by Randy Russell, which was a collection of job stories from low-wage workers around the United States.American Job was produced by Chris Smith, edited by Sarah Price and Chris Smith, and written by Doug Ruschaupt, Randy Russell, and Chris Smith. "Academy Award® winner Alex Gibney (Taxi to the Dark Side) collaborates with Lawrence Wright to bring Wright's titular one-man play to the screen. With equal parts Spalding Gray and An Inconvenient Truth, My Trip to Al Qaeda chronicles fundamentalist Islam's rise to power and explores Wright's struggle to maintain his objectivity as a journalist writing about Islamic terror." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Die Legende vom Potsdamer Platz is a 2000 film directed by Manfred Wilhelms. Terra Madre is a 2009 documentary film written by Ermanno Olmi, Carlo Petrini, Franco Piavoli and Mario Piavoli, and directed by Ermanno Olmi. Celso and Cora is a 1983 documentary film directed by Gary Kildea. Dinosaur Eggs in the Living Room is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Rafael Urban. Gogol Bordello Non-Stop is a 2008 music documentary film, written and directed by Margarita Jimeno and starring Gogol Bordello and Eugene Hütz. Notes Towards an African Orestes is a 1970 Italian film by director Pier Paolo Pasolini about Pasolini's preparations for making a film version of the Oresteia set in Africa. The film starts as a cinematic notebook of Pasolini scouting locations and actors with a voice-over of his thoughts -- "perhaps this will be my Electra". Back in Rome, there is a sequence with a jazz group playing. He then invites a group of African students at the University of Rome to review his notes and comment. They politely but clearly tell Pasolini that the primeval Africa he imagined had little to do with the complex, diverse reality and that treating it as a primal setting for an ancient European story was foolish. They appear to be amusedly patronised by Pasolini's implication that social progress in Africa via the adoption of Western education systems should be distrusted in favour of his romanticised ideals of communal tribal systems and the dignity of labour. The African Orestes was never made. It is implied towards the end of the documentary that Pasolini himself was having doubts concerning his own idea. The Interceptor from My Hometown is a 2011 documentary film directed by Zhang Zanbo. Lost Years: A People's Struggle for Justice is a 2011 documentary directed by Kenda Gee and Tom Radford. The film premiered on December 5, 2011 at the Guangzhou International Documentary Film Festival, where it won the Best Documentary Award for history and culture. The film has also been shown as a two-part, national television mini-series for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. A premiere of extended episodes aired on CTV Two Alberta, June 8 and 15, 2013, with repeat broadcasts scheduled for November 16 & 23, 2013. Gee and Radford began work on the film in late 1999, taking twelve years to fully research the movie. Of the film, Radford stated that they were "originally inspired by the tale of Larry Kwong of Vernon". So war das S.O.36 is a 1985 documentary film directed by Manfred O. Jelinski and Jörg Buttgereit. Roses, Thorns and Dreams is a 2003 documentary film, written and directed by Ralf Brings and Tatiana Yankina. Script: The Times - Three Decades is a 1992 documentary film directed by Barbara and Winfried Junge. Melaku Belay is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Henrique Goldman. One Way Boogie Woogie is a 1977 indie, documentary and experimental film written and directed by James Benning. Extinction Soup is a sport biographical documentary film directed by Philip Waller. Discipline is a documentary, drama film directed by Kim Lee-chang. Earth Days is a 2009 documentary film about the history of the environmental movement in the United States, directed by Robert Stone and distributed by Zeitgeist Films in theaters. Earth Days premiered on US television April 19 2010 as part of the American Experience series on PBS. Timuti is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Jobie Weetaluktuk. "When Nahid Persson Sarvestani, an Iranian exile, set out to make a documentary about Farrah, the wife of the shah of Iran, she expected to encounter her opposite. As a child, Persson Sarvestani had lived in dire poverty, watching Farrah’s wedding as if it were a fairy tale. As a teenager, she joined the Communist faction of Khomeini’s revolution that deposed the shah, sending him and his family volleying from country to country. When Khomeini betrayed his promise for democracy, imposing more violent measures than the shah had, Persson Sarvestani was also forced to flee. Thirty years later, she needs key questions answered and goes directly to the source. Surprisingly, Queen Farrah welcomes her as a fellow refugee from their beloved homeland, granting unprecedented access. Over the next year and a half, Persson Sarvestani enters the queen’s world, planning to challenge the shah’s ideology; instead, she must rethink her own. When Persson Sarvestani’s prior opposition to the shah surfaces, the queen shuts down filming. Yet, in the struggle to understand each other’s experiences, an unlikely friendship has blossomed. Confronting Farrah about the shah’s repression has become not only a political conflict but a personal one, and Persson Sarvestani’s objectivity is shaken.In this gripping, poignant consideration of subjectivity as truth, we learn that people write history. And can also heal it. The Queen and I couldn’t be more relevant as we reach across our own political aisles." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. White Soldier is a 2013 adventure, war, biographical and documentary film written by Yair Moss and Danielle Zini and directed by Danielle Zini. Act Up Oral History Project Series is a film directed by Jim Hubbard. All About Girls’ Generation: Paradise in Phuket is the third music DVD release video from South Korean girl group Girls' Generation. It was released on June 30, 2011 in Korea. The Reading Lesson is a 1973 documentary film written and directed by Johan van der Keuken. The London Scene is a documentary film about urban flora and fauna in London, which first aired on ITV in 1961. It was the first programme in the Survival series. Kizzy: Mum at 14 was a BBC Three documentary about an underage mother, Kizzy Kay Neal. It was first shown on 11 December 2007 and was shown as the fourth and final part of the Born Survivor series on BBC Three. Kizzy had sex for the first time at the age of 13, and gave birth, at the age of 14 to a boy, whom she named Kaylib. Pompeii: The Last Day is a 2003 dramatized documentary that tells of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius on 24 August 79 AD. This eruption covered the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum in ash and pumice, killing all those trapped between the volcano and the sea. The documentary portrays the different phases of the eruption; it was directed by Peter Nicholson and written by Edward Canfor-Dumas. I am a Dancer is a 1972 documentary biographical film written and directed by Pierre Jourdan. Bruce Lee: Path of the Dragon is a 1998 short documentary film written and directed by Walt Missingham. The Power of Salad, also known as The Power of Salad & Milkshakes, is a film by Peter Glantz and Nick Noe, featuring and documenting the Providence, Rhode Island noise rock band Lightning Bolt. The film follows the avant-garde duo, Brian Gibson and Brian Chippendale, through a tour of the states, along with interviews of the band and their friends and family. Live performances, for which Lightning Bolt is renowned, were shot from June 2–21 and July 14–15, 2001. These performances were held in, in the order they were listed: Washington, D.C. Houston, Texas Davis, California Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Lubbock, Texas Providence, Rhode Island New Orleans, Louisiana Brooklyn, New York Oakland, California San Diego, California Chapel Hill, North Carolina Shreveport, Louisiana Charlotte, North Carolina Austin, Texas Phoenix, Arizona Los Angeles, California San Francisco, California Mobile, Alabama Fort Sumner, New Mexico Fort Thunder, Rhode Island Appearances, interviews, and cameos are made by Pink and Brown, Dave Auchenbach, and Load Records founder Ben McOsker. A music video to "13 Monsters" by Paper Rad is also included on the DVD. China's Great Wall is a 2007 history film written and directed by Nic Young. Ithuteng is a 2005 documentary film about the Ithuteng Trust School in Soweto, South Africa. The film features the school's students and leader Jackie Maarohanye, referred to as Mama Jackey. It was directed by Willie Ebersol and co-produced by Charlie Ebersol and Kip Kroeger. Ithuteng premiered on HBO and HBO Family in December 2006. Oprah Winfrey donated $1.14 million to the cause after it appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show in February 2006. In 2001, the South African investigative news magazine show Carte Blanche first broadcast a story on Ithuteng founder Jackey Maaronhanye, calling her the Angel of Soweto. In 2006, a group of the Ithuteng Trust School's former students said that they had lied about the stories of abuse and poverty told to sponsors and media. They said that their heart-wrenching stories had been scripted by Maarohanye. Former students alleged that in order to gain the sympathy of donors and obtain educational funding, they had lied about their circumstances. When the students went on to study and became suspicious that their fees were not being paid as promised, they went public with allegations of lies, financial mismanagement, intimidation, violence and more. Into Eternity is a feature documentary film directed by Danish director Michael Madsen, released in 2010. It follows the construction of the Onkalo waste repository at the Olkiluoto Nuclear Power Plant on the island of Olkiluoto, Finland. Director Michael Madsen questions Onkalo's intended eternal existence, addressing an audience in the remote future. Into Eternity raises the question of the authorities' responsibility of ensuring compliance with relatively new safety criteria legislation and the principles at the core of nuclear waste management. When shown on the British More4 digital television channel on 26 April 2011, the name Nuclear Eternity was used. Leaving King's Bay is a 2011 biographic documentary drama film directed by Claudia Cipriani. Reserved to Fight is a documentary film that follows four Marine Reservists of Fox Company 2/23 for four years. It documents their deployment, their return home from Iraq combat in May 2003, and their reintegration into civilian life. Their battalion was the first reserve unit activated for Operation Iraqi Freedom. They were also the first to return home. The film deals with the lives of the friends as they come to grips with the harsh reality of reassuming civilian life. Each has a different experience, some dealing with varying degrees of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. The film is notable for following the first Reservists deployed in Operation Iraqi Freedom, and therefore the first of these soldiers to begin the reintegration process. Reserved to Fight aired on PBS nationwide in 2008, and has been broadcast in 8 countries and several film festivals. It has been screened in various venues across the country: in individual military mental health symposiums, a suicide prevention treatment program by the Montana National Guard, and the University of Utah's soldier integration program. Reserved To Fight was directed and produced by Chantelle Squires of MirrorLake Films. Audioscopiks is a 1935 American short documentary film directed by Jacob F. Leventhal and John A. Norling. The main point of the short was to show off 3-D film technology. The film was nominated for an Academy Award at the 8th Academy Awards in 1935 for Best Short Subject. This was MGM's first film in 3-D, filmed using the red-green anaglyph process, with prints produced by Technicolor. Current prints appear to have faded to a crimson-cyan color, causing ghosting to occur when viewed. Audioscopiks was followed by The New Audioscopiks, and by Third Dimensional Murder. Next to Us is a 2005 short and documentary film written and directed by Algimantas Maceina. Murder on a Sunday Morning is a documentary film by French filmmaker Jean-Xavier de Lestrade. Its subject is the Brenton Butler case, a criminal case in which a fifteen-year-old boy was wrongfully accused of murder. The film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 74th Academy Awards in 2001. Brenton Butler was arrested and tried for the 2000 murder of a tourist in Jacksonville, Florida. The prosecution's case relied heavily upon a positive identification made by the victim's husband, and on Butler's confession, which the teen claimed was coerced. The film follows Butler's defense team building their case for his innocence. Fragments of a Participant Observation is a 2013 documentary film written by Pedro Pinho and directed by Filipa Reis and João Miller Guerra. 2012: An Awakening is a 2009 film directed by Christopher Turner. Color perro que huye is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Andrés Duque. Through Korean Cinema is a 2010 documentary film directed by Leonardo Cinieri Lombroso. Wait 'til This Year is a reality-type docu-drama film which follows a Boston Red Sox fan during the 2004 baseball season, when the team ended their famous losing streak by winning the World Series. The film was aired on New England Sports Network and then released on DVD afterward. Monika Lahiri starred and produced the film, which combines reality, documentary and scripted scenes when following the events from the perspective of Monika. In the film Monika and her husband Jes are diehard Sox fans. Friends Rob and Alex, have a conflict, because one is a Yankees fan, and one a Sox fan. Coming Soon is a 1982 documentary film directed by John Landis for Universal. Landis used trailers of old Universal horror and thriller movies to create his own contribution to his favourite movie genres. The film is narrated by Jamie Lee Curtis. Please Vote for Me is a 2007 documentary film following the elections for class monitor in a 3rd grade class of eight-year-old children in the Evergreen Primary School in Wuhan, China. The candidates, Luo Lei, Xu Xiaofei, and Cheng Cheng, compete against each other for the coveted role and are egged on by their teachers and doting parents. This was reported to be the first election of its type for a class monitor held in a school in China, as well as an interesting use of classic democratic voting principles and interpersonal dynamics. The documentary gives a glimpse into China's contemporary urban middle classes. It won the Sterling Feature Award at Silverdocs in 2007. In November 2007, Please Vote for Me was named by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as one of 15 films on its documentary feature Oscar shortlist. The list was narrowed to five films on January 22, 2008, but Please Vote for Me did not make it to the final five. The film is part of the "Why Democracy?" series. It was aired in no less than 35 different countries around the world in October 2007, including BBC in the UK and PBS in the United States. My Date with Drew is a 2004 independent documentary film starring and directed by Brian Herzlinger. The film heavily utilizes guerrilla filmmaking and received numerous awards for this. Mother Europe is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Petra Seliskar. Loden - The Little Monk is a 2012 documentary and short film written and directed by André Hörmann. Vida Y Danza Cuba is a documentary film written and directed by Veronica Tennant. The Minutemen is a film directed by Corey Wascinski. Glastonbury Fayre is a 1972 documentary film directed by Nicolas Roeg and Peter Neal of the 1971 Glastonbury Festival which was held on 20–24 June 1971. Finding Judy is a 2011 documentary, short, biographical film directed by Gary Riotto. Me, Myself & Martin Laursen is a 2012 documentary film written by Flemming Klem and directed by Anthony Tullberg. Na stanici u Puli is a 2011 Croatian documentary film directed by Robert Zuber. Circus Dreams is a 2011 drama, documentary, family, news film directed by Signe Taylor. The Body Human: Becoming a Man is 1981 documentary short film produced by Robert E. Fuisz and Alfred R. Kelman. Khutwa Khutwa is a 1978 documentary written and directed by Usama Muhammad. For thousands of years, they lay dormant in the soil until suddenly, they became the driving force behind a technical revolution. Smart phones, laptops, touch screens, wind turbines, hybrid vehicles: they all needs rare earths. Among the first to recognize this were the Chinese. Today China mines an incredible 97% of all rare earth minerals extracted worldwide. The Chinese government makes good use of this monopoly: Recently, it cut production by about two-thirds. Within days the prices of some rare earth metals shot up by 1000%. However, the Chinese also have to deal with the downside of rare earth mining: Environmental pollution, destroyed landscapes and radioactive residues, as rare earth metal deposits are usually laced with radioactive minerals and are extremely difficult to refine. Because of the scarcity of rare earth deposits, the sky-rocketing prices on the international commodity market and the environmental problems associated with mining and processing, Scientists around the world are looking for new, better ways to source these minerals. We follow researchers as they drill for new deposits in Europe and Australia, we see how they try and find new, more environmentally friendly ways of processing the materials, we discover how they try and recycle them out of old mobile phones and computers – and we reveal how physicists and chemists are working on ground-breaking new materials that could soon replace rare earths completely – a fascinating glimpse at cutting-edge research that could make our green technologies of the future even greener. Hubble is a Canadian-American 2010 documentary film about the Hubble Space Telescope repair mission. The Ghost Pepper Eating Contest of Jefferson County is a 2013 short documentary comedy film directed by Sam Frazier Jr. The Red Race is a 2008 film directed by Chao Gan about Chinese child gymnasts who are being groomed for Olympic stardom. Appunti per un film sull'India is a 1968 short documentary film by Pier Paolo Pasolini where he visits India in the search of a king who could give up his body to feed a starving tiger. The film was shot around post-independent India when it was facing grave challenges of poverty, population and caste system. Pasolini narrates the challenges of India and its charms amidst all the problems the country faces. The 33 minute long documentary is composed of short interviews from random people about their opinions on matters such as family planning. The documentary also shows short interviews of journalists and one politician about the challenges of India to modernize without becoming westernized or losing the Indian identity. The documentary was shot in many places including New Delhi, Jaipur, Rishikesh and Varanasi etc. Soldiers of the Sky is a 1941 American short documentary film directed by Earl Allvine. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The News Parade of the Year 1942 is a 1942 9-minute documentary film made in the USA and directed by Eugene W. Castle. It is composed of newsreel footage of wartime activity and includes archive footage of Joseph Stalin, Winston Churchill and others. Frances Steloff: Memoirs of a Bookseller is a 1987 American short documentary film produced by Deborah Dickson. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Cancer in Two Voices is a 1993 film directed by Lucy Massie Phenix. Berlin Babylon is a 2001 German documentary film directed by Hubertus Siegert with industrial music performed by Einstürzende Neubauten. The film's main focus is on the extensive rebuilding projects in Berlin after the fall of the Berlin Wall. It features internationally acclaimed architects including Rem Koolhaas, Renzo Piano and I.M. Pei. Some sequences are characterized by time-lapse photography along with the narration of Der Engel der Geschichte. The documentary also contains stock footage of demolitions of the buildings which were left to stand in ruins after the second world war. The New Woman: Annie "londonderry" Kupchovsky is a 2013 documentary short biographical film written and directed by Gillian Willman. The New Americans is a seven-hour American documentary, produced by Kartemquin Films, that was originally broadcast on American television over three nights on the Public Broadcasting Service in late March 2004. The observational documentary, which includes minimal voice-over narration and very little direct interviewing of its subjects, follows the lives of a series of immigrants to the United States over the course of four years. The series was filmed between 1998 and 2001, although not all of its subjects were filmed during that entire length of time. The immigrants were filmed both in their countries of origin before immigrating as well as in the United States. The filming during this period was extensive and occurred in the subjects' homes, at their places of work, in government offices, and in a number of other situations, many of them quite intimate. As a result, The New Americans offers an unusually personal and comprehensive look at the people it profiles. New Orleans Music in Exile is a documentary/ music film that was made in 2006 and released on DVD on August 7, 2007. It was directed by Robert Mugge. Billy & Alan: In Life, Equality Matters, Love & Death is a 2013 short film directed by Vicki Nantz. Usain Bolt - The Movie is a 2012 documentary film directed by Gael Leibland. His Way is a 2011 television documentary film about Jerry Weintraub, an American film producer and former chairman and CEO of United Artists. It was directed by Douglas McGrath. It features interviews with Weintraub, Jane Morgan, George H. W. Bush, Barbara Bush, George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Julia Roberts, Elliott Gould, Ellen Barkin, James Caan, Matt Damon and Bruce Willis. From surfing innovations to gritty localism, follow the rise and fall of The Westsiders surf tribe through the eyes of three best friends – Daryl "Flea" Virostko, Shawn "Barney" Barron, and Jason "Ratboy" Collins – from the original 'Surf City': Santa Cruz, California. Bonded by common tragedy and their love of surfing, they live through shattered homes, drug addiction and hardcore localism to achieve their dream of becoming professional surfers before the age of 24. To surf the notorious Steamer Lane, they had to join 'The Westsiders' Surf Tribe and go face to face with Vince Collier, aka "The Godfather of The Westside". Vince, a massive brute force, ran Steamer Lane with his own version of street justice. This film explores The Westsiders as the latest chapter in the fascinating history of Santa Cruz, California. Jean-Louis Comolli, filmer pour voir! is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Ginette Lavigne. Before It's Too Late: The Zoos 1993 documentary film written by Mike Searle and directed by Peter Du Cane. Landmarks of Western Art: Impressionism & Post-Impressionism is a 2003 documentary film. Histoire(s) du cinéma is an 8-part video project begun by Jean-Luc Godard in the late 1980s and completed in 1998. The densest, at 266 minutes the longest, and one of the most difficult of Godard's films, Histoire(s) du cinéma is an examination of the history of the concept of cinema and how it relates to the 20th century; in this sense, it can also be considered a critique of the 20th century and how it perceives itself. The project is considered the longest and most important work of the late period of Godard's career. Histoire(s) du cinéma is always referred to by its French title, because of the word play it implies: histoire means both "history" and "story," and the s in parentheses gives the possibility of a plural. Therefore, the phrase Histoire(s) du cinéma simultaneously means The History of Cinema, Histories of Cinema, The Story of Cinema and Stories of Cinema. Similar double or triple meanings, as well as puns, are a recurring motif throughout Histoire(s) and much of Godard's work. The film was screened out of competition at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival. Nine years later, it was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1997 Festival. The Horse with the Flying Tail is a 1960 American documentary film by Walt Disney Pictures, that won the Best Documentary award at the 33rd Academy Awards. The movie is about the palomino horse, Nautical, who won the team gold medal at the 1959 Pan American Games. The movie portrays this horse as having been a nondescript stock horse, however, he was sired by an American Quarter Horse named Muchacho de Oro out of an Army Remount mare of mostly Thoroughbred breeding. This horse's registered name was Pelo de Oro, which was given to him at birth. He became an open jumper and was shown in the national horse show circuit in the United States. Open jumpers compete for scores based on faults and time elapsed to complete the course. Prior to his Olympic fame, he had a reputation as a temperamental jumper who was inclined to stop at water and ditch jumps. Such refusals would disqualify a jumper from an event and his nickname among competitors was, Sneaky Pete, for those obvious reasons. He was an excellent jumper, however, and when he cleared a fence, Sneaky Pete consistently would raise his tail in the characteristic fashion shown in the photograph displayed from the film. Santa Ken: The Mad Prophet Of Christmas is a 2012 documentary, comedy film directed by Eric Paul Fournier. Meat And Milk is a 2013 documentary drama film written by Bernard Bloch and Laurent Quentin and directed by Bernard Bloch. Music for a Blue Train is a 48-minute 2003 documentary about busker musicians in the Montreal Metro subway train system. It was written and directed by Mila Aung-Thwin of EyeSteelFilm and produced by Germaine Ying Gee Wong for the National Film Board of Canada. A harmonica player known as Bad News Brown acts as an impromptu host in the documentary bringing the viewers snippets of the lives of musicians in Montreal's subway system - The Metro - run by Société de transport de Montréal that gives around 60 spots on a first-come-first-serve basis, provided the musician-busker registers his name early enough as soon as the Metro opens to the public and returns during his assigned time to perform for an hour or two, amidst indifference from most passersby or, at times, a token word of encouragement. Death in a Cornfield is a 1999 film directed by Thomas Hoepker and Christine Kruchen. Blue Pullman is a 1960 short documentary film directed by James Ritchie, which follows the development, preparation and a journey from London to Manchester on new British Rail Blue Pullman units. As with earlier British Transport Films, many of the personnel, scientists, engineers, crew and passengers were featured in the 20 minute film. It won several awards, including the Technical & Industrial Information section of the Festival for Films for Television in 1961. The film is also particularly noted for its score, by Clifton Parker, which, unlike the earlier Elizabethan Express is uninterrupted by any commentary. Hollywood Without Make-Up is a 1963 American film directed by Rudy Behlmer, Loring d'Usseau, and Ken Murray. Sao Paulo, SP is a 1990 documentary film directed by Olivier Koning. Hermitage Revealed is a 2014 historical documentary film written and directed by Margy Kinmonth. Art Pepper: Notes from a Jazz Survivor is a 1982 documentary film directed by Don McGlynn. Climb Dance is a famous cinéma vérité short film, which features Finnish rally driver Ari Vatanen setting a record time in a highly modified four-wheel drive, all-wheel steering Peugeot 405 Turbo 16 GR at the 1988 Pikes Peak International Hillclimb in Colorado, USA. The film was produced by Peugeot and directed by Jean Louis Mourey. The record time set was 10:47.77. In 2013 Peugeot commissioned remastered HD version of film in celebration of their contest in Pikes Peak International Hill Climb 2013 edition with rally ace Sébastien Loeb. It also appears as an Easter egg in V-Rally 2. One Water is a 2008 documentary film directed by Sanjeev Chatterjee and Ali Habashi. The film premiered at the 2008 Miami International Film Festival on 22 February 2008. The Dream is Alive is an IMAX movie, released in June 1985, about NASA's Space Shuttle program. The film was narrated by Walter Cronkite, and directed by Graeme Ferguson. Calcutta Calling is a 2006 documentary short film written by Katrin Milhahn and directed by André Hörmann Room 666 is a 1982 documentary film directed by German film director Wim Wenders. During the 1982 Cannes Film Festival, Wenders set up a static camera in room 666 of the Hotel Martinez and provided selected film directors a list of questions to answer concerning the future of cinema. Each director is given one 16 mm reel to answer the questions. The principal question asked was, "Is cinema a language about to get lost, an art about to die?" Wenders then edited this footage and added an introduction. Directors interviewed include Steven Spielberg, Jean-Luc Godard, and Rainer Werner Fassbinder, who died less than a month after filming. The film was later screened out of competition at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival. Band and Battalion of the U.S. Indian School is silent film documentary made on April 30, 1901 by American Mutoscope and Biograph Company made in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, USA. The cinematographer was Arthur Marvin. It depicts a parade drill by the cadet corps of the American Indian School which includes many representatives of the Native American tribes in the United States. The head of the parade was the renowned Carlisle Band of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School. Finding Happiness is a documentary film directed by Ted Nicolaou. Pandit Nehru is a 1982 documentary film directed by Shyam Benegal. Something to Tell You is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Pete Gleeson. Jane Goodall's Wild Chimpanzees is a 2002 documentary film written by Stephen Low and directed by David Lickley. "This much anticipated documentary celebrates the 25th Anniversary of HDT SPECIAL VEHICLES by taking an in depth look at the period in history in which some of Australia’s most famous muscle cars were born. Special and exclusive commentary by Peter Brock, John Harvey, Lewis Brock and more, tells the story of HDT SV from the initial prototype VC HDT, through all models VH, VK, VL of the BROCK HDT vehicles. Covering all the HDT successes you know, to ‘one off’ cars and projects you never knew existed along with rare footage of vehicles such as the first ever HDT, Aeros/Directors, the Monza and the vehicle which sealed the end of the Peter Brock SPECIAL VEHICLES/Holden partnership. Travelling to every corner of Australia and a year in production makes this feature the most comprehensive archival DVD ever on HDT SPECIAL VEHICLES and is essential for any HDT, Brock and Holden enthusiast!" Quoting the description from the Chevron Publishing site. Shakespeare High is a 2011 documentary film directed by Alex Rotaru. Building Hope is a film by Turk and Christy Pipkin. It was produced by The Nobelity Project and premiered on March 12 at the 2011 South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas. It is the sequel to the film One Peace at a Time. Russian Soil is a 1941 short documentary film produced in the Soviet Union. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Rage Against the Darkness: Bunny and Leona is a 2004 documentary television movie written and directed by John Kastner. Truckfighters is a documentary directed by Joerg Steineck about the Swedish rock band named Truckfighters. It incorporates various interviews with the band, showing their members working on day-to-day jobs in their home town Örebro, recording the album "Mania" in their studio and following them on tour through Europe. The film, which is documentative in style of narration, signifies itself a "fuzzomentary film". It provides various surreal graphical sequences of fictional and non fictional content, which serve as connective and illustrative elements. A certain graphical style leads as stylistic central theme through the entire film. Truckfighters additionally features short guest appearances of well known names like Josh Homme, Alfredo Hernandez, Nick Oliveri. Furthermore it provides guest appearances by singer/songwriter Chris Maher and first hour Kyuss member Chris Cockrell. Maidan is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Sergei Loznitsa. The Package Tour is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Gyula Gazdag. "Still working at 75 years old Marjane is a legendary San Francisco drag queen. Her story reveals an amazing career from cross-dressing hoochie-coochie girl to toast of the town. Plus two shorts featuring great performers. An intimate portrait of an extraordinary survivor, Vicki Marlane. This leading San Francisco drag queen started as a cross-dressing hoochie-coochie girl in a carnival sideshow over 50 years ago and now in her 70s is still working. She crossed America as the leader of a drag troupe and reigned as the toast of San Francisco 1970s. Tragedy and comedy intermingle with sheer determination in this fascinating documentary. BR" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. John Fiege's MISSISSIPPI CHICKEN is a rich, intimate tapestry of lives thus far disregarded by the mainstream media. The film takes the viewer into the lives of a Latin American immigrant population in a small poultry town in the New South. It explores the ongoing difficulties they face while documenting the increasing attempts to redress the balance by community organizers. Living with the people and listening to their stories over the course of one summer, this unique documentary builds contrasting lyrical vignettes of everyday life with the ever-present pressures and injustices faced by its community. Call Me Salma (original title: Appelez-moi Salma) is a 2010 film directed by Aude Leroux-Lévesque and Sébastien Rist. The Source Family is a 2012 feature documentary film directed by Jodi Wille and Maria Demopoulos that recounts the story of Father Yod, Ya Ho Wa 13 and the Source Family. The film premiered in competition at South by Southwest Film Festival 2012 and screened at festivals Silverdocs, Seattle International Film Festival and San Francisco International Film Festival, with special screenings at True/False Festival "Boonedawdle" and Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival "Doc Soup" series. In May 2013, the film was released theatrically, premiering at IFC Center in New York City, where its run was extended for over a month. The film screened in 60 cities and had extended runs in Los Angeles, Portland, San Francisco, and Nashville. It is distributed by Drag City and Gravitas Ventures. From the Internet Movie Database: The Source Family was a radical experiment in '70s utopian living. Their outlandish style, popular health food restaurant, rock band, and beautiful women made them the darlings of Hollywood’s Sunset Strip; but their outsider ideals and the unconventional behavior of their spiritual leader, Father Yod, caused controversy with local authorities. Yeabu’s Homecoming is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Jenny Chu. Supersize She is a 2005 television documentary focused on British professional female bodybuilder Joanna Thomas. The title was a take-off on the success of the film Super Size Me. The one-hour program premiered at the MIPTV in April 2005. Since airing on Channel 5, it has been sold and distributed to over 30 countries. "Legendary German filmmaker Rosa von Praunheim is back in the USA. He’s looking ahead by looking back — at his old stomping grounds and former protagonists — with new eyes. The current New York City is much different from the city captured in von Praunheim’s 1989 success Survival in New York (Überleben in New York). Von Praunheim reaches back for his past glory days, and as he says, “I wanted to know what had happened to my favorite city — the place where I once spent the happiest times of my life.” What he finds now seems to be a watered-down, conservative version of the glittering, wacky, no-holds-barred aura of the 1970s and 1980s. As he revisits his subjects, Anna and Claudia (his third subject, Uli, has moved to California), their actions, too, remind him of the time that has passed. After the AIDS crisis in the late 1980s, through Mayor Giuliani’s “cleansing” of the city in the 1990s, little that is familiar to the director seems to remain. With amazing footage from von Praunheim’s time in a rougher, tougher New York City and discussions with current New York City residents, the director’s signature candid style shines on." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Escape from Singapore is a 1973 Australian TV dramatised documentary about General Gordon Bennett and his escape from Singapore in World War Two. It was a number of dramatised documentaries Power made for Australian TV. He spent ten months researching it, accessing papers provided by Bennett's widow. It won Best Documentary at the 1974 TV Week Logie Awards. "AUTOMORPHOSIS looks into the minds and hearts of a delightful collection of eccentrics, visionaries, and just plain folks who have transformed their autos into artworks. On a humorous and touching journey, we discover what drives the creative process for these unconventional characters. And in the end, we find that an art car has the power to change us — to alter our view of our increasingly homogeneous world. Subjects featured include: Harrod Blank and his Camera Van; World-renowned spoon bender Uri Geller and his fork-and-spoon-covered “Peace Car”; Howard Davis’s “Telephone Car” an obsession-driven telephone collection; & Leonard Knight, a religious folk artist who’s painted his vehicles as well as most of an entire mountain in the desert as a testament to his faith. Weaving his own tale amidst the others, Blank, as narrator, is the glue that binds these vibrant portraits." Quoting the description from the Official Site. Zanzibar Musical Club is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Philippe Gasnier and Patrice Nezan. El Guatón Ramírez is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Sergio Muoz. Life Begins Tomorrow (La Vie Commence Demain) is a 1952 documentary and drama film written and directed by Nicole Védrès. John Steinbeck and his friend, biologist Ed Ricketts, sailed down to the Sea of Cortez in March 1940. In these phosphorescent waters, they sought an understanding of mankinds relationship to the natural world, and hope for a world headed toward war. Money-Driven Medicine is a 2009 documentary film that offers a behind the scenes look at the American healthcare system. The 86 minute documentary explores the economics underlying, and often undermining, the $2.6 trillion US healthcare system. Produced by Alex Gibney and inspired by Maggie Mahar’s book Money-Driven Medicine: The Real Reason Health Care Costs So Much, Money-Driven Medicine looks at how the United States spends twice as much per capita on healthcare as the average developed nation yet has worse outcomes by explaining that the United States is the only developed nation with a medical system that is largely unregulated and for profit. Money-Driven Medicine includes interviews of experts including Don Berwick, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and former President and Chief Executive Officer of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement; James Weinstein of The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice and bio-ethicist Larry Churchill of Vanderbilt. Xoxosms is a 2011 short documentary drama film directed by Nancy Schwartzman. Arabian Horses is a short film shown in 1964. The Flight That Fought Back is a docu-drama film produced by the London-based company Brook Lapping Productions for the Discovery Channel about United Airlines Flight 93. The program debuted in the United States on September 11, 2005, marking the fourth anniversary of the event on which it is based. The dramatic film, narrated by Kiefer Sutherland and a cast of actor playing hijackers, passengers and crew, reconstructs the events that led to Flight 93 crashing in Stonycreek Township, Pennsylvania, approx 150 miles northwest of Washington, D.C., during the September 11, 2001, attacks. It proved to be highly popular when it debuted on the fourth anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. It eventually made its way across the Atlantic to the United Kingdom, where it was aired on Five on Thursday, January 5, 2006. Original music was provided for the film by London based post-rock musician Mark Beazley, more frequently known as Rothko, and composer Gavin Skinner. The film was directed by Bruce Goodison and edited by London based documentary film maker Joby Gee. Streams of Consequence is a 2013 short, documentary and adventure film directed by James 'Q' Martin and Chris Kasar. Emergency is a 2006 documentary film written by Im Sun-ae and directed by Yoo-chul Lim. Wlac Radio Staff In Studio is a 1949 film about a day in the life of the WLAC radio staff. The History of the World In Three Minutes Flat is a 1981 short animation film directed by Michael Mills. Lipsett Diaries is a 2010 short animated documentary about the life and art of collage filmmaker Arthur Lipsett, animated and directed by Theodore Ushev and written by Chris Robinson. The 14-minute film was produced by the National Film Board of Canada in Montreal, where Lipsett had worked from 1958 to 1972, before committing suicide in 1986. The film is narrated by Xavier Dolan. Tsumugu: Spinning the Threads of Life is a documentary, drama film directed by Toshiro Yoshioka. Hard Time is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ron Harpelle. Tony Rayns and a Quarter Century of Korean Cinema is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Won-tae Seo. Je me souviens is a 2002 documentary film about antisemitism and pro-Nazi sympathies in Quebec during the 1930s through post World War II made by Montreal filmmaker Eric Richard Scott. The title of the film is French for I remember, and is the official motto of Quebec. The film was inspired by The Traitor and the Jew, a history of Quebec from 1929-1939, showing the links among antisemitism, nationalism and fascism among Quebec Catholic intellectuals. The First Citizen of Estonia is a 1992 film directed by Mark Soosaar. Waiting for Armageddon is a documentary that studies Armageddon theology and Christian eschatology. Some evangelicals in the United States believe that bible prophecy predicts events including the Rapture and the Battle of Armageddon. The documentary raises questions regarding how this theology shapes United States and Middle East relations and how it may encourage an international holy war. George Carlin: You are All Diseased is a 1999 comedy documentary written by George Carlin and directed by Rocco Urbisci. America's Music: The Roots of Country is a 1996 three-part, six episode documentary about the history of American country music directed by Tom Neff and Jerry Aronson and written by Neff and Robert K. Oermann. The film touches on many of the styles of music that make up country music, including: Old-time music, Cajun music, Folk music, Rockabilly, Western music, Western swing, the Bakersfield sound, Honky-tonk and the Nashville sound. Country music artist and actor Kris Kristofferson narrates the three-part series. The film was produced by Wild Wolf Productions for TBS Superstation and shown on three consecutive nights beginning on June 2, 1996. It was repeated only once in the Fall of 2011. The Self Destruction of the Ultimate Warrior is a DVD produced by World Wrestling Entertainment, looking back at the career of The Ultimate Warrior. Veiled Ambition is a 1-part documentary created by Rebel Films for the SBS independent network following a Lebanese-Australian woman named Frida as she opens a shop selling fashionable clothing for Muslim women on Melbourne's Sydney Road. The documentary follows Frida, described as a "little aussie battler in a scarf" as she develops her business in Melbourne while juggling a husband and home in Sydney and a pregnancy. A down-turn in sales after police raids on Muslim homes in Sydney and Melbourne induces Frida to stage a fashion show at the Australian Bridal Expo in order to gain greater exposure, a month before she is due to give birth. Veiled Ambition won the Palace Films Award for Short Film Promoting Human Rights at the 2006 Melbourne International Film Festival. Technique of Seed Production in Wheat and Paddy is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Raj Gopal Rao. Valley Uprising is a documentary film, directed by Peter Mortimer and Nick Rosen. Domestic Life is a drama film directed by Isabelle Czajka. Movement (R)evolution Africa is a 2007 documentary film. Making Ballet is a 1995 documentary film directed by Anthony Azzopardi. Corridor #8 is a 2008 film directed by Boris Despodov. The Tadpole, the Rabbit and the Holy Ghost is a 2007 documentary film written by Richard Komárek and directed by Filip Remunda. Where Should the Birds Fly? is a documentary film directed by Fida Qishta. La Société du Spectacle is a black and white 1973 film by the Situationist Guy Debord based on his 1967 book of the same name. It was Debord's first feature-length film. It uses found footage and detournement in a radical Marxist critique of mass marketing and its role in the alienation of modern society. Purgatorio: A Journey Into the Heart of the Border is a 2013 documentary film written by Rodrigo Reyes and Hugo Perez and directed by Rodrigo Reyes. Ich denke oft an Hawaii is a 1978 documentary film directed and written by Elfi Mikesch. Farewell to a Princess is a 1998 documentary film written by Jerry Cipriano and L. Franklin DeVine. Dance Like No One's Watching is a 2013 short documentary biographical film directed by Jenn Garrison. Sandra Bernhard: Confessions of a Pretty Lady is a 1993 film directed by Kristiene Clarke. Saigon, U.S.A. is a 2004 documentary film about Vietnamese Americans that live in the United States. It was produced and directed by Lindsey Jang and Robert C. Winn. Por esos ojos is a 1998 documentary film directed by Gonzalo Arijon. Beijing: The Second Ring is a documentary film directed and produced by Ai Weiwei. Out For the Long Run is a 2010 coming of age, documentary, LGBT, sports, documentary, family film directed by Scott Bloom. "The Carter is a documentary about Dwayne Michael Carter Jr. aka Lil' Wayne. An internationally known rapper, his most recent album went platinum in a week, and he just might be the voice of his generation. But this ain't no VH1 rock doc. Rather, it is an intoxicating, cinematic journey into the thoughts and world of an extremely complicated man whose creative force is something to behold. He never stops recording. He has a portable studio that he carries around in a black bag, and it allows him to lay down a track anytime anywhere. It is his pressure valve and makes him a refreshing anomaly in a sea of manufactured prefab ""singers."" His work is his own: unfiltered, uncensored, raw, and powerful. Director Adam Bhala Lough, whose fiction film Weapons premiered in competition at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, has unbelievable access to Lil' Wayne's public and private lives. He captures remarkably candid moments, such as Lil' Wayne recounting his first sexual experience, as well as him talking openly about his drug habits. Following him all over the country and to Amsterdam, Lough mixes fly-on-the-wall footage of Lil' Wayne in his hotel room and on his bus with artfully composed concert f ootage. The result is a shockingly intimate portrait of one of the most inspired (and eccentric) musicians of modern America." Quoting the description on the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. In a small village in Thailand, the locals dance with deadly snakes to attract tourists. Cobras are kept as pets and playthings and it's far from taboo to kiss a cobra. These villagers believe they've found a miracle cure, a local root which protects them from fatal snake bites. Snake expert Steve Backshall investigates this theory by catching a wild king cobra to test its venom. Kidnapped for Christ is a documentary film that details the experiences of several teenagers who were removed from their homes and sent to a behavior modification and ex-gay school in Jarabacoa, Dominican Republic. The film was directed by Kate Logan. Tom DeSanto, Lance Bass and Mike Manning are the executive producers. The film premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, in January 2014. Chicken Ranch is a 1983 documentary film by Nick Broomfield about the famous legalised brothel, the Chicken Ranch, in Pahrump, Nevada. The documentary, which remains purely observational for the most part, depicts the prostitutes as likeable characters often looking for a way out of the remote location where the brothel is situated. The film shows the girls lining up for potential clients, joking about their job, and interacting with one another within the brothel. The film ends with one girl, Mandy, being fired from the ranch. Remembering Saddam is a documentary by Don North, a television news producer. The film follows the story of nine Iraqi businessmen who were arrested in 1995 by Saddam Hussein's regime which was notorious for human rights abuses. They were charged with dealing in foreign currency and imprisoned in Abu Ghraib prison. After a short trial with no defense representation, they were sentenced to amputation of their right hands. The amputation was videotaped and used by Saddam Hussein as a deterrent to other would-be criminals. An "X of shame" was also carved into the foreheads of each man by the surgeons. After the 2003 invasion of Iraq, North tracked down the nine men; seven of them agreed to tell their stories. The documentary follows their story as organizations are lined up to donate surgical services, transportation and prosthetic limbs. Transportation was provided by Continental Airlines. Dr. Agris and Dr. Kestler of Houston donated their time. Medical facilities were provided by Methodist Hospital in Houston. The prosthetic hands which normally cost $50,000 each were donated by Otto Bock, a German-American company. Our Trip to Africa is a 1966 short film directed by Peter Kubelka. The Fish Tamer is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Dani Resines and Roger Gómez. Super Trash is a 2013 documentary directed by Martin Esposito. The Lost String is a documentary film on American alternative guitarist Marc Ribot directed by French film maker Anaïs Prosaïc. Meditation, Creativity, Peace is a 2012 film written by David Lynch. Señor Turista is a 1984 film written and directed by Gerlinde Böhm. "Wonderfully honest and hysterically funny, this self-doc covers issues of adoption, race and family through the eyes of a seven-year-old boy." Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. An Idea Film. A Bookumentary. A cinematic treatment of a worldview. A poet live in concert. A motion picture sermon. VH1 Storytellers meets Planet Earth. 60 Minutes meets Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God. In this unusual but fascinating film sequence best-selling author N.D. Wilson gives an emotional and intellectual tour of life in this world and the final chapter that is death. Everything before after and in-between is a series of miracles--some of which are encouraging others disturbing and uncomfortable. On The Mat is a 2012 documentary film directed by Fredric Golding. Thin Arms is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Sandeep Ray. Second Opinion: Laetrile at Sloan-Kettering is a biographical documentary drama film directed by Eric Merola. Time Will Tell is a 1992 music biography documentary film directed by Declan Lowney. Insight is a 2012 documentary and short film written and directed by Sebastian Diaz Morales. Sword Fishing is a 1939 short documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award in 1940 for Best Live Action Short Film, One-Reel. The Natural History of the Chicken is a 2000 comedy documentary film. The Other Half of the Sky: A China Memoir is a 1975 American documentary film directed by Shirley MacLaine and Claudia Weill. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Symbiosis was a 70 mm film shown from October 1982 to January 1995 in the Harvest Theater at The Land pavilion at Epcot at the Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. It was directed by Paul Gerber and narrated by veteran voice-actor Philip L. Clarke. The movie focused on the balance between technological expansion and the protection of the environment. The film showed environmental damage caused by humans and what is being done to fix the damage created. It closed on January 1, 1995 and was replaced by Circle of Life: An Environmental Fable. The new film featured some re-edited footage from Symbiosis. Hamoon Bazha is a documentary film by Mani Haghighi. It is about a famous Iranian cult film named Hamoon directed by Dariush Mehrjui. A Lovely Day is a documentary film directed by Kerri Gawryn. Steve-O: Demise and Rise is a 2009 documentary film directed by Dimitry Elyashkevich. The Smell of Burning Ants is a 1994 documentary short film directed by Jay Rosenblatt. Moroloja is a 2011 documentary short biography directed by Alexander Ingham Brooke. Traduire is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Nurit Aviv. The Flan is a 2013 comedy, animated, biographical, family short film written and directed by Raoul Olou. Methel Island is a 2013 documentary film directed and written by Meg Smaker. Jews of Egypt is an Egyptian documentary film produced by Haitham El-Khameesy and directed by Amir Ramses, the film is also cowritten and researched by Mostafa Youssef. It documented the history of the Jewish people in Egypt. Alastair Beach of The Independent said that the film was "[b]illed as the first film of this kind to be allowed out on general release". Pierre Rissient: Man of Cinema is a 2007 documentary directed by Todd McCarthy. Ragnar Axelsson, known as Rax, is a photograher for Iceland's largest newspaper. This documentary follows him on his life's mission, to capture the human faces of climate change by photographing the vanishing lifestyles of the people of the north. Rax is among the most celebrated photographers in the world and his series of photographs, Faces of the North, is a living document of the dying cultures of the far northern reaches of the planet, mainly Icelandic farmers, fishermen and the great hunters of Greenland. 'It was really only one photograph that started me off,' he says. 'An old man in a rowing boat and his dog on a skerry. I thought to myself, these men are vanishing. If I don't photograph them now, no one will remember them and no one will know that they ever existed.' Rax spent his childhood summers on an isolated farm on the southern coast of Iceland, where the farmers lived off of the land as countless generations had before them. As a child he was enraptured by the landscape and the interactions between man and nature. Twenty-five years ago, his fascination with people who try to survive in extreme circumstances took him from Iceland to Greenland - a place which has continually inspired him to return. His photo essays of the hunters of Greenland are legendary. Rax could well have been a hunter himself - and we watch him as he stalks his images and strikes at the opportune moment. Fascinated by stories of half-forgotten people who have adapted to unspeakably harsh conditions, Rax is now documenting them as they cope with extreme changes to those conditions as the result of climate change. Last Days of the Arctic is a celebration of the photographer and his subjects, an elegy for a disappearing landscape and the people who inhabit it. Ikland is a 2011 documentary film about a journey into the mountains of northern Uganda near the Kenyan border and a visit with the notorious Ik people. It was produced by Cevin Soling, and directed by Soling and David Hilbert. The Ik were famously described as callous and indifferent by anthropologist Colin Turnbull in his 1972 ethnographic book The Mountain People. Ikland recounts an adventure in travel, revisits Turnbull's description in the context of local circumstances, and reveals the Ik people and culture in a more sympathetic and up-to-date manner. Beyond the Cloud Yonaoshi 3.11 is a documentary film directed by Keiko Courdy. Not without You is a 2010 documentary film directed by Petra Lataster-Czisch and Peter Lataster. To Play and To Fight presents the captivating story of the Venezuelan Youth Orchestra System - an incredible network of hundreds of orchestras formed within most of Venezuela's towns and villages. Once a modest program designed to expose rural children to the wonders of music, the system has become one of the most important and beautiful social phenomena in modern history. The documentary portrays the inspirational stories of world class musicians trained by the Venezuelan system, including the Berlin Philharmonic's youngest player Edicson Ruiz and world renowned conductor Gustavo Dudamel. With interviews with many of the world's most celebrated musicians including the great tenor Placido Domingo, Claudio Abbado, Sir Simon Rattle, Guiseppe Sinopoli, and Eduardo Mata, To Play and To Fight is an inspirational story of courage, determination, ambition, and love showing us that... only those who dream can achieve the impossible. The Gleaners and I is a 2000 French documentary film by Agnès Varda that features various kinds of gleaning. It was entered into competition at the 2000 Cannes Film Festival, and later went on to win awards around the world. In a 2014 Sight and Sound poll, film critics voted The Gleaners and I the eighth best documentary film of all time. Hamburg damals – Die Jahre 1965-69 is a 2005 documentary film directed by Christian Mangels. Cat Skin is a 1962 short documentary film written by Joaquim Pedro de Andrade and Domingos de Oliveira and directed by Joaquim Pedro de Andrade. A King's Story is a 1965 British documentary film directed by Harry Booth about the life of King Edward VIII, from his birth until abdication in 1936. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Hollywood & Hammer is a 2012 comedy short film written and directed by Ryan Steven Green. Breaking the Habit is a 1964 American short documentary film directed by John Korty about cigarette smoking and lung cancer. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Most Secret Place on Earth is a 2008 film by German director Marc Eberle, dealing with the secret operation waged by the CIA throughout the sixties and early seventies against communist guerrillas in Laos, particularly in the city of Long Chen. Stories Of Trust: Calling For Climate Recovery – Trust Montana is a 2011 short family historical documentary film written by John Thiebes and directed by Kelly Matheson, Deia Schlosberg, Christi Cooper-Kuhn, Katie Lose Gilbertson and Sean Solowiej. Soldiers' Stories is a short historical war documentary film directed by Jonathan Kitzen. Disfarmer: A Portrait of America is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Martin Layut. The Spirit Moves: A History of Black Social Dance on Film, 1900–1986 is a documentary film by Mura Dehn chronicling the evolution of African-American social dance throughout most of the 20th century. In its original form it consists of nearly six hours of rare archival footage shot over the course of thirty years. Since 1987 this complete version has only been available for viewing at a select few institutions. In 2008 the first three parts of Dehn's work, totaling two hours, were remastered and released on DVD by Dancetime Publications. Let's Rock Again! is a music documentary film following Joe Strummer as he tours across USA and Japan with his band the Mescaleros promoting their second album Global a Go-Go. The memoir was shot by filmmaker and longtime Strummer friend Dick Rude in the 18 months leading up to Strummer's death in 2002. Jerusalem My Love is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Jeppe Rønde. A Time and A Time is a 2008 film directed by Sarah Cox. Grannys Is is a 1989 film directed by David Larcher. Dreams with Sharp Teeth is a 2008 biographical documentary film about writer Harlan Ellison. It is composed of original and archive footage of Ellison and talking head segments from colleagues and fans including Robin Williams, Peter David, and Neil Gaiman. Dutch Influence is a documentary film directed by Samuel Comazzi, Hatim El Khatib and Rikash Gobardhan. The Himmler Project is a 2000 film directed by Romuald Karmakar. The Ring of Life is a sports, documentary film directed by Lee Jin-hyeok. Tipping Point: The End of Oil is a 2011 documentary film directed by Tom Radford and Niobe Thompson. Steve Avery is a 2010 documentary biographical short film directed by Sam Huntley. Flores para el soldado is a 2008 biographical documentary war film written and directed by Francisco Javier. Shakespeare: The Hidden Truth is a Norwegian documentary film directed by Jørgen Friberg expected to be released in the UK in 2013. The film follows the Norwegian organist and amateur cryptologist Petter Amundsen. Amundsen claims, after a thorough investigation of Shakespeare’s works, to be able to prove that in fact several people were involved the writing of what is today known as the works of William Shakespeare. When released in Norway, the film spurred controversy in Norwegian media. Film Magasinet scored the film 4/6 stars. Blood from a Stone is a 2003 documentary film directed by Phil Tuckett. Director Claudia Muller follows the career of conceptual artist Jenny Holzer in this documentary that's as illuminating as her trademark LED displays. For over 30 years, Holzer has used a variety of unusual backdrops for her text installations. MicroBirth is a documentary film directed by Toni Harman and Alex Wakeford. Not a Carwash is a 2012 documentary film directed by Gentian Koçi. Michelangelo Eye to Eye is a 2004 short documentary film written and directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. Cofralandes, Chilean Rhapsody is an experimental four-part 2002 Franco-Chilean digital video series written and directed by Raúl Ruiz. The first part won a FIPRESCI Award at the Montreal World Film Festival in 2002 "for the director's personal exploration into his homeland, using DV in a rigorous yet playful manner". War's End is a 1992 documentary film directed by Viola Stephan. Atomic Jihad: Ahmadinejad's Coming War For Islamic Revival And Obama's Politics is a 2010 political documentary film directed, written and produced by Joel Gilbert, narrated by Lance Lewman and starring Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Barack Obama. 20 Feet from Stardom is a 2013 American documentary film directed by documentary filmmaker Morgan Neville and was produced by Gil Friesen, a music industry executive whose curiosity to know more about the lives of background singers inspired the making of the film. The film follows the behind-the-scenes of backup singers and stars Darlene Love, Judith Hill, Merry Clayton, Lisa Fischer, Táta Vega, and Jo Lawry, among many others. On March 2, 2014, it won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 86th Academy Awards. L'atelier de Louis is a 1976 documentary, short film directed by Didier Pourcel. An Uncommon King is a 2011 72-minute HD documentary film directed by award-winning documentary and television producer Johanna J. Lunn. It records the life of Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche, son of meditation master Chögyam Trungpa and leader of the Shambhala Buddhist lineage and Shambhala International, a global community with over 200 meditation centers. Red, White & The Green is a 2009 film directed by Nader Davoodi. Lakshmi and Me is a 2007 Documentary film directed by Nishtha Jain. Alice – A Fight For Life is a documentary featuring 47-year-old Alice Jefferson, a British woman who developed malignant pleural mesothelioma thirty years after working for nine months at Cape Insulation's Acre Mill asbestos plant in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire. The film also explored the health issues surrounding the manufacture and use of asbestos products. Described by The Guardian newspaper as "a momentous film", the programme also explicitly linked asbestos with cancer, and attacked what it perceived as the government's complacency in limiting the manufacture and use of asbestos in Britain. My Child is a 2013 documentary family film written and directed by Can Candan. Eine Symphonie des Kampfwillens is the first film documentary of a Nuremberg Rally. Made soon after the establishment of the Nazi Party film office, the film is a short record of the highlights of the conference, interspersed with newspaper descriptions of the rally. It begins with the arrival at Nuremberg of the various contingents of Nazis, some on train, others in trucks or on foot. The main gatherings are held in parks, rather than the stadiums that would be used later. An important moment in the film is the sequence when Adolf Hitler greets the delegations from areas of Germany that have been occupied or cut off from the Reich, such as the Ruhr, or Austria, and vows that the foreigners will be expelled and German people reunited. The film ends, like others in this series, with a parade of the Sturmabteilung before the Führer. De Cierta Manera is a 1974 Cuban romantic drama film. Directed by Sara Gómez, the film mixes documentary-style footage with a fictional story that looks at the poor neighborhoods of Havana shortly after the Cuban Revolution of 1959. The film illustrates the history before the background of the development process in Cuba. It demonstrates how tearing down slums and building modern settlements does not immediately change the culture of the inhabitants. Gómez completed filming with Mario Balmaseda and Yolanda Cuellar just before her death; technical work was finished by Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Julio García-Espinosa y Rigoberto López before its posthumous release. Kate Bornstein is a Queer & Pleasant Danger is a 2014 Documentary film written and directed by Sam Feder. Infiniment Québec is a 2008 documentary film written by Jean-Claude Labrecque and Francine Laurendeau and directed by Jean-Claude Labrecque. The Night It Rained is a 1967 short documentary film written by Esmaeel Noori Ala, Kamran Shirdel and directed by Kamran Shirdel. Wiebo's War is a 2011 Canadian documentary about accused eco-terrorist Wiebo Ludwig, directed by David York. Ludwig was first approached by York in 2008. Filming began in late 2008 and continued into 2010, with York living as a guest in the isolated Ludwig family compound in the community of Trickle Creek, approximately 450 kilometres northwest of Edmonton. The film documents a stillbirth and a string of miscarriages among Ludwig family members, as well as livestock deaths, which Ludwigs attribute to sour gas from nearby gas wells. In one scene, Ludwig home video shows Wiebo holding the stillborn infant, while in another, a family member ignites water from the kitchen tap. During filming in early 2010, Ludwig was arrested as a suspect in bombings of sour-gas installations in nearby British Columbia. The film also explores Ludwig's religious views, with excerpts from a four-hour conversation between the atheist film director and Wiebo and his sons, who tell York that he is living in a “terrible darkness.” Untitled is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Neil Beloufa. "Skid Row" is a 50-square block area in downtown Los Angeles where an average of 90,000 homeless and transient people live on any given night. More than just a place - it's a way of life, a mind set, the last resort for those who have given up on society and, in many cases, themselves. In the feature documentary SKID ROW, Pras Michel - one third of the successful hip-hop band The Fugees - lives on the streets of Skid Row for nine straight days and nights as a homeless person. The entire time he and his crew are undercover, using surveillance cameras. His journey is a difficult one, riddled with hunger, exposure to the elements, criminals, drugs and danger. It is also life-changing...as Pras learns not only how to fend for himself, but discovers the dark, very human and, at times, humorous underbelly of Los Angeles. Grandma Neyde's House is a 2011 documentary biography drama film directed by Caio Cavechini. Among Horses and Men is a 2010 documentary film directed by Marjoleine Boonstra. "In the vast desert of Nevada, two raw and unpolished worlds come together. With the rugged mountains and vivid colors in the background, wild men and horses are vulnerably facing off. Chris, Dean, Gilbert, Charles, Steven, Bo and Mike are all young inmates at the Northern Nevada Correctional Center, in the last phase of lengthy prison sentences. Before returning to society, they are participating in a special project that allows them to capture, tame and train wild horses for periodic auctions. Filmmaker Marjoleine Boonstra follows the detainees over the course of three months of intensive training, during which time the men see themselves reflected in the eyes of their horses. The men learn to win the trust of another living being once again, a skill that has slipped away during their time on the inside. Horses are incredibly perceptive creatures: they take the men as they are, without a history, without a record, but only if the men are just as open and vulnerable as they are. Boonstra captures the intimacy between these "tough guys" and their equine counterparts in a touching moment of transition: on the threshold of freedom, while exchanging looks of reflection." Quoting the synopsis from the "2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam" site. Mordfall John Lennon - Das Idol und sein Attentäter is a 2005 documentary film directed by Egon Koch and Friedrich Scherer. The 'Socalled' Movie is a 2010 documentary film directed by Garry Beitel. The World of Lygia Clark is a documentary film directed by Eduardo Clark. Beyond Iconic is a documentary and biographical film directed by Hanna Sawka. Living Utopia is a documentary film by Juan Gamero. It consists of 30 interviews with surviving activists of the 1936–1939 Spanish Revolution, which are combined with visual materials such as manifestos, photographs, excerpts from film footage, portraits and flamenco music by El Cabrero and Paco del Gastor. The testimony of the anarcho-syndicalists and anarchist militants from the CNT-FAI revealing the constructive work of anarchists in Spain, as well as the amazing educational and cultural activities which lead up to 1936. This workers' self-management meant as Gaston Leval comments in ‘The Anarchist Collectives’, Sam Dolgoff: The various agrarian and industrial collectives immediately instituted economic equality in accordance with the essential principle of communism, 'From each according to his ability and to each according to his needs.' They coordinated their efforts through free association in whole regions, created new wealth, increased production, built more schools, and bettered public services. Passion Despair is a documentary film by Swiss filmmaker Steff Gruber. Gruber started shooting in 2005. The film premiered at the Gdansk Dokfilm Festival 2011. Shine a Light is a 2008 documentary film directed by Martin Scorsese documenting The Rolling Stones' 2006 Beacon Theatre performance on their A Bigger Bang Tour. The Scorsese film also includes archive footage from the band's career and marked the first utilisation by Scorsese of digital cinematography for his films with it being used for the backstage sequences. The film takes its title from the song of the same name, featured on the band's 1972 album Exile on Main St. A soundtrack album was released in April 2008 on the Universal label. This is also the last movie by Paramount Classics, as the company would fold up and merge into its sister company Paramount Vantage after the movie was released. A Force of Nature is a 2011 documentary and biographical short film directed by Barbara Kopple. UFO Abduction is a 1989 found footage / thriller film, which was written, directed, filmed, and produced by Dean Alioto, through IndieSyndicate Productions. Dean Alioto produced the no budget film using $6,500.00. The film had a limited release through Axiom Films. The film is a mockumentary similar in presentation to 1999's The Blair Witch Project, which presents the final recordings and last known whereabouts of a Connecticut family named the Van Heeses just before they are abducted by extraterrestrials. Created to appear as a genuine 1983 home video recording, the film is widely believed to depict a real alien abduction of a Connecticut family named "the McPhersons" as they celebrate their relative's 5th birthday. The film is widely debated, despite evidence that the film is a work of fiction. Dean Alioto and Paul Chitlik remade UFO Abduction in 1998, with a larger budget and professional actors, into Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County. Dean Alioto has since discussed his two films. The Children of Theatre Street is a 1977 American documentary film directed by Robert Dornhelm and Earle I. Mack. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. GAMERS is a documentary film that follows filmmaker Ben Gonyo into the world of MMO style video games and the World of Warcraft. Having not played video games for nearly ten years, a lot of things have changed since Ben last picked up a controller. Ben dives headfirst into a whole new genre of video games called MMORPG's, which he describes as, "living in a movie." In this humorous yet informative documentary, viewers will learn what these games are, where they came from, how they're made and what it takes to conquer a virtual world.Ben interviews players, critics, super fans, game designers, visionaries and just about anyone involved in MMO gaming. It's a light-hearted look into real people's virtual existence. A combination of player interviews and trips to gaming conventions tells the story of a subculture of obsessed fans. Celebrity interviews include Red Sox pitching great Curt Schilling, comedian Jay Mohr and popular fantasy author RA Salvatore.MMO Games like World of Warcraft and EverQuest are a global phenomenon. Some estimate that around 200+ million people play some sort of an MMO. Warcraft alone has 11.5 million subscribers paying Blizzard $16 a month to be a part of their virtual universe. Tickets to Blizzard's "BlizzCon" convention in 2008 were $100 a ticket. They sold 15,000 in 15 minutes. Mt. Dew released two official World of Warcraft sodas called Gamer's Fuel.The game space is one of the fastest growing populations in history. From player growth to ad revenue to licensed products, it's just about recession proof. Ask around, everyone knows a person or two sucked into these games. This film dives headfirst into this virtual underworld with a fun DIY aesthetic. Our Hobby Is Depeche Mode is a documentary directed by Nick Abrahams and Jeremy Deller. True Story Of Love, Life, Death And Sometimes Revolution is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Nidal Hassan. Housemaids is a 2012 documentary drama family film written and directed by Gabriel Mascaro. The kids of the coal mine: A letter to Henri Storck is a 1999 documentary film by director Patric Jean about the former mining district Borinage in the Walloon region of Belgium. The film is a follow up/homage to Henri Storck's previous 1933 documentary about the Borinage, Misère au Borinage. Mysteries of Egypt is an IMAX film about Howard Carter's discovery of King Tutankhamen's tomb in 1922. Directed by Bruce Neibaur, the film was released in June 1998. A meditation on love, life, death and the human voice is a 1996 documentary film written by Werner Schroeter and Claire Alby and directed by Werner Schroeter. Day of the Sparrow is a 2010 documentary film directed by Philip Scheffner. Signed: Lino Brocka is a 1987 documentary film directed by Christian Blackwood. Celluloid Experiments 2011 is a 2011 doumentary, animated film. Writer of O (Écrivain d'O) is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Pola Rapaport. Jimmywork is a 2004 mockumentary film written and directed by Simon Sauvé and produced by Atopia. On the eve of his 50th birthday Jimmy W finds himself at the cross roads of his existence. For him it's now or never. The time has come to become rich and maybe even famous. Pretending to be an American Producer, he offers his services to the St-Tite Rodeo to develop an ad campaign to attract American tourists. Charmed as much by his demeanor as well as by his proposition, the Rodeo organizers call him in for a meeting to present his project. The meeting turns out to be a complete fiasco. Suspicious about Jimmy, they politely turn him down. Jimmy returns home furious and determined to get his revenge. Operating from his kitchen, he plans an elaborate scheme to extort the beer stock from the Rodeo valued at a quarter of million dollars. This film tells the real story behind the unforgettable Ron Howard/Tom Hanks film. In this film we feature the real astronauts, the actual footage and real events of Apollo 13. Ice People is a documentary film directed by Anne Aghion about the research of Allan Ashworth and Adam Lewis in Antarctica. Produced by Dry Valleys Productions, this 2008 film portrays the scientists discovering fossils from 13.9 million years ago. The film premiered at the San Francisco International Film Festival in April 2008 and was screened at the Jerusalem Film Festival in July 2008. This film aired on Sundance Channel in 2009. Karama Has No Walls is a 2012 short, documentary and drama film written and directed by Sara Ishaq. How Do I Look is a LGBT Historic Art Documentary, released in 2006 as a documentary film directed by Wolfgang Busch, assistant directors are Kevin Omni and Luna Khan. Distributed by Art From The Heart; USA, 80 minutes. How Do I Look world premiered at the NewFest Film Festival in New York City in 2006, won a Humanitarian Award at the Black International Cinema in Berlin, Germany in 2008, and won the Pill Award for Best Documentary in New York City in 2007. The How Do I Look DVD is available on Amazon.com and ships worldwide. How Do I Look is an artistic empowerment and HIV/AIDS awareness community project and is used by university, college, and high school students and by community based institutions for theses, research and outreach, and is screened at festivals and special events worldwide. How Do I Look is about the Harlem House Ball competitions, also known as "Drag Balls". According to a 2005 article published by The New York Times, the director spent a decade collecting footage to create How Do I Look. An Undertaking is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Ed Emsley. Love Hacking is a 2011 documentary, short and adventure film directed by Jenni Nelson. Fragments of Dissolution is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Travis Wilkerson. Cuba: Battle of the 10,000,000 is a 1971 documentary film directed by Valérie Mayoux and Chris Marker. Classic Albums: Meat Loaf: Bat Out of Hell is a 1999 documentary music film directed by Bob Smeaton Royal Journey is a National Film Board of Canada documentary film chronicling a five-week Royal visit by the then-Princess Elizabeth and her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, to Canada and the United States in the fall of 1951. Released in December 1951, Royal Journey is also notable for being the first commercial feature film in Eastmancolor. Royal Journey features sequences from Quebec City, the National War Memorial in Ottawa, CFB Trenton and a performance of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, as well as sequences in Toronto, Regina, Calgary and Edmonton. Royal Journey also shows the royal couple crossing the Rocky Mountains by rail and making stops in several small towns. In Vancouver, they board the HMCS Crusader in Vancouver and attend native dances in Thunderbird Park. The action then briefly shifts to the U.S., where they are welcomed by President Harry S. Truman. The remainder of the journey includes visits to Montreal, the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton, Halifax, Charlottetown, a steel mill in Sydney, Nova Scotia and finally Portugal Cove, Newfoundland. Royal Journey was directed by David Bairstow, Gudrun Parker and Roger Blais and produced by Tom Daly for the NFB. Cyberman is a 2001 documentary film about Steve Mann, inventor of the EyeTap. It was directed by Peter Lynch, but much of the material in the film was also shot by Mann himself, through his EyeTap. Thus Cyberman may well have been the first film in which the subject incidentally or existentially shot much of the material used in the film. The book, Cyborg... was released the same year, and much of the material in the film is based on material in an early draft of the book's manuscript. Novelist William Gibson appears in the film, in conjunction with Mann's presentation at the TED conference. Mann and Gibson were both presenters at TED, and the interview takes place immediately following their presentations at the conference. The Last Day of Summer is a 2010 short documentary film written by Dorota Wardeszkiewicz, Anna Dymek and Piotr Stasik and directed by Piotr Stasik. As Time Goes By in Shanghai is a 2013 music, biographical documentary film written by Uli Gaulke and Jeannette Eggert, and directed by Uli Gaulke. The FBI's War on Black America is a documentary film directed by Paul Lee. Scenario du film "Passion" is 1982 documentary film directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Where Soldiers Come From is a 2011 American documentary film directed by Heather Courtney. The film is an intimate look at a group of young American men who join the Michigan Army National Guard, their families, and the town they come from. Director Heather Courtney follows these young men closely, as they transition from small town teenagers to Army guardsmen during the war in Afghanistan. Their story continues to follow the 23-year-old veterans dealing with the less visible wounds of Traumatic Brain Injury and PTSD. It premiered at South by Southwest festival, where it won the best documentary editing award. In 2012 the film won a News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Continuing Coverage of a News Story, as well as the Truer Than Fiction Independent Spirit Award. Realtime is a 1983 film directed by Hellmut Costard and Jürgen Ebert. Eric & Ernie: Behind the Scenes is a 2011 documentary film directed by Zoë Thorman. Freakbeat is a 2011 musical and documentary film written by Claudio Piersanti and directed by Luca Pastore. Blue Rinse is a 2010 documentary short drama film directed by Matt Leigh. Kun 65 is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Tal Haim Yoffe. Red Forest Hotel is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mika Koskinen. Waste Land is a feature documentary film that premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival and went on to be nominated for the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature at the 83rd Annual Academy Awards, as well as win over 50 other film awards including the International Documentary Association's Best Documentary Award, which was handed to director Lucy Walker inside a garbage bag. Waste Land is the uplifting story of artist Vik Muniz who travels to the world's largest landfill, Jardim Gramacho outside Rio de Janeiro, to collaborate with a lively group of catadores, or pickers of recyclable materials, who find a way to the most prestigious auction house in London via the surprising transformation of refuse into contemporary art. The catadores work in a co-operative founded and led by Sebastião Carlos Dos Santos, the ACAMJG, or Association of Pickers of Jardim Gramacho, who dreamed of improving life for his community. The money created by the selling of the artworks was given back to the catadores and the ACAMJG, as well as the prize money from the film awards, in order to help the catadores and their community. Two Coronations is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Stephen Connolly. La tumultueuse vie d’un déflaté is a 2009 documentary film. Harvest at Nong Lub is a 1971 short documentary film directed by Brian Hannant. Culture Over Everything is a 2014 short biographical music documentary film directed by Charlie Cook and Ravi Lloyd. Hollywood Now is a 1995 documentary film directed by Anthea Kennedy and Karl Schedereit. Yoga Is is a documentary film directed by Suzanne Bryant. Low Down And Derby is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Jennifer Rollason. Yomigaeri no recipe is a documentary film directed by Satoshi Watanabe. The Shadow of a Mine is a 1929 German silent drama film directed by Phil Jutzi and starring Holmes Zimmermann and Sybille Schloß. Its original German title is Ums tägliche Brot. It is also known as Hunger in Waldenburg. The film was produced by the left-wing Volksfilmverband in partnership with Weltfilm and the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm. Using a docudrama format, the film hightlights the hardships faced by Silesian coal miners in Waldenburg. It premiered at the Tauenzienpalast in Berlin on 16 March 1929. The film was screened in Britain by the London Workers' Film Society in December 1929. This is now the only print of the film which survives. Assault in the Ring is a 2008 sports documentary film about a controversial boxing match held at Madison Square Garden on June 16, 1983. The fight has drawn comparisons to the Antonio Margarito-Miguel Cotto controversy. The Invisible Mountains is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Angel Linares. Perfect Square is a video recording of a concert by rock band R.E.M., filmed on 19 July 2003 at the Bowling Green in Wiesbaden, Germany. It was released in DVD format on the Warner Brothers label on March 9, 2004. This concert is perhaps most notable for a performance of the song "Country Feedback", which Michael Stipe opens by declaring it his "favorite song". The rendition features appended lyrics from another song, Reveal's "Chorus and the Ring", and a guitar solo by Peter Buck, neither of which are in the original. The performance also found its way onto the limited edition issue of the In Time compilation, which was released a few months after the Wiesbaden concert. Other concert highlights include the appearance of two then-new songs, "Bad Day" and "Animal", and the re-emergence of the long-lost song "Permanent Vacation". "Permanent Vacation" dates back to 1980, years before their first album, while "Bad Day" dates back to 1985. Included on the DVD release is a bonus documentary, A Stirling Performance, chronicling the band's three-night stand at Stirling Castle in Scotland in July 1999. The documentary demonstrates the effect the concerts had on Stirling and its residents. The Good Life is a 2010 documentary film directed by Eva Mulvad. "How do you cope with being broke after having lived a life of luxury and privilege? This is the fundamental question facing spoiled Anne Mette and her mother, a once-rich family now living off a small pension and struggling to adapt to their new situation in a coastal Portuguese hamlet. A Grey Gardens for the current financial era, The Good Life is a character study at turns touching and frustrating, but ultimately poignant." Quoting the description from the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival site. "Packed with evocative photos, rare audio recordings, stirring film appearances and TV performances, REJOICE AND SHOUT covers the 200 year musical history of African-American Christianity. Culled from hundreds of hours of music REJOICE AND SHOUT features the creme de la creme of Gospel music." Quoting the program nnotes form the 2010 SXSW Film Festival. Signale is a 1964 short documentary film directed by Raimund Ruehl. Image of an Assassination: A New Look at the Zapruder Film is a 1998 documentary film written and directed by H.D. Motyl. In 1990, an unknown candidate named Alberto Fujimori rode a wave of popular support to become the president of Peru. He fought an allout war on terror against the guerilla organization Shining Path, and won. Ten years later, accused of kidnapping, murder and corruption, he fled Peru to his native Japan, where he was in exile for four years. Fujimori has remained virtually silent about the abrupt end of his controversial presidency, until now. He granted an unprecedented, in-depth interview to filmmaker Ellen Perry, who presents an intimate, chilling portrait of this enigmatic leader's rise and fall, interweaving neverbefore-seen footage from his regime with Fujimori's own words. As events unfold in his quest to return to Peruvian politics, The Fall of Fujimori offers a cautionary tale about power and corruption in an age of terrorism. Exodus: A Journey to the Mountain of God is a 1992 Israeli documentary film that follows an international group of archaeologists and travelers who go on a camel-back journey looking for the true location of the Biblical Mount Sinai. Arriving at Mount Karkom in the southern Negev Desert of Israel, they examine the archaeological findings discovered there by Italian archaeologist Prof. Emmanuel Anati. These findings are the basis for a theory claiming that the Biblical Mount Sinai is not Jabal Musa in Egypt, as some traditions claim, but Mount Karkom, and that this is where the Exodus took place. It also follows the expedition members' experiences and thoughts about religion, faith, human nature, and spirituality.Due to the remote desert terrain, the production equipment was hauled along the 160-kilometer expedition route by the crew and on camel-back. The film was co-directed by Alon Bar and Eitan Bin Noun and written by Bar. It premiered at the Casablanca International Film Festival, Morocco on November 24, 1993, and was the first Israeli film ever to be shown in a film festival in an Arab country, and the first time that Israeli filmmakers officially took part in such an event. Hello Cinema is a 1995 Iranian film directed by Mohsen Makhmalbaf. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival. It was made explicitly for the celebration of the 100th anniversary of cinema. The year 1895 is considered the debut of the motion picture as an entertainment medium. The year 1895 was the year of the first film screenings by Auguste and Louis Lumière. Made in a fashion to resemble a documentary, the film starts with the music of the "Dance of Spring" by Shahrdad Rohani, showing a huge crowd of people gathering outside a studio. Makhmalbaf has put an advertisement in the papers, asking for 100 actors, and thousands have shown up. The film goes on to show different people being auditioned and each explaining their reason for wanting to act in a film. We Are Alive! is a documentary film directed by Tony Buba and Tom Dubensky. George Carlin: Complaint and Grievances is a 2001 comedy documentary film written by George Carlin and directed by Rocco Urbisci. Hoof, Tooth & Claw is 2012 short documentary biography film directed by Adam Gutch. ""Hurricane Strip"" is a provocative docuDrama detailing the life-changing effects of Hurricane Katrina. This film centers on the little talked-about lives of Bourbon Street strippers. When a prim and proper 21-year-old law student suddenly loses everything in Hurricane Katrina, she turns to the last job she ever pictured herself doing - dancing nude on New Orleans' legendary Bourbon Street. But the more she dances, the more she gets caught up in the lifestyle, the late nights, and the lure of easy money. Now the question is, when you lose everything, will your life ever be the same again? Monte Adentro is a 2013 documentary film written and directed Nicolás Macario Alonso. Austin Unbound is a 2011 short biographical documentary written by Shannon Graham and directed by Eliza Greenwood and Sel Staley. Estamira is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Marcos Prado. Red Tail Reborn is a 2007 historical documentary film by Adam White about the Commemorative Air Force's Red Tail Project. The project involves the restoration, exhibition and maintenance of a World War II P-51 Mustang flown by the United States Air Force 332d Fighter Group. The exhibition of this plane is considered to be a traveling and flying tribute to the Tuskegee Airmen. In addition to increasing awareness of the travails of the Tuskegee Airmen, this film served to highlight the Red Tail Project fundraising effort to rebuild the plane after a 2004 crash. The film was initially broadcast and released on DVD in 2007 in the director's home state of Ohio, winning local Emmy Award recognition. The following year, it was broadcast nationally for the first time on Public Broadcasting Services stations. The film had a sequel called Flight of the Red Tail. Deus Ex is a 1971 short film directed by Stan Brakhage. Who Killed Dr Bogle and Mrs Chandler? is an Australian documentary film about the mysterious deaths of Dr Gilbert Bogle and Mrs Margaret Chandler in Sydney, Australia in 1963. Although it was assumed the couple were murdered, police investigators could find or produce no evidence that it was actually murder. The documentary, directed and written by Australian documentary film maker Peter Butt, presents unique evidence to suggest the couple died from hydrogen sulphide poisoning emanating from a river. Spring Summer Fall is a 2012 short documentary family film directed by Piotr Zlotorowicz. Compound Eyes 2: Odonata is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Paul Clipson. Exploring the radical change in social and religious attitudes towards sex, this award-winning documentary takes a look throughout history and traces the shift in social attitudes and practices. Terry traces an unexpected route of how sex got from strict social repression to the full-frontal glossies of today. Over a century ago, a vicious serial murderer stalked the streets of London. A string of innocent victims were brutally slashed by his knife. No suspects were convicted. There have been scores of books and movies on the subject and dozens of theories about the killings have evolved, but none have been conclusive. To this day, the true identity of the killer who has haunted the nightmares of the world has never been determined. Barefoot Flamenco : YASUKO NAGAMINE is a documentary film directed by Koichi Omiya. High Wind Advisory is a 2013 short, drama, biographical, family, documentary film directed by Theresa Barton. Platform 12 is a 2013 short documentary film created by Rainbow Collective. I nie opuszcze cie az do smierci is a 2000 short documentary film directed by Maciej Adamek and written by Maciej Adamek and Jolanta Krysowata. City of Dreams is a 2000 documentary biography film written by Belinda Mason and Gaby Mason. It is also directed by Belinda Mason. Pints and Pins is a documentary sport film directed by Nathan Ripperger and Dustin Roth. "In January 2009 over 1300 Palestinians were killed in Gaza. Around 300 of them children. When the ceasefire was declared, BAFTA winning film-maker Jezza Neumann arrived to follow the lives of four children over the course of a year. Through their eyes, and in their words, Children of Gaza gives us a unique insight into the impact of war on vulnerable young minds. Despite the horrors they witnessed, Amal 9, Mahmoud and Omsyatte 12, and Ibraheem 11 still have hope and humor while living in the ruins of the Gaza Strip. Increasingly isolated by a blockade that prevents anyone from rebuilding their homes and their lives, Children of Gaza is a shocking, touching and uniquely intimate reflection on extraordinary courage in the face of great adversity." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Based On A True Story is a 2004 documentary written and directed by Walter Stokman. First Ink is a DVD featuring comedic digital shorts and a documentary about professional basketball player Chris Bosh. The comedic digital shorts segment, known as CBTV, features a collection of new digital shorts and characters. The new skits are coupled with "classic CBTV" skits, which earned Chris top ranking in ESPN's viral athletes rankings. The documentary segment follows Chris during his time off in the summer before his final season on contract with the Toronto Raptors. The film is approximately 30 minutes long and documents Chris' attempt to transform his body both by gaining weight and muscle and by getting a full back tattoo. The DVD was released in Canada on December 15, 2009. Det svider i hjärtat is a Swedish documentary that provides a glimpse into the world of young European Muslims who dedicate themselves to jihad, or holy war. It was nominated by the Swedish Film Institute for the 2007 Guldbagge Awards in the category of 'Best Documentary'. The film includes the story of "two young Swedes with immigrant backgrounds - one from Ostermalm, one of Stockholm's poshest neighborhoods, and one from Kvanum, a tiny town in central Sweden - who left their homes in the 1990s to seek martyrdom in the wars of Chechnya and Bosnia and Herzegovina." Oscar Hedin, the director and writer of the film received support from academics who have studied the phenomenon of Islamic radicalisation. The Devotion Project: My Person is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Tony Osso. Anne Frank Remembered is a 1995 documentary film by Jon Blair about the life of the diarist Anne Frank. The documentary was made in association with Anne Frank House, Walt Disney Pictures and the British Broadcasting Corporation. It was originally screened as a TV documentary, but was later given a theatrical release by Sony Pictures. The film is narrated by Kenneth Branagh and extracts from Frank's diary are read by Glenn Close. The choice of an adult reader is unusual in representations of Anne Frank; Blair has explained that he read Frank's diary as a child, and had a very clear image of what she was like, and found that the use of children's voices robbed the viewer of their own impression of Anne Frank. Miep Gies, the woman who had helped shelter the family, and who had saved the diary after the group was betrayed, collaborated with Blair and is interviewed about her memories of hiding the Frank family. Blair also uses interviews with Hanneli Goslar and Jaqueline van Maarsen, two of Anne Frank's friends, and notably uses archive interviews of Otto Frank to retell Anne's story. God Loves Uganda is a documentary film produced and directed by Roger Ross Williams which premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. It explores connections between evangelicalism in North America and in Uganda, suggesting that the North American influence is the reason behind the controversial Uganda Anti-Homosexuality Bill, which at one point raised the possibility of the death penalty for gays and lesbians. The filmmakers follow a group of young missionaries from the International House of Prayer in their first missionary effort in another nation, as well as interviewing several evangelical leaders from the US and Uganda. Williams was inspired to make God Loves Uganda when he met David Kato an LBGT activist who was killed in 2011, ostensibly in a robbery. Kato told there was an untold story of the damage American fundamentalist evangelicals are doing in Uganda; of the insidious nature of their aggressive effort to harvest young, unclaimed souls to preach a gospel of love intertwined with a gospel of intolerance. Jouer Ponette is a 2007 short film directed by Jeanne Crépeau. A Western is a 1987 documentary short film written and directed by Laurie Dunphy. Little Hope Was Arson is a 2013 documentary, crime and drama film directed by Theo Love. Impossible Light is the 2014 documentary drama film directed by Jeremy Ambers. Exotic Belly Dancing is a 2004 documentary film written by Araceli Santiago and directed by Rico Gutierrez Seriat is a 1991 film directed by Urs Graf and Marlies Dätwyler. Five Summer Stories is a surf film by Jim Freeman and Greg MacGillivray starring David Nuuhiwa, Eddie Aikau, Gerry Lopez, and Sam Hawk. It was released in 1972, with a VHS re-release in 1994, followed by a subsequent DVD release. The Original Sound Track from Five Summer Stories was composed and recorded by the Southern California native band, Honk. The soundtrack was released on LP in 1972 and re-released on CD in 1992. Called a "cinematic cult classic", the film is generally acknowledged as the start of the second generation of surf films, the first generation being typified by Bruce Brown's The Endless Summer. A Farewell Song is a 2006 documentary film about a group of retired Chinese musicians who reunite to perform a series of concerts outside of the state-backed music system. It was directed by Arthur Jones and Luther Jones, and supported by the British Documentary Film Foundation. Odysseus' Gambit is a 2011 documentary film, directed by Alex Lora Cercos, about a homeless Cambodian immigrant who maintains his livelihood and sanity by playing chess in the heart of Manhattan. In 2012, Odysseus' Gambit was nominated for the Best Short Filmmaking Award at the Sundance Film Festival. The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till is a 2005 documentary directed by Keith Beauchamp. A look at the iguanas of the Galapagos. Daughters of the Niger Delta is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ilse van Lamoen. A City Surrounded By the Mountains is a documentary by Mahmoud Shoolizadeh, and it introduces the social, cultural and geographical life of the people in Khansar, in Isfahan province of Iran. In this film the beauty of nature with the capsized tulips in the very high mountain slope that surrounded the city, and also the people and their cultures are portrayed. The Heart of Texas is a 2008 American documentary film. The documentary is made up of individuals from Simonton, Texas, Fulshear, Texas and Wallis, Texas, where most of the film's participants reside. The film features Grover Norwood and Ulice Parker as the primary characters. On November 11, 2008, Plaid Shirt Pictures announced that the film would open in Houston area theaters on November 19, 2008. Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Tribute is the telecast of the concert that was held on June 11, 1988 at Wembley Stadium. The Marriage is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Aldo Garay. Things are Different Now is a 2012 short film directed by Ryan Conrad. Contra el tiempo is a 2012 documentary film written by Montse Gómez and José Manuel Serrano Cueto and directed by José Manuel Serrano Cueto. Captain Kang is a documentary, drama, family film directed by Ho-Yeon Won. Wisconsin Death Trip is a 1999 American black-and-white and color docudrama film written and directed by James Marsh, based on the 1973 book of the same name by Michael Lesy. Original music for the film was composed by DJ Shadow, with original piano music for the closing credits by John Cale. The film dramatizes the photographs by Charles Van Schaick found by in the early 1970s by Lesy, connected to a series of macabre incidents that took place in Black River Falls, Wisconsin in the late 19th century, and, in part, the film was shot on location there. Marsh makes use of silent black-and-white recreations with voice-over narration by Ian Holm contrasted with contemporary color footage of the area. The film's visual style was intended to carry the content of the film; as Marsh said: I wanted to convey in the film the real pathos contained in a four line newspaper report that simultaneously records and dismisses the end of someone’s life. Wisconsin Death Trip was presented on the BBC documentary series Arena in 2000. Bell Jar is a 2013 documentary short film written by Alexandre Sarian and Ana Levisky and directed by Ana Levisky. Seeds of Dissent is a 2009 documentary film directed by Pankaj Rishi Kumar. Bodybuilders was originally shot and aired as an episode of the Discovery Channel documentary series called On the Inside. This particular episode went into the sport of bodybuilding at the turn of the millennium, bringing light to various depths of bodybuilding that the general public had little awareness of at the time—particularly natural bodybuilding. This episode aired for 8 years on 4 different networks. It inspired countless of thousands of people to achieve healthier greater physiques. Of all the bodybuilding documentaries, in terms of popularity, it comes second only to Pumping Iron, which was the documentary that turned Arnold Schwarzenegger into a household name. It also featured the former Incredible Hulk actor, Lou Ferrigno. IMDB credited cast list: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Lesa Lewis, Lou Ferrigno, Frank Zane, Jay Cutler, Kim Chizevsky-Nicholls, Stan McQuay, Corinna Everson, Craig Titus, Joe Weider, Ben Weider, and Travis Wojcik. Pinter's Progress is a 2009 documentary TV film directed and by Philip Saville and Lyndy Saville. The Sonosopher: Alex Caldiero in Life...In Sound is a 2010 film directed by Torben Bernhard. Charles Dickens's England is a feature documentary written and produced by David Nicholas Wilkinson, directed by Julian Richards and presented by Derek Jacobi. Other participants include Roy Hattersley, Adrian Wootton, Tony Williams, Thelma Grove, Lee Ault and Tony Pointon. Squatterpunk is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Khavn De La Cruz. Not Yet Begun to Fight is a documentary, bigraphy, drama, war film directed by Shasta Grenier and Sabrina Lee. Soka Afrika is a 2011 sports biographical documentary film directed by Suridh Hassan. The Color of Olives is a documentary film that captures moments from the lives of a Palestinian family. The Color of Olives was filmed in Masha, a Palestinian village 15 miles from Tel Aviv. Mexican director Carolina Rivas focuses on a Palestinian family of eight, headed by Hani and Monira Amer. Recently a wall has been completed and is now separating Israel from the West Bank. Because of the wall Hani has had his orange and olive groves separated by electrified fences, a military road and a checkpoint. In Rivas' film it shows how Hani and his children wait patiently each morning for soldiers to unlock the gate so that Hani can go to work and his children can get to their school. The Color of Olives was shot using only natural light. In the United States, the movie opened in New York at the Two Boots Pioneer Theater in the East Village. It was shown with English subtitles. It's Your War Too is a 1944 short documentary film about the American Women's Army Corps and commissioned by the United States Government during World War II. It contains 1 minute of animation by the Walt Disney Studios. Jazz Dance is a 1954 film written by Roger Tilton and directed by Roger Tilton and Richard Leacock. "Corpusse is a Montreal-born musician, performance artist and painter who has been pursuing his singular vision for over 20 years. His work defies categorization but has been described as "gothic shock opera," and the Montreal Mirror once stated "If you think you've seen it all, you haven't seen Corpusse." With footage of his riveting live shows and interviews with collaborators, friends, fans and the secretive Corpusse himself, this film documents the life, art and philosophy of one of Canada's most unique and under-appreciated artists." Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. SWING STATE redefines the phrase "behind the scenes."  Where political documentaries were once limited to bleak, coffee-stained campaign offices, SWING STATE breaks down the final barrier, taking one giant leap into the home of the candidate.Focused primarily on the 2006 Ohio Governor's race, a contest widely considered to have drastic implications for the outcome of the 2008 Presidential elections, SWING STATE tells the story of career politician Lee Fisher, who, with family in tow, campaigns for Ohio Lieutenant Governor, alongside Democratic Gubernatorial Candidate and U. S. Congressman Ted Strickland.What makes SWING STATE most unique, however, is the perspective of Lee's son Jason, one of the film's directors.  As a 14 year old, Jason filmed his father's bitter, razor-thin loss for Ohio Governor in 1998.  Jason's intimate, piercing footage is woven into the film's current telling of the 2006 race; a race in which we observe a man, through the eyes of his son, putting it all on the line for one last shot at his dream.Over the course of 6 months, the Fisher family learns that, once again, politics can be cruel and exhausting, but it can also serve to bring people together.  Lee's ambition to make a difference that is "deep and wide" is what makes possible the most memorable family experience they have ever shared.The road to the White House in 2008 runs directly through the Ohio Statehouse in 2006.  The lives of all Ohioans - all Americans - will be affected by this one election.  And one family will show us the way. Featuring interviews with Bill Clinton, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Barack Obama, John Edwards, John Kerry, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Chuck Schumer, Bill Richardson and many more.  Vote SWING STATE in '08, it's the obvious choice. A Tale of Two Cities: The Circuit City Story is a documentary produced, directed, and edited by Tom Wulf. The documentary chronicles the entire 60-year history of the Richmond-based retailer, Circuit City. The documentary traces the defunct retailer from its humble beginnings as the family-owned Wards TV, to its rise to become the nation's largest specialty retailer of consumer electronics, to its downhill slide into bankruptcy and liquidation in 2009. According to its website, the film "tells the tale of two "Cities:" one that went from good to great, and the other that went from great to gone." The film made its world premiere at the Virginia Film Festival in November 2010. Beautiful Mistake is a 2000 Welsh music documentary film directed by Marc Evans starring James Dean Bradfield, Huw Bunford and Cian Ciaran. Seltzer Works is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Jessica Edwards. You Don't Have to Die is a 1988 American short documentary film about a young boy's successful battle against cancer, directed by Malcolm Clarke and Bill Guttentag. It won an Academy Award in 1989 for Documentary Short Subject. Inu to neko to ningen to 2 is a documentary film directed by Daisuke Shishido. Salinger is a 2013 documentary film about the writer J. D. Salinger, written and directed by Shane Salerno. The film was one of the top-ten highest-grossing documentaries of 2013. The film holds an audience approval rating of 4 out of 5 stars from over 112,000 votes on Netflix. A Gesar Bard’s Tale is a documentary film directed by Donagh Coleman. Playing Columbine is a 2008 American documentary film produced and edited by Danny Ledonne, an American independent filmmaker. The film follows the video game Super Columbine Massacre RPG! in which players experience the Columbine High School massacre through the eyes of the killers, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold. Act Normal is a 2006 Icelandic documentary by Olaf de Fleur. "Uplifting documentary which follows an effervescent 50 year old as she comes to terms with her sexuality. Jan's coming out late in life. After watching the entire series of The L Word back to back, the effervescent 50 year old finally realises what it is that has been missing all her life: lesbians. In this engaging documentary we follow Jan as she comes to terms with her sexuality and her quest to discover all things Sapphic in the new world that has opened up to her. From chatting to lesbian party goers, to sharing a drink and some jokes with out author Stella Duffy and her wife, and even spending an idyllic weekend in the country with out actresses and real life couple Jill Bennett and Cathy DeBuono. Jan's openness and her joy at finally figuring out her sexuality is palpably felt on screen. There are tears, heartfelt conversations but most of all lots of laughter and celebration in Jan's Coming Out." Quoting Emma Smart from the 2011 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival site. Coney Island is a 1991 documentary film that traces the history of Coney Island, the westernmost part of the barrier islands of Long Island, New York. The film covers the island's 1609 discovery by Henry Hudson, its 1870s incarnation as a respectable beach destination for city-dwellers and showcase of the new developments ushered in by the machine age, the early 20th century, when amusement parks and innovative attractions attracted hundreds of thousands of people each day, and the gradual demise of the amusements. The film is narrated by Philip Bosco. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and broadcast nationally on PBS as part of the American Experience program in February 1991. On-camera appearances include Al Lewis, Vincent Gardenia, Eli Wallach, Elliot Willensky, Frederick Fried and Mae Timpano. Voice-over actors include Judd Hirsch, Nathan Lane, John Mahoney, Jerry Orbach, George Plimpton, Lois Smith, Frances Sternhagen and Andrei Codrescu. Service Inbegriffe is a 2013 documentary written and directed by Eric Bergkraut. How Yukong Moved the Mountains is a 1976 French documentary film directed by Joris Ivens, about the last days of the Cultural Revolution. At 763 min it is one of the longest films by running time. Amor Cronico is a 2012 comedy film directed by Jorge Perugorría. Full Metal Village is a 2007 documentary film about the lives of the residents of a small village in the German state of Schleswig-Holstein, Wacken, in a series of interviews and visual tableaux as it prepares for the annual Wacken Open Air Festival. Taglined "Ein Heimatfilm", the director Sung-Hyung Cho explores the relationship of the 1,800 resident townsfolk and the brief annual influx of 70,000 metal music enthusiasts who attend the open-air concert. Notable scenes of the film are elderly villagers who confess to have 'heard' that the concert-goers worship Satan, and over-enthusiastic concert-goers headbanging to the traditional regional anthem played by a local fire department band to open the festival. Defamation is a 2009 film directed by Yoav Shamir. "Yoav Shamir is a documentary maker who specialises in films about modern Israeli life. His latest deals with anti-Semitism, which he claims never to have experienced personally, yet he hears the term used everyday, describing it as 'a constant buzz, always in the background, always annoying'. His quest leads him to explore whether anti-Semitism has become an excusable prejudice in some civilised societies, or whether it is used as a spectre to drum up support for right wing Zionism. He garners a broad range of opinions, including those of Abraham Foxman, director of the American Anti-Defamation League, which collects evidence of anti-Semitism, and controversial academic Norman Finkelstein, author of The Holocaust Industry, who has argued that the Nazis' treatment of the Jews is used as justification of Israel's conduct toward Palestinians. A journey to the site of concentration camps in Poland with Israeli high-school students gives revealing insight into what anti-Semitism means to kids two generations away from the Holocaust. Defamation is a bold, authored documentary that not only dares to raise serious issues, but also presents arguments with wit and balance, Shamir's irreverent sense of humour making it as entertaining as it is provocative." Quoting Michael Hayden Gotta Dance is a 2008 documentary film and Tribeca Film Festival Audience Award Finalist directed by Dori Berinstein. The film "chronicles the debut of the New Jersey Nets' first-ever senior hip-hop dance team, 12 women and 1 man - all dance team newbies, from auditions through to performance.” The Talgai Skull: An Investigation Into the Origin of the Australian Aborigines is a 1968 Australian film. It shared the 1968 Australian Film Institute award for Best Documentary. Jarmark Europa is a 2004 film directed by Minze Tummescheit. The Conscience of Nhem En is a 26-minute documentary directed by Steven Okazaki, telling the stories of three survivors of the Tuol Sleng Prison. Also known as S-21, Tuol Sleng was where 17,000 Cambodians were imprisoned and killed in the late 1970s. The film follows a young soldier responsible for taking the ID photos of thousands of people before they were tortured and murdered by the Khmer Rouge. The documentary was nominated for an Academy Award. This Way of Life is a New Zealand documentary film about a horse breeding family living in the wild near the Ruahine Ranges, resisting the call to a more "modern" lifestyle. It was directed by Thomas Burstyn and produced by Barbara Sumner-Burstyn. It opened theatrically in Vancouver on 3 October 2009 at the Vancouver International Film Festival, Seattle on 11 June 2010 at the Seattle International Film Festival, and in New York City on 30 July 2010. It opened in Los Angeles on 6 August 2010 at the 14th Annual DocuWeeks. This Way of Life has also made the 2011 Oscar Documentary long list and was paid for with NZ tax payer funding. Flint Mountains is a film directed by Nidal Hassan. Ruins is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Manuel Mozos. The Gamester is a 2010 documentary film directed by Viktar Dashuk. Shrimp Stories is 1964 documentary and short film directed by Geneviève Hamon and Jean Painlevé. " Japanese activist Tamaki Matsuoka reveals the truth about Nanking. For years, Japanese activist Tamaki Matsuoka tried to counter denials of her country’s notorious wartime massacre of civilians in the city of Nanjing with books and photo exhibitions. Now the retired teacher says she has indisputable proof of the atrocities: Japanese veterans admitting on camera they forced themselves on Chinese women and mowed down Chinese refugees with machine guns. Matsuoka was angered by accounts in her country’s textbooks that whitewashed the crimes committed by Japan’s Imperial Army during World War II. Her documentary, shown for the first time outside of Japan at the Hong Kong International Film Festival on Sunday, attempts to set the record straight." Quoting watchfreedocumentaries.com Greedy Lying Bastards is a 2012 American documentary film directed by Craig Rosebraugh. The film explores the phenomenon of climate change denial. Americas in Transition is a 1981 American short documentary film directed by Obie Benz. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Suitcase of Love and Shame is a 2013 romance, history documentary film directed by Jane Gillooly. Poste Restante is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by Marcel Łoziński. Arrastre is a 2012 documentary short drama film directed by Ana Teresa Fernandez. Born To Film is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Frédéric Sojcher. The story of James Garner's year with his racing team, from the time he bought the car, and assembled his team through Mexico, England, Florida and Canada. My Architect: A Son's Journey is a 2003 documentary film about the American architect Louis Kahn, by his son Nathaniel Kahn, detailing the architect's extraordinary career and his familial legacy after his death in 1974. In the film, Louis Kahn is quoted as saying “When I went to high school I had a teacher, in the arts, who was head of the department of Central High, William Grey, and he gave a course in Architecture, the only course in any high school I am sure, in Greek, Roman, Renaissance, Egyptian, and Gothic Architecture, and at that point two of my colleagues and myself realized that only Architecture was to be my life. How accidental are our existences are really, and how full of influence by circumstance.” The film features interviews with renowned architects, including Frank Gehry, Shamsul Wares, I.M. Pei, Anne Tyng and Philip Johnson. Throughout the film, Kahn visits all of his father's buildings including The Yale Center for British Art, The Salk Institute, Jatiyo Sangshad Bhaban and the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad. My Architect was nominated for the 2003 Academy Award for Documentary Feature. The Search for Emak Bakia is a 2012 drama film written and directed by Oskar Alegria. The Backward Class is 2014 Documentary film written and directed by Madeleine Grant. Deadliest Crash: The Le Mans 1955 Disaster is a documentary film made by Bigger Picture Films for the BBC in 2009. It was originally aired on BBC Four on Sunday, 16 May 2010. It was subsequently repeated on BBC Two and BBC Four. The programme tells the story of the 1955 Le Mans disaster in which Pierre Levegh's Mercedes 300 SLR smashed into the crowd, killing 83 people and injuring 120 more. The Dubai In Me - Rendering The World is a 2010 directed by Christian Von Borries and written by Sebastian Lütgert and Christian Von Borries. Mohammed's Birds is a 2013 short biographical film written and directed by Mohammed Alawadi. The Truth About Mother Goose is an animated film published in 1957 by Walt Disney and directed by Bill Justice. In it, a trio of jazz-singing jesters sing three Mother Goose nursery rhymes, while an offscreen narrator explains their origins in three animated vignettes. The rhymes include: Little Jack Horner: Thomas Horner, allegedly stealing a title deed in transit to Henry VIII of England. Mary Mary Quite Contrary: The life of Mary Stuart. London Bridge Is Falling Down: The gradual deterioration and dilapidation of the medieval Old London Bridge. The Drama of Dresden is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Sebastian Dehnhardt. In the Gutter and Other Good Places is a 1993 documentary film directed by Cristine Richey. Food Chains is a 2013 documentary film written by Sanjay Rawal and Erin Barnett and directed by Sanjay Rawal. James Joseph Brown was recognized by a plethora of titles including Soul Brother Number One, Mr. Dynamite, The Hardest Working Man in Show Business, Minister of The New New Super Heavy Funk, Mr. Please Please Please, The Boss, and the best-known, the Godfather of Soul. This DVD reveals in much depth the myths and the truths surrounding the man who was respected by so many people not just for his music but his very colorful life before his sad and untimely death. To Live Again is a 1963 short documentary film produced by Mel London. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. This fascinating film follows the construction of Sweden's famous Ice Hotel, during the winter of 2004. The team building it face temperatures plummeting to 30 or even 40 degrees below freezing. During the past few years they have accumulated an astonishing amount of knowledge on how to use snow and ice to make viable large constructions. Fuck for Forest is a 2012 documentary film directed by Michal Marczak. The film premiered in Poland on 13 October 2012 at the Warsaw Film Festival, where it won Best Documentary. It premiered in the United States at the South by Southwest Film Festival on 8 March 2013. In 2013 it was nominated for the Sheffield Green Award as part of Sheffield Doc/Fest, and received a Special Mention. Ecopolis China is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Anna-Karin Grönroos. Two Mothers is a 2007 documentary film written by Rosa von Praunheim and directed by Rosa von Praunheim. The Seinfeld Story is a 2004 tv film directed by Morgan Sackett. The Love Bone Earth Affair is a home video by the American rock band Mother Love Bone. It was released in 1993. Ana Pauker Speaks To Us is a 1946 short film directed by Ion Cosma. Homeless Man: The Restless Heart of Rich Mullins is a 2008 documentary film directed by Ben Pearson. River's Memory is a 2013 short documentary music film written by Roney Freitas and Alexandre Taira and directed by Roney Freitas. Dark Girls is a 2012 documentary film by American filmmakers Bill Duke and D. Channsin Berry. It documents colorism based on skin tone among African Americans, a subject still considered taboo by many black Americans. The film contains interviews with notable African Americans including Viola Davis. It also reports on a new version of the 1940s black doll experiment by Kenneth and Mamie Clark, which proved that black children had internalized racism by having children select a white or a black doll based on questions asked. In the updated version, black children favored light-skinned dolls over dark-skinned dolls. BattleGround: 21 Days on the Empire's Edge was released in 2004, and received the Silver Hugo Award for documentaries at the 2004 Chicago International Film Festival. It aired on Showtime and was released on DVD by Home Vision. The film follows the story of Frank al-Bayati, a former Shiite guerrilla traveling back to Iraq for the first time since the 1991 uprising against Saddam Hussein. Al-Bayati was wounded, captured, tortured and then escaped. He spent more than a year in a Saudi Arabian refugee camp before being repatriated to the U.S. Lappé and Marshall follow al-Bayati as he tracks down his family members and capture the emotional reunions. Al-Bayati's optimism for what he calls "liberated Iraq" is countered by the reality the filmmakers find on the ground. A growing insurgency is creating more enemies than it is killing. With candid interviews with top American commanders, the filmmakers capture the U.S. military's inability to grasp the nature of their enemy. In addition, Lappé and Marshall bring a Geiger counter and conduct their own radiation tests on Iraqi armor that has been hit by American shells. Upaj: Improvise ls 2013 documentary film written and directed by Hoku Uchiyama. Promises to Keep is a 1988 documentary film produced by Ginny Durrin. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Last Communist is a 2006 Malaysian film described by director Amir Muhammad as a "semi-musical documentary". It is inspired by the leader of the disbanded Malayan Communist Party, Chin Peng and the Malayan Emergency during which more than 10,000 Malayan and British troops and civilians lost their lives. The film was banned from screening in Malaysia by the government's Home Affairs Ministry. The film features interviews with people in the towns in which Peng lived from birth to national independence, interspersed with songs that are fashioned after propaganda films. The Last Communist made its world premiere at the 2006 Berlin Film Festival. It has also been shown at the Seattle International Film Festival, the London Film Festival, the Singapore International Film Festival and the Hong Kong International Film Festival, but ironically has never been publicly shown in its home country. The film has been uploaded in its entirety on YouTube. The Yanks Are Coming is a 1963 American documentary film produced by Marshall Flaum. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Marshall Flaum wrote, produced and directed the documentary about the American involvement in World War I. Christmas Under Fire is a 1941 British short documentary film directed by Harry Watt for the Crown Film Unit of the Ministry of Information. It was conceived as propaganda primarily for an American audience, to raise support for the Allied cause during the Second World War. Produced in the context of German bombings of British cities, it depicts the resilience of British civilians despite the hardships they suffered during Christmas 1940, by showing the continuation of Christmas traditions in the face of the disruptions caused by war. The film is a sequel to London Can Take It, with the same narrator, Quentin Reynolds. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, which was won by Churchill's Island. Lost: The Final Journey is a 2010 TV documentary film starring Matthew Fox, Evangeline Lilly, Josh Holloway and the entire cast of LOST series. Dick Ho: Asian Male Porn Star is the title of a 2006 documentary film directed by Jeffrey Lei, that explores the supposed existence of an adult film actor named Dick Ho during the 1970s, which is considered to be the golden age of the adult film industry. The lore of the film emphasizes the fact that he’s Asian, commenting on the lack or absence of Asian male heterosexuality in mainstream American porn. Revelations of his life, and the controversy surrounding it, are presented through rare film footage and interviews with actual porn stars of the era. Its screening history includes: the 4th S.F. Sex Worker Film & Arts Festival, 24th San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival, SinCine Erotic Film Fest, Cinekink NYC & tour, 1st Disorient Film Festival of Oregon, L.A. VC FilmFest, 5th Asian Film Festival of Dallas, 9th APAture festival, Bindelstiff Film Festival, Chicago Asian American Showcase, Northwest Asian American Film Fest, San Diego Asian Film Festival, and the L.A. Erotica Film Fest ’07. Combalimon is a 2007 documentary film written by Raphaël Mathié and directed by Raphal Mathi Thinking XXX is a 2004 documentary television film about the process photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders went through to create his book XXX: 30 Porn Star Portraits. Broadway: Beyond the Golden Age is a 2011 documentary film written by Ricky Mckay and directed by Rick Mckay. Traces of a Dragon is a 2003 documentary film directed by Mabel Cheung. The film explores the touching and history-filled background of Jackie Chan as we have never seen him before. Métamorphose d'une gare is a 2010 documentary film directed by Thierry Michel that follows the construction of the modern new railway station of Guillemins in Liège, Belgium. Errol Morris: A Lightning Sketch is a 2013 documentary film directed by Charles Musser and Carina Rosanna Tautu. Trilogia das novas familias is a 2008 documentary film. Stand Tall is a 1997 documentary about bodybuilding in the same vein as Pumping Iron. The movie centers on Lou Ferrigno's battle with hearing loss and his rise to prominence on the world bodybuilding stage. Bodybuilding legends Joe Weider and Arnold Schwarzenegger also appear in the film, as well as notable bodybuilders like Robby Robinson. La silla de Fernando is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Luis Alegre and David Trueba. GIFT OF FIRE Nineteen (Obscure) Frames That Changed The World is a 2008 film directed by Ken Jacobs. Frida Kahlo and Tina Modotti is a 1984 short documentary film written and directed by Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollenand. Motherland: Tales of Wonder is a 1995 documentary film directed by Owen 'Alik Shahadah. We Are the World: The Story Behind the Song is a 1985 documentary film directed by Tom Trbovich. Yukon Quest is a 1986 documentary film directed by Valie Export. The Transformation of the World Into Music is a 1994 documentary film by German filmmaker Werner Herzog. It is about the Bayreuth Festival, and focuses on the operas and music of Richard Wagner. Hollywood Outlaw, The Unmaking of a Bitter Jester is the director’s cut of the controversial documentary Bitter Jester which was buried in 2004 amidst much scandal, never to be seen again. Directed by, written by, and starring Maija DiGiorgio, this film follows her through the construction and subsequent deconstruction of Bitter Jester, including all of the footage that sparked the scandal leading to blackmail and censorship. Rick Trembles’ Motion Picture Purgatory Decensortized is a horror documentary film directed by Rick Trembles. Building Bombs is a 1991 American documentary film produced and directed by Mark Mori and Susan J. Robinson. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. It dealt with environmental contamination and worker safety issues at the Savannah River Site nuclear materials processing center in the United States state of South Carolina. Open the Sky is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Atsuko Sakai. The Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara is a 2003 American documentary film about the life and times of former U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara illustrating his observations of the nature of modern warfare. The film was directed by Errol Morris and features an original score by Philip Glass. The title derives from the military concept of the "fog of war" depicting the difficulty of making decisions in the midst of conflict. The film won the 2003 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary Feature. It was non-competitively screened at the Cannes Film Festival. U.S. Navy documentary narrated by Glenn Ford. De Tijd is a 1983 documentary film directed by Johan van der Keuken. Star Light No.5 Bis is a 2013 short animated/documentary film written and directed by Cécile Fontaine. Great White Encounter: The Scott Stephens Story is a 2013 short documentary film written by Ted Okell. Never Again, Forever is a 1996 documentary film directed by Pierre Chainet and Danae Elon. Love and Power is a part of a film series written and directed by Adam Curtis. Elegy of Life: Rostropovich, Vishnevskaya is a 2006 music documentary film written and directed by Aleksandr Sokurov. Záviš, the Prince of Pornofolk Under the Influence of Griffith’s Intolerance and Tati’s Mr. Hulot’s Holiday or The Foundation and Doom of Czechoslovakia is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Karel Vachek. The Impossibility of Knowing is 2010 short documentary film directed by Tan Pin Pin. Cubamerican is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jose Enrique Pardo. "Before queers started knocking each other over to line up for Kathy Griffin, San Francisco native Margaret Cho, the original ass-master, was the queen of cock-talk and hardcore queer rights activism. And she still is. The woman who embraces all the letters of the queer alphabet is back on the big screen, ready to attack the few taboos remaining after previous concert films I’m the One That I Want (2000), Notorious C.H.O. (2002), and Revolution (2004). Cho Dependent, bearing the same name as Cho’s 2010 Grammy-award nominated comedy album, covers it all—from her stint on Dancing With the Stars, to Lady Gaga to the culture shock of moving to the deep south for Drop Dead Diva. In typical Cho fashion, the performance toggles between outrageous bedroom antics to self-deprecating tales of an outsider to impressions of her mother’s latest antics (yay!). Come get a “ticket for gaywalking” with the only comedienne who can offend every demographic in our fair city, while somehow making us all laugh out loud. Help us celebrate our 2011 Frameline award winner, then spread the word about Lady Caca." Quoting ALEXIS WHITHAM from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. 7 Notes to Infinity is a 2012 documentary film directed by Shrenik Rao. It is a musical documentary which pays tribute to Indian classical music and explores the universality of music through infinite musical compositions created from seven pitches. Kenny Loggins: Outside from the Redwoods is a 1994 music documentary. Three Days (of Hamlet) is an American documentary film from independent production company TMG, The Martindale Group, based in Los Angeles, California. TMG previously produced "Pursuit of Happiness" in 2000 starring Frank Whaley and Annabeth Gish. Three Days (of Hamlet) covers a troupe of actors, and others, who gather to rehearse and perform a staged-reading of William Shakespeare's Tragedy of Hamlet at the Matrix Theatre in West Hollywood, California during three days in July 2010. Reality intrudes. Alex Rotaru, Director of the documentary film Shakespeare High, in a personal message to the film's creator, actor/director Alex Hyde-White, says about Three Days (of Hamlet)'...jaw-droppingly ambitious and often brilliant... It was such an exquisite pleasure to learn something new about the play of all plays through your eyes. The pressure cooker in which you put yourself and your fellow actors was truly an ultimate test - I felt butterflies in my stomach just watching it. If Hamlet urges his actors to "hold a mirror up to nature", you hold a mirror up to the mirror itself, doing what the French call 'mise en abime', or loosely: 'looking into the abyss of infinite reflections' Future Days is a short political drama documentary film directed by Clay Zimmerman. Cheetah: The Nelson Vails Story is a sport documentary film directed by Stephane Gauger. Reberg and Tarkovsky - Reverse Side of Stalker is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Igor Maiboroda. Chris Rock: Bring the Pain is a 1996 HBO television special starring comedian Chris Rock. This was Rock's second special for the network, following 1994's Big Ass Jokes. Rock was already a well-known comedian, but Bring the Pain made him one of the most popular comedians in the United States. Intermissions is a 2004 documentary film directed by João Moreira Salles. Home for Life, the founding documentary of Kartemquin Films released in 1967, depicts the experiences of two elderly people in their first month at a home for the aged. One is a woman whose struggle to remain useful in her son and daughter-in-law's home is no longer appreciated. The other is a widower, without a family, who suddenly realizes he can no longer take care of himself. The film offers an unblinking look at the feelings of the two new residents in their encounters with other residents, medical staff, social workers, psychiatrists and family. A touching, sometimes painfully honest dramatic experience, it is valuable for in-service staff training, and for all other audiences both professional and non-professional, interested in the problems of the aged. Winning the Chicago Award at the Chicago International Film Festival, as well as being an Official Selection at both the New York Film Festival and Edinburgh Film Festival, Kartemquin recently restored Home for Life and made their landmark film available to own on DVD. Avril Lavigne: My World is a music dvd concert that was nominated for music DVD of the year in the 2004 Juno Awards. The Life and Times of Sara Baartman is 1988 documentary film directed by Zola Maseko. Behind the Candelabra is a 2013 American drama film directed by Steven Soderbergh about the last ten years in the life of pianist Liberace and the secret affair he had with the younger Scott Thorson, based on Thorson’s memoir, Behind the Candelabra: My Life with Liberace. Richard LaGravenese wrote the screenplay. Jerry Weintraub was the executive producer. It premiered at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival on May 21, 2013 and competed for the Palme d'Or. It aired on HBO on May 26, 2013 and was given a cinematic release in the United Kingdom on June 7, 2013. The film received general acclaim from television critics, mostly praising the performances of Michael Douglas and Matt Damon. Pig Business is a 2009 film by Tracy Worcester, a former actress and now an environmental campaigner. It is a feature documentary exposing the huge hidden costs behind the pork and processed meat products on our supermarket shelves, and shows viewers and consumers how they can use their buying power to help create a more compassionate world. The Agronomist is a 2003 American documentary directed by Jonathan Demme, and starring Jean Dominique. The documentary follows the life of Dominique, who ran Haiti's first independent radio station, Radio Haiti-Inter, during multiple repressive regimes. Detroit Wild City is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Florent Tillon. "Florent Tillon’s film begins with familiar but inevitably arresting images of Detroit’s decay into postapocalyptic pastoralism, but doesn’t end there. While most cinematic pilgrims have portrayed the Motor City as a giant canvas onto which they project their outsider fantasies, Tillon has greater ambitions and greater respect. The obligatory urban tour of empty factories and the abandoned Michigan Central station quickly gives way to a contemplative, nuanced discussion of what futures might actually be possible. As we visit with a variety of Detroiters, we realize that most of what we think we know about Detroit is superficial, and begin to question easy assumptions about urban agriculture, urban pioneering and Detroit’s reversion to a “natural” state. While urban farmer Shirley Robinson suggests “a lot of people would go back to a simple life if they had a choice,” outsider historian/pundit Black Monk questions the long-term effect of today’s urban pioneering movement. “Urban pioneers find the edge, but don’t occupy it,” he tells us. “Cities are built by settlers, not pioneers.” Tavern proprietor Larry Mongo, on the other hand, likens today’s young inbound migrants to those who originally settled Detroit 300 years ago. A minimalist but intelligent travelogue that resists sensationalism, Detroit Wild City focuses on people rather than ruins. It suggests that while macronarratives may help us understand the past, micronarratives will describe the future, and Detroit’s destiny will be the product of many individual, small-group and localized efforts." Quoting Rick Prelinger from the 2011 San Francisco International Film Festival site. In the Garden of Sounds is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Nicola Bellucci. War Elephants is a 2012 documentary TV movie written and directed by David Hamlin. The Harvest is a 2010 documentary film about agricultural child labor in America. The film depicts children as young as 12 years of age who work as many as 12 hours a day, six months a year, subject to hazardous conditions: heat exposure, pesticides, and dangerous work. The agriculture industry has been subject to significantly more lenient labor laws than any other occupation in the United States. As a result, lack of consistent schooling significantly limits their opportunities of succeeding in high school or more. The hazardous conditions threaten their health and lives. The purpose of the documentary is to bring awareness of the harsh working conditions which tens of thousands of children face in the fields of the United States each year and to enact the Children's Act for Responsible Employment which will bring parity of labor conditions to field workers that are afforded to minors in other occupations. Mom and Dad is a feature-length 1945 film directed by William Beaudine, and largely produced by the exploitation film maker and presenter Kroger Babb. Mom and Dad is considered the most successful film within its genre of "sex hygiene" films. Although it faced numerous legal challenges and was condemned by the National Legion of Decency, it went on to become one of the highest-grossing films of the 1940s. The film is regarded as an exploitation film as it was repackaged controversial content designed to establish an educational value that might circumvent U.S. censorship laws. Babb's marketing of his film incorporated old-style medicine show techniques, and used unique promotions to build an audience. These formed a template for his later works, which were imitated by his contemporary filmmakers. In 2005, the film was added to the United States National Film Registry, in recognition of its numerous achievements. The Sari Soldiers is a 2008 documentary film directed by Julie Bridgham. The Magnetic North is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Dennis Hill. Prud’hommes is a 2010 documentary film written by Stéphane Goël and Claude Muret and directed by Stéphane Goël. A Crime Against Art is a 2007 film directed by Hila Peleg. Building Empire is a ‘commentary documentary’, combining all of the known behind the scenes footage with audio commentary and text facts. The Idylls Of Kirtimai is a 1991 documentary film written and directed by Arturas Jevdokimovas. The Land Is White, The Seed Is Black is a 1995 documentary film directed by Koto Bolofo. Uku Ukai is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Audrius Stonys. Are the Kids Alright? is a documentary film which explores mental health care for children and youths at risk in Texas. Filmmaker, Ellen Spiro, gained unprecedented and unique access to troubled children and their families, as well as the judicial, psychiatric and correctional institutions. By following several different families, the filmmakers document the results of the decline in the availability of mental health services for the youth who most desperately need it. Orange Revolution is a 2007 feature-length documentary produced by York Zimmerman Inc. and directed by Steve York capturing the massive street protests that followed the rigged 2004 presidential elections in the Ukraine. Hope and Miracles: The Making of 'Living Proof' is a 2009 short documentary film. The Crow Agenda is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jeremy Larter and Jason Arsenault. Fixer: The Taking of Ajmal Naqshbandi is a documentary by Ian Olds that shows the kidnapping of Italian journalist Daniele Mastrogiacomo and interpreter Ajmal Naqshbandi and the events leading to the release of the former and the murder of the latter by the Taliban. Olds won Best New Documentary Filmmaker 2009 at the Tribeca Film Festival for the film. The Last Dymaxion: Buckminster Fuller’s Dream Restored is a 2012 documentary film directed by Noel Murphy. about Buckminster Fuller's 1933 Dymaxion car as well as Fuller himself. The film features British architect Norman Foster, who called the car “an incredibly beautiful aesthetic object” and rebuilt the fourth Dymaxion car from drawings and study of the first three cars. In the film, noted automobile collector Jay Leno calls Buckminster Fuller a genius. Buckminster Fuller's advocacy for humanity permeates the film. Director Noel Murphy said describing "Buckminster Fuller as a car designer would be like describing Jimi Hendrix as a guitar tech”. Fuller was a visionary environmentalist; his lightweight teardrop-shaped car spun on three wheels, held a dozen people and was originally meant to run on alcohol fuel. The documentary explores his other green innovations, including his geodesic domes and philosophical approach to architecture. Journey into Self is a documentary film introduced by Stanley Kramer, produced by Bill McGaw, and directed by Tom Skinner. The film portrays a 16-hour group-therapy session for eight well-adjusted people who had never met before. The session was led by psychologists Carl Rogers and Richard Farson. The participants included a cashier, a theology student, a teacher, a principal, a housewife, and three businessmen. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 1968. Damocracy is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Todd Southgate and Tolga Temuge. El Sopar is a 1974 documentary film, in Catalan and Spanish, by experimental filmmaker Pere Portabella. The film takes place on the night of the execution of militant anarchist Salvador Puig Antich by Franco's regime. Using simple cinematic conventions, Portabella's documentary involves five former political prisoners gathered in a farmhouse to prepare dinner and discuss the problems with long prison terms. To protect the film's subjects from further persecution by Franco's regime, the film's production was coordinated in secrecy, with notices of the secret shooting location sent to technicians and participants at staggered times. At the Edge of the World is a 2008 documentary which chronicles the efforts of animal rights activist Paul Watson and 45 other volunteers, who set out in two Sea Shepherd ships to hinder the Japanese whaling fleet in the waters around Antarctica. The film won Best Environmental Film at the Vancouver International Film Festival. Director and Producer Dan Stone would later produce the first season of Whale Wars. Homo Sapiens 1900 is a 1998 documentary directed by Peter Cohen, about various eugenics methods that were in practice in Europe during the first part of the 20th century. Unplugged: A 14 Day Challenge is a 2011 short family, biographical documentary film written and directed by Kaylor Myers. Cancer is a 1997 documentary film directed by C. K. M. Rao. Beyond The Seven Colors is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Camila Biau. Food For Change: The Story Of Cooperation America is a documentary film directed by Steve Alves. Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore? is a 2006 documentary film directed by Frank Popper, which follows Missouri politician Jeff Smith's 2004 Democratic primary election campaign to the United States House of Representatives after the retirement of Dick Gephardt from his seat. The film follows Smith as he challenges Russ Carnahan, a member of the Carnahan political family and the frontrunner of a crowded Democratic primary, to capture the Democratic nomination for the seat. The movie's title references Frank Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, a film in which a naive but well-meaning man becomes a Senator and fights the cynical nature of Washington. For centuries, 40 million buffalo roamed the American West. In the 19th century, wars between the Indians and European settlers caused their near total extinction. Today, the buffalo is back! Whether riding freely through the plains or bred on ranches, it has remained a wild animal. In this documentary, meet Ron, a breeder, Larry, a Sioux Indian and Mike, a Yellowstone Park guide, all unlikely heroes who, for very personal reasons, have linked their fates to the fate of the buffalo. Half Past Autumn is a 2000 documentary written by Lou Potter and directed by Craig Laurence Rice. The Sax Man is a documentary biographical music film directed by Joe Siebert. Words in Progress is a 2004 documentary film directed by Samuel Faure and Gilles Jacob. Out of Mind, Out of Sight is a 2014 Canadian documentary film by John Kastner focusing on four patients at the Brockville Mental Health Centre. The film concentrates on two floors of the Brockville facility devoted to forensic psychiatry, whose patients have all been found not criminally responsible for crimes including assault and murder. Over 18 months, Kastner filmed 46 of the 59 patients on the floors, as well as 75 staff members. Named best Canadian feature documentary at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, the film was shot at the Centre at the same time as Kastner was shooting his 2013 film, NCR: Not Criminally Responsible, exploring the personal impact of the mental disorder defence in Canada. Out of Mind, Out of Sight was co-produced by J.S. Kastner Prods. and the National Film Board of Canada in association with TVOntario, and had its world broadcast premiere on TVO on May 7, 2014. The War Symphonies: Shostakovich Against Stalin is a documentary/music film co-written by David New, Larry Weinstein, Gemma van Zeventer, Solomon Volkov and directed by Larry Weinstein. The Disenchanted Forest is a 1999 documentary film that follows endangered orphan orangutans on the island of Borneo as they are rehabilitated and returned to their rainforest home. It centres on the three main Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation projects - Wanariset, Nyaru Menteng and Mawas. It is narrated by Brooke Shields. Pele Eterno, released in 2004, is a documentary directed by Anibal Massaini Neto about the Brazilian footballer Pelé. Moneyocracy is a 2012 documentary film about Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 558 U.S. 310,which was a landmark United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held that the First Amendment prohibited the government from restricting independent political expenditures by corporations and unions. The film explores how the Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission decision has dramatically changed the U.S Campaign Finance Laws and lead to the most expensive Elections in the United States. The film describes the systemic corruption of the United States democracy and the consequences of that systemic corruption on the U.S democracy and the electorate. Kili Radio - "Voice of the Lakota Nation" - is broadcast out of a small wooden house that sits isolated on a hill, lost in the vast countryside of South Dakota. It’s a place that’s long forgotten; lying at the crossroads between combat and hope, between the American dream and daily existence on America’s poorest reservation. Yet we find people like Roxanne Two Bulls, who’s trying to start over again on the land of her ancestors; the young DJ Derrick who’s discovering his gift for music; Bruce, the white lawyer who for thirty years has been trying to free a militant who’s been fighting for American Indian rights; and finally John Trudell, an old AIM activist who’s made a career for himself as a musician in Hollywood. Everything converges at Kili Radio. Instead of sending smoke signals the radio station transmits its own signals across a vast and magnificent landscape with a delightful combination of humor and melancholy. Native hip hop and broken windshields: pride has been restored - it really is OK to be Lakota. (Kili = Lakota: awesome) Jai Bhim Comrade is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Anand Patwardhan. Hello My Name Is Lesbian is a 2009 documentary film directed by Minna Grooss. Choir Boys is a 1999 documentary film directed by Magnus Isacsson. Handling Ships is a 1945 British stop motion animated film made by Halas and Batchelor. The 70-minute film was created at the request of the British Admiralty, as a training aid for new navigators joining the Royal Navy. Although never formally released to cinemas because of its small target audience, Handling Ships was an "Official Selection" at the 1946 Cannes Film Festival, and is recognised as the first feature length work, and the first work in Technicolor, in British animation history. Sexing the Transman is a 2011 documentary film directed by Buck Angel. No Friend of Mine is a 2010 documentary film directed by Sivan Ben Ari. Box is a 2013 short documentary thriller film written and directed by Tarik Abdel-Gawad. The Last Romantic is a documentary filmed within the home of concert pianist Vladimir Horowitz. The film contains mainly performances of classical works, but also provides an intimate look into Horowitz's private life. Madame Le Murie is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Petr Václav. Computer Dreams is an award-winning 1988 film created by Digital Vision Entertainment and released by MPI Home Video. Written, produced and directed by Geoffrey de Valois and hosted by Amanda Pays, it consists primarily of clips and behind-the-scenes work of early computer graphics animation. Notably included are Luxo Jr. and Red's Dream, the first two short films from Pixar Animation Studios. The film is an hour long and features a haunting electronic score by Music Fantastic. It was revised and re-released on DVD as "The History of Computer Animation, Volume 2". It won the Winner Gold Special Jury Award at the 1989 Houston International Film Festival, and the 1989 Golden Decade Award from the US Film & Video Festival. After losing both parents to drugs and eventually AIDS, Lemon discovered poetry while serving time. Through raw talent and unstoppable drive, he found himself on Broadway, starring in Russell Simmons' Def Poetry Jam. But when the show closed, he lost everything and moved his wife and two small daughters back to the projects to live with thirteen family members. Desperate for a way out, he turns to the only things he has left, his pen and his past. LEMON follows one man's three-year journey to adapt his life story for the New York stage while battling his darkest demons. It brings to life the anguish of a generation of men clinging to the margins but fighting for something more. A beautifully crafted film that features a surprise turn by Spike Lee and music by hip-hop phenomenons Kanye West, Mos Def, Talib Kweli and Aloe Blacc. The Last Season is a 2014 documentary film directed by Sara Dosa. God on My Side is a documentary directed and produced by Australian agnostic Andrew Denton which follows his trip to the 2006 National Religious Broadcasters Convention in Texas. The 63rd National Religious Broadcasters Convention delegates comprised some 6,000 Christian communicators. God On My Side premiered at the 53rd Sydney Film Festival on 15 June 2006 and was released in Australian cinemas on 2 November 2006. It was broadcast as a TV special on ABC on 21 May 2007. Andrew Denton interviews attenders their opinion on abortion, homosexuality, environmental issues, future of religious TV media and movies, influence of religions on politics, rapture, separation of church and state, fundamental truths about god, and other matters. Opinions of the interviewees mostly present views of fundamentalist Christians. Demons and Wonders is a 1987 Brazilian autobiographical documentary film by and about Brazilian filmmaker, director, screenwriter, film and television actor and media personality José Mojica Marins. Marins is also known by his alter ego Zé do Caixão. In the film Marins focuses on himself in scenes recounting life and experiences in filmmaking, with much focus on Marins' many battles with Brazilian film censors. Marins began filming a second installment of the film called Alucinação Macabra, which consisted of scenes from his films mixed with video segments. Although all filming was completed, the film was never edited or released due to finances. Youth Sports Festival is an East German film. It was released in 1951. Reluctant Prophet is a 1995 short documentary film written by Michael O. Sajbel, John Shepherd and directed by Michael O. Sajbel. Glastonbury the Movie is a 1996 documentary film about the Glastonbury Festival produced and directed by William Beaton, Robin Mahoney and Matthew Salkeld. Texas: 30 Odd Foot of Grunts is a 2002 musical documentary (rockumentary) film directed by Circumstance, Russell Crowe, and Brendan Fletcher. Men at Work: Voices from Detroit's Underground Economy is a documentary and historical film directed by H. James Gilmore. Mistaken for Strangers is a 2013 documentary music comedy film directed by Tom Berninger. The Pests is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Katja Lautamatti and Mina Laamo. Mont Blanc - Gefahr im Gletscher is a 2005 television documentary film written by Rolf Schlenker and directed by Liesl Clark. Painters Painting: The New York Art Scene 1940-1970 is a 1972 documentary directed by Emile de Antonio. It covers American art movements from abstract expressionism to pop art through conversations with artists in their studios. Artists appearing in the film include Willem de Kooning, Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, Helen Frankenthaler, Frank Stella, Barnett Newman, Hans Hofmann, Jules Olitski, Philip Pavia, Larry Poons, Robert Motherwell, and Kenneth Noland. On The Edge Of Lisbon is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Pablo Briones. Us and the Game Industry is a documentary film directed by Stephanie Beth. The Grand Rescue is a 2013 short film documentary written by William A. Kerig and directed by William A. Kerig, Meredith Lavitt Williams and Jenny Wilson In Search of the Edge is a 1990 short film written by Scott Barrie. Live: The Greatest Hits of Side A is a 2003 documentary music film. Commission is a 2011 short film written and directed by Erik van Lieshout. Life at the End of the Rainbow is a 55-minute, 2002 documentary by filmmaker Wayne Coles-Janess about the small farming community of Rainbow, population 500, which lies on the edge of the Big Desert, North Western Victoria, Australia. Silent Storm is an Australian documentary film. The documentary was directed and written by Australian documentary film maker Peter Butt. L'Amendment is a 2007 film directed by Kevin Papatie. The Libertines: There Are No Innocent Bystanders is a 2011 music documentary film directed by Roger Sargent. Astronauts Gone Wild: An Investigation Into the Authenticity of the Moon Landings is a 2004 documentary film produced and directed by Bart Winfield Sibrel, a Nashville, Tennessee-based filmmaker who charges that the six Apollo Moon landings in the 1960s and 1970s were elaborate hoaxes. Sibrel made this film as a follow-up to his 2001 video A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon, which accuses NASA of falsifying the Apollo 11 mission photography. The title of the film is a wordplay on the Girls Gone Wild video series. The Coal Miner's Day is a 2013 documentary and drama film written and directed by Gaël Mocaër. The Butch Factor: What Kind of Man Are You? is a 2009 documentary film produced and directed by American director Christopher Hines through his own production company Rogue Culture Inc. The film, narrated by Hines, was filmed at various locations including Atlanta, Georgia, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Guerneville, California and Seattle, Washington and was shown at a great number of gay and documentary festivals. The television premiere was April 17, 2010 on the gay channel Logo. Christopher Hines followed up The Butch Factor by the documentary The Adonis Factor. Black and Cuba is a 2013 documentary, adventure and history film written and directed by Robin J. Hayes. Apples of the Golan is a 2012 documentary film directed by Jill Beardsworth and Keith Walsh. Afghan Stories is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Taran Davies. Jorge Amado no Cinema is a 1979 documentary directed by Glauber Rocha. Just Like Being There is a documentary film on the American gig poster scene, directed by Scout Shannon. Soldiers of Music is a 1991 documentary film directed by Bob Eisenhardt, Susan Frömke, and Albert Maysles. Greatest Journeys: Japan: Journeys on the Tokaido is a 2007 travel documentary. A - Diálogo Sin Fronteras is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Ignacio Dimattia. Il nuovo sud dell’Italia is a 2010 film written and directed by Pino Esposito. Radioman is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mary Kerr. Melungeons is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Ian Cheney and Thomas Schienagel. Mr. Untouchable is an English language documentary film for HDNet Films, directed by Marc Levin and produced by Mary-Jane Robinson. The film is about the rise and fall of Nicky Barnes, a former drug kingpin in New York City. The film includes first-hand testimony from Barnes himself and was produced by New York based Blowback Productions. It opened in limited release on October 26, 2007. The Cool School is a 2008 American documentary film about the rise of the Los Angeles contemporary art scene. It was directed by Morgan Neville and narrated by Jeff Bridges. The documentary premièred at the Cleveland International Film Festival. Deim Dar El Naeim - Slum zum Paradies is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Cornelia Schlede. The Silver Fez is a 2009 South African documentary film. Dancing Salmon Home is a 2012 documentary family film directed by Will Doolittle. Compendio cinematográfico is a 1983 short documentary film directed by Miguel Campos. Bois de Boulogne (Porte de Madrid) is an 1896 short documentary film directed by Georges Méliès. Kevin Hart: Let Me Explain is a 2013 American stand-up comedy film featuring Kevin Hart's 2012 performance at Madison Square Garden. It was released in theaters on July 3, 2013. The film was produced by Hartbeat Productions and distributed by Summit Entertainment. Standing on the Edge of the Noise is a unique, intimate look at Oasis performing in their own space, instead of the huge stadium stages on which they are more often seen. The programme includes a mix of classics and new tracks from Dig Out Your Soul. It's a one-off live show that they played for a handful of fans in their rehearsal studio, as preparations for their 2008/2009 "Dig Out Your Soul Tour". It is also the name of a track on Oasis's successor band Beady Eye's debut album. An edit for TV was shown on 4Music on 23 November 2008, and on Channel 4 on 29 November 2008. "Standing on the Edge of the Noise" was also a song written by Gem Archer, released when Beady Eye included it on their debut album, 2011's Different Gear, Still Speeding. The Children Next Door is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Doug Block. The Life and Death of Celso Junior is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Panayotis Evangelidis. Jeremy Clarkson sets out to find his favourite car of the year in this DVD filmed at the high-tech testing ground for Formula One - Circuit Paul Ricard. For starters there's a pair of Ferraris... the V12, 6.3 litre FF, the 458 and the UK challenger to the 458... McLaren’s MP4-12C. Joining the action are the latest gizmo-laden Nissan GTR, Porsche's GT2 RS, the 570-horsepower Lamborghini Performante and the insanely fun BMW 1M. Helping me on my mission are tame racing driver The Stig and the not-so-tame Formula One driver Karun Chandhok. And there are blasts from the past as well - with bang up to date credentials; the awesome Eagle Speedster - the modern twist on the iconic, timeless E-Type with its 4.7 litre engine - and an eye-watering £500,000 price tag. There’s also enough in-your-face power to flambé your eyebrows from the single-seater, super-lightweight B.A.C. Mono - capable of 0-60 in 2.8 seconds. Circuit Paul Ricard tests all these cars and more to the limit... Life on Planet 51 is a documentary short film directed by Antonia King. Cloudy Mountains is a 2012 documentary film directed by Zhu Yu. Der schnellste Mann am Berg is a 2009 documentary film directed by Jacqueline Schwerzmann. A notorious war documentary containing never before seen footage from WWII and the Nazi invasion. Emotionally fierce and astonishingly unique, the footage (now in color) paints a startling landscape of the horrors of war and the power of human resilience. Straw Into Gold is a 1996 documentary film written by Barbara Teufel and directed by Calle Overweg and Barbara Teufel. Juvenile Judge is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Meral Uslu and Maria Mok. "Award winning documentary filmmakers John Beck and Don R. Lewis are at it again as they cast their camera on the competitors in the annual "Worlds Ugliest Dog Contest" which takes place each summer in Petaluma, CA. Last years "Ugliest Dog Contest" featured a major upset as a rescue dog named Pabst upset Rascal, a crazy looking pooch that may very well hold the record for most ugly dog contests won ever. This year Pabst and Rascal are back for a rematch!" Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco Independent Film Festival site. In the parched Sahara desert, Dr. Paul Sereno uncovers the skull of a ten-ton giant SuperCroc, the size of a school bus and one of the largest crocs to have lived. Sereno joins forces with reptile expert Dr. Brady Barr for an around-the-globe adventure-packed quest to flesh out this ancient 40-foot croc. Computer animation takes viewers back in time to see how SuperCroc might have lived and battled for its food. Queens & Cowboys: A Straight Year On The Gay Rodeo is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Matt Livadary. The Battle of Britain was the fourth of Frank Capra's Why We Fight series of seven propaganda films, which made the case for fighting and winning the Second World War. It was released in 1943 and concentrated on the German bombardment of the United Kingdom in anticipation of Operation Sea Lion, the planned Nazi invasion of Great Britain. Unter Menschen is a 2012 documentary, adventure and drama film written by Christian Rost and directed by Christian Rost and Claus Strigel. Karla's Arrival is a 2011 drama and documentary film written and directed by Koen Suidgeest. Boston Fire is a 1979 documentary short film directed by Peter Hutton. The Wild West is a 2010 documentary film directed by Susan Koenen. The Next Day is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jason Gilmore. Gruningers Fall is a 1997 film written and directed by Richard Dindo. The Seeds is a 2006 Short Documentary film written and directed by Wojciech Kasperski. Egypt's Lost Cities is a 2011 documentary history film directed by Harvey Lilley. Flower in Otomí is a 2012 documentary film directed by Luisa Riley. Fragments of Palestine is a 2011 documentary film directed by Marie Caspari. Canoe Traditions is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Dalia Perez. "In the polygamist community cultivated by the notorious (and now incarcerated) "prophet" Warren Jeffs, women are a commodity, children are reared to be ignorant, and free thought is surrendered. For a group of teenage boys, the desire for autonomy means banishment from their homes and families. This fascinating documentary explores the heartbreaking losses and hopeful determination of these exiles as they struggle to make new lives in mainstream America." Quoting the description from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Get Lamp is a two-disc documentary about interactive fiction filmed by computer historian Jason Scott of textfiles.com. Scott conducted the interviews between February 2006 and February 2008, and the documentary was released in July 2010. The documentary and its hours of episodes and bonus footage contain material from roughly 80 interviews of interactive fiction developers, designers, and players. Included in the bonus footage is a nearly 50-minute documentary about Infocom, the best-known commercial publisher of interactive fiction. Get Lamp is licensed under the Creative Commons-Attribution-Sharealike-Noncommercial license. Raw interview footage is hosted at the Internet Archive. Get Lamp cases Get Lamp coins Unknown Chaplin is an acclaimed three-part 1983 British documentary series about the career and methods of the silent film luminary Charles Chaplin, using previously unseen film for illustration. The film was directed and written by film historians Kevin Brownlow and David Gill. They were granted access to unseen material from Chaplin's private film archive by his widow Oona O'Neil Chaplin. Episode one of the series was also based on a large cache of pirated outtakes from the Mutual Film Corporation period of Chaplin's career, made available by private film collector Raymond Rohauer. The documentary also includes interviews with Chaplin's second wife Lita Grey, his son Sydney Chaplin, and his surviving co-stars Jackie Coogan, Dean Riesner, Georgia Hale, and Virginia Cherrill. The series gives unparalleled insight into Chaplin's working methods and filmmaking techniques. In particular, the Mutual outtakes show his painstaking approach to developing comedic and dramatic ideas on film, examined in what director Brownlow described as an "archaeology of the cinema". No Place on Earth is a 2012 Docudrama directed by Janet Tobias. The film was released theatrically in the United States on April 5, 2013. In 1993, NYPD officer and caving enthusiast Chris Nicola visited Ukraine to explore the Verteba and Priest's Grotto caves, and found evidence that they had recently been inhabited by humans. After discovering that the caves were used by Jews escaping The Holocaust, he embarked on a decade-long quest to find survivors. The film also features interviews with survivors and their descendants, now living mainly in New York City and Montreal, and includes a segment in which Tobias brings some of the survivors, the oldest of whom was in his 90s, into the caves. The film was shown at the Toronto International Film Festival, the Hamptons International Film Festival, the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam, and the Jewish Film Festival Berlin. Its screenwriters, Janet Tobias and Paul Laikin, were finalists for the 2014 Award for Documentary Screenplay from the Writers Guild of America. Champneys is a documentary featured on ITV. Heaven's Mirror is a 2011 documentary film directed by Joshua Dylan Mellars. Resident Alien is a documentary film directed, produced and edited by Jonathan Nossiter, and co-produced by Dean Silvers. 33 Minutes With Tibet is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Vytautas V. Landsbergis. Happy Birthday Oscar Wilde is a 2004 documentary film that celebrates Oscar Wilde's 150th birthday. Over 150 of his well known quotes are delivered by 150 of stars in stage, screen and music. In Comparison is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Harun Farocki. Sitting Bull’s Voice is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Bill Matson. What Are Pina Bausch and Her Dancers Doing in Wuppertal? is a 1983 film directed by Klaus Wildenhahn. The story of Leon Cooper's -- World War II veteran and American original -- return to "Red Beach". Cooper, a veteran of the battle of "Bloody Tarawa," returned to Tarawa in February 2008 in order to learn more about reports he had read about garbage on the fabled "Red Beach."In November 1943, Leon, a US Navy landing craft officer, helped launch the first major amphibious assault on a Central Pacific Japanese stronghold. Leon is dismayed to discover that this hallowed ground is strewn with garbage rotting in the sun, a painful insult to the sacrifice his fellow marines made for their country, during one of the bloodiest three-day battles in American war history.Cooper's trip is full of wonder, anger, amazement and divine providence as he and film maker Steven C. Barber visit what Leon suspects to be the graves of hundreds of Marines still buried on Tarawa. Follow Leon Cooper's trip back in time, as narrated by Oscar-nominated actor, Ed Harris. A story of redemption and passion that will move you to tears.Look for the new sequel from filmmaker Steven C. Barber,  Until They Are Home.  Coming Soon. Learn more at http://www.untiltheyarehome.com/ Zelim's Confession is a documentary and biography film written and directed by Natalia Mikhaylova. Giuseppina is a 1960 short British documentary film produced by James Hill. It won the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. Production of the film was sponsored by the British Petroleum company, which also distributes the film. The BP webpage summarizes the film as, "set at an Italian petrol station where various characters pass through on their onward journey, while entertaining and playing with the attendant's daughter, Giuseppina." In the 1960s and early 1970s, Giuseppina was broadcast 185 times on British television as a trade test colour film. Excerpts were also shown on Vision On, the BBC programme for deaf and hard-of-hearing children. It was released as an extra on the BFI Flipside DVD release of "Lunch Hour". Tokyo Waka is a 2012 documentary film directed by John Haptas and Kristine Samuelson. Bruno Mars found success initially as a songwriter for other popular artists such as Adam Levine, Brandy, Sean Kingston, and Flo Rida, however his ultimate dream was to be a great performer. Mars eventually realized his dream and signed as a solo artist with Atlantic Records. Pilate: The Man Who Killed Christ is a 2004 documentary directed by Andrew Chater. Buffalo Girls is a documentary film about two eight-year-old Thai girls who engage in professional Muay Thai boxing in rural Thailand. The film was directed by Todd Kellstein and produced by Lanette Phillips and Jonathon Ker. It had its World Premiere at the Slamdance Film Festival on January 22, 2012. The film was singled out in several previews of the festival, including those by the Los Angeles Times, the Salt Lake City Weekly and the Park Record. Film critic Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times called the film "unexpected and fascinating." The film received a favorable review in the Hollywood Reporter, and was reviewed locally by Salt Lake Magazine, and SLUG Magazine This film follows the progress of Green Day from the day they formed to the eve of American Idiot's release, and in so doing reveals a modern success story that has rarely, if ever, been equaled in the arena of contemporary music. Occupation, the 27th Picture is a 2013 Documentary and History film written and directed by Pavo Marinkovic. Rose Kennedy: A Life To Remember is a short documentary directed by Terry Sanders and produced by Sanders with Freida Lee Mock. It was nominated for a "Documentary Short Subject" Academy Award in 1991. The U.S. vs. John Lennon is a 2006 documentary film about English musician John Lennon's transformation from a member of The Beatles to a rallying anti-war activist striving for world peace during the late 1960s and early 1970s. The film also details the attempts by the United States government under President Richard Nixon to silence him. The film had its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival and its North American premiere at the Toronto Film Festival. It was released in New York City and Los Angeles, California on 15 September 2006, and had a nationwide release on 29 September. A soundtrack composed of John Lennon tracks was released by Capitol Records and EMI on 26 September 2006. The film makes extensive use of archival footage of Lennon and Yoko Ono, and includes a famously hard-hitting interview conducted by anti-war reporter Gloria Emerson. The U.K. release was on December 8, 2006, 26 years to the day after the death of John Lennon. The DVD was released on February 13, 2007 in the United States. The film made its cable television debut in the U.S. on August 18, 2007 on VH1 Classic. Barely Dead is a video documentary about the underground culture of Rollerblading. Credited are: Azikiwee Anderson, Julian Bah, Erik Bailey, Michael "Gumby" Braud, Alex Broskow, Cameron Card, Shane Coburn, Jess Dyrenforth, Arlo Eisenberg, Jon Elliot, Chris Farmer, Rob Guerrero, Chris Haffey, Chiaki Ito, Jon Julio, Ramelle Knight, Dave Kollash, Pat Lennon, Montre Livingston, Franky Morales, Jeromy Morris, Mike Opalek, Dre Powel, Brian Shima, Oli Short, David Sizemore and Jeff Stockwell. The artwork on the packaging was done by Andrew Tunney. Teatro Amazonas is a 1999 short documentary film directed by Sharon Lockhart. Midtown is a 1998 documentary/short film directed by Sarah Morris. Born in the USSR: 21 Up is a 2005 British documentary, directed by Sergei Miroshnichenko. Following in the tradition of the original UK Up Series, this documentary revisits a group of Russian children at seven-year intervals to track their development against a backdrop of social and political change. Following the success of the UK original, this film looks at life for a group of young people from the former Soviet Union. The adults here, all introduced to viewers at the age of seven and seen again at 14, were born in a country that no longer exists. Their stories provide an insight into the break-up of the former Soviet Union as well as a reflection of what life has become without Communism. Since filming started 14 years ago, some of the youngsters have left the former USSR to go to Israel or the United States, some have stayed in their family home, but all have had their lives changed. Archival footage of them at the ages of seven and 14, and now new material at 21, shows life in a society that was once shut off from the world. The documentary was followed by Born in the USSR: 28 Up in 2012. Adwa - An African Victory is a 1999 Ethiopian documentary film directed by Haile Gerima. It concerns the Battle of Adowa. The Outer Space Connection is a 1975 documentary film produced by Alan Landsburg, directed by Fred Warshofsky and narrated by Rod Serling. This documentary was the last in a trilogy of ancient astronaut documentaries produced by Landsburg. This film was one of the last projects that Rod Serling worked on prior to his death in 1975. Happy Endings? is a 2009 cinéma vérité documentary film directed and produced by Tara Hurley. Filmed over 27 months, it chronicles the lives of the women in massage parlors in Rhode Island during a battle in the state legislature to once again make prostitution illegal. During the period of filming, prostitution in Rhode Island was legal as long as it was conducted behind closed doors. The expression "happy ending" is a colloquial term for the practice of a masseuse giving a sexual release to a client. Have You Seen Andy? is 2008 Emmy News and Documentary Award winner for Outstanding Investigative Journalism - long form. En la Falda de un Cerro is a 2007 short documentary film written by Leonel Jofré, José Luis León and directed by Leonel Jofré. Sincerely Ethiopia is a 2013 documentary film directed by Nathan Araya. Born into Brothels: Calcutta's Red Light Kids is a 2004 American documentary film about the children of prostitutes in Sonagachi, Kolkata's red light district. The widely acclaimed film, written and directed by Zana Briski and Ross Kauffman, won a string of accolades including the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2005. Installation is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Laura Green. How to Start a Revolution is a BAFTA award winning British documentary film about Nobel Peace Prize nominee and political theorist Gene Sharp, described as the world's foremost scholar on nonviolent revolution. The film describes Sharp's ideas, and their influence on popular uprisings around the world. Screened in cinemas and television in more than 22 countries it became an underground hit with the Occupy Wall St Movement. Justicia En Venta is a documentary film. A Day In The Life Of A Montessori Junior High Class: The Element is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Morgana McKenzie. Ricardo, Miriam y Fidel is the first feature length documentary of the Swiss director Christian Frei. It had his premiere at the Swiss film festival Visions du Réel. The film is a portrait of Miriam Martínez and her father, the Cuban revolutionary Ricardo Martínez. Daughter and father are torn between the desire to emigrate to the United States and the faith in the revolutionary ideas. Marginación is a 1982 short documentary film directed by Jaime Kuri Aiza. Dear Pyongyang is a documentary film by Zainichi Korean director Yang Yong-hi about her own family. Shot in Osaka Japan and Pyongyang, North Korea, the film features Korean and Japanese dialogue with subtitles. The US release also has Korean and Japanese dialogue, but with added English subtitles. In August 2006, Yang also released a book in Japanese under the same title expanding on the themes she explored in the film. Money and Life is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Katie Teague. Love Letter to Edie is a 1975 short documentary by Robert Maier. The film is about actress Edith Massey who starred in many of John Waters films such as Desperate Living, Pink Flamingos, and Female Trouble. The film follows Edith Massey around her Baltimore thrift store, and includes fantasy sequences and stories about her past. Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite is a music concert that was headlined by Elvis Presley, and was broadcast live via satellite on January 14, 1973. The concert took place at the Honolulu International Center in Honolulu and aired in over 40 countries across Asia and Europe. Despite the satellite innovation, the United States did not air the concert until April 4, 1973. Viewing figures have been claimed by the promoters at over 1 billion viewers worldwide, although the accuracy of these figures have been debated. The show was the most expensive entertainment special at the time, costing $2.5 million. Nadie es Inocente is a 1986 documentary short film directed by Sarah Minter. 13 Lakes is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by James Benning. Chikara - The Sumo Wrestler's Son is a 2013 short, action, sport, family and documentary film written and directed by Simon Lereng Wilmont. The self proclaimed Antichrist Superstar, Marilyn Manson is still one of the most controversial metal icons of our time! His shocking performances feature fetish, horror, and Satanism took him to the top of the charts. Featuring early live performances of Marilyn Manson and the Spooky Kids. The Network is a 2013 historical war documentary film directed by Eva Orner. Cinema of Vengeance: Martial Arts in the Movies is a 1994 documentary film directed by Toby Russell. Playboy: Fast Women is a 1996 documentary film directed by Scott Allen. Mediterranee is a 1963 documentary film directed by Jean-Daniel Pollet and Volker Schlöndorff. O Dreamland is a 1953 documentary by British film director Lindsay Anderson. The documentary was made in 1953 by Anderson and his camerman/assistant, John Fletcher, using a single 16mm camera and an audiotape recorder. The film was shelved until 1956 when Anderson included it as part of the first Free Cinema programme. The black-and-white film is a 12-minute exploration of the Dreamland funfair in Margate, Kent and has no commentary but is accompanied by background noises and music. Gavin Lambert, a key supporter of the Free Cinema movement, said of the film "Everything is ugly... It is almost too much. The nightmare is redeemed by the point of view, which, for all the unsparing candid camerawork and the harsh, inelegant photography, is emphatically humane. Pity, sadness, even poetry is infused into this drearily tawdry, aimlessly hungry world." Friendly Persuasion: Iranian Cinema After the 1979 Revolution is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Jamsheed Akrami. Adolf Hitler: His Life is a 2005 historical documentary film. Fox Movietone News: Jenkins Orphanage Band is a 1928 short documentary and musical film. Passport to the Universe is a 2012 documentary film. Soliloquy is a 2012 documentary film directed by Magda Dragan. The Hungry Heart is a 2013 documentary film directed by Bess O’Brien. The Out List is a 2013 documentary film directed by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders. Enthusiasm is a 1931 documentary film directed by Dziga Vertov. Expo: Magic of the White City is a historical documentary released to DVD on September 13, 2005. Directed by Mark Bussler and narrated by Gene Wilder, the documentary tells the story of Chicago's World's Columbian Exposition in 1893. It begins by explaining Frederick Law Olmsted's planning of the fair and the architecture by Daniel Burnham. It also details exhibits by many people, including George Westinghouse, Nikola Tesla and Thomas Edison. In addition to detailing the fair itself, the documentary also describes the Midway Plaisance. Features of the Midway included bellydancing, side-shows, saloons, and a large Ferris wheel. Finally Expo: Magic of the White City discusses the aftermath of the fair and the legacy it left. Janson Media acquired the copyright to the film in 2010. All for the Good of the World and Nosovice is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Vít Klusák. ""Using cars to change the world" is one of the mottos of the South Korean automobile manufacturer Hyundai, which produces 300,000 cars each year with the help of the inhabitants of the Czech village Nosovice. The factory looks like it came from another planet, the parking lot and the huge drab shoebox-shaped factory contrasting shrilly with the rolling green hills that surround them. Once, the local people grew vegetables here. Now, the villagers - employees - must get used to the Koreans' strict operating procedure and perform monotonous tasks in the factory. They spend entire days at the conveyor belt with barely a break. The farmers who used to own the land were subjected to huge pressure, including death threats, to sell their fertile agricultural plots bordering a nature reserve to the factory, sometimes for as little as 4,000 euros a piece. One of the landowners resists to the last and erects a statue made of rusty car parts and a copy of a letter containing a death threat. Czech director Vít Klusák's previous film work includes co-directing Czech Dream, in which he created a huge media campaign to entice Czechs to a fake hypermarket. In this film, Klusák follows nine of the people involved, once more creating a politically charged film that takes a stance against consumerism and destruction of the landscape." Quoting the description from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site. Hungry for Monsters is a 2003 documentary by George Csicsery about false memory, focussing on Nicole Althaus' disproved allegations of sexual abuse against her father, made when she was 15 years old. Muchos años después... Gabo en México is a 20 biographical documenary film written and directed by Juan Jacinto Silva. Caudillo is a documentary film by Spanish film director Basilio Martín Patino. It follows the military and political career of Francisco Franco and the most important moments of the Spanish Civil War. It uses footage from both sides of the war, music from the period and voice-over testimonies of various people. Host and author of international best-seller Cracking The Da Vinci Code, Simon Cox, takes you on an in depth journey through the heart of the mysteries behind Dan Brown's best-selling novel The Da Vinci Code. Lost and Found in Mexico is a 2007 film directed by Caren Cross. Close-Up is a 1990 Iranian docufiction written, directed and edited by Abbas Kiarostami. The film tells the story of the real-life trial of a man who impersonated film-maker Mohsen Makhmalbaf, conning a family into believing they would star in his new film. It features the people involved, acting as themselves. A film about human identity, it helped to increase recognition of Kiarostami in the West. In the 2012 Sight & Sound poll, it was voted by critics onto "The Top 50 Greatest Films of All Time" list. 16 Days of Glory is a 1986 documentary film by Bud Greenspan about the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California, USA. The film has been featured on HBO. Among the athletes profiled are Mary Lou Retton, Greg Louganis and Michael Groß. The Last Assyrians is a French documentary film by Robert Alaux. Olympia is a 1938 German documentary film film written, directed and produced by Leni Riefenstahl, documenting the 1936 Summer Olympics, held in the Olympic Stadium in Berlin, Germany. The film was released in two parts: Olympia 1. Teil — Fest der Völker and Olympia 2. Teil — Fest der Schönheit. It was the first documentary feature film of the Olympic Games ever made. Many advanced motion picture techniques, which later became industry standards but which were groundbreaking at the time, were employed —including unusual camera angles, smash cuts, extreme close-ups, placing tracking shot rails within the bleachers, and the like. The techniques employed are almost universally admired, but the film is controversial due to its political context. Nevertheless, the film appears on many lists of the greatest films of all-time, including Time magazine's "All-Time 100 Movies." Olympia set the precedent for future films documenting and glorifying the Olympic Games, particularly the Summer Games. The 1936 Summer Olympics torch relay was devised by the German sports official Dr. Carl Diem for these Olympic Games in Berlin. The Curators is a 2013 documentary film written by Jermaine Fletcher and directed by Jimmie Thomas and Jermaine Fletcher. Deacon of Death is a 2004 Dutch documentary film by film director Jan van den Berg and was produced by DRS Films. The film introduces Sok Chea, a victim of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia in the 70s, as she confronts Karoby, the man she remembers killing her family and others in their village when she was a child. Karoby has never been brought to trial and still lives in the village where the atrocities took place. In 2004, the film had a fairly successful theatrical release and won the Golden Calf for best long documentary. After Empire is a 2011 documentary film written by Herman Asselberghs and Dieter Lesage and directed by Herman Asselberghs. Congo in Four Acts is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Dieudo Hamadi, Kiripi Katembo Siku and Divita wa Lusala. Outliving Dracula: Le Fanu's Carmilla is a 2011 biographical documentary written by Fergus Daly; directed by Fergus Daly and Katherine Waugh. The Colours of My Father: A Portrait of Sam Borenstein is a 1992 short animated documentary directed by Joyce Borenstein about her father, the Canadian painter Sam Borenstein. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. In Canada, it was named best short documentary at the 12th Genie Awards. Another Perfect World is a 2009 film written by Femke Wolting and directed by Jorien van Nes and Femke Wolting. My World is a 2013 documentary biographical family drama short film written and directed by Sergio Garcia Locatelli. Sophie Calle: Untitled is a 2012 documentary written and directed by Victoria Clay Mendoza. Bear 71 is a 2012 interactive National Film Board of Canada web documentary by Leanne Allison and Jeremy Mendes about a grizzly bear in Banff National Park, who was collared at the age of three and was watched her whole life via trail cameras in the park. Living Statues is a 2013 short biographical drama documentary film written and directed by Mirrah Iañez. Toute la mémoire du monde is a documentary short film by Alain Resnais released in 1956. Lost and Sound is a 2012 documentary film directed by Lindsey Dryden. Space Race: Race to the Moon: Vol. 1 is a 2007 historical fiction documentary film. Chelsea's Light is a short documentary film directed by Bruce Caulk. Madonna Live: The Virgin Tour is the first video album by American singer-songwriter Madonna. It was released by Warner Music Video and Sire Records on November 13, 1985 and contains the concert footage from The Virgin Tour, filmed at Cobo Arena in Detroit, Michigan on May 25, 1985. Director Daniel Kleinman, who presided over the shooting of the tour on video, submitted the footage to Warner Bros. Records, who decided to release it as a video album. Madonna wanted to have a proper introduction added before the concert footage and asked director James Foley to shoot one, which portrayed her with her first image makeover, reciting lines related to how she became famous. After its release, Madonna Live: The Virgin Tour received mixed reviews from critics, but went on to become a commercial success, topping the Music Video Sales chart of Billboard and becoming the top selling music video cassette of 1986. The video was certified two-times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America for shipment of 100,000 copies and in September 1986, it received a "Video Software Dealers Award" for the Most Popular Music Video. Il Loro Natale is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Gaetano Di Vaio. Time Bombs is a Canadian film produced by "Productions de la ruelle". The Words I Love is a 2013 short documentary comedy film written and directed by Thanachart Siripatrachai. A Short Film About John Bolton is a 2003 film written and directed by Neil Gaiman. The film takes the form of a fictional television piece on real-life artist John Bolton. It was released direct to video, along with several bonus features. Walbiri Ritual At Gunadjari is a documentary film directed by Roger Sandall. Down by the River's Edge is a documentary historical fiction film directed by Susan Gagnon. The voice of the Dalai Lama has defined Tibet to the world. Since 1949, Chinese policies have led to the deaths of 1.2 million Tibetans (1/6th of the population) by execution, imprisonment, starvation and forced labor. China's assault on Tibet forced the Dalai Lama into exile in India in 1959. Neil Young In Berlin is a live video by Neil Young, directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg and recorded in 1982. It was issued on VHS Video & later on DVD. Holy Himalayas is a 1953 documentary film directed by K. L. Khandpur. The Beatles Revolution is a 2000 music documentary directed by Rudy Bednar. The Pruitt-Igoe Myth is a 2011 documentary film detailing the history of the Pruitt–Igoe public housing complex in St. Louis, Missouri, and the eventual decision to implode the entire complex in 1976. The documentary argues that the violent social collapse within the Pruitt-Igoe complex was not due to the demographic composition of its residents, but was a result of wider, external social forces, namely the declining economic fortunes of St. Louis and the resulting impact upon employment opportunities. The Declic Years is a 1985 documentary film directed by Raymond Depardon. The Territory of Others is a 1970 French documentary film directed by François Bel. It was entered into the 1970 Cannes Film Festival where it won the Technical Grand Prize. This Is Noise Pop! is a documentary music film directed by Adam Werbach. Rata nece biti! is a 2008 documentary film written by Daniele Gaglianone, Andrea Parena and Enrico Giovannone and directed by Daniele Gaglianone. Silvered Water, Syria Self-Portrait is a Syrian documentary film about the Syrian Civil War, directed by Ossama Mohammed and Wiam Simav Bedirxan. The film premiered in the Special Screenings section of the 2014 Cannes Film Festival. Shot by a reported “1,001 Syrians,” according to the filmmakers, Silvered Water, Syria Self-Portrait impressionistically documents the destruction and atrocities of the civil war through a combination of eye-witness accounts shot on mobile phones and posted to the internet, and footage shot by Bedirxan during the siege of Homs. Bedirxan, an elementary school teacher in Homs, had contacted Mohammed online to ask him what he would film, if he was there. Mohammed, working in forced exile in Paris, is tormented by feelings of cowardice as he witnesses the horrors from afar, and the self-reflexive film also chronicles how he is haunted in this dreams by a Syrian boy once shot to death for snatching his camera on the street. The documentary includes some scenes of atrocities that Mohammed believes could only have been filmed by members of the Syrian government security forces. Guidelines is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Jean-François Caissy. Klaus Wildenhahn. Direct! Public and private is a 2010 Documentary/ Biography film written and directed by Quinka F. Stoehr. Kurt Carr Project: One Church is a 2005 documentary musical film directed by Matthew Crouch. The Anabasis of May and Fusako Shigenobu, Masao Adachi and the 27 Years Without Images is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Eric Baudelaire. The French Revolution is a 2005 documentary film written by Thomas Emil, Alexander Emmert, Doug Shultz and Hilary Sio and directed by Doug Shultz. The Celluloid Closet is a 1995 American documentary film directed and written by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. The film is based on the 1981 book of the same name written by Vito Russo, and on previous lecture and film clip presentations given in person by Russo 1972–82. Russo researched the history of how motion pictures, especially Hollywood films, had portrayed gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender characters. It was given a limited release in select theatres, including the Castro Theatre in San Francisco in April 1996, and then shown on cable channel HBO. For the Bible Tells Me So is a 2007 American documentary film directed by Daniel G. Karslake about homosexuality and its perceived conflict with Christianity, as well as various interpretations of what the Bible says about same-sex sexuality. It includes lengthy interview segments with several sets of religious parents regarding their personal experiences raising homosexual children, and also interviews with those children. The film features an animated segment, "Is Homosexuality a Choice?", in which a summary of the current scientific theories about sexual orientation is given. It is directed by Powerhouse Animation Studios and narrated by Don LaFontaine in one of his last non-trailer narration roles. The film premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival. Bambuti is a 1956 West German film directed by Bernhard Grzimek, Michael Grzimek. Known as No Place for Wild Animals in the USA, the film documents the need for nature reserves in Africa. Power and Control: Domestic Violence in America is a documentary film released in 2010 that depicts the issue of domestic violence in the U.S. as told through the personal story of Kim Mosher, a mother of three from Wabasha, Minnesota and victim of physical and emotional abuse. Finally leaving her husband in 2008 and facing an uncertain future, she succeeds in re-building much of her life, seeking refuge at a women's shelter and forming deep friendships with other victims. Detailing the problems dealt with by the multi-disciplinary anti-abuse effort known as the "Duluth model", it has received a variety of supportive critical reviews from publications such as the City Pages and The Minnesota Post. Railroad of Hope is a 2002 Chinese documentary film directed by Ning Ying. The film was produced by Eurasia Communications and Beijing Happy Village. The Making of 'Ghost Machine' is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Mark L. Cowden. Live from Amsterdam is the first concert film and live album by American rock band Alter Bridge, recorded on December 7, 2008 at the Heineken Music Hall in Amsterdam, Netherlands and released to extremely positive reviews on September 12, 2009 via Amazon. A Blu-ray retail version, along with a deluxe box set, was delayed several times by Universal Republic, Alter Bridge's former record label, causing controversy and the band's eventual split from the label. It was finally released in stores in North America on January 11, 2011, almost two years after the originally planned release date, by DC3 Music Group and Alter Bridge Recordings. Live from Amsterdam was directed and produced by Daniel Catullo from DC3 Music Group and Coming Home Productions, who has also worked with artists such as Nickelback, Godsmack, Marilyn Manson, Chickenfoot, Dave Matthews Band, and The Smashing Pumpkins. Marines in the Making is a 1942 short propaganda film produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer about the United States Marine Corps. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Short Subject, One-reel in 1943. Shipbreakers is a documentary film. A co-production of the National Film Board of Canada with Storyline Entertainment directed by Michael Kot, the film explores the practice of ship breaking decommissioned vessels in Alang, India. An impoverished third world shantytown of 40,000 on the Arabian Sea, Alang also has few environmental or safety restrictions to protect the villagers who dismantle the ships from workplace dangers and toxic substances such as PCBs and asbestos. An average of one worker a day dies from falls and other accidents while others are expected to succumb to future cancers. Tubular Bells III, The Premiere Performance is a live concert video by Mike Oldfield released in 1998. It was released on VHS and Laserdisc in 1998, and later packaged with Tubular Bells II Live on DVD, which was certified Gold in UK. House Calls is 2006 Canadian documentary film about Mark Nowaczynski, a Toronto physician and photographer who makes house calls to elderly patients unable to travel to a clinic or doctor's office. Written and directed by Ian McLeod, this National Film Board of Canada production received the Donald Brittain Award for Best Social/Political Documentary Program at the 2006 Gemini Awards. In addition to being one of the few doctors who perform house calls, "Dr. Mark" began taking black and white photographs to document the lives of his patients, in an effort "to open doors, to open eyes and hopefully to open people's hearts" to the plight of the elderly. The film focuses on three of Nowaczynski's patients: Connie, aged 93 and partially blind, who longs to go back to her cat Oscar; Joe, aged 86, whose arthritis makes getting on a streetcar or bus impossible; and Ria, who at 90, had been a patient of Dr. Nowaczynski for 20 years and had just accepted his offer to have him come to her house. For Ria, it was a point of pride that she was able to come to his office. Following the Flag in Mexico is a 1916 silent documentary film about the Mexican Revolution. The Cleanest Pig is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Paul Wedel and David White. Working On It is a 2008 documentary film directed by Sabina Baumann and Karin Michalski. The Exodus Decoded is a documentary film aired on April 16, 2006, on The History Channel. The program was created by Israeli-Canadian filmmaker Simcha Jacobovici and the producer/director James Cameron. The documentary explores evidence for the Biblical account of the Exodus. Its claims and methods were criticized by Biblical scholars and mainstream scientists. Jacobovici suggests that the Exodus took place around 1500 BC, during the reign of pharaoh Ahmose I, and that it coincided with the Minoan eruption. In the documentary, the plagues that ravaged Egypt in the Bible are explained as having resulted from that eruption and a related limnic eruption in the Nile Delta, similar to what occurred in the 1980s at Lake Nyos in Cameroon. While much of Jacobovici's archaeological evidence for the Exodus comes from Egypt, some comes from Mycenae on mainland Greece, such as a gold ornament that somewhat resembles the Ark of the Covenant. The documentary makes extensive use of computer animation and visual effects made by Gravity Visual Effects, Inc., based in Toronto. It runs for 90 minutes and was first aired in Canada on April 16, 2006. Honour Your Word is a 2013 Documentary and Drama film written and directed by Martha Stiegman. A Music Fairy is a 44-minute documentary about Nazia Hassan directed and produced by Ahmad Haseeb. The dcoumentary was screened at the Kara Film Festival in 2009. The documentary starts with the Anwar Maqsood's tribute poem on Nazia Hassan and then talks about Nazia's childhood. Ahmad Haseeb uses rare music videos of Nazia and Zoheb like Disco Deewane, Boom Boom, Mujhay Chahie, Telephone Pyar & Hulla Gulla Karien Hum. The Documentary explains the death of Nazia Hassan, and ends with her funeral. A Music Fairy is a non-commercial documentary. In an interview Ahmad Haseeb reveals that he has no plan to release it commercially, because it was his school thesis and too personal. Social Genocide is a 2004 Argentine documentary film directed by Fernando Solanas. The film highlights numerous political, financial, social and judicial aspects that mark out Argentina's road to ruin. The Kids Are Alright is a 1979 rockumentary film about the English rock band The Who, including live performances, promotional films and interviews from 1964 to 1978. Conquering Kilimanjaro with Angie Everhart is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Brian Cavallaro. Celebration Day is a concert film by the English rock band Led Zeppelin, recorded at the Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert on 10 December 2007, in London's O2 Arena. The film was given a limited theatrical run starting on 17 October 2012, and was released on several home audio and video formats on 19 November 2012. The performance, the film, and album releases have been widely praised. Hollyweird is a 1999 film directed by Penelope Spheeris. It is a documentary focusing on the making of Blood Dolls and features interviews with many of the people involved with the film. The film has never been released on any video format, although a promotional trailer for the film can be seen on the DVD release of Blood Dolls. Ecstasy Rising, ABC News television documentary with Peter Jennings on the history of MDMA also known as ecstasy. It includes a short history of the drug and criticizes the negative health claims made by the U.S. government. Trans Lives Matter! Justice for Islan Nettles is 2013 documentary, short and crime film written and directed by Seyi Adebanjo. Citizen Koch is a 2013 documentary film directed by Tia Lessin and Carl Deal concerning the political influence of American plutocrats following the Citizens United ruling, and of the titular Koch brothers in particular. The film also focuses on the election of Wisconsin governor Scott Walker and his relationship with the Koch Brothers. Citizen Koch was completed using funds from a successful Kickstarter campaign after allegations that PBS pulled funding initially promised to it. Since at least half of PBS' funding relies on donations, it has been alleged that financial support for the film was pulled because the content was not favourable to the Koch brothers, who are major donors to the network. Regarding the allegations of censorship, and The New Yorker article which helped bring the case to public attention, the PBS ombudsman has stated that: Although some of Mayer's reporting about "Citizen Koch" is based on unnamed sources, the strength of the article does reflect the internal concerns that can or did, as the thrust of her article suggests, lead to intense internal pressures that come to equal self-censorship. The reporting and quotes throughout appear convincing. El Papa Francisco is a documentary film directed by Brian Maya. "Still Black: A Portrait of Black Transmen is brought to life by the stories of six thoughtful, eloquent and diverse transmen. Preachers, teachers, students and activists educate us simply by making their presence known. Each man brings a colorful and complex richness as he describes his relationship to himself, as well as others in his life — the cadence of his voice keeping in rhythm with how the speaker displays himself to the camera. Director Kortney Ryan Ziegler lets the subjects’ words and personalities dictate the images and film effects, and the black images on the white background play on the fact that issues concerning gender, race and sexuality are not and cannot be discussed in black and white terms. Clear voices speak on love, family, passing and sex. The viewer is welcomed with vivid discussions of the connections they have to their bodies, social status and the consequences of being black, transgender and men. With fresh images of rarely seen black transmen, one is left with the recognition of their determination to live an honest and full life and the resilience to live visible lives. Still Black: A Portrait of Black Transmen more than entertains, it gives the LGBT community an opportunity to learn about itself." Quoting ZION JOHNSON from the 2009 Frameline SF LGBT Film Festival site. Get Up, Stand Up: The Story of Pop and Politics is a 6x60 minutes documentary TV-series about the relationship between singers and politics in the USA, the UK, Germany and France from the 1960s until 2003. It was made in 2003 by Rudi Dolezal, Hannes Rossacher and Simon Witter as a joint production between German ZDF and the French-German culture channel Arte. It has since been showed by a number of other broadcasters in Europe, but also by Australia's ABC. The series feature an impressive list of interviewees, including Joan Baez, Tom Paxton, Bono, David Bowie, Johnny Cash, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Bob Dylan, Ice-T, Bob Geldof, Willie Nelson, Roger Waters, Bruce Springsteen, Pete Seeger, and Neil Young. A much shorter, two-hour version, called Get Up, Stand Up: The Story of Pop and Protest, aired on PBS in September 2005, hosted and narrated by co-founder of Public Enemy Chuck D. The PBS version focuses mainly on the American history of protest songs. The title is borrowed from the reggae protest song Get Up, Stand Up by Bob Marley and Peter Tosh. From March to September 1943, Saint-Martin-Vesubie, an alpine resort north of Nice close to the Italian border, saw its population of 1500 nearly double with the arrival of 1200, mainly foreign Jews. Entire families found hospitality, compassion and assistance from the town’s inhabitants,and the Italian occupiers. The town’s two synagogues were full, Jewish children were able to go to school and young people, Jews and Saint-Martinois, danced together in the evening. A total 1200 refugees experienced a short respite from years of hounding and persecution in Saint-Martin-Vesubie. Sadly, on September 8, this protection came to an end. In 1943 Eisenhower prematurely announced a secret peace agreement signed several days earlier with the Italian government, triggering the German invasion of the Italian Occupation Zone and of northern Italy. Some of the Saint-Martin-Vesubie refugees managed to hide locally, but most joined the fleeing Italian army in an exodus across two 2500 metre high mountain passes into Northern Italy, only to be met with persecution and death on their arrival. Through The Fire is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Miguel Narings. "Sam Durbin spent most of his life as the victim of abuse and institutionalization until he found hope and healing at a clubhouse for people with disabilities." Quoting the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. The Genius of Marian is a 2013 documentary drama family film directed by Anna Fitch and Banker White. Europa 54°54`-25°19` is a 1997 documentary and short film by Deimantas Narkevicius. Nefertiti Resurrected is a documentary film. Menmaniacs - The Legacy Of Leather is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Jochen Hick. Persistence of Vision is a 2012 documentary film based on Richard Williams' experiences trying to get The Thief and the Cobbler made. Its tagline is: "about the greatest animated film never made". The film premiered in Canada on 4 October 2012 at the Vancouver International Film Festival. Project 10 - Real Stories From a Free South Africa: Home (Ikhaya) is a 2003 film directed by Omelga Hlengiwe Mthiyane. Revenge of the Mekons is a documentary film directed by Joe Angio. Knabenjahre is a 1989 film directed by Peter Voigt. The Simpsons: Mischief & Mayhem is a 2010 documentary film directed by David Green. Dhrupad is a 1983 documentary film directed by Mani Kaul. Gossliwil, Teil IV is a 1985 documentary film directed by Hans Stürm and Beatrice Michel-Leuthold. Saving Grace: Children and Spirituality is a 2001 documentary directed by Denise Greene. Restless - Keith Haring In Brazil is a 2013 Documentary film written and directed by Guto Barra and Gisela Matta. Light Up Nippon is a documentary film directed by Kensaku Kakimoto. Soldier / Citizen is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Silvina Landsmann. Protected is a 1975 documentary film, narrated by Don Brady and Sydney born producer Robert Hughes. The film was directed by Alessandro Cavadini. It was an exposé of the ill-treatment of Aboriginal workers by white men. The details of what life was like for Indigenous Australians on Palm Island became more widely known when Allessandro Cavadini and Carolyn Strachan recreated the strike in 1957 by hundreds of the Island’s residents even though there was huge resistance from local authorities. Some 22 years later in 2007, Aboriginal activist, and convicted Palm Island rioter Lex Wotton presented a screening of the film to the Film Fanatics society at Petersham Bowling Club. He recalled watching the film as a schoolboy and seeing his father on film. He said that screening opened his eyes to the way "things were different on Palm". He also said "There are numerous things that people haven't documented but this [film] was one thing that brought what was happening to the indigenous people to the attention of the wider community. Dark Circle is a 1982 American documentary film directed and produced by Judy Irving, Christopher Beaver and Ruth Landy that focuses on the connections between the nuclear weapons and the nuclear power industries, with a strong emphasis on the individual human and protracted U.S. environmental costs involved. A clear point made by the film is that while only two bombs were dropped on Japan, many hundreds were exploded in the United States. The film won the Grand Prize for documentary at the Sundance Film Festival and received a national Emmy Award for "Outstanding individual achievement in news and documentary." For the opening scenes and about half of its length, the film focuses on the Rocky Flats Plant and its plutonium contamination of the area's environment. The remainder of the film covers the development, wartime usage and prolonged testing of U.S. nuclear weapons, including the creation of plutonium-239 in commercial nuclear power plants such as Diablo Canyon Power Plant. The documentary is unrated. The rhino is a stubborn “tank” of a beast whose nose mounted weaponry and armor of thick skin are links to its prehistoric past. This episode dives into an exploration of this amazing creature, one that has roamed the earth for more than sixty million years. Trials, Tribulations Sustainable Growth of a Cock is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Vladimir Perovic. Stone Melody is a 2011 short film written and directed by Parviz Rostami. Josh's Trees is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Peter Entell. Beware of Mr. Baker is a 2012 documentary film by Jay Bulger about rock drummer Ginger Baker. It won the Grand Jury prize for best documentary at SXSW. The title is a reference to a sign outside of his South African compound. Mark Bunyan: Very Nearly Almost Famous is a 2012 documentary, biographical and musical short film directed by Jackie Nunns and Angie West. Depression:  Out of the Shadows is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Larkin McPhee. On the Way to India is a 1982 film directed by Augusto Sevá and Isa Castro. Poor - Land is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Filip Marczewski. The Return of Courtney Love is a 2006 documentary film by Will Yapp documenting the progression of musician Courtney Love's second studio album, How Dirty Girls Get Clean, as well as her recovery from drug addiction. The documentary was first broadcast on More4 in the United Kingdom and Ireland on September 26, 2006. Interviews with My Lai Veterans is a 1970 American short documentary film directed by Joseph Strick featuring first hand accounts of the My Lai Massacre. It won an Academy Award in 1971 for Documentary Short Subject. The Island of St. Matthews is a 2013 drama documentary film written and directed by Kevin Jerome Everson. A Balinese Trance Seance is a documentary film by ethnographic filmmaker the late Tim Asch that profiles Jero Tapakan, a Balinese spirit medium. It was one of five films that were made with Jero Tapakan and were considered to be exemplary ethnographic film The film was the first in the series - A Balinese Trance Seance, - the later films were: Jero on Jero: "A Balinese Trance Seance" Observed, The Medium is the Masseuse: A Balinese Massage, and Jero Tapakan: Stories From the Life of a Balinese Healer. At the tender age of nine, Miley Cyrus decided that acting would be her career. Her passion for acting, and singing, has catapulted her into a global teen idol. This inspirational film explores her astonishing evolution-from a Disney Channel favorite to a mega celebrity. Breaking Ground - The Story of the London Irish Women's Centre is a 2013 documentary history film directed by Michelle Deignan. Dersimiz: Atatürk is a 2010 Turkish biographical film directed by Hamdi Alkan based on the life of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. About Face: The Supermodels, Then and Now is a 2012 documentary film directed by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders. Project: Ice is a documentary family historical sports film directed by William Kleinert. The Hunted – In Search of Home and Hope is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Shaji Pattanam. Fragebogen im IV. Reich is a 1984 film directed by Mehmet Alatur, Gerd Roscher, Michael Engler and Dörte Schipper. The Doors - Collection is a 1999 DVD release by The Doors. This Doors DVD compiles three films Live at the Hollywood Bowl, Dance on Fire and The Soft Parade - A Retrospective . The first was filmed live at the Hollywood Bowl in the summer of 1968. The second is a collection of 14 videos, including some rare footage from television performances. The third includes the Doors' last televised appearance on PBS in 1969 in the aftermath of the infamous Miami concert that resulted in Morrison's arrest for "indecent exposure." Dishonorable Disclosures is a 2012 American documentary film purporting to show that the administration of President Barack Obama has endangered lives by allegedly leaking information about the U.S. military raid that killed Osama bin Laden in 2011. The video was produced by the Special Operations OPSEC Education Fund Inc, a 501 group which began a political ad campaign critical of President Obama and showed the video in swing states in the months leading up to the 2012 presidential election In response, the Obama Campaign compared the film to the "Swift Boat" attacks against Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry in 2004. Müezzin is a 2009 Austrian-Turkish documentary film directed by Sebastian Brameshuber about the annual Turkish competition for the best muezzin. The film was selected for the 29th International Istanbul Film Festival and 16th London Turkish Film Festival. Variations on a Subject of Masks is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Goda Rupeikaitė. Death of a Legend was the first of three documentary films by Bill Mason about wolves, helping to dispel the image of wolves as "evil" and demonstrating their role in maintaining the balance of nature. Released in 1971, Death of the Legend was the first documentary to feature footage of wolves being born in the wild, and their first year of life. The film was followed two years later by Mason's feature length theatrical documentary on wolves, Cry of the Wild. Both films were produced by the National Film Board of Canada. Mason completed his third and final film on wolves, Wolf Pack, in 1974. Awards for the film included two Golden Sheaf Awards and an Etrog Award, now known as the Genie Awards, for Best Colour Cinematography. Say, I'm a Jew is a 1985 documentary film directed by Pier Marton. Spiegelgrund is a 2000 film directed by Angelika Schuster and Tristan Sindelgruber. Once I Was a Champion is a 2011 documentary film directed by Gerard Roxburgh. Narco Armas is a nominated work in the 2014 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Investigative Journalism in Spanish. Frida – The DVD is a 3½ hour documentary DVD, that covers the singing career of Anni-Frid Lyngstad, also known as Frida, one of the four members of Swedish pop group ABBA. The DVD was released by Universal in 2005. Brothers at War is a 2009 documentary film directed by Jake Rademacher and produced by Rademacher and Norman S. Powell. The film follows several US soldiers in the Iraq War. The film's executive producers are actor, director, and Presidential Citizens Medal recipient Gary Sinise and Secretary of Defense Medal for Outstanding Public Service recipient David Scantling. Brothers at War won the Best Documentary Feature Award at the 2008 GI Film Festival. The film features an original score by Lee Holdridge and an original song--"Brothers in Arms"—by John Ondrasik of Five for Fighting. The Million Pound Bike Ride: A Sport Relief Special is a 2010 documentary film directed by Susanna Handslip and Matt Reid. Journey with Prabhat is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Samarth Dixit and Jessica Sadana. Naissance is a 1977 documentary, short film directed by Frédéric Le Boyer. A Fleeting Passage to the Orient is a 1999 documentary film written and directed by Ruth Beckermann. Exploring the Reef is a humorous short documentary film included on the second disc of the Finding Nemo DVD. It features Jean-Michel Cousteau in a documentary film he is trying to make about coral reefs, but Marlin, Dory, and Nemo keep interrupting him. An Unending Expanse is a 2008 short documentary film written by Gautam Bora and Jyotsna Kalita and directed by Gautam Bora. The Legend of Bigfoot is a 1976 American pseudo-documentary film directed by Harry Winer. Elvis: Return to Tupelo is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Michael L. Rose. Charlie Victor Romeo is a 2013 historical drama, documentary, thriller and drama film written by Robert Berger, Patrick Daniels, Irving Gregory and directed by Robert Berger, Patrick Daniels and Karlyn Michelson. Al-Nakba: The Palestinian Catastrophe 1948 is a documentary film of Benny Brunner and Alexandra Jansse. It follows the events that surround the 1948 Palestinian exodus. It was filmed in 1996, is 58 minutes long and is in English. Based on the book The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem, 1947–1949 by Benny Morris, it is the first documentary film to examine the displacement of 750,000 Palestinians during the birth of the state of Israel. The film shifts between interviews with Palestinian refugees and the reactions of Irgun and Haganah soldiers who witnessed and participated in the events of 1948. Half Emirati is a 2012 documentary, biographical, short film directed by Amal Al-Agroobi. The Waiting Room is a 2012 documentary film and social media project directed by Peter Nicks that follows the life and times of patients, doctors, and staff at Highland Hospital, a safety-net hospital in Oakland, California. The project includes a blog which features stories and conversations from the waiting room as well as behind-the-scenes information about the project. Frequent video updates from the project are posted on the blog. These videos examine what life is like in an American public hospital caring for a community of largely uninsured patients. The project involves placing interactive storytelling booths in hospital waiting rooms. These kiosks will include the live-blogged reports from people living without health insurance, and a unique online portal that will distribute these stories and become an archive for the testimonials that will highlight the urgency of the national dialogue around health care. The Waiting Room is funded by the MacArthur Foundation, Independent Television Service, The Fledgling Fund, The San Francisco Foundation, California Council for the Humanities, the Pacific Pioneer Find, and the San Francisco Film Society. World Leaders on Peace and Democracy is a 1939 documentary short film. Renewal, a 2008 documentary film, is the first feature-length documentary film to capture the vitality and diversity of today’s religious-environmental activists. Directed and produced by American filmmakers Marty Ostrow and Terry Kay Rockefeller, the film includes eight stories that represent the growing religious-environmental movement. Each story is set in a different religious-tradition, addressing a different environmental concern. Renewal began airing on public television stations in the United States in April, 2009. Hongkong - Insel im Roten Meer is a 1958 documentary short film directed by Herbert Viktor. Richard Hammond's Top Gear Uncovered is a 2009 sport documentary film written by Richard Porter and directed by Southan Morris and Owen Trevor. The Isle is a 2000 South Korean film written and directed by Kim Ki-duk. The film was the fifth film made by Kim, and the first to receive wider international acclaim for his recognizable style. It also became notorious for being difficult to watch, with stories of viewers vomiting or passing out during the more gruesome scenes when the film premiered at the Venice Film Festival. The Isle stars Seo Jeong and Kim Yu-seok as an unlikely couple who develop a love for each other despite the unusual circumstances. BerlinSong is a 2006 documentary film directed by Uli M. Schueppel. Water for a City is a 1971 short documentary film directed by Bruce Moir. Der Fuhrer und Sein Volk is a 1942 documentary short film directed by Fritz Hippler. Earhart's Electra: Eyewitness Accounts of What Happened to Amelia Earhart's Plane is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Richard Martini. Stand Up Planet is a 2014 comedy documentary film directed by David Munro. Kickin' It With the Kinks is a documentary film directed by Cynthia Butare. Looking for Nicolas Sarkozy is a 2011 French documentary film directed by William Karel. The film records the reactions of 18 non-French Paris-based journalists when Karel asked their opinions of Nicolas Sarkozy, the 23rd President of France. It was released on TV network Arte on December 21, 2011. As new research continues to reveal that apes are smarter than previously thought, NOVA explores just what separates humans from the great apes. The Police Tapes is a 1977 documentary about a police precinct in the South Bronx. The original ran ninety minutes and was produced for public television; a one-hour version later aired on ABC. It won two Emmy Awards, a Peabody Award, and a DuPont-Columbia University Award for Broadcast Journalism, and became an influence on later television and film dramas. Pouters is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Paul Fegan. The Life and Works of Yasujiro Ozu is a 1983 documentary film written by Kazuo Inoue and Kôki Takaoka and directed by Kazuo Inoue. Invisible Strings: The Talented Pusker Sisters is a documentary film written and directed by Ágnes Sós. Hill of Pleasures is a 2013 short film written and directed by Maria Augusta Ramos. Andalusische Wallfahrt is a 1960 short documentary film directed by Fritz Illing. Fuck Off Police Car is a 2009 documentary film directed by Bryan Little. Galileo and Raphael guide us through the ancient streets of Rome as we re-examine the great artwork, Popes, Emperors and Kings in our quest to find the facts behind Brown's fiction. Was the great sculptor Bernini truly a secret adept of the legendary Illuminati? Do the Illuminati still exist and exert control in the world today? More than just an investigation, Illuminating Angels and Demons is a visually stunning travelogue of the intrigue in baroque and renaissance Rome and its implications for us today. Der Bauer Bleibst Du is a 2013 documentary film directed and written by Benedikt Kuby. Twenty Eight Feet: Life on a Little Wooden Boat is a short adventure documentary film directed by Kevin A. Fraser. Der Strom führt Eis is a 1955 short documentary film directed by Wolf Hart. The America's Cup 150 Years In The Making is a documentary directed by Pj Panzica. Surviving Japan is a 2012 documentary film about the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami and the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in Japan written and directed by volunteer and resident Chris Noland. Tiësto in Concert is a DVD of Tiësto's concert on May 10, 2003, at the Gelredome in Arnhem, Gelderland, Netherlands, when he performed before an audience of over 25,000 people,the concert was divided into parties with live performances of groups, bands and artists representaror to a country which, in turn representing a continent in the following order: In the presentasion Tiesto intro followed by live performance by singer Andain presented to Britain, Europe, a group of carnival Sanba presented to Brazil, South America, the singer's live performance and band Dinand Woesthoff Star Spangled Banner presented to the United States of America, North America, the Chinese group I play the theme Tiësto in Concert Asia presented to China, Asia after the live performance by singer Jan Johnston, after the live performance of Omar Ka & Fula Band presented to Africa in general, and finally the live performance of Jonge & Beijerink Presented to Australia, Oceania. Jerry Lee Lewis: I Am What I Am is a documentary. But The Word Dog Doesn’t Bark is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Bernd Schoch. Coastal Command is a 1943 British film made by the Crown Film Unit for the Ministry of Information. The movie, distributed by RKO, dramatised the work of RAF Coastal Command. It was made under the supervision of Ian Dalrymple, with the full cooperation of the Royal Air Force and the Royal Navy. The participants of the movie were active RAF officers, NCOs and aircrew, and RN officers, and included pilot Roger Hunter and Flight Sergeant Charles Norman Lewis; the latter of whom was killed in World War II. The performances were generally well received. Coastal Command is notable for its score by Ralph Vaughan Williams. Sud Eau Nord Déplacer is a 2014 historical documentary film written and directed by Antoine Boutet. Mississippi Cold Case is a 2007 feature documentary produced by David Ridgen of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation about the Ku Klux Klan murders of two 19-year-old black youth in 1964 and a brother's quest for justice. Blaue Blumen is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Herbert Achternbusch. Love at a Certain Age is a 2013 documentary comedy drama romance film directed by Logan Hendricks. A Third Version Of The Imaginary is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Benjamin Tiven. Buck is a 2010 documentary film directed by Cindy Meehl. "A living legend in the horse world, Buck Brannaman was the inspiration for The Horse Whisperer. For this true cowboy, horses are a mirror of the human soul. Reared by an abusive father, Buck eschews violence. By teaching people to communicate with horses through instinct, not punishment, he frees the spirit of the horse and its human comrade. Crisscrossing the world with Zenlike wisdom, Buck promulgates grace in the bond between man and horse. The animal-human relationship becomes a perfect metaphor for meeting the challenges of daily life, whether they consist of raising kids, running a business, or finding your flow with a dance partner. What is extraordinary about Buck Brannaman, the man, leaps off the screen in this strikingly cinematic film by first-time director Cindy Meehl. Part guru, part psychologist, the adult Buck, who was once a beaten kid, has now beaten the odds. Buck Brannaman could transform your troubled horse. Buck the movie may transform your soul." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Barack Obama: The Power of Change is a 2008 documentary written and directed by Pearl Jr. Mad as Hell is a 2014 comedy, drama, documentary, historical fiction and biographical film written and directed by Andrew Napier. The Giants Of The Ocean is a 2013 documentary film directed by Zsolt Sasdi. I Am Because We Are is a 2008 documentary film about AIDS orphans in Malawi. It was directed by Nathan Rissman and written, narrated, and produced by Madonna through her production company Semtex Films. The film premiered at the 7th annual Tribeca Film Festival in New York City, on April 24, 2008 and at the 61st annual Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France on May 21, 2008. The film also headlined the 2008 Traverse City Film Festival. On December 1, 2008, it premiered in the U.S. on the Sundance Channel for World AIDS Day. On March 26, 2009, the film was uploaded by Madonna's team onto YouTube and Hulu for free viewing. The film won the VH1 Do Something Docu Style Award in 2010. Nae Pasaran is a 2013 documentary film directed by Felipe Bustos Sierra. From Star Wars to Jedi: The Making of a Saga is a 1983 television documentary special that originally aired on PBS. It is a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the original Star Wars trilogy, with particular emphasis on the final film, Return of the Jedi. Narrated by actor Mark Hamill, the documentary was written by Richard Schickel who had written the previous television documentaries The Making of Star Wars and SP FX: The Empire Strikes Back. Two and a half millennia ago, a new religion was born in India, generated from the ideas of the Buddha, a mysterious Indian sage who gained enlightenment while he sat under a large, shapely fig tree. The Buddha never claimed to be God or his emissary on earth, only that he was a human being who had found a kind of serenity that others could find, too. This documentary tells the story of his life, a journey especially relevant in our own times. Kirkcaldy Man is a 2011 short, family documentary film directed by Julian Schwanitz. Voices Of El Alto is a 2013 documentary film written by and directed by Benjamin Oroza. They're known as ’floating goldmines’. In the fish markets of Tokyo, a single bluefin tuna can sell for over €20,000. But the international trend for sushi has pushed this species to the brink of extinction. In the past 40 years, Western Atlantic bluefin tuna stocks have declined by over 82%. Stocks of many other species of tuna have collapsed completely. Now, it is the Mediterranean spawning grounds that are coming under attack. For years, Roberto Mielgo, worked for the sushi industry. Now, he is using his in-depth knowledge and contacts to try and protect bluefin tuna. He has developed a network of contacts around the Mediterranean sea that reports to him every suspicious move. Roberto’s data enables environmental organizations to monitor and denounce fleets that exceed fishing quotas. But millions of jobs are dependent on the sushi industry. If bluefin fishing is banned, these jobs could be lost. From Croatia to Greece, from Japan to the coast of Spain, we investigate the global impact of tuna fishing and ask if there is such a thing as sustainable sushi. Gene Boy Came Home is a 2007 documentary film by First Nations filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin, produced by the National Film Board of Canada. The film tells the story of Eugene "Gene Boy" Benedict, a First Nations person raised on the Odanak Indian Reserve, approximately an hour and a half east of Montreal. He left home at age 15 to work in construction in New York. At 17, adrift and beginning to lose his way, he accepted a dare and enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. A few months later, he was on his way to the frontlines of the Vietnam War. The film recounts Benedict's childhood, when he was taken from his family sent to school in Ontario. In his teens, he left his reserve to in then high steel construction in the United States. On a dare from his step-father, he enlisted in the U.S. military and went through boot camp at Parris Island. The film combines his recollections of experiences there with scenes of a contemporary boot camp, to show how little has changed in the way young men are broken down and remade as soldiers. Benedict was assigned as a sniper and scout at Da Nang. Pot Country is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Kate McLean and Mario Furloni. Who's Counting? Marilyn Waring on Sex, Lies and Global Economics is a 1995 documentary film on Marilyn Waring and largely based on her book If Women Counted, directed by Terre Nash and produced by the National Film Board of Canada. Sequences from the film were shot in Canada, New Zealand, New York City, the Persian Gulf and the Philippines. The film includes music from Penny Lang, Penguin Café Orchestra, Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois. The title is a pun on Sex, Lies, and Videotape. Soldier Girls is a 1981 documentary film by Nick Broomfield and Joan Churchill about several women training in the US army. Under the aggressive Sergeant Abing are several young women, some dedicated to defending their country, others who seem to have been forced into joining by circumstance. Several of these recruits become harder and colder through the course of their basic training at Fort Gordon. Excerpts from the film are used in U2's song "Seconds" on their third album, War. The documentary In the Mirror of Maya Deren is a film about avant garde filmmaker Maya Deren by Austrian film maker Martina Kudlacek. It is based on the biography The Legend of Maya Deren. The soundtrack to this documentary was made by the avant-garde composer John Zorn. Ein Strom fließt durch Deutschland is an East German film. It was released in 1954. Salvador Allende is a 2004 documentary film about Chilean president Salvador Allende, from his election campaign to the coup d'état which ended his life. It was directed by Patricio Guzmán and screened out of competition at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. Skateistan: To Live and Skate Kabul is a short film that follows the lives of a group of young skateboarders in Afghanistan. Operating against the backdrop of war and bleak prospects, the Skateistan charity project is the world’s first co-educational skateboarding school, where a team of international volunteers work with girls and boys between the ages of 5 and 17. The short documentary film follows the lives of young skateboarders in Afghanistan, directed by UK filmmaker Orlando von Einsiedel. The film team includes cinematographer Franklin Dow and editor Peta Ridley. The multi-award winning documentary film has received over a million hits online and has been the official selection at a number of top film festivals across the world including Sundance 2011, SXSW 2011, Sheffield Doc/Fest 2010, One World 2011, Santa Cruz 2011 and The London Short Film Festival 2011. Awards to date include: Best Documentary LA Skate Film Festival, Best Documentary Portable Film Festival, Best Editing Underwire Film Festival, Best Cultural Film Sheffield Adventure Film Festival, Finalist Fuji Film Shorts 2011. Operation Vittles is a 1948 American short documentary film about the Berlin Airlift. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. A Thousand Leagues Of The Revolution is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Behzad Adib. Marooned is an hour-long fly-on-the-wall documentary which followed the success of the Westmeath senior football team that won the 2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship Final, the county's first ever title at senior level, under the guidance of Páidí Ó Sé. The documentary focused on Ó Sé who had taken over as Westmeath manager after departing Kerry in acrimonious circumstances. During Marooned Ó Sé admitted that managing Westmeath against his former team was "the hardest day of my life outside bereavements and things like that". First shown on RTÉ One, RTÉ again aired Marooned in January 2013 following Ó Sé's death the previous month. Setanta Sports also aired it twice over the Christmas period - 21 December at 21.45 and 29 December at 22.30. Pat Collins, known for films on the writers John McGahern and Michael Hartnett, directed. Lisa, Go Home! is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Oksana Buraja. A Tase of Fame is a 1996 film directed by Miloslav Šmídmajer. Five Ways to Save the World is a British documentary film on environmental issues related to climate change, released in 2006. The film was made by Karen O'Connor, for the big screen and was shot in the English language to reach an international audience. It includes interviews with five environmental scientists and experts including Paul Crutzen, James Roger Angel, John Latham, Ian Jones, and Klaus Lackner. The "five ways" proposed are geoengineering techniques: space lenses in orbit, to diffract sunlight away from the earth cloud seeding with seawater to increase albedo sulfur launched into the stratosphere to increase albedo ocean fertilization with iron or urea artificial trees Since the first three methods do not remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, they would only reduce global warming but not ocean acidification. Since the last two methods would remove carbon dioxide, they could in theory reduce both global warming and ocean acidification. Un regard neuf sur Olympia 52 is a 2013 documentary film directed by Julien Faraut. Journey of the Universe is a 2011 documentary film directed by David Kennard and Patsy Northcutt. Santra And The Talking Trees is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Miia Tervo. The Naked Bunyip is a 1970 Australian documentary film directed by John B. Murray. The film explores sex in Australia using a fictional framework. The Russian Winter is a 2012 drama biographical documentary film directed by Peter Ringbom. Emptying The Skies is a 2013 documentary film directed by Douglas Kass. La loterie de la vie is a 1977 documentary, short film directed by Guy Gilles. In Fair Palestine: A story of Romeo and Juliet is a film produced by Palestinian high school students at the Quaker-run Ramallah Friends Schools in the West Bank. A documentary drama, it reprises the story of Romeo and Juliet in the modern-day context of life in a Palestinian city, Ramallah. Work on the project was initiated in January 2006 by Doug Hart, an English teacher of American background . The film premiered on 19 January 2008 at the Ramallah Cultural Palace to an audience of 800 people in the 700 seat cinema. The premiere garnered coverage by mainstream media outlets in the Palestinian territories, Jordan and Syria. All Access: Front Row, Backstage: Live is a music documentary film directed by Martyn Atkins. American Cycle is a documentary film directed by Fernando DelValle and Baruh Benjamins. DPG Eulogy is a 2005 documentary on Tha Dogg Pound. Me and My Matchmaker is a 1996 documentary film written by Robert DeMaio, Hajira Majid and Mark Wexler and directed by Mark Wexler. Israel: A Right to Live is a 1967 documentary shot in Israel about the Six-Day War. John Schlesinger directed and Harry Saltzman produced. Anthony B. Richmond photographed the 16 mm film. Wolf Mankowitz wrote the narration; David Samuelson was a camera assistant. The USA in the 1930s is a 1958 nominated work for BAFTA Award for Best Documentary. Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson is a 2008 documentary film directed by Alex Gibney. It details Hunter S. Thompson's landmark writings on music and politics. Friends and family provide interviews to help describe the mythos of Hunter and his life. The film premiered on January 20 in the Documentary Competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival, released in theaters in the U.S. on July 4, 2008, and on DVD on November 18, 2008. Abraham and Eugenia: Stories From Jewish Cuba is a 1994 documentary directed by American Bonnie Burt. Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes is a 2006 documentary film written, produced, and directed by Byron Hurt. The documentary explores the issues of masculinity, violence, homophobia and sexism in hip hop music and culture, through interviews with artists, academics and fans. Hurt's activism in gender issues and his love of hip-hop caused him to feel what he described as a sense of hypocrisy, and began working on the film. The premiere of the film took place at the Sundance Film Festival, being welcomed by a standing ovation. It has also won Best Documentary at the San Francisco Black Film Festival and the Audience Award at the Roxbury Film Festival. On February 20, 2007 the film aired on the PBS Emmy-winning documentary series, Independent Lens. Stan Herd: Down To Earth is a 2013 biographical documentary short film written and directed by Bradley Beenders. Only the Young is a 2012 documentary film directed by Elizabeth Mims and Jason Tippet. Le Singe Bleu is a 1992 documentary short film written and directed by Esther Valiquette. The Komediant is an Israeli documentary film of 2000 directed by Arnon Goldfinger which recalls the life, and careers of the Burstein family of Yiddish theatre: Pesach Burstein, his wife Lillian Lux, his son Mike Burstyn and daughter Susan Burstein-Roth. It received the prestigious Israeli Academy's Best Documentary Award, and chronicles one of the most visible families of the Yiddish theater in America. The film was made in honor of the 100th birth anniversary of Pesach Burstein in 1996. It contains rare footage of Yiddish theater from the 1930s onwards and has several guest narrators, including Lillian Lux, Mike Burstyn, and Fyvush Finkel. Danske piger viser alt is a1996 film directed by Mani Kaul. Desert People is a 1967 documentary film directed by Ian Dunlop. Irish Folk Furniture is a short film directed by Tony Donoghue which won the prize for Best Animation at the Sundance Film Festival. It uses stop-motion animation to breathe life into the disregarded pieces of furniture that frequently lie rotting in Irish barns and sheds, showing the process of renovating them and returning them to the homes they once inhabited. The short was produced by Cathal Black under the IFB ‘Frameworks’ animated short film scheme. Lino Micciché, mio padre. Una visione del mondo is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Francesco Miccichè. A Story from Bhutan: The Making of 'Travellers & Magicians' is a 2004 documentary short film written by Eric Blair, Bunty Avieson, Noa Jones and directed by Eric Blair. Over the course of the last century, the US has silently encircled the world with a web of military bases unlike any other in history. No continent is spared. They have shaped the lives of millions, yet remain a mystery to most. Featuring Gore Vidal and Noam Chomsky. Benjy is a 1951 American short documentary film directed by Fred Zinnemann. It won an Academy Award in 1952 for Documentary Short Subject. Dad Made Dirty Movies is a 2011 Bulgarian-German documentary film by Jordan Todorov following Stephen C. Apostolof's life and career. The film premiered at Visions du Réel International Film Festival in April 2011 and consists of archive footage as well as interviews with Apostolof's family, friends and associates. The film also includes never before seen archive footage from making of Orgy of the Dead - Apostolof's most well known film. The title Dad Made Dirty Movies comes from a quote by Polly Apostolof, one of Apostolof's daughters. "Irina Markova, a solitary Russian poodle trainer, reveals her transcendent relationship with her dogs, the childhood tragedy that sparked a lifetime of working with animals, and the welcome isolation behind the red velvet curtains of the circus." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. Behind the Glass is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Gabriel Rhodes. Samosiuk. The Independent Film Republic is a 2012 documentary short film written and directed by Adam Lewandowski. The Rhythm Devils Concert Experience is a 2008 two-disc DVD concert and documentary of the Rhythm Devils 2006 tour, featuring members of the Grateful Dead, Phish, The Other Ones, and Deep Banana Blackout. The name "Rhythm Devils" was originally a nickname for Dead drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann. Hart and Kreutzmann formed the band in 2006 and used the name as the group's moniker. Disc one features concert footage from Chicago, Illinois, and Sayerville, New Jersey recorded in October 2006, featuring all original compositions with lyrics by Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter. Disc two features behind the scenes interviews, sound check footage, and excerpts from various live concerts. Mesa 17 is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Manuel Abramovich. Perdón... investidura (1950-1954) is a 1992 short documentary film written by Luis Carrion, Ricardo Pérez Monfort, and José Rovirosa, and directed by José Rovirosa Macías. Everybody's Child is a 2013 documentary film written by Lorna Hutcheon and directed by Garry Fraser. Gang War: Bangin' in Little Rock often referred to as Gang Bangin' in Little Rock is a 1994 HBO documentary about street gangs in Little Rock, Arkansas. Sally's Story is a 2011 documentary film directed by Mark Andersson. Save the Farm is a 2011 short documentary action film directed by Michael Kuehnert. Dinner at the No-Gos is a 2012 film written and directed by Marco Orsini. Wild Wings is a 1966 British short documentary film directed by Patrick Carey and John Taylor and produced by British Transport Films. It won an Academy Award in 1967 for Best Short Subject. The Matrix Revisited is a feature-length documentary on the production of the movie The Matrix. The film goes behind the scenes of the 1999 sci-fi movie to give explanations of complicated scenes, previews of the then-forthcoming sequels, and interviews with the cast and crew, including the reclusive Wachowski siblings, who rarely give interviews. It was first released as the first and only documentary in the series, but was later included as part of a two-disc Collector's Edition of The Matrix. It now forms part of The Ultimate Matrix Collection. The Forgotten Army is a 1999 documentary film directed by Kabir Khan. The Last Victory is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by John Appel. Perón: Apuntes para una biografía is a 2010 Argentine documentary film about Juan Domingo Perón. It features a number of Argentine historians like Norberto Galasso, and it is focuses mainly in Perón early life and his intervention in the Revolution of '43. His government is described in a brief summany at the end, and it doesn't reference his life after the Revolución Libertadora military coup that ousted him from power. It is written and directed by the Argentine secretary of culture, Jorge Coscia. It is the eight biography film produced by Caras y Caretas. The film includes old photos, video archives, recordings at key sites of his early life and interviews with historians. My Neighbor, My Killer is a 2009 French-American documentary film directed by Anne Aghion that focuses on the process of the Gacaca courts, a citizen-based justice system that was put into place in Rwanda after the 1994 genocide. Filmed over ten years, it makes us reflect on how people can live together after such a traumatic experience. Through the story and the words of the inhabitants of a small rural community, we see survivors and killers learn how to coexist. To become invisible, to stop existing..." Hidden under a rock or still in his shed, Jean-Michel Bertrand tries to disappear. He invites us behind the scenes of a solitary shoot, up in the mountains. Only patience and discretion will allow magic to happen. This film is the result of several years of shooting, essentially in the Champsaur region, in the Alps. Tears of Gaza is a Norwegian anti-war movie from 2010 concerning the Gaza War as seen through the eyes of a group of Palestinian children. The documentary was directed by Vibeke Løkkeberg. The film is based on the imagery taken by people themselves in Gaza while the war continued, with some additional material from the few foreign journalists who were present while the conflict unfolded. Løkkeberg was not present in Gaza during the war. The film was met with strong reactions from Israel and the pro-Israeli organization "Israel For Peace" because the film is seen as a propaganda film for Palestine. It has been argued that the film was only created to defame Israel, and that it has been produced to portray Israel as the world's most brutal military power. Regardless of the motives of the directors, the documentary uses authentic footage from Gaza. Travel Queeries is a 2009 documentary film directed by Elliat Graney-Saucke. Mobutu, King of Zaire is a 1999 documentary film about Mobutu Sese Seko, the long-time President of Zaire. Presents the story of the effort to save the 895th surviving oiled pelican in Louisiana, showing how conservationists, government agencies and wildlife activists joined forces to preserve this one life. "In 1997, Academy Award–winning actor Morgan Freeman offered to pay for the senior prom at Charleston High School in Mississippi under one condition: the prom had to be racially integrated. His offer was ignored. In 2008, Freeman offered again. This time the school board accepted, and history was made. Charleston High School had its first-ever integrated prom—in 2008! Until then, blacks and whites had had separate proms even though their classrooms have been integrated for decades. Canadian filmmaker Paul Saltzman follows students, teachers, and parents in the lead-up to the big day. Freeman addresses the student body. Girls shop for dresses and get their hair done. Boys rent tuxedoes and buy corsages. These seemingly inconsequential rites of passage suddenly become profound as the weight of history falls on teenage shoulders. We quickly learn that change does not come easily in this sleepy Delta town. Freeman’s generosity fans the flames of racism—and racism in Charleston has a distinctly generational tinge. Some white parents forbid their children to attend the integrated prom and hold a separate white-only dance. ""Billy Joe,"" an enlightened white senior, appears on camera in shadow, fearing his racist parents will disown him if they know his true feelings. Prom Night In Mississippi captures a big moment in a small town, where hope finally blossoms in black, white, and a whole lot of taffeta." Quoting the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. 5 de mayo: Un día de gloria is a 2012 documentary and historical film written by Luis Mario Aguilera and Marco Sahagún and directed by Andrea Martínez, Mauricio Velez-Dominguez and Gerardo Tort. My Other Me: A Film About Cosplayers is a 2013 documentary drama film directed by Josh Laner. The Man Who Predicted 9/11 is a documentary television film that premiered in 2002 on The History Channel. The programme is centered on the director of security of Morgan Stanley, Rick Rescorla, who predicted an attack on the World Trade Center and led hundreds out of the South Tower before dying in its collapse. The film was shown on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom and The History Channel in the United States. We the Parents is a 2013 drama documentary film directed by James Takata. Recipe for Murder is a 52-minute Australian TV docudrama film released in May 2011. It recounts some of the history of a series of murders in post-World War II Sydney by women using thallium sulphate poisons. It was written and directed by Sonia Bible, produced by Susan Lambert and narrated by Dan Wyllie. Hookers...On Davie is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Janis Cole and Holly Dale. We Believe: Chicago and its Cubs is a 2009 documentary film about the city of Chicago and her enduring love for the Chicago Cubs directed by John Scheinfeld. It is currently scheduled to be released into theaters during the spring of 2009. Burmese Butterfly is a 2011 short film directed by Hnin Ei Hlaing. The Contradictions of Fair Hope is a documentary film directed by S. Epatha Merkerson and Rockell Metcalf. Skyward is a 1985 short documentary film directed by Stephen Low. Bright Leaves is a 2003 documentary film by independent filmmaker Ross McElwee about the association his family had with the tobacco industry. Bright Leaf is the name of a strain of tobacco. It was also the name of a 1949 novel and 1950 feature film about a struggle between two tobacco barons. The struggle depicted in the film, according to McElwee family tradition, parallels the historical one between McElwee's great-grandfather and the patriarch of the Duke family who founded Duke University. The documentary follows McElwee's usual style, where he gives voiceovers to apparently spontaneous footage, making the story more personal. A Day in the Life of Lolita, the Performing Orca is a 2014 short film written by Ingrid Visser and Daniel Azarian and directed by Daniel Azarian. The Fragile Promise of Choice: Abortion in the United States Today is a documentary film by Dorothy Fadiman which examines abortion rights and access in the U.S. in 1996 which was 23 years after the legislative decision, Roe vs. Wade. Dorothy narrated the film which featured interviews with abortion care providers and news clips, including one of Dr. George Tiller. It is last of three films called the Trilogy on Reproductive Rights or the From the Back-Alleys to the Supreme Court & Beyond Trilogy. Africa: Kalahari is a 2013 documentary film directed by Katrina Bartlam. Fatherhood 101 is a documentary film directed by Marquette Williams. Soy Libre - I Am Free is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Andrea Roggon. Dear Mr. Watterson is a 2013 American documentary film directed by Joel Allen Schroeder, produced by Christopher Browne and Matt McUsic, with Andrew P. Waruszewski as the cinematographer. The film follows the career of Bill Watterson, the author of the comic strip Calvin and Hobbes, and the influence of both the author and the comic strip on the world. Watterson ended the strip on December 31, 1995, and since then remained away from the public scene. Joel Schroeder says that the film is not a quest to find Watterson or invade his privacy: Dear Mr. Watterson is a film that will look to the readers and fans of Calvin & Hobbes to tell the story of the strip and its creator. As we explore the art and impact of Bill Watterson through this unique perspective, the undying appreciation and love of Calvin & Hobbes and the man behind it will be evident in the anecdotes, stories, and memories shared by readers of the strip and friends and colleagues of Mr. Watterson. —Joel Allen Schroeder The U Movie is a 2010 Canadian documentary film that describes the backpacking adventures of Alexander Reid and Thomas Douglas as they travel to the South Pacific in late September 2004. Theumovie won the Sir Edmund Hillary Award at the 2011 Mountain Film Festival and the Rising Star Award in Filmmaking at the 2011 Canada International Film Festival. Ballet Boys is a 2014 documentary and sports film written and directed by Kenneth Elvebakk. Noema is a 2013 short fantasy biographical documentary film written and directed by Christiana Perschon. N-Judah 5:30 is a 2004 documentary short film directed by Sam Green. The Die is Caste is an Indian documentary film released in 2004. It is an appraisal of three decades of the Naxalite movement in the state of Bihar, in eastern India. It examines the role of Naxalites as agents of socio-political change, employing violence. Against the backdrop of Parliamentary and Legislative Assembly elections in Bihar, between 1999-2001, the film portrays the change - over 30 years - in social and political status of the Scheduled Castes; the benefits accruing to the middle castes, engineered by the Mandal Commission and the emergence of Laloo Yadav and the consequent violent backlash from upper-caste landlord militias like the Ranvir Sena. The Die is Caste is thus an exploration of caste dynamics in Bihar and raises the question as to whether any benefit has accrued to the Scheduled Castes or, are they mere pawns on the political chessboard. Description Manufactured Landscapes is a 2006 feature length documentary film about the work of photographer Edward Burtynsky. It was directed by Jennifer Baichwal and is distributed by Zeitgeist Films. I Remember is a 2001 war documentary film directed by Andrzej Wajda. Winter House is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Gonzalo Castro. Soap Life is a 2012 documentary film produced by New York Production Services that chronicles the decline of daytime television dramas and the prospective future of the genre. Frank Capra's American Dream is a 1997 Documentary film directed by Kenneth Bowser. Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home is a documentary released in 2009 which relates the personal transformation of farmers as they reexamine their relationship to animals. The movie also tells the story of two animal rescues. The principal filmmakers were James LaVeck and Jenny Stein working with associate producers Eric Huang and Kevin Smith. The name of LaVeck and Stein's charitable organization is Tribe of Heart. The stories of seven people compose the core of the documentary: Harold Brown, Howard Lyman and his wife Willow Jeane Lyman, Cheri Ezell-Vandersluis and her husband Jim Vandersluis, and Jason Tracy and his partner Cayce Mell. In the case of Harold Brown, the Lyman couple, and the Ezell-Vandersluis couple, the movie tells the story of how they began as traditional farmers working as part of the system that uses animals for food or other human purposes, but then came to the view that such practices are cruel and unethical. In the case of Jason Tracy and Cayce Mell the movie tells the story of two animal rescues they participated in: one occurring after a tornado hit a chicken farm, and the other from the house of a woman who suffered from an animal hoarding compulsion. Growing Cities is a 2013 documentary film written by Andrew Monbouquette and directed by Dan Susman. "Andrei Nekrasov, with directing partner Olga Konskaya, returns to Sundance with a formidable documentary that energetically delves into the violent and bewildering conflicts in the Caucasus, with Russia pitted against the former Soviet state of Georgia, and involving Georgia’s troubled regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Boldly visiting conflict zones rarely filmed, the codirectors uncover damning evidence of Russian violence, incidents whose few recorded images are often reprocessed in mass-media reports as evidence of other people’s crimes (often, supposedly, residents of Georgia). Parsing the complex history of the region, as well as oversimplified cultural assumptions about internecine ethnic conflicts, Nekrasov and Konskaya construct a portrait of a cynical Russia willing to engage in secret wars and manufacture conflicts and media reports simply to consolidate power. With immediacy and passion, but also with a commanding mastery of film form, their documentary dignifies the struggles of powerless people and holds a sobering mirror up to a superpower and its media." Quoting the description from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival site. "Protest, parade, political action or celebration: what is Pride? President of Vancouver Pride and parade organizer Ken Coolen knows what it means to him. But at the 2007 InterPride Conference in Zurich, Switzerland, he meets delegates from countries where a Pride event is a forbidden fantasy. Take Sri Lanka, one of eighty countries that still criminalizes homosexuality. There, rape is used to “cure” lesbianism. Or a man seeking asylum from what has been called the most homophobic nation in the world: Jamaica. Thirteen of his friends have been murdered. In countries like these, Pride is less an occasion for partying than a daring act from which there is no turning back. Coolen travels to Warsaw, Poland, to take part in a tense march surrounded by antigay Catholics. In Sao Paulo, Brazil, he is overwhelmed by unruly crowds and alcohol consumption. But most nerve-wracking is Moscow, whose homophobic mayor refuses to issue a permit or provide security. Coolen is warned that he’ll either be detained or physically attacked. It’s a relief to attend a drag march in Manhattan, but the old-timers there regale him with memories of the Stonewall uprising and all that he takes for granted today as he steers a Pride march half a million strong. This rousing, often joyous documentary asks us to take a moment of silence from our celebration to “remember, you are not walking for yourselves but for the millions of people around the world who can’t.” " Quoting Frako Loden from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival Site W.R.: Mysteries of the Organism is a 1971 film by Serbian director Dušan Makavejev that explores the relationship between communist politics and sexuality, as well as exploring the life and work of Wilhelm Reich. The Stilwell Road was a propaganda film produced by the American Office of War Information and the British and Indian film units in 1945 detailing the creation of the Ledo Road, also known as the Stilwell Road after the U.S. General Joseph Stilwell. The movie was narrated by Ronald Reagan. The film opens with a message telling the audience that the film is about more than the building of a road in the jungle; it is also the story of Scots, Irish, English, Americans, Africans, Indians, and Chinese working together to win the war, and that they are now ready to work together to win a peaceful post war world as well. The hour-length film concentrates mostly on the importance of the Burma Campaign and the Burma Road in supplying Chinese nationalist army and American forces in the Republic of China with supplies to resist Japanese domination, in much the same way Persian Corridor needed to be kept open to keep the USSR supplied by the Western Allies. But the forces there have to confront harsh terrain and monsoons, and are driven out in early 1942. I Am A Girl is a 2013 documentary that follows six girls aged between 17 and 19 from the United States, Australia, Cambodia, Afghanistan, Cameroon, and Papua New Guinea, highlighting issues of gender inequality, domestic abuse, mental health and family planning. The story is told through interviews with the girls and cinematic observational footage as they experience important events and rites of passage in their life. The film's producer and director, Rebecca Barry, is an award-winning filmmaker from Australia. The film is distributed by Women Make Movies in North America, Titan View in Australia, and TVF International in the rest of the world. A Cinema of Discontent is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jamsheed Akrami. ¿QUÉ SUEÑAN LAS CABRAS? is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jorge Prior. The Case Against 8 is an American documentary film, which premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. Directed and produced by Ben Cotner and Ryan White, the film documents the legal battle to overturn California's Proposition 8, focusing in particular on behind-the-scenes footage of David Boies and Theodore Olson during the Perry v. Schwarzenegger case. Cotner and White won the Directing Award: U.S. Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. The film was also subsequently screened at the 2014 SXSW festival, where it won an Audience Award. The film screened at the 2014 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival in Toronto, Ontario and went on to screen within such festivals as SXSW and Maryland Film Festival. The film will also receive a limited theatrical release in June 2014, screening in New York City, Los Angeles and other major US cities before airing on HBO on June 23. Intelligence and the Japanese Civilian was a 1945 film produced by the US Marine Corps, to instruct Marines on how they should handle the civilian population of Japan during the post-war occupation. The film begins by describing the difficulties the civilian population posed during the Battle of Saipan including the famous mass suicide of Japanese who believed the US would torture them. As the Marianas campaign progressed though, the Marines learned to use the Intelligence Division to handle the Japanese civilians, and by the time the Marines reached Okinawa, the ID had become a routine part of the operation. The Marianas and Okinawa, pre-war Japanese possessions, had large Japanese civilian populations at the time of their occupation, whereas other islands, like Tarawa, Guam or Iwo Jima, were either uninhabited by civilians, or only by indigenous civilians. The ID used a variety of techniques to handle the Japanese civilians: they first made loudspeaker announcements in Japanese to coax them into surrendering; once a group surrendered they found a community leader or someone in a position of authority to make more loudspeaker broadcasts to encourage further surrenders. Word Sound and Power is a 1980 documentary film directed by Jeremiah Stein. Celluloid Man is a 2012 documentary film directed by Shivendra Singh Dungarpur that explores the life and work of legendary Indian archivist P. K. Nair, founder of the National Film Archive of India and guardian of Indian cinema. Celluloid Man has been screened at 50 film festivals – one of the few Indian films to have been selected for such a high number of festivals. The film has won two National Awards at the 60th National Film Awards, including Best Biographical Film and Best Editing for Irene Dhar Malik. The film was released in India on 3 May 2013 to coincide with the centenary of Indian cinema. Unexpected is an Italian 2005 documentary film written and directed by Domenico Distilo. Distilo's diploma film from Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia, Unexpected is a documentary on the demand for political asylum in Italy. It was screened in 2005 at the Festival dei Popoli in Florence, in 2006 at Berlinale, an Alicante Film Festival, where the movie won the prize as best documentary, at the Arcipelago Film Festival in Rome, where it won the jury's special mention, at the El ojo cojo festival in Madrid, at the Unheard Voices festival in London and many other minor festivals. Poet Erri De Luca composed a poem for the movie entitled Them. Indies Under Fire: The Battle for the American Bookstore is an American documentary film which chronicles the difficulties faced by independent bookstores in the information economy. The Palo Alto based Printers Inc. Bookstore which closed in 2001 is the primary focus of the film. It also explores the impact of Borders moving into two small towns filled with independent bookstores: Capitola, California and Santa Cruz, California. Director Jacob Bricca stated that he was inspired to make the documentary in response to the closing of Printers Inc. Bookstore: "I took the [store's closing] very personally [...] I grew up in Palo Alto and spent many hours reading and hanging out at Printers Inc. I saw the strong connection the community had to the bookstore and, like others in the film, was very distressed at its closing." Bellissime 2 is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Giovanna Gagliardo. Turkish Kraut is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Anna Hepp. Djiarama is a Spanish 2007 documentary film. Top Spin is a 2010 documentary short biographical film directed by Sara Newens and Mina T. Son. Revolutionary Memories of Bahman Who Loved Leila is a 2011 short film directed by Farahnaz Sharifi. People of a Feather is 2011 documentary film written by Community of Sanikiluaq, Joel Heath, Dinah Kavik, Johnny Kudluarok and directed by Joel Heath. Make Hummus Not War is a 2012 historical comedy documentary film directed by Trevor Graham. Shotgun Freeway is a documentary film directed by Morgan Neville and Harry Pallenberg. Imperfect Journey is a 1994 Ethiopian documentary film directed by Haile Gerima. Reverberlin is a 2006 documentary film directed by Michael Snow. Rémi Gaillard fait n'importe quoi!: le roi de la farce is a 2011 comedy documentary film written and directed by Julien Carpentier. Marty on Film is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Jeffrey Schwarz. Woman on the Hilltop is a 2012 short adventure fantasy documentary family film directed by Cássio Pereira Dos Santos. In Glorious Mud Green Man is a 2012 film directed by Joe Fenstermaker. Viagem à Expo is a 1998 documentary film directed by João Pedro Rodrigues. "Being a man means demonstrating that you aren’t weak—which means showing that you are not female, which means that you can’t be seen as gay. A powerful and intimate look at how popular pressures around gender and sexuality are shaping the lives of American youth today." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Beer Wars is a 2009 documentary film about the American beer industry. In particular, it covers the differences between large corporate breweries, namely Anheuser-Busch, the Miller Brewing Company, and the Coors Brewing Company opposed to smaller breweries like Dogfish Head Brewery, Stone Brewing Co., and other producers of craft beer. Also covered is how advertising and lobbyists are used to control the beer market, implying that these things harm competition and consumer choice. Throughout the film there is a theme that the smallest breweries have next to no chance to compete due to the sheer volume of advertising and outdated beer distribution laws. The original laws demanded a three tier system to separate the powers of selling beer. The law demands that the beer brewer cannot deliver directly to the retailer, supposedly creating a separation of powers resembling the US government's congress, judicial, and executive branches. The film claims these laws are now inhibiting growth of smaller brewers and therefore allowing the largest brewers to maintain an oligopoly on beer. The film was written, produced, narrated, and directed by Anat Baron, former head of Mike's Hard Lemonade. Maracatu is a 2013 short documentary film directed by André Szilágyi and Gustavo Raulino. Riding The Gale is a documentary film produced by Kim Batterham and Genni Batterham. Saba is a 2006 short documentary film directed by Gregorio Graziosi and Thereza Menezes. Trolleybus City is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Giedre Beinoriute. The Principle is a 2014 American documentary film produced by Rick Delano and Robert Sungenis questioning the Copernican principle and discussing geocentricism. The film opened in Chicago on October 24, 2014. The film is narrated by Kate Mulgrew and features scientists such as Lawrence M. Krauss and Michio Kaku. Cuban Song is a 2007 documentary film written by Fernand Bélanger and directed by Yves Angrignon, Fernand Bélanger and Louise Dugal. A married couple attempt to walk, paddle and ski under their own power from Seattle to the Aleutians along the wild and remote northwest coast of North America. This documentary was filmed with a tiny hand held video camera by the adventures as they traveled through northern Washington, British Columbia and Alaska. Experience this modern adventure through their eyes as they encounter breathtaking scenery, harsh weather, amazing wildlife, starvation and danger. This modern adventure demonstrates that the most significant aspect of a journey is not reaching the final destination but how the journey changes the trajectory of the rest of a person's life. "Jonathan’s Return" examines the experience of a young man diagnosed with schizophrenia as he migrates between institutional and national mental health contexts: growing up as a teenager in the U.S.; serving in the Israeli Army (where he is treated with suspicion); and returning to the U.S. to secure treatment. At each point, we see how different cultural frameworks inform Jonathan’s experience. Electric Boogaloo: The Wild, Untold Story of Cannon Films is a 2014 Australian documentary about The Cannon Group. Comstock Films has created a unique film series that explores sexual relationships among couples. Each film focuses on one couple and begins with an intimate interview that sets up the background of the couple's relationship: how they met, the basis of their intimacy, what attracts them sexually to one another, and how they share their innermost desires and fantasies. The camera then turns to an intimate lovemaking session, recording in detail the passion and eroticism that exists between the two. Coverage is explicit, but not provocative; it allows viewers to share in the couple's healthy, passionate, romantic relationship and to experience first hand the erotic intimacy of their lovemaking. Damon and Hunter: Doing it Together features the first gay relationship in the series. Damon and Hunter are two adult film stars on the rise, but are also real-life lovers. The film explores the details of their romantic and passionate personal relationship through the revealing interview and the erotic lovemaking session that follows. Songs of War is a 2010 documentary film directed by Tristan Chytroschek. Katy Perry: Part of Me is a 2012 3D autobiographical documentary film on Katy Perry. It was directed by Dan Cutforth and Jane Lipsitz and released in the United States, Canada, the UK, and Ireland on July 5, 2012. The Barbershop is an 1894 documentary short film directed by William Dickson and William Heise. To Dance Like a Man is a documentary film directed by Sylvie Collier. Assaulted: Civil Rights Under Fire is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kris Koenig. Heroes Behind the Badge is a documentary film directed by Wayne Derrick. Kenny Chesney: Summer in 3D is a 2010 documentary film written by Holly Gleason and directed by Joe Thomas. Shut Up, Little Man! is the title of audio vérité recordings of two argumentative and violent alcoholics, Peter J. Haskett and Raymond Huffman in San Francisco. Bananafish magazine arranged for a commercial release of the tapes in 1992. The recordings were made by "Eddie Lee Sausage" and "Mitchell D.", who lived in a bright pink apartment building dubbed the "Pepto Bismol Palace" in San Francisco's Lower Haight district. Eddie Lee and Mitchell moved into the apartment in 1987, and discovered that their neighbors, Haskett and Huffman, argued nearly constantly, with Peter often shouting "shut up, little man!" at Ray. Eddie and Mitchell began tape recording the arguments, and distributing copies among their friends. Eddie Lee and Mitchell sometimes goaded Ray and Peter with prank telephone calls. In 1992, Huffman died of a heart attack brought on by colon cancer, pancreatitis, and alcoholism. Haskett died in 1996 of liver problems due to alcoholism. Our Bad Children is a 1992 documentary film directed by Karl Heinz Lotz. Mara y Osmey is a 2007 documentary and short film written by Jorge Orozco and Angel Urrutia and directed by Diego Arredondo. Under the Scares is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Steve Villeneuve. Ballet Victoria is currently in its seventh year of operations, struggling to stay alive. This is a story on how a young artistic dance troupe based in Victoria, British Colombia stays alive in our tough economic times, and the joys and hardships of keeping alive an artistic dream. Sweet 16 is a 2012 Documentary, Biographical, Drama and Family Film written by Isabelle DePelteau and directed by Dan Shannon. The documentary Darfur Diaries: Message from Home features interviews with many victims of the devastating genocide taking place in the area. The filmmakers seek to shine some light on this dark chapter in human history, encouraging people to make a great effort for humanitarian relief in besieged Darfur. Dr. Reineger, a famous neuropsychologist, has become convinced that a twin girl named Anna has a rare form of Autism called Asperger's Syndrome, rendering her unable to cope with reality. As for her blind sister, Sarah, the doctor cannot say for sure why her imaginary visions map so close to Anna's. At home, unable to face reality, their father leaves the family. To escape the pain, the girls sink deeper and deeper into their imagination. When a major earthquake takes their mother's life, Reineger gets more involved with helping the now-orphaned twins, while struggling with his realization that the girls seem to be capable of prophetic visions. The girls escape the doctor's institution and a subsequent search finds no trace of them. Have they transcended the physical realm? A mixture of live action, stop motion animation and other techniques makes this film a fantastic journey into the realm of imagination. Noel Field—The Fictitious Spy is a 1996 documentary film directed by Werner Schweizer. Julie and Carol at Carnegie Hall is an American musical comedy television showcase starring Julie Andrews and Carol Burnett, broadcast on CBS on June 11, 1962. William and the Windmill is a 2013 drama biography documentary film directed by Ben Nabors. We Will See Tomorrow is a 2012 biographical, historical, music documentary film directed by Yuliya Tikhonova. Only When I Dance is a 2009 documentary film directed by Beadie Finzi. Satya: A Prayer for the Enemy is a 1995 short documentary film directed by Ellen Bruno. Exile in Sarajevo is a 1998 Australian documentary film directed by Tahir Cambis and Alma Sahbaz, in which a Bosnian Australian returns to his homeland to record the impact the siege of Sarajevo on its inhabitants. It won the 1998 International Emmy for Documentaries. The Making of a Legend: Gone with the Wind is a 1988 documentary outlining the successes and challenges of the casting, filming, and legacy of the 1939 film Gone with the Wind, from concept to finished product. The documentary focuses on David O. Selznick from the time of the book's publication to the Academy Awards ceremony of 1940. Included are interviews with many of the crew and office personnel involved in making the film. Producer David O. Selznick struggled to control his project, working with three directors along the way--George Cukor, Victor Fleming and Sam Wood. Each had their own vision and the strong-willed men often clashed. The Making of a Legend brings up many of the "what ifs?" that arose as different scenarios were discussed. Among these were the possibilities of Errol Flynn and Gary Cooper as Rhett Butler. The Bag is a 2011 short, documentary film directed by Thet Su Hlaing. Dealers Among Dealers is a 1995 documentary film directed by Gaylen Ross. The Philosopher Kings is a 2009 documentary film directed by Patrick Shen, and produced by Greg Bennick, about custodial workers at major U.S. universities and their lives. Filming took place at Cornish College of the Arts; UC Berkeley; Duke University; University of Florida; Princeton University, for the section about Josue Lajeunesse; the California Institute of Technology; and Cornell University. The film premiered at Silverdocs in June 2009 and was shown at the SF DocFest film festival at The Roxie in San Francisco in October 2009. Agnus Dei is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Alejandra Sánchez. Catch: The Hold Not Taken is a 2005 feature documentary film that contrasts the billion dollar industry of professional wrestling with its humble roots in Lancashire, England, where the original tradition struggles to survive. The documentary examines wrestling's exile from the commercial world of ‘real’ sports and looks at Catch’s clear relationship with the growing modern phenomenon of full contact fighting. Chagall is a 1963 short documentary film directed by Lauro Venturi. It won an Academy Award at the 36th Academy Awards in 1964 for Documentary Short Subject. Hype! is a documentary directed by Doug Pray about the popularity of grunge rock in the early to mid-1990s United States. It incorporates interviews and rare concert footage to trace the steps of grunge, from its subversive inception in neighborhood basements, to its explosion as a pop culture phenomenon. Hype! shows grunge from the point of view of people within the grunge scene, and attempts to dispel some of the myths of the genre promulgated by media hype, hence the title. The movie generally portrays the latter faction in a satirical way, though acknowledges that media hype helped to propel some of these obscure bands to fame, albeit briefly. Bosnia Diaries is an independent Portuguese documentary directed by Joaquim Sapinho, produced at Rosa Filmes, which had its world premiere in 2005, at the Pusan International Film Festival. The film narrates Joaquim Sapinho's experience in Bosnia during and after the Yugoslav Wars. Diabetes: Life’s Journey is a 2013 documentary film directed by Carlos V. Leal. The Terrestrials is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by René Daalder. How To Begin A Film About Javier Aguirre is a 2013 documentary film written by Antonio Peláez Barceló and directed by Antonio Peláez Barceló. Family Gathering is a 1988 American short documentary film by Lise Yasui, exploring three generations of her Japanese-American family, from their immigration to Oregon in the early 20th century through their imprisonment in internment camps during World War II. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. South of the Border with Disney is a 1942 Disney short documentary. It was shot in the same occasion Saludos Amigos was, when Walt Disney and a group of eighteen artists, musicians and writers went to South America looking for inspirations for a movie. While Saludos Amigos is the result of this voyage, alternating animated shorts to the sequences from the travel that inspired them, South of the Border with Disney is more of a behind-the-scenes documentary showing only the travel and the genesis of cartoons not only for Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros, but also some others used in later occasions. The most notable example is a female Armadillo used for a 1943 Pluto cartoon, Pluto and the Armadillo. Film also includes some pencil test animation. In 2000, South of the Border with Disney was released on the Gold Classic Collection DVD of Saludos Amigos as an extra, and it was released again as a bonus feature on the 2008 Saludos Amigos/The Three Caballeros "Classic Caballero Collection". L'Oreal Summer Music Mania is a 1999 music documentary film. BP (Pushing the Boundaries) is a 1997 documentary short film directed by Brian Nash. San Clemente is a 1980 documentary film directed and written by Raymond Depardon. El Inmigrante is a 2005 documentary directed and written by brothers David and John Eckenrode along with John Sheedy, about immigrant deaths along the U.S.-Mexico border. The film documents the story of the fatal encounter between Mexican migrant Eusebio de Haro Espinosa and elderly Texan Sam Blackwood, close to Blackwood’s property near the international border. Raja Sarajevo is a 1994 documentary film directed by Erik Gandini. Les Murs de Sable is a documentary about Italian Prisoners Of War in the Hereford Camp, Texas during World War II. Me & You is a 2012 animation documentary drama family and short film directed by Mike Rauch and Tim Rauch. Felix Austria! is a 2013 Documentary,Biographical and History film directed by Christine Beebe. Champ Of The Champ is a 2013 directed by Mahmoud Kaabour. Beyond Words is a 1997 documentary film directed by Louis van Gasteren. Shot in India partly in 1967 in 35mm film and partly thirty years later in 1997 in video, Beyond Words is one of only three or four films ever shot of the silent master Meher Baba that include synchronized sound and the only film shot of him in color 35mm. In the film Van Gasteren deftly interviews Meher Baba on finding God within the self, and questions him on drugs and cinema. Meher Baba's silent gestures are interpreted in English by his disciple Eruch Jessawala. It was one of the last films and by far the most professional ever shot of Baba, with cinematography by Jan de Bont. The Meher Baba footage in Beyond Words was originally shot for a feature film Van Gasteren was making in the 1960s, titled Nema Aviona Za Zagreb. The film stalled in 1969 and remained unfinished for decades. Although Gasteren did not show the 1967 footage of Baba for 30 years, he allowed Pete Townshend of The Who to include two still frames from it inside the gatefold cover of his 1972 Meher Baba tribute album Who Came First. Love beyond frontiers - Made in Japan is a 1996 Dutch documentary film by the director Puck de Leeuw. The documentary tells the story of two Dutch women and one Flemish woman, living in Japan with their Japanese husbands and coping with their new way of life. The documentary is part 1 of the series 'Love beyond frontiers'. The other documentary film in this series is part 2, 'Love beyond frontiers; made in Africa'. Part 3, 'Love beyond frontiers; made in USA' was never made. Motown High is a documentary by Canadian director Barbara Hager about a group of talented Canadian high school students who develop a musical bond with their idol, Motown diva Martha Reeves, after they meet her on a school band trip to Detroit. The documentary was the opening film at the 2008 Victoria Film Festival. The documentary was shot over a two-year period starting in April 2005 when the Vic High R&B Band first met Martha after she accepted an invitation from Victoria High School band teacher Eric Emde to meet the students in Detroit. Ms. Reeves was so impressed by the student's dedication to the Motown sound, that she decided to mentor them after seeing them perform at Northwestern High School in Detroit. Two months after meeting Martha in Detroit, the Canadian students invited her to Victoria. She accepted and spent three days with the Vic High R&B Band—presenting a Motown workshop, revealing stories about her life as a Motown star and joining them on stage at a local nightclub. A year later, Martha was invited to headline the Victoria International Jazz Festival and she immediately called Eric to see if the students would perform with her. Launderette is a short film directed by Bertie Telezynski. Spark: A Burning Man Story is a 2013 documentary biography action drama film directed by Steve Brown and Jessie Deeter. Honey Day is a 2012 short documentary biography film directed by Jay Buim. Children of the Sea is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Annabel Verbeke. Hardcore Norfolk: A Story of Rock 'n' Roll Survival is 2011 documentary, biography, music film directed by Debra Persons and Andrea Rizzo. Nickel City Smiler chronicles a refugee’s fight for survival and hope in the American rustbelt. In Burma, Smiler Greely fought against the brutal military government, who attacked, tortured, raped and murdered thousands of the country’s ethnic minorities. After spending more than 20 years in the confinement of a refugee camp, Smiler and his family were selected for resettlement in the United States and assigned to live in Buffalo, New York. Nickel City Smiler documents the struggles Smiler’s family and the refugee community encounter on the streets of one of America’s poorest cities. Forced to fight against poverty, violence and bureaucracy, Smiler battles for the hope and hearts of his people. Mudanza is a film written and directed by Daniel Kvitko. A River Tamed is a documentary film directed by Becky McMillen. Head Wind is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Mohammad Rasoulof. Typeface is an independent documentary film, produced by Kartemquin Films, about visual culture, technology and graphic design, centered on the Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum in Two Rivers, Wisconsin. Typeface the film focuses on a rural Midwestern museum and print shop where international artists meet retired craftsmen and together navigate the convergence of modern design and traditional technique. Directed by Justine Nagan, it was released in 2009 after two sold-out sneak previews at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, MN. Its international premiere was at the Breda International Film Festival in The Netherlands. Since that time, the film has toured around the world for screenings in select theatres, museums, universities and film festivals, including the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, The Alamo Drafthouse Cinema in Austin, a sold-out week run at the Gene Siskel Film Center in Chicago, and the Denver Art Museum in Denver. Musician Josh Ritter provided the film’s soundtrack. Typeface won “Best Documentary” at the Flyway Film Festival in October 2009. The film was a 2010 Regional Emmy nominee for Best Documentary. Beethoven: Missa Solemnis is a 1996 documentary music film We the Owners: Employees Expanding the American Dream is a documentary, historical fiction, biographical film directed by David Romero. Patio is a 2013 short documentary crime fiction film written and directed by Aly Muritiba. First Edition is a 1977 American short documentary film directed by Helen Whitney. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Truth in 24 is a 2008 documentary film directed by Keith Cossrow and Bennett Visltear detailing Audi's preparation for the 2008 24 Hours of Le Mans. The team is followed through several races prior to Le Mans, including the 12 Hours of Sebring and the 1000km of Monza. Neither race results in victory for Audi heading into Le Mans. The focus shifts to Le Mans itself, documenting the buildup to the race and the ultimate result of the race. Numerous Audi officials and drivers are interviewed through the film, including the eventual winning team of Allan McNish, Dindo Capello, and Tom Kristensen. Row Hard No Excuses is a 2007 sports documentary adventure film written and directed by Luke Wolbach. Document: Haino Keiji is a 2012 documentary film directed by Kazuhiro Hirao. A Day in the Life of Bonnie Consolo is a short, documentary film directed by Barry J. Spinello. Soriano is a documentary on the life of Osvaldo Soriano by Eduardo Montes-Bradley. Soriano includes rare footage filmed by Osvaldo Soriano and friends during the early 1960s. Shot in Milano, Rome, Paris, Lintz Am Rhein, Brussels, and Buenos Aires the documentary follows on the footsteps of the Argentine writer in an attempt to reconstruct his life in exile after the military coup which forced many intellectuals in Argentina to seek refuge in Europe. Audrey Of The Alps is a 2012 documentary drama adventure film directed by Grace Mckenzie. Duk County is a 2013 historical adventure documentary film written and directed by Jordan Campbell. Whalesong is a TV program. Welcome To Doe Bay is a 2012 musical, documentary film written by Dan Thornton, James Allen Smith, Amy Enser and Jonathan Cunningham, and directed by Dan Thornton and Nesib Shamah. Things that Matter is a 2011 documentary film written by Frans Bromet, Silvia Bromet and Julie van Traa and directed by Frans Bromet. Recuerdos de Juan O'Gorman is a 1984 biographical documentary short film written and directed by Juan Mora Catlett. My Father's House is a 2011 documentary history film directed by Zhao Dayong and David L. Bandurski. Drought is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Everardo González. Casablanca Mon Amour is a 2012 adventure drama film written and directed by John Slattery. In the Spirit of Laxmi is a 2010 short drama documentary film directed by Mike Rogers and Meghan Shea. Land, Gold and Women is a documentary about the conditions of women in rural Pakistan. It chronicles the traditional use of ritual gang rape as a method of social control. Central to the film are the stories of Mukhtar Mai, and Dr. Shazia Khalid. The documentary was first broadcast on 5 March 2006. Sleeping Distric is a 2014 documentary film directed by Tinne Zenner. Sur le fil is a 2009 documentary film. Iranium is a 2011 documentary film by director Alex Traiman, Written and Distributed by Clarion Fund. Featuring footage with Iranian leaders and interviews with 25 leading politicians, dissidents, and researchers, the film discusses the Iranian nuclear program, Middle East policy, terrorism, and nuclear proliferation. Beginning with the Islamic revolution, the film documents the creation of the Iranian nuclear program and development of weapons of mass destruction. The film discusses Iranian foreign policy and Iran – United States relations, including the Iran hostage crisis and the 1979 Iranian Revolution and takeover by Ayatollah Khomeini to what it refers to as "the brutal nature of the Iranian regime to its own citizens, and the Iranian people’s desire to rejoin the international community." The film is produced by the Clarion Fund. It was produced by the same team that produced Obsession: Radical Islam's War Against the West and The Third Jihad. Iranian and Academy Award nominated actress Shohreh Aghdashloo narrates the film. 100 nen gohan is a documentary film directed by Chigumi Obayashi. Open Sesame: The Story of Seeds is a 2013 documentary film directed by M. Sean Kaminsky. This multi-part documentary is based on the memoirs of Armenian composer Aram Khachaturian (1903-1978). Rare archival materials have been gathered from Russian archives in Moscow and Armenia, family members have been interviewed on camera, and research is underway for a film that will be the first in the West to document the life and music of one of the world's most loved composers.Khachaturian was the President of the powerful Composer's Union of the Soviet Union, and as a communist party functionary wielded great influence over the course of Russian music. However, he was also a comrade and personal friend to the dissident composers of the time - Shostakovich, Prokofiev, and others.This film is about the fine line a man had to tread between being a loyal party functionary on the one hand, and a fighter for artistic freedom on the other. CLAW: The Collective of Lady Arm Wrestlers is a sports documentary film directed by Billy Hunt and Brian Wimer. Ça ira - Il fiume della rivolta, also released internationally as Thermidor, is an Italian collage film of documentary film and drama film genres directed by Tinto Brass. Taking its name from the popular revolutionary song Ça ira, the film is a critical narrative of 20th century revolutions from 1900 to 1962 and their legacy. The first film directed by Brass, Ça ira - Il fiume della rivolta was produced in 1962 but it could be premiered at the Venice Film Festival in September 1964, to see theatrical release in December. Beyond Belief is a feature documentary directed by Beth Murphy. The film follows Susan Retik and Patti Quigley, two women who lost their husbands on September 11, 2001, as they set up humanitarian programs for war widows in Afghanistan. It premiered at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival. Time Machine: The Journey Back is a documentary film, produced in 1993 for airing on PBS stations. It was hosted by Rod Taylor and produced and directed by Clyde Lucas. The film was made about the Time Machine prop, not the movie, but during filming, Bob Burns surprised director Clyde Lucas by having Gene Warren, Sr. drop by. Warren, the award winning effects creator for the original movie, consented to an on-air interview in which he discussed creating the special effects for the film. This led to an interview with one of Warren's partners, Wah Chang, in Northern California. Chang and Warren shared more details about creating the effects and how the little Time Machine prop was made. Lucas contacted the original screenwriter, David Duncan, who agreed to write a mini-sequel to George Pal's film. The mini-sequel reunited George with Filby. Lucas first filmed Whit Bissell for the opening, recreating his role as Walter. It would be Bissell's last acting performance. The film won a Saturn Award and a Telly Award. It was included as a "special feature" on the DVD for George Pal's film The Time Machine, released by Warner Bros. and was featured in Starlog Magazine. E-Team is a 2014 American documentary film co-directed and produced by Katy Chevigny and Ross Kauffman. The film premiered in the competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. Rachel Beth Anderson and Ross Kauffman won the Cinematography Award: U.S. Documentary at the festival, as well as the Candescent Award. After Winter: Sterling Brown is a documentary by Haile Gerima about the famous Black poet, Sterling Brown. Dream and Melncholy is a 2011 documentary film directed by Shuntaro Katsura. The Captain And His Pirate is a 2013 documentary drama film directed by Andy Wolff. Master Tito And The Social Capoeira is a 2012 documentary short film written by Ingrid Júnia, Raissa Cristine, Joyce Lime, Izabela dos Santos and directed by Francisco Vorcaro. This article is on the documentary film about exotic pets. The Elephant in the Living Room is an American documentary film about the raising of exotic pets in homes around the United States, and the controversy surrounding the issue. In some States there are currently no laws around keeping exotic animals as pets, even though incidents have occurred where their owners and people around them are put in serious danger and hurt by these animals. The Occult History of the Third Reich, narrated by Patrick Allen and directed by Dave Flitton, is a 1991 four-part History Channel documentary regarding the occult influences and history of Nazi Germany and early 20th century Germany. Our Times is a 2002 documentary film directed by Rakhshan Bani Etemad. Aliens of the Deep is a 2005 documentary film, directed in part by James Cameron alongside fellow cameraman and friend Steven Quale, who would go on to direct Final Destination 5 six years later, and filmed in the IMAX 3D format. It was produced by Walden Media and Walt Disney Pictures. Cameron teams with NASA scientists to explore the Mid-Ocean Ridges, submerged chains of mountains in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans that are home to some of the planet's more unusual forms of life. One Who Came Back is a 1951 American short documentary film produced by Owen Crump and the National Organization of Disabled American Veterans, about an American soldier wounded in the Korean War, rescued from behind enemy lines and transported back to the United States. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Father Wanted: With a Piggy Nose is a 2012 documentary, short and family film written and directed by Annelies Kruk. El pueblo Maya is a 1983 short documentary film directed by Carlos Velo. Sexual abuse of children by women is still a social taboo. The idea contradicts all the usual clichés. Women are primarily the victims of sexual violence and not the perpetrators. But experts estimate that women commit 15-20% of sexual abuse. Usually it is mothers who abuse their own children. These cases are hardly ever brought to court – and convictions are even more seldom. Often the victims feel deeply ashamed. Also, the police and the judiciary frequently assume that women are incapable of such crimes. And finally, it is often difficult to determine with certainty where loving concern ends and sexual violence starts. The film tells the stories of Axel and Andrea, both haunted by their memories of the sexual abuse they suffered at the hands of their mothers. For a long time they repressed the memories of these traumatic childhood experiences and it was not until after the birth of their own children that their devastating memories came back and threatened to overwhelm them. In order to be able to lead normal lives with their children, both Axel and Andrea had to confront their experiences. A big problem for them is that sexual abuse by women is still a taboo subject. Again and again, Axel and Andrea have to fight rejection and incomprehension. But in the end both of them manage to tell their story in public as a first step in a long, painful healing process. We hear from players in the global economic casino, thinkers and world-class economists, like the celebrated writer Michael Lewis and Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz. They give an unflinching account of today’s situation and draw fascinating historical parallels. Bird Cage is a documentary film directed by Nahid Persson Sarvestani. "A book about discrimination against Aids sufferers in China provided the inspiration for Chinese director Gu Changwei – who won a Silver Bear for GONG QUE/THE WOMAN at the 2005 Berlinale – to make his latest drama, a moving love story entitled MO SHU WAI ZHUAN/TIL DEATH DO US PART. Having cast two well-known actors, Zhang Ziyi and Aaron Kwok, as the leads, the director decided to cast genuine Aids patients in supporting roles. Made alongside Gu Changwei’s sumptuous melodrama, Zhao Liang’s documentary records Gu Changwei’s search for these cast members – but the resulting film is so much more than a glimpse of events behind-the-scenes. Zhao Liang’s film portrays Aids sufferers of both genders; they are all people with very different biographies. As if it wasn’t bad enough being infected by HIV, their suffering is compounded by the fact that in the People’s Republic of China the disease is hushed up and people living with Aids are ostracised. In China, the public at large knows very little about the disease and most people associate the virus with promiscuity. This fear of discrimination forces most patients to hide the fact that they are positive. The Aids sufferers in Zhao Liang’s film were willing to share their experiences with him. The filmmaker was able to make contact with them via internet support groups; he also visited children with Aids at a ‘red ribbon’ school; but above all, he talked to Aids sufferers during the making of Gu Changwei’s film. It is their presence which lends Changwei’s film its particular authenticity." Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Hell's Bells: The Dangers of Rock 'N' Roll is a 1989 Christian documentary film produced and directed by Eric Holmberg, who also produced and directed its sequel, Hell's Bells 2 - The Power and Spirit of Popular Music. The Disappearance of McKinley Nolan is a 2010 documentary film directed by Henry Corra, which follows Michael Nolan on the search for his brother McKinley Nolan, a U.S. Army Private who vanished during the Vietnam War. The circumstances of McKinley's disappearance were mysterious, and his status and whereabouts became classified U.S. military information to which the Nolan family was denied access. Retired Lt. Dan Smith returned 40 years later to the U.S. from Tay Ninh, Vietnam having encountered a nameless American man whom he later photo-identified as McKinley Nolan. The search for McKinley is a deeply personal journey for his brother Michael and includes groundbreaking footage and interviews of former Khmer Rouge and Viet Cong members. De panzazo is a Mexican documental film, led by Juan Carlos Rulfo and co-produced by Carlos Loret de Mola. It was an initiative of the Mexican non-profit educational organization "Mexicanos Primero". This project was developed over three years. It premiered in Mexico on February 24, 2012 in Guadalajara, San Luis Potosi, Mérida, Morelia, Puebla, Querétaro and the Federal District. FROM RIVER TO SEA is an emotional, heartfelt story about journeys, decisions and modern life. As a small glimpse into the realities of what it means to be a mother in our times, we follow Susan Fink, a filmmaker, whose life - after a devastating divorce - is at a crossroads. She is 36, without a home of her own, and living with her daughter in her mother's one-bedroom apartment. Her spirit is broken and the relationships with her mother and daughter have been harmed by despair and neglect. While on a trip to Eastern Europe, attempting to film the realities of post-war Jewish life, she confronts her own demons and decides to repair the damage with her mother and daughter. She transforms the journey into one of discovery and fulfillment - seeking advice and learning about herself along the way.Shot on location in Slovakia, Russia, Germany, Ukraine, and Los Angeles, the film follows Susan, her mother, and her daughter on their travels. Using their shared Jewish tradition and her heart as a guide, Susan struggles to heal and reconnect the three generations - searching for a way to heal herself, and bring them all back together once again. American Drug War: The Last White Hope is a 2007 documentary by writer/director Kevin Booth about the War on Drugs in the United States. Nanocam, a trip into biodiversity is a 2011 short fulldome show that was screened at 2011 Melbourne International Film Festival. The Greatest is a 1977 film about the life of boxer Muhammad Ali, in which Ali plays himself. It was directed by Tom Gries and Monte Hellman. The film follows Ali's life from the 1960 Olympics to his regaining the heavyweight crown from George Foreman in their famous "Rumble in the Jungle" fight in 1974. The footage of the boxing matches themselves are largely the actual footage from the time involved. The song "The Greatest Love of All" was written for this film and sung by George Benson; it was later remade by Whitney Houston as "Greatest Love of All". The movie is based on a book written by Muhammad Ali, Herbert Muhammad and Richard Durham. Papirosen is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Gastón Solnicki. Who the #$&% Is Jackson Pollock? is a documentary following a woman named Teri Horton, a 73-year-old former long-haul truck driver from California, who purchased a painting from a thrift shop for $5, only later to find out that it may be a Jackson Pollock painting; she had no clue at the time who Jackson Pollock was, hence the name of the film. According to an interview from the film, Horton purchased the painting from a California thrift shop as a gift for a friend who was feeling depressed. Horton thought the bright colors were cheery, but when the dinner-table-sized painting proved too large to fit into her friend's trailer, Horton set it out among other items at a yard sale, where a local art teacher spotted it and suggested that the work could have been painted by Pollock due to the similarity to his action painting technique. At one point Horton and her friend decided the painting would be good for target practice, but they never got around to trying that activity. The film depicts Horton's attempts to authenticate and sell the painting as an original work by Pollock. Daughter From Yan'An (Enan no musume) is a 2003 documentary film directed by Kaoru Ikeya. Cradle of Genius is a 1961 Irish short documentary film directed by Paul Rotha. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Critically-Acclaimed Documentary -- Nominated for Three Emmy Awards.Paul Simon’s milestone album, Graceland, is considered by many to be one of the most important albums of all time, both for its musical mastery and innovative sound, and for the foundational way it brought together the music of two very different cultures. The album elevated global awareness of South African music and politics, and created a watershed moment in musical fusion. It has even been suggested that the global attention that Graceland brought to the culture helped usher in the end of Apartheid.In honor of Graceland’s 25th Anniversary, radical.media, AE IndieFilms and Sony Music Entertainment have teamed up to produce a feature documentary film celebrating the album. The story of the film, told by Paul himself, re-traces the incredible journey of the history and evolution of the Graceland album as well as the cultural and political climate of South Africa during that time. We follow Paul in the present day on his current tour, and travel with him to South Africa to revisit the people, places, and music that first inspired him.As such an integral part of South Africans’ cultural identity, the music is indivisible from the politics of the era. By speaking to anti-apartheid activists, ANC representatives, religious figures, exiled citizens, the incumbent government of the era and other key participants, insight is gained into the complex politics of that time, the conflicting views on the apartheid, and the role that global and native musicians played in that battle.The narrative threads of the present and past are artfully interwoven to create a story that is at once informative, historical, personal, and emotional. To see these musicians living freely in a South Africa that once oppressed them is inspiring as well. Through interviews with the original musicians, high-profile scholars, humanitarians, political figures, and celebrities, the film also reflects on what the album means, 25 years later.Partly a portrait of an icon, partly a musical exploration and reminiscence, this documentary allows viewers to get to know Paul Simon in an intimate way, and shows how a series of synchronicities came together to create the album that won the Grammy award for “Best Album of the Year.The film is directed by Joe Berlinger, an award-winning filmmaker whose films include the celebrated documentaries Brother’s Keeper, Paradise Lost, and Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, and 5 seasons of the critically acclaimed series Iconoclasts.REVIEWS+ The Controversy In Making Paul Simon's "Graceland"  via Indiewire+ LA Times+ NY Times+ NY Daily News+ Village Voice I Knew It Was You: Rediscovering John Cazale is a 2009 American documentary film about actor John Cazale, directed by Richard Shepard and produced by Brett Ratner, Stacey Reiss and Richard Shepard. Five O'Clock Tea is a 2004 short documentary film directed by Manuel Cañibe. Chaotilop is a 1978 short, documentary film directed by Jean-Louis Gros. East Hastings Pharmacy is a 2012 drama film written by Antoine Bourges and directed by Antoine Bourges. Sarah's Night is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Anne Kleisen. A surfing documentary where Laird Hamilton travels to Hawaii and Tahiti in search of the biggest waves. Pop Gear is a British music revue film, directed by Frederic Goode, which was released in 1965. It contains live concert footage of The Beatles, and lip-synched films of some of the British Invasion bands, including The Animals, Herman's Hermits, The Nashville Teens, Peter and Gordon, Matt Monro, Billy J. Kramer and the Dakotas, The Honeycombs, The Rockin' Berries, and the Spencer Davis Group. Each segment is introduced by Jimmy Savile, who at the time was the host of Top of the Pops on the BBC. The material by The Beatles was lifted from a newsreel short The Beatles Come to Town. The film was released sometime between January and April 1965, the footage having been filmed in December 1964. Artists and songs in order: I Know Where I'm Going is a 2009 documentary experimental short film directed by Ben Rivers. Eighteen Footers is a documentary film produced by Richard Mason. Ballet 422 is a 2014 documentary drama music sports film directed by Jody Lee Lipes. His-story is a 1998 short documentary film directed by Deimantas Narkevičius. Wolves Unleashed is a 2012 adventure family documentary film written and directed by Andrew Simpson. "Got the Facts on Milk?" dares to question the conventional wisdom of the publicized health benefits of milk and dairy products. Addressing myth, truth and all in-between, the film is a humorous yet shocking exposition that provokes serious thought about this everyday staple. Brian Eno - 1971-1977: The Man Who Fell to Earth is a 2012 music, documentary and biographical film directed by Ed Haynes. Recovered: Journeys Through the Autism Spectrum and Back is a 2008 documentary about four children who have completely recovered from the autism spectrum. The film is directed by Michele Jaquis and produced by Dr. Doreen Granpeesheh and the Center for Autism and Related Disorders. Recovered premiered on April 25, 2008 at the Pacific Design Center's SilverScreen Theater. Gulabi Gang is a 2012 Norwegian-Indian –Danish co-production documentary written and directed by Nishtha Jain and co-written and produced by Torstein Grude at Piraya Film. It released nationwide in India on February 21, 2014. The film has received the Best Film on Social Issues, and the Best Non-Feature Film editing at the 61st National Film Awards. 638 Ways to Kill Castro is a Channel 4 documentary film, broadcast in the United Kingdom on November 28, 2006, which tells the story of some of the numerous attempts of the Central Intelligence Agency to kill Cuba's leader Fidel Castro. Two Girls against the Rain is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Sao Sopheak. Sera posible el sur - Mercedes Sosa is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Stefan Paul. "Latino queers honor their chosen family and community in these two powerful films about a lesbian’s unorthodox family in Mexico and a closely-knit group of transwomen who band together to weather a tragedy. Mother Earth is based on the true life story of its star, Aidee Gonzalez. The film takes us through Aidee’s beginning as an erotic dancer, to the harsh realities of raising her children, first alone and then with a new girlfriend, Rosalba, who also works at the club. When Rosalba also decides to get pregnant, Aidee agrees to help her find a man to do the job, hoping to ensure he’s isn’t so handsome that she loses Rosalba to the donor. The new child and Rosalba’s motherhood change the family dynamic, forcing Aidee to reach out to friends to build the family she truly needs. With a colorful cast of characters infused with charm and determination, Mother Earth offers a rare and honest glimpse into the life of a lesbian in Mexico’s adult industry, who’s working to make a living, build a family and raise her kids right." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. The Man Who Loves Gary Lineker is a 1993 documentary film directed by Ylli Hasani and Steve Sklair. The Tree That Remembers is a 2002 animated documentary by Iranian filmmaker Masoud Raouf, exploring the lives of former political prisoners like himself who had been active in the democratic movement during the days of the Shah of Iran, only to face imprisonment and torture under the Islamic regime after the 1979 Iranian revolution. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, awards for the film included the Silver Award for Best Canadian Documentary at Hot Docs, as well as a Golden Sheaf Award for Best Social Documentary at the Yorkton Film Festival. The Laughing Star is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Werner Schroeter. In the first of Sky One's specials celebrating 20 years of "The Simpsons", Ricky Gervais takes you behind the scenes to see how the show is made, talking to those who put each episode together, plus celebrity fans like Simon Cowell and Hugh Hefner. Migropolis is a 2011 animated short film written by Karolina Villarraga and Carlos Azcuaga and directed by Karolina Villarraga. Kaspar Film is a 2011 film written and directed by Florence Pezon. Willie Nelson: My Life is a 1992 documentary film. Iron Maiden: Flight 666 is a concert documentary film featuring the British heavy metal band Iron Maiden. The film follows the band on the first leg of their Somewhere Back in Time World Tour between February and March 2008, during which they travelled on their own customised Boeing 757, Ed Force One, which used the call-sign "666". Flight 666 is co-produced by Toronto-based Banger Films, Inc, known for their documentaries Metal: A Headbanger's Journey, Global Metal and Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage. The film was shot in high-definition video with accompanying 5.1 surround sound produced by Kevin Shirley. It was distributed by Arts Alliance Media and EMI in select digital theatres on 21 April 2009. CHARLIE “BIRD” PARKER is a 1989 documentary film directed by Jan Horne. Zombie: The Resurrection Of Tim Zom is a 2014 documentary film directed by Billy Pols. Mabo: Life of an Island Man is a documentary directed by Trevor Graham. Unholy War is a 2001 war documentary film directed by James Miller. Marina of the Zabbaleen is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Engi Wassef that examines the life of Marina, a 7-year-old Egyptian girl living in a Zabbaleen garbage-collecting village in Cairo. The film debuted at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival with sold-out screenings. The film piqued the interest of many movie goers with its poignant tagline, "Garbage and God are the only options: plight of Christians peasants in Cairo." Far from the Trees is a documentary film by Spanish artist and director Jacinto Esteva Grew. Shot in 1963, it was held up for nine years before its release in 1972. A documentary told as a travelogue and intent on exposing the intense poverty of areas of Spain outside of the touristic eye, Far from the Trees is considered by some a successor to Luis Buñuel's Land Without Bread. As a political statement, the film is a protest to the image of a newly modernized Spain being promoted by Franco. Fake Fruit Factory is a 1986 documentary short directed by Chick Strand. XupapoynÃg is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Isael Maxakali. Atvaltozas is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Sándor Kardos. Gamba di legno is a 1952 Italian film. Story of a Day is a 2009 film directed by Rosana Matecki. Rolling Stones: Live at the Max is a concert film by The Rolling Stones released in 1991. It was specially filmed in IMAX during the Urban Jungle Tour in Europe in 1990. It was one of the first attempts at presenting entertainment in the IMAX format. Rolling Stones: Live at the Max premiered 25 October 1991 in Los Angeles at the California Museum of Science and Industry. In the UK it was shown at the National Museum of Photography, Film and Television in Bradford, Yorkshire in 1992. The tagline was "Larger than life". Johnny Vaughan and the Shrunken Head interview the cast and crew of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. Reichsautobahn is a 1985 documentary film directed by Hartmut Bitomsky. Another Colour TV is a 2013 documentary, short film written and Directed by Dyantini Adeline and Yovista Ahtajida. A Closer Walk is Robert Bilheimer's documentary film about the global AIDS epidemic. Narrated by Glenn Close and Will Smith, A Closer Walk features cinematography by Richard D. Young, interviews with the Dalai Lama, Bono, and Kofi Annan, and musical contributions by Annie Lennox, The Neville Brothers, Dido, Eric Clapton, Moby, Geoffrey Oryema, and Sade. Subjects and storylines encompass the broad spectrum of the global AIDS experience and include people with HIV/AIDS from all walks of life; AIDS children and orphans and those caring for them; doctors, nurses, and social workers; human rights advocates; and prominent scientists, economists, researchers, government leaders, and NGO officials. The film's basic themes remain, what are the underlying causes of AIDS; the relationship between health, dignity, and human rights; and the universal need for action, compassion, and commitment to counter what has become the worst plague in human history. Bombay Movie is a documentary adventure biographical drama film directed by Alexandra Eaton. "Classic protest film in which French new wave directors collaborate to make a co-operative movie condemning America's war of aggression in Vietnam. Films against war can never go out of fashion, and this revival of the (mostly) French 'new wave' directors' collective protest against the Vietnam War in 1967, restored by the Archives Françaises du Film (CNC) in collaboration with SOFRACIMA, needs no excuses. A classic example of what documentary historian Erik Barnouw has called guerrilla filmmaking in its angry, violent denunciation of American aggression in Vietnam, the co-operative project brought together Agnès Varda, Joris Ivens, William Klein, Claude Lelouch, Jean-Luc Godard and Alain Resnais, co-ordinated by Chris Marker, who mobilised 200 technicians, cameramen, editors and the like for more than four months to knit together imagery of the war, interviews, intellectual styles, fictional incursions and documentary footage in a bid to counter and interpret the intensive media coverage and propaganda manipulated by the American government. Necessarily dated and unwieldy though the film may now seem, it was a group film-making effort unique in the cinema's history and remains a powerful and passionate plea for peace. William Klein summed it up thus: 'How to make a 'useful' film? Fiction, agit-prop, documentary, what? We were never able to decide, but we had to do something.' The film has been restored from the original reversal 16mm print and blown up to 35mm." Quoting Clyde Jeavons Are there alien intelligences? How could we communicate with them? What about UFOs? The answers to these questions take us to Egypt to decode ancient hieroglyphics, to the largest radio telescope on Earth and, in the Spaceship of the Imagination, to visit other civilizations in space. Dr. Sagan answers questions such as: "What is the life span of a planetary civilization?" and "Will we one day hook up with a network of civilizations in the Milky Way galaxy? Giuseppe Makes a Movie is a 2014 documentary film written by David Nordstrom, Mike Plante, Adam Rifkin and directed by Adam Rifkin. The Human Body is a seven-part documentary series, first shown on 20 May 1998 on BBC One and presented by medical scientist Robert Winston. A co-production between the BBC and The Learning Channel, the series looks at the mechanics and emotions of the human body from birth to death. The series was nominated for numerous awards, winning several, including three BAFTA awards, four RTS awards and a Peabody Award. What is it like to have power over life and death, and yet to struggle with your own humanity? Dr. Henry Marsh is one of England's foremost brain surgeons, a pioneer in his field and respected throughout the world. Surprisingly modest despite all his achievements, he still rides an old bicycle to work and worries constantly about his patients and the potential damage of such delicate surgery. "When push comes to shove we can afford to lose an arm or a leg, but . . . if something goes wrong [in brain surgery] I can destroy that person's character — forever," he says. Refusenik is a 2007 documentary film by Laura Bialis that chronicles the struggle of Jews to emigrate from the Soviet Union in the 1960s and 70s. A former refusenik Natan Sharansky appears in the film. Garden Jungle is a 1975 documentary film. Seven Reeds, One Suit is a 1949 short documentary film written and directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. Jeff, Embrace Your Past is a documentary film directed by Roger Teich. As Seen Through These Eyes is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Hilary Helstein. We Ain't Rich or Famous But We Are the Happy Pals is a 2011 musical documentary film written and directed by Jai Bajaj. Serpent and the Sun: Tales of an Aztec Apprentice is a documentary film written and directed by Shaahin Cheyene, an Iran-born American businessman. The documentary was filmed in Mexico, and tells the story about the life of the Aztec people in the modern era. Unwanted Witness is a 2008 documentary directed by Juan Jos Lozano. Tales From the Organ Trade is a 2013 Canadian documentary film written and directed by Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Ric Esther Bienstock which was created in association with HBO Documentary Films, Shaw Media and Canal D. The film examines the shadowy world of black market organ trafficking. The film is narrated by David Cronenberg. White Earth is a 2013 short documentary family drama film written and directed by J. Christian Jensen. Shanne And Her Friends is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Ulla Søe and Sussie Weinold. How the Motor Car Works is a 1967 documentary film directed by Derek Armstrong. Jenny Is a Good Thing is a 1969 American short documentary film about children and poverty, directed by Joan Horvath. Produced for Project Head Start, it shows the importance of good nutrition for underprivileged nursery school children. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. CASTING BY debuting 08.05. This one spotlights one of filmmaking’s unsung heroes – the casting director – viewing the last half-century of Hollywood history from a different perspective. Iconoclastic casting pioneers like Marion Dougherty and Lynn Stalmaster used their exquisite taste and gut instincts to reject traditional Hollywood typecasting and bring new kinds of leading men and women to the screen, such as Dustin Hoffman, Bette Midler, Robert Duvall and Gene Hackman. In the process, they helped change the old studio system and usher in a new Hollywood through movies like “Midnight Cowboy,” “The Graduate,” “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” and “Bonnie and Clyde. The Idiot Cycle is a 2009 French-Canadian documentary which alleges that six major chemical companies are responsible for decades of cancer causing chemicals and pollution, and also develop cancer treatments and drugs. It also argues these companies own the most patents on genetically modified crops that have never been tested for long term health impacts like cancer. With Gentle Majesty is a 1963 Silver Award Winner in AACTA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Television Screen Craft category. Castro Street is a visual nonstory documentary film which uses the sounds and sights of a city street—in this case, Castro Street near the Standard Oil Refinery in Richmond, California—to convey the street's own mood and feel. There is no dialogue in this non-narrative experimental film. It was directed by Bruce Baillie. In 1992, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". From a Far Country is a 1981 biographical film directed by Krzysztof Zanussi. Grandma's Tattoos is a 2011 documentary film directed by Suzanne Khardalian The Book Lady is a documentary about country music legend and pop-culture icon Dolly Parton’s campaign for children’s literacy. Dolly Parton, Miley Ray Cyrus, Keith Urban, Canadian singer–songwriters Sarah Harmer and Justin Rutledge, fiddler Natalie MacMaster and children's author Robert Munsch are featured in the documentary, which chronicles the launch of Parton’s “Imagination Library” in Canada. The Book Lady was directed by Natasha Ryan, produced by Brad Horvath and executive-produced by filmmaker Thom Fitzgerald and Doug Pettigrew. It will air on CBC Television, Bravo! and BookTelevision in Canada. It had its international premiere at the 28th Atlantic Film Festival in Halifax, Nova Scotia, on September 20, 2008. No Kidding, Me Too! is a documentary film directed by Joe Pantoliano. Ivan and Ivana is a 2011 documentary adventure drama film written and directed by Jeff Silva. S Club 7: Bring It All Back (To You) is a 1999 musical documentary of the English pop group S Club 7. In Search of Hip-Hop is a 2010 documentary short fim directed by Issraa El-Kogali. Step Across the Border is a 1990 avant-garde documentary film on English guitarist, composer and improviser Fred Frith. It was written and directed by Nicolas Humbert and Werner Penzel and released in Germany and Switzerland. The film was screened in cinemas in North America, South America, Europe and Japan, and on television in the United States, Germany, Switzerland, Austria and France. It was also released on VHS by RecRec Music in 1990, and was later released on DVD by Winter & Winter in 2003. Shot in black and white, the 35mm documentary was filmed between 1988 and 1990 in Japan, Italy, France, Germany, England, the United States and Switzerland, and shows Frith rehearsing, performing, giving interviews and relaxing. Other musicians featured include René Lussier, Iva Bittová, Tom Cora, Tim Hodgkinson, Bob Ostertag and John Zorn. The film won "Best Documentary" at the European Film Awards in 1990. A companion soundtrack album, Step Across the Border was also released by RecRec Music in 1990. Spellbound is a 2002 documentary that was directed by Jeffrey Blitz. The film follows eight competitors in the 1999 Scripps National Spelling Bee. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Documentary Feature; Yana Gorskaya's editing won the ACE Eddie award for best editing of documentary. Spellbound won the Emmy for Cultural/Artistic Programming and Jeffrey Blitz was nominated for directing. In 2007, it was included as #4 of the "IDA's Top 25 Documentaries" of all-time by the members of the International Documentary Association. Frank Neuhauser, winner of the first National Spelling Bee held in 1925, also appears in the film. Khrushchev Does America is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Tim Toidze. A Man Called "Bee": Studying the Yanomamo is a film by ethnographic filmmakers Tim Asch and Napoleon Chagnon. Bob Smith, U.S.A. is a 2005 documentary film directed by Neil Abramson. The Seamstresses is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Biljana Garvanlieva. "Jean-Paul Colmor lives by himself, but he's hardly alone. Many lives are represented all around him in the old cars and piles of discarded objects that litter his land in Saint-Amable, near Montreal. Quietly, Colmor works at repairing what others have tossed aside, selling what he can in order to buy even more, adding to his collection and recycling the past to pay for the future. Into his peaceful and cluttered sanctuary come four teenagers with Down syndrome, who find refuge in Colmor's second-hand world. Provocative and poetic, Denis Côté's Carcasses is a blend of fact and fiction, one of the most daring works of the filmmaker's increasingly influential career. One of the leaders of Quebec's contemporary art cinema, Côté crafts intricate, subtle movies, usually on a shoestring budget, and has helped re-establish the province's status as a hot spot for filmic innovation. Côté's observational style recalls Quebec's direct cinema roots, and by marrying this traditional approach to modern genre, he offers a collision of sensibilities rarely seen in the province's commercial movies. In Carcasses, Côté finds a kindred spirit in Colmor, who also remakes the old into something new, building an existence on the fringe and living a truly independent life. Côté finds beauty in Colmor's decaying environment, using long takes as if to suspend time amid the memories stored in the detritus of a culture. Colmor is an engaging and willing subject, equally comfortable espousing his philosophies for Côté's camera or silently working on a car with the director as voyeur, peering into what is typically a private act of restoration and recovery. By including the constructed narrative of the teens' arrival, Côté forces a social interpretation of his images, questioning how a society assesses the value of things to determine what should be kept and what should be thrown away. Carcasses is a mature work by one of Canada's most intriguing cinematic talents. Côté is changing the face of Canadian cinema from the outside in. His influence is easily spotted in the work of contemporaries like Rafaël Ouellet, who made Le Cèdre penché in 2007 and last year's Derrière moi,and his independent spirit mirrored in the works of Carl Bessai (director of Normal, Mothers and this year's Cole) and Rodrigue Jean (director of 2008's Lost Song). Carcasses is Côté's most urgent and effective statement for a new Canadian cinema." Quoting Jesse Wente on the 2009 TIFF site. A Bagful of Fleas is a 1962 short documentary film written and directed by Vera Chytilová. Memorial: Letters from American Soldiers is a 1991 American short documentary film directed by Bill Couturié. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Lost Legend of Viking America is a documentary film directed by Mike Scholtz. The Lust Killer is a 2013 documentary/sport film directed by Marcin Koszalka. Wiedersehen in Hildburghausen is a 1996 documentary film written by Rainer Hartleb and Wilhelm Bittorf and directed by Rainer Hartleb. A team of experts takes on the preservation of the origianl Constitution, Declaration of Indipendance and Bill of Rights. Operation Filmmaker is a 2007 film directed by Nina Davenport. Nuclear Tipping Point is a 2010 documentary film produced by the Nuclear Threat Initiative. It features interviews with four American government officials who were in office during the Cold War period, but are now advocating for the elimination of nuclear weapons. They are: Henry Kissinger, George Shultz, Sam Nunn, and William Perry. These "Four Cold Warriors", who each contributed in important ways to the nuclear arms race, built on classical deterrence theory, now argue that we must eliminate all nuclear weapons or face disaster on an enormous scale. Former Secretary Kissinger puts the new danger this way: "The classical notion of deterrence was that there was some consequences before which aggressors and evildoers would recoil. In a world of suicide bombers, that calculation doesn’t operate in any comparable way". Shultz has said, "If you think of the people who are doing suicide attacks, and people like that get a nuclear weapon, they are almost by definition not deterrable". The film was screened at the White House on April 6, 2010. Education for Life is a 1955 documentary film. The True Story of Frank Zappa's 200 Motels is a documentary film released in 1988 by Frank Zappa, detailing the making of Zappa's 1971 film 200 Motels. As of December 2013, the video has not yet been released on DVD. A Purpleman is a 2010 animated documentary short film written by Tak Hoon Kim, Hyungkee Lee and Jin Ho Ryu directed by Tak Hoon Kim and Tekn Kim. Submerged Queer Spaces is a 2012 historical documentary film directed by Jack Curtis Dubowsky. Cartoon College is a 2012 documentary film directed by Josh Melrod and Tara Wray. Carlo's Vision is a 2011 short film directed by Rosalind Nashashibi. Romans d’ados 3 – Les Illusions perdues is a 2010 documentary film written by Nasser Bakhti and directed by Béatrice Bakhti. Of God and Dogs is a 2014 documentary short film, directed by Abounaddara Collective. Abounaddara Collective is a Damascus based independent film company that specializes in documentaries. The film later screened at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. It won the Grand Jury Prize at the festival. The film later screened at 2014 Sundance London Film Festival on April 26, 2014. Desert Runners is a 2013 documentary film directed by Jennifer Steinman that follows a group of non-professional runners that attempt to complete 4 Deserts, a series of ultramarathon races often considered the most difficult in the world. Their journeys take them through some of the world’s most beautiful places while pushing the limits of their minds and bodies. It provides a look into the mindset of endurance athletes, and the ways in which humans deal with both heartbreak and achievement. Every year screenwriters finish tens of thousands of scripts, but only a few hundred are made into movies..DREAMS ON SPEC takes an intimate look at how far people will go - and how much they will sacrifice - for the chance to pursue their dreams. This feature-length documentary delves into the lives of three aspiring Hollywood screenwriters as they pour their hearts into their spec scripts, pitch their ideas to anyone who will listen, go to meetings, hold table reads, and work at low-level day-jobs in the hopes of one day seeing one of their beloved creations made into a movie. 12 Years of DFA: Too Old To Be New, Too New To Be Classic is a 2013 music documentary short film written and directed by Max Joseph. Hope in Heaven is a documentary that examines the Philippines sex trade and the young women and children it trafficks. It was part of a five-year development project funded by the Canadian International Development Agency in cooperation with Mount Saint Vincent University and Saint Mary’s University, of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Tony Benn: Will and Testament is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Skip Kite. Chimps: So Like Us is a 1990 American short documentary film directed by Kirk Simon and Karen Goodman. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The half hour film, shot on location in New York, Arizona and Tanzania, profiles the work of Jane Goodall. The film has been broadcast extensively on HBO. Hollow Earth is a short documentary film directed by Emilija Škarnulytė and Tanya Busse. Bella Vita is a 2013 documentary adventure, biography and sports film written and directed by Jason Baffa. Visions of Light is a 1992 documentary film directed by Arnold Glassman, Todd McCarthy, and Stuart Samuels. The film is also known as Visions of Light: The Art of Cinematography. The film covers the art of cinematography since the conception of cinema at the turn of the 20th century. Many filmmakers and cinematographers present their views and discuss why the art of cinematography is important within the craft of filmmaking. "As we near the 30th anniversary of HIV/AIDS in 2011, The HIV Story Project is multi-platform story-telling endeavor around HIV/AIDS that endeavors to emerge as a digital AIDS Quilt for the 21st Century. It includes three distinct components: a new media web portal; a public media installation and storytelling booth that will premiere at Under One Roof on Castro Street during Frameline34; and a short film compilation that features 20 original works directed by well known Bay Area filmmakers that tell the stories of Bay Area people thriving and surviving with HIV/AIDS. In this program, The HIV Story Project presents its first completed short films, a teaser of the full-length compilation to come in 2011." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Internationally acclaimed ventriloquist Nina Conti, takes the bereaved puppets of her mentor and erstwhile lover Ken Campbell on a pilgrimage to Venthaven, the resting place for puppets of dead ventriloquists. She gets to know her latex and wooden travelling partners along the way, and with them deconstructs herself and her lost love in this ventriloquial docu-mocumentary requiem. Ken Campbell was a hugely respected maverick of the British theatre, an eccentric genius who would snort out forgotten artforms. Nina was his prodigy in ventriloquism and has been said to have reinvented the artform. This film is truly unique in genre and style. No one has seen ventriloquism like this before. Nina Conti's funny, highly original and poignant documentary, takes us on two journeys. A personal journey, and a professional one, through the strange, surprising and often hilarious world of ventriloquism. When Nina was just another twenty-something wannabe actress, Ken presented her with a teach-yourself ventriloquism kit. This set her on a path to becoming a sell-out act in Britain and abroad, with a clutch of major awards. On the road, Nina brings all the puppets to life as struggles to meet the conflicting demands of her old acerbic partner Monkey, and the new characters she has been bequeathed. But one puppet remains silent. Ken's doll of himself sits mournful and judgemental in the hotel bedroom. Nina cannot find her master's voice and until she does, she will not be able to lay her old life to rest. Never has watching someone talk to themselves been this interesting. Remote Intimacy is a 2007 documentary short film directed by Sylvia Schedelbauer. Uncle Meat is a film written and directed by Frank Zappa, released directly to video in 1987. Principal photography having never been completed, the videocassette is actually a "making of" documentary showing rehearsals and background footage from 1968 and interviews with people involved with the uncompleted production. The video has not yet been released on DVD. SVDDXNLY is a 2014 documentary film directed by David Laven. Taboo Yardies is a 2011 documentary family history film directed by Selena Blake. Nazi Pop Twins is a 2007 British documentary wherein filmmaker James Quinn travels to the United States to investigate Prussian Blue, a pop duo composed of twin sisters Lynx and Lamb Gaede. The film first aired on 19 July 2007 on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom. The documentary was filmed over the course of a year. Dresden Gaede, the twins' toddler half-sister and April Gaede's parents, Bill and Dianne, also appear in the documentary. In a change from a previous documentary featuring the duo, Louis and the Nazis by Louis Theroux, Nazi Pop Twins was without humorous irony. Filmed mainly in low-light, indoors and/or in winter, it stresses tension between the twins and their mother, April — manager and driving force behind the band — and the stress the white nationalist ideology has put on grandparents Bill and Dianne's relationship to the point where Dianne threatens to leave Bill during the making of the program. It also touches on the fact that this ideology seems to have been a factor in the breakup of mother April's marriage, which also happens concurrently to the making of the program. Very Young Girls, directed by David Schisgall and Nina Alvarez, is a documentary and exposé of human trafficking that follows 13- and 14-year-old African-American girls as they are seduced, abused, and sold on New York’s streets by pimps; while being treated as adult criminals by police. The film follows the barely adolescent girls in real time, using vérité and intimate interviews with them as they are first lured on to the streets and the dire events which follow. The film also uses startling footage shot by the brazen pimps themselves, giving a rare glimpse into how the cycle of street life begins for many women. The film documents the work of Girls Educational and Mentoring Services, a recovery center founded and operated by Rachel Lloyd, a survivor of sexual exploitation. She and her staff help girls sent by the court or found on the street that are working in prostitution. The documentary shows that, given a chance to piece their lives back together, many teeter on edge of two different worlds consistently battling the force that suck them back into the underground. Constable Al Arsenault, along with six other policemen, began video-documenting the lives of people on their beat to create a powerful educational tool to help prevent drug use among young people. This unique group of officers, who formed a non-profit group dubbed the Odd Squad, resulted in an unusual relationship between the police and addicts in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. Through a Blue Lens tells this moving and compassionate story. Niemanns Zeit - Ein deutscher Heimatfilm is a 1985 documentary film directed by Host Kurnitzky and Marion Schmid. Mckenzie is a 2012 short biographical documentary written by Paul Farmer and directed by Paul Houston and Paul Farmer. Fassbinder in Hollywood is a 2002 documentary film written by Robert Fischer and Ulli Lommel and directed by Robert Fischer. Pose is a 2012 documentary film directed by Eva Madden-Hagen. The White Planet or in French, La Planète Blanche, is a 2006 documentary about the wildlife of the Arctic. It shows interactions between marine animals, birds and land animals, especially the polar bear, over a one year period. The fragility of the Arctic is hinted at as a reason to prevent climate change. It was nominated for the Documentary category in the 27th Genie Awards in 2007. Katiyabaaz is a 2014 Indian Hindi documentary film directed by Deepti Kakkar and Fahad Mustafa about the problem of power theft in Kanpur. Released in India on August 22, 2014, the film is shot in Kanpur city, which faces long power cuts, giving rise to the profession of Loha Singh, a local electricity thief or katiyabaaz in localities like Chaman Ganj. He provides illegal electicity connections to people, while Ritu Maheshwari, MD of KESCo, Kanpur Electricity Supply Company, tries to tackle the issue of rampant electricity theft. The film was premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival 2013 and later won the Best Film in the India Gold Section at the 15th Mumbai Film Festival. At the 61st National Film Awards the film won the ward for Best Investigative Film. Katiyabaaz premiered on American television on Independent Lens - PBS on November 3, 2014. Portugal - unbekanntes Land am Meer is a 1952 documentary film directed and written by Alfred Ehrhardt. The World Before Her is a Canadian documentary film, released in 2012. Written and directed by Nisha Pahuja, the film explores the complex and conflicting environment for young girls in India by profiling two young women participating in two very different types of training camp — Ruhi Singh, who aspires to become Miss India, and Prachi Trivedi, a Hindu nationalist with the Durga Vahini. The film was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Coverage of a Current News Story in 2014. It also won the awards for Best Canadian Feature at the 2012 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival and Best Documentary Feature at the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival, and was a nominee for Best Feature Length Documentary at the 1st Canadian Screen Awards. On June 6, 2014, the film released to widespread critical acclaim in India, the country it depicts, with the help of filmmaker Anurag Kashyap. Critics called it "the most important film of the year". Witness to Hope: The Life of John Paul II is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Judith Dwan Hallet. Great North is a 2001 documentary film written by Georges-Hébert Germain and David Homel and directed by Martin J. Dignard and William Reeve. Nature's Half Acre is a 1951 American short documentary film directed by James Algar. It won an Academy Award in 1952 for Best Short Subject. The film was produced by Walt Disney as part of the True-Life Adventures series of nature documentaries. Tous cobayes? is a documentary film directed by Jean-Paul Jaud. Céline Dion: These Are Special Times is a 1998 television music documentary. The Bottom of the World is a 1920 documentary film. Relative Strangers is a 1998 short documentary film directed by Rosemary Hesp. King Naki and the Thundering Hooves is a 2011 documentary film directed by Tim Wege. Gabriel Orozco is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Juan Carlos Martín. Love Arranged is a 2011 documentary film written by Emily Harris and directed by Soniya Kirpalani. The Oil Gush Fire in Bibiheybat is an 1898 Azerbaijani silent film. Directed by the pioneer of cinema in Azerbaijan, Alexandre Michon, this 30-second film was shot on August 6, 1898 in Bibiheybət village near Baku and presented at the International Paris Exhibition. The film was shot using a 35mm film on a Lumière cinematograph. Some scenes from this film were also shown in France in 1995, in a footage commemorating the 100th anniversary of world cinema. Traces of an Elephant is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Vanessa Nica Müller. “Abba” (阿爸) is a musical documentary about the life and legacy of Hong Yi-feng (洪一峰, 1927-2010), one of the most iconic popular musicians in post-World War II Taiwan. The film, produced by Hong's three sons, offers great music, nostalgic discoveries, a glimpse into creative minds, a complex and tender family story and some food for thought on the possible healing power of religion. Oaks is a 2011 short independent documentary film directed by Charles Wittenmeier. Der Diplomat is a 1994 documentary film written by Manfred Flügge and Hans-Helmut Grotjahn directed by Antje Starost, Hans-Helmut Grotjahn and Manfred Flügge Finding Benjaman is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by John Wikstrom. Lalia is a 1999 documentary short film written by Ignasi Riera and directed by Silvia Munt. Intonation. Valery Zorkin is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Alexander Sokurov. Lady Kul El Arab is a 2008 Israeli documentary directed by Ibtisam Mara'ana which tells the story of Doaa Fares, a Druze model who entered the Miss Israel beauty contest in 2007. This caused some resentment from Israel's Druze community, and she dropped out of the contest following threats for dishonouring her community and subsequent arrest of five people, among them two of her uncles, for planning her murder. Minako: Geisha of the Yoshiwara -A Record of the Yoshiwara’s Last Living Remnant - is a 2013 documentary film directed by Makoto Yasuhara. Shooting the Hollywood Stars is 2011 documentary directed by Vivi Mellegard. An Unreasonable Man is a 2006 documentary film that traces the life and career of political activist Ralph Nader, the founder of modern consumer protection in America and perennial presidential candidate. The film was created to defend Nader and restore his reputation after his controversial role in the 2000 U.S. presidential election The first half of the film examines Nader's advocacy for auto safety features, such as federally mandated seat belts and air bags, as well as his rise to national prominence following an invasion of privacy lawsuit against General Motors. It also examines the formation of independent advocacy groups during the 1970s; organizations which carried out independent research on various federal agencies, such as the Federal Trade Commission and the Food and Drug Administration. Over the next thirty years, the film argues, Nader "built a legislative record that would be the envy of any modern president." The second half of the film traces Nader's shift to a grassroots form of organizing focused on citizen power, including his disillusionment with the two-party system following the rise of Reaganism. Kids' Rights: Gabriel is a 2012 documentary film directed by Iris Kleinsman and Yvonne Roerdink. Champs is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Bert Marcus. Happy Birthday, Mr. Mograbi is a 1998 documentary film directed by Avi Mograbi. Liberty Square of Munich is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Harald Rumpf. D-DAY: THE PRICE OF FREEDOM pays tribute to the courageous men who began the liberation of France more than 60 years ago. Throughout this moving documentary, former paratroopers, gunners, landing craft operators and others from the U.S. Army and U.S. Navy share their harrowing tales of survival. Five veterans — some of whom were returning to France for the first time since 1944 — make an emotional journey to the American Cemetery overlooking Omaha Beach, the final resting place of 9,000 of their fallen comrades. There, each speaks candidly about the unimaginable horror, despair and fear of the day. D-DAY: THE PRICE OF FREEDOM also explores why these aging men remain heroes to the French people. During their visit, young and old alike honor their liberators with toasts, ceremonies and other tokens of gratitude. The Wings of Lithuania is a 1983 film directed by Robertas Verba. Memory of Water is a 1994 Spanish-Argentine drama film directed by Héctor Fáver. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1992 Cannes Film Festival. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is a 1966 Italian epic Spaghetti Western film directed by Sergio Leone, starring Clint Eastwood, Lee Van Cleef, and Eli Wallach in the title roles respectively. The screenplay was written by Age & Scarpelli, Luciano Vincenzoni and Leone, based on a story by Vincenzoni and Leone. Director of photography Tonino Delli Colli was responsible for the film's sweeping widescreen cinematography and Ennio Morricone composed the film's score, including its main theme. It was a co-production between companies in Italy, Spain and West Germany. The film is known for Leone's use of long shots and close-up cinematography, as well as his distinctive utilization of violence, tension, and stylistic gunfights. The plot revolves around three gunslingers competing to find fortune in a buried cache of Confederate gold amidst the violent chaos of the American Civil War, while participating in many battles and duels along the way. The film was the third collaboration between Leone and Clint Eastwood, and the second with Lee Van Cleef. A Walk to Beautiful is a 2007 American documentary film produced and distributed by Engel Entertainment about women who suffer from childbirth injuries in Ethiopia. In 2007, it premiered in film festivals and was chosen for the International Documentary Association Best Feature Documentary Film of the Year award. The following year, the film opened in theaters in the United States in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. A 52-minute version of A Walk to Beautiful that premiered on NOVA on PBS on May 13, 2008 won the 2009 Emmy Award in the Outstanding Informational Programming category on September 21, 2009 at the News and Documentary Emmy Awards ceremony on September 21, 2009 at Rose Hall, Lincoln Center in New York City. Dinner is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Linas Mikuta. On Foot to Santiago de Compostela is a 2007 documentary film written by Bruno Moll and directed by Bruno Moll. Jungle Patrol is a 1944 Australian documentary narrated by Peter Finch, which follows eight Australian soldiers on patrol in New Guinea during World War Two. Bridegroom is a 2013 American documentary film about the relationship between two young gay men, produced and directed by Linda Bloodworth-Thomason. Bridegroom premiered at the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival on April 23, 2013, and attracted further press coverage because its premiere screening at the festival was introduced by former President Bill Clinton. The film won the festival's Audience Award for Best Documentary Film. The film jointly received the 2014 GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Documentary alongside Call Me Kuchu. In A Brief Moment Of Optimism is a 2013 short film written and directed by Marie Rømer Westh. Taboo: The Single and the LP is a documentary psychological drama film directed by Curt McDowell. Armenia: Invisible Country is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mariam Ohanyan. Remembering Charlie Perkins is a tribute to Aboriginal activist Dr. Charles N. Perkins. It features Professor Gordon Briscoe who was with Perkins from early times. Briscoe recounts Perkins's life and events in activism. The film is presented in conjunction with ABC Fora. The Beaver Trilogy is a documentary film directed by Trent Harris, featuring "Groovin' Gary", Sean Penn, Crispin Glover and co-starring Courtney Gains and Elizabeth Daily. The Beaver Trilogy combines three separate vignettes that were filmed at different times, in 1979, 1981, and 1985. The first, entitled The Beaver Kid, is a short documentary about the exploits of "Groovin' Gary", a performer that filmmaker Harris happened upon while filming for a Salt Lake City, Utah news station. Harris was testing out a color video video camera that the station had just acquired in the parking lot of his workplace when he stumbled upon Gary taking photographs of their news helicopter. Gary immediately launched into a number of celebrity impressions, including John Wayne and Sylvester Stallone. Although Gary is seemingly very personable and humble, he also alludes to intense needs for fame, recognition and mass approval. Several weeks after they first met, Harris traveled to the small town of Beaver, Utah and filmed Gary, an Olivia Newton-John obsessive, as he staged a talent show that featured Gary dressed in full drag singing the Newton-John song "Please Don't Keep Me Waiting". Adventures of a Brown Man in Search of Civilization is a 54 minute color documentary based on the life and thoughts of Nirad C. Chaudhuri. It was made in 1972 and was directed by James Ivory. In this, Chaudhuri expounds his views on culture, history, religion and society from a comparative perspective. It is available in the DVD sets of several Merchant Ivory films. Concert for George is a 2003 British documentary film directed by David Leland that covers the events of the Concert for George, a tribute concert for George Harrison held at the Royal Albert Hall in London on 29 November 2002, the first anniversary of Harrison's death. The film was re-released on Blu-ray as a special two disc set on 22 March 2012. The Comedians of Comedy is a stand-up comedy tour featuring alternative comedians Patton Oswalt, Zach Galifianakis, Brian Posehn and Maria Bamford that was documented in a 2005 film and 2005 Comedy Central television series of the same name, both directed by Michael Blieden. After Zach Galifianakis left the tour, he was replaced by comedian Eugene Mirman. A mãe dos netos is a 2008 Spanish film. Matthew lets you get to know him a little more with this Life With Matthew DVD which includes all home videos. Terminator Salvation: A G4 Special is a 2009 documentary film. Monicelli. La Versione Di Mario is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mario Canale, Felice Farina, Wilma Labate, Mario Gianni and Annarosa Morri. Helmut's House is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Jess Dickenson. Twin Towers is a 2003 short documentary film directed by Bill Guttentag and Robert David Port, depicting the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. It is about two brothers, one a policeman and the other a fireman, and their actions during the attacks. The film was awarded an Oscar for best Documentary Short Subject. The Last Lions is a 2011 African nature documentary film by National Geographic Society, videotaped and directed by Dereck and Beverly Joubert. The film premiered at the Palm Springs International Film Festival in January 2011 and was released in select theaters on February 18, 2011. The film follows in the tradition of other National Geographic big cat films, such as India: Land of the Tiger and Eye of the Leopard. The film documentary focuses on a lioness named Ma di Tau as she battles to protect her cubs against the daunting onslaught of enemies to ensure their survival. The underlying message of the film is on the low population of large cats in the world and whether or not Ma di Tau and her cubs are among the last lions. The film is narrated by Jeremy Irons, who voiced Scar in Disney's 1994 animated film The Lion King. Irons also narrated Eye of the Leopard, a 2006 National Geographic film. Four years earlier, National Geographic released Super Pride, which was narrated by Lance Lewman. Disneynature released African Cats, a similar documentary film on April 22, 2011. Brazil: Cinema, Sex and the Generals is a documentary directed by Simon Hartog that examines Brazilian filmmakers who used the pornochanchada genre to escape censorship of their socially critical films during dictatorial rule in Brazil. This documentary seems to have been censored in the United Kingdom. Slavery by Another Name is a 2012 documentary film written by Sheila Curran Bernard and directed by Samuel D. Pollard. Serra Pelada, The Legend Of The Gold Mountain is a 2013 Documentary film written by Mauricio Lissovski and Victor Lopes and directed by Victor Lopes. Albert Fish is a 2007 biographical documentary film directed by John Borowski. The film relates the life story of American serial killer and cannibal Albert Fish. In addition to interviews, period footage and photographs, the film also recreates many of Fish's crimes in numerous reenactment scenes. The film is also Tony Jay's final work, having died seven months prior to its release. Mondo Banana is a documentary film directed by Ryan White. Herencia De Cantina is a short documentary film. De Leger- En Vlootfilm, Holland Neutraal is a 1917 documentary film directed by Willy Mullens. Hard Grit is a climbing film produced by Slackjaw Film, featuring climbing on gritstone in the North of England. It has won ten international film festival awards. A group of young lost rebellious outsiders are given a home in New York City by Emmy Award-winning fashion stylist, Patricia Field, and together take on the world, changing it forever. A Life in the Death of Joe Meek is an independent American documentary about the British record producer Joe Meek, made by Howard S. Berger and Susan Stahman. Joe Meek was one of Britain's premier independent record producers of the late fifties and early sixties, renowned for his pioneering recording techniques and for the futuristic sound of the records he produced, but notorious for his eccentric personality. His biggest success was the production of The Tornados' 1962 worldwide #1 hit "Telstar". After a long struggle with debt, paranoia and depression, he killed his landlady and shot himself on 3 February 1967. The documentary was shown as a work-in-progress on the opening night of the 2008 Sensoria Music & Film Festival in Sheffield, on 12 April 2008. Later in 2008 it was shown at the Cambridge Film Festival and the Raindance Film Festival in London. A North American premiere of the film opened the Chattanooga Film Festival on 3 April 2014. The documentary contains over 60 interviews with Meek's family, close friends, associates, musicians and pop culture movers and shakers. Operation Concrete is a documentary made by French filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard, preceding his work in narrative, fiction film. When former reporter Asra Nomani returns to her hometown in West Virginia to raise her son (after being abandoned by the boy's Pakistani father), she's disturbed to find that her local mosque has taken what she views as an extremist turn. She pushes against the rigid views, while mosque members push back, accusing her of careerism. Through one woman's story, this film attempts to capture the struggle at the heart of American Islam. Highway 40 West - Reise in Amerika is a 1981 film directed by Hartmut Bitomsky. Paavo Nurmi - The Man and His Times is a 1978 documentary film written and directed by Markku Koski and Peter von Bagh. François Truffaut: Stolen Portraits is a 1993 French documentary film directed by Michel Pascal and Serge Toubiana, about the film director François Truffaut. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1993 Cannes Film Festival. Love and Terror on the Howling Plains of Nowhere is a 2014 documentary film directed by Dave Jannetta. How Are You Doing, Rudolf Ming? is a documentary film written by Jānis Kalve and directed by Roberts Rubīns. Army of Lovers or Revolt of the Perverts is a 1979 German documentary film directed by Rosa von Praunheim. The film, mainly shot in San Francisco, chronicles the rise of gay activism in the United States between 1972 and 1978 in the aftermath of the Stonewall riots and before the arrival of the AIDS epidemic. It explores, among other themes, the initial unity formed post-Stonewall era, splintered into numerous factions. The American gay liberation movement, strengthened by the assault of the Anita Bryant led anti gay initiatives, appears foundering into polarization and self-interest groups in an increasingly fractured leadership. The film discusses whether overt sexual expression and promiscuity were helping or hurting the cause of gay rights. Those interviewed include a gay Nazi; gay porno movie stars; spokespersons from the Gay Activists Alliance and its more conservative counterpart, the National Gay Task Force; leaders of the mattachine society; the founders of the Daughters of Bilitis; and novelist John Rechy, who defends gay male promiscuity against the director’s contention that what is hurting the gay men’s movement is the obsession with “discos”, baths, and orgy bars”. Bosnian Rhapsody at the Margins of Science is a 2011 documentary war film written and directed by Vesna Ljubic The One Minutes: 25 Pieces of World (Oil Reserves) is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Arya Sukapura Putra. Luther Metke at 94 is a 1979 short documentary film directed by Jorge Preloran and Steve Raymen at the Ethnographic Film Program, University of California, Los Angeles. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short in 1980. The film presents a portrait of Luther Metke, a veteran of the Spanish-American war. Even in his advanced age, Metke continues his work of building log cabins by hand in the Cascade Mountains of Oregon. The film documents many aspects of log cabin building as Metke works on a hexagonal cabin and teaches his methods to a young couple. Additional footage shows Metke's daily life, accompanied by a voice over of his recollections, commentary on log cabin construction, and musings on life. Metke also shares some of his poetry on camera and through voice over. "Originating from the southern Alps, Luc Moullet has been struck by the abnormally high incidence of mental disorder in the area. Accounts of murder, suicide and self-immolation are plentiful. In this documentary, Moullet examines the causes and consequences of these extreme psychiatric phenomena and arrives at some disturbing conclusions." Quoting the synopsis from filmsdefrance.com Plaster Caster is a 2001 documentary about Cynthia Plaster Caster, the legendary groupie who became famous for making plaster casts of rock stars' penises, including Jimi Hendrix's. Desert Fugue is a 90 minute documentary film about Johann Sebastian Bach's The Art of Fugue directed by Will Fraser and produced by Fugue State Films. It features organist George Ritchie, Bach scholar Christoph Wolff and organ builders Ralph Richards and Bruce Fowkes. In the film, Wolff outlines the history of The Art of Fugue, while Ritchie discusses his recording of the work, described by Gramophone Magazine as 'the finest recording of the Art of Fugue irrespective of media or instrument'. Ritchie also talks about his teacher Helmut Walcha, and Walcha's completion of the unfinished final fugue. The Berlin Government District is the first part of a trilogy, which deals with the historical Berlin government district between 1932 and 1945, and its destruction after the Second World War. The movie is completely 3D animated and was produced in South Africa. Preview was in Berlin and Frankfurt on 29 September 2005. Breastmilk is a documentary drama film directed by Dana Ben-Ari. Wo men de gu shi is a documentary film directed by Yang Yang. Kick Me is a 2007 documentary short film directed by Chelsea Adams and Jennifer Jordan. The Secret Life of Plants is a 1979 family documentary film based on the 1973 book The Secret Life of Plants by Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird and directed by Walon Green. Me at the Zoo is a 2012 documentary film directed by Chris Moukarbel and Valerie Veatch and starring Chris Crocker. Me at the Zoo takes a look at the young video blogger from a small town in Tennessee. The documentary delves into the life of Chris Crocker who was made famous on the internet through numerous public videos, notably his video "Leave Britney Alone", which garnered mainstream media attention. The film also explores how video sharing and social media have shaped the way people share their stories and go about their lives. On January 17, 2012, HBO Documentary Films secured the US broadcasting rights to the film. It premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival on January 21, 2012 and on HBO on June 25, 2012. UFO Chronicles is an unprecedented series featuring top authorities on the UFO enigma disclosing information you were never meant to know. Stars Alfred Lambremont Webre. Why Man Creates is a 1968 animated short documentary film which discusses the nature of creativity. It was written by Saul Bass and Mayo Simon, and directed by Saul Bass. The movie won the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. An abbreviated version of it ran on the first broadcast of CBS' 60 Minutes, on September 24, 1968. Why Man Creates focuses on the creative process and the different approaches taken to that process. It is divided into eight sections: The Edifice, Fooling Around, The Process, Judgment, A Parable, Digression, The Search, and The Mark. In 2002, this film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Manos Hajidakis: Eidolo ston kathrefti is a 2008 biographical documentary film written and directed by Dimitris Vernicos. Are You Listening!, is a Bangladeshi documentary film written-directed by Kamar Ahmad Simon and produced by Sara Afreen. It was the ‘Curtain-Opener’ of 55th DOK Leipzig in Germany, one of the oldest documentary festivals of the world. Later the film won the ‘Grand Prix’ in the 35th Cinéma du Réel held in Paris and 'Golden Conch' in Mumbai International Film Festival 2014, India as the best feature length documentary. It was also in the ‘Official Selection’ of the 25th International Documentary Festival of Amsterdam in Netherlands and in the New Asian Current Competition of 25th Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival in Japan. In a rare move as a documentary, it was released in theatre in Bangladesh on 21 February 2014 in Bashundhara Star Cineplex and successfully ran for four weeks. Written, directed and also filmed by Kamar over a span of 20 months living in a remote coastal village of Bangladesh, it is an observational cinema inspired in Cinema Vérité or Direct Cinema style, a genre almost missing until now in Bangladesh. Feel My Love is a 2014 documentary film directed by Griet Teck. The Sugar Babies is a feature-length documentary film about exploitation in the sugar plantations of the Dominican Republic. The film, narrated by Edwidge Danticat, suggests that the descendants of African slaves, brought over from Haiti, live and work in unfair conditions akin to "modern day slavery." G-Phoria is a 2003 documentary film directed by Gerry Duggan. Renée is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Eric Drath. Grace Paley: Collected Shorts is a 2010 documentary film directed by Lilly Rivlin and Margaret Murphy. Charlie : The Life And Art Of Charles Chaplin is a 2003 documentary and biographical film written and directed by Richard Schickel. Miles of Smiles, Years of Struggle is a 1982 documentary film about a group of Pullman car porters who organized the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters - claimed to be the first African American trade union. The film examines issues of work, race and dignity. The film uses a variety of sources including historical records and photos, old films, and interviews with and reminiscences of retired porters. The film is narrated by a porter's widow and former union organizer: Rosina Tucker. The film was produced by Jack Santino and Paul Wagner and won four regional Emmy Awards. It has been described as "One hundred years of history is spanned in an enlightening portrait of admirable dignity." – New York Times and as "A moving account of the Pullman porters' remarkable history." – Washington Post. In addition to its four regional Emmy Awards, the film has also ben honoured at the Telluride Film Festival, and received the American Film Festival Blue Ribbon, and a CINE Golden Eagle. The film was funded by the D.C. Community Humanities Council. Goyte is best known for his hit single Somebody That I Used to Know, which reached number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Aside from being a compelling vocalist, he is also a pianist, drummer, and painter. In this revealing documentary we examine the journey of the world's most artsy musician. The Models Of Bekonscot is a 2012 documentary short film written and directed by Sophie Le Neveu. The Witches of Gambaga is a documentary film directed by Yaba Badoe. Gray Matter is a 2004 documentary film written by Joe Berlinger and Michael Bonfiglio and directed by Joe Berlinger. THE LOOMIS GANG is a feature length documentary film based upon the tales of a legendary 19th Century crime family that operated in New York State. In the years surrounding The Civil War, The Loomis Gang was arguably the largest family crime syndicate in America. Today, however, few outside of central New York State have ever heard of these horse-thieving rogues from the small village of Waterville. No "professional" historians have laid claim to the Loomis legend. No action figures. No comic books. In fact, the only thing standing between the Loomis family and utter obscurity is a collection of local folks who are fighting to keep the legend alive in a village that largely ignores it. This struggle typifies a battle being waged in towns across the country, and history may be losing. The Land Inhabited is a 2009 film written and directed by Anna Sanmartí Baró. Pas De Piquerie Dans Mon Quartier is a 2012 drama documentary film written by Jean Guénette, Jean-Laurence Seaborn and Jonathan Seaborn, and directed by Jean Guénette. The Girl in the Poster is a 2001 documentary film written by Ewa Pietaová and directed by Ewa Pieta. Tales and Tallies is a 1993 documentary film directed by Eliane de Latour. Futebol Total is a 1974 documentary film written by Sérgio Noronha and directed by Oswaldo Caldeira & Carlos Leonam. Working To Beat The Devil is a 2014 short documentary biographical horror sci-fi film written and directed by Adam Gutch and Chu-Li Shewring. Aliki is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Richard Wiebe. The objective of The 11/4/08 Project is to use film and interactive technology to capture a moment in time, and reinvent the process of writing history. By choosing the day of Barack Obama's election - a moment that was expected to be "historic" before it had even occurred - I was able to encourage a group of filmmakers from all over the world to record their experiences of 11/4/08. It became an experiment in interactive history. To learn more please check out www.11-4-08.com A Century of Cinema is a 1994 documentary directed by Caroline Thomas about the art of filmmaking, containing numerous interviews with some of the most influential film personalities of the 20th century. Fuente Álamo, the Caress of Time is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Pablo García. This Is Our Island is a 1971 documentary film directed by Nancy Hamilton. Im Angesicht der Ewigkeit is a 1958 documentary short film. (Goodbye To) Manhattan is a documentary film directed by Ken Okiishi. Selling the Silence is a 2010 documentary film written by Tarja Kylmä and Markku Tuurna and directed by Markku Tuurna. About Canto is a 2011 documentary film directed by Ramon Gieling. Like a Breath is a 2013 short documentary and biographical film directed by Jaelle Marquis-Gobeille. El Valley Centro is a 1999 documentary film directed by James Benning. Alaska, Sled Building In Mcgrath is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Jett Novak. IV maratón náutico del río Balsas is a 1975 short documentary film directed by Demetrio Bilbatua. Death of a Nation: The Timor Conspiracy is a 1994 Central Independent Television documentary, written and presented by John Pilger, and directed and produced by David Munro, which uncovers the complicity of the US and Great Britain governments in the East Timor genocide in the context of the 1990-91 Gulf War. "Accusations of genocide fly in this disturbing and controversial British documentary," writes Sandra Brennan of Allmovie, as well as, "disturbing accusations regarding the complacency of the U.S., British, and Australian governments who purportedly knew about the killing and did nothing." An updated version of the film entitled The Timor Conspiracy was released in 1999. Megiddo: The March to Armageddon is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Christian J. Pinto. Que nino tan bonito al que di luz is a 1999 short documentary film written and directed by Marcin Koszałka. Richard Artschwager: Shut Up and Look is a documentary film directed by Maryte Kavaliauskas. Been There Done That: The Linsey Alexander Story is a 2013 short biographical music documentary written and directed by Taylor Kidd. My Enemy's Enemy is a documentary film directed by Kevin Macdonald in 2007. Beah: A Black Woman Speaks is a 2003 documentary about the life of Academy Award nominated actress Beah Richards. Directed by Lisa Gay Hamilton, it won the Documentary Award at the AFI Los Angeles International Film Festival in 2003. A Story about a Bad Dream is a docudrama made by Czech director Pavel Stingl, dramatizing the diary of Eva Erbenova, a young girl who survived the Holocaust. The film based on her memoir uses reenactments. with its child narrator and naive view of World War II, it can appeal to a younger audience. The Way to Kevin is a 2012 Documentary, Biography, Drama film directed by Erin Marie Davis and Nathan Edmondson Cannibal Tours is a 1988 documentary film by Australian director and cinematographer Dennis O'Rourke. While it borrows heavily from ethnographic modes of representation, the film is a biting commentary on the nature of modernity. The film follows a number of European and American ecotourists as they travel from village to village throughout the Sepik River area in Papua New Guinea, driving hard bargains for local handcrafted items, paying to view formerly sacred ceremonies and taking photographs of every aspect of "primitive" life. With some prodding, the tourists unwittingly reveal an unattractive and pervasive ethnocentrism to O'Rourke's cameras. The tourists thus become somewhat dehumanized by the camera, even as the tourists themselves are busy exoticizing even the most mundane aspects of Sepik River life. The title of the film can be read in at least a couple of ways. At one point early in the film, a German tourist, clearly titillated, describes the bygone practice of raiding and cannibalism. Cannibalism, the viewer also learns, was highly symbolic and often involved taking and wearing the skins of the victims. Buffy Sainte Marie: Up Where We Belong is a 1996 documentary musical film directed by David Storey. 21 Up is a 1977 documentary biography film directed by Michael Apted. She's a Grouse Game is a 1970 short documentary film directed by Rod Kinnear. Orgasm Inc. is the first feature documentary by award-winning director Liz Canner. It premiered at the Hot Docs Documentary Film Festival. In the documentary, filmmaker Liz Canner takes a job editing erotic movies for a drug trial for a pharmaceutical company called Vivus. Her employer is developing what they hope will be the first Viagra drug for women that wins FDA approval to treat a new disease: female sexual dysfunction. Liz gains permission to film the company's work in general for her own documentary. Initially, she plans to create a movie about science and pleasure but she soon begins to suspect that her employer, along with a cadre of other medical companies, might be trying to take advantage of women in pursuit of billion dollar profits. The film continues from Vivus onto the more general question of whether there is a solid scientific foundation to medical industry claims about what constitutes "healthy" female sexuality and whether drugs and surgery are a suitable first-line approach to obtaining it. Pedro Vivanco started off delivering his family's wine door-to-door on a bicycle, and rose to become the major provider of wine to Rioja wineries. When others were destroying their old machinery to make way for the new, he started collecting them and other pieces over a period of forty years in order to set up what is perhaps the world's best wine museum, as part of his philosophy of 'giving back to wine what wine has given us.' Não pise à grama is a 2009 short/animation/documentary film directed by Orlando Avila. 3 Marias is a 2012 documentary film directed by Maria Dalva Almeida, Maria Adelaide Oliveira, Maria Aparecida De Lima, Luciane Maria Da Silva and Maria José De Lima. At the Edge of Russia is a 2010 documentary film directed by Michal Marczak. Los posibles is a 2013 film directed by Santiago Mitre and Juan Onofri Barbato. Making Overtures: The Story of a Community Orchestra is a 1985 Canadian short documentary film directed by Larry Weinstein. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Jag Mandir, sometimes known by its subtitle, The Eccentric Private Theatre of the Maharaja of Udaipur, is a 1991 documentary film directed for television by Werner Herzog. The bulk of the film consists of footage of an elaborate theatrical performance for the Maharana Arvind Singh Mewar at the City Palace of Udaipur, Rajasthan staged by André Heller. Trapped in the Towers: The Elevators of 9/11 is a 1-hour long documentary about people who were trapped inside elevators inside the World Trade Center during the 9/11 attacks. It is shown chiefly as a re-enactment intercut with interviews of some survivors. The Other Side of the Wind is an unfinished film directed by Orson Welles, shot between 1969 and 1976, and starring John Huston, Bob Random, Peter Bogdanovich, Susan Strasberg and Oja Kodar. In October 2014 it was announced that the film would be completed and screened to coincide with the 100th anniversary of Welles's birth, May 6, 2015. Fire-Followers is a 2013 fake documentary mystery film written and directed by Karolina Bregula. Men of Burden: Pedaling towards a Horizon is a 2006 documentary film set in the city of Pondicherry in the Indian territory of Puducherry. The documentary uncovers the story of disappearing cycle rickshaw drivers living in abject poverty. Over time, the city has experienced a gradual reduction in the number of cycle rickshaws. thereby diminishing the chances of living for those who depend on them. What used to be one of the primary modes of transport in the city is now a fading memory with the few remaining ones staging a difficult survival. The film explores some of the ethical dimensions of man pulling man against the background of the increasingly menacing effects of motorised transport and air pollution. It also takes the viewer through the rickshaw men’s journey of hope on the roads that have fostered them. Representing one facet of India’s population below poverty line, these unflagging men perpetually struggle to eat one satisfying meal a day. What is remarkable is the essence of some who believe in making a difference in an apparently hopeless livelihood. Chuck Amuck: The Movie is a 1991 documentary film about Chuck Jones' career with Warner Bros., centered on his work with Looney Tunes; narrated by Dick Vosburgh. Bambi Verleihung 2009 is a documentary directed by Utz Weber. Jijos de la crisis is a 1985 short documentary film directed by Jijos de la crisis. Eighteen remarkable Latinas share their stories in the 10th anniversary special of the HBO Latino Habla documentary Series. The Revolving Door is a 1968 American short documentary film directed by Lee R. Bobker and produced by Vision Associates. The 28.5 minute film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Kurische Nehrung is a 2000 film directed by Volker Koepp. Perfect/Growing Older (Dis)gracefully is a film directed by Esra Ersen. The Fourth World War is a 2003 feature film directed by Rick Rowley. Everybody Street is a 2013 documentary, biographical, historical and musical film directed by Cheryl Dunn. Melodias is a 2005 documentary film directed by François Bovy. Venomous Folds is a 2013 documentary film directed by Vipin Vijay. Mindelo - Atras de Horizonte is a 2008 documentary film directed by Alexis Tsafas. Charters to Hell is a 1981 International Emmy Award winning documentary film. Buster Keaton: A Hard Act to Follow is a 3-part television documentary series made in 1987, charting the life and career of Buster Keaton. The series was written and produced by Kevin Brownlow and David Gill for Thames Television and narrated by Lindsay Anderson. It was one of three such series produced as follow-ups to Brownlow and Gill's epic documentary series Hollywood, falling between Unknown Chaplin and Harold Lloyd: The Third Genius. The series makes extensive use of Keaton's own words, taken from various radio and television interviews. Clips from Keaton's movies are taken from the best available sources, and clips from Keaton's silent films are shown at their original speed. Keaton's widow Eleanor and his business associate Raymond Rohauer worked closely with Brownlow and Gill in the production, and appear in the documentary. The series was shown in the U.S. on Turner Classic Movies. It is currently available on DVD in the United Kingdom as a companion to the Buster Keaton Chronicles movie box set. From the lighting strike at liftoff, to the splashdown disaster that almost caused the first space flight fatality. APOLLO 12: UNCENSORED tells the true story of the Apollo 12 Moon Mission that NASA never told. The Neorealism: We Were Not Just Bicycles Thieves is a 2013 documentary film co-written and directed by Gianni Bozzacchi. Daddy & Papa is a 2002 documentary film made by Johnny Symons. It explores same-sex parenting as seen in the lives of four families headed by male couples. The film also examines the legal, social, and political challenges faced by gay parents and their children. Filmmaker Symons and his partner William Rogers, along with their adopted son, Zachary, were one of the four families featured in the film. Symons says of the project, I wanted to document this phenomenon: what it means for out gay men to form their own families - for the dads, for the kids, for their extended families and schools and communities and the thousands of mainstream people who are being changed by their exposure to a new kind of family. Daddy & Papa was shown nationwide in the U.S. on PBS in the spring of 2003 as part of its Independent Lens series. The film was scheduled for rebroadcast on the LOGO channel in August 2007. Vessel for My Heart is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Ryan Lexi. Maa Ooru is a 1987 Telugu non-feature film written and directed by B. Narsing Rao. The film won the National Film Award for Best Anthropological/Ethnographic Film The film also received the Media Wave Award at the Hungary International festival of visual arts. Hollywood Spies on Spies is a 1999 documentary film written by Jerry Decker and directed by Larayne Decoeur. Super 8 Stories is a documentary film about the band No Smoking Orchestra. It is directed by the award-winning Serbian filmmaker Emir Kusturica. The film won the Silver Plate of best documentary at Chicago International Film Festival in 2001. People of the World is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Yves Jeuland. Leuchtturm des Chaos is a 1983 documentary profile of the American actor Sterling Hayden. The film features discussions with Hayden concerning his life and career, intercut with clips and stills from his films. It follows the actor through several long and digressive afternoon conversations with the German filmmakers aboard the barge in the Netherlands on which he was living. Hayden smokes hashish and drinks heavily throughout, telling the filmmakers that they "have a record of exactly what alcoholism is". Hayden recounts his shame at having co-operated with the House Un-American Activities Committee during the Second Red Scare, his pride in his achievements as a sailor, and adopts a scornful attitude towards his illustrious career as a Hollywood film icon. The film was shown at the 1983 Edinburgh Film Festival, where it was one of a few independent films singled out for praise by critic Steve McIntyre in an otherwise disappointing event. In a review for The New York Times, critic Janet Maslin cited the film as an example of "documentary film making ... at its most laissez faire", lamenting that "[e]very discussion is allowed to proceed far beyond its natural conclusion". The One Who Builds is a 2013 short biographical documentary war drama film directed by Peter Carolla, Nick Gooler and Hillary Pierce. Stories Of Arcanjo - A Documentary About Tim Lopes is a 2013 documentary film written by Bruno Quintella and directed by Guilherme Azevedo. Troop 1500 is a documentary film which won two Gracie Awards from the American Women in Radio & Television in the Individual Achievement Award for Outstanding Director and Outstanding Documentary. The nationally broadcast film follows a unique Girl Scouts of the USA troop which unites mothers and daughters monthly behind the bars at the Hilltop Unit, a prison of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, in Gatesville, Texas. All of the mothers have been convicted of serious crimes and are serving long sentences. The troop’s activities are centered on rebuilding the tenuous relationships, and addition to arts and crafts and learning life skills, the mothers and daughters bond by asking and answering tough questions of each other. For more than five years, filmmaker Ellen Spiro worked with the leaders and girls of Troop 1500, the “prison troop,” as a volunteer and mentor. She spent the first year with the troop training the girls in cinematography, sound and editing, and then she began making Troop 1500 in which the girls occupy front and center of the film, as subjects as well as crew. Heart Of Iron: Mining In The Congo Basin Rain Forest is a 2013 short adventure drama documentary film written by Leo Bottrill and Anjali Nayar and directed by Leo Bottrill. Not in My Backyard is a 2011 documentary film directed by Matthias Bittner. The Legend of Marilyn Monroe is a 1966 American documentary film chronicling the life and career of actress Marilyn Monroe. Directed by Terry Sanders, and narrated by John Huston, the film was also released under the title The Marilyn Monroe Story in the UK. Crossroads: Labor Pains of a New Worldview is a documentary historical fiction film directed by Joseph Ohayon. How I Got Over is a documentary drama film directed by Nicole Boxer. Rafea: Solar Mama is a documentary that depicts the trials and tribulations faced by Rafea, an illiterate Jordanian Bedouin as she follows her aspirations of lighting up her village by harnessing the power of solar energy by enrolling in the Barefoot College solar program in India. The story takes the viewer through Rafea's and her neighbour's physical and emotional journey before she triumphs. The true story was directed by Mona Eldaief and Jehane Noujaim as part of the Why Poverty project Enlarged to Show Detail is a 1996 documentary created by the multi-genred band 311. The set contains a documentary and a bonus CD EP. This was the first video documenting their experiences as a band promoting what they consider to be peace and a positive outlook on life. It features backstage footage, clips of music videos and live concert footage. Enlarged to Show Detail was certified as a Platinum selling video by the RIAA. Lady Gaga's Secret World is a 2012 biographical documentary film directed by Maureen Goldthorpe. Flipping Out is a 2008 documentary film directed by Yoav Shamir describing the drug use of Israeli men and women in India. It follows Israeli soldiers who take their discharge bonus and travel to India, where 90 percent will take drugs and around 2,000 will eventually need professional help after experiencing drug-induced mental breakdowns, or "flipping out". It was shown on Sundance Channel. Juan, I Forgot I Don’t Remember is a 1999 documentary film directed by Juan Carlos Rulfo. Eyes in Outer Space is a 1959 film directed by Ward Kimball. You Know What? I Love You is a film of 2012 directed by Natalie Cunningham. Goodbye Uncle Tom is a 1971 Italian film directed by Mondo film documentary directors Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi with music by Riz Ortolani. It is a pseudo-documentary in which the filmmakers go back in time and visit antebellum America, using period documents to examine, in graphic detail, the racist ideology and degrading conditions faced by Africans under slavery. Because of the use of published documents and materials from the public record, the film labels itself a documentary, though all footage is restaged using actors. Though the film is presented as a documentary, the fantasy framing device of the directors travelling back in time combined with the re-staging of historical events make it one of the earliest known mockumentary films. Cropsey is a 2009 American documentary film written and directed by Joshua Zeman and Barbara Brancaccio. The film initially begins as an examination of "Cropsey," a boogeyman-like figure from New York urban legend, before segueing into the story of Andre Rand, a convicted child kidnapper from Staten Island. In 2009, Cropsey premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival, where programmer David Kwok stated, “The eeriness of the mystery pulsates through the film as they journey into the underbelly… As more information and clues unravel, Zeman and Brancaccio become more immersed in shocking surprises and revelations. The reality they uncover in this uniquely hair-raising documentary is more terrifying than any urban legend.” "Living in the wake of the Idi Amin reign of terror and institutional discrimination, one Ugandan coffee farmer organized a group of Christian, Muslim and Jewish neighbors to challenge historical––as well as economic and environmental––hurdles by forming Delicious Peace Coffee Cooperative to enhance peaceful relationships and economic development. Partnering with a Fair Trade US distributor, the standard of living of the farmers is improving, peace is flourishing, and their messages of peace and fair wages are spreading to coffee customers in the US. The film is narrated by the actor Ed O'Neill." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. No hay más is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Alma Cristina Pérez Reyes. The Globe Collector is a 2012 documentary, short and biographical film written and directed by Summer DeRoche. Peter Mettler: Picture of Light is a 1994 documentary film directed by Peter Mettler. Graven Image is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Abhijit Chattopadhyay. Project Hope is a 1961 American short documentary film produced by Frank P. Bibas, documenting the maiden voyage of the SS Hope. It won an Academy Award in 1962 for Documentary Short Subject. The Battle of the Ancre and the Advance of the Tanks is a 1917 documentary war film directed by Geoffrey H. Malins TRANS is a 2012 documentary drama film directed by Chris Arnold. Sfiorando il muro is a 2012 documentary film written by Silvia Giralucci and directed by Silvia Giralucci and Luca Ricciardi. Classic Albums: Nirvana – Nevermind is a documentary DVD released by Eagle Vision in March 2005, as part of the Classic Albums series. It features interviews specifically for this release with Nirvana band members Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic, as well as Nevermind album producer Butch Vig about the recording of the album. Other interview highlights include Garry Gersh, Jonathan Ponneman and Nils Bernstein, Thurston Moore and Jack Endino. The El Paso Conquest is a documentary film directed by Charlie Minn. Human Ape is a National Geographic documentary film on the genetic and evolutionary origins of human behavior, and covers the genetic and behavioural similarities and differences between humans and other great apes. The award-winning independent production company Pioneer Productions of London was commissioned by National Geographic Channels International to produce Human Ape. Pioneer’s expertise with special effects are showcased in documentary films such as The Living Body, Life Before Birth, In the Womb: Animals, In The Womb: Multiples and The Body Atlas, all of which used wide ranging techniques to explore the inner world of the living organisms. Human Ape was executive produced by Stuart Carter for Pioneer Productions and directed by Martin Gorst. It was commissioned by Sydney Suissa, Executive Vice President, National Geographic Channels International, and distributed by National Geographic Channel and Granada International. The show was aired on both the US and internationally on National Geographic Channel beginning in March 2008. A Falcon, A Revolution is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Md Rezwan Al Islam and Jassim Al Rumaihi. K-OS: Publicity Stunt? is a music DVD that was nominated the award for in the 2006 Juno Awards. Lgh + Bil + Allt Jag Har Och äger is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Clara Bodén. Maya Deren, Take Zero is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Gerard Gil and Jaime Ballada. Quality Balls—The David Steinberg Story is a 2013 documentary film directed by Barry Avrich. China: The Roots of Madness is a 1967 Cold War era, made-for-TV documentary film produced by David L. Wolper, written by Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Theodore H. White with production cost funded by a donation from John and Paige Curran.The film has been released under Creative Commons license. It won an Emmy Award in the documentary category. The film attempts to analyze the Anti-Western sentiment in China from the official American's perspective, covering 170 years of China's political history, from Boxer Rebellion of the Qing Dynasty to Red Guards of Cultural Revolution. The film focuses on the power struggle between the Kuomintang and the Communist Party of China, amid heavy political intervention from Moscow, with Sun Yat-sen, Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong playing the pivotal role at the center stage. Taken By Storm: The Art Of Storm Thorgerson And Hipgnosis is a 2011 history biography documentary film directed by Roddy Bogawa. Raindeer is a 2011 short documentary adventure film written and directed by Eva Weber. The Battle for Titanic is a 1999 documentary film written by John Gau and directed by Chris Powell. Come to the Table is a 2010 documentary short film directed by Zoe Salnave. Yangsi is a documentary biographical film directed by Mark Elliott. KOGI is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Paula Gaitán. The Toronto Rap Project is a documentary directed by Richard Budman and produced by John Bortolotti for D.C.R. Productions. The Toronto Rap Project premiered April 20, 2006 at the ReelWorld Film Festival, going on to capture several major film awards, including the StarTV audience choice award for best film and the best director award at the festival, while selling out both of the screenings of the film. The film was also awarded a four-star review by Now Magazine and received positive reviews in The Toronto Star and National Post. It was also a feature story on CBC News and MTV Canada. The Toronto Rap Project also played several other film festivals, receiving rave reviews at both its Brunswick House Screening and at the 2006 Commfest Gala with Harold Stoute. The Rap Project also hosted a Jane and Finch community screening at Driftwood Community Center with Rap Project Star Blacus Ninjah. The Toronto Rap Project was eventually distributed on-line through the Rap Project website and through social networking sites such as YouTube, Myspace, and Facebook. "The Hawksbill turtle has been swimming in the southern oceans since the time of the dinosaurs. Over-fishing is now threatening the species' survival and has brought the Hawksbill to the brink of extinction. The Arnavon Islands are nestled in a far corner of the Solomon Islands and have become one of the Hawksbill's most important rookeries in the Pacific Ocean. They're one of the turtle's last stands. Three rival tribes claim ownership of the islands, but their need for resources is threatening the very environment they depend on. Home for Hawksbill tells the remarkable story of how these rival tribes overcame cultural conflicts and disputes over land ownership to protect the islands and save the turtles. Their success inspired others, and is now a model for conservation throughout the world." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. The Inner Tour is a 2001 documentary film directed by Ra'anan Alexandrowicz. Blighted Beauty is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Joe Brown. Back to the Moon: For Good is a short documentary film directed by Max Crow. Exporting Raymond is a 2010 documentary film, directed by Philip Rosenthal. The documentary follows Everybody Loves Raymond creator Philip Rosenthal on a journey to create a Russian version of the hit TV series under the name Voroniny. Sarah Palin: You Betcha! is a 2011 documentary film about Sarah Palin. Directed by Nick Broomfield and Joan Churchill, the film was produced by Marc Hoeferlin and Cassian Elwes. Shani Hinton, Sophie Watts and Gregory Unruh executive produced. The documentary premiered at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival. $31,120 was raised through Kickstarter for the film's distribution and advertising. The film received a limited release in the United States on September 30, 2011. Of By For is a 2013 documentary film directed by Christopher Kay. The Ladies is a 2007 film directed by Christina A. Voros. The Queen of Versailles is a 2012 American documentary film by Lauren Greenfield. The film depicts Jackie Siegel and David Siegel, owners of Westgate Resorts, and their family as they build the Versailles house, the largest and most expensive single-family house in the United States, and the crisis they face as the U.S. economy declines. Positive Youth is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Charlie David. Cinephile is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Mark Wihak. Freia And The Wannabe Indians is a 2013 short film written and directed by Carl Javér. Video chronicling Alanis Morissette's Jagged Little Pill world tour from 1995 to 1996. It was primarily filmed in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, but it features clips from various other tour stops, including Morissette's hometown of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. The video Jagged Little Pill Live won a 1997 Grammy Award for "Best Long Form Music Video". L'ange de l'abîme is a 1982 short, documentary film directed by Annie Tresgot. Unfit- The Baby Shower is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Bruno Karnov. Milk and Honey from Rotfront is a 2001 film directed by Hans-Erich Viet. Examined Life is a 2008 documentary film directed by Astra Taylor. The film features eight influential contemporary philosophers walking around New York and other metropolises and discussing the practical application of their ideas in modern culture. The philosophers featured are Cornel West, Avital Ronell, Peter Singer, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Martha Nussbaum, Michael Hardt, Slavoj Žižek, and Judith Butler, who is accompanied by Taylor's sister Sunny, a disability activist. The film appeared in the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival, the 2009 Melbourne International Film Festival and the 2009 Kingston Canadian Film Festival. It is co-produced by Sphinx Productions and the National Film Board of Canada, in association with the Ontario Media Development Corporation, TVOntario and Knowledge Network. Reception has been generally favorable, however Martha Nussbaum subsequently complained in The Point that although Examined Life displays "a keen visual imagination and a vivid sense of atmosphere and place" it nonetheless "presents a portrait of philosophy that is ... a betrayal of the tradition of philosophizing that began, in Europe, with the life of Socrates". Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth is an documentary film directed by Pratibha Parmar, made by Kali Films production company. The film follows the life of the Pulitzer Prize-winning author, poet and activist Alice Walker. Shooting began in May 2011. It was aired on the BBC on Monday July 8, 2013, and on PBS on February 7, 2014. Alice Walker and Pratibha Palmer have previously collaborated on A Place of Rage and Warrior Marks. Demonstration is a 2013 documentary film directed by Victor Kossakovsky. Hell House is a 2001 documentary that was directed by George Ratliff that focuses on the idea of a hell house, a Christian-themed haunted attraction, in Cedar Hill, Texas. The film follows the youth group of the Cedar Hill Trinity Church, documenting the work involved in creating the hell house, the performances themselves, and the personal lives of some of the participants. Being Jewish in France, 2007 is a three-hour documentary film originally shown on French TV, about the history of Jewish life in France from the 19th century to the present day. The film, written and directed by French cinematographer Yves Jeuland, had its North American premiere at the Atlanta Jewish Film Festival on 21 January 2008. Negro Colleges in War Time is a short propaganda film produced by the Office of War Information in 1943. Other than in the title no reference is made to the students' race. The film begins with a shot of the famous statue of Booker T. Washington at Tuskegee, and notes that "progress and industry" has a new meaning for the present -- winning the Second World War. A brief overview of the war related work at several different black colleges follows, starting with Tuskegee where the famous George Washington Carver was putting his brain to work for the war effort. Students are encouraged to join the Tuskegee Airmen or learn about aviation manufacture. At Prairie View College in Texas and Howard University in Washington, DC students learn the increasingly technical skills of war industry and agriculture. At Howard's medical school, training is also being offered to supply the field with nurses. Hampton University in Virginia is "practically on a 24-hour basis training more war workers." Géographie humaine is a 2013 documentary film written by Claire Simon and directed by Claire Simon. Geronimo and the Apache Resistance is a 1988 tv documentary film. The Tightrope Dancer is a 1989 documentary film written and directed by Ruth Cullen. Call of the Mountains is a 1958 documentary film directed by A. K. Chaudhuri. Searching for Debra Winger is a 2002 American documentary film conceived and directed by Rosanna Arquette. It presents a series of interviews with leading actresses who discuss the various pressures they face as women working in the film industry while trying to juggle their professional commitments with their personal responsibilities to their families and themselves. Linha Vermelha is a 2011 documentary biography history film written and directed by José Filipe Costa. Directed by John Roecker, the series is a behind-the-scenes look at the lives of some of gay adult cinema's hottest talents. Among the current and former porn stars featured on the series will be Johnny Hazzard, Brad Benton, Nick Capra, Jason Hawke, Nick Piston and Jason Ridge. The series is also Executive Produced by Chris Panizzon (Shelter) and features music by Tim Armstrong and Rancid. Gypaetus Helveticus is a 2011 documentary, animation and short film written and directed by Marcel Barelli. Moscow Clad in Snow is a 1909 short silent documentary film directed by Joseph-Louis Mundwiller about winter in Moscow 1908. Brötzmann - That's When The World Is Mine is a 2012 Documentary film written and directed by Uli M. Schueppel. To Chris Marker, An Unsent Letter is a 2012 documentary, biographical film directed by Emiko Omori. Lake of Fire is a 2006 documentary film that graphically depicts abortion in the United States. It features Noam Chomsky, Peter Singer, Alan Dershowitz, Nat Hentoff and Randall Terry. The documentary was filmed entirely in black and white. It opened in September 2006 in Toronto. Melissa Immaculate is a 2009 documentary film directed by Julian Krubasik. Filmland is a documentary TV series. Return To Departure: The Biography Of A Painting Or Watching A Pigment Dry And Other Realisms is a 1986 documentary film directed by Kirk Tougas. Idem Paris is a 2013 documentary short film, directed by David Lynch. Filmed at the eponymous Idem Paris, a fine art printing studio in Paris, France, and "virtually wordless", it documents the lithographic process. The film was edited by Noriko Miyakawa and mixed by Dean Hurley. Idem Paris was shot on high definition digital video, presented in black-and-white and released on YouTube. Critics drew comparisons between Idem Paris and Lynch's debut feature film, 1977's Eraserhead, noting that both had "high-contrast black and white images, the focus on specific machinery, and the clanking and hissing array of sounds." Describing the background of the film, Lynch said: Hervé Chandès from the Fondation Cartier brought me over to Idem and introduced me to Patrice Forest. I see this incredible place, and I get the opportunity to work there. And this was like a dream! It just opened up this brand-new world of the lithography and the magic of lithography, the magic of the stones. And it was a great, great thing! This thing of lithography, this channel of lithography opened up and a bunch of ideas came flowing out and it led to about a hundred lithographs. Living Warbirds: Steel Warriors is a 2009 documentary directed by Iqbal Hans. "A compelling documentary about the resurgence of gay & lesbian civil rights movement in response to the passage of Proposition 8 that denied marriage for same-sex couples in California annulling thousands of marriages." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. The Concert for Bangladesh is a film directed by Saul Swimmer and released in 1972. The film documents the two benefit concerts that were organised by George Harrison and Ravi Shankar to raise funds for refugees of the Bangladesh Liberation War, and were held on Sunday, 1 August 1971 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. As well as notable performances from Harrison and Shankar, the film includes "main performer" contributions from Harrison's fellow ex-Beatle Ringo Starr, Billy Preston and Leon Russell, and a surprise walk-on from Bob Dylan. Other contributing musicians include Ali Akbar Khan, Eric Clapton, the band Badfinger, Klaus Voormann, Jesse Ed Davis, Jim Horn and Jim Keltner. The film was the final part of Harrison's "pioneering" aid project for the people of former East Pakistan, following his "Bangla Desh" charity single, the UNICEF benefit concerts, and a triple live album of the event credited to "George Harrison and Friends". The Concert for Bangladesh was produced by The Beatles' Apple Films; after delays caused by problems with inadequate footage from the event, it opened in US cinemas in the spring of 1972. This was an official documentary shown on television featuring George Martin taking us through the album tracks and Paul, George and Ringo giving us their memories of the sessions. The Making Of Sgt. Pepper was transmitted in the UK on ITV on 14th June 1992 and featured separate interviews with Paul (filmed on 9th April 1992), George (12th April) and Ringo (19th April). The show also features George Martin playing some unreleased Sgt. Pepper's recordings directly off the original studio 4-track master tapes. MindFlux is a 2010 documentary film directed by Ryan Kerrison. Urgan is nine years old and lives in an isolated village in the Himalayas. He has never known anything other than this land surrounded by snow capped peaks. In this month of January however, he must leave his family for the monastery and cross the 5,000 meter high Wori La pass. During his journey, he will be accompanied his nineteen year old cousin, Norbou. They will experience unexpected, fascinating and sometimes frightening spiritual encounters...a true path to enlightenment. Poetry Is an Island, Derek Walcott is a documentary film directed by Ida Does. Reisender Krieger is a 1981 film directed by Christian Schocher. Full Cycle: A World Odyssey is a mountain biking video title that chronicles the travel adventures of San Diego husband and wife team, Mark Schulze and Patty Mooney, who in 1993 and 1994, went in search of the best singletrack mountain trails of nine countries including the United States, Canada, Costa Rica, Wales, Switzerland, Greece, Tahiti, Australia and India. Featured in the documentary are actor James Hong and his family, along with mountain bike pioneers Gary Fisher, Charlie Kelly, Jacquie Phelan and World Trials Champion, Ot Pi of Barcelona. Summit Magazine, among other publications, referred to it as the Endless Summer on Wheels. Bruce Lee,The Man and The Legend is a 1973 Hong Kong Documentary produced by Raymond Chow, and starring Bruce Lee. A Follow-up/reworking of this Documentary was released in 1984 under the title Bruce Lee,The Legend In Search Of The Unreturned Soldiers In Malaysia is a 1971 documentary film directed by Shohei Imamura. Africa Ama is a 1971 documentary film written by Guido Guerrasio and directed by Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni, Guido Guerrasio, Oreste Pellini. To Sell A War is a documentary, first aired in December 1992 as part of CBC programme the fifth estate. The programme was directed and produced by Neil Docherty. It chronicles the Citizens for a Free Kuwait campaign efforts to spin public relations sentiment in the United States in favor of the Gulf War, focusing on the story of Nurse Nayirah, who was, in fact, Nayirah al-Sabah, the daughter of Kuwait's ambassador to the United States Saud Nasir Al-Sabah. Her infamous testimony about Iraqi soldiers removing babies from incubators, which was widely disseminated, was a result of coaching by PR firm Hill & Knowlton. Le choix d'un peuple is a 1985 historical documentary film written by Bernard Lalonde, Hugues Mignault, Michel Pratt and Jean Saulnier and directed by Hugues Mignault. Examines the ethical issues and scientific achievements that surrounds this new science. Space Station is a 2012 documentary and short film written and directed by Felicitas Sonvilla. "Who was the real Anne Lister? See one version of her story in Frameline34’s engaging Opening Night film, The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister. Then follow comedy writer Sue Perkins as she guides you through this dry-witted documentary, digging up even more of the real dirt on a British lesbian who was well ahead of her time. Born to a landowning family in Halifax in 1791, Lister lived in the same era as the Bronte sisters, but her writings — and, boy, did she write — were a far cry from Wuthering Heights. In a series of elaborate and often encrypted diaries (“The Rosetta Stone of lesbian history,” says her biographer), Lister detailed every one of her sexual relationships. It took over four million words to capture her dalliances, beginning at the ripe young age of thirteen with her roommate at an elite girls’ boarding school (from which she, naturally, was sent home in short order). Journeying across the Yorkshire countryside, Perkins attempts to trace the life and loves of Lister, from her experimental youth to her radical industrialist-landowner days with her live-in lover (okay, wife). Thanks to the meticulous decoding efforts of Lister’s biographer, Helena Whitbread, and the insights of a handful of local historians and scholars, Perkins is able to paint an intriguing picture of a complex character, who is at once pioneering, self-serving, rebellious, manipulative and bold — but certainly never boring." Quoting Joanne Parsont from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. The House Is Black is an acclaimed Iranian documentary short film directed by Forough Farrokhzad. The film is a look at life and suffering in a leper colony and focuses on the human condition and the beauty of creation. It is spliced with Farrokhzad's narration of quotes from the Old Testament, the Koran and her own poetry. The film was based on the Behkadeh Raji colony. It was the only film she directed before her death in 1967. During the shooting she became attached to a child of two lepers, whom she later adopted. Although the film attracted little attention outside Iran when released, it has since been recognised as a landmark in Iranian film. Reviewer Eric Henderson described the film; "One of the prototypal essay films, The House is Black paved the way for the Iranian New Wave." "Duki Dror (My Fantasia, SFJFF 2005; Taqasim, SFJFF 2003) is a documentary filmmaker who embraces his subjects with a keen eye and curious intellect. In this creative homage, Dror illuminates the life of German Jewish Expessionist architect Erich Mendelsohn. The visionary Mendelsohn, a contemporary of Walter Gropius and influenced by artists such as Franz Marc and the Blue Rider group, produced work embodying a kind of organic dynamism. His story unfolds through letters exchanged with his wife, Luise, an accomplished cellist. Dror gently breathes life into the correspondence of two passionate artists who helped each other weather a turbulent time in history. Mendelsohn’s career followed the jagged trajectory of many German Jewish émigrés fleeing Nazism; he worked in England, Israel and, finally, the Bay Area, where he taught at UC Berkeley. Mendelsohn’s drawings pulsate with energy and his buildings are stunning. Among his accomplishments, he designed the Einstein Tower, Schocken department stores and the Universum Cinema in Germany; the Mt. Scopus Campus of Hadassah Hospital and the Weitzman House in Israel; and private homes and a hospital in the Bay Area. Dror deftly juxtaposes the architect’s original designs with contemporary images, weaving in reflections from Mendelsohn’s granddaughter, other architects and the people who use these unique structures today—a testament to the integrity and timelessness of visionary design." Quoting Nancy Fishman from the 2011 San Francisco Jewish Film Festival site. Learn the secrets of the wild pandas! Hear the outsized yelp of a four-ounce panda cub, and spy on hungry pandas who eat as much as 80 pounds of food a day. Radical Act is a feature length documentary by Tex Clark. Shot in 1995, Radical Act documents the contributions of female artists to the 1990s indie rock scene. Participants include Kathleen Hanna, Toshi Reagon, Gretchen Phillips, Melissa York, Kim Coletta, Shirlé Hale, Sharon Topper, journalist Evelyn McDonnell, author Victoria "Vicky" Starr and Dr. Kay Turner. Radical Act screened at the 1996 Outfest Film Festival in Los Angeles and was included in Miranda July's "Joanie For Jackie chainletter" collection of short films. "A joyously uplifting celebration of the creative process and the inventive, outrageous downtown art scene of New York from the past 30 years, Arias with a Twist focuses its lens on the inspired collaboration between cabaret and drag artist Joey Arias and master puppeteer Basil Twist, whose groundbreaking 2008 show brought them some of the biggest success of their careers. Featuring never-before-seen footage of Andy Warhol, Jim Henson, Keith Haring, Grace Jones, and Divine." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival. Fresh Art Daily is a 2004 film directed by Thomas Schlottmann and Andreas Geiger. Anaheim Uprising: The Police Killing Of Manuel Angel Diaz is a 2014 documentary short film directed by YCM. Free China:The Courage to Believe is a 2012 documentary film covering the persecution of Falun Gong. Starring Jennifer Zeng and Charles Lee. From the award winning director of "Tibet: Beyond Fear", Free China: The Courage to Believe tells the remarkable stories of Jennifer Zeng, a Communist Party member and Dr. Charles Lee, a Chinese American businessman who are jailed and tortured for their belief in Falun Gong, the meditation practice that swept across China in the 1990s. Directed by Michael Perlman and co-produced by Mr. Wong and NTDTV. It is the winner of many film festivals, including American INSIGHT's 2012 Free Speech Film Festival and WorldFest's 2012 Film Festival Yanni Live at the Acropolis is the name of both an album and a video by contemporary instrumental musician Yanni, recorded live at the Herodes Atticus Theatre, Athens, Greece, on September 25, 1993, and released in 1994. The album peaked at number 1 on Billboard's "Top New Age Albums" chart and at number 5 on the "Billboard 200" chart in the same year. The film spent 229 weeks on Billboard's "Top Music Video" charts and "Top VHS sales" charts, and received an Emmy nomination in 1994 for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Lighting Direction for a Drama Series, Variety Series, Miniseries or a Special". In a three-year television deal with the Public Broadcasting Service, the live television special was one of the top fund-raising subjects for PBS, raising $13 million, with more than 750,000 home videos and more than 7 million albums sold worldwide. It has been seen in 65 countries by half a billion people, and is the second-best-selling music video of all time. Whispering Hope: Unmasking the Mystery of Alzheimer's is a 1985 News & Documentary Emmy Award nominee. Children of Jerusalem: Gesho follows a thirteen-year-old Ethiopian boy who was one of 14,000 refugees to flee the warring African nation in hopes of finding a better life in the Jewish State of Israel. This 1996 documentary short is one of a five-part series directed by Beverly Shaffer. She explores Israel’s holiest city through the eyes of its children. Apocalypse Later: Harold Camping vs The End of the World is a 2013 biographical documentary film directed by Zeke Piestrup. The Potato Eaters is a 2011 documentary film written by Arno Hagers and Harmen Jalvingh and directed by Arno Hagers. Go under cover during the MX Nationals 2002. Hear what you have never heard before. Listen to "wired" riders and machanics for complete coverage as the events unwind. You will be taken on an exhilarating experience as Ricky Carmichael produces the perfect season. Shot on 16mm film to capture the agony and excitement experienced by some of the worlds best athletes as never seen before... The World of 007 is a 1995 documentary film directed by Paul Hall and Tom Shelly. Royal Paintbox is a 2013 documentary, history, family film written and directed by Margy Kinmonth. Im Still Alive is a 1987 film directed by Michael Aue. Dead Men Talking is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Robin Newell. Digna... hasta el último aliento is a Mexican film released in 2003. This documentary is about Digna Ochoa Plácido, a human rights activist who died under mysterious circumstances in 2001 in Mexico City following her kidnapping by the federal police in 1999. It was presented at the Guadalajara and Berlin Film Festivals. It won the Ariel Award in 2005 in the category of Best Feature Length Documentary for Felipe Cazals. It was also nominated for the Ariel Award for the Best Actress. Debonair Dancers is a 1986 short Canadian documentary film produced by Alison Nigh-Strelich. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Joachim Gatti, variation de lumière is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Jean-Marie Straub. Battle for the City is a 2011 Finnish documentary film directed by Jouko Aaltonen about the city of Turku. Akbar is a 1967 short documentary film directed by Shanti S. Varma. Sing Faster: The Stagehands' Ring Cycle is a 1999 documentary film. Sodankylä Forever - The Century Of Cinema is an episode of the documentary television series Sodankylä Forever. Sea Point Days is a 2008 documentary film about the Cape Town suburb of Sea Point, directed by François Verster. Running on the Sun: The Badwater 135 is a 2000 documentary film directed by Mel Stuart. The film follows athletes as they run 135 miles in the 1999 Badwater Ultramarathon, starting in California's Death Valley and ending at Whitney Portal, the trailhead to Mount Whitney. The winner for the 1999 race was Eric Clifton with a time of 27 hours and 49 minutes, beating the previous year winner, Gabriel Flores. Late Shift - Gunter Grass working on etching for "Dog Years" is a 2013 biographical historical documentary short film written and directed by Sigrun Matthiesen. Three Days Of Freedom is a short biographical documentary drama film written and directed by Lukasz Borowski. Merle Haggard: Learning to Live with Myself is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Gandulf Hennig. Five Years of Soviet Russia is a 1922 documentary film. Addicted in Afghanistan is a 2009 documentary film written by Jawed Taiman and Sharron Ward and directed by Jawed Taiman. "There are more than a million drug addicts in Afghanistan, including a shockingly high percentage of children. Addicted in Afghanistan, the feature-length debut of director Jawed Taiman, is about the teenagers Jabar and Zahir, both of whom are from Kabul and come from families that have been ravaged by drugs. Zahir used opium for the first time when his drug-addicted mother gave it to him at age eight, and the two boys spend their days looking for their next heroin score. The film sketches an intimate portrait of their lives in the slums of the city, where they smoke heroin in their decrepit houses or leave the detox clinic for the umpteenth time. But there are also some lighthearted moments, such as when Jabar and Zahir exuberantly pull the legs of passersby in broken English in the opening scene. And between the lines, the political situation of their broken country also gets adequate attention: while Jabar and Zahir blame the Americans for introducing heroin to Afghanistan, Zahir's mother knows better -- it was the Taliban that got her addicted. Taiman does not try to maintain an objective distance, but makes passionate attempts from behind his camera to change Jabar and Zahir's literally hopeless lives." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 International Documentary Filmfestival Amsterdam site, Tales from a Hard City is a 1994 documentary film directed by Kim Flitcroft. I Went to the Dance is a 1989 musical documentary film written by Ann Savoy and directed by Les Blank and Chris Strachwitz. "Framed by the hate crime murder of 16-year-old Fred Martinez, this riveting documentary explores the diverse histories of gender and sexuality in Native American cultures. In 2001, 16-year-old Fred Martinez was brutally murdered in the small town of Cortez, Colorado. A poor Navajo teenager, Fred was also nádleehi, a person with both masculine and feminine essences. Fred's determination to express this identity, which is revered in his culture, ultimately cost him his life. Two Spirits inspirationally elevates Fred's story from a hate crime tragedy into a deeper exploration of Native American cultures that embrace diversity in human gender and sexuality. It deftly weaves heart-wrenching interviews with Fred's mother, Cortez community members, and civil rights leaders into a largely unknown indigenous history, illuminating topics from native gender expression and same-sex marriage to the legacy of colonialism that impacts native LGBT communities. Rare archival footage, golden photography of the American Southwest, and a score by Navajo composers contribute to this riveting film that will open your mind and hearts to the spiritual possibilities of difference. KS" Quoting the program notes from the 2010 London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. A same-sex couple celebrates their 25th anniversary by traveling across the country to get married in every state that will let them. State of Dogs is a Mongolian movie that was released in 1998, directed and written by Peter Brosens and Dorjkhandyn Turmunkh. The film was shown at the 1998 Venice Film Festival, the 1998 Toronto Film Festival, the 1999 Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival, and won the Grand Prix at the 1998 Visions du Réel film festival in Nyon, Switzerland. Tubular Bells II, The Performance Live at Edinburgh Castle is a live concert video by Mike Oldfield released in 1992. Manuel Álvarez Bravo, fotógrafo is a 1983 documentary short film directed by Juan Mora Catlett. George Clinton: The Mothership Connection is the title of a DVD released in 1998 and then reissued in 2001 featuring George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic. The DVD features a concert performed by Parliament-Funkadelic at the Hofheinz Pavilion in Houston, Texas on October 31, 1976. The DVD documents the beginning of famed P-Funk Earth Tour, which would run for almost two years. Love & Engineering is a 2014 romance and comedy documentary film written by Kaarle Aho and Tonislav Hristov, directed by Tonislav Hristov. Panamericana is a 2010 documentary about the life at the longest road on Earth: a road-trip from Mexico to Argentina through 12 countries and for 13,000 kilometers. Laya Project is a world music documentary produced by EarthSync, a world music audio-visual production company based in South India. The project is a "personal and collective musical tribute to the resilience of the human spirit", and is dedicated to the survivors of the December 26 2004 Asian tsunami. A team of sound engineers and camera men took a two-year journey through six countries, including India, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Maldives and Myanmar, and recorded film footage and music with the local musicians. The material was mastered at the Clementine studio in Chennai. The film was directed by Harold Monfils. The music was produced by Patrick Sebag. Laya Project won various awards and is being screened at international film festivals in places such as Los Angeles, St. Petersburg, Tel Aviv, Mumbai and Kuala Lumpur. It has also been broadcast worldwide on the National Geographic Channel. Ingmar Bergman is a 1970 documentary film directed by Stig Bjorkman and Ingmar Bergman. " In 1970 Björkman accompanied the preparations and shooting of BERÖRINGEN/THE TOUCH, which had its premiere in the following year. Supplementing the material he shot is a long interview he made with the director at the end of November/beginning of December 1970. He also spoke with the actors Bibi Andersson, Max von Sydow and Elliott Gould. We see them and the rest of the film crew during the planning and shooting of the film." Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Mona Lisa Descending a Staircase is 1992 short animated film directed by Joan C. Gratz. 6 Versus 6 is a 2013 short documentary sports adventure film written and directed by Pius Neumaier. Far Out Isn't Far Enough: The Tomi Ungerer Story is a 2012 documentary film by American director Brad Bernstein. The documentary details the life and times of renegade children's book author and illustrator Tomi Ungerer. Far Out had its North American premiere at the 2012 Toronto International Film Festival. Ivory Tower is a 2014 American documentary film written, directed and produced by Andrew Rossi. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 18, 2014. After its premiere at Sundance Film Festival, Participant Media, Paramount Pictures and Samuel Goldwyn Films acquired distribution rights of the film. The film had a theatrical release on 13 June 2014 in United States by Samuel Goldwyn Films. Paramount Pictures will handle the international release of the film, while Participant Media will handle the campaign for film's theatrical release. Irena Sendler: In The Name Of Their Mothers is a 2010 documentary biographical war film directed by Mary Skinner. The Secret of Trees is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Albert Maysles. Looking for Adventure is a 2013 short documentary adventure film directed by Kimi Takesue. Anwar – Dream of A Dark Night is a 2009 documentary film written by Saibal Chatterjee and directed by Anwar Jamal. IZENIK GABE, 200X133 is a 2013 documentary film written by Miren Juaristi and Monika Zumeta and directed by Enara Goikoetxea and Monika Zumeta. The Metaphor is a 1980 short documentary film directed by King Vidor. Palms is a 1993 documentary film directed by Artur Aristakisian. Jackass Number Two is a 2006 American reality film. It is the sequel to Jackass: The Movie, both based upon the MTV series Jackass. Like its predecessor and the original TV show, the film is a compilation of stunts, pranks and skits. The film stars the regular Jackass cast of Johnny Knoxville, Bam Margera, Chris Pontius, Steve-O, Ryan Dunn, Dave England, Jason "Wee Man" Acuña, Preston Lacy and Ehren McGhehey. Everyone depicted in the film plays as themselves. All nine main cast members from the first film returned for the sequel. The film was directed by Jeff Tremaine, who also directed Jackass: The Movie and produced Jackass. The film was produced by Dickhouse Productions and MTV Films and distributed by Paramount Pictures. The film premiered in theatres on September 22, 2006. The DVD was later released on December 26, 2006. Jackass 2.5, a direct-to-video feature, was made available online on December 19, 2007 and on DVD on December 26, 2007. It contains most of the deleted and unused scenes that were originally shot for Jackass Number Two. Ice Kings is an award winning documentary film by Craig E. Shapiro. The film chronicles Mount Saint Charles Academy hockey team's historic streak of 26 consecutive state titles. Ocean Frontiers: The Dawn of a New Era in Ocean Stewardship is a documentary film directed by Ralf Meyer and Karen Anspacher-Meyer. Bombay Beach is a 2011 documentary film directed and produced by Israeli filmmaker Alma Har'el. The film was nominated for an Independent Spirit "Truer than Fiction" Award, won "Best Feature Documentary" at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival, and has been taught in several universities including Harvard’s Sensory Ethnography Lab and Film Center as a genre redefining work. Taking place in the Salton Sea, a rusting relic of a failed 1950s development boom, Bombay Beach is a dreamlike poem that sets three personal stories to a stylized melding of observational documentary and choreographed dance to music specially composed for the film by Zach Condon of the band Beirut, and songs by Bob Dylan. Filmmaker Terry Gilliam called the film, "A beautiful, quirky, and ultimately very moving film about the American Dream on the edge of a desert sea." Tut: The Boy King was a special television program. Best Kept Secret is a 2013 documentary film that was directed by Samantha Buck and produced by Danielle DiGiacomo. The film aired as part of POV on PBS and focuses on a special education teacher who must find her students a place in the real world as they prepare to leave the public school system. Wild West Hebron is a drama documentary film directed by Nissim Mossek. The Human Scale is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Andreas Dalsgaard. Colosseum: Rome's Arena of Death aka Colosseum: A Gladiator's Story is a 2003 BBC Television docudrama which tells the true story of Verus a gladiator who fought at the Colosseum in Rome. Living on the Edge is a 2005 documentary film by Canadian director of Acadian origin Rodrigue Jean. In this documentary, Rodrigue Jean pays tribute to his Acadian roots, focussing on the poetry of Gérald Leblanc. The Road to Rome: Tracing the Steps of Paul the Apostle is a 2007 historical drama documentary film written by Chip Lusko and directed by Daniel Lusko. This documentary takes the cameras where they have never previously preyed, interviewing AC/DC's original singer Dave Evans, original drummer Colin Burgess, school friends, Bon's lifelong friend Vincent Lovegrove, AC/DC biographers Malcolm Dome and Clinton Walker and many others. All the Way Through Evening is a 2011 documentary, biographical and musical film directed by Rohan Spong. A Way Out of the Wilderness is a 1968 American short documentary film produced by Dan E. Weisburd. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. We Sold Our Souls for Rock 'n Roll is a 2001 documentary by Penelope Spheeris. It was filmed at the 1999 Ozzfest and won an award for "Most Popular Documentary" at the 2001 Melbourne International Film Festival. Legal issues delayed the release. The documentary received mixed reviews. (The Importance of) Hair is a 2011 short film written and directed by Christina Höglund. The Rainbow Warriors Of Waiheke Island is a 2009 documentary film directed by Suzanne Raes. Om Amira is a 2013 documentary, short, biographical and drama film written and directed by Naji Ismail. Retour en Normandie is a 2007 documentary film directed by Nicolas Philibert. Living with your eyes is a 1997 written and directed by Ramon Gieling. Janet: Live in Hawaii is a video released by American R&B/pop singer Janet Jackson. La Vie Ailleurs is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by David Teboul. The Really Big Family is a 1966 American documentary film directed by Alexander Grasshoff about the Duke family of Seattle, who had 18 children. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. White Ash is a documentary and animation film written and directed by Leighton Pierce. Skoplje '63 is a 1964 Yugoslavian documentary film directed by Veljko Bulajić about the 1963 Skopje earthquake. It was screened at the 1964 Cannes Film Festival, but wasn't entered into the main competition. The film was also selected as the Yugoslav entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 37th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee. The filming started three days after the earthquake and lasted for four months. After that, Bulajić spent 12 months editing the footage at Jadran Film studios. Street Kids United is a documentary sports film directed by Tim Pritchard. Envoles is a 2013 documentary, sport, drama film written and directed by Victor Ridley. "In 1977, during the last military dictatorship, Osvaldo Cacciatore's de facto government proposed an ambitious Urban Highway Plan for the city of Buenos Aires. Out of the eight highways that were planned only two were built; a third one, the AU3, or Central Highway, left an inheritance of expropriations all along its route through several neighborhoods: Villa Urquiza, Saavedra, Villa Ortúzar, Chacarita, Belgrano "R"... That urban scar dotted with empty lots and half-demolished houses soon became the best homes low income families could find. Three decades later, the AU3 has added some new chapters to its series of deferments, neighbor wars, and failed plans of recovery. Hartmann shapes a precise portrait of one of the great urban and social debts of Buenos Aires by going through that strange frontier with open eyes and ears, listening to its inhabitants and the people responsible, as well as critics and specialist on the subject." Quoting the description from the 2010 Mar del Plata Film Festival site. Immagine in Cornice, Italian for "picture in a frame," is a live concert film documenting the 2006 five-concert tour of Italy by the American alternative rock band Pearl Jam. It was released on September 25, 2007. Come Worry with Us! is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Helene Klodawsky. Portrait of Jason is a 1967 documentary film directed, produced and edited by Shirley Clarke and starring Jason Holliday. Do I Sound Gay? is an American documentary film, which was released in 2014. Written and directed by David Thorpe, the film explores the existence and accuracy of stereotypes about the speech patterns of gay men, and the ways in which one's degree of conformity to the stereotype can contribute to internalized homophobia. Other figures participating in the film include Dan Savage, George Takei, David Sedaris, Tim Gunn and Margaret Cho, as well as University of Toronto linguist Ron Smyth. The film was funded in part by a Kickstarter campaign in the spring of 2014. The film was first runner-up for the People's Choice Award for Best Documentary at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival. Ducks Out of Water is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Raj Gopal Rao. The Tailor is a 2007 documentary short film directed by Oscar Perez. "Cem Aslan is an integrated Danish Muslim of Turkish origin and a student at the University of Aalborg. In The Accidental Terrorist, he wonders how it is possible that Abdulkadir Cesur, a young man of about his age and with a similar background, ended up in a Bosnian prison charged with terrorism. Aslan visits one of Abdulkadir's former classmates at primary school and interviews Abdulkadir's sister about how he became a fundamentalist after 9/11. In road movie style, The Accidental Terrorist follows Aslan's search for the cause of Abdulkadir's radicalization. We hear his thoughts and reflections as he watches suicide terrorists' farewell videos or makes his way to interviews. And then we see him talking separately with Abdulkadir's former classmate, his sister, and a friend. Archive footage from news broadcasts showing Abdulkadir's arrest provides background, and several times we see Abdulkadir declaring his innocence to a judge." Quoting the synopsis from the 2009 International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam site. A revolution of good deeds positively changing the planet. In a groundbreaking experiment, researchers at the National Institutes of Health have discovered that humans are hard-wired to be unselfish. During functional MRI brain scans, scientists learned that altruism makes people feel good, lighting up a primitive part of the human brain that usually responds to food, receiving money, and even sex. Combine a heart-warming, funny and semi-autobiographical storyline about two reporters who uncover this altruistic revolution with actual interviews from leading scientists, artists and philosophers and you have the World's First Truly "Feel Good" Movie, Serotonin Rising. Written by Tony Perri Hotstuff is a documentary short film directed by Robin Lehman. Philip Johnson: Diary of an Eccentric Architect is a documentary and biographical film. A Study of Negro Artists is a silent film in black and white on four reels that was created in 1930s to highlight the development of African American fine arts. The film features many influential black artists associated with the Harlem Renaissance, including Richmond Barthe, James Latimer Allen, Palmer Hayden, Aaron Douglas, and Augusa Savage. The 15 minute motion picture was filmed by Jules V.D. Bucher. Mar asesino is a 1979 documentary film directed by Ramón Bravo and René Cardona. Zecharia Sitchin is the author of THE EARTH CHRONICLES series of books. Now you can join this amazing scholar of ancient languages as he makes a scientific and scholarly argument for ancient E.T. visits to our Earth. Sitchin presents a compelling and entertaining story based on belief about ancient visitors from other worlds. Zecharia Sitchin's key ideas are based on the assumption that ancient myths are not myths but historical and scientific texts. According to Sitchin, ancient Sumerian clay tablets reveal that gods from another planet (Nibiru, which orbits our Sun every 3,600 years) arrived on Earth some 450,000 years ago. Whats in a Name? is a 2009 documentary short film directed by Ben Kullerd and Caitlin Lundin. God's Country is a 1985 documentary film about Glencoe, Minnesota, by French filmmaker Louis Malle. Original footage of a farming community, 60 miles west of Minneapolis, Minnesota was filmed in 1979 for a PBS documentary. But for the next six years Malle was too busy with other projects to finish this work. He returned in 1985 for a follow-up and found the community reacting to the mid eighties crisis of overproduction in farm country. Malle documented a sense of frustration and apprehension from the same participants he had befriended in better times half a decade earlier. The film is occasionally shown on Turner Classic Movies, and is available on DVD from the Criterion Collection. The name of the film comes from the widespread belief in American folklore that the United States of America has an exceptional status in the world as 'God's country' or 'the promised land' because, metaphorically, early European settlers such as the Puritans of Massachusetts Bay believed they were founding at God's behest a shining city upon a hill. FUKUSIMA: A RECORD OF LIVNG THINGS Episode One ~Exposure~ is a 2013 documentary film directed by Masanori Iwasaki. Let Them Wear Towels is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg. A City On Fire is a 2013 short animation news documentary film written and directed by Michelle Tsen. Where is my mother tongue? is a 2012 documentary drama film written and directed by Veli Kahraman. Prophecy. Pasolini's Africa is a 2013 documentary film directed by Gianni Borgna and Enrico Menduni. Shooting Robert King is a 2008 documentary film directed by Richard Parry. It documents photojournalist Robert King over 15 years and through 3 different war zones. The films splices footage from his time working in war zones with footage of him home with his family in Tennessee. The After Party: The Last Party 3 is a 2011 documentary feature film about a cinematographer whose life is changed forever when he is suddenly caught in a mass arrest. His ordeal and eventual release compels him to seek answers, but doing so uncovers a bizarre world he never imagined existed. Planet of the Apes: Rule the Planet is a film directed by Thomas C. Grane released on Jul 25, 2001. Countdown to Ground Zero is a television documentary special that premiered on The History Channel on August 13, 2006. Patti Smith: Dream of Life is a 2008 documentary film about Patti Smith directed by Steven Sebring. It was presented at Berlin International Film Festival. The movie won the "Excellence in Cinematography Award: Documentary" at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival and aired on the PBS series P.O.V. on December 30, 2009. A Patti Smith: Dream of Life app for the iPad was published in May 2011. Throughout the 1980s, Miami, Florida, was at the center of a racial and cultural shift taking place throughout the country. Overwhelmed by riots and tensions, Miami was a city in flux, and the University of Miami football team served as a microcosm for this evolution. The image of the predominantly white university was forever changed when coach Howard Schnellenberger scoured some of the toughest ghettos in Florida to recruit mostly black players for his team. With a newly branded swagger, inspired and fueled by the quickly growing local Miami hip hop culture, these Hurricanes took on larger-than-life personalities and won four national titles between 1983 and 1991. Filmmaker Billy Corben, a Miami native and University of Miami alum, will tell the story of how these “Bad Boys” of football changed the attitude of the game they played, and how this serene campus was transformed into “The U. Life's A Dive is a 2013 short, biography, history, war and documentary film written and directed by John Taschner. Outside Industry: The Story Of SXSW is a 2011 documentary film directed by Alan Berg. Exotic World and the Burlesque Revival is a documentary film directed by Red Tremmel. Single Video Theory is a music documentary directed by Mark Pellington that follows the making of Yield, the fifth album by the American alternative rock band Pearl Jam. It was released first on VHS on August 4, 1998, and then on DVD on November 24, 1998. No More Tears Sister is a 2005 documentary film about the leftist revolutionary Rajini Thiranagama who joined the guerrilla group the Tamil Tigers in reaction to a brutal government crackdown in Sri Lanka. Thiranagama ultimately left the group, however, when she realized it was more a murderous group than a revolutionary force. She was assassinated on September 21, 1989 when she was only 35. No More Tears Sister was written and directed by Helene Klodawsky and was the season premiere for the 19th season of the PBS Point of View series in 2006. The film received the Gemini Award for Best Photography in a Documentary Program or Series, presented to cinematographer François Dagenais. With so little documentary footage available, the film makes extensive use of dramatic recreations. Violence Stories Caravan is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Adelheid Roosen. R3 is a 2003 film directed by Betty Thomas. Out Of Body is a 2012 short drama Thriller film written by Casey Stouffer and directed by Casey Stouffer. So is a 2007 short documentary written and directed by Aimee Jennings. Down To The Countryside is a 2013 short film directed by Yunfan Sun and Leah Thompson. Our warming earth is most dramatically revealed in this modern day journey through the North West Passage. A revealing and worrying documentary from the Four Corners team. A fascinating look at a rough and tough motorcycle gang of ex-cons and former drug users who have been converted to the teaching of Jesus Christ. Firm in their religious convictions, these bikers have become soldiers of Jesus who take to the road to spread the good word. Citizen Tanouye is a 2005 documentary film written by Robert Horsting and directed by Robert Horsting and Craig Yahata. What Is Cinema? is a 2013 documentary historical fiction film written and directed by Chuck Workman. Ghost of the Brotherhood is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Martin Jeffrey's. An Impression of John Steinbeck: Writer is a 1969 American short documentary film directed by Donald Wrye, about John Steinbeck. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Arctic Defenders is a 2013 documentary adventure drama film written and directed by John Walker. Fuge staccato is a 1984 film directed by Chantal Laventure. In this beautiful film we follow the attempts to harness wind and solar energy for the benefit of the residents of the Palestinian village of Susia. And in the process we get to know extraordinary individuals from both sides of the conflict. What was missing in Noam Dotan’s otherwise perfect life? What made him- and others, leave symbols of success and devote themselves to a renewable energy project in a Palestinian village? What is this dream, shared with the residents of Susia, which is today coming to fruition? They work through action, rather than through protest or demonstrations. Three years in the making, in joint meetings with local residents, they have created a renewable energy project at Susia. They have succeeded in supplying electricity for residents living in tents and caves, figuratively and literally lighting up their lives. Hamburg Damals - Die Jahre 1980-1984 is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Christian Mangels. The Pyjama Girl Murder Case is a dramatised documentary from director Rupert Kathner based on the murder of Linda Agostini. It was an instalment of the Australia Today series and was Australia's first "true crime" movie. For centuries the lives of the people of Ketama, a small village high up in the mountains of northern Morocco, have been intricately tied in with the drug hashish. Hashish as daily labour, hashish as a bartering good, hashish as business, hashish as the basis and philosophy of a social system, hashish as the medium of dreams and hashish as the reason for stagnation. The film sketches a portrait of this life: a look at work and daily family life; the drug; music and landscape as a metaphysical projection surface; the question of freedom in a globalized world; and, at the core of the film, the stories of the people. Sky Dance is a 2002 short film written by Michel Picard and Michel Sibra and directed by Eric Magnan. Sky Above and Mud Beneath, also released as The Sky Above –The Mud Below, is a 1961 French documentary film. It won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and was entered into the 1961 Cannes Film Festival. The film documented a 7-month, thousand-mile Franco-Dutch expedition led by Pierre-Dominique Gaisseau, into uncharted territories of what was then Netherlands New Guinea. The expedition began in the northern region of the Asmat. The group interacted with tribes of cannibals, headhunters and Pygmies; battled leeches, hunger, and exhaustion; and discovered and named the Princess Marijke River, named after Princess Maria Christina of the Netherlands. Man Free moves way beyond traditional travel programming to present the country of Jamaica as we have never seen it before. With insightful commentary by legendary Jamaican filmmaker Perry Henzell (The Harder They Come), Man Free sheds a light on real life in Jamaica. It's not all reggae and beaches. It is also a land of conflict and struggle, and a people whose diversity and grace that make Jamaica one of the most unique countries on the planet. Auschwitz - unique symbol of methodically perfected horror, and at the same time destination for daily streams of tourists. How can an encounter with this place avoid the banality of a visit? This question was asked by New York Zen master Roshi Bernhard Glassman. His answer: the "Auschwitz Retreat". He invites people of different ethnicity and belief to face Auschwitz directly and without cover. The group will spend five days in meditation, silence, prayer and sharing on the very grounds of the termination camp. An encounter happens between Christians, Jews, Muslims and Buddhists. Descendants of victims meet descendants of perpetrators.The film portrays five participants and follows closely their inner development. They are changing. Beliefs are undermined, old wounds torn open, reconciliation begins. It is no longer they who come to Auschwitz, it is Auschwitz that comes to them. In silence they bear witness to what happened there. My Name Is Mostafa Khamis is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mohamed Elkaliouby. Family Instinct is a 2010 drama, biographical, documentary film directed by Andris Gauja. Sadhu is a 2013 documentary music adventure film directed by Gaël Métroz. Frost on Interviews is a 2012 documentary TV movie directed by Figs Jackman and Andrew Fettis. Bomb Country is a 2013 documentary short adventure film written by Andrew Froening, Garett Hayes and Eric Wartenweiler Smith and directed by Andrew Froening and Garett Hayes. Wings Over the World is a 1979 television documentary film featuring the rock band Wings. It consists of concert performances from their acclaimed 1975–76 world tour, together with behind-the-scenes footage. Also included is a short excerpt of Wings rehearsing at London's Institute of Contemporary Arts before their 1972 UK university tour. Problems with the audio from the 1976 live performances delayed the film's release until March 1979, by which time, band members Jimmy McCulloch and Joe English had left the group and been replaced. In 2013, the film was released on DVD as part of the deluxe edition of the Wings over America live album. Unmasking the Dead features Michael Jones, purported to have been the inspiration of The Sixth Sense, who shares his insight on experiencing the paranormal. See even more supernatural activity as Dan T. Hall and his crew visit various haunted places in hopes of communicating with the other side. Includes footage from Cliff House, Whispers Estate, Tuckaway House and the Wayne County Historical Museum. A Long Way from Nowhere is a 1970 American short documentary film produced by Bob Aller. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. En Passant is a 1984 documentary film written and directed by Michael Klier. Chi is a 2013 National Film Board of Canada documentary film by Anne Wheeler about Vancouver actress Babz Chula and her death from cancer. Part of the film was shot at an ayurvedic clinic in Kerala, India, where Chula had travelled for cancer treatment in 2010. The idea to make a film about her story first occurred to Wheeler when she cast Chula, already diagnosed with cancer in real life, as a cancer patient who dispenses philosophical advice in her 2008 TV movie, Living Out Loud. When Wheeler and Chula worked together again the following year on Carl Bessai’s film Fathers & Sons, Chula shared the story of a patient she'd met at a chemotherapy who credited her recovery to treatment in India. Wheeler, who had spent considerable time in India, decided to accompany Chula on her search for a cure. The film had its world premiere in April 2013 at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival. On March 9, 2014, Chi was named best short documentary film at the Canadian Screen Awards. The Rise and Fall of the Grumpy Burger is a 2008 documentary film written by Michael Allcock and directed by Matt Gallagher. Neukölln Unlimited is a 2010 German documentary. The film follows three Lebanese siblings - Hassan, Lial and Maradona - through their daily lives in Berlin's district of Neukölln. The film was co-produced by the German broadcaster RBB in collaboration with the Franco-German cultural channel Arte. Financial support for the documentary came from the German Federal Film Board, DFFF, Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg, as well as from MFG Baden-Württemberg and the MEDIA Programme of the European Union. The children of the Akkouch family Hassan, Lial and Maradona are successful musicians and breakdancers who live in Berlin. They grew up with Hip Hop and streetdance, that is their language and their passion. But the pressure has put a strain on the two teenagers and a rivalry arises about who should be the family's main breadwinner. In the meantime, Maradona gets himself into more and more trouble, and is suspended from school. He is at the crossroads between his siblings’ ambitious lifestyle and the street life of his mates. However, a surprising qualification for a TV-casting show could prove to be his turning point. Carbon For Water is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Evan Abramson and Carmen Elsa López. This “making of the film” documentary shows the impact of the Walter Cronkite-narrated 1940 documentary ‘Power and the Land,’ commissioned by the Rural Electrification Administration of the New Deal, which helped raise awareness of the fact that 75% of rural America was still living without electricity. Nominated for three Emmy Awards, ‘Power for the Parkinsons’ shows how significant the original documentary was in electrifying the heartland of America. UFOs: Seeing Is Believing is a two-hour American television special documentary film that aired on ABC on February 24, 2005. The program is narrated by Peter Jennings and features UFOs. It was produced by PJ Productions and Springs Media for ABC News. Dr. Steven M. Greer, founder of the Disclosure Project, has exposed this "documentary" as a fraudulent, and deliberately deceptive piece of misinformation, designed to discredit genuine evidence that UFO and extraterrestrial activity on earth has not only occurred, but has been covered up by the governmental-corporate complex. The documentary mentions: UFO sightings: features CSICOP scientific consultant James McGaha, Seth Shostak and Jill Tarter of the SETI Institute, J. Allen Hynek the alleged Roswell UFO incident: features clips from Unsolved Mysteries and X-Files; Stanton Friedman alien abductions: features clip from Taken; hypnotist Hopkins, psychologist Susan Clancy space travel: features clips from Star Wars Episode 2 and Star Trek; Michio Kaku The documentary has since aired on the National Geographic Channel. Into the Deep: IMAX is a documentary short film directed by Howard Hall. Jenin, Jenin is a film directed by Mohammed Bakri, a prominent Arab actor and Israeli citizen, in order to portray what Bakri calls "the Palestinian truth" about the "Battle of Jenin", a clash between the Israeli army and Palestinians in April 2002 which drew Palestinian accounts of a "Jenin Massacre". In the early 1990s, Seattle was the focal point of an emerging musical underground. The Gits helped spearhead this new scene. Their sound was proto-grunge and all-out punk aggression. The earnest, blues wail of front woman Mia Zapata was its center. Mia was the very embodiment of riot grrrl intensity, talent, and humanity. Her uncompromised integrity epitomized a way of life that influenced an entire generation of female artists to follow. Upon returning from a successful European tour -and at the height of The Gits' popularity- singer Mia Zapata was found raped and murdered, unfairly abbreviating the band's fable. Incredibly, more than a decade later, new evidence would surface, Mia's case file would be reopened, and a suspect would be brought to justice -as cameras rolled.The Gits is an account of overcoming adversity, addiction, love, loss and pain. It's a punk rock mystery, but not merely a tale of tragedy. It's the mythic story of a great American Rock N Roll band. Abu Jamil Street is a 2010 documentary film directed by Monchovet Alexis and Stephane Marchetti. Joe Polowsky - ein amerikanischer Träumer is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Wolfgang Pfeiffer. Conquest Of The Rivers is a 1958 documentary film directed by Harry Malcom. Act of Terror is a 2013 film written by Adem Ay and directed by Gemma Atkinson and Fred Grace. Doc Next: Political Brands, Empty Words is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Rocío Trejo Zamorano. Mystery of the Sphinx is a 1993 documentary about the Great Sphinx of Giza. It deals mainly with the conflict between egyptologists and geologists about the age of the Great Sphinx. It does so by suggesting the Sphinx water erosion hypothesis. Charlton Heston is the host of the documentary, which features Egyptologist John Anthony West and writer Richard C. Hoagland. Hideous Hair is a 2014 documentary short film directed by YCM. Cowtown Keeylocko is a 2013 western, biographical, short, and documentary film written by Ira Chute and directed by Ira Chute, Trevor Gavin and Nathan Henry. Born Rich is a 2003 documentary film about the experience of growing up as a child in one of the world's richest families. It was created by Jamie Johnson, an heir to the Johnson & Johnson fortune. EKG EXPOSITUS (the Broadcast and the Artistic Media) is a 2003 film directed by Michael Brynntrup. Dancing for Oliver is a 2006 documentary film directed by Suzanne Gielgud. Esther's Book is a 2004 short documentary film written and directed by Esaias Baitel. The Fourth Revolution: Energy, also known as Die 4. Revolution – Energy Autonomy, is a German documentary film about renewable energy by Carl-A. Fechner, released in 2010. It shows the vision of a global society, which lives in a world where the energy is produced 100% with renewable energies, showing a complete reconstruction of the economy, to reach this goal. The production of the film lasted four years and was financed by volunteers. The parts of the film were made in 10 different countries, showing existing pioneer projects in different cultures: from the vision of the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammed Yunus and his micro-credits over the visions of the Right Livelihood Award laureate Hermann Scheer to enterprises that work hard to become all these visions' reality. The film started in the cinemas of Germany March 18, 2010 and had its U.S. premiere at the San Francisco Green Film Festival in March 2011. In the German trailer to the film, the revolution in capitalist ownership of energy resources is stressed; Hermann Scheer says that "instead of a few owners we will have hundreds of thousands..." and "energy supply will receive a democratization". Gently Whispering The Circle Back is a 2014 documentary, biography, history and news film written by and directed by Beth Wishart Mackenzie. The Jean Richard is a 1963 short, documentary film written by Judith Crawley and Pierre Perrault and directed by René Bonnière. Moving Mountains is a 1966 documentary film directed by Bryan Lobascher. Building On Research is a 1962 documentary film directed by Stanley Trevor Evans. Joe K is a 2006 short documentary film written and directed by Óscar de Julián. Ladakh: Life Along the Indus is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Bappa Ray. Best Sound is a 2013 documentary, short, comedy, music and mystery film written and directed by Josh Polon. Roots Germania is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Mo Asumang. Carole Roussopoulos, une femme à la caméra is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Emmanuelle de Riedmatten. The Tango is a History is a 1983 documentary film written and directed by Humberto Rios. I'm in a Band is a 2012 documentary biographical family musical film written by Thomas Griffin and directed by Christopher Hill, Mathieu Nieto, Cyrille Renaux, and Thomas Griffin. The Laundry Room is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Floriane Devigne and Fred Florey. Daughter from Đà Nẵng is a 2002 documentary film about an Amerasian, Heidi Bub, born on December 10, 1968, in Danang in southern Vietnam, one of the children brought to the United States from Vietnam in 1975 during "Operation Babylift" at the end of the Vietnam War. The Last Catch is a 2012 film directed by Markus Schmidt. Unforgiven: The Boys Who Killed James Bulger is a 2001 documentary film directed by Gerry Troyna. The England of Elizabeth is a 1957 documentary about the Elizabethan age, directed by John Taylor for British Transport Films. It is particularly noted for its score composed by Ralph Vaughan Williams. The soundtrack script is read by veteran Shakespearean actor Alec Clunes. Williams' score was the basis for the concert work Three Portraits from the England of Elizabeth. Way Of The Morris is a 2010 documentary film written by Tim Plester and directed by Rob Curry and Tim Plester. Secrets of Dhaulagiri is a 2011 Nepalese documentary film directed by Prabesh Subedi and produced by Media Chautari. This film fallows two families living in the remote Himalayas, Dhaulagiri Himal of Nepal. It focuses on happiness and sorrows of people living with the geographical difficulties along with their cultural and religious beliefs. This film was released on 11 December 2011 at Kathmandu International Mountain Film Festival. Film as a Subversive Art: Amos Vogel and Cinema 16 is a 2003 documentary film directed by Paul Cronin. Airstrip - Aufbruch der Moderne, Teil III is a sequel of the film Perret in France and Algeria, released in 2012. Khajuraho is a 1956 documentary film directed by M. Wadhwani. Nodin (Wind) is a short documentary film written and directed by Nodin Wawatie. Joy! is a 2012 documentary drama film directed and written by Joe Balass. America's Pop Collector: Robert C. Scull – Contemporary Art at Auction is a 1974 documentary film directed by John Schott and E.J. Vaughn Pandit Bhimsen Joshi is a 1992 documentary film directed by Gulzar. From Children is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Niko Apel. Taprobana is a 2014 short film written and directed by Gabriel Abrantes. JUNIOR is a 2012 action drama family documentary film written and directed by Sien Versteyhe. The Fig of the Regime is a 1991 documentary film directed by Giovanni Minerba and Ottavio Mai. 10th District Court is a 2004 documentary film from France, directed by Raymond Depardon. I’m Sorry is a film directed by Mark McKinney. Wood of Value is a 2010 short documentary family film directed by Bjørn Ståle Bratberg. A look back at the unique genre of film noir, featuring a collection of trailers from classic films and commentary from filmmakers and experts, plus condensed versions of two excellent films from the 1940s, DETOUR and D.O.A. Afghan Star is a 2009 documentary film following four contestants in the Afghan music competition, Afghan Star. Afghan Star was directed by Havana Marking and is distributed by Zeitgeist Films. Paquime, el confín de Mesoamérica is a 1985 short documentary film written by Rafael Arnaldo Ortega Esquivel and directed by Rafael Ortega Esquivel. Mercy Mercy: A Portrait of a True Adoption is a 2012 documentary film directed by Katrine Riis Kjaer. Utau Hito is a documentary film directed by Ryusuke Hamaguchi and Kou Sakai. Back in the Wings: Freddie Dunn's Lexington is a documentary film directed by Eli Scarr. Preacher's Sons is a 2008 American documentary film, by C. Roebuck Reed and Mark Nealey. It follows the lives of a Unitarian Universalist minister, his husband, and the five sons they adopted from the California foster care system. The family is seen dealing with issues related to the fathers' homosexuality and the mixed-race composition of the family, as well as the disturbed backgrounds of the children before their adoptions. The introductory segment has been aired on the public television program, In the Life. The California Council for the Humanities supported the film. Forward Ever: The Killing of a Revolution is a biographical documentary film directed by Bruce Paddington and Luke Paddington. No Letters Allowed Behind Bars is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Youth CineMedia. Noise and Resistance is a German documentary. The film follows the European DIY punk music scene. The directors enter the centres of a vivid and vibrant, a rebellious and self-conscious scene. Be it squatters in Barcelona, anti-fascists in Moscow, Dutch trade unionists, the activists of England's Crass collective, queer trailer park inhabitants in Berlin, or Swedish girl punk bands, their music always expresses a collective self-assertion, a No! set to music whose slogan : Do it yourself! has become a strident 21st century "International". The film was mainly self-produced by the two directors. It had its international premiere at the Crossing Europe film Festival in Linz, Austria. Star Trek: Beyond the Final Frontier is a 2-hour 2007 television documentary about the 40-year history of Star Trek and an auction of Star Trek props released by Paramount Pictures for an auction by Christie's auction house in New York City. The documentary aired in the United States on February 19, 2007 and March 3, 2007 on The History Channel. A Year in Review is a 2013 short drama documentary film written and directed by Finn Paul. Forbidden City: Revealed is a 2008 documentary film. Malunguinho is a 2013 documentary short film written by Felipe Peres Calheiros and Paulo Sano and directed by Felipe Peres Calheiros. The people on the pier of Sevastopol Bay are a symbol of the inextricable dilemma in which the city finds itself: too impoverished for splendour and glory, and much too alive for the scrap-heap.People such as handsome 14-year-old Push, who finds mopeds much cooler than girl, or shy 13-year-old Nastja, still mourning her lost first love, spend their summer together on the pier. Even 80-year-old Galina still has a few tears to spare for the bass voice of her erstwhile lover, but not before she completes her morning swim at Apolonovka‘s run-down beach. And then again there‘s wiry, long-distance swimmer Sergej who, despite his 85 years, would certainly never consider neglecting "the third point" of health - sex. Finally we meet Vova and Andrej on the pier: one a tattooed former prisoner the other a discharged police officer – now working together illegally as divers next to the ships of the Black See Fleet.A summer on Sevastopol‘s pier, a place made fascinating by the encounter between parallel worlds. A Flood in Baath Country is a Syrian documentary film by the director Omar Amiralay. Lady Valor: The Kristin Beck Story is a 2014 documentary film directed by Mark Herzog and Sandrine Orabona. Kids Rights: Boglárka is a 2011 documentary film directed by Nora Ruszkai. Iron Crows is a 2009 documentary film written by Ye-Won Moon and Bong-Nam Park and directed by Bong-Nam Park. UnHung Hero is a 2013 documentary directed by Brian Spitz and starring Patrick Moote. La Camera Passe-partout - A Documentary Film Legacy is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jane Weiner. The State of Arizona is a documentary film directed by Carlos Sandoval and Catherine Tambini. Picture Me: A Model's Diary is a 2010 documentary film directed by Ole Schell and Sara Ziff. Neo Lounge is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Joanna Vasquez Arong. An examination of political consultant Karl Rove's influence on George W. Bush's candidacy. Pool of Princesses is a 2007 documentary directed by Bettina Blümner. The New Environmentalists: Mothers Of Ituzaingo is a 2012 film directed by Will Parrinello and Vicente Franco. Meeting Resistance is a 2007 documentary film about the Iraq War. The film presents the views of eleven Iraqi resistance fighters in the Adhamiyah neighborhood of Baghdad. The film was directed by journalists Molly Bingham and Steve Connors. The interviewees are all anonymous and faceless or out-of-focus on camera. They are presented as nicknames: The Teacher, The Warrior, The Traveler, The Imam, The Wife, The Syrian, The Fugitive, The Local, The Republican Guard, The Lieutenant, and The Professor. The US military currently organizes showings for its forces in Iraq so they can know who they are fighting. Beware of the Dogs is a 2012 music documentary film directed by Kamp Kennedy. Liberia: An Uncivil War is a documentary film. Hollywood in Uniform is a 1943 American short documentary film directed by Ralph Staub. It was nominated for an Academy Award at the 16th Academy Awards for Best Short Subject. Playboy Celebrity Centerfold: Jessica Hahn is a 1992 documentary film directed by Scott Allen. For the Love of Dolly is a 2006 documentary film directed by Tai Uhlmann. It focuses on five colorful Dolly Parton fans and explores their fascination with the singer. The film made its debut at the 2006 Miami Film Festival. Sky Over Holland is a 1967 short, documentary film written by Simon Koster and directed by John Fernhout. A Will for the Woods is a 2013 documentary drama film directed by Amy Browne, Tony Hale, Jeremy Kaplan and Brian Wilson. Into the Abyss, subtitled A Tale of Death, a Tale of Life, is a documentary film written and directed by Werner Herzog about two men convicted of a triple homicide which occurred in Conroe, Texas. Michael Perry received a death sentence for the crime. The film was first shown on September 3, 2011, at the Telluride Film Festival, and had its official world premiere on September 8, 2011, at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival. After strong festival showings and a surge of interest in the issue of capital punishment in America, Herzog requested that the film be rushed into general theatrical release, which occurred on November 11, 2011. Tiger Spirit is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Min Sook Lee. Selänne is a 2013 documentary film by Finnish director JP Siili about the Finnish professional ice hockey winger Teemu Selänne. The film covers both his professional and personal life. Ramen yori Taisetsu na mono is a documentary film directed by Takashi Innami. The Man You Loved to Hate is a 1979 documentary film directed by Patrick Montgomery and Richard Koszarski. The 11th Hour is a 2007 documentary film, created, produced and narrated by Leonardo DiCaprio, on the state of the natural environment. It was directed by Leila Conners Petersen and Nadia Conners and financed by Adam Lewis and Pierre André Senizergues, and distributed by Warner Independent Pictures. Its world premiere was at the 2007 60th Annual Cannes Film Festival and it was released on August 17, 2007, in the year in which the Fourth Assessment Report of the United Nations global warming panel IPCC was published and about a year after Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth, another film documentary about global warming. Callas Assoluta is a film written and directed by Philippe Kohly. A documentary that commemorates the 30th anniversary of famed soprano Maria Callas's death. Taken for a Ride is a documentary film by Martha Olson and Jim Klein about the Great American Streetcar Scandal. The 55-minute film was first broadcast on August 6, 1996 on the PBS television series POV. Into the Empty Quarter is a 2013 adventure, biography, and documentary film written and directed by Alastair Humphreys and Leon McCarron. Last Call at Maud's is a 1993 documentary film directed by Paris Poirier. North by Northwest: One for the Ages is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Gary Leva. Six by Sondheim is an HBO television documentary which pays tribute to Broadway composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim. The film was directed and co-produced by James Lapine, based on an idea by Frank Rich and "centers on the backstory of six great Sondheim songs." La Petite Morte is a 2003 documentary directed by Emmanuelle Schick Garcia about the pornography business in Paris, centering on the interviews of Raffaela Anderson, John B. Root and others. It won three film festival awards for Best Documentary and one nomination for Best Documentary. The title is a reference to "la petite mort", French for "the little death," an idiom and euphemism for orgasm. Common enough to have become a caricature, age differences in relationships are the topic of A's Love Chronicles: May-December Romance. Jokes may fly when an older man joins with a younger woman, but, in reality, the union may serve both sides equally. While many mismatched couples have simpler motivations, others profess a true love despite the generational gap. Real-life stories serve as examples of these unlikely pairings. John Corbett hosts the one-hour exploration of love throughout the ages. Special Zu 'Star Trek XI' is a 2009 documentary film starring John Cho, Bruce Greenwood and Simon Pegg. One Way Boogie Woogie 2012 is a 2012 documentary film, written and directed by James Benning. Sa, 29. Juni/Arctic Circle is a 1990 short documentary film directed by Gustav Deutsch. Magnum Photos: The Changing of A Myth is a 1999 documentary film directed by Reiner Holzemer. Too Much Pussy! is a 2010 French-German docudrama film directed by Émilie Jouvet. It follows a group of performers who are all members the Sex-positive movement during the tour of their "Queer X Show" through Europe, from Berlin to Malmö. The group consists of the writer and actress Wendy Delorme, the DJ Metzgerei, the adult actress Judy Minx, the singer Mad Kate, the artist and performer Sadie Lune, and the adult actress and director Madison Young. The film premiered at the Cinémarges Festival in Bordeaux in April 2010. In 2011, it was released an uncensored version of the film titled Much More Pussy!. It was defined as a "magnificent ode to women in all its forms which is expected soon to become a cult". Maids and Bosses is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Abner Benaim. The Last Gospel of the Pagan Babies is a documentary film directed by Jean Donohue. Unchain is a 2000 documentary film directed by Toshiaki Toyoda. Welcome Mr. Postman is a documentary film directed by Madeleine Bondy. Terrorstorm: A History of Government Sponsored Terrorism is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Alex Jones. Chords of Fame is a 1984 feature-length documentary film about Phil Ochs, a U.S. singer-songwriter of the 1960s and early 1970s. The film was directed by Michael Korolenko, written by Mady Schutzman, and produced by Korolenko, Schutzman, and David Sternburg. It was funded in part by grants from the American Film Institute and the National Endowment for the Arts. Chords of Fame features Bill Burnett as Ochs in re-enactments of scenes from his life, and Martha Wingate as his wife, Alice Ochs. The film includes interviews with people who had known Ochs, including Yippies Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin, manager Harold Leventhal, and Mike Porco, the owner of Gerde's Folk City. Chords of Fame also includes performances of Ochs songs by folk musicians who knew him, such as Bob Gibson, Pete Seeger, Tom Paxton, Dave Van Ronk, and Eric Andersen. The film concludes with footage of Ochs performing "I Ain't Marching Anymore" at The Troubadour in Los Angeles. Reviewing the film in The New York Times, Janet Maslin wrote that by re-enacting scenes from Ochs's life, Korolenko took "an exasperating approach" in making Chords of Fame. She would have preferred photos and recordings of Ochs himself. Made You Look is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Sigal Yona. Hollywood on Trial is a 1976 American documentary film directed by David Helpern. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Butte, America is a 2008 documentary film about Butte, Montana's history as a copper mining town. It was created by Pamela Roberts, narrated by Gabriel Byrne, and includes a mix of first hand accounts and scholarly analysis from John T. Shea, Marie Cassidy, David Emmons, and Janet Finn. The movie focuses on developments in American labor and production during the "dawn" of the electrical age in the 1880s when copper was discovered in Butte. The mining activity brought an influx of immigrant workers and their families to the boom town that grew to be a "Western" metropolis of 45,000 people forming a Rocky Mountain city that with similarities to Pittsburgh in the East. Labor relations and the corporate operations of Anaconda Copper are also related. The film aired on the Independent Lens PBS show on October 20, 2009. Thoth is a documentary film by Sarah Kernochan and Lynn Appelle about the life of New York-based street performer S. K. Thoth. The film won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject in 2002. Une vie ordinaire ou Mes questions sur l'homosexualité is a 2001 documentary film directed by Serge Moati. Rebel with a Camera is a 2006 documentary film by Quebec director Denys Desjardins produced by the National Film Board of Canada. The title is a reference to the film Rebel Without a Cause In the Face of Evil: Reagan's War in Word and Deed is a 2004 documentary film written by Stephen K. Bannon and Tim Watkins and directed by Stephen K. Bannon and Julia Jones. The Hound That Thought He Was a Raccoon is a 1960 Walt Disney film directed by Tom McGowan. Mala, a female raccoon, lives with her cubs inside an old tree in the South. During a flood caused by an intense storm, the tree collapses and Mala is able to save only one of her cubs, Weecha. Nearby, Jeff Emory, a backwoods "Mr. Fix It," owns a pack of coonhounds, and recently Lulubelle, his prime female, has had a litter of pups. "Nubbin" is the most active pup and frequently explores the farmyard. One day his curiosity leads him inside a butter churn that Jeff is about to return to a neighbor, and Jeff loads the churn onto his old truck and drives off with Nubbin still inside. During the trip, the churn falls off the truck, rolls down the road, over an embankment and breaks up against a tree. Nubbin emerges from the wreckage dizzy and lost, but eventually finds the hollow tree where Mala is nursing Weecha. Although hounds and raccoons are natural enemies, Mala nurses Nubbin and mothers him. Two weeks pass and as Nubbin explores the area, he encounters Old Grouch, Weecha's father, who attacks him. Mala intervenes and fights her mate, who later leaves the area. Necking is a 2011 documentary short family romance biography film directed by Lindsay Lindenbaum Über das Meer is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Arend Agthe. Ancestral Delicatessen is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Gabriel Folgado. Photographer Spencer Tunick travels the U.S. in search of volunteers to pose nude for his outlaw photo-shoots, all of them done out in public and often without legal permits. Hans Richter: Everything Turns, Everything Revolves is a 2013 documentary film directed by Dave Davidson. Jesus in India is a 2008 TV documentary written by and directed by Paul Davids. Quest for the Lost Tribes is a 2003 documentary film directed by Simcha Jacobovici and Elliott Halpern. The Quantum Indians is a 2013 historical documentary and biographical film written and directed by Raja Choudhury. The Pinochet Case is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Patricio Guzmán. Man From Tomorrow is a 2014 short film directed by Jacqueline Caux. Pastor Angelicus is a 1942 documentary film written by Diego Fabbri, Ennio Flaiano, Luigi Gedda, Andrea Lazzarini and Romolo Marcellini, directed by Romolo Marcellini and Luis Trenker. Zona pericolosa is a 1951 Italian documentary film directed by Francesco Maselli. Dinosaur! is an American television documentary about dinosaurs. It was first broadcast in the United States on November 5, 1985, on CBS. Directed by Robert Guenette and written by Steven Paul Mark, Dinosaur! was hosted by the American actor Christopher Reeve, who some years before had played the leading role of Superman. In 1991, another documentary, also entitled Dinosaur! though not related, was hosted on A&E by the CBS anchorman Walter Cronkite. Look for Me Here: 299 Days in the Life of Nora Lenihan was a televison documentary. It won a Peabody award in 1997. Where Was God? is a documentary film directed by Travis Palmer. Pope John Paul II: Celebration of the Great Jubilee is a 1999 biographical documentary film. Close to You: Remembering The Carpenters is a 100 minute long documentary that was released on DVD by MPI Home Video. It features interviews by Richard Carpenter, John Bettis, Gary Sims, Petula Clark, et al. The documentary itself runs for approximately 60 minutes, with a 12 minute encore after the end credits featuring a performance of " Hideaway", the Carpenters' commercial for Morton's Potato Chips, and their performance of "Ave Maria" for the 1978 A Christmas Portrait special. The rest of the 100 minute total running time includes the special features. The documentary originally aired as a documentary on PBS. Mechanics of the Brain is a 1926 Soviet documentary film directed by Vsevolod Pudovkin, a popularization of Ivan Pavlov's studies in classical conditioning. The film is the first independent work of Pudovkin as a director and also marks the start of his collaboration with cinematographer Anatoli Golovnya. Pudovkin joined Mezhrabpom-Rus film studio in 1925 and, as his first job, was assigned to make a popular science film about Ivan Pavlov's work. The filming started in May 1925 and proceeded for more than a year. The many delays were caused by constant shuttling between the Pavlov's laboratory in Leningrad and the film studio in Moscow as well as difficulties with filming conditioned animals who were easily distracted by the lights and sounds of filming process. Twenty years later, Pudovkin told an interviewer: Highway Amazon is a 2001 documentary film directed by Ronnie Cramer. It chronicles the life of body builder Christine Fetzer, as she travels across the USA wrestling men in hotel rooms. During the course of the film, Fetzer reminisces about her former career as an exotic dancer and is shown lifting weights and engaging in several erotic wrestling matches, as well as indulging her clients in muscle worship. Highway Amazon was named Best Documentary at the Humboldt Film Festival in Arcata, California. Our Newspaper is a 2011 documentary film directed by Eline Flipse. Chaplin's Goliath is a 1996 film directed by Kevin Macdonald. Guañape Sur is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by János Richter. Good Bread is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Eddie Schmidt. Water Blues: Green Solutions is a documentary film directed by Frank Christopher. Shepard & Dark is a 2012 documentary, drama film directed by Treva Wurmfeld. Le Repas de Bébé is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Louis Lumière and starring Andrée Lumière. The film formed part of the first commercial presentation of the Lumière Cinématographe on December 28, 1895 at the Salon Indien, Grand Café, 14 Boulevard des Capucines, Paris. Dare to Dream is a 2005 sports documentary about the United States women's national soccer team. It describes the pivotal roles of Brandi Chastain, Mia Hamm, Julie Foudy, Kristine Lilly, and Joy Fawcett in the development of the team. These athletes also give interviews for the film. It was created by the "Peabody Award-winning creative team at HBO Sports" and " follows the 18-year journey of the U.S. women's soccer team from obscurity in the late '80s to its second Olympic gold match in 2004." The DVD of the film was released on 19 September 2007. Prison Body - Freedom Soul: The Saga Of Robert Coney is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Richard Willis Jr. Primate is a 1974 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. AS THE CALL, SO THE ECHO tells the story of an American surgeon who volunteers in a poverty stricken hospital in central Vietnam. When a woman with a deadly cancer is presented to him, he must struggle to save her life, fighting to overcome a language barrier, limited equipment, and his deepest fears. Cruces Divided is a documentary film directed by Charlie Minn. Double Decade is a movie that documents some of today's top snowboarders.The movie is a look into the past as the snowboarders featured in this movie talk about the early days of snowboarding, but it is also a look into the future of snowboarding as the snowboarders are shown in action in places throughout Finland, Norway, Austria, Alaska, Whistler, Tahoe, Montana, Minnesota, and Utah Memory for Max, Claire, Ida and Company is a 2005 documentary film directed by Allan King. Perret in France and Algeria is a documentary film written and directed by Heinz Emigholz. Ror is a 2013 documentary family music short biographical film written and directed by Natalie Cunningham. Moi fatigué debout, moi couché is a 1997 film directed by Jean Rouch. Africa: The Serengeti is a 70mm American documentary film released in 1994 to IMAX theaters. It is narrated by Academy Award-nominated actor James Earl Jones, and directed by George Casey. It was shot on location in Tanzania and Kenya. The film features nature cinematography during a year at East Africa's Serengeti plain. The Serengeti is a huge area of grassland in Tanzania. Once a year, in time of drought, animals travel north in order to survive. This "great migration", an event in which millions of wildebeests, zebras, and antelope travel several hundred miles across the plain, while lions and other dangers await them along the way, is considered one of the great wonders of the world. Hans Zimmer, the Academy Award-winning composer of the The Lion King, contributed to the film's soundtrack. Casey followed up with another nature documentary, this time on the other side of the globe, called Alaska: Spirit of the Wild. The Man Whose Mind Exploded is a 2012 documentary film directed by Toby Amies. The film depicts the strange, complicated, and hilarious relationship between Toby and Brighton eccentric, Drako Oho Zarharzar. It was first premiered at the Sheffield Doc/Fest and was also shown at the Cork Film Festival, Revelation Perth International Film Festival, Cambridge Film Festival, Brighton's Cinecity Festival, and was an official selection at the East End Film Festival. The Man Whose Mind Exploded started life as a BBC Radio 4 programme described by Miranda Sawyer in The Observer as the best documentary of 2008. The reception to which was so positive that the director was encouraged to turn it into a film. The film was produced by Rob Alexander, Kat Mansoor, and Toby Amies. Executive producers were Daisy Asquith and Dunstan Bruce while the editing was done by Jim Scott. Heliotropes is a 2010 animation drama experimental short film written and directed by Michael Langan. Ted Baryluk's Grocery is a 1982 short documentary about Ukrainian-Canadian Ted Baryluk's grocery store in Winnipeg's North End. Co-directed by John Paskievich and Michael Mirus and produced by the National Film Board of Canada, the film consists of Baryluk talking about his store, his customers and the changes in his neighbourhood, set against Paskievich's black and white still photography. It also chronicles his efforts to convince a reluctant daughter to take over the business, despite her fears about the store's unruly clientele. Baryluk's efforts to preserve the store were unsuccessful, as it closed shortly after the film's release. Ted Baryluk's Grocery received the Genie Award for Best Theatrical Short and the Antoinette Kryski Canadian Heritage Award at the Golden Sheaf Awards. The film was also selected for the short film competition at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival. The Dillinger Conspiracy is a 2006 documentary biographical film directed by Michael S. Ojeda. Dieu sait quoi is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Jean-Daniel Pollet. Carl & Niels is a 2013 drama short family fantasy documentary film written and directed by Alexander Lind. The Hellstrom Chronicle is an American film released in 1971 which combines elements of documentary, science fiction, horror and apocalyptic prophecy to present a gripping satirical depiction of the Darwinian struggle for survival between humans and insects. It was conceived and produced by David L. Wolper, directed by Walon Green and written by David Seltzer, who earned a Writers Guild of America Award nomination for his screenplay. Green, later called it "almost yellow-journally but good. We were giving the audience an elbow to the ribs every third line." Several cinematographers photographed this film using stop-motion photography with microscopic and telescopic lenses. The trailer resembled an announcement for a science fiction movie. The film provided the inspiration for Frank Herbert's science fiction novel Hellstrom's Hive. One Cup is an Australian short documentary film, produced and released by Scarab Studio and Mutiny Media. Its crew included Dominic Allen, Joel Betts, Nicholas Hansen, Greta Costello, Dylan Tromp. Filmed in the mountains of Timor-Leste in January 2006, One Cup depicts the struggles and health concerns of coffee farming communities in Timor-Leste, Asia. Featuring then Foreign Minister José Ramos-Horta, Oxfam Program Director Keryn Clark and Timorese coffee farmers, One Cup attempts to illustrate benefits offered by the international fair trade system. Unlike the documentary film Black Gold, which looks at the issues around fair trade One Cup attempts to show positive benefits of the fair trade system. Concerned that the real John McCain story was not being told, Robert Greenwald and his team at Brave New Films decided they HAD to do something about it, so they did some extensive research on his flip-flopping. The result is a series of short films laying bare the fallacy of the straight-talk label that has been attached to McCain like a Siamese Twin for the better part of a decade.The results have been truly spectacular, entering record-breaking territory. Within a week of its debut on the web over 1 million people viewed The Real McCain 2. It s been the #1 most viewed video on YouTube, #1 on the viral video chart, and the #2 story on the Digg Election 2008 page. Brave New Films is now reaching an audience that most cable news shows only dream of.This film compiles the shorts and adds exclusive on-camera instruction and commentary from key progressive leaders including MoveOn s Eli Pariser, Democracy For America s Jim Dean and Greenwald himself. They show the viewer how to use these short films to maximum effect. Project Grizzly is a 1996 National Film Board of Canada documentary about the lifelong project of Troy Hurtubise, a man who has been obsessed with researching the Canadian grizzly bear up close, ever since surviving an early encounter with such a bear. Gate #5 is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Simon El Habre. The Great Night is a 2013 drama and a documentary film written and directed by Petr Hátle. The Noon Gun is a 2004 documentary film directed by Anthony Stern. In 1971, the experimental film maker Anthony Stern travelled to Afghanistan with his 16 mm film camera. The footage was lost for almost 30 years. Recently rediscovered, it forms the basis of this impressionistic documentary, with an original soundtrack provided by the world fusion musicians Equa. The Noon Gun had its world premiere at the 53rd Melbourne International Film Festival in 2004. It premiered in the UK at the National Museum of Photography, Film and Television in Bradford, September 2004. In 2005 it also featured as part of 'Films From The South' Festival in Oslo, Norway. In 2006 it was broadcast on Tolo TV, the most popular liberal TV station in Kabul, Afghanistan. The Noon Gun was shortlisted, along with 6 other films, for The Satyajit Ray Foundation Short Film Competition in London. Extracts from the entries were screened at the Award Ceremony held in the David Lean Room of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, Piccadilly, London on the afternoon of Sunday 23 April 2006. Dress Rehearsal for Utopia is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Andrés Duque. The Search for General Tso is a documentary film that premiered at the 2014 Tribeca Film Festival. It was directed by Ian Cheney and produced by Amanda Murray and Jennifer 8. Lee. With What Voice is a 2009 documentary film directed by Nicholas Oulman. Sé Villana is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by María Cañas. Le Cirque: A Table In Heaven is a 2007 American documentary film directed by Andrew Rossi about the reopening of the Le Cirque restaurant in New York City. Before being released by HBO, the film premiered at the 2007 Full Frame Film Festival and went on to play at the 2007 Hamptons Film Festival, the 2008 Berlin International Film Festival, and the 2008 Sarasota Film Festival, among others. Katzenball is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Veronika Minder. " In the Mexican penal system, one is guilty until proven innocent. This leads to a very uncomfortable reality: prisons full of people serving time for crimes they didn't commit. Presumed Guilty narrates the story of José Antonio Zúñiga Rodriguez, nicknamed Toño, who was mistakenly accused of murder and condemned to twenty years in jail for being poor and in the wrong place at the wrong time. His case would have been one of many unfortunate stories, but lawyers Roberto Hernández and Layda Negrete decided to get involved and publicize the injustice. Hernández and Negrete gained recognition for a short documentary called The Tunnel, which provoked the release of an innocent man from prison. This film eventually led them to Toño's case, and after studying the court documents, they discovered that the lawyer representing him was working illegally with a forged licence. They were able to reopen the case and decided to film the new trial. Hernández and Geoffrey Smith (of The English Surgeon) then teamed up to bring Toño's story to the screen. Presumed Guilty shows how Toño's strength and creativity help him through nearly three years of wrongful imprisonment. Courtroom scenes chillingly call to mind Kafka's The Trial, so absurd is the mindless bureaucracy in the judicial process. Toño is retried by the same judge who condemned him. The prosecutor is concerned only with the previous case file and has no interest in new information. The police officers refuse to co-operate, insisting they do not remember Toño's arrest. It is revealed that the only witness to implicate Toño had himself originally been accused of the crime, then learned of Toño through the police. Hernández and Negrete uncover a frustrating, labyrinthine legal system defended by mediocre civil servants and corrupt police officers. Turning the lens on a dysfunctional legal system, Hernández and Smith show just how difficult it is to achieve any sort of justice. At a time when there is a strong push for the death penalty in Mexico, Presumed Guilty is important not only as a document of the system's flaws but as a vehicle for change." Quoting the program notes from the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival site. The Fabulous Stains: Behind the Movie is a 1999 documentary short film directed by Sam Green and Sarah Jacobson. Shepherdesses is a 2013 Documentary film written and directed by Amina Souleiman. Jodie: An Icon is a 1996 short documentary film directed by Pratibha Parmar. "A fast paced, breezy look at the transatlantic phenomenon that has made Hollywood actress Jodie Foster an icon for lesbians who identify with, adore and celebrate the screen personas of her remarkable career." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site Ethel is a 2012 documentary that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. The subject of the documentary is Ethel Kennedy, the widow of Robert F. Kennedy. Ethel was scheduled to premiere on HBO later in 2012. Rory Kennedy, one of their 11 children, asked her mother Ethel if she would be a part of a documentary. Opening with Ethel's memories about her family, the documentary has five days worth of interviews including Ethel's siblings. The Kennedy family is documented in home videos and pictures. Rory called her mother's life one of the great untold stories. The documentary is scored by Miriam Cutler. Les Chiefs is a 2004 Canadian documentary film directed by Jason Gileno. Les Chiefs follows the Laval Chiefs, a semi-pro team that plays in the LHSPQ, from the beginning of the 2001-2002 season until the start of the 2002-2003 season. Gordie is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Traolach O Murchu. Bottled Up: The Battle Over Dublin Dr Pepper is a 2014 drama, mystery, biographical documentary film written by Drew Rist and Don Merritt and directed by Drew Rist. The Fourth Estate: A Film of a British Newspaper is a 1940 documentary film directed by Paul Rotha. The film was sponsored by the owners of The Times, and depicts the preparation and production of a day's edition of the newspaper. The film is notable for the fact that it went unreleased. The Second World War broke out while it was in production, and the explanation for The Fourth Estate having been buried most commonly given by historians of the Documentary Movement is that following the film's completion, the Ministry of Information were reluctant to sanction its release on the grounds that it depicted life in peacetime London, which would no longer be accepted by viewers as realistic. However, Rotha himself claimed that the film's sponsor was reluctant to release The Fourth Estate in the belief that it implicitly criticised The Times from a leftist perspective, portraying it as the mouthpiece of the establishment. Another point of interest is that Carl Mayer, the Jewish and prominent Weimar screenwriter, who by this time was living in Britain as an exile from the Nazis, acted as a 'scenario consultant' to the film. Secrets of Life is a 1956 documentary film written and directed by James Algar. Alive and Well is a 2013 film directed by Josh Taft. David Bromberg: Unsung Treasure is a music documentary film directed by Beth Toni Kruvant. Caring for the Lagoon is a documentary directed by Oliver Dickinson about how the Mahorans of Mayotte are trying to preserve their lagoon. The film has been selected by numerous festivals throughout the world and has won many awards. A Portrait of Diego: The Revolutionary Gaze is a 2007 documentary/biographical film written by Diego López Rivera and Margarita Mansilla and directed by Gabriel Figueroa Flores and Diego López Rivera. Plain Talk & Common Sense is a 1987 film directed by Jon Jost. Why we climb is a 2013 short, action, documentary film directed by Chris Cresci. How Bruce Lee Changed the World is a 2009 documentary television film written and directed by Steve Webb. The Magic Of David Copperfield XVI: Unexplained Forces is a 1995 Emmy Award winning TV special that was aired on CBS. The Image Revolution is a documentary biographical film directed by Patrick Meaney. Kingdom Of The Apes: Brother Vs Brother is a 2014 documentary film. Tincity is a 2010 documentary drama short film written and directed by László Csáki. Beyond the hysteria of Reefer Madness and past the deceptive lessons of "Just Say No", HIGH exposes the true story of America's war on drugs. The Song of Life is a 2013 music documentary film written and directed by Irene Langemann. The Hairy-Nosed Wombat is a 1972 documentary film directed by Douglas Steen. What Price Clean Air? is a 1983 Emmy News and Documentary Award for Outstanding Background/Analysis of a Single Current Story - Programs nominated tv program aired on August 15, 1982 in the United States of America. To Whom It May Concern: Ka Shen's Journey is a 2009 docudrama about actress Nancy Kwan. Directed and written by former Warner Bros. executive Brian Jamieson, the film depicts Kwan's meteoric rise to fame when she was selected to star in the 1960 film The World of Suzie Wong and the 1961 film Flower Drum Song. In an era when Caucasians played the Asian roles in Hollywood, Kwan's achievement was groundbreaking. The film portrays Kwan's being cast for inconspicuous roles after her early success. To Whom It May Concern was filmed in locations in several countries, including Cambodia, Hong Kong, and the United States. In Cambodia's 12th-century temple Angkor Wat, Kwan grapples with the death of her son, Bernie Pock, from AIDS at the age of 33 in 1996. The film is being screened in film festivals internationally. It was awarded "Best Feature Documentary" by American International Film Festival and WorldFest-Houston International Film Festival. Reviewers praised the documentary for its judicious use of archival footage and poignant interviews with Kwan. Several reviewers characterized the clips of Kwan's watching "The World of Suzie Wong" as unnecessary and unpolished. The Line King: The Al Hirschfeld Story is a 1996 American documentary film directed by Susan Warms Dryfoos about the artist Al Hirschfeld. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Apicula Enigma is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Marine Hugonnier. Heroes and Time is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Arturo Ripstein. Tik Lo Sagur is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Naftaly Gliksberg. Baboon Tales is an award-nominated work in the 14th Gemini Awards for Best Science, Technology, Nature, Environment or Adventure Documentary Program. Collecting Sgt. Dan is a documentary film directed by Matt Patron. Bella Italia - Zuflucht auf Widerruf is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Peter Voigt. Kung Fu Killers is a 1974 Australian documentary directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith. The Beekeeper is a 2013 biographical docudrama film written and directed by Mano Khalil. An inside look into the sexy world of Brazilian prostitutes. In the larger cities of Brazil like Rio De Janeiro beautiful Brazilian women offer a unique service: the "Programa". Not simply sex, but friendship and companionship with a hundreds of year old tradition. Men from around the world flock to the hot spots of Brazil to spend time with some of the world's most sensual women. Meet the women, see their charms, and learn about their lives. Still My Home is a 2008 documentary film directed by Owen 'Alik Shahadah. I Only Wanted to Live is a 2006 documentary film directed by Mimmo Calopresti. What We Do in the Shadows is a 2014 New Zealand horror comedy mockumentary film about a group of vampires who live together in Wellington, New Zealand. It was directed and written by Taika Waititi and Jemaine Clement, who also star in the film. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2014. Maillart's Bridges is a 2001 short documentary film written and directed by Heinz Emigholz. DEEPER THAN Y is a feature length, humorous and touching documentary questioning 8 eccentric elderly New Yorkers about relationships, politics, careers, and aging, while they faithfully attend the same water exercise class at the Vanderbilt YMCA.Which one of them will you be at 80?Will you spend your days in "God's waiting room", an airless senior community, or embrace an unpredictable varied life in New York City? Will you be writing a script for Steven Spielberg or calculating the exact tip after your early bird special? Will you still slow dance with your wife or sleep in separate bedrooms?After the director of the film taught their water exercise class for two years, her elderly students opened up to her about relationships, pasts, politics, careers, and their insecurities about aging.The result is DEEPER THAN Y, an enlightening, heartfelt, and humorous journey through the lives of seven people, many of whom you might have passed on the street without giving a second look, people who not only impact the realities, fragilities, and humor of old age but also share their enduring hope for human possibility. Filmage: The Story of Descendents/All is a 2013 documentary, biographical, and music film directed by Deedle LaCour and Matt Riggle. Coney Island: Dreams for Sale is a 2013 documentary film directed by Alessandra Giordano. Arirang is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Kim Ki-duk. "Arirang is about Kim Ki-duk playing 3 roles in 1. Through Arirang I climb over one hill in life. Through Arirang I understand human beings, thank the nature, and accept my life as it is now. We are now... in the terrestrial world lurking with desires, in the ghostly world lurking with sorrow in the imaginary world lurking with dreams, with no beginning nor end, slowly going crazy. What is affection that it still remains all around me decaying? It’s still stuck to the crown of my head, testing my emotions. It’s still hiding deep within my heart, testing my sense of compassion. If I didn’t give my heart, they would be bad people erased from memories but if I gave my heart, I couldn’t let them go till the day that I die as despicable people. Ah... Arirang Alright Let’s mercilessly kill each other in our hearts till we die. Even today I hold back as I get angry I laugh as I get jealous I love as I despise And forgive as I quiver with the urge to kill. Wait I will kill Myself, who remembers you." Quoting the synopsis from the 2011 Cannes Film Festival site. Tokyo Trial is a 1983 Japanese film directed by Masaki Kobayashi. It is a documentary film which deals with the Tokyo Trials at the end of the second world war. Before the Spring: After the Fall is a 2013 documentary/drama film directed by Jed Rothstein. Disneyland '59 is a film directed by Marshall Dirkin and Hamilton Luske released by June 15, 1959. Bicicleta, cuchara, manzana is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Carles Bosch. "In Autumn 2007, Pasqual Maragall was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. Following the harsh blow, he and his family set out on a crusade against the disease, with this film as their exceptional witness from the very outset. With intelligence, sincerity and good-nature, Maragall allows himself to be portrayed alongside his family and doctor in order to leave a record of his everyday personal struggle. Two years of monitoring an extraordinary patient who does what he can to help scientists find a cure before the 26 million sufferers worldwide multiply tenfold. A tough yet optimistic film in spite of it all." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Donostia-San Sebastián International Film Festival site. My Father Looks Like Abdel Nasser is a 2012 short documentary biographical film written and directed by Farah Kassem. Still I Strive is a 2012 documentary action drama film written and directed by Adam Pfleghaar and A. Todd Smith. Monkey Kingdom is an upcoming nature documentary film about a family of monkeys living in ancient ruins founded deep in the jungles of South Asia with the other Asian animals. The film will be released by Disneynature on April 17, 2015. Without A Net is a 2012 documentary, action, adventure, sports film directed by Kelly J Richardson. Fit to Print is an American documentary film by Adam Chadwick, produced by Nancy Wolfe, which began production in 2009 and is scheduled to be completed in 2012. Big Name No Blanket is a 2013 Documentary film written by Steven McGregor, Lisa Watts and directed by Steven McGregor. Dale Earnhardt Jr.: Any Given Day is a 2004 sports documentary film. Gaza-Sderot, Pre-War Chronicles is a 2009 documentary film directed by Robby Elmaliah and Khalil al Muzayyen. The End of Suburbia: Oil Depletion and the Collapse of The American Dream is a 2004 documentary film concerning peak oil and its implications for the suburban lifestyle, written and directed by Toronto-based filmmaker Gregory Greene. The film is hosted by Canadian broadcaster Barrie Zwicker and features discussions with James Howard Kunstler, Peter Calthorpe, Michael Klare, Richard Heinberg, Matthew Simmons, Michael Ruppert, Julian Darley, Colin Campbell, Kenneth S. Deffeyes, Ali Samsam Bakhtiari and Steve Andrews. In 2007, Greene released a sequel called Escape from Suburbia. My Dagestan. Confession is a 2014 documentary film written by Murad Ibragimbekov, Ramazan Abdulatipov and directed by Murad Ibragimbekov. Birth of the Living Dead is a documentary 2013 film directed by Rob Kuhns. Protect and Survive is a public information series on civil defence produced by the British government during the late 1970s and early 1980s. It is intended to inform British citizens on how to protect themselves during a nuclear attack, and consists of a mixture of pamphlets, radio broadcasts, and public information films. The series had originally been intended for distribution only in the event of dire national emergency, but provoked such intense public interest that the pamphlets were authorised for general release. Kerry and Me is a 2010 tv documentary film directed by Lynn Alleway. The Red Card is a 2006 documentary film directed by Mahnaz Afzali. On her twenty-fourth birthday, this film's director Barbara Sonneborn received a knock on her door from a United States Army soldier, and heard the words "We regret to inform you...." Her husband Jeff had been killed by a mortar in Vietnam. She received a box containing Jeff's dog tags still encrusted with his blood. Twenty years later, Sonneborn embarks on a journey through the country where he fought and died. Woven into her personal odyssey are interviews with American and Vietnamese widows from both sides of the conflict who speak openly about the men they loved and how war changed their lives forever. 1961, The Duck-in is a 2005 documentary film directed by Rachel Naninaaq Edwardson. Sepideh – Reaching for the Stars is a 2013 Persian-language Danish documentary film written and directed by Berit Madsen. The film premiered in-competition at the 2013 International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam on November 24, 2013. The film later premiered in-competition in the World Cinema Documentary Competition at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 17, 2014. After its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, the film become available in United States and Canada by iTunes. In 2014 the film won the Maysles Brothers Award at 14th Belfast Film Festival. Un été silencieux is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Stephane Breton. We Lived for Estonia is a documentary film about the Forest brothers during World War II. Light Keeps Me Company is a 1999 documentary film directed by Carl-Gustaf Nykvist. The Radio of Hope: After Tsunami 3.11 is a documentary film directed by Kazunari Tsukahara and Taro Umemura. Crash Test Dudes is a 2001 film directed by Brad Roberts Jeff Stephenson and Jason Tan. Distance to Nearby is a 1981 film directed by Barbara Meter. Once Upon a Time... A Clockwork Orange is a 2003 documentary film directed by Antoine de Gaudemar. The Last Dogs of Winter is a 2011 documentary film directed by Costa Botes. Hug an Athiest is a 2013 documentary film directed by Sylvia Broeckx. Marriage Stories 20 Years Later is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Helena Třeštíková. Mieux vaut mal vivre que mourir is a 2006 documentary film. Godard Sollers: l'entretien is a 1984 film directed by Jean-Paul Fargier. Blue Collar White Christmas is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Max Kestner. 100 Years of Japanese Cinema is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Nagisa Ôshima. Emma Goldman: The Anarchist Guest is a documentary about Emma Goldman that was released in 2000. It was directed by Canadian sociologist and filmmaker Coleman Romalis. The film was screened at the 2000 San Francisco Jewish Film Festival. The Highest Court is a 1987 film directed by Herz Frank. Dear Old London is a 1933 Australian short film directed by Claude Flemming for Efftee Studios. It is a travelogue of London. Film perduto is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Yervant Gianikian and Angela Ricci Lucchi. John Muir's High Sierra is a 1974 American short documentary film directed by Dewitt Jones produced by Dewitt Jones and Lesley Foster. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Armenian Coat of Jean-Jacques Rousseau is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Patrick Cazals. Where The Wonder Went is a 2013 short documentary film written by Susan Dworsky, Casey O'Hara, Bryan Latchford and directed by Bryan Latchford. Bryusov is a 2012 short, documentary film written and directed by Samvel Matosyan. Lord Montagu is a 2013 biographical drama family historical documentary film written by Luke Korem and Bradley Jackson and directed by Luke Korem. Journey Back to Youth is a 2001 documentary film by Russian film makers, Alexander Gutman and Sergei Litviakov, an interview of four German women who tell the story of four young German girls from East Prussia placed into a Soviet labor camp by the end of World War II according to the Stalin's decisions about forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union about mobilization of Germans for reconstruction works in the USSR. The film won the Platinum Award at the 34th International Independent Film Festival in Houston, TX in 2001 and the "Gold Camera Award" at the US International Film and Video Festival in 2001. U.S. oil interests threaten to destroy a traditional way of life in Canada's north. For the Vuntut Gwitch'in people of Old Crow in the Yukon, much depends on the caribou migration. Now new oil drilling in Alaska could bring an end to the caribou and an end to this ancient culture. Warrendale is a 1967 documentary film by Canadian filmmaker Allan King. It was originally produced for broadcast on CBC Television, but was never shown due to King's refusal to edit out the copious profanity in the footage. The film is a cinéma vérité look at the lives of emotionally disturbed children housed in a Toronto facility named Warrendale. Warrendale won awards at the Cannes Film Festival, and French director Jean Renoir declared King a great artist. In 2002, Warrendale was honoured as a "MasterWork" by the Audio-Visual Preservation Trust of Canada. Crazy Legs Conti: Zen And The Art Of Competitive Eating is a 2004 documentary film portraying the culture of competitive eating. It was directed by Danielle Franco and Christopher Kenneally. The film follows Jason "Crazy Legs" Conti, an eccentric New York window washer, nude model and sperm donor. He begins as a huge fan of the annual July 4 hot dog eating competition, but then casually breaks the world oyster eating record in New Orleans. He proceeds to dedicate himself to fulfilling his lifelong dream of becoming a professional competitive eater. Hail! Hail! Rock 'n' Roll is a 1987 documentary film directed by Taylor Hackford that chronicles two 1986 concerts celebrating rock and roll musician Chuck Berry's 60th birthday. A soundtrack album was released in October 1987 on the MCA label. The two concerts were held on October 16, 1986, at the Fox Theatre in St. Louis; among the artists performing with Berry were Linda Ronstadt, Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Robert Cray, Etta James, Johnnie Johnson, Steve Jordan, Bobby Keys, Julian Lennon, and Joey Spampinato from NRBQ. Along with concert footage, the film also features scenes from the rehearsals for the shows, interviews with Berry and members of his family, and "talking-head"-type appearances from a number of musicians, including Bo Diddley, The Everly Brothers, John Lennon, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison, Little Richard and Bruce Springsteen. The Sticking Place is a 2012 interactive web documentary by Moosestash Films. The film explores the journey of elite athlete, Leah Callahan, a freestyle wrestler with a dream to compete in the Olympic Games. The Inner Eye is a 1972 short documentary film made by Satyajit Ray on Benode Behari Mukherjee, a blind artist and a teacher from Visva-Bharati University, a university founded by Rabindranath Tagore at Santiniketan. The twenty minutes documentary features the life and works of Mukherjee in the form of paintings and photographs, starring himself. The documentary covers his journey from childhood till his blindness along with much of his works and features his words, "Blindness is a new feeling, a new experience, a new state of being". The documentary was awarded as Best Information Film at 20th National Film Awards in 1972. Mukherjee is known as the most informed Indian artist of his generation and a legend of modern Asian Art. Born with severe eye problem, being myopic on one eye and blind in the other, Mukherjee lost his sight completely after an unsuccessful cataract operation. However, he continued his work as an artist. The Academy Film Archive, part of the Academy Foundation, took an initiative to restore Satyajit Ray's films and could successfully restore 19 Ray films. The Inner Eye is yet to be restored but found to be in good condition for the restoration. Le 6 juin a laube is a 1945 short film directed by Jean Grémillon. Dreaming The Quiet Man is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Sé Merry Doyle. The London Rock and Roll Show was a 1973 British-produced concert film directed by Peter Clifton chronicling a Rock and Roll Revival concert held at Wembley Stadium in London, England in August 1972. From the late 1960s to the early 1970s, many rock and roll performers from the 1950s experienced major career revivals due to a temporary upswing of interest in their form of music. The Revival was marked by a series of major concerts in the United States, and also spread to Europe where events such as the Wembley concert attracted thousands of fans who came out to see the performers behind the music. London Rock and Roll Show begins with excerpts from numerous "warm-up" performers shown singing either covers of 1950s hits, or original tunes, including a performance by Screaming Lord Sutch that threatens to end the concert prematurely when he brings a stripper on stage. The main concert segment begins with Bo Diddley and continues with a string of other major performers including Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, and Bill Haley and His Comets. MAKERS OUR STORY is a feature-length documentary about the UK independent film industry directed and produced by independent filmmakers. It is an inspirational project featuring an array of talent from the UK filmmaking community with interviews from award winning filmmakers and film industry experts. Ali's 65 is a 2007 documentary TV movie. The Famine Within is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Katherine Gilday. 102 Minutes That Changed America is a 102-minute American television special documentary film that was produced by the History channel and premiered commercial-free on September 11, 2008, marking the seventh anniversary of the September 11 attacks. The film depicts, in virtually real time, the New York-based events of the attacks primarily using raw footage from mostly amateur citizen journalists. The documentary is accompanied by an 18-minute documentary short called I-Witness to 9/11, which features interviews with nine firsthand eyewitnesses who captured the footage on camera. According to this film, most of the archival footage was in possession of the U.S. government but was released to History years after 9/11. The documentary film attracted 5.2 million viewers. The program aired on Channel 4 in the UK, France 3 in France, History Channel in Brazil on 7 September 2009, SBS6, in the Netherlands on 9 September 2009 and on ZDF in 2009 and 2010. A&E Television Networks, parent company of History, aired it across all of their cable networks on September 11, 2011 at 8:46 a.m. EDT, the exact time American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into 1 World Trade Center ten years earlier. Formed in 1962 and still a act to this day, The Rolling Stones are surely the most unique act of our time. This DVD explores the fascinating story and extraordinary songs of the UK's most treasured, as it takes a detailed look at their career throughout their most fascinating period: the 1960's. I.O.U.S.A. is a 2008 American documentary film directed by Patrick Creadon. The film focuses on the shape and impact of the United States national debt. The film features Robert Bixby, director of the Concord Coalition, and David Walker, the former U.S. Comptroller-General, as they travel around the United States on a tour to let communities know of the potential dangers of the national debt. The tour was carried out through the Concord Coalition, and was known as the "Fiscal Wake-Up Tour." The film competed in the Documentary Competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. It began its nationwide showing at the Holland Performing Arts Center in Omaha, Nebraska on 21 August 2008, with a live discussion among Warren Buffett, Pete Peterson, David Walker, William Niskanen, and Bill Novelli following the screening. The film was broadcast on CNN on January 10, 2009. The Corporation is a 2003 Canadian documentary film written by University of British Columbia law professor Joel Bakan, and directed by Mark Achbar and Jennifer Abbott. The documentary examines the modern-day corporation. Bakan wrote the book, The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power, during the filming of the documentary. A Changing Delta is a 2013 documentary short film written by Andrew Quinn and directed by Brandon White. My Mind's Eye is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Alexis Gambis. ...So Goes The Nation is a 2006 political documentary that follows the 2004 United States presidential election between John Kerry and George W. Bush, concentrating on the battleground state of Ohio. The film interviews campaign workers on both sides and analyzes the outcome of the results. The name comes from the saying that "As Ohio goes, so goes the nation". In 2004 Ohio itself swung the election, and in fact no Republican has ever won the White House without Ohio. The documentary focused heavily on the rural-urban divide in Ohio, and the corresponding cultural and moral issues which, according to the documentary, played a pivotal role in the election. Haenyeo: Woman Of The Sea is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Alex Igidbashian, Kevin John Sawicki, Kevin Sawicki and Daye Jeong. Pyuupiru 2001-2008 is a 2009 documentary film directed by Matsunaga Daishi. Ben Johnson: Third Cowboy on the Right is a 1996 documentary film about the life of actor Ben Johnson. The film was directed by Tom Thurman and written by Thurman and Tom Marksbury. David Holzman's Diary is a 1967 American film, directed by Jim McBride, which interrogates the art of documentary-making. It may be considered a docufiction: paradoxically, despite the film is in fact a false autobiography and documentary, «a fairy tale», it represents the filmmaker's life and experience and also the world in which the action takes place with documentary realist techniques. The mirror metaphor is explicit in the film as code for reality. It tells the story of a young man making a documentary of his life, who discovers something important about himself while making the movie. It stars L.M. Kit Carson, Eileen Dietz, Lorenzo Mans and Louise Levine. This was McBride's directorial debut. He has since gone on to direct more mainstream work like Great Balls of Fire!, The Big Easy, and episodes of television shows such as Six Feet Under and The Wonder Years. David Holzman's Diary opened in New York City in December 1973. In 1991, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". A Blu-ray release from Lorber Films was scheduled on August 16, 2011. L'antimiracolo is a 1965 Italian documentary film directed by Elio Piccon. Arnold Schwarzenegger: A VH1 Popumentary is a 2004 tv film directed by Drew Daywalt and David Schneider. Goodbye Mandima is a 2010 short, documentary film written and directed by Robert-Jan Lacombe. Jesus Christ Saviour is a documentary film directed by Peter Geyer. Anita O'Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer is a 2007 American documentary film about the jazz singer Anita O'Day. The documentary was directed and produced by Robbie Cavolina and Ian McCrudden. The documentary premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2007 and had a limited release on August 15, 2008. It was nominated for Best Long Form Music Video at 52nd Grammy Awards. Doc Next: I'm Looking for Someone is a 2011 short documentary directed by Janusz Kojro. Digging Up Ancestors is a 1970 short documentary film. Chasing Lewis Clark Across America: A 21st Century Aviation Adventure is a documentary film about the Lewis and Clark Expedition, directed by Ron Lowery. It’s Elementary—Talking About Gay Issues in School is a 1997 documentary film directed by Debra Chasnoff and Helen Cohen . Triumph Over Violence is a 1965 Soviet film directed by Mikhail Romm. The film is also known as Echo of the Jackboot in the United Kingdom and Trumps Over Violence in the USA. It is mainly in the form of annotated excerpts of archival film in order to describe the rise and fall of fascism, and especially the example of Nazi Germany. Body Without Soul is a 1994 documentary film about young boys in Prague working as prostitutes. The creator of the documentary, Wiktor Grodecki interviews the boys whose age ranges between 14-17 to find out more about their lives and how they got into the business. The film also explores the hopes and fears of the young men, they talk about their bodies and souls, money, their sexual orientation, AIDS, their dreams, and death. Butterfly Stories is 2012 documentary , biography , adventure comedy film directed by Christoph Schuch. Ramkinkar Baij- is an incomplete personality study or documentary on sculptor Ramkinkar Baij created by legendary filmmaker Ritwik Ghatak. He started creating the film in 1975. The film was almost complete but it still remained unfinished for the death of Ritwik Ghatak. "The feature-length documentary "American Grindhouse" explores the hidden history of the American Exploitation Film. The movie digs deep into this often overlooked category of U.S. cinema and unearths the shameless and occasionally shocking origins of this popular entertainment. Exploitation Cinema has left an indelible mark on American culture, and this informative and amusing documentary proves that its principles--and popularity--endure to this day." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 SXSW Film Festival. Goran's Way is a 2013 documentary film Directed by Leon Rizmaul. Terror in the Aisles is a 1984 documentary film about horror films featuring clips from Friday the 13th I and/or II, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, Halloween I and II, Jaws 1 and 2, Alien, John Carpenter's The Thing, The Shining and Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho and The Birds. The film is hosted by Donald Pleasence and Nancy Allen. The original music score is composed by John Beal. How Diana Died: The Conspiracy Files is a 2006 documentary film. An Inconvenient Youth is a 2012 short biographical adventure documentary film written and directed by Slater Jewell-Kemker. The Dark Glow of the Mountains is a TV documentary made in 1984 by German filmmaker Werner Herzog. It is about an expedition made by freestyle mountain climber Reinhold Messner and his partner Hans Kammerlander to climb Gasherbrum II and Gasherbrum I all in one trip without returning to base camp. The film is not so much concerned with showing the climb itself or giving guidelines on mountaineering, but seeks to reveal the inner motivation of the climbers. Ban This is a 1989 skateboarding documentary film featuring the Bones Brigade. It presents a commentary on how many people view skateboarders as delinquents or lawbreakers. The video starts with a scientist posing a question to the viewer, what is skateboarding? Then it cuts to a montage of the skaters in the video. As the video progresses it intercuts skits with the solo video parts of the skaters. These skits are meant to show how ludicrous peoples reactions to skateboarders are: in a crime ridden area with robbery, drugs, and prostitution, the one cop arrests a kid for skateboarding on the sidewalk. The skits also present the skaters in a "classy" scenario: Four skaters are in a parking lot dressed as golfers. They have caddies and golf bags with skateboards in them. The video is presented as a broadcast of a golf tournament with the quiet commentator marveling at the skill of the players. There are also interjections of a panel of people who oppose everything in the video, for example: saying,"That's not art," following a section with the skaters painting on a ramp. The video ends with a scooter race downhill. The Men is a 1950 film directed by Fred Zinnemann. It tells the story of a World War II lieutenant, who is seriously injured in combat, and the struggles he faces as he attempts to re-enter society. It stars Marlon Brando in his feature film debut, Teresa Wright, and Everett Sloane. The movie was written by Carl Foreman who had previously scripted Champion and Home of the Brave. Although not a commercial success, this film was notable for being Marlon Brando’s movie debut. Savage Africa is a 1950 French film directed by Jacques Dupont. The film is also known as Congolaise. Life is Strange is a 2011 documentary, biographical, historical and family film directed by Isaac Hertz. Rien que les heures is a 1926 experimental silent film by Brazilian director Alberto Cavalcanti showing the life of Paris through one day in 45 minutes. Cavalcanti made a similar film about Berlin the next year. Other noted examples of the genre include Charles Sheeler and Paul Strand's Manhatta, Walter Ruttmann's Berlin: Symphony of a Metropolis, Andre Sauvage's Etudes sur Paris, and Dziga Vertov's Man With a Movie Camera There Are So Many Things Still to Say is a Syrian documentary film by the director Omar Amiralay. The film was based on an interview with Syrian playwright Saadallah Wannous a few months before he died of cancer. Wannous, narrates his somber and relentless reflections-an adieu to a generation for whom the Arab-Israeli conflict has been the source of all disillusion. The playwright recounts, with some regret for the lost opportunities that resulted, how the Palestinian struggle became a central part of intellectual life for an entire generation. Space Junk 3D is a short documentary film directed by Melissa R. Butts. Beyond the Brick: A LEGO Brickumentary is a 2014 documentary film directed by Daniel Junge and Kief Davidson. Ai Weiwei's Appeal ¥15,220,910.50 is a 2014 documentary film directed by Weiwei Ai. Dead Ringers: The Making of Touch of Grey is a music documentary film about the American rock group the Grateful Dead. It depicts the production of the band's first music video, for their song "Touch of Grey". Dead Ringers was directed by Justin Kreutzmann, the son of Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann. Released on VHS video tape in 1987, it is 30 minutes long. The film is known by several different names. The cover of the video box says both Dead Ringers and The Making of the Touch of Grey Video and More. However, the opening titles of the film definitively give the name as Dead Ringers: The Making of Touch of Grey. With huge achievements in a number of different businesses, including aviation, movies, and hotels, the multi-million dollar lifestyle of Howard Hughes was a true American success story. Prince and the Revolution: Live is a live concert video by Prince and The Revolution. Released after the tour itself was complete, the video is a recording of the March 30, 1985 concert in Syracuse, New York. The concert was also broadcast live throughout Europe as the final act of the 15th “Rock Night”, an all-night show of four concerts staged by West-German public broadcaster Westdeutscher Rundfunk as part of its Rockpalast series that was simulcast by the Eurovision network of European TV stations. Baghdad Twist is a 2008 documentary short film directed by Joe Balass. Live At Preservation Hall: Louisiana Fairytale is a 2011 documentary film directed by Danny Clinch. Buckminster Fuller: Thinking Out Loud is a PBS 'American Masters' TV documentary on the inventor/visionary/thinker R. Buckminster Fuller, produced and directed by four time Academy Award nominees Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon. Cinematography by Buddy Squires, edited by Sara Fishko and a Production of Simon & Goodman Picture Company. Fuller is considered by some to be one of the 20th century's most noteworthy, controversial and creative thinkers, since his death in 1983. The film looks at his unconventional life, his innovations, and his radical view of the contemporary world. Best known as the inventor of the Geodesic Dome, Fuller had many other inventions, such as an air-streamed three-wheeled car, and ideas of how to "benefit mankind." The film includes interviews with Philip Johnson, Merce Cunningham, John Cage and Arthur Penn. It is narrated by Morley Safer and Spalding Gray is the voice of Buckminster Fuller. The filmmakers were the first journalists to have open access to the vast collections of Fuller's personal papers. As Fuller was widely documented, the film includes extensive archival footage of Fuller from scores of sources. When the Iron Bird Flies is a 2012 documentary and historical film directed by Victress Hitchcock and Amber Bemak. Come Full Circle is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Ben Grossman. We Are the Littletons: A True Story is a documentary drama short comedy film directed by Penny Lane. Une Journée Du Facteur Khan Agha is a 2011 film directed by Wahid Nazir. Los niños de Morelia is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Juan Pablo Villaseñor. "Director John Greyson’s operatic tour-de-force smashes conventional barriers of form and genre to reinvent the documentary. The protagonists of Fig Trees are two of the patron saints of AIDS activism: Tim McCaskell, a founder of the Canadian AIDS Action Now, who has been living with AIDS for 25 years, and Zackie Achmat, who went on a treatment strike in 1989, refusing to take anti-retroviral drugs until they were made generally available in South Africa. The story is a grand-scale narrative of personal heroism in the face of evil as personified by politicians and pharmaceutical company executives, with millions of lives hanging in the balance. The result is a postmodern pastiche of palindromes, queer history, music history, and Catholic theology (with an albino squirrel thrown in for good measure). Riffing off another famously queer opera, Gertrude Stein and Virgil Thomson's “Four Saints in Three Acts,” the film features a first-rate score by collaborator David Wall." Quoting the program notes from the 2010 Seattle Interntional Film Festival. No Direction Home is a documentary film by Martin Scorsese that traces the life of Bob Dylan, and his impact on 20th-century American popular music and culture. The film focuses on the period between Dylan's arrival in New York in January 1961 and his "retirement" from touring following his motorcycle accident in July 1966. This period encapsulates Dylan's rise to fame as a folk singer and songwriter, and the controversy surrounding his move to a rock style of music. The title is taken from a lyric of Dylan's 1965 hit single, "Like a Rolling Stone". Finding Samuel Lowe: From Harlem to China is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Jeanette Kong. Searching for Safe Ground is a documentary drama film directed by Costa Mantis. Kalo Culture is a 2012 documentary and family film directed by Kamuela Vance. Holocaust: Is It A Wallpaper Paste? is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mumin Shakirov. I Feel...is a 2010 mystery/documentary film directed by Elsbeth van Noppen. Skydancer is a 2011 historical fiction, adventure documentary film written and directed by Katja Esson. Believe: The Eddie Izzard Story is a 2009 Documentary Comedy film written and directed by Sarah Townsend. Jerry and Me is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Mehrnaz Saeed-Vafa. Open Heart is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Kief Davidson about eight Rwandan children who leave their families to receive heart surgery. The film was nominated for the 2013 Academy Award for Best Documentary. After being nominated for an Academy Award the film was released along with all the other 15 Oscar-nominated short films in theaters by ShortsHD. Timisoara: December 1989 is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Bose O. Pastina. Nina Hagen - Punk + Glory is a 1998 music documentary film directed by Peter Sempel. Raised on a wildlife reserve in Alaska, 15-year-old Garrett was interested in the dietary habits of the farm animals. After the tragic death of his mother, Garrett's father decided to home-school his son and assigned a book written by Dr. Max Gerson that proposed a direct link between diet and a cure for cancer. Fascinated, Garrett embarks in this documentary on a cross-country road trip to investigate The Gerson Therapy. He meets with scientists, doctors and cancer survivors who reveal how it is in the best interest of the multi-billion dollar medical industry to dismiss the notion of alternative and natural cures. Soul Boys of the Western World is a 2014 music documentary film directed by George Hencken. Turn it Up to 11 provides an inside look on the rise of one band to stardom, while another band's talents go unrecognized. Hospital Horror is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Youth CineMedia. Attention - A Life in Extremes is a 90-minute documentary film, which explores the phenomenon of extreme sports from a personal and critical perspective. The documentary shows the lives of three athletes: French freediver and world champion Guillaume Néry, Austrian extreme cyclist Gerhard Gulewicz and Norwegian wingsuit flyer Halvor Angvik. The film was directed by Austrian filmmaker Sascha Koellnreitner. Theatrical release in Austria, Germany and Switzerland will be in September 2014. Attention - A life in Extremes is the first European documentary and the first Austrian film supporting Dolby Atmos. Waidmannsheil Hail to the Good Shooter is a documentary film directed by Klaas Boelen. Herb and Dorothy is a 2008 documentary film by Megumi Sasaki. The film tells the story of two middle-class collectors of contemporary art, Herbert and Dorothy Vogel, and the enormous and valuable collection of conceptual art and minimalist art they amassed in spite of their relatively meager salaries as New York City civil servants. Many artists are interviewed in the film, including Christo, Chuck Close, Robert Mangold, and Pat Steir. As of September 2009, the film had made $194,721 at the box office. The Black List: Volume 1 is a 2008 documentary film written by Elvis Mitchell and directed by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders. Behind the Looking Glass is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Jagoda Kaloper. Family Portrait in Black and White is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Julia Ivanova. Ore wa Sono Sion da! is a 1985 documentary directed by Sion Sono. Leading to War is a 2008 American documentary film composed entirely of archival news footage of the declarations of the United States President George W. Bush and his administration explaining their reasons to attack Iraq in 2003. The film is presented as a historical record and highlights the rhetorical devices and techniques employed by a government to wage war against another nation. Presented chronologically from President Bush’s State of the Union Address in January 2002, and continuing up to the announcement of formal U.S. military action in Iraq on March 19, 2003, the film presents selected interviews, speeches, and press conferences given by Bush and his administration, including Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of State Colin Powell, National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz. Non-U.S. sources include British Prime Minister Tony Blair. Footage was licensed from major news sources, including ABC, AP, BBC, CNN, ITN, and NBC. Jesus, You Know is a 2003 documentary film written by Ulrich Seidl and Veronika Franz and directed by Ulrich Seidl. Excursions in the Dark is a 2011 documentary film directed by Kaya Behkalam. Reflections Unheard: Black Women in Civil Rights is a 2013 documentary film directed by Nevline Nnaji. Poets of the People is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Dirk Manthey. Portrait of Queenie is a 1964 documentary music film written by Michael Orrom and James Stevens and directed by Michael Orrom. Struggle for Hope is a 1997 film directed by Niv Fichman. Oshuns 11 is a 2013 short documentary film, written and directed by Aline Allegra. Winged Wonderland is a 1975 short documentary film directed by Shanti S. Varma. I Was Worth 50 Sheep is a 2010 documentary film written by Steven Seidenberg and directed by Nima Sarvestani. The Sound of Insects: Record of a Mummy is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Peter Liechti. Yogawoman is a documentary film directed by Saraswati Clere and Kate Clere McIntyre. Scaling The Mountain: Protecting Forests For Families In Nepal is a 2014 documentary film directed by Michael T. Miller. Björk: Biophilia Live is a 2014 British concert film by Björk, directed and edited by Peter Strickland and Nick Fenton. The film features Björk performing tracks from her Biophilia Tour, which started in June 2011 and ended in September 2013. It was filmed at Alexandra Palace in London on 3 September 2013, and had a theatrical premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on 26 April 2014 with screenings across the world throughout the same year. The film will be released in DVD and Blu-ray on 25 November 2014 and will also have a CD release with the live audio. BorderLine is a 2012 historical documentary film written and directed by Daniel Sekulich. The Dreamer That Remains: A Portrait of Harry Partch is a documentary film directed by Stephen Pouliot. Richard III: The King in the Car Park is a 2013 TV movie directed by Louise Osmond. Evergreen: The Road to Legalization in Washington is a 2013 documentary film written by Nils Cowan and directed by Riley Morton. Gallivant is the first feature-length movie by Andrew Kötting. Released in 1996, it was a "highly idiosyncratic" documentary. It recorded a journey the director took clockwise around the coast of Britain accompanied by his 85-year-old grandmother, Gladys, and his seven-year-old daughter Eden. Eden was born at Guy's Hospital, London, in 1988 with a rare genetic disorder – Joubert syndrome – causing cerebral vermis hypoplasia and several other neurological complications. The growing closeness between these two and the sense of impending mortality give the film its emotional underpinning. Robert Kennedy's career in public service, his work in his brother's administration, and his presidential aspirations at the time of his assassination. Year of the Kings is a 1977 documentary film directed by David Parer. The Afghan Alphabet is a 2002 documentary by Mohsen Makhmalbaf showing the life of children of the Afghan villages bordering Iran, and how their life and culture were affected by the Taliban regime. Everest: Getting to the Bottom of the Mountain is a 2003 television documentary film directed by Steve Robinson. First Strike is a 1979 film created by KRON-TV and Chronicle Publishing Company under the broadcast division name "Chronicle Broadcasting Company" in partnership with the United States Department of Defense and the RAND Corporation that discusses the United States armed forces strategy for dealing with nuclear warfare. The film became far better known when various clips were edited into the 1983 TV film The Day After. Stable Life is a 2013 documentary film directed by Sara MacPherson. Brandon Semenuk's Rad Company is a documentary adventure music sports film directed by Jeremy Grant and Aaron Whitley. Tanaka-san Will Not Do Callisthenics is a documentary film directed by Maree Delofski. Lock-Up:The Prisoners Of Rikers Island is a 1994 crime documentary film written by Nina Rosenblum and directed by Jon Alpert and Nina Rosenblum. Burn: The Evolution of an American City is a documentary film directed by Harold Jackson III. Meetin' WA is a 1986 short film by Jean-Luc Godard. In the film, he interviews his "old friend" Woody Allen. Throughout the film there are cuts in the interviews featuring photographs and film clips from Woody Allen's films. The two of them talk about movies, life, relationships to other directors and actors and Woody's past. The segments of the interview are separated by title cards, black cards and white type, a Woody Allen trademark. It runs for 26 minutes. Gypsy Blood is a British feature-length observational documentary which examines the fighting culture that gypsy fathers hand on to their sons. It was filmed over two years by the photographer Leo Maguire and produced by the production company ClearStory. Salsa Giants is a 2013 film directed by Pablo Croce. Dürers Erben is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Lutz Dammbeck. A wealth of archive footage of Grand Prix racing Laugh Clown Laugh is a 2013 short documentary biographical film directed by Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee. The Beach Boys: An American Band is a 1985 biographical musical film directed by Malcolm Leo. The movie is basically a biography of the American rock band The Beach Boys, with interviews, concert footage and clips from movies and television shows they appeared in. Currently, it is sold as a double feature, paired with the I Just Wasn't Made for These Times documentary. One Last Hug (...and a few smooches) Three Days at Grief Camp is a 2014 documentary and short film directed by Irene Taylor Brodsky. Superstar in a Housedress is a feature-length documentary by independent filmmaker Craig Highberger about the life and legend of Warhol superstar Jackie Curtis. Highberger also wrote the biography of the same name, published by Penguin imprint Chamberlain Bros. in 2005. The film includes interviews with surviving superstars Holly Woodlawn, Penny Arcade and Joe Dallesandro; as well as Paul Morrissey, the director of the Warhol films Flesh and Women In Revolt that Jackie appeared in; and Tony Award winners Harvey Fierstein, and Lily Tomlin who also narrates. The film also includes twenty friends and colleagues of Curtis who round out the story of the artist's life. Rare footage includes Curtis performing in Vain Victory, Heaven Grand in Amber Orbit, and Glamour, Glory and Gold. Paid Fire is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Ramon Batista. Elvira Luz Cruz, pena máxima is a 1985 documentary film written and directed by Ana Díez and Dana Rotberg. A Film Is A Film Is A Film is a 2014 experimental, short, documentary, biographical, historical documentaries film written and directed by Eva von Schweinitz. Brilliant Soil is a 2011 documentary film written by Sebastián Díaz, José Luis Figueroa, Lorena Fuentes and directed by Sebastián Díaz and José Luis Figueroa. The Song of Ceylon is a 1934 British documentary film directed by Basil Wright and produced by John Grierson for the Ceylon Tea Propaganda Board. The film was shot on location in Ceylon at the start of 1934 and completed at the GPO film studios in Blackheath, London. Digitized versions of the film are available to watch online on YouTube and via the Colonial Film: Moving Images of the British Empire website. See the links below. The YouTube version is low quality in comparison to the version on the Colonial Film site. A DVD version of the film is available from the British Film Institute as part of their award winning GPO DVD series. Los Angeles Plays Itself is a video essay by Thom Andersen, finished in 2003, exploring the way Los Angeles has been presented in movies. Consisting entirely of clips from other films with narration, the film was not initially released commercially. The film was only seen in screenings presented by Andersen, occasional presentations at American Cinematheque and copies distributed via filesharing and other person-to-person methods. In 2014, it was announced that the film would finally be released officially by Cinema Guild. Granny's Flags is a short family documentary film directed by Naziha Arebi. Antarctica – A Continent In Alert is a 2010 film directed by Prince Albert II. MANSON is a 1973 documentary film about Charles Manson and his followers. It was directed by Robert Hendrickson and Laurence Merrick. A Letter to Dad is the 2011 documentary, biographical and family film written and directed by Srdjan Keca. Lisbon Revisited is a 2014 documentary film written by Fernando Pessoa, Edgar Pêra and directed by Edgar Pêra. Untitled Sara Jane Moore Documentary is a 2010 documentary film directed by Robinson Devor. Hollywood Chinese: The Chinese in American Feature Films is a 2007 American documentary film directed by Academy Award-nominated director Arthur Dong. From early films like the 1900s Beheading the Chinese Prisoner to Ang Lee's triumphant Brokeback Mountain in 2005, Dong utilizes clips of more than 100 films and interviews of prominent Chinese Americans to create a thorough overview on the depiction of Chinese in mainstream Hollywood films. He hits many major points such as white performers who portray Asians in both The Good Earth and Fu Manchu series, Nancy Kwan's roles in The World of Suzie Wong, Bruce Lee and the emergence of martial arts films and Justin Lin's take on his film Better Luck Tomorrow. People interviewed include Christopher Lee, Wayne Wang, James Hong, Nancy Kwan, Luise Rainer, Amy Tan and B. D. Wong. Dong also spends time talking about his discovery of two reels of the 1916-17 silent film The Curse of Quon Gwon, which is considered to be the first feature film made by an Asian American. The documentary was also broadcast on PBS on May 27, 2009. Blood is Not Fresh Water is an Ethiopian film, made in 1997 and directed by Theo Eshetu. Through the Fire is a 2005 documentary film. The film focuses on Sebastian Telfair as he goes through his senior year at Abraham Lincoln High School in New York City. Throughout the film, Sebastian is faced with the choice between college in Louisville or making the jump from high school to the NBA. Alaska: Spirit of the Wild is a 70mm Academy Award-nominated American documentary film featuring the landscape and wildlife of Alaska. It is narrated by Charlton Heston and released to IMAX theaters in 1997. Alaskan wildlife featured in the film include moose, bears, seals, wolves, caribou, and whales, while narrator Heston provides background information. The film was produced by the same IMAX filmmaking team that created Africa: The Serengeti. Similar shots of vast landscapes, which are particularly well suited for IMAX's large screen theaters, and entertaining wildlife footage is featured. Aerial photography and underwater photography techniques are utilized throughout the production. It has been well received by critics and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject in 1998. Youssou N'Dour: I Bring What I Love is a 2008 documentary film directed by filmmaker Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi that chronicles Senegalese icon Youssou N'Dour as he releases his Grammy Award-winning album Egypt and works to promote a more tolerant view of Islam. The film features musical superstar/activists Bono and Peter Gabriel. The documentary screened at festivals internationally including the Telluride Film Festival and Toronto International Film Festival in 2008, winning numerous audience awards as well the Special Jury Prize at the Middle East International Film Festival in 2008 and a nomination for the Pare Lorentz Award at the International Documentary Association Awards in 2009. The film premiered in New York City as the opening night of Brooklyn Academy of Music's Muslim Voices: Arts & Ideas Festival in 2009, and opened in theaters in the US and internationally to much acclaim. The film's soundtrack was released by Nonesuch Records in 2010. Minamata: The Victims and Their World is a Japanese documentary made in 1971 by Noriaki Tsuchimoto. It is the first in a series of independent documentaries that Tsuchimoto made of the mercury poisoning incident in Minamata, Japan. Odyssey of Life is a television program. De regreso is a 2010 short documentry film written and directed by Krzysztof Kadlubowski. Kidd Life is a 2012 music, documentary, and biographical film written and directed by Andreas Johnsen. The Future of Art is a 2010 documentary film by Erik Niedling and Ingo Niermann. It features interviews with protagonists of the contemporary art scene and premiered on November 10, 2010, in Berlin. The film was released on DVD in September 2011 accompanied by the book The Future of Art. A Manual, published by Sternberg Press. Subsequent to the premiere screening, the movie was playing at the Angermuseum in Erfurt from November 10 to November 28, 2010. Until May 2011 the interviews were also shown as a web series at 3min.de, a video-sharing site of Deutsche Telekom. The movie was mainly shot in Berlin, Hamburg, Frankfurt and New York. A Dancer’s World is a 1957 documentary, music film written by Martha Graham and LeRoy Leatherman and directed by Peter Glushanok. "An exploration of the Westboro Baptist Church’s visit to Vermont to protest gay marriage, Jews, Catholics, and pretty much anyone that’s not them." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. "“We were raised to believe in resistance, persistence, and confrontation. That’s why I know I can handle anything.” So says one of the women in Quest for Honor, a searing and necessary documentary about the still-prevalent practice of honor killings in the Kurdistan region in northern Iraq. Kurds number more than 26 million and are believed to be the largest ethnic group in the world without their own country. Despite much progress politically and economically, honor killings are routinely cited as the major human-rights violation among Kurds. Since 1991, statistics suggest that more than 12,000 women, mostly between 13 and 18, have met a gruesome death at the hands of relatives, usually the men of the family, who are convinced the victim has impugned the family’s honor. The film centers on cases taken up by the Women’s Media and Education Center in Sulaimaniyah, Kurdish Iraq. Texas-based photographer and author Mary Ann Smothers Bruni’s film marks her evolution from still photographer to filmmaker. While the deaths themselves are shocking in their sheer brutality, perhaps more striking is the ease with which the men involved in the killings speak about their unforgiving attitudes toward the victims. Deeply disturbing, yet profoundly hopeful, in its belief that change in centuries-old attitudes is possible, Quest for Honor asks us to imagine a day when women everywhere can live in honor, and not fear for their lives." Quoting the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. How Hitler Lost the War is a 1989 World War II documentary created and produced by David Hoffman and Robert Denny, and narrated by Norman Rose. The documentary includes many statements by respected military historians and veterans like Adolf Galland and Johann von Kielmansegg. Git Along, Little Dogies is a 2010 short comedy film written and directed by Kate Lain. Iraq in Fragments is a documentary film directed by James Longley. Longley shot the film in Digital Video on a Panasonic DVX100 miniDV camcorder. The film premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival where it won three awards: "Directing Award Documentary", "Editing Award Documentary" and "Excellence in Cinematography Award Documentary". The film is also a part of the Iraq Media Action Project film collection. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film was shot in Iraq and edited at 911 Media Arts Center in Seattle. This film has three parts to it which describe the viewpoints of Sunni, Shi'ite, and Kurdish residents. The Chirola is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Diego Mondaca. Fish Can't Fly is a 2005 documentary film directed by Tom Murray. Superwoman is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Khadija Charles. Gerhard Richter: 4 Decades is a 2005 documentary film directed by Michael Blackwood. ‘Standing Up: Taking Over the War’ chronicles the lives of young Afghan men training to become the first line of defense in the fight against worldwide terrorism. With President Obama’s recent withdrawal of more than 30,000 troops from Afghanistan, “Standing Up” is a documentary about the future of the war in Afghanistan and the global war against terror. Centered around the Kabul Military Training Center, ‘Standing Up’ depicts the lives and hardships of young Afghan National Army recruits training to defend their country against the Taliban and Al-Qaeda. With unprecedented access to the Kabul Military Training Center, ‘Standing Up’ provides a rare insider’s perspective into one of the most underreported and important stories in the difficult fight to keep Afghanistan out of the hands of terrorists. Shawn Harris: Personal Trainer is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Tyler Silver and Simon Turkel. Ito – a Diary of an Urban Priest is a 2010 documentary film by Finnish director Pirjo Honkasalo shot in Tokyo and portraying a young Buddhist priest Yoshinobu Fujioka. Ben Chavis is a 1977 documentary, short film directed by Jean-Daniel Simon. "“What does ‘bear’ mean to you?” asks Bear Nation of the gay men who identify as bears, chase them, and everyone else who wonders what it’s all about. This insightful exploration from the director of Festival favorite doc Small Town Gay Bar swings from heterosexual ignorance to the superficially obvious, then digs deeper into an emotional identification for queer men who felt marginalized… at least until they found others who fit their aesthetic. The journey begins with reflections of gay bears. For most, there was a dual coming out process, starting with the acceptance of being gay and then experiencing a lack of acceptance in the queer community due to body image. These men then share heart-felt stories of their second coming out: finding other big, hairy guys. The focus broadens to a “community” of bears, high-lighting Chicago’s annual Bear Pride and clubs like London’s XXL that helped transform the bear movement into a celebrated subculture. This hirsute image has even reached mainstream media. Hetero standup comic Kevin Smith, who passes for bear, candidly and humorously shares his appreciation for the bear image on Tonight with David Letterman and with us. Acclaimed director Malcolm Ingram deftly guides us from the experience of being lonely and believing a negative self-image to finding acceptance in a big way. The strength, courage and passion of a bear are unmistakable, and those of us watching get brought into the fold." Quoting Marcus Wonacott from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LFBT Film Festival site. Driverless vehicles compete in a 130-mile race across the Majove Desert. El Bulli - Cooking in Progress is a 2011 documentary film written by Gereon Wetzel and Anna Ginesti Rosell and directed by Gereon Wetzel. After a quarter-century of political denial and social stigma, of stunning scientific breakthroughs, bitter policy battles and inadequate prevention campaigns, HIV/AIDS continues to spread rapidly throughout much of the world. Through interviews with AIDS researchers, world leaders, activists, and patients, FRONTLINE investigates the science, politics, and human cost of this fateful disease and asks: What are the lessons of the past, and what can be done to stop AIDS? In Part 1, ?The Age of AIDS? traces the pandemic over the past 25 years, beginning with the virus's eary cases. Included: political denial; social stigma; the contamination of blood supplies; and the virus's personal toll. Dr. Jim Curran, who headed the CDC's AIDS initiative in the1980s, recounts the story of a Florida family whose house was burned down because their children were hemophiliacs with AIDS. Also: the impact of the deaths of Rock Hudson and Ryan White. On the Edge of Peace is the first joint Israeli-Palestinian co-production. The documentary film captures a tumultuous year from the perspective of both sides. From the signing of the Oslo Accords to Yasser Arafat’s return to Gaza in 1994, three Palestinians and three Israelis are sent out with camcorders to document their own lives in intimate video diaries. Aadhi Haqeeqat, Aadha Fasana is 1990 Hindi/English language Documentary Feature film directed by Dilip Ghosh and produced by Ravi Malik in association with National Film Development Corporation of India. Colored My Mind is a 2012 short documentary family drama film written and directed by Nia Hill. Reconstructing Tamara Drewe is a 2011 short drama film starring Gemma Arterton, Dominic Cooper and Luke Evans. Four Days in Chicago is a historical documentary film directed by Haskell Wexler. Unfinished Business is a 1985 documentary film directed by Steven Okazaki which centered on Min Yasui, an attorney from Oregon, Gordon Hirabayashi, a Quaker college student in Washington, and Fred Korematsu, a San Francisco welder and how their lives were affected by Japanese American internment during World War II. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for 1986. Maidentrip is a 2013 adventure documentary film written by Laura Dekker, Penelope Falk and Jillian Schlesinger, and directed by Jillian Schlesinger. Speak of the Devil: The Canon of Anton LaVey is a documentary film about Church of Satan founder Anton LaVey, released in 1993 through Wavelength Video. It contains footage of La Vey including interviews and performances, a tour of his San Francisco home, known as "The Black House", and a look into his ritual chamber, music room, library, and the personal retreat he called the "Den of Iniquity". The Fisherman is a 2011 biographical documentary short film written by Patrick Bolger and directed by Tom Burke. Layla's Melody is a 2013 documentary film written by Jens Pedersen and directed by Jens Pedersen and Taj Mohammad Bakhtari. Three Stories of Galicia is a 2010 documentary/drama/history/war film directed by Sarah Farhat and Olha Onyshko. Fall to Grace is a 2013 documentary film produced, filmed, directed by Alexandra Pelosi. The film covers the career of former New Jersey Governor Jim McGreevey after his "fall from grace" that led to his resignation from political office in the wake of an extramarital affair, to his admission that he was a homosexual, and a bitter divorce battle. In the years after his resignation, McGreevey pursued a calling to become an Episcopal priest, obtained a Master of Divinity degree at New York City's General Theological Seminary. In recent years, McGreevey has counseled female inmates seeking rehabilitation at correctional facilities in the New Jersey and greater New York City area. Fall to Grace was an official selection at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival, and premiered on HBO on 28 March 2013. The film also opened the 2013 Golden Door Film Festival My Best Fiend is a 1999 documentary film by Werner Herzog about his tumultuous yet productive relationship with German actor Klaus Kinski. It was released on DVD in 2000 by Anchor Bay. Post Harvest Management of Potato is a 1997 short documentary film directed by V. Packirisamy. Touched by Fire: Bleeding Kansas is a 2005 documentary film written by Jonathon Goering and Ken Spurgeon and directed by Nathan King Miller. Rock Pockets is a 2007 short documentary LGBT film written and directed by Trevor Anderson. Negative History Of Hungarian Cinema is a 2010 documentary film written by Gábor Farkas, Péter Lichter and Gyula Nemes. It was directed by Gyula Nemes. Captured on Film: The True Story of Marion Davies is a 2001 tv documentary film written by Elaina Archer, Hugh Munro Neely and John J. Flynn, and directed by Hugh Munro Neely. Paulo Moura - Alma Brasileira is a 2013 documentary film directed by Eduardo Escorel about the Brazilian clarinetist and saxophonist Paulo Moura. The documentary is based on over 40 years of videos and written records. It features 25 songs from the artist repertoire, while Paul Moura himself gives more details about his musical life and the Brazilian music scene. Pittsburgh 8/5/68 is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Ted Kennedy. My Mother Had Fourteen Children is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Lars-Lennart Forsberg. Classic Albums: Pink Floyd – The Making of The Dark Side of the Moon is a direct-to-video documentary about the making of The Dark Side of the Moon album by Pink Floyd. It is part of the Classic Albums series, released by Isis Productions/Eagle Rock Entertainment. All four members of the lineup that made the album - David Gilmour, Nick Mason, Roger Waters and Richard Wright - appear, albeit in separate interviews at various locations. It also features interviews with the album's engineer Alan Parsons, two music journalists, the former chairman of their record label and Storm Thorgerson. The Fisherman and the Dancing is a 2005 documentary film directed by Valeri Solomin. South Of The Border is a 1987 documentary film produced by David Bradbury. Earth Air Fire Water is a 1971 documentary film directed by Rick Kabriel. E Haku Inoa: To Weave a Name is a documentary film directed by Christen Hepuakoa Marquez. Twilight of the Mississippi is a documentary advanture comedy film directed by Gus Ganley. Silence Is Gold is a 2013 documentary film directed by Julien Fréchette. The normal life cycle: we are born, we live and we die. But what happens when life’s unfortunate incidents cause loss of limb or control of our bodies? The WORLD OF DISCOVERY series takes you to the far corners of the globe to explore the secrets of nature and wildlife, the frontiers of science and technology, and the compelling questions of history and the world we live in. National Geographic: Egypt: Quest for Eternity is a 1983 News & Documentary Emmy Awards for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Writers nominated tv program. A Very Special Date is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Susan Earl. Berlin: Symphony of a Metropolis is a 1927 German film directed by Walter Ruttmann, co-written by Carl Mayer and Karl Freund. The film is an example of the city symphony film genre. A musical score for an orchestra to accompany the silent film was written by Edmund Meisel. As a "city symphony" film, it portrays the life of a city, mainly through visual impressions in a semi-documentary style, without the narrative content of more mainstream films, though the sequencing of events can imply a kind of loose theme or impression of the city's daily life. Other noted examples of the genre include Charles Sheeler and Paul Strand's Manhatta, Alberto Cavalcanti's Rien que les heures, Andre Sauvage's Etudes sur Paris, Dziga Vertov's Man With a Movie Camera, and Alexandr Hackenschmied's Bezúčelná procházka. This film represented a sort of break from Ruttmann's earlier "Absolute films" which were abstract. Some of Vertov's earlier films have been cited as influential on Ruttmann's approach to this film, and it seems the filmmakers mutually inspired one another, as there exist many parallels between this film and the later Man With a Movie Camera. Fishtail is a 2014 Western documentary film written by Andrew Renzi and Tylee Abbott and directed by Andrew Renzi. Night and Fog is a 1955 French documentary short film. Directed by Alain Resnais, it was made ten years after the liberation of Nazi concentration camps. The documentary features the abandoned grounds of Auschwitz and Majdanek while describing the lives of prisoners in the camps. Night and Fog was made in collaboration with scriptwriter Jean Cayrol, a survivor of the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp. The music of the soundtrack was composed by Hanns Eisler. Resnais was originally hesitant about making the film and refused the offer to make it until Cayrol was contracted to write the script. The film was shot entirely in the year 1955 and is composed of contemporary shots of the camps and stock footage. Resnais and Cayrol found the film very difficult to make due to its graphic nature and subject matter. The film faced difficulties with French censors unhappy with a shot of a French police officer in the film, and with the German embassy in France, which attempted to halt the film's release at the Cannes Film Festival. Night and Fog was released to very positive acclaim and still receives very high praise today. Ariane Mnouchkine, the Adventure of Theatre du Solie is a 2009 film directed by Catherine Vilpoux. If We Knew is a 2007 film directed by Petra Lataster Czisch. Matrioskos is a 2005 documentary and short film directed by Deimantas Narkevičius. Bienvenue im Kleidermarkt: Antonia Hilkes legendäre TV-Modenschau is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Oliver Schwabe. Frontline: Sick Around the World is a 2008 documentary film directed and written by Jon Palfreman. Falling in Love With Chris and Greg: “Work of Art! Reality TV Special” is a 2012 comedy/documentary film directed by Chris Vargas and Greg Youmans. Arbeit is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Duncan Campbell. Risk/Reward is a 2003 documentary film about women on Wall Street. It follows the lives of four Wall Street women - a research analyst, a currency trader, an NYSE floor broker and a rookie investment banker. It was directed by Elizabeth Holder and Xan Parker and produced by Roland Park Pictures. The documentary features Louise Jones, Carol Warner Wilke, Kimberley Euston, and Umber Ahmad; and includes appearances by Roslyn Dickerson, Muriel Siebert, Ann Kaplan, Janet Tiebout Hanson, Sheila Wellington and Maria Bartiromo. Risk/Reward was released theatrically in New York City and Chicago and was televised on Oxygen Media. Das Jahr 1945 is a 1984 film directed by Karl Gass. Sweet Crude is a documentary film by Sandy Cioffi about Nigeria's oil-rich Niger Delta. The film premiered in April 2009 at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival and has since screened at 30 film festivals around the world and has won numerous awards. On April 12, 2008, members of the Sweet Crude filmmaking crew were detained by the Nigerian military Joint Task Force while traveling by boat in the Niger Delta. The crew was taken into custody and subsequently handed over to the Nigerian State Security Services. They were held for seven days without being charged and without access to legal counsel. They were released Friday, April 18. From the Sweet Crude website: Cinématon is a 190-hour long experimental film by French director Gérard Courant. It was the longest film ever released until 2011. Composed over 36 years from 1978 until 2006, it consists of a series of over 2,861 silent vignettes, each 3 minutes and 25 seconds long, of various celebrities, artists, journalists and friends of the director, each doing whatever they want for the allotted time. Subjects of the film include directors Barbet Schroeder, Nagisa Oshima, Volker Schlöndorff, Ken Loach, Benjamin Cuq, Youssef Chahine, Wim Wenders, Joseph Losey, Jean-Luc Godard, Samuel Fuller and Terry Gilliam, chess grandmaster Joël Lautier, and actors Roberto Benigni, Stéphane Audran, Julie Delpy and Lesley Chatterley. Gilliam is featured eating a 100-franc note, while Fuller smokes a cigar. Courant's favourite subject was a 7-month-old baby. The film was screened in its then-entirety in Avignon in November 2009 and was screened in Redondo Beach, CA on April 9, 2010. America's Wilderness is a 2013 short documentary film written by Erin Finicane, Sarah Gulick and Sylvia Johnson directed by Erin Finicane and Sarah Gulick. Day Is Done is a 2011 documentary film written by Thomas Imbach and Patricia Stotz and directed by Thomas Imbach. The History of Canadian Humour is an upcoming 2012 documentary film directed by Rob Cohen. Lost & Found in China: Red White Black & Blue II is a biographical documentary sports family film directed by Anton Leach and James Brown. Sand And Sorrow: A New Documentary about Darfur is a 2007 American documentary film about the Darfur crisis that is narrated and co-executive produced by George Clooney. The film is directed by Paul Freedman and uses interviews and footage of human rights activist John Prendergast, Harvard professor Samantha Power and New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof to depict the origins and the aftermath of the conflict between the Arab and non-Arab tribes in the Darfur region. The Walking Dead Girls is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Tyler Benjamin Rendezvous with Death is a 2006 German documentary film that claims that G2, a secret service organization of the Cuban government, organized the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy. The film first aired on January 6, 2006 on German television station Westdeutscher Rundfunk. It was directed by Wilfried Huismann. Rendezvous with Death features interviews with four Cuban former secret service agents and an American FBI agent, and also cites documents from KGB and Mexican government archives. A possible Cuban connection was investigated by the US immediately after Kennedy's death. But an FBI officer sent to follow the Oswald's trail during a visit to Mexico was recalled after only three days and the investigation called off. Laurence Keenan, now 81, said it was "perhaps the worst investigation the FBI was ever involved in". "I realised that I was used. I felt ashamed. We missed a moment in history," Mr Keenan said. Veteran US official Alexander Haig told the filmmaker that Kennedy's successor, Lyndon B Johnson, believed Cuba was to blame and feared a pronounced swing to the right if the truth were known that would keep the Democrats out of power for a long time. Morning Light is a 2008 film directed by Mark Monroe and executive produced by Roy E. Disney. The film was released on October 17, 2008 by Walt Disney Pictures. The film chronicles a real-life crew training and competing in the 44th Transpacific Yacht Race aboard a TP52 class sailing yacht, Morning Light. 26-year-old charmer Daniel Dembele is equal parts West African and European, and looking to make his mark on the world. Seizing the moment at a crossroads in his life, Daniel decides to return to his homeland in Mali and start a local business building solar panels - the first of its kind in the sun-drenched nation. Daniel's goal is to electrify the households of rural communities, 99 percent of which live without power. BURNING IN THE SUN tells the story of Daniel's journey growing the budding idea into a viable company, and of the business' impact on Daniel's first customers in the tiny village of Banko. Taking controversial stances on climate change, poverty, and African self-sufficiency, the film explores what it means to grow up as a man, and what it takes to prosper as a nation. Originally featured in the ViewChange Online Film Contest. This So-Called Disaster is a 2003 documentary film directed by Michael Almereyda. Pablo Picasso: Réminiscences is a 1989 documentary film directed by Fabienne Strouve. It's My Country Too: Muslim Americans is a 2005 documentary film directed by Clifford Bestall and produced by Ruhi Hamid. The film follows the journey of the South Asian rock music band Junoon during their tours to America and the lives of Salman Ahmad and Muslims in the United States, and the Muslims for Bush pressure group. On March 3, 2005, Salman Ahmad appeared on the documentary which aired on BBC television documentary strand This World. I Like Killing Flies is a 2004 documentary film produced, directed, filmed, and edited by Matt Mahurin. It documents Shopsins restaurant in New York City's Greenwich Village and its owner and head cook, Kenny Shopsin. In 2002 and 2003, Mahurin followed Shopsin in his final year at the location he ran for over 30 years. Throughout the film, Shopsin offers what he calls "half-baked" philosophy, peppered with profanities. In the first half, Shopsin opens his eatery for the day and talks about his kitchen, his business, his employees, and his customers. We meet the regulars and friends who eat some of the 900 eclectic dishes he prepares, and we learn the rules of the restaurant: all customers must eat, parties of five or more are unwelcome, and anyone who irritates the owner will be swiftly shown the door. Shopsin's wife and children, all of whom work at the restaurant, weigh in on what it's like to work for this eccentric and occasionally hot-tempered man. In the film's second half, Shopsin loses his lease and is forced to move his establishment to a larger location on nearby Carmine Street. Family, friends, and customers all pitch in to help with the move. La mirada de Ouka Leele is a 2009 film written and directed by Rafael Gordon. "Truth might well be stranger than fiction, but who would have thought it could be so hallucinogenic? The film follows the surreal story of Petra (Petra Woschniak), a mesmerizing figure who scours the streets of Istanbul. We are introduced to her twilight universe via daily sessions with her very unusual therapist Herold (Herold). This masked conversationalist is a wine-sipping, coke-sniffing man of unspecified sexual orientation who tries to break down Petra's defences while maintaining his own. Hidden behind a leather S mask and topped off with a variety of flamboyant wigs, he talks her through her deepest fears, though his intentions are unclear." Quoting Piers Handling. Paperback Dreams is a 2008 television documentary film about the fate of bookstores in the new economy, that was part of the KQED documentary film series, Truly CA. It is "the story of two landmark independent bookstores and their struggle to survive. The film follows Andy Ross, owner of Cody's Books, and Clark Kepler, owner of Kepler's Books, over the course of two tumultuous years in the book business." Publishers Weekly notes that Beckstead became interested in the topic after becoming a "fan" of Cody's and Kepler's. While working in Menlo Park, California, he frequently shopped at Kepler's. Beckstead stated: “When I heard Kepler's was closing [briefly in 2005], I was shocked: it's in one of the most affluent, educated cities in America—just 15 minutes from Stanford University—and it made me realize that if an independent bookstore couldn't survive there, there must be a larger story.” After making the documentary, Beckstead stated that he discovered "four elements essential to the survival of an independent bookstore: Own your own building [...] Hire experienced staff [...] Sell used books [...] Figure out some way to sell books online." Scent of Revolution is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Viola Shafik. A Showcase by Zach Wise (NYTimes.com) is a 2010 online and multimedia documentaries directed by Zach Wise. Walk On is a 2013 documentary, biography, drama and sport film directed by Mark Bashian. The Great Ecstasy of Woodcarver Steiner is a 1974 documentary film by German filmmaker Werner Herzog. It is about celebrated ski-jumper Walter Steiner who works as a carpenter for his full-time occupation. Herzog has called it "one of my most important films." Ghost Noise is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Marcia Connolly. Inventing Our Life: The Kibbutz Experiment is a 2010 documentary film directed by Toby Perl Freilich. The film examines the 100-year history of Israel's kibbutz movement as a modern generation struggles to ensure its survival amidst painful reforms and a new capitalist reality. Among those interviewed are first, second and third generation members from kibbutzim like Degania, the flagship commune established in 1910; Hulda, once near collapse and recently privatized; Sasa, the first to be settled entirely by Americans and today Israel's wealthiest kibbutz; and Tamuz, an urban kibbutz founded in 1987 and located in Beit Shemesh. Dominica: Charting a Future for Paradise is a 2011 documentary short film about the history of the Commonwealth of Dominica and the challenges it faces as a young independent nation. The film has screened at the Africa World Documentary Film Festival in St. Louis and in Barbados, the Montreal International Black Film Festival, and it received the award for Best Documentary Short at the 2012 Third World Independent Film Festival. Comstock Films has created a unique film series that explores sexual relationships among couples. Each film focuses on one couple and begins with an intimate interview that sets up the background of the couple's relationship: how they met, the basis of their intimacy, what attracts them sexually to one another, and how they share their innermost desires and fantasies. The camera then turns to an intimate lovemaking session, recording in detail the passion and eroticism that exists between the two. Coverage is explicit, but not provocative; it allows viewers to share in the couple's healthy, passionate, romantic relationship and to experience firsthand the erotic intimacy of their lovemaking. Ashley and Kisha are an unusual couple, in that when they first met, Ashley had a girlfriend and Kisha was straight. Yet proud lady-killer Ashley was smitten with sexually conservative Kisha, and began to devise ways to seduce her. After several failed attempts, Kisha's curiosity finally gave way to Ashley's advances, which quickly turned into a passionate desire and eventual blossoming of love. Now in a committed and passionate lesbian relationship, they share their story of meeting, falling in love, and turning each other on. Thank You For Calling is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Régis Coussot. The Love We Make is a cinéma vérité documentary film by Albert Maysles. The film chronicles Paul McCartney's experiences in New York City after the September 11, 2001 attacks, following him as he prepared The Concert for New York City October 2001 benefit event. McCartney was on an airplane taxiing at JFK International Airport, about to depart for the United Kingdom, when the attacks occurred, and he wanted to do something to uplift and benefit the first responders in New York, so he arranged this concert. The film chronicles McCartney's planning and backstage experiences with the other participants in the concert. The film premiered on Showtime on September 10, 2011 – the eve of the 10th anniversary of the attacks. The film's title comes from a line in The Beatles' song "The End". Derren Brown: The Great Art Robbery is a 2013 documentary TV Movie co-written by Stephen Long and Iain Sharkey and directed by Jon Richards. We Are Not Ghosts is a documentary film directed by Mark Dworkin and Melissa Young. 1973 is a 2005 documentary historical crime film written and directed by Antonino Isordia. Arnos tonlabor is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Christoph Janetzko. Gerrymandering is a 2010 documentary feature film written and directed by Jeff Reichert. The film explores the history and the ethical, moral and racial problems raised by redistricting, i.e., the drawing of boundaries of electoral districts in the United States. Gerrymandering covers the history of the redistricting practice, how it is used and abused, how it benefits the two major political parties, Democrats and Republicans. The documentary draws on the perspectives from different individuals, reporters, pundits and politicians including Arnold Schwarzenegger, Howard Dean, Bob Graham, Lani Guiner, Ed Rollins, John Fund and Susan Lerner, and an array of lesser-known personalities. Not a Love Story: A Film About Pornography is a documentary about the pornography industry. It was directed by Bonnie Sherr Klein in 1981, and released in 1982. It remains one of the landmark works from the Studio D, the women's studio of the National Film Board of Canada. The film was banned in the province of Ontario on the basis of its pornographic content - a decision that was later reversed. Sunny Land is a 2010 film directed by Aljoscha Weskott and Marietta Kesting. Denk ich an Deutschland - Das Wispern im Berg der Dinge is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by Dominik Graf and Michael Althen. Zemlja obetovannaja. Vozvrascenie is a 2000 film directed by Aleksandr Rechwiaschwili. The Sons of Tennessee Williams is a 2010 documentary history film directed by Tim Wolff. The thundering liftoff of Atlantis The brilliant blue of the Pacific The majesty of the Himalayas The vast red dunes of the Sahara It is America of the 1950s and 1960s, when a woman's most important contribution to society is generally considered to be her ability to raise happy, well-adjusted children. But for the mother whose child is diagnosed with autism, her life's purpose will soon become a twisted nightmare. Looking for help and support, she encounters instead a medical establishment that pins the blame for her child's bizarre behaviors on her supposedly frigid and detached mothering. Along with a heartbreaking label for her child, she receives a devastating label of her own. She is a "refrigerator mother".Refrigerator Mothers paints an intimate portrait of an entire generation of mothers, already laden with the challenge of raising profoundly disordered children, who lived for years under the dehumanizing shadow of professionally promoted "mother blame."Once isolated and unheard, these mothers have emerged with strong, resilient voices to share the details of their personal journeys. Through their poignant stories, Refrigerator Mothers puts a human face on what can happen when authority goes unquestioned and humanity is removed from the search for scientific answers. Road of Hope: The Spiritual Journey of Cardinal Nguyen Van Thuan is a 2009 film written and directed by David Naglieri. I Was Five When I Became A Woman is 2013 short drama documentary film written and directed by Maryam Tafakory. Axe Crossing is a 2004 documentary film written by Christian Bau and directed by Christian Bau and Monika Treut. From the Journals of Jean Seberg is a 1995 docudrama type found footage film on the life of actress Jean Seberg. It is directed by Mark Rappaport. Ausweg is a 1990 short documentary film written and directed by Malgorzata Bienkowska-Buehlmann. Separado! is a 2010 documentary family music film directed by Dylan Goch and Gruff Rhys. Three Letters from China is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Luc Schaedler. Swastika is a 1967 short documentary film written by Pekka Lehto and Pirjo Honkasalo and directed by Pirjo Honkasalo. Forgotten Transports: To Estonia is a 2008 drama film written and directed by Lukáš Přibyl. Project 10 - Real Stories From a Free South Africa: Belonging is a 2003 film directed by Kethiwe Ngcobo and Minky Schlesinger. Chasing Legends is a documentary film covering the events of the 2009 Tour de France from the perspective of Team Columbia-High Road. It premiered at the cinema in May 2010 in the US and October 2010 in the UK. Unfair Dealing is an independent 2008 documentary film produced by Canadian broadcaster David Weingarten. The film was originally marketed to an online audience. The film alleges that the terrorism charges brought against the "Toronto 18" were largely exaggerated or fabricated by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Canadian Security Intelligence Service in order to justify the controversial Canadian Anti-Terrorism Act, and increased funding for security and law enforcement. Nothing on Earth is a 2013 documentary film directed by Michael Angus. Love, Marilyn is a 2012 American documentary film about Marilyn Monroe's writings produced by Stanley F. Buchthal, Liz Garbus, Amy Hobby, and directed by Garbus. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 12, 2012 and is based on the 2010 non-fiction book Fragments: Poems, Intimate Notes, Letters, edited by Stanley F. Buchthal and Bernard Comment. The production firms that produced the film included the Diamond Girl production company, Sol's Luncheonette Production and the French-based StudioCanal production company, whose parent company owns the third-largest film library in the world. The film was initially slated to be named Fragments, but was later changed to Love, Marilyn. Surf Shaper Documentary is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Liv Williams. The Peter Sellers Story... as he filmed it is a 2002 documentary film directed by Anthony Wall and Peter Lydon. "A coming of age musical extravaganza about a child raised by his mother and grand mother who allowed him to express himself in a most unconventional way. A true homage to the greatness inside us all — if only we can achieve our dreams." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site L'ombrello di Beatocello is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Georges Gachot. Wir waren niemals hier is a 2004 documentary film directed by Antonia Ganz. God and Gays: Bridging the Gap is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Luane Beck. 2084 is a 1984 short documentary film written and directed by Chris Marker. In Search of the Black Knight is a 2013 romance drama film written and directed by Tamarat Makonnen. Can you make a movie while having mental illness? Bud Clayman is doing it. Will making a documentary about your mental illness change your life? Mental illness interrupted his dream of a filmmaking career. Thirty years later, he’s making the movie of his life – a story with universal relevance, a wildly original film about pain and vulnerability, empowerment and Bud’s quest for belonging. The Bohemian Knot is a 1994 documentary film directed by Pavel Schnabel. 12 Wasted Years is a video documentary of heavy metal band Iron Maiden, focusing on the history of the band from 1975-1987. It includes several rare videos and interviews from the band's career, some of which were later included on the 2004 documentary The Early Days. The video was originally released on laserdisc and VHS tape and has been out of print for over a decade. In March 2013, Iron Maiden included the full documentary in a reissue of their 1989 concert film, Maiden England. Tale of a Forest is a Documentary and Family film directed by Kim Saarniluoto and Ville Suhonen. Sludge is a 2005 documentary film by Appalshop filmmaker Robert Salyer chronicling the Martin County Sludge Spill that was an accident that occurred after midnight on October 11, 2000 when a coal sludge impoundment in Martin County, Kentucky, broke through an underground mine below, propelling 306 million gallons of sludge down two tributaries of the Tug Fork River. The movie documents the continuing story of the Martin County disaster, the resulting federal investigation, and the looming threat of coal sludge ponds throughout the coalfield region. In the United States today, coal is the largest single source of fuel for energy production. Annually, the country mines over a billion tons of coal. Coal waste is a consequence of this consumption; the Mine Safety and Health Administration has estimated that there are over 235 sludge ponds throughout the region with the potential to break into an underground mine, as the Martin County pond did in 2000. In the wake of the December 2008 release of coal ash at a Tennessee Valley Authority power plant, Appalshop provided a web stream of Sludge for the public for a limited time. Laamb is a 2013 Documentary, Short, Sport film written by Peter Alsted, Kristoffer Hegnsvad and directed by Kristoffer Hegnsvad. German Shepherd is a 2014 short documentary animation biography history film directed by Nils Bergendal. David Malone looks at four brilliant mathematicians - Georg Cantor, Ludwig Boltzmann, Kurt Gödel and Alan Turing - whose genius has profoundly affected us, but which tragically drove them insane and eventually led to them all committing suicide. The film begins with Georg Cantor, the great mathematician whose work proved to be the foundation for much of the 20th-century mathematics. He believed he was God's messenger and was eventually driven insane trying to prove his theories of infinity. Steps to Eternity is a 2009 short documentary film written by Steve Littman and directed by Daniel Goldberg. My Sister Maria is a 2002 documentary drama film written by Natalya Andreychenko, Maximilian Schell, Gero von Boehm and directed by Maximilian Schell. Join British author Alexander McCall Smith as he makes one of his annual treks through the cities and bush of Botswana, the setting of his best-selling mystery series The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency. As Smith reveals the startling beauty of Botswana's land and people, he also gets up close and personal with lions and other wildlife, then visits Oscar-winning director Anthony Minghella as he films an adaptation of the series' first novel. Star Trek: Gene Rodenberry's Vision is a 2009 short documentary film written by M. David Melvin. The Dark Side of Chocolate is a 2010 documentary film about the exploitation and slavetrading of African children to harvest chocolate still occurring nearly ten years after the cocoa industry pledged to end it. Elephant Shaman is a 2012 documentary film directed by Shane Bunnag. Life Almost Wonderful is a 2013 documentary film writen and directed by Svetoslav Draganov. Elective Affinities is a 1968 documentary film written and directed by Karel Vachek. The Rise and Fall of ECW is a 2004 direct-to-video documentary produced by World Wrestling Entertainment. It chronicles the history of Philadelphia-based professional wrestling promotion Extreme Championship Wrestling. The documentary features interviews with various performers who worked in the promotion including co-founder and former owner Paul Heyman as well as performers Tazz, Tommy Dreamer, Dawn Marie, Stevie Richards, Mick Foley, Chris Jericho, Lance Storm, Rey Mysterio, Eddie Guerrero, Chris Benoit, Rob Van Dam, Rhyno, Nunzio, Spike Dudley, Bubba Ray Dudley and D'Von Dudley. A book with the same title was published by WWE and Pocket Books in 2006 with much of the same information and interviews from the DVD transcribed and included. People of the Wind is a 1976 American documentary film about the Bakhtiari people, produced by Anthony Howarth and David Koff. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature and also for a Golden Globe. Lost Girl is a 2008 documentary and short film directed by Ali Taleb. Color Adjustment is a 1992 documentary film that traces 40 years of race relations and the representation of African Americans through the lens of prime time television entertainment, scrutinizing television's racial myths. In some ways this documentary narrated by Ruby Dee is a sequel to Riggs’ Ethnic Notions, now examining racial stereotypes in the broadcast age. My Lai is a documentary film created by PBS; it aired as an episode of American Experience. The documentary details the 1968 My Lai Massacre and its background. Topics of the video include the men of Charlie Company and the cover-up of the event. Hugh Thompson, Jr. is also covered in the documentary. My Lai was recognized as the 2010 Outstanding Directing For Nonfiction Programming during the Emmys. The documentary was also nominated as the 2010 Exceptional Merit In Nonfiction Filmmaking in the Emmys. The documentary was also awarded a 2010 Peabody Award. Desarrollo humano is a Spanish 2007 short documentary film. Fan of the Dead is a 2007 documentary directed by Nicolas Garreau. The Recess Ends is a documentary film by brothers Austin and Brian Chu about the 2008-2009 recession. They crossed the United States to document the effects of the recession on people and communities, and filmed in all 50 states. The film premiered at the Victoria Theater in San Francisco on September 30, 2009. From Danger to Dignity: The Fight for Safe Abortion is a 1995 documentary film directed by filmmaker, Dorothy Fadiman. The film weaves together two parallel stories: the evolution of underground networks that helped women find safe abortions outside the law, and the intensive efforts by activists and legislators to decriminalize abortion through legislative and judicial channels. This film combines rare archival footage with interviews that document the courageous efforts of those who fought to break the silence, change the laws and end the shame which surrounded abortion when it was a crime. The film is the second of the Abortion Rights Film Trilogy. The film features interviews with Dr. Jane Elizabeth Hodgson, Pat Maginnis, Constance Cook, Sarah Weddington, and archival footage featuring George M. Michaels. Fair Wind - Notes of a Traveller is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Bernadette Weigel. Erbkrank is a 1936 Nazi propaganda film. Directed by Herbert Gerdes, it was one of six propagandistic movies produced by the "NSDAP, Reichsleitung, Rassenpolitisches Amt" or the Office of Racial Policy, from 1935 to 1937 to demonize people in Germany diagnosed with mental illness and mental retardation. The goal was to gain public support for the T-4 Euthanasia Program then in the works. This film, as the others, was made with actual footage of patients in German psychiatric hospitals. Adolf Hitler reportedly liked the film so much that he encouraged the production of the full-length film Opfer der Vergangenheit: Die Sünde wider Blut und Rasse. In 1937, Erbkrank was reportedly showing in nearly all Berlin film theaters. Prior to World War II, the film was distributed in America through the Pioneer Fund. Let's Burn is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Leticia Berrizbeitia, Anastasios Gkinosatis and Nicola Scandroglio. Goodnight Miss Ann is a 1978 American short documentary film directed by August Cinquegrana. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Hunting Bobby Oatway is a 1997 documentary film written and directed by John Kastner. Voyage to Narragonia is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Germán Berger. The Standbys is a 2012 musical, drama, documentary, family film directed by Stephanie Riggs. "Boy Interrupted is a film that raises questions. It asks how a young boy can end his life at the tender age of 15. It struggles to find answers about what kind of family he had and the life he led. By its very nature, it is a naked display of its filmmaker's personal life at its most revealing and perhaps disturbing. How can a mother, we may ask, make a film about the death of her son? What defines this film as a remarkably unique and truth-telling achievement is the way it explores how filmmaking can create closure for its creators as well as its audience. Dana Perry has gathered home movies, photographs, and a variety of different documents to tell the story of her son, Evan: his bipolar illness, his life, and his death, and their impact on those who loved him the most. She interviews his siblings and friends, his doctors and his teachers, and in the process, she chronicles a harrowing and difficult journey. The camera provides insight and revelation, and yet Boy Interrupted is a film that is also full of despair. The film's saving grace is that it functions, in the final analysis, as therapy for both its viewers and its subjects at a most fundamental level. It is an essentially human story, and a parent’s worst nightmare." Quoting the description on the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Salmon Confidential is a 2013 documentary news film directed by Twyla Roscovich. "With so much emphasis — and rightly so — on the events of the Stonewall riots, our common history has made it easy to forget the struggles of our community in other parts of the country. On These Shoulders We Stand explores the early decades of the gay rights movement in Los Angeles through the eyes of a handful of heroic individuals. Los Angeles in the 1950’s was both a gay haven and a prison. People found each other and celebrated, only to be threatened and humiliated by the police and, it seemed, the city itself. Yet with each setback, new people found their place in the movement. Fear and shame slowly transformed into defiance. Challenging authority with a knowing silence evolved into demonstrations and marches. In the wake of Stonewall, Los Angeles hosted the first Gay Pride Parade. Feminism and the gay rights movement partnered to lead the way for women to celebrate themselves and each other. Health clinics were opened. Churches were founded. The rights of LGBT peoples were discussed and defended. One by one, victims turned into survivors. Survivors became crusaders. This kind of place-based history reminds us that every movement is sparked by individual stories. By celebrating different communities’ contributions to our national and international LGBT rights movements, we acknowledge that each of us, no matter where we come from, has a part to play." Quoting Kristine Kolton from the 2010 Frameline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival Site. My House Stood In Sulukule is a 2010 documentary film directed and written by Astrid Heubrandtner. A proposito degli effetti speciali is a 2001 short documentary film written and directed by Alberto Grifi. Bald Headed Blues: A Doctormentary on Sarcofiguy is a documentary film directed by C.W. Prather. When Jews Were Funny is a documentary film by Canadian director Alan Zweig, released in 2013, which explores the role of Jewish comedians in the history of North American comedy and humour from the Borscht belt to the present day. The film features interviews with and/or performance clips of a wide variety of Jewish comedy performers and writers of the 20th and 21st centuries, including Howie Mandel, Gilbert Gottfried, Rodney Dangerfield, Eugene Mirman, Marc Maron, Bob Einstein, Andy Kindler, Shelley Berman, Alan King, Judy Gold, Elon Gold, David Steinberg, Jackie Mason, Jack Carter, Norm Crosby, Henny Youngman, David Brenner, Shecky Greene, Mark Breslin, Cory Kahaney, Harrison Greenbaum, Simon Rakoff, Lisa Lambert, Larry Josephson and Michael Wex. The film premiered on September 10, 2013 at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. It subsequently won the festival award for the year's best Canadian feature film. Hunting the Zodiac is a 2003 documentary film written by Reinhardt Beetz and directed by Reinhardt Beetz and John Mikulenka. Petrella: Shine On Me is a 2013 documentary film directed by Bob Polleyfeyt. Eminem: Behind the Mask is a 2001 documentary directed by Peter Emina. Surfwise is a 2007 American documentary film about the 11-member Doc Paskowitz family, which was directed by Doug Pray. The film premiered at the Toronto Film Festival on 11 September 2007 and had its U.S. premiere on 9 May 2008. Paskowitz went to Stanford University Medical School, became an M.D., and espoused a philosophy of holistic health and diet, while raising his large family of eight boys and one girl in a camper, and founding a school of surfing. Live In Hyde Park is concert film recorded by blues-rock guitarist Eric Clapton on 29 June 1996 in London's Hyde Park. The concert was presented by the MasterCard Masters of Music for The Prince's Trust and featured songs from right across his career. The VHS of the footage from the concert was released in 1997, followed by a DVD version in 2001. Last Woman Standing is a 2013 sports documentary film written and directed by Juliet Lammers and Lorraine Price. Black Box BRD is a 2001 German documentary film written and directed by Andres Veiel. The film deals with West German politics of the 1970s and 1980s, a period marked by turmoil and the highly publicized activities of the left-wing terrorist group known as the Red Army Faction. The film focuses on the lives and deaths of Alfred Herrhausen, a prominent banker and chairman of the Deutsche Bank who was assassinated by the RAF in 1989, and Wolfgang Grams, member of RAF who was a suspect in the attack on Herrhausen and who later shot himself in the head while being chased by the German police in 1993. A number of relatives, friends, and colleagues of both men were interviewed for the film. In Germany the film was released in May 2001, and then re-released in September 2002. It was screened at a number of festivals and won several awards in 2001 and 2002, including the 2002 German Film Award for Best Documentary Film and the 2001 European Film Award. In the United States the film was shown on PBS, retitled as Black Box Germany. JKF:BREAKING THE NEWS is a 2004 documentary film written by Alastair Layzell and Krys Boyd Villaseñor and directed by Alastair Layzell. The Prime Ministers: The Pioneers is a 2013 documentary film directed by Richard Trank. Screen Snapshots were a series of documentary short subjects produced by Columbia Pictures between 1924 and 1958. They featured behind-the-scenes footage of Hollywood stars of the day at various Hollywood events or parties. From about 1930, these short documentaries were almost exclusively written, produced and directed by Ralph Staub, until the series was discontinued in 1958. They usually ran for 9 or 10 minutes and were shown in cinema theatres like newsreels alongside main features. Three of these documentary shorts were nominated for an Academy Award, Best Short Subject, One-reel. They are - 1944 Screen Snapshots Series 23, No. 1:Hollywood in Uniform - Ralph Staub, producer 1945 Screen Snapshots' 50th Anniversary of Motion Pictures - Ralph Staub, producer 1946 Screen Snapshots Series 25, No. 1:25th Anniversary - Ralph Staub, producer Ultra Violet For Sixteen Minutes is a 2011 short independent documentary film directed by David Henry Gerson. Successful leaders reflect on their Dyslexic experiences, as a high school senior must overcome the challenges of Dyslexia to achieve his dream of getting into a competitive college. Going Upriver: The Long War of John Kerry is a documentary film on U.S. Senator John Kerry's military service during the Vietnam War and his subsequent participation in the peace movement. There is significant emphasis on Kerry's famous speech before a Senate committee, historical footage from the Winter Soldier Investigations, and coverage of the Dewey Canyon III anti-war demonstrations in Washington, D.C. The majority of the film is composed of archival footage, with much of it in the original black-and-white format. From the producer's website, Archived October 1, 2004 at the Wayback Machine: "This is a feature length documentary about character and moral leadership during a time of national crisis. Loosely based on the bestselling book Tour of Duty by Douglas Brinkley, Going Upriver examines the story of John Kerry and the key events that made him a national figure and the man he is today. Building the Impossible: The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World is a 2000 documentary film directed by Clive Maltby, and narrated by Pierce Brosnan. Panic Bodies is a 1998 film written and directed by Mike Hoolboom. A Father's Music is a 2007 documentary film directed by Igor Heitzmann. Konzert am Tümpel is a short documentary film directed by Heinz Sielmann. Faraz Anwar – Documentary is a 2005 documentary film directed and produced by Haroon Sheikh. The documentary film follows the experience of Faraz Anwar, lead guitarist and vocalist of the Pakistani progressive rock band Mizraab, in the music industry. The documentary was released on November, 2005, by Poison Wood Productions. Tahrir 2011: The Good, the Bad and the Politician is an Egyptian documentary directed by Tamer Ezzat, Ahmad Abdalla, Ayten Amin and Amr Salama. The film is divided in three parts covering respectively the protesters, the police forces and a profile of Hosni Mubarak by several political figures. The film mixes interviews and real footage from the demonstrations. It premiered at 68th Venice International Film Festival as an out of competition feature film and the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival in the Mavericks section. Tow-in allows surfers to pick up the biggest waves of the ocean. The surfers are towed by jet skis into the waves. The documentary shows a group of surfers dedicated to it. Vesterbro is a 2007 film directed by Michael Noer. MTV: Grammys Uncensored is a 2001 television film directed by Danielle Weiss. Heidi Fleiss:The Would-Be Madam of Crystal is a 2008 documentary directed by Randy Barbato and Fenton Bailey. Nowhere to Call Home: A Tibetan in Beijing is a documentary drama family film directed by Jocelyn Ford. Silver Girls is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Saara Aila Waasner. A Better Life examines the effects of American immigration policy by documenting the experiences of three Mexican immigrants in the Chicago area. The film focuses primarily on Octavio (Gus) 
Salazar, who migrated to Rockford, Illinois in 1995, and uses this story among others to approach this complex social and political crisis. In Rockford, Gus found stable employment, married an American woman (Pamela) and started a family. He was ultimately deported in
 2003. The Redwoods is a 1967 American short documentary film produced by Trevor Greenwood and Mark Jonathan Harris. It was produced for the Sierra Club as part of their campaign for a national park to protect the redwood forest. It won an Academy Award in 1968 for Documentary Short Subject. Everyone is susceptible to pressures of modern living, and in this release from National Geographic filmmakers attempt to gain a greater understanding of how our bodies respond to this contemporary plague while revealing why stress is much more than a simple state of mind. Just how deep does the impact of stress really hit us? This is the question posed by university researchers as they travel from the plains of Africa to neuroscience labs at Stanford University on a mission to uncover the physical tools that can result from serious mental strain. The Iceman Confesses: Secrets of a Mafia Hitman and The Iceman Tapes: Conversations with a Killer are two documentaries that feature the Mafia hitman Richard Kuklinski. They were produced by HBO and released in 1992 and 2001, respectively. After years of silence, "The Iceman" speaks. In two interviews a decade apart, Richard Kuklinski, a notorious top enforcer for the Gambino crime family, tells his unusual and gruesome story. Raised on—and immune to—violence, he kept his unorthodox job and tactics a secret from his adoring family. In 1986, after a long investigation, Kuklinski was betrayed by "the only man I didn't kill" and when interviewed was serving multiple life sentences. Street Kids is a 1982 documentary film written by Kent Chadwick, Adrian Tame, Rob Scott and Leigh Tilson and directed by Leigh Tilson and Rob Scott. Molly & Mobarak is a 2003 Australian documentary directed by Tom Zubrycki. It follows a Hazara asylum seeker, 22-year-old Mobarak Tahiri, as he falls in love with 25-year-old Molly Rule, and faces possible deportation as his temporary visa nears expiration. In 2003, it was nominated for best documentary at the IF Awards. À ciel ouvert is a documentary film written by Mariana Otero and Anne Paschetta and directed by Mariana Otero. Prisoner 345 is a 2006 documentary film. Partisans of Vilna is a 1986 indie documentary film written and directed by Joshua Waletzky, with writing credits by Aviva Kempner. Perversion for Profit is a 1965 propaganda film financed by Charles Keating and narrated by news reporter George Putnam. A vehement diatribe against pornography, the film argues that sexually explicit materials corrupt young viewers and readers, leading to acts of violence and "perverted" attitudes regarding sex—including inclination toward homosexuality. Although Perversion for Profit is quite serious in its suggestion that pornography could erode the integrity of American culture, Peter L. Stein of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote in a 2003 review that it was "shrill and sometimes comical". Today, Perversion for Profit is in the public domain, and due largely to its unintentional humor value, it has become popular on the Prelinger Archives website and on YouTube. As Peter L. Stein observes in an article for the San Francisco Chronicle, however, the film also has considerable historical significance, serving as a sort of time capsule of pornography from the era as well as an example of historical concerns regarding media influence: Farrebique - The Four Seasons is a 1946 black and white documentary written and directed by Georges Rouquier. Life Under Mike is a political documentary film directed and produced by Canadian filmmaker James Motluk. It was released to theaters in September 2000 to generally positive reviews. The movie takes a critical look at the government of then Ontario Premier Mike Harris. It was partially funded by American Filmmaker Michael Moore after Motluk met Moore at the Toronto International Film Festival. Music was provided for the movie soundtrack by rock stars Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan. In 2001, it received a Media human Rights Award from the League for Human Rights of Canada. The movie touches on themes such as the need for government to play a role in the economy, the need for a strong sense of community and support for strong trade unions. It features interviews with economist John Kenneth Galbraith and former NDP Leader Jack Layton. Who Owns The Street? is a 2012 film directed by Frazer Dempsey. Colors: Bangin' in South Carolina is a biographical crime fiction documentary film directed by Terry Davis. The Hooping Life is a 2010 documentary film directed by Amy Goldstein. The film had its world premiere in April 2010 at the Sarasota Film Festival, and focuses on the history of hooping. Metro-Land is a BBC documentary film written and narrated by the then UK Poet Laureate Sir John Betjeman. It was directed by Edward Mirzoeff and first broadcast on 26 February 1973. The film celebrates suburban life in the area to the Northwest of London that grew up in the early 20th century around the Metropolitan Railway. "Metro-land" was the slogan coined by the railway for promotional purposes in about 1915 and used for about twenty years, until shortly after the incorporation of the Metropolitan into the railways division of the London Passenger Transport Board in 1933. As Betjeman himself put it at the beginning of Metro-Land, it was a "Child of the First War, forgotten by the Second". Betjeman carries the pamphlet guide to Metro-land from the 1920s with him as he travels. The film was critically acclaimed and is fondly remembered today. A DVD was released in 2006 to coincide with the centenary of Betjeman's birth. Vittorio Racconta Gassman- Una Vita Da Mattatore (A Tribute to Vittorio Gassman) is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Giancarlo Scarchilli. Tepeyolotl, corazón del cerro is a 2005 short documentary film written and directed by Miguel Ángel García. Finding Josephine is a 2012 short documentary family film directed by Tomás Sheridan. Medieval Warfare: The Crusades is a 2001 documentary film. Break the Science Barrier is a 1996 television documentary written and presented by Richard Dawkins, which promotes the viewpoint that scientific endeavour is not only useful, but also intellectually stimulating and exciting. Featuring interviews with many well-known figures from the world of science and beyond, it was originally broadcast on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom — the first of a series of collaborations between Dawkins and the station — before being released on DVD more than a decade later. The documentary contains many of the themes later expounded in his book Unweaving the Rainbow, which was published two years after the initial broadcast. Herman's House is a 2012 documentary crime film written and directed by Angad Singh Bhalla. Destiny in Space is a 70mm Canadian IMAX documentary film released in 1994. The film was directed by Toni Myers and Academy Award-winner Ben Burtt, and narrated by Leonard Nimoy. The film is a showcase of the daily lives of astronauts in space, as they fix instruments and take measurements. The film includes two space shuttle launches and several cargo bay scenes, including an astronaut repairing the Hubble space telescope. CGI recreations of the surface of Venus and Mars based on satellite data from JPL are also featured. The film looks at the future of human space exploration and what future generations might accomplish in the years to come. Four filmmakers contributed to directing the film. Director/cinematographer James Neihouse was the cinematographer for Blue Planet, The Dream Is Alive, Michael Jordan to the Max and other IMAX features. Burtt, aside from his lengthy and impressive list of sound crew credits, directed both Destiny and Blue Planet. Toni Myers edited several IMAX pictures, including L5: First City in Space, Hail Columbia! and others. Acharya is an upcoming documentary film about A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, the founder of the Hare Krishna movement, scheduled for release in September 2015 in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Bhaktivedanta Swami's arrival in the United States. It is directed and produced by Yadubara Das and co-directed by Mukunda Michael Dewil. Le rêve d'une mère is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Cherilyn Papatie. BAM150 is a 2012 feature documentary film directed by Michael Sladek. After the Cup: Sons of Sakhnin United is a 2010 documentary film directed by Alexander H. Browne and Christopher Browne. Oscillare is a 2011 short biographical documentary film directed by Lauren Feiring. The Songs Of Rice is a 2014 documentary film written by Uruphong Raksasad and Kriengsak Wittayaaniwat and directed by Uruphong Raksasad. Location Hunting in Palestine or Sopralluoghi in Palestina per il vangelo secondo Matteo is a 1965 Italian documentary film directed by Pier Paolo Pasolini. The Central Park Five is a 2012 documentary film about the Central Park jogger case, directed by Ken Burns, Sarah Burns, and David McMahon. It was released in the US on November 23, 2012. What's the T? is a 2012 biography documentary film written by Joshua Jones and directed by Joseph Pe and Cecilio Asuncion. Meet the Patels is a 2014 documentary film written by Matthew Hamachek, Billy McMillin,Geeta Patel,Ravi Patel and directed by Geeta Patel and Ravi Patel. Dirt for Dinner is a 2000 film directed by Branwen Okpako. In Rwanda We Say…The Family That Does Not Speak Dies is a documentary film examining the Gacaca justice process in the aftermath of the 1994 Rwandan Genocide. Directed by Anne Aghion and produced by Gacaca Productions, this 2004 film won an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Informational Programming." Filmed in Rwanda, the language of In Rwanda is Kinyarwanda with English subtitles. Adrenaline Rush: The Science of Risk is a 2002 IMAX documentary film that explores the human biology behind risk-taking—why it gives some people such a powerful physical lift, and why the human mind and body craves danger. In addition, filmmaker Marc Fafard presents an up-close look at two of the most dangerous and exciting human pastimes: parachuting and base-jumping. The Secret Land is a 1948 American documentary film about an American expedition code-named "Operation High Jump" to explore Antarctica. It won the Academy Award for Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. 3 Akkorde für ein Halleluja is a documentary, directed by Trini Trimpop, about the history of the German band Die Toten Hosen between 1982 and 1988. The movie first appeared as VHS in November 1989 after the release of the band’s album Ein kleines bisschen Horrorschau, which made them known to a wider audience for the first time, but It wasn’t till July 18, 1991 that the film was first shown on the big screen. In 2004 it was rewarded with a golden record. In 2006 the director Stefan Kloos added comments from the band member Campino and the band’s representative Uwe Faust to the 89 minutes long film and launched it as DVD, as which it climbed to the 46th place of the German Charts. Man in the Sand is a 1999 music documentary that chronicles the collaboration between Billy Bragg and Wilco, which involved the musicians creating new music to accompany lyrics that were written decades earlier by folk singer Woody Guthrie. The project, which was organized by Woody's daughter Nora, spawned two albums: Mermaid Avenue, released in 1998, and Mermaid Avenue Vol. II, released in 2000. The film begins with Bragg in Guthrie's original hometown of Okemah, Oklahoma, and follows along as Bragg travels to other Guthrie haunts in Texas, California, and finally, New York. Much of the documentary is also spent at the recording sessions in Chicago and Dublin, Ireland. Most of the tracks from both albums were recorded at these sessions. Population Boom is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Werner Boote. Stupidity Or Crime? is a 1990 written and directed by Maj Wechselmann. Know Your Mushrooms is a 2008 documentary film by Canadian director Ron Mann. The 74 minute Sphinx Productions film examines the counterculture Telluride Mushroom Festival, held annually in Telluride, Colorado and some of the mycologists and funghiphiles that gather there such as Larry Evans and Gary Lincoff, author of seven mushroom identification guidebooks including the Audubon Field Guide to Mushrooms. The soundtrack includes music by the Flaming Lips and The Sadies. Paying the Price: Killing the Children of Iraq is a 2000 Carlton Television documentary written and presented by John Pilger which was directed by Alan Lowery. In this documentary Pilger argues that UN sanctions had a devastating effect on the children of Iraq during the 1990s. Team Network: Badru's Story is a 2013 short film directed by Benjamin Drummond and Sara Joy Steele. Frederick Douglass and the White Negro is a documentary film originally released in 2008. Musicians On Call - Brantley Gilbert is a 2013 Telly Award winning film, created for Musicians On Call. Campaign is a documentary that aired as part of the P.O.V. television series. Mafrouza/Coeur is a 2007 documentary film directed by Emmanuelle Demoris. Petróleo is a 1936 Mexican film directed by Fernando de Fuentes. The Sunken Tomb is a 1976 short documentary film written and directed by Nagisa Ôshima. Carte Blanche is a 2011 documentary film written by Sonja Heizmann and Heidi Specogna and directed by Heidi Specogna. Dang An is a 2014 documentary historical fiction film written and directed by Rikun Zhu. Dear Mandella is a 2011 documentary film directed by Dara Kell and Christopher Nizza. Pride & Glory is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Dilber Shatursun. Nefertiti Revealed is a 2003 documentary film written by Shaun Trevisick and directed by Matthew Wortman. Die Kinder sind tot is a 2003 documentary film directed by Aelrun Goette. "A documentary portrait of an extraordinary dance ensemble from Memphis composed of young adults with Down syndrome. The film profiles individual dancers and their families along with showing performances. It also explores the offstage lives of the dancers and touches on some tough issues that go beyond the arts such as mainstreaming or not, how to find and create jobs, and other topics." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. Hollywoodism is a 1997 film directed by Simcha Jacobovici. The World According to Dick Cheney is a 2013 documentary film directed by R.J. Cutler and Greg Finton. Il Capo is a 2010 short biographical documentary film directed by Yuri Ancarani. Rock n Roll Junkie is a 1994 Dutch documentary film directed by Jan Eilander. The film is about Herman Brood. Emergency Exit: Young Italians Abroad is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Brunella Filì. Ashes and Snow by Canadian artist Gregory Colbert is an installation of photographic artworks, films, and a novel in letters that travels in the Nomadic Museum, a temporary structure built exclusively to house the exhibition. The work explores the shared poetic sensibilities of human beings and animals. Ashes and Snow has traveled to Venice, New York, Santa Monica, Tokyo, and Mexico City. To date, Ashes and Snow has attracted more than 10 million visitors, making it the most attended exhibition by a living artist in history. Claudio Abbado: In Portrait is a 1996 music documentary film directed by Paul Smaczny. Bridgewalkers is a 2013 documentary, adventure, family, historical fiction film written by Don Cirillo and directed by Kara Rhodes. A Painter of Eloquent Silence: Ganesh Pyne is a 1998 short documentary film produced and directed by Buddhadeb Dasgupta. Out of Place is a surfing documentary directed by Scott Ditzenberger and Darrin McDonald that follows the lives of several lake surfers in Cleveland, Ohio. While Lake Erie does not offer the quality of waves they would prefer, business commitments, family, and friends keep them from moving. As the best waves occur in the winter, the surfers often experience freezing conditions including during a snow bound Great Lakes Eastern Surfing Association competition featured in the film. Fish Tale: Secret Life of Plankton is a 2012 documentary film written by Tierney Thys and Christian Sardet and directed by Christian Sardet, Noe Sardet and Sharif Mirshak. Status Anxiety is a 2004 documentary film written by Alain de Botton and directed by Neil Crombie. As We Forgive is the 2008 student documentary film by Laura Waters Hinson. Big Mama is a 2000 documentary film by Tracy Seretean. It chronicles the struggle of 89-year-old Viola Dees and her fight to retain custody of her grandson. It illustrates many of the difficulties facing an increasing number of grandparents raising their grandchildren in the USA today. It won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject. Step Up to the Plate is a 2012 family documentary film directed by Paul Lacoste. The Arc of Life is a film of an interview of world religion scholar Professor Huston Smith by Dr. Ken Dychtwald, a gerontologist and psychologist. The topics covered range from an overview of how societies from early human history to today deal with the problem of aging, to how the various religions of the world view the purpose of life, and what they teach about what happens after death. Mother Teresa: A Life of Devotion is a 1997 documentary TV film written by Agnes Nixon. Control Room is a 2004 documentary film about Al Jazeera and its relations with the US Central Command, as well as the other news organizations that covered the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Made by Egyptian-American filmmaker Jehane Noujaim, the film was distributed by Magnolia Pictures. People featured in the film include Lieutenant Josh Rushing, a press officer from US Central Command, David Shuster, an NBC correspondent, and Tom Mintier, a CNN correspondent. Al Jazeera was represented by Samir Khader, a senior producer, Hassan Ibrahim, a Sudanese journalist who attended American universities and headed the BBC Arab News Service before joining Al Jazeera, and Dima Khatib, a Syrian journalist and a producer at Al Jazeera. Samir Khader later became the editor of Al-Jazeera. Josh Rushing started working for Al Jazeera English in 2006, Shuster started working for Al Jazeera America in 2013. The Personals is a 1998 American short documentary film directed by Keiko Ibi about a Jewish senior citizens' theatre group in New York City. It won an Academy Award in 1999 for Documentary Short Subject. Cooking Up Dreams is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Ernesto Cabellos. Other Worlds is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Marko Škop. The Killing of the Imam is a 2010 South African short documentary film. The Termite Colony is a 1970 short documentary film. "The Yes Men are back, but no one saw them coming. After their first film, you would think they had blown their cover, but,to the contrary, they have only stepped up their game. If you don’t know them, they’re Andy Bichlbaum and Mike Bonanno, a pair of notorious troublemakers who sneak into corporate events disguised as captains of industry. Then they use their momentary authority to expose the biggest criminals on the planet. In The Yes Men Fix the World, they’ve set their sights on a plethora of manmade disasters, from profiteering after Hurricane Katrina to the environmental disaster in Bhopal.Initially their antics come across like adolescent pranks, but after further exploration, you discover that Bichlbaum and Bonanno can actually be considered “inside out activists.” By changing reality—even temporarily—they open your mind to the possible. Sweet dreams for some, a nightmare for corporate Goliaths with skeletons in the closet. When they present what should have been done, you become acutely aware of how easy it would have been to solve the problem in the first place. A film complete with comedic interludes and, yes, an underwater ballet, The Yes Men Fix the World is as entertaining as it is effective. My only fear is that by the time this film premieres at the Festival, the Yes Men could easily be in jail. See this movie now!" Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance film Festival site. Ama Girls is a 1958 American short documentary film produced by Ben Sharpsteen. It won an Academy Award at the 31st Academy Awards in 1959 for Documentary Short Subject. It is also known as Japan Harvests the Sea. Männen från vidsel is a 2014 documentary short film written and directed by Sven Blume. The Rainmakers is a 1962 film recognized by Special Award for scientific photography in the 5th Australian Film Institute Awards. The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill is a 2003 documentary film directed, produced, and edited by Judy Irving. It chronicles the relationship between Mark Bittner, an unemployed musician who is living rent-free in a cabin in Telegraph Hill in San Francisco, California, and a flock of feral parrots that he feeds and interacts with -- cherry-headed conures, mainly, but also two blue-crowned conures, one of which is named Connor. Bittner also wrote a book by the same name on the subject. In May 2007, the documentary aired on the PBS series Independent Lens. Much of the documentary focuses on the individual parrots, and their relationships with one another. Bittner notes that there is humor in the piece, which he believes makes it different from many other nature documentaries. Raising funding for the film was difficult at first, as Irving had to find individual donors. The proceeds from a fundraiser, in which Bittner gave a presentation to a packed theater, allowed Irving to start shooting the film in earnest. The musical score was created by Chris Michie, a Bay area musician, formerly the guitarist for Van Morrison. It was his final project before he died from melanoma. The Demining Camp is a 2005 documentary directed by Licínio Azevedo. It presents the problems related to land mines left after the Mozambique Civil War and the resulting demining operations. Cinexpérimentaux Stephen Dwoskin is a 2012 film directed by Michel Amarger and Frédérique Devaux. El Huaso is a 2011 family, drama, and documentary film written by Carlo Guillermo Proto and Gustavo Guillermo Proto and directed by Carlo Guillermo Proto. Frère et sÅ“ur is 2014 documentary film directed by Daniel Touati. The film looks at the intertwined interests and relationships between the British, the Tibetans, the Chinese and the Indians over the 20th century and beyond, on the subject of Tibetan sovereignty. Sixteen Decisions is a documentary film directed and produced by Gayle Ferraro, exploring the impact of the Grameen Bank on impoverished women in Bangladesh. The bank provides micro loans of about $60 each to the poor, as well as promoting a social charter that gave the film its title. The film was Gayle Ferraro's first, begun in 1997 and completed in 2000. It has been shown at multiple film festivals, including the 2001 New York International Independent Film and Video Festival and 2002 Women With Vision Film Festival. It won the Bronze Award for Women's Issues at the Houston Worldfest, and was broadcast by PBS in 2003 N.U. is a short 1948 documentary film directed by Michelangelo Antonioni. The film examines a weekday morning of Italian janitors, captured at work on the streets of post-WWII Rome. Although undoubtedly neorealistic in its style, this documentary does foreshadow some of Antonioni's own future trademarks, such as slow-moving camera that is enamoured with alienated and deserted urban landscapes and inanimate objects of architecture, nature, etc. and seemingly less than concerned with sweepers, washers and cleaners. The film's narration consists of barely several phrases; musically soundtrack alternates classical-like piano improvisations with jazzy pieces. In 1948 N.U. won Antonioni Nastro d'Argento Best Documentary award. So did his L'amorosa menzogna next year. The Iron Ministry is a 2014 documentary film directed by J.P. Sniadecki. The Parching Winds of Somalia is a documentary film produced by Charles Geshekter. The Steinway Virtuosos is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Amelia Bushell, Emily Keifer and Scarlett Urbano. Turin - Santo Stefano Belbo is a 1984 documentary film directed by Renate Sami and Petra Seeger. The Future Will Not Be Capitalist is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Sasha Pirker. Gateway to a City is a 1962 documentary film directed by R. Johnston. Pinter People is a documentary film written by Harold Pinter and directed by Gerald Potterton. Anatomy of a Filmmaker is a 1991 documentary film directed by Valerie A. Robins. John Paul II Vol 5: 2000-2005: From the Jubilee to the Last Goodbye is a 2006 biographical documentary film. String Theory: The Evolution of the YoYo is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Michael Maddeaux. Perreus is a 2014 musical documentary film written and directed by Kalien Delgado Molina. Will the Real Dave Barber Please Stand Up? is a 2014 short documentary film written and directed by Dave Barber. À bientôt, j'espère is a 1968 French documentary film directed by Chris Marker and Mario Marret. It tells the story of a strike action at a textile factory in Besançon in March 1967. The film was shot in black and white, with photography by Pierre Lhomme. Poetry of Resilience is a 2011 documentary short film directed by Katja Esson. Matrimonio alla moda is a 1951 Italian documentary short film. The director and writer was Luciano Emmer. Bis ans Ende...und dann noch weiter is a 1988 documentary film directed by Peter Buchka. S&M: Short and Male is a 2008 Canadian documentary directed by Howard Goldberg which examines the obstacles that short statured men face every day in life, love and work. The film was featured at the 2008 Hot Docs film festival and premiered on CTV in May 2008. The Farm: Angola, USA is a 1998 award-winning documentary set in America's infamous maximum security prison in Angola, Louisiana. It was produced by Jonathan Stack and Liz Garbus and directed by Stack, Garbus, and Wilbert Rideau. The film follows the lives of six prison inmates who convey their own personal stories of life, death, and survival in a world that few manage to ever leave. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. A follow-up film, The Farm: 10 Down, which examines the lives of the surviving prison inmates 10 years after the original film, was released in 2009. El duque is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Rodolfo Guzmán and Raúl Ramón. Vagabond - A Nomad in Spirit & in Reality is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Mahvish Rahman, Priya Thuvassery, Swati Bhattacharyya, and Tulika. Tony Palmer's Film About the Fantastic World of Michael Crawford is a 1996 documentary film directed by Tony Palmer. The Promise: Prenatal Memories of Children is a 2013 documentary film directed by Norio Ogikubo. Gifts From The Elders is a 2013 documentary film written by James M. Fortier and Chantelle A.M. Richmond and directed by James M. Fortier. See You in One Year! is a 2013 documentary film directed by Marko Stanić. Straža na Drini is a 1942 documentary war film directed by Branko Marjanović. The film was edited from the episodes of the weekly Ustasha newsreel. Along with the number of other films, it received a bronze diploma at the 1942 Venice Film Festival, attended only by the Axis countries. "Libertarian, outlaw, shaman, philosopher, romantic, preacher, genius…Bill Hicks was always something other than a comedian. His death from cancer in 1994 deprived the world of arguably the most iconic and probing voice in American culture of the period, and it's hard to find the words to do him justice. Given the fact Hicks was much more celebrated in the UK than he was at home, it is perhaps fitting that it's British filmmakers Matt Harlock and Paul Thomas who step up to pay him his dues. Cleverly shunning a conventional talking-heads approach, American: The Bill Hicks Story uses an innovative animation technique, some rare and previously unseen performance footage, and testimonies only from the people who knew him best, his family and close friends, to create a deeply perceptive, fittingly honest celebration of the man occasionally known as Goatboy. From his teenage years, when he would have to sneak out of his parents home to appear at the Austin comedy club where he first attracted attention, through to being infamously censored on The Late Show with David Letterman, this is as complete and definitive a biography as there is available. The frequent stand-up clips serve to illustrate why Hicks remains so revered and relevant: he was so funny, so fearless and always right." Quoting Michael Hayden San Yuan Li is a 2003 experimental independent Chinese documentary directed and produced by artists Ou Ning and Cao Fei. Sickfuckpeople - Short Version is a short documentary drama family film directed by Juri Rechinsky. Fp is a 2012 Documentary film written and directed by Michela Carmazzi. The Unfinished History of Life is a 2011 film directed by Cong Feng. Oh, What a Lovely Tea Party is a 2004 documentary about the making of Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, released and produced by Kevin Smith's View Askew Productions. The 3-hour work marks the directorial debut of Jennifer Schwalbach Smith, Kevin Smith's wife. It was originally intended to be a bonus feature on the Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back DVD, but due to its length it became a standalone feature. Plans to include it on the Clerks X DVD were scrapped for similar reasons. It has since been screened at several of Kevin Smith's "Vulgarthon" film festivals. According to a Q&A session with Smith in Vancouver in early 2009, it would be included in full on a future Blu-ray Disc release of Clerks, and it was on the November 2009 release. Living the Silent Spring is a documentary film directed by Masako Sakata. Transfusion is a drama documentary film directed by Robert D. Lemon. Kärlekens XYZ is a 1971 Swedish sex educational film directed by Torgny Wickman. It is a sequel to the two films Language of Love and Mera ur kärlekens språk. In 1973 the three films were edited together into a new film, Det bästa ur Kärlekens språk-filmerna. Play it Again Sam: The Sam Shoenfeld Story is a documentary film directed by Matt Berkowitz. Dan Behind His Eyes is a 2013 Documentary Film written and directed by Sheri Kebbel. Marc Anthony: Concert from Madison Square Garden is a TV special. Narco Cultura is a 2013 documentary film about the Mexican Drug War in Ciudad Juárez, directed by Shaul Schwarz. The two main focal points of the movie are Edgar Quintero of the narcocorrido band Buknas de Culiacan and crime scene investigator Richi Soto. The film was released in the United States on November 22, 2013. Do It is a 2000 film directed by Sabine Gisiger and Marcel Zwingli. Wild Bill's Run is a Documentary adventure biographical crime fiction film directed by Mike Scholtz. The Joycean Society is a documentary 2013 film directed by Dora García. Premji-Ithihasathinte Sparsam is a 1998 documentary film directed by M. R. Rajan. The Motherhood Archives is a 2013 science fiction documentary film written and directed by Irene Lusztig. Annabelle Serpentine Dance is short silent American film produced and distributed by Edison Manufacturing Company in 1895. It is one of several released by the studio the late 19th century. Each short film depicts the popular serpentine dance performed by Annabelle Moore. Many of the prints were distributed in color, which was hand-tinted. The Battered Bastards of Baseball is a 2014 documentary film about the Portland Mavericks, a defunct Minor League Baseball team which operated from 1973 through 1977. Owned by actor Bing Russell, the Mavericks were independent of Major League Baseball teams, despite competing in a league of teams with MLB affiliates. The film was directed by Chapman Way and Maclain Way, grandsons of Russell. The film features Russell's son Kurt Russell, who played for the Mavericks and worked as a vice president. The film also features Todd Field, who was a batboy for the Mavericks, Frank “The Flake” Peters, Joe Garza, Jim Bouton, and Joe Garagiola. The film premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. The film premiered on Netflix on July 11, 2014. Justin Lin acquired the rights to adapt the documentary to a feature film, with Field as its director. The Young Messiah, is a musical production of a modern adaptation of George Frideric Handel's oratorio Messiah, It was arranged by Tom Parker, in 1982, and featured vocals by Labi Siffre, Madeline Bell and Vicki Brown. A later version was produced and arranged by Frank McNamara, who also conducted the orchestra and chorus. The cast included Gladys Knight, Chaka Khan, Roger Daltrey, Jeffrey Osborne, the Irish Philharmonic Orchestra & Choir and the Visual Ministry Gospel Choir. The production included a narration, Beware of False Prophets, which was written by Frank McGuinness and performed by Aidan Quinn. The music integrates gospel, rock and soul sounds. Whatever Forever: Douwe Bob is a 2013 documentary film, directed by Lex Uiting, Linda Hakeboom and Rolf Hartogensis. Fionn Costello is a 2012 short film directed by Denise Sammon In the Cobbler's Shoes is a 2013 documentary film directed by David Marks. Glacial Balance is a documentary, adventure, and drama film directed by Ethan Steinman. A Letter To Mohamed is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Christine Moderbacher. Better Than Sinatra is a 2013 short documentary drama film directed by Jefferson Grainger. Many people have heard of dogging, or know places where it apparently happens, but very few know what goes on in this secretive world. Dogging Tales, is an intimate and compelling documentary told through doggers themselves, who share their experiences of a mysterious, little understood neck of the woods. Filmed over ten months, the documentary follows a range of people whilst attempting to gain insight into why men and women engage in or watch sexual activity in front of strangers in public areas under the cover of darkness. Part of the True Stories strand, showcasing the best of feature length documentaries, Dogging Tales is directed by award-winning photographer Leo Maguire – who made his critically-acclaimed debut in 2012 with Gypsy Blood: True Stories (Best Newcomer at Grierson Awards, Bafta-nominated for Photography). The first interviews with doggers take place in the ‘real world’ – as their day draws to a close and they consider their life, families and relationships. Pixar: 25 Magic Moments is a 2011 documentary film directed by Richard Mills and Paul Wright. Michael Childers: Hollywood in the Desert Sky is a 2014 Biography film written and directed by Mary Silverman. Jimmy Carr: Telling Jokes is 2009 documentary comedy directed by Tristram Shapeero. Monumental: In Search of America's National Treasure is an American documentary film hosted by Kirk Cameron. Directed by Duane Barnhart and written by Kevin Miller, Cameron's mission in making the film is to "search for the real treasure of America." Monumental began its box office run on March 27, 2012 with a Tuesday night premiere. Reviews of the film have been nearly nonexistent, with only notable Christians such as Francis Chan and Joni Eareckson Tada praising it. Pipes of Para is a 1963 documentary film directed by Gilbert J. Brealey. Independent Little Cuss is a 1996 short documentary film directed by Jeff Patterson. Central Texas Barbecue is a 2014 film written and directed by Matthew Salleh. New York Says Thank You is a 2010 documentary film directed by Scott Rettberg. The Ambassador & Me is a 2011 short biographical family and comedy documentary film directed by Jan Czarlewski. Evoque - Reality Show is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Mauro John Capece. Medora is a 2013 documentary film by Andrew Cohn and Davy Rothbart about a small town basketball team based in Medora, Indiana, called the Medora Hornets, the town's 70-students high school basketball team which is on a losing streak of many seasons, just unable to keep up with larger schools in the area league, much as Medora itself struggles to barely survive. The directors were initially interested in the team after an article in The New York Times about the team. For the full season 2010-2011, they took more than 600 hours of footage about the team and the lives and struggles of its team members. The post-production costs were financed through the crowdfunding site Kickstarter. The 82-minute resulting documentary has been released in November 2013. Limited Partnership is a 2014 Documentary, Biography, Drama and History film written by and directed by Thomas G. Miller. Classic Albums: Iron Maiden – The Number of the Beast is a documentary about the making of the album of the same name by the British heavy metal band Iron Maiden, released on 26 November 2001 as part of the Classic Albums documentary series. Directed by Tim Kirkby, it featured cuts from the title track, "Children of the Damned", "Run to the Hills", and "The Prisoner," in addition to extended interviews and live footage of "Hallowed Be Thy Name," recorded during the band's performance at the Rock in Rio festival in 2001. The video reached No. 9 on the Norwegian DVD Charts, and was certified Gold by the Australian Recording Industry Association. It was released in DVD, VHS and UMD formats, and featured subtitles in six different languages, Dutch, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, and French. "Lucas Chaffin is a proud fourth-generation coal miner, trying to live up to the legend of his dad and what he believes is a family duty. But his father Luther, still known in the mines as “Bonecrusher,” is withered and sick at just 61. He’s given his life to the dust, and he wants his son to get out of the mines before it’s too late. Bonecrusher is an intimate account of the love between a father and son; and a moving portrait of a tough community and an even tougher way of life." Quoting the description from the 201 IndieFest site. The Tiradentes Republic is a 2005 documentary film directed by Zózimo Bulbul. Sangue is a 2013 documentary and drama film directed by Pippo Delbono. Milosevic on Trial, also known as Slobodan Milosevic – Præsident under Anklage, is a documentary by Danish director Michael Christoffersen that follows the trial of Slobodan Milošević. The documentary has won several awards, and has been in competition at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival, at Hot Docs '08, and at the 6th Silverdocs festival in Washington DC. The showing at Silverdocs was followed by a panel discussion with former NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe, Wesley Clark. Beauty: In the Eyes of the Beheld is a 2008 American documentary film that explores what it is like to be a beautiful woman through interviews of eight American women considered physically beautiful. The women interviewed include a physician, an exotic dancer, a musician who worked with recording artist Prince, former beauty queens, a student in a wheelchair, an assistant paralegal, and an assistant television producer. Eye opening stories of insecurity, vulnerability and tragedy surface along with the more predictable blessings beauty brings. The preview asks " Is beauty all it is cracked to be?" Surprising stories surface as they speak about their childhoods, careers, relationships, and life satisfaction. Beauty: In the Eyes of the Beheld is included in the National Eating Disorders Association's list of body image educational tools. Director and producer Liza Figueroa Kravinsky explores these perceptions, those of the women of themselves, and how they feel they are perceived by the outside world, by the impossible "ideal" created and demanded by the media, ideals that are modified from season to season. The Naked Feminist is a 2004 documentary film about sex-positive feminist women working in the American pornography industry. It is the debut work of Australian film maker Louisa Achille and features interviews with Marilyn Chambers, Christi Lake, Ginger Lynn Allen, Chloe Nicole, Sharon Mitchell, Nina Hartley, Veronica Hart, Kylie Ireland, Annie Sprinkle and Candida Royalle. Some of these women were members of Club 90, an early support group of female porn performers, and all of them found their work in porn empowering. The 58-minute long film won an audience award at the South by Southwest Festival in 2004. The Meaning Behind The Word is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Katharine Niemuller. The 3 Rooms of Melancholia is a 2004 Finnish documentary film written, directed and co-produced by Pirjo Honkasalo. The film documents the devastation and ruin brought on by the Second Chechen War, more specifically the toll that the war had taken on the children of Chechnya and Russia. The film was critically acclaimed upon its release, being praised for its high artistic value and winning numerous awards in the process. Dangerous Acts Starring the Unstable Elements of Belarus is a 2013 documentary and drama film written and directed by Madeleine Sackler. Snow on tha Bluff is a 2012 reality/drama film directed by Damon Russell. It is the story of Curtis Snow, a real Atlanta "robbery boy and crack dealer whose livelihood revolves around armed robbery and drug pushing" who "sought out [director] Damon Russell to make a film about his life." The film's title refers to protagonist Curtis Snow and to Atlanta's neighborhood The Bluff, which is infamous for crime and drug dealing. Biggie and Tupac is a no holds barred investigation into the still unsolved murders of two of the biggest superstars rap has ever produced; Christopher Wallace, aka Biggie Smalls, and Tupac Shakur. Answering the crusading calls for justice from Biggie's mother Voletta, Broomfield hits the streets from East Coast to West Coast, putting his own life at risk as he uncovers sensational new evidence that points directly to the involvement of the LAPD and imprisoned Death Row records co-founder Marion 'Suge' Knight in the violent slayings that shocked the hip hop world. Ciao Italia: Live from Italy is a video album by American singer-songwriter Madonna and was released by Warner Reprise Video and Sire Records on May 24, 1988. It contained footage from a previous TV special of the Who's That Girl World Tour, Madonna in Concerto, broadcast in Europe in 1987, filmed at the Stadio Comunale in Turin, Italy. The video release also contained footage from shows recorded in Florence, Italy and Tokyo, Japan, the latter having previously been released as a Japanese TV special and home video release, Who's That Girl: Live in Japan. The decision to release Ciao Italia was spurred by the fact that this previous release became a commercial success in Japan. A re-release of the video took place in 1999, when it was released in DVD format, with a stereo soundtrack containing the songs only. The video received positive reviews from critics, who noted Madonna's showmanship and her skills as a performer. They also complimented the camera work in the video, for enhancing the visual aspects of the tour. Ciao Italia topped the Music Video sales chart of Billboard, and became the second best-selling music video cassette of 1988. My Dearest Enemy is an Israeli documentary that takes a behind-the-scenes look at Israel's secret diplomacy by sharing the highly anticipated meeting between Israeli Amnon Lipkin-Shahak and Palestinian Hani El Hassan—both powerful leaders in opposite camps. An Extras Night In is a 2010 documentary film. As the saying goes, nothing is certain in life but death and taxes. But how well do you really know the agency that collects your federal taxes? Most of us only hear from the IRS twice a year - when we get our tax forms and when we get our refund. But what about sides of the IRS you've never seen? Experience the challenge of collecting trillions in taxes from hundreds of millions of taxpayers as National Geographic takes a look inside IRS processing facilities. Somewhere Better is a 2003 documentary film directed by Mira Erdevicki. Beyond the Mountains is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Aya Koretzky. Cloudy Times is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Arami Ullon. Mussolini Speaks is a 1933 documentary film highlighting the first 10 years of Benito Mussolini’s rule as Prime Minister of Italy. The film, narrated by U.S. radio broadcaster Lowell Thomas, includes footage of the Fascists’ March on Rome, the Lateran Treaty between Italy and The Holy See, engineering projects in Italy and North Africa, and excerpts of speeches by Mussolini. Mussolini Speaks was produced and distributed by Columbia Pictures and grossed $1 million in the U.S. To date, Mussolini Speaks has not been released on DVD. Louis The Ferris Wheel Kid is a 2013 short, drama, family and documentary film written and directed by Tara Fallaux. Trips to hell - Living with the addiction is a 2011 TV documentary written by Wilma Pradetto and directed by Wilma Pradetto. Luchino Visconti is a 1999 Italian documentary film directed by Carlo Lizzani. It stars Claudia Cardinale. The Polish Pope is a 2006 biographical documentary film. National Geographic's Most Incredible Photos is a 2010 News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Cinematography – News Coverage/Documentaries nominated tv program. Argentinean Lesson is a 2011 documentary film directed by Wojciech Staroń. Happy Valley is a 2014 American documentary film, written and directed by Amir Bar-Lev. The film had its world premiere at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2014. The film later screened at 2014 Sarasota Film Festival and won the jury award at the festival. The Flight of the Aquanaut is a short Canadian documentary movie about an aquanaut with an atmospheric diving suit which shows the submarine world to the viewers in an entertaining way. The movie is characterized by a lot of different sceneries and the sound of vision. Cinematographie is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Philipp Fleischmann. El Palacio is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Nicolás Pereda. The Sower is a 2013 documentary film directed by Julie Perron. The Story of CNBLUE: Never Stop is a 2014 music documentary film directed by Jun Yong Seung. Die Wismut is a 1993 film directed by Volker Koepp. Tapetum Lucidum is a documentary drama film directed by Pablo Chavarría Gutiérrez. The World Without US is a documentary film created by Mitch Anderson and Jason J. Tomaric. Released in 2008, the documentary explores what might happen if the United States were to leave the international arena, rescind its global reach and become an isolationist nation for the first time since the early 20th century. Living / Building is a 2012 documentary film directed by Clémence Ancelin. Life as a Collage is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Forrest Penrod. Ben Webster in Europe is a 1967 documentary film Johan van der Keuken. Dictature Affective is a 2012 documentary drama film written by Sylvie Bouchard and directed by Louise Archambault and Karina Marceau. ONE NATION UNDER DOG: STORIES OF FEAR, LOSS AND BETRAYAL (debuting June 18) reveals the sobering realities behind America’s obsession with dogs, using startling images to show not only how far some dog lovers will go for theirpets, but how far the nation has to go before it treats all dogs humanely. Americans have conducted a long love affair with canines, but lost amidst all the pampering are unpleasant truths about dog ownership, care and commerce, not to mention the daunting odds that face millions of unwanted shelter animals. Directed by Ellen Goosenberg Kent, Amanda Micheli and Jenny Carchman. Lighting over Braddock: A Rust Bowl Fantasy is a 1988 documentary film directed by Tony Buba. C(Us)Todians is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Aly Muritiba. Freedom & Unity: The Vermont Movie is a documentary film directed by Nora Jacobson. Faire-Part - Musee Henri Langlois - Cinematheque Francaise is a 1997 documentary film directed by Jean Rouch. Aids ungleich Tod is a 1996 documentary film directed by Claus Constantin. Riding Solo to the Top of the World is a documentary film on the Chang pas of Ladakh, in India, about a journey of self-discovery. Garbage Warrior is a 2007 film about architect Mike Reynolds, inventor of the Earthship style of building, directed by Oliver Hodge. It follows Reynolds and how he developed the Earthship style of building and his struggle with the legislature of Taos, New Mexico, the location of his experimental Earthship community, in order to be allowed to build homes that do not match the structures of local building codes. The film concludes with a postscript showing Reynolds and his team of builders travelling to the Andaman Islands in the aftermath of the Boxing Day tsunami to assist the locals with disaster recovery and teaching them how to construct extremely low-cost homes. Cardin in Australia is a 1968 Australian film about Pierre Cardin's visit to Australia at the invitation of the Australian Wool Board, who invited the French fashion designer to promote his designs and his use of wool in his collections, highlighting the value of wool as a fashion item. The film won the 1967 Australian Film Institute award for Best Documentary. It also won the 1967 Australian Film Institute award for best editing in a non-feature film. Ted Williams is a 2009 sports documentary film written by Aaron Cohen. The inside story on the life and career of one of the world's most enduring and endearing heroes, from his early life in Louisville, Kentucky to his triumphant return to the international stage at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. Demain et encore demain / Journal 1995 is a 1997 documentary film directed by Dominique Cabrera. Wolves at Our Door is a 1997 documentary directed by Jim Dutcher. On the Brink: Doomsday is a 1997 documentary war film written and directed by Gary Parker. There Is a Happy Land is a 1987 documentary film written and directed by John McGrath. Bo Kata is a 2007 documentary film produced, directed, edited and shot by Shehzad Afzal. The original sound track for Bo Kata was composed by musician John Walden from Fife Scotland, who runs studio outfit Daft Dog Music. Douglas Mackinnon, Scottish Film and TV Director, who attended the film premiere of Bo Kata in Dundee at the Contemporary Arts Cinema, said it was “A beautifully made film about a world of kites and conflict, with marvelously atmospheric music.” Bo Kata was nominated for the Satyajit Ray Film Foundation Award 2007 for Best Film in association with the British Council and the British Film Institute. Bo Kata received a limited theatrical release across the UK in 2007, and was selected for in-competition for a number of international film festivals and showcases. These Streets are Watching is a 50-minute video on police accountability in three communities in the United States; Denver, Cincinnati and Berkeley. The video documents incidents that its creators consider demonstrate the unnecessary use of force by the police. Independent filmmaker, Jacob Crawford, weaves the responses made in these three cities to police brutality into a single tale of community empowerment and direct action. The film conveys basic legal concepts that can provide practical help to groups and individuals seeking an understanding of their rights when dealing with police. The film is divided into sections that explain citizen's basic rights, tactics for documenting police activity and ideas for further action. These Streets Are Watching has been screened across the United States and has played on television across the nation. In Sunshine Or In Shadow is a 2010 documentary sport film directed by Andrew Gallimore. Prison Through Tomorrow's Eyes is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Paul Sutton. The 70s: The Decade That Changed Television is a 2000 documentary film written by Arash Ayrom and 5 others and directed by Stacy Peralta. Jikuu Keisatsu Hyperion is a 2009 Japanese tokusatsu film that serves as a prequel and a sequel to the 2007 television series Jikuu Keisatsu Wecker Signa. It was released in theaters on July 25, 2009, for a limited release, and then released on two DVDs on July 31, 2009. The DVD releases divide the story of the film into the 1989 storyline starring and the 2009 storyline. Sanshiro Wada, Showtaro Morikubo, Ryo Shihono, Ai Hazuki, and Takaou Ayatsuki return from Wecker Signa, and are joined by newcomers Takuma Terashima, Miyu Irino, Ayumi Murata, Ayano Niina, and Hikari Yamaguchi, and veteran actor Susumu Kurobe, known for his portrayal of the original Ultraman Shin Hayata. The film's soundtrack is performed by electronica group Fantastic Explosion. This film is followed by Jikuu Keisatsu Wecker SIGHT in 2011. Forget about life-work-balance. A new generation of drugs promise unlimited increases in productivity without the need for rest or sleep. “Brain doping” is the latest trend among high flyers. Pharmaceutical companies are developing pills that increase mental capability, stimulate desire, and heighten the mood. A meaningful life full of happiness and success – without side effects. The industry hopes for fantastic profits if the pretty pills become socially acceptable. Are we at the dawn of a new era, in which cosmetic neurology is an everyday phenomenon? Der Glanz von Berlin is a 2001 German documentary film directed by Judith Keil and Antje Kruska. Dennis Miller: Citizen Arcane is a 1996 comedy documentary film written by Dennis Miller. Kafka au Congo is a 2010 documentary film. DamNation is a 2014 advocacy documentary film about the changing attitudes in the United States concerning the large dams in that country. The film was released on March 10, 2014. Blu-ray and DVD versions were also released in 2014. The film was directed by Travis Rummel and Ben Knight; produced by Matt Stoecker and Travis Rummel; and edited by Ben Knight. The executive producer was Yvon Chouinard, the associate producer Beda Calhoun, and the cinematographers: Ben Knight, Travis Rummel, Matt Stoecker My Father and the Man in Black is a 2012 Canadian documentary film directed and produced by Jonathan Holiff about the stormy relationship between country music star Johnny Cash and the filmmaker's father, Saul Holiff, his personal manager. It qualified for Oscar consideration in 2013. Holiff was inspired to produce the film when he stumbled on his fathers' storage locker filled with audio diaries and a large assortment of other documents relating to his time in the 1960s and 70s as Cash's manager. The locker also included a framed gold record of "A Boy Named Sue" which went on display at The Grand Theatre during the running of their musical Ring of Fire. Peace versus Justice is a documentary film written by Stacy Sullivan and Klaartje Quirijns; and directed by Klaartje Quirijns. Dallas Reunion: The Return to Southfork is a two-hour retrospective television special celebrating the long-running primetime television series Dallas which aired on CBS on Sunday, November 7, 2004. The special featured original cast members Larry Hagman, Patrick Duffy, Linda Gray, Steve Kanaly, Ken Kercheval, Victoria Principal, Charlene Tilton and a special appearance by Mary Crosby reunited at Southfork Ranch in Parker, Texas to reminisce about their time together on the show, as well as special tributes to the late Jim Davis and Barbara Bel Geddes, who was too ill to take part in the reunion but sent a telegram of good wishes to her former castmates. It also included outtakes, bloopers, behind-the-scenes practical jokes, home movies, fan questions, and the final results of an online poll at CBS.com where fans voted for their favorite top 10 Dallas cliffhangers: "A House Divided" - March 21, 1980 "Blast from the Past" - May 16, 1986 "Conundrum" - May 3, 1991 "End Game" - May 18, 1984 "The Fat Lady Singeth" - May 13, 1988 "Swan Song" - May 17, 1985 "Fall of the House of Ewing" - May 15, 1987 "Ewing Inferno" - May 6, 1983 "John Ewing III: Part 2" - April 6, 1979 Iron Is Hot is a 2009 short documentary film directed by Biju Toppo and Meghnath. Watchmen In The Wind is a 2014 documentary film directed by Liang Bixin. Once in a Lifetime: The Extraordinary Story of the New York Cosmos is a 2006 documentary film about the New York Cosmos, one of the most famous soccer clubs in the history of the United States. A Blind Hero - the Love of Otto Weidt is a documentary/biographical drama directed by Kai Christiansen. Prima di tutto is a 2012 documentary written and directed by Marco Simon Puccioni. Kørsel med Grønlandske hunde, is a Danish silent film made in 1897 by the photographer Peter Elfelt. It was the first movie sequence filmed in Denmark. The film, less than one minute in length, shows a Danish colony manager named Johan Carl Joensen driving a sledge pulled by Greenlandic sled dogs through Fælledparken in Copenhagen, Denmark. In the short sequence, the dog sled is driven toward the camera across a flat snow-covered landscape, it disappears out of the picture, and then reappears from the other side with the driver chasing behind. Elfelt shot the film using a camera he had had constructed from detailed plans that Elfelt obtained from the French inventor, Jules Carpentier. August and After is a 2012 documentary short film directed by Nathaniel Dorsky. A Finnish Summer with Turisas is a documentary film by and about the Finnish metal band Turisas, featuring live performances. It was released on 3 November 2008 in Europe and 25 November 2008 for the United States. One Crazy Ride is a 2009 Indian documentary film based on a 2002 route-charting expedition in India. It is directed by Gaurav Jani and produced by Dirt Track Productions. The film follows five biking enthusiasts as they journey across the Himalayas via an untried route. It was commercially released in Indian cinemas in February 2009. Kabbalah Me is a 2014 documentary film directed by Steven E. Bram. POPS Goes The Fourth! 2002 is a 2002 music documentary directed by Bob Comiskey. Jazz on a Summer's Day is a documentary film set at the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival in Rhode Island, co-filmed and co-directed by commercial and fashion photographer Bert Stern and director Aram Avakian, who also edited the movie. It was written by Albert D'Annibale and Arnold Perl. The Columbia Records jazz producer, George Avakian, was the musical director of the film. The film mixes images of water and the city with the performers and audience at the festival. It also features scenes of the 1958 America's Cup yacht races. The film is largely without dialog or narration. The film features performances by Jimmy Giuffre, Thelonious Monk, Sonny Stitt, Anita O'Day, Dinah Washington, Gerry Mulligan, Chuck Berry, Louis Armstrong, and Jack Teagarden. Also appearing are Buck Clayton, Jo Jones, Armando Peraza, and Eli's Chosen Six, the Yale College student ensemble that included trombonist Roswell Rudd, shown driving around Newport in a convertible jalopy, playing Dixieland. Many performances ran so long that the last act, Mahalia Jackson, did not appear on stage until after midnight, performing The Lord's Prayer. Octopusalarm is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Elisabeth Scharang. Ten Thousand Years Older is a 2002 documentary film by Werner Herzog about the Amondauas people of Brazil. The ten-minute film was produced and included as part of the Ten Minutes Older project, released in the collection The Trumpet. Hurricain Kalatozov is a 2010 film written and directed by Patrick Cazals. City of Hate: Dallas and the Assassination is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Quin Mathews. Black Wave: The Legacy of the Exxon Valdez is a 2008 documentary film directed by Robert Cornellier. Dig It! is a 2011 music documentary film directed by Danny Clinch. "When Hilly Kristal opened CBGB in New York's Bowery district in 1973, he'd intended to showcase the music that those letters stood for; country, bluegrass, blues. From the time Television played their first gigs there, it was revered as the birthplace of punk, and the place from where The Ramones, Blondie, Patti Smith and Talking Heads all emerged. Described by Joey Ramone as 'the womb of creativity', it became a rock 'n' roll mecca that was mythologised unlike any other. Never mind the tales of needles in its toilets and shit on its floor, or that every joker from Spinal Tap to Vanilla Ice would play there over the years, when it closed in October 2006, it did feel that part of pop music's history had been abandoned. Mandy Stein's brilliantly realised documentary presents the history of the venue, featuring contributions from CBGB employees, punters and, of course, a number of the artists who played there, from Sting to Henry Rollins. It also relates the story of the failed campaign to keep it open, which, as it involves a feud with the non-profit homeless charity which owned the building and an attempt to move the club as a franchise to Las Vegas, is fittingly bizarre in itself. As much as anything, the film emerges as a touching tribute to Kristal, whose passion and charisma made CBGB what it was." Quoting Michael Hayden Five Fragments of the Extinct Empathy is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Anna Nykyri. Poor Consuelo Conquers the World is a 2011 documentary film directed and written by Peter Friedman. An American Journey: In Robert Frank's Footsteps is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Philippe Seclier. Deutschland erwacht is a 1933 German film. Showing Up is a 2011 documentary film directed by Riad Galayini and James Morrison. Cardboard is a documentary, biographical and historical film directed by Matt Longmire. Régis Belleville, an experienced explorer, embarks on an unprecedented adventure: crossing the Sahara Desert at its widest point, from west to east along the 20th parallel, the most arid route possible, with the fewest people and wells. In the most extreme survival conditions, the explorer tests the limits of his body’s endurance on an unpredictable adventure. Injured camels, drought, extreme heat, sandstorms, the threat of bandits and the onset of dehydration remind Régis that one should never forget that nature is the ultimate master. Tinar is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Mahdi Moniri. Day of the Fight is a 1951 American short subject documentary film shot in black-and-white and also the first picture directed by Stanley Kubrick. Kubrick financed the film himself, and it is based on an earlier photo feature he had done as a photographer for Look magazine in 1949. Großstadt-Typen is a 1938 documentary short film written and directed by Leo de Laforgue. This event documentary, produced and directed by award-winning filmmaker Sean McGinly examines the grief, hope and emotions of 31 men who lost brothers in the attack on the Twin Towers on September 11th 2001. The Golden Years is a 1960 sponsored film promoting bowling as a family sport. It features a Populuxe bowling alley with a family of four having fun. It is a notable Populuxe film. It was made by the Jam Handy Organization. It is in the public domain. Incident in New Baghdad is a 2011 short documentary film about the July 12, 2007 Baghdad airstrike, directed by James Spione. The film features a first-person account from Ethan McCord, one of the first soldiers to arrive at the scene of the airstrike that killed between 12 to "over 18" people and wounded 2 children in New Baghdad during the Iraq War. The film premiered theatrically at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival, where it won the prize for Best Short Documentary. It was nominated for the Best Documentary Short Subject at the 84th Academy Awards. It was the second Kickstarter-funded film to be nominated for an Academy Award. Maradona, the Golden Kid is a 2006 documentary film written by Benoît Heimermann and Jean-Christophe Rosé and directed by Jean-Christophe Rosé. In episode 1, Battlefield Detectives: Massacre at Waterloo asks - was there more to Napoleon's defeat than the tactics and fighting prowess of the Allies? Waterloo has always been seen as a tactical victory for the Duke of Wellington, his small but highly trained Allied army outfighting the veteran soldiers of Napoleon's Grand Army. Now the latest scientific techniques are shedding crucial light on Napoleon's campaign. And a dramatic archaeological discovery is helping answer the central question: what went wrong for Napoleon at Waterloo? The program uncovers why, for the first and only time in their history, Napoleon's Imperial Guard broke and fled from the battlefield. Switch is a documentary film on global energy directed by Harry Lynch, produced and distributed by Arcos Films, and featuring Scott W. Tinker, a geologist and energy researcher who runs the Bureau of Economic Geology, a 200-person research unit of The University of Texas at Austin. and is a professor at the Jackson School of Geosciences. The film is part of a larger energy education and efficiency project, which also includes the Switch Energy Project website, with additional video content and educational programs. The website includes interviews with some of the world's leading energy policy analysts. Interviews including Ernie Moniz, former Under Secretary of Energy, Steven E. Koonin, Deputy Executive Director of the International Energy Agency, Richard Jones and physicist Richard A. Muller. The film aims to be a nonpartisan, scientifically based exploration of the energy transition from the traditional energies of coal and oil to future energies. It has been accepted by many environmental groups, government agencies, fossil and renewable energy companies and academic institutions. Ronald is a 2014 short documentary film directed by John Dower. Imagine is a 1972 television film by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, filmed mostly at their Tittenhurst Park home in Ascot, England, during 1971, and intended for television. All the songs from Lennon's Imagine album appear in the soundtrack, and also the songs "Mrs. Lennon" and "Don't Count the Waves", from Ono's album Fly. "Mrs. Goundo's Daughter is the story of a young mother's quest to keep her baby daughter healthy and whole. It is also the story of the African tradition of female genital cutting, which dates back thousands of years, and how it affects people's lives in just two of the many places where the practice is being debated today. Mrs. Goundo's husband fled drought and ethnic conflict in his native Mali, West Africa sixteen years ago. Mrs. Goundo came to the United States in 1999. Together, they are raising three young children in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. To stay in the US, Mrs. Goundo must persuade an immigration judge that her 2-year-old daughter Djenebou, born in the US, will almost certainly suffer clitoral excision if Goundo is deported. In Mali, where up to 85% of women and girls are excised, Mrs. Goundo and her husband are convinced they would be powerless to protect their daughter from her well-intentioned grandparents, who believe all girls should be excised." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site, 56Up is a documentary film directed by Michael Apted and Paul Almond. Our Corpses Still Live is a 1981 film directed by Rosa von Praunheim. The Vehicle with the Soul of a Man is a 2000 short documentary film written and directed by Balaka Gosh. Plan Your Dream Wedding is a 2004 documentary film directed by Monti Parungao. Skanks is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by David McMahon. Trains of Winnipeg is a film and multimedia art project by Clive Holden, released in stages between 2001 and 2004. The final project included a series of 14 short films, designed as visual representations of Holden's poetry, as well as a soundtrack CD and a book. The short films were scored by Emily Goodden, Christine Fellows, Jason Tait and Steve Bates; additional contributors on the CD included John K. Samson and Leanne Zacharias, as well as an archival recording of Al Purdy. The film series won the New Vision Award at the 2005 Copenhagen International Documentary Festival. Princesa de África is a 2008 documentary film. Throughout the long months of the Arctic’s frozen winter, the sun remains below the horizon. The cold is intensified by the darkness, making life difficult, if not impossible, for all but the toughest and most experienced of animals. Snowy owls are built for the challenge, their every sense and skill honed to take on the eerie, bleak world. When the brief Arctic summer approaches, bringing light back to the tundra, snowy owls embark on an even more daunting challenge than keeping themselves alive. They breed and attempt to raise young in one of the harshest environments on the planet. Once summer arrives, they will have just 82 days of sunlight to successfully raise a family of helpless owlets until they are ready and able to fly. Documenting the degree of difficulty involved in those efforts, a team of filmmakers must face some challenges of their own as they set out to record the rarely observed daily lives of a breeding pair of snowy owls. "Hold the skepticism—the smart and funny group of people profiled in this fast-moving documentary have heard it all before. Meet Swank Ivy who makes YouTube videos debunking common beliefs about asexuals; or David Jay, the movement’s poster boy, and a regular on television talk shows. The ladies of The View can barely conceal their disbelief as young and cute Jay describes his lack of desire—for anyone. (A)sexual documents the growth of this newly organized sexual minority while raising provocative questions about queer inclusiveness and the boundaries of “normal” sexual desire. The community is powered by the internet and modeled on the gay rights movement. In 2002 Jay created a website, asexuality.org, so he could find others like himself. Today, there are some 26,000 members of AVEN (Asexual Visibility and Education Network). Members discuss coming out as an asexual, their struggles for acceptance, and the various subgroups within the community (to cuddle or not to cuddle?). The endless parallels to queer experiences will make your head spin. Along with David Jay and other members of the asexual community, the film features academic researchers who speculate that there are over three million asexuals in the US. Sexperts Carol Queen and Dan Savage weigh in on the fledgling asexual movement and its place in queerdom. Does the GLBTQQ community have room for another letter? And is it possible that in today’s sexualized society, lack of desire is perversion’s final frontier?" Quoting Monica Nolan from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. "Micky has been a member of the local bathing club for almost half a decade. Every day, every season, she swims with her friends at her beloved bathing club. From her story we gain a perspective on ourselves, and on how our existence is but the fruit of coincidence." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Cannes Film Festival Site. The Ghost Army is a 2013 American documentary about the United States Army 23rd Headquarters Special Troops, produced and directed by Rick Beyer. Whateverest is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Kristoffer Borgli. Genetic Roulette: The Gamble of Our Lives is a documentary family film directed by Jeffrey M. Smith. Pepitto is a 2013 short, documentary, biographical, drama, and musical film, written by Lilit Grigoryan, and directed by Gurgen Janibekyan. A Documentary About Me and Running Really Far is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Liane Costello. Can’t Stop The Water is a 2013 documentary film directed by Rebecca Marshall Islam: The Untold Story is a documentary film written and presented by the English novelist and popular historian Tom Holland. The documentary explores the origins of Islam, an Abrahamic religion that developed in Arabia in the 7th century; it criticizes the orthodox Islamic account of this history, claiming that this traditional story lacks sufficient supporting evidence. It was commissioned by the British television company Channel 4 and first broadcast in August 2012. Its release followed the publication of Holland's In the Shadow of the Sword: The Battle for Global Empire and the End of the Ancient World, which also discussed the rise of the Arab Empire and the origins of Islam. Adopting the controversial theories of academic historian Patricia Crone as a basis, Holland asserted that there was little hard evidence for the origins of Islam and asked why it took several decades after the death of Muhammad for his name to appear on surviving documents or artifacts. Finding Shangri-La is a 2008 film directed by Ismene Ting. Kelly Clarkson exploded on the world after winning the American Idol contest in 2002. She continues to top the charts with hits like Miss Independent, Breakaway, My Life Would Suck Without You, and Already Gone. Her unwavering work ethic has allowed her to sell over 15 million albums worldwide. Robert Capa: In Love and War is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Anne Makepeace DRUM! Live is a music DVD that was nominated the award for Music DVD of the Year in the 2010 Juno Awards. On Music or the Dance of Joy is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jean-Charles Fitoussi. Loose Change is a series of films released between 2005 and 2009 which argue in favor of certain conspiracy theories surrounding the September 11th attacks. The films were written and directed by Dylan Avery and produced by Korey Rowe, Jason Bermas and Matthew Brown. The original 2005 film was edited and re-released as Loose Change: 2nd Edition, and then subsequently edited a third time for the 2nd Edition Recut. Loose Change: Final Cut, deemed "the third and final release of this documentary series" was released on DVD and Web-streaming format on November 11, 2007. Another version of the film, Loose Change 9/11: An American Coup, released on September 22, 2009, is narrated by Daniel Sunjata and distributed by Microcinema International. Coverage for the film increased in 2006 with the recut release having airings on U.S. and European television stations and over 4 million views online in four months, leading Vanity Fair to say it could be the first internet blockbuster. Loose Change asserts that the usual account of the Pentagon attack, World Trade Center collapse and United 93 phone calls and crash is implausible and instead suggests the 9/11 attacks were a false flag operation. Girl Model is a 2011 documentary film following Ashley, a conflicted model scout recruiting young Siberian girls to model in Japan, and Nadya, a recruited 13-year-old who gets financially taken advantage of during her modeling work in Japan. It was directed by David Redmon and A. Sabin. The film holds a 93% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. While receiving much praise for its subject matter, it left some critics wondering why the filmmakers didn't question the participants more thoroughly. Ty Burr of the Boston Globe writes, "It’s a valid approach that doesn’t yield as many dividends as the filmmakers hope. You sense there are dots left unconnected, a larger picture we’re not seeing. Are the various agency heads exploiting the models on their own, or is there malevolent collusion? Who’s making money and how? “Girl Model” shows but doesn’t investigate." Jeannette Catsoulis of the New York Times writes, "Filled with blind eyes and unspoken agreements, “Girl Model” opens a can of worms, then disdains to follow their slimy trails." Matan Uziel of The Fashion Corruption writes, "This video gives one a very distributing insight into how wealthy nations prey upon the poor in other countries. The Birders is a 1975 documentary film directed by David Morgan. That's Dancing! is a 1985 retrospective documentary produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer that looked back at the history of dancing in film. Unlike the That's Entertainment! series, this film did not focus specifically on MGM films and included more recent performances by the likes of John Travolta and Michael Jackson and from the then-popular films Fame and Flashdance, as well as classic films from other studios, including Carousel, released by 20th Century Fox, and Oklahoma!, released by Magna Corporation and 20th Century Fox. A highlight of the film was the first theatrical release of a complete dance routine by Ray Bolger for his "If I Only Had a Brain" number that had been shortened in The Wizard of Oz. The hosts for this film are Gene Kelly, Ray Bolger, Liza Minnelli, Sammy Davis, Jr., and Mikhail Baryshnikov. Pop singer Kim Carnes was commissioned to sing an original song, "Invitation to Dance", that plays over the closing credits. This film is sometimes considered part of the That's Entertainment! series, especially since its starting credits contain a card with the That's Entertainment! The Endless Summer is a seminal 1966 surf movie. Filmmaker/narrator Bruce Brown follows two surfers, Mike Hynson and Robert August, on a surfing trip around the world. Despite the balmy climate of their native California, cold ocean currents make local beaches inhospitable during the winter. They, with Rodney Sumpter and Nat Young, travel to the coasts of Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Tahiti and Hawaii in a quest for new surf spots and introduce locals to the sport. Other important surfers of the time, such as Miki Dora, Phil Edwards and Butch Van Artsdalen, also appear. Its title comes from the idea, expressed at both the beginning and end of the film, that if one had enough time and money it would be possible to follow the summer around the world, making it endless. The concept of the film was born through the suggestion of a travel agent to Bruce Brown during the planning stages of the film. The travel agent suggested that the flight from Los Angeles to Cape Town, South Africa and back would cost $50 more than a trip circumnavigating the world. After which, Bruce came up with the idea of following the summer season by traveling around the world. I Väntan På Larry is 2014 documentary short film directed by Mattias Sjöstedt. Dry Bones is a music documentary film directed by Greg Lamberson and Michael O'Hear. Out of the Ashes is a 2010 British documentary film directed by Tim Albone, Lucy Martens and Leslie Knott. It documents the story of the Afghanistan national cricket team's qualification for the 2010 ICC World Twenty20 tournament. Shape Of Things To Come is a 2012 documentary,short,biographical film directed by Matt Day. Angel on my Shoulder is a 1997 film directed by Donna Deitch. Bad Brains: Band in DC is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mandy Stein and Benjamen Logan. Fatal Assistance is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Raoul Peck. Crystal Darkness is a 30-minute Emmy and Telly Award-winning documentary on the dangers and prevalence of the drug methamphetamine. The film features testimonies of young people who have gone through meth addiction, as well as interviews with high profile politicians and law enforcement officials. The documentary is the centerpiece of a city-by-city, state-by-state campaign and has garnered the attention of residents in regions across the United States when it aired. In Arizona alone, the program reached an estimated 2.5 million residents and took over 1,200 phone calls from persons seeking help with meth addiction. Horses is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Liz Mermin. Double Dare is a 2004 documentary film about stuntwomen, specifically Jeannie Epper and Zoë Bell, directed by Amanda Micheli. The documentary follows Epper and Bell over several years, Epper from 1997 and Bell from the end of Xena: Warrior Princess in 2001, to 2003. Broadway: The Golden Age is a 2003 documentary film by Rick McKay, telling the story of the "golden age" of Broadway by the oral history of the legendary actors of the 40s and 50s, incorporating rare lost footage of actual performances and never-before-seen personal home movies and photos. Saga of the Franklin was a Kodachrome colour documentary film produced about the aircraft carrier USS Franklin which was hit by a Japanese dive bomber on March 19, 1945. Franklin was the most heavily-damaged carrier to survive World War II. The film traces the career of the Franklin from construction to commissioning, and then follows her out to sea and combat. Some of the most harrowing footage in the film shows the aftermath of the Japanese bombing, when ammunition dumps aboard the carrier caught fire and began to explode. A sequence showing the ships chaplain, Lieutenant Commander Joseph T. O'Callahan, wearing a steel helmet while administering the last rites to a dying sailor is one of the most enduring images of World War II in the Pacific. Both O'Callahan and Lieutenant JG Donald A. Gary, were awarded the Medal of Honor for their actions on the Franklin. The film ends as a badly damaged Franklin, against all odds, reaches New York City for repairs. Called "the most important intellectual alive" by The New York Times, and "a rebel without a pause" by rock-star Bono, Noam Chomsky is one of the greatest minds of the 20th Century and the world's leading voice of dissent.In a post 9-11 world, Noam Chomsky speaks openly about the U.S. war on terrorism, media manipulation, and social activism to intimate seminar groups and crowded venues. Chomsky analyzes the roots of anti-American sentiment, defines terrorism in the new millennium, and examines the after-effects of 9-11 in honest and forthright terms, providing a critical voice that many audiences feel is missing in the world today.Featuring candid interviews with his wife and tour manager, Carol Chomsky, as well as activists, fans, and critics REBEL WITHOUT A PAUSE is a timely, must-see film that offers an alternative voice and explores the truths and myths about the most important intellectual of our time. Once Brothers is a 2010 sports documentary film written and directed by Michael Tolajian. It was co-produced by ESPN and NBA Entertainment for ESPN's 30 for 30 series. The film chronicles the relationship of two basketball players from SFR Yugoslavia—Vlade Divac and Dražen Petrović. The duo played together on the Yugoslavia national basketball team from 1986 to 1990 and were at one time close friends, but the Yugoslav Wars drove them apart emotionally, as they came from opposing sides. Petrović died in an automobile accident in 1993 before the two could reconcile; much of film focuses on Divac's regret that they were never able to resolve their differences. Participants in the film include: Toni Kukoč, Dino Rađa, Žarko Paspalj, Clyde Drexler, Danny Ainge, Rick Adelman, Kenny Anderson, Derrick Coleman, Bill Fitch, Larry Bird, Jan Hubbard, Magic Johnson, Jerry West, Aleksandar Petrović, Biserka Petrović, etc. God's Angry Man is a 1981 documentary film about Gene Scott, directed by Werner Herzog. The film was produced for television. The German title Glaube und Währung translates as Faith and Currency. The film consists of footage of Scott on the set of his television program Festival of Faith and interviews with Scott and Scott's parents conducted by Herzog. The footage from Scott's television program focuses almost exclusively on his fundraising efforts and an elaborate rant against the Federal Communications Commission. Scott at one point refuses to speak until his viewers pledge an additional $600. After several minutes of silence, he yells angrily at the camera until a production assistant informs him that they have received $700. Scott represents the FCC on his show by a cymbal-banging monkey toy. State 194 is a 2012 documentary film about the pursuit for Palestinian statehood. The film is written, directed, and produced by Israeli filmmaker Dan Setton. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 10, 2012. It had a limited release in theaters in the United States on May 17, 2013. Changing Us is a 2008 documentary film directed by Laef Fox. Thunderbolt! is a 1947 film documenting the American aerial operations of Operation Strangle in early 1944, when American flyers based on Corsica successfully impeded Axis supply lines to the Gustav Line and Anzio beachhead. The film begins with an introduction by James Stewart, who notes that the footage was shot in 1944, "ancient history", and reads a message from the commander that, even though the units in the picture happen to be American, it could easily have been an RAF mission, and indeed belongs to all people who desire freedom. The narrative begins by showing desolate areas of Italy, noting that this was the fulfilment of the promise of Fascism, an idea dedicated to the proposition that some men are meant to be the slaves of others. The film next brings the audience to Corsica, introducing us to members of the squadron in question and then tells us the objectives of the mission by way of an after-breakfast briefing that merges into an animated map of Italy showing the allies stuck at the Gustav line, and the mission to cut off the supply lines by destroying bridges and roads in northern Italy. Vote for Change? 2004 is a 2008 documentary film produced and directed by Rick Charnoski and Coan Nichols. It follows the American alternative rock band Pearl Jam on the 2004 Vote for Change tour. B-Boy is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Abraham Escobedo Salas. Mass for the Dakota Sioux is a 1964 short documentary film directed by Bruce Baillie. Four Seasons of Espigoule is a 1999 film directed by Christian Philibert. Secrets of the Dead: Blackbeard's Lost Ship is a 2009 history, war and mystery documentary, This documentary retraces the life of Napoleon Bonaparte’s brother through the world of art, his preferred field. The little-known prince was an art collector and played a key role. One man was present through every step of Napoleon’s destiny: his brother Lucien. Without him, the course of history might have taken a different turn. Discover the facets of this personality: politician, art collector and poet... Lucien Bonaparte was, above all, the only man to have stood up to the French Emperor. Baba Luba is an Israeli documentary that follows musician Danny Bassan on his journey to Brasil to find his long-lost father. It won the Best Documentary category at the Israeli Film Academy Awards. June 17th, 1994 is a documentary film directed by Brett Morgen that aired as part of ESPN's film series 30 for 30. As Lilith (Kmo Lilith) is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by Eytan Harris. Rad Queers: Payasos L.A. is a 2012 short documentary biographical film directed by Graham Kolbeins. Love Inventory aka Reshimat Ahava is a 2000 Israeli documentary film, written and directed by David Fisher and produced by Yahaly Gat and David Fisher. This is the First film in the family trilogy created by director David Fisher followed by Mostar Round-Trip and Six Million and One. Fairweather Man is 2009 documentary film directed by Aviva Ziegler. USA vs AL-ARIAN is 2007 documentary film about Sami Al-Arian and his family during and after his federal trial on terrorism-related charges. It was directed by the Norwegian director Line Halvorsen. According to the St. Petersburg Times, the film "glosses over the specific charges, and pays scant attention to the evidence." However Variety notes that, "Though unquestionably biased, eye-opening docu "USA vs Al-Arian" throws the spotlight on a justice system shanghaied by the Patriot Act, leaving a deeply sympathetic family frayed but not quite broken." In the trial, the jury acquitted Al-Arian of nearly half the charges, and deadlocked on the remaining charges. After the trial, Al-Arian pleaded guilty in 2006 to conspiracy to help a terrorist organization, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Guiding Sights is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Katherina Harder Sacre. The Jewish Steppe is a 2001 documentary about a group of Russian Jews who, exhausted by prejudice and fearful of pogroms, left their homeland to farm the untamed Crimean Peninsula. Established in the 1920s, their Soviet agrarian commune met with a tragic end. Connecting the Dots is a 2011 short documentary, family and biographical film directed by Marissa Dodds. Final Offer is a Canadian film documenting the 1984 contract negotiations between the United Auto Workers Union and GM. Ultimately, it provided a historical record of the birth of the Canadian Auto Workers Union as Bob White, then head of the Canadian sector of the UAW, led his membership out of the International union and created the CAW. The movie depicts life in an era of massive industrial change in North America. The audience sees the emergence of automation and how it begins to affect the lives of the working class. Other themes depicted are labour relations, life on the picket line, and corporate restructuring. The film won multiple awards including: Grand Prize Banff Television Festival and Genie Award for Best Feature Length Documentary. A National Film Board of Canada production, Final Offer is directed by Sturla Gunnarsson and Robert Collison and produced by John Kramer, Sturla Gunnarsson and Robert Collison. The movie features: Henry Ramer, Buzz Hargrove, Roger Smith Chairman of General Motors, and Bob White. Film runtime: 79 minutes. The Jewish Street is a 1992 documentary film written by Herz Frank, Aleksandrs Getmans and Leonids Kovals and directed by Herz Frank. Das Netz is an independent film directed by Lutz Dammbeck and subtitled "The Unabomber, LSD and the Internet". Das Netz premiered in 2003. The film explores the ideas and histories of groundbreaking artists Marshall McLuhan and Nam June Paik, hippy idealists such as Timothy Leary and Ken Kesey, counterculturalists such as John Brockman and Stewart Brand, cyberneticists such as Robert William Taylor and Heinz von Foerster, and neo-luddite Unabomber Ted Kaczynski. Families Are Forever is a 2013 short biographical film directed by Vivian Kleiman. Inside the Ring is a 2013 documentary short sports film written by Darian Henry and directed by Darian Henry and Imani Peterkin. Milos Forman: What doesn't kill you is a 2009 film documentary written and directed by Milos Smídmajer. The Last Continent is a 2007 documentary film directed by Jean Lemire. My Mother, Lady Bondong is a documentary film. Images from the Playground is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Stig Björkman. Probes in Space is a 1975 American short documentary film produced by George Casey. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Chop Off is a 2008 short documentary film written and directed by M.M. Serra. Insel der Rosen is an East German film. It was released in 1958. Nathan: Why Walk When You Can Fly? is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Ray Wong. Humanity's Last Line of Defense is a 2010 special feature for the DVD release of the movie "Legion", it tackles the cast and characters of the movie. Peter Beard Scrapbooks: Africa and Beyond is a 1998 TV documentary film written and directed by Guillaume Bonn and Jean-Claude Luyat. Mighty Times: The Legacy of Rosa Parks is a 2002 American short documentary film directed by Robert Houston and produced by Robert Hudson. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Old Man is a 2012 animation-documentary film directed by Leah Shore. Journey of a Female Comic is a documentary film directed by Erick M. Crespo. East Nashville Tonight is a 2013 documentary, comedy and musical film directed by Brad Barnes and Todd Barnes. Life As a Movie is a 2008 documentary/adventure film written by Benji Weatherley and Mai Miyama and directed by Benji Weatherley. Warshots is a 1996 documentary film written by Harald Göckeritz and Heiner Stadler and directed by Heiner Stadler. Journey to the Edge of the Universe is a documentary film broadcast on National Geographic and the Discovery Channel. It documents a space journey from Earth to the edge of the universe itself. The US edition was narrated by Alec Baldwin and the UK edition by Sean Pertwee. The documentary runs 91 minutes and was broadcast on December 7, 2008. Titanic's Final Moments: Missing Pieces is a TV movie. Chimney Sweeps is a 2012 documentary film directed by Hans-Georg Ullrich and Detlef Gumm. Hlemmur is a 2002 Icelandic documentary directed by Ólafur Sveinsson from 2002. It is named after Reykjavík's main bus terminal and revolves around the lives of some unfortunate destitute men who spend most of their time there. The film received the 2003 Edda Award for Best Documentary. The soundtrack of this documentary was composed and performed by Sigur Rós. The film and the soundtrack were released together in a limited-edition DVD-CD package in August 2007 on the band's label Krúnk. This was the first time the film was released. Horatio's Drive: America's First Road Trip is a 2003 documentary film directed by Ken Burns and written by Dayton Duncan. Its subject is the first cross-country automobile journey in the United States, which occurred during the summer of 1903. The documentary focuses primarily on Horatio Nelson Jackson and his Winton car, The Vermont; along with his companions Sewall K. Crocker, his pet pit bull Bud and frequent correspondence with Jackson's wife Bertha Richardson Wells. The journey became a race between three teams, the winners being Jackson and Crocker. The documentary has a companion book and audiobook, Horatio's Drive: America's First Road Trip, authored by Dayton Duncan and Ken Burns, published by Knopf in 2003. Bertolucci on Bertolucci is a 2013 documentary film directed by Walter Fasano and Luca Guadagnino. Walk With Me is a 2013 animation and short film written by Peter Muhumuza Tukei, Johan Oettinger and Morten Søndergaard and directed by Peter Muhumuza Tukei and Johan Oettinger. A President to Remember is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Robert Drew. You Decide! is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Maj Wechselmann. American Artifact: The Rise of American Rock Poster Art is a 2009 documentary film directed by Merle Becker. The gripping story of a HS wrestling sensation who refuses to sell out his dreams of becoming a national champion & celeb, despite doctor’s warnings that if he continues wrestling he’ll go blind. The astonishing story of a boy who refuses to give up. Tralalà is a 2012 documentary film directed by Nicolò Massazza and Iacopo Bedogni. Sex Hygiene is a 1942 American documentary film directed by John Ford and Otto Brower. It belonged to the instructional social guidance film genre, which offered adolescent and adult behavioural advice, medical information and moral exhortations. Aftermath: Population Zero is a two-hour Canadian special documentary film that premiered on Sunday, March 9, 2008 on the National Geographic Channel. The program was produced by Cream Productions. Similar to the History Channel's special Life After People, Aftermath features what scientists and others speculate the earth, animal life, and plant life might be like if humanity no longer existed, as well as the effect that humanity's disappearance would have on the artifacts of civilization. Both documentaries are inspired by Alan Weisman's The World Without Us. A follow-up 4-part TV series was created, Aftermath, following different scenarios and what happens. Blood Equity is a 2009 documentary film written by Josh Salzberg and Ryan Sheffer, and directed by Michael Felix. ROCK FRESH is an electrifying documentary on the world of the graffiti artists. The first of its kind; the film presents a raw and gritty snapshot of artists who literally have their backs against the wall. "Possessing both a cosmic perspective that reaches into the vastness of time and space, and the kind of warm, earnest energy that inspires small revolutions inside human hearts, Dirt! The Movie offers an important and timely look at the vital relationship between those of us on Earth and something that is easy to take for granted—the soil upon which we tread. Inspired by William Bryant Logan’s acclaimed book Dirt, the Ecstatic Skin of the Earth, directors Bill Benenson and Gene Rosow employ a colorful combination of animation, vignettes, and personal accounts from farmers, physicists, church leaders, children, wine critics, anthropologists, and activists to learn about dirt—where it comes from, how we regard (or disregard) it, how it sustains us, the way it has become endangered, and what we can do about it. Benenson and Rosow find answers everywhere: in tiny villages that dare to rise up to battle giant corporations to trendy organic farms; from prison horticultural programs to scientists who discover connections with soil that can offset the damage from global warming. The fresh and generous spirit of Dirt! The Movie is simple and energizing. You may walk into the theatre on asphalt, carpet, and cement, but you will likely walk out with a rekindled connection to the living, dark, rich soil that lies beneath you and a mind set on cultivating a new future." Quoting the description from the 2009 Sundance Film Festival site. Hiato is a 2008 short documentary film directed by Vladimir Seixas. Two Gorillas At Home (digibeta) is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Quincy Russell. These Birds Walk is a 2013 documentary film directed by Omar Mullick and Bassam Tariq that follows the life of a runaway boy in Pakistan as well as the humanitarian efforts of Abdul Sattar Edhi . The film premiered at South by Southwest 2013 and was met with a positive response from critics. It opened in theaters in the US in November 2013 and will be available on Blu-ray and DVD in 2014. Channels of Rage is a 2003 documentary film by Anat Halachmi. Finisterre is a 2003 documentary film written by Bob Stanley, Kieran Evans and Kevin Pearce and directed by Kieran Evans and Paul Kelly. When this acclaimed feature documentary aired on PBS, the Hollywood Reporter wrote, "When you peruse the cultural landscape, there are not that many folks who have achieved the acclamation of national treasure." The late Norman Corwin, who turned 100 years old in 2011, was the great writer and director of the Golden Age of Radio. His productions regularly featured actors such as Orson Welles, Jimmy Stewart, Groucho Marx and Lionel Barrymore.The film includes excerpts from many of his famous radio plays and later television productions, along with interviews with CBS news anchor Charles Kuralt, CBS President William Paley, Ray Bradbury, Norman Lear, Bill Moyers and media historian Erik Barnouw.Actor Charles Laughton said at the time, "There is no actor on the stage, or the screen or in radio, who will not drop what he is doing to be in one of Norman Corwin's radio shows. We all look up to him as a writer of the first importance, as one of the most important writers in any medium in America today."More From indieWIRE+ Farewell To A Giant: Norman Corwin 1910-2011 By Leonard Maltin Tobacco Habits and Oral Cancer is a 1977 short documentary film directed by Arun Khopkar. Poto and Cabengo is a 1980 documentary film written and directed by jean-Pierre Gorin. Gatekeepers is a documentary film directed by René Roelofs. Behind the Clouds the Sun Is Shining is a 1925 Dutch silent documentary film directed by Willy Mullens. Little Belgium is a 1942 documentary film. Honk if You Love Someone is a 2013 short biographical documentary film directed by Sophia Pink. In the heart of the Amazon, a naturopathic doctor and an accountant experience life-altering epiphanies when they drink the psychoactive brew ayahuasca, the 'Vine of the Soul'. Stars Dennis McKenna, Gabor Mate. 5 Broken Cameras is a 94 minute documentary film co-directed by Palestinian Emad Burnat and Israeli Guy Davidi. It was shown at film festivals in 2011 and placed in general release by Kino Lorber in 2012. 5 Broken Cameras is a first-hand account of protests in Bil'in, a West Bank village affected by the Israeli West Bank barrier. The documentary was shot almost entirely by Palestinian farmer Emad Burnat, who bought his first camera in 2005 to record the birth of his youngest son. In 2009 Israeli co-director Guy Davidi joined the project. Structured around the destruction of Burnat's cameras, the filmmakers' collaboration follows one family's evolution over five years of turmoil. The film won a 2012 Sundance Film Festival award, it won the Golden Apricot at the 2012 Yerevan International Film Festival, Armenia, for Best Documentary Film, won the 2013 International Emmy Award, and was nominated for a 2012 Academy Award. Lafayette: The Lost Hero is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Oren Jacoby. Cirque du Soleil: Nouvelle Expérience is a 1991 documentary film. Beautiful Krista is a 2013 documentary film directed by Antje Schneider and Carsten Waldbauer Welcome to the lives of American Sex Workers. These women candidly discuss what brought them to the doors of the sex trade, what they found when they got there, and why they stayed. Stars Kristen DiAngelo and Gina DePalma. Naked as Nature Intended is a 1961 British nudist film produced and directed by George Harrison Marks and starring Pamela Green. It was the first film from producers Tony Tenser and Michael Klinger. The film was released in the United States as As Nature Intended, the word “Naked” being considered too risqué for the American public. The Great Hip Hop Hoax is a documentary film by Jeanie Finlay about a Scottish hip-hop duo called Silibil N' Brains, who pretended to be Americans to secure a £250,000 record deal with Sony. The film premièred at South by Southwest and was later shown at the Edinburgh International Film Festival, before a national theatrical release in Scotland and broadcasts on BBC Two Scotland, BBC Four, and Danish station DR2. The Lost Tapes is a documentary film directed by Christopher Mills that was nominated for Music DVD of the Year in Juno Awards of 2011. Memories of Origin - Hiroshi Sugimoto is a 2011 documentary film directed by Yuko Nakamura. Continuous Journey is a documentary film written and directed by Ali Kazimi. Hjem: Living At The End Of The World is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Martina Chamrad and Christoph Kirchner. After Vegas is a 2012 short biography documentary directed by Laurence Bonvin and Stephane Degoutin. Shadow Boxers is a 1999 documentary film about women's boxing by director Katya Bankowsky that focuses on the pioneering fighter Lucia Rijker and features an original soundtrack by Argentine singer and songwriter Zoel. Shadow Boxers had its international premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival in 1999. And It Was Called JOADJA is a 1968 documentary film written by Mitch Mathews and directed by John Alaimo. Stolen Generations is a 2001 documentary film written and directed by Darlene Johnson. Beyond The Miracle is a 2011 documentary film written by Louis-François Grenier and directed by Orlando Arriagada. The Materials is a 2009 documentary film directed by Los Hijos. Running To The Limits is a 2009 documentary film about filmmaker Alex Vero’s journey to qualify for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Marathon. Narrated by Vero and set against the backdrop of a massive decline in British professional marathon running, the film spans over three years and several continents as he works to overcome physical and personal demons and complete his marathon training. It features Vero’s story, as well as those of famous runners and coaches who he meets while training. The film won for Best Documentary at the 2009 Norwich Film Festival, screened in the UK and was broadcast by Channel 4. D-Day Remembered is a 1994 American documentary film directed by Charles Guggenheim. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Landscape of My Heart is a 2004 film written and directed by Jan Nemec. Über Goober A Film About Gamers is a 2004 independent documentary film focusing on people who play role-playing games. The film was directed by Steve Metze and features interviews with Gary Gygax, Peter Adkison, Mike Stackpole, and Bob Larson, amongst others. The film has screened at theatres, film festivals, and gaming conventions, winning the award for "Best Film" at Gen Con Indianapolis, 2004. Unknown Africa is a 2007 documentary film from the BBC dealing with the environment and society of places in Africa. Dreamtime, Revisited is a documentary film directed by Dónal Ó Céilleachair and Julius Ziz. Future Shock is a 1972 American short documentary film directed by Alex Grasshoff and narrated by Orson Welles. It was screened at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival, but wasn't entered into the main competition. It is based on the book of the same name. New Maps of the City is a 1982 film directed by Roger Garcia and Jim Shum. La Lucha: The Struggle is a 2005 documentary film directed by Duncan MacLeod. Kapitalism: Our Improved Formula is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Alexandru Solomon. ¿Qué Sois Ahora? is a 2011 documentary film written by Gustavo Galuppo and directed by Gustavo Galuppo and Mariano Goldgrob. LoveMEATender is a 2011 documentary film written by Serge Elleinstein and Yvan Beck, and directed by Manu Coeman The Cave of the Yellow Dog is a Mongolian/German film written and directed by Byambasuren Davaa. The film was submitted as Mongolia's contender for the 2005 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It won the 2006 Deutscher Filmpreis Award for Best Children's Picture. The story is a gentle fable about the limitations of life and its acceptance. A girl learns the painful lesson of letting go of want and desire when her father insists on leaving her newfound stray dog. However, the ending of the film offers hope—another lesson of life being full of changes and the consequences of change may bring unexpected rewards. Mekong Hotel is a 2012 Thai film directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul. The film was screened in the Special Screenings section at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival. Quixote is a 1965 short documentary film directed by Bruce Baillie. Giap and the Last Iron Board Factory is a short documentary film directed by Tony Nguyen. Family Video Diaries: Daughter of the Bride is a 1997 American short documentary film directed by Terri Randall. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Gendernauts: A Journey Through Shifting Identities is a 1999 film by Monika Treut featuring Sandy Stone, Texas Tomboy, and Susan Stryker. It shows us a group of artists in San Francisco who live between the poles of conventional gender identities. Touch the Sound: A Sound Journey with Evelyn Glennie is a 2004 German documentary film directed by Thomas Riedelsheimer about profoundly deaf Scottish classical percussionist Evelyn Glennie. In the film Glennie, who won a Grammy Award in 1989, collaborates with English experimental musician Fred Frith and others, and explains how she perceives sound. The film appeared at over 20 film festivals across the world, and won several awards, including "Best Documentary" at the 2004 BAFTA Awards, Scotland. A soundtrack of Touch the Sound featuring Glennie and Frith, plus additional music and sounds from the film, was released in 2004. An album based on Glennie and Frith's performances in the film entitled The Sugar Factory was released in 2007. No Distance Left to Run is a documentary film about the British rock band Blur, released in cinemas on 19 January 2010. Following the band during their 2009 reunion and tour, the film also includes unseen archive footage and interviews. It was released on DVD on 15 February 2010 region free and the recording of the 2009 Hyde Park concert is included on a second disc. It aired on BBC2 on 14 March 2010. It is the band's second documentary video, following Starshaped seventeen years before in 1993. My Granny Lien is a 2011 short documentary film written and directed by Annelies de Wit. Techistan is a 2012 documentary film directed by Senain Kheshgi. The Devil Came on Horseback is a documentary film by Ricki Stern and Anne Sundberg illustrating the continuing Darfur Conflict in Sudan. Based on the book by former U.S. Marine Captain Brian Steidle and his experiences while working for the African Union. The film asks viewers to become educated about the on-going genocide in Darfur and laments the failure of the US and others to end the crisis. Quietly Into Disaster is a documentary film directed by Marcin El. A Night in Tuscany is the first DVD released by Italian singer Andrea Bocelli of a concert held in his native Tuscany, in 1997, highlighting the unique blend of Classical, Pop, and traditional Italian songs that made him a crossover success as an internationally acclaimed tenor. The concert takes place at the Piazza dei Cavalieri in Pisa. Bocelli performs two opera duets with soprano Nuccia Focile during the concert, before singing Miserere with Italian rock star Zucchero, who discovered him, and Time To Say Goodbye with English soprano Sarah Brightman. The concert was also Bocelli's first PBS Special, designed to promote his breakthrough album, Romanza. The DVD was certified double platinum in the US by the Recording Industry Association of America. La historia en la mirada is a 2011 historical documentary film directed by José Ramón Mikelajáuregui. The Basketboll Player is a 2013 documentary film directed by Kenan Gurgurovci. Raising Resistance is a 2011 documentary film written by David Bernet, Bettina Borgfeld, Christin Stoltz and directed by David Bernet and Bettina Borgfeld. The Last Migration is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Fereydoun Najafi. George Sluizer: Filming Beyond Boundaries is a 2006 documentary film directed by Hans Heijnen. Beijing is a 2009 documentary film directed by Sarah Morris. Das letzte Jahr is a 1982 film directed by Wolf Gremm. "An animated short documentary, poetically describing the memories of a five-year-old boy (Thor Ochsner) who ends up in a dramatic car accident with his dad." Quoting the description from the official site. Gasolin' is a 2006 documentary film directed by Anders Østergaard. It's a film about Denmark's most influential rock band Gasolin'. For the first time since they split up in 1978 the four band members reflect upon their career and why they parted. No País das Amazonas is a 1922 Brazilian silent documentary film directed by Agesilau De Araujo and Silvino Santos. The film was notable in that it was one of the earliest to document the Amazon Rainforest on camera and present it to a wider audience. The film documents the local economies of the Amazonian Indians, examining production lines and workers in factories. It also portrays fishing on the Amazon River as a way of life, and shows how the locals prepare the fish for sale with salt. Later on, the film also examines rubber plantations in the rainforest and how the locals make use of the natural reserves for export. The film premiered on January 12, 1922 in Rio de Janeiro. "Hiroshima is Uruguayan director Pablo Stoll's first solo feature. Critically acclaimed for his debut film, 25 Watts, which he followed with the sublime hit Whisky (both co-directed with the late Juan Pablo Rebella), Stoll now returns to filmmaking with a completely different piece: a (mostly) silent musical. Hiroshima is a very intimate film. The director follows his brother Juan as he goes about his daily routine in Montevideo. As the lead singer of a band, Juan lacks the ability to communicate his feelings verbally. Instead he relates to the world through his music. The natural sounds around him and the songs he listens to on his Discman take on a fundamental role in the film, and, as in the days of silent cinema, all dialogue is presented through title cards. With the creation of a film with silent dialogue, Stoll fosters an affecting depiction of a protagonist cut off from the world around him and those close to him. The only time words are heard is when Juan watches old home movies that he found while cleaning out his closet. Unsettlingly, we are only able to hear the voices from his past and from his childhood. Similarly disconcerting is when he goes to the street market and sells the projector along with all of his family films. When the buyer asks if they are his, Juan claims to have found them and to have no idea to whom they belong. Hiroshima touches on these themes of disappearance and disengagement with great dexterity. The film displays the talents of an emerging group of filmmakers working in Uruguay today. A number of these artists have cameos in Stoll's film: Adrián Biniez, who presents his debut, Gigante, at the Festival this year; Federico Veiroj, whose film Acné screened here last year; and Manuel Nieto Zas, director of The Dog Pound, which screened two years prior in 2006. These filmmakers gained their early experiences in cinema working on Stoll and Rebella's initial two features, and it's inspiring to see them all participating in Stoll's first independent effort. Stoll is an important name in the flourishing Uruguayan film industry, and his latest film is both a testament to his national cinema's success and a poignant tribute to the late Rebella." Quoting Diana Sanchez on the 2009 TIFF site. El rey de Canfranc is a 2013 documentary film written by Marcos Escudero and Manuel Priede and directed by José Antonio Blanco and Manuel Priede. Actingclassof1977.com, or Acting Class of 1977, is a 2008 Australian documentary television film that looks at the Australian entertainment industry and the actor-training practices of the National Institute of Dramatic Art during the 1970s. Written, directed and produced by Sally McKenzie, the documentary first aired on the ABC in June 2008. Red Fairy n the Holy Ghost is a 2011 documentary film directed by Balaka Ghosh. Anzac is a 1960 short documentary film directed by Jennie Blackwood. Ukraine Brides 2000 is a 2000 documentary film directed by Nili Tal. Diabetes is a health crisis reaching epidemic levels in America and unfortunately more people are succumbing to this devasting disease than ever before.Preventing and Reversing Diabetes Naturally features Dr. Gary Null along with the world'stop Medical Doctors Psychiatrists and Psychologists who will show you the latest most powerful natural and conventional approaches to prevent or reverse Diabetes Obesity and Metabolic Syndrome.In the current economy with countless Americans who can't afford health insurance and the future of our healthcare in question you need all of the information you can get on how to stay healthy. Zabad is a 2008 documentary film. Janapar is a 2012 documentary film directed by James Newton. Gacaca, Living Together Again In Rwanda? is the first documentary film in a trilogy by Anne Aghion examining the aftermath of the Rwandan Genocide. Directed by Anne Aghion and produced by Dominant 7, Gacaca Productions, and Planète, this 2002 film won UNESCO's Fellini Prize. Filmed in Rwanda, the language of Gacaca is Kinyarwanda with English subtitles. In Kinyarwanda, gacaca means "grass", which was the location of the reparation trials in Rwanda. Great Wonders of the World is a TV series documentary written by Stephen Most and directed by Chris Valentini. Seven Easy Pieces by Marina Abramovic is a 2007 documentary film directed by Babette Mangolte. Willi Baumeister is a 1955 short documentary film directed by Ottomar Domnick. Letter is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Sergei Loznitsa. THE CON KID explores Richard Ringheim's breakneck universe, charting his development from teller of tall tales, through white-collar crime, and, finally, into a world of big-time criminals. Ringheim ends up risking his life to be with the people he looks up to. "The first Sarajevo Queer Festival took place in the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina from 24 to 26 September, 2008. Threats had been made during the run-up to the event and, at the event’s opening, there were indeed attacks on both the festival’s organizers and those taking part." Quoting the program notes from Frameline 33. Kroonjuwelen - Hard Times, Good Times, Better Times is a 2006 documentary film produced and directed by independent Dutch film crew Stunned Film. This film premiered 11 October 2006 at the Paradiso in Amsterdam. The film is entirely spoken in Dutch, but English subtitles are shown. On Saturday, 14 October 2006 the film premiered on national television, when it was broadcast by MTV Netherlands. The film continues to receive screenings at film festivals around the World, such as at the Tate Modern in London, U.K. at the Street Art Exposition in 2008. The Silent Revolution is a 1972 German documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Pete Seeger: A Song and a Stone is a documentary music film directed by Robert Elfstrom. Marrabenta Stories is a 2004 documentary film directed by Karen Boswall. A musical documentary, it covers Marrabenta, the national music of Mozambique. Complaints of a Dutiful Daughter is a 1994 American documentary film directed by Deborah Hoffmann, with her wife, Frances Reid, as cinematographer. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film is about the struggle of Doris Hoffman, mother of the director and widow of Albert Einstein's associate Banesh Hoffmann, with Alzheimer's disease. The Young Butler is a 2011 documentary film directed by Marcela Said and Jean de Certeau. In Sarmatien is a 2013 documentary film directed by Volker Koepp. Ellos is a 1986 short documentary film directed by Óscar Emilio Eguía Hernández. Survival City is a 1955 American short documentary film directed by Anthony Muto. It won an Academy Award in 1956 for Best Short Subject. Village without Women is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Srdjan Sarenac. A Visit to the Seaside was the first successful motion picture in natural color, filmed with Kinemacolor. It is an 8 minute short film directed by George Albert Smith of Brighton, showing people doing everyday activities. It is ranked of high historical importance. Kinemacolor later influenced and replaced by Technicolor, which was used from 1916 to 1952. Kredens is a 2007 short documentary film written and directed by Jacob Dammas. Masks, Jesters, Demons is a 2001 written and directed by Rudolf Adler. Submission is a 2010 Swedish documentary film directed by Stefan Jarl and narrated by Stellan Skarsgård. In the film, director Jarl has his blood drawn for a series of tests to show how much of a "chemical burden" is in his body. Jarl convinces actress Eva Röse, who is pregnant, to have the blood tests also. The film goes on to describe the issue of chemicals and plastics invented since World War II and how they affect the health of people around the world. The film had its North American premiere at the Mill Valley Film Festival on 15 October 2010. Shrek Forever After: The Animators Corner is a 2010 short documentary film directed by John Wheeler. Sleeplessness is a documentary film directed by Ivan Vojnár. From the Sky Down is a 2011 American documentary film directed by Davis Guggenheim about rock band U2 and the production of their 1991 album Achtung Baby. The film documents the album's difficult recording period, the band members' relationships, and the group's creative process. Guggenheim, who was commissioned by U2 to create the film to commemorate the record's 20th anniversary, spent several months in 2011 developing the documentary. The band were filmed during a return visit to Hansa Studios in Berlin where parts of the album were recorded, and during rehearsals in Winnipeg for the Glastonbury Festival 2011. The film contains unreleased scenes from the group's 1988 motion picture Rattle and Hum, along with archival footage and stills from the Achtung Baby recording sessions. Development of the album's emblematic song "One" is recounted through the replaying of old recording tapes. The film premiered at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival on September 8, 2011, the first time in the festival's history that a documentary was screened as the opening film. Heksenketel is a documentary film released on VHS by Canadian rock band The Tragically Hip. It features concert footage and other clips of the band and crew as they travel across Canada from coast to coast during their 1993 tour, Another Roadside Attraction. In this compelling and often funny tale of recovery and renewal, author and activist Linda G. Mills is propelled by her family’s life-threatening experience of September 11, 2001 to return to the site of her mother’s flight from Vienna in 1939. Accompanied by her comically restless ten-year old son and highly opinionated mother, Linda discovers unsettling truths that upend familial and historical myths. An unconventional documentary that brings the lessons of history into the present through the eyes of an often irreverent ten-year-old boy. A startlingly humorous adventure spanning five generations. Moscow Elegy is a 1988 documentary film directed by Alexander Sokurov, about the later life and death of Soviet Russian filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky. The film was originally intended to mark the 50th birthday of Tarkovsky in 1982, which would have been before his death. Controversy with Soviet authorities about the film's style and content led to significant delays in the production. Lone Twin is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Anne van der Wee. Les maîtres fous is a short film directed by Jean Rouch, a well-known French film director and ethnologist. It is a docufiction, his first ethnofiction, a genre he is considered to have created. Offers a critical appreciation of Italian horror cinema, pioneered by directors such as Dario Argento and Mario Bava, a genre that influenced filmmakers from Quentin Tarantino to Takashi Miike. Reveals the history and worldwide scope of plastics pollution, investigates its toxicity and explores solutions. From styrofoam cups to artificial organs, plastics are perhaps the most ubiquitous and versatile material ever invented. No invention in the past 100 years has had more influence and presence than synthetics. But such progress has had a cost. Şəhər bağında xalq gəzintisi is one of the earliest films ever produced in the Cinema of Azerbaijan directed by Azeri cinema pioneer Aleksandr Mişon. It was filmed on May 31, 1898 and released on June 21, 1898 in Baku. The film was shot on 35mm. Old Man Bebo is a 2007 film directed by Carlos Carcas. Shipwreck is a 2014 short documentary film directed by Morgan Knibbe. Sean Connery, an Intimate Portrait is a documentary biography directed by Louise Krakower and Michael Tobias and directed by Michael Tobias. Jugend sieht Deutschland is a 1962 short documentary film directed by Bert Brandt and Helmut Gerzer. Out My Window is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Katerina Cizek. Dicte is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jesper Dalgaard. The Basque swastika is a 2013 documentary written and directed by Javier Barajas and also directed by Alfonso Andrés Ayarza. Mor-vran is a 1930 documentary film directed by Jean Epstein. Der Garten Eden is a 1977 documentary film directed and written by Lutz Mommartz. Louis and the Nazis is a British documentary that was televised on 21 December 2003. It was directed by Stuart Cabb and written by Louis Theroux. The documentary ran for 80 minutes. Louis travels to California to meet the man dubbed "the most dangerous racist in America", Tom Metzger. Louis meets him, his family and his publicity manager as well as following him to skinhead rallies and on a visit to Mexico. He also encounters the Nazi-pop folk duo Prussian Blue and their mother and maternal grandfather. Louis Theroux would revisit the subjects of the documentary in his book The Call of the Weird: Travels in American Subcultures. Elizabethan Express is a 1954 British Transport Film that follows The Elizabethan, a non-stop British Railways service from London to Edinburgh along the East Coast Main Line. Although originally intended as an advertising short, it now acts as a nostalgic record of the halcyon years of steam on British Railways and the ex-LNER Class A4. It was directed by Tony Thompson, with a tongue-in-cheek poetic commentary written by Paul Le Saux. It is also notable for its music by Clifton Parker, who also wrote the score for Blue Pullman and several other British Transport Films. He was later to write the music for the 1959 version of The Thirty-Nine Steps, which also features an A4. The Eye of the Typhoon is a 1992 documentary film directed by Paulus Manker. Now We Can Dance: The Story of the Hayward Gay Prom is a 2012 documentary film directed by Laurie Wills. Trade Secrets: A Moyers Report is a documentary film. Food for Love is a documentary film directed by Marianna Oikonomou. Lucumi is a boy living in Havana's black district who dreams of becoming a "rumbero": a Cuban street drummer. Join him as he uses his music to express the hardships he has endured, and follow him as he wakes up the spirits of the tumbadora. Reverend Billy and the Church of Stop Shopping is the title of the first feature length documentary film about the actor and performance artist Reverend Billy. The film was produced and directed by the filmmakers Dietmar Post and Lucia Palacios. The film debuted on the festival circuit in August 2002 at the Chicago Underground Film Festival. In My Life: Zsa Zsa Padilla is a 2005 music and documentary film. American Meat is a 2013 documentary film written by Graham Meriwether and Memo Salazar, and directed by Graham Meriwether. Square Grouper: The Godfathers of Ganja is a 2011 documentary by director Billy Corben and produced by Alfred Spellman and Billy Corben through their Miami-based media studio Rakontur. The term square grouper was a nickname given to bales of marijuana thrown overboard or out of airplanes in South Florida in the 70's and 80's. In sharp contrast to the brazenly violent "Cocaine Cowboys" of the 1980s, Miami's marijuana smugglers were cooler, calmer, and typically nonviolent. Square Grouper paints a vivid portrait of Miami's pot smuggling culture in the '70s and '80s and its major players: the smuggling Black Tuna Gang, the pot dealing Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church and the tiny fishing village Everglades City. 15 Days At The Beach is a 2013 documentary film directed by Flavia de la Fuente. Benjamin Franklin is a 2002 American documentary television series which premiered November 19–20, 2002. The series was produced by Twin Cities Public Television of Minneapolis-St. Paul. Benjamin Franklin won an Emmy for Outstanding Nonfiction Special in 2003. Catherine Allan and Jerry Richman accepted the award. America's Parking Lot is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jonny Mars. Down and Out in America is a 1986 Academy Award-winning documentary film that critiques Reaganomics by showing examples of poverty in the United States. It won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, tying with Artie Shaw: Time Is All You've Got. Unsupported Transit is a 2013 documentary and short film written and directed by Zachary Formwalt. Ukraine in Flames is a 1943 Soviet documentary war film by Ukrainian director Alexander Dovzhenko and Yuliya Solntseva. It is Dovzhenko's second World War II documentary, and dealt with the Battle of Kharkov. The film incorporates German footage of the invasion of Ukraine, which was later captured by the Soviets. The Austin Pendleton Project is a 2011 documentary film directed by Gene Gallerano and David H. Holmes. The Matador is a 2008 documentary film about David Fandila's quest to become the world's top-ranked bullfighter. It first premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival and had since met with mostly positive reviews. The film follows Fandila's three-year journey into bullfighting history as the violent cultural tradition is questioned. Arab Attraction is a 2010 biographical documentary film directed by Andreas Horvath and Monika Muskala. The Unforeseen is a 2007 documentary film directed by Laura Dunn. "Werner Schroeter was one of the most significant proponents of New German Cinema. Schroeter was diagnosed with cancer in 2006. At the time, he was working for the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf gallery on a musical piece entitled ‘Schönheit der Schatten’ (The Beauty of Shadows) based on the works of Robert Schumann and Heinrich Heine. For Schroeter, oscillating between hope and trepidation, it marked the beginning of a race against time. In her film, Elfi Mikesch, who photographed a number of Schroeter’s films and who collaborated closely with him to create his vision, provides us with an intimate insight into Schroeter’s artistic output during the remaining four years of his life. MONDO LUX portrays Schroeter full of creative energy and enthusiasm for the cinema, theatre and photography. We observe him at rehearsals for ‘Antigone/Elektra’; preparing the photographic exhibition ‘Autrefois & Toujours’ and working intensively on the dubbed version of his last film, DIESE NACHT, which was shot in Portugal in 2008. Copious excerpts from Schroeter’s films, ranging from EIKA KATAPPA (1969) to DIESE NACHT (2009), reflect the colourful spectrum of his oeuvre, inscribed in a retrospective view that is pervaded by music. The film also illuminates biographical connections and enshrines the passionate bond that Schroeter felt towards film, opera and theatre, but also towards his friends, the people with whom he lived and worked. Schroeter was an artist propelled by Eros and by passion, a man who felt the proximity of both beauty and death. MONDO LUX constitutes an intimate space – a space in which, in view of the time the protagonist has left to live, every day becomes quite unlike any other. Werner Schroeter died on 12 April, 2010." Quoting the description from the 2011 Berlin International Film Festival site. Wajeh is a 2010 documentary short drama film directed by Murad Nassar. Media Malpractice is a 2009 documentary written and directed by John Ziegler. 66 Months is a 2011 documentary film directed by James Bluemel. 7 Days in September is a 2002 film directed by Steve Rosenbaum. Energising India is a short documentary on how India can have energy without polluting the atmosphere. Although about India, this is a German film and directed by the National Award winning Indian director Jyoti Sarup. This film was premiered in the World Energy Conservation Conference, Germany, in 2004. Grosse weite Welt is a 1997 film directed by Andreas Voigt. Vito is a 2011 documentary produced and directed by Jeffrey Schwarz of the Los Angeles-based production company Automat Pictures. The film documents the life of Vito Russo, gay activist, film scholar, and author of The Celluloid Closet. Vito premiered at the 2011 New York Film Festival, went on to screen within such festivals as Maryland Film Festival, and made its television debut on HBO in July, 2012. The DVD was released by First Run Features in April, 2013. An intimate portrait of five key years in David Bowie's career. Featuring a wealth of previously unseen archive this film looks at how Bowie continually evolved, from Ziggy Stardust, to the Soul Star of Young Americans, to the 'Thin White Duke'. It explores his regeneration in Berlin with the critically acclaimed album Heroes, his triumph with Scary Monsters and his global success with Let's Dance. With interviews with all his closest collaborators, this film investigates how Bowie has become an 'icon of our times'. It's Who we Are: Celebrating 20 Years of the Jewish Lesbian Group of Victoria is a 2013 documentary, biographical and historical fiction short film written and directed by David Muir and Kate Lefoe. Trek Nation is a 2011 documentary film directed by Scott Colthorp examining the positive impact that Star Trek and creator Gene Roddenberry may have had on people's lives as seen through the eyes of his son, Eugene Roddenberry, Jr.. It includes interviews with castmembers and crew from all five Star Trek incarnations as well as with various fans and celebrities who were markedly influenced by the show while growing up. Rod Roddenberry also visits Skywalker Ranch to interview George Lucas on the influence that Star Trek had on him. Lucas shares how he had gone to Star Trek conventions before creating Star Wars. The film premiered on November 30, 2011, on Science. Local Angel - Theological Political Fragments is a 2002 film directed by Udi Aloni. David Bowie Is a documentary film directed by Hamish Hamilton. Survival Prayer is a 2013 documentary adventure film directed by Benjamin Greené. Últimos testigos is a 2009 documentary film written by José Luis López-Linares, Manuel Martín Cuenca and Manuel Milian Mestre and directed by José Luis López-Linares and Manuel Martín Cuenca The Presence of Joseph Chaikin is a 2012 documentary comedy drama film produced and directed by Troy Word. Living for 32 is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Kevin Breslin. Gamín is a 1977 Colombian documentary film written and directed by Ciro Durán. History of Jaroslav Šabata is a 2007 historical documentary film directed by Vít Janeček and co-written with Jakub Patocka. Joe Louis: America's Hero Betrayed is a documentary film on HBO Sports. Artists and Orphans: A True Drama is a 2001 documentary about an American theatre troupe visiting the country of Georgia. The film was nominated for an Oscar at the 74th Academy Awards in 2002 for Best Documentary Short Subject. The film also won the Best Short Film audience award at the 2001 Florida Film Festival and the Best Documentary audience choice award at the 2001 Santa Barbara International Film Festival. Rosie O'Donnell narrated the film and Sharon Gans starred as herself. It was directed by Lianne Klapper-McNally. The summer of 1960 was a critical moment in the history of film, when the fly-on-the-wall documentary was born. The Camera that Changed the World tells the story of the filmmakers and ingenious engineers who led this revolution by building the first hand-held cameras that followed real life as it happened. By amazing co-incidence, there were two separate groups of them - one on each side of the Atlantic. In the US, the pioneers used their new camera to make Primary, a compelling portrait of American politics. They followed a then little known John F Kennedy as he began his long campaign for the presidency. Meanwhile, in France, another new camera was inspiring an influential experiment in documentary filmmaking. Chronique d'un Ete captures the real lives of ordinary Parisians across the summer of 1960. Both these extraordinary films smashed existing conventions as handheld cameras followed the action across public spheres into intimate and previously hidden worlds. In The Camera that Changed the World this remarkable story is told by the pioneers themselves, some of whom, such as DA Pennebaker and Al Maysles are now filmmaking legends. Back in 1960, they were determined young revolutionaries. Key West: City of Colors is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Talmadge Heyward. Who is Dayani Cristal? is a 2013 documentary film directed by Marc Silver and written by Mark Monroe. Ted Bundy: Natural Porn Killer is a 2006 documentary film directed by Sascha Olofson. The Goebbels Experiment is a 2005 documentary film written by Lutz Hachmeister and Michael Kloft and directed by Lutz Hachmeister. Playing Warriors is a 2011 romantic comedy film written and directed by Rumbi Katedza. Desire Inc. is a video documentary piece created by the artist Lynn Hershman. Hershman created a series of seductive television ads in which a sexy woman asked for viewers to call her. The ads, interviews with the respondents to the ad, and commentary from Hershman are woven together to create the 26-minute video. This is one of Hershman's significant works, and it demonstrates the viewers' intense personal relationship to the public space. It is a rare piece of video art that makes television interactive, where the response from a viewer is as much the art as the ad itself. Hershman uses the form of the TV commercial, which usually just directs desire toward consumer objects, to direct viewers toward actual interpersonal connection instead. The Healthcare Movie is a 2011 documentary film directed by Laurie Simons and Terry Sterrenberg. That Justice Be Done was a one-reel propaganda film made in 1946 by the Office of War Information for the US Chief of Counsel at Nuremberg and the War Crimes Office of the Judge Advocate General's Corps. The film opens with a shot of the Jefferson Memorial and a voice over of Jefferson declaring his opposition to all forms of tyranny, then slowly fades to footage of Adolf Hitler making a speech soon dubbed into English "We have the right to do anything which benefits the German race, including complete expulsion of inferior peoples." The camera then moves to the crowds of people shouting Sieg heil and the soundtrack continues over pictures of war crimes. The narrator describes how the various classes of war criminals, traitors, and people who committed specific acts are dealt with, then moves on to the major Nazi war criminals. The narrator states that we cannot torture or poison them like they did to their victims, but must uphold a higher standard of justice, exemplified by George Washington. The film states that 1945 must be the year of not only Germany's military defeat but also that of a trial and therefore a public exposure and repudiation of the ideas of Nazism itself. Histoire de mes cheveux is a documentary film written and directed by Boris Lehman. Yesterday's Men is a British documentary shown in the 24 Hours series on 16 June 1971. The programme is remembered for provoking a major clash between the Labour Party and the BBC. According to Anthony Smith, the editor of 24 Hours at the time, the film led to "the biggest and most furious row that a television programme in the English language has ever provoked." Scientific Whaling Vs. Cultural Whaling is a 2013 film directed by Jeff Litton. Live and Let Live is a documentary film directed by Marc Pierschel. Israel and the Bomb is an documentary film about nuclear weapons and Israel and policy of "nuclear ambiguity", produced and directed by Florian Hartung and Dirk Pohlmann. It was broadcast by ARTE on November 7, 2012. Mother Dao, the Turtlelike is a 1995 documentary film written and directed by Vincent Monnikendam. The Threat in the Water is a 1968 short documentary film directed by Richard Bigham. Paris Is Burning is a 1990 American documentary film directed by Jennie Livingston. Filmed in the mid-to-late 1980s, it chronicles the ball culture of New York City and the African-American, Latino, gay, and transgender communities involved in it. The film is considered to be an invaluable documentary of the end of the "Golden Age" of New York City drag balls, and critics have praised it as a thoughtful exploration of race, class, gender, and sexuality in America. Albert II of Monaco, the unknown prince is a documentary with intimate Prince Albert, diffused by 40 TV channels all over the world. This 52-minute-long film is a documentary made in 2005 on Prince Albert II of Monaco who had always turned down requests for interviews and coverage of his life. For eight months, he has been filmed as he carried out his public duties and conducted his private life. In it he shows around the palace, plays in a friendly football match, also behind-the-scenes preparations of the Red Cross Gala evening, gives an access on his private jet as he flies to New York to address the General Assembly of the United Nations, jogging in central Park, shopping for DVDs in the Big Apple, etc. There are also some moments of father and son, filmed just three months before Prince Rainier died. Beyond these pictures, the Prince spoke freely and at length in a wide-ranging interview on many issues; from the rumours about his alleged homosexuality to claims that Monaco is a money-laundering centre. Before The Music Ends is a 2011 documentary music film directed by Ashley Armitage and Gina Mattassa. Vienna Is Different: 50 Years After The Anschluß is a 1989 documentary film written by D. W. Leitner and directed by Susan Korda and David Leitner. Thai Boxing: A Fighting Chance is a 2002 documentary by independent producer Susanne Cornwall Carvin. The hour-long film, narrated by British actor Jason Statham, follows the lives of three boxers as they prepare to compete in muay thai, also known as Thai boxing. One character, Sam Sheridan, is a 27-year old Harvard University graduate who has traveled to Thailand to learn the art of muay thai from Apidej Sit-Hirun, a retired boxing champion. The second primary character, Gong-Prai Sorjintana, is a 13-year-old boy from the town of Ayutthaya; his mother runs a boxing camp for troubled teenagers and he's fighting to raise money for university. The third character, Boon-Term Kitmuti, is a 29-year-old mother of two children who wanted to box when she was younger, before muay thai was legal for women. Now that there is an active muay thai league for women, she has decided to travel to Bangkok and learn the sport, despite the disapproval of her husband. Her husband left because he didn't like women anymore. The documentary follows each character as they prepare for their next fight, while weaving in the history and culture of the sport. Blog Wars is a 2006 documentary film about the rise of political blogging and its influence on the 2006 midterm Connecticut senate election. Original musical score is composed by Samuel Sim. It follows the primary in which Ned Lamont successfully challenged Joe Lieberman for the Democratic nomination for Junior Senator of Connecticut. Before losing to Liberberman, then running as an Independent, in the general elections. The 60 minute film features a range of top bloggers, liberal and conservative, including: Markos Moulitsas, founder of DailyKos; Michelle Malkin, blogger and Fox News Commentator; Jane Hamsher, founder of firedoglake; John Hinderaker, co-founder of Powerline; Charles Foster Johnson, founder of littlegreenfootballs; Andrew Sullivan, former editor of the New Republic. The film was directed by James Rogan and executive produced by Phil Craig at Brook Lapping Productions for the Sundance Channel. Garifuna in Peril is a 2012 drama film written and directed by Ali Allie and Ruben Reyes. In Search of the Second Amendment is a documentary film on the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution. It was produced and directed by American author and attorney David T. Hardy. He argues the individual rights model of the Second Amendment. Hardy also discusses the Fourteenth Amendment. Duma is a ground-breaking and controversial documentary about the abuse of women in Arab and Palestinian society. Made by Palestinian female director Abeer Zeibak Haddad, it is regarded as the first ever film to shed light on sexual abuse of women in Arab society. "Duma is an extremely powerful documentary. Brutally realistic; revealingly provocative, and exceedingly enthralling.". . Fightville is a mixed martial arts documentary film released in 2011. It was co-directed by Petra Epperlein and Michael Tucker. The film featured interviews with a group of Lafayette, Louisiana fighters and coaches which includes Dustin Poirier, Tim Credeur, and Albert Stainback. Other fighters featured were Derrick Krantz and Ronny Lis. Poirier and Stainback receives much of the screen time as the filmmakers explores their troubled respective backgrounds and reasons for fighting. Credeur, a fighter and coach, is interviewed about his Gladiator Academy which seeks to "build better men". Gil "The Thrill" Guillory, the promoter of a local promotion named USA MMA, is also featured. It premiered internationally on April 28, 2011 at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival. The idea for "Fightville" came about during production of Gunner Palace, when the filmmakers found out about MMA by observing soldiers watching and practicing the sport. The Conquest of Everest is a 1953 British documentary film directed by George Lowe about various expeditions to the summit of Mount Everest. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Top Ten Ldn is a 2013 documentary, short, adventure film written and directed by Tara Manandhar. Taking Root: The Vision of Wangari Maathai is a 2008 film directed by Lisa Merton and Alan Dater. Deutschlands wilde Vögel is a documentary film directed by Hans-Jürgen Zimmermann. Must Read After My Death is a 2007 documentary film that chronicles the life of Allis Beaumont Reid and her relationship with her four children and her abusive husband Charlie Ker Reid II. The film received positive critical acclaim receiving 91% positive reviews at the website Rotten Tomatoes. Sync or Swim is a 2008 documentary film directed by Cheryl Furjanic. Die Iltiskoppel is a 1956 documentary film directed by Heinz Sielmann. Chrigu is a 2007 documentary film directed by Jan Gassmann and Christian Ziörjen. Lindenhotel is a 1990 documentary film written and directed by Andreas Fischer and Fayd Jungnickel. The Big T.N.T. Show is a 1966 concert film. Directed by Larry Peerce and distributed by American International Pictures, it includes performances by numerous popular rock and roll and R&B musicians from the United States and England. A sequel to 1964's The T.A.M.I. Show, and like it executive produced by Henry G. Saperstein, The Big T.N.T. Show was likewise shot on videotape and transferred to 35-millimeter film. Some footage from it was reused in the film That Was Rock a.k.a. The T.A.M.I. / T.N.T. Show. The concert was shot before a live audience at the Moulin Rouge club in Los Angeles, California on November 29, 1965. Its pre-release title was This Could Be the Night. The film's theme song was called "This Could Be the Night", and was written by Harry Nilsson, produced by Phil Spector, and performed by Modern Folk Quartet. Hasta los pájaros pierden un ala is a 2013 documentary film directed by Ana Maciel. Paul Robeson: Tribute to an Artist is a 1979 American short documentary film directed by Saul J. Turell. It won an Academy Award in 1980 for Documentary Short Subject. Documenting the Face of America: Roy Stryker & the FSA Photographers is a 2008 documentary film writteny and directed by Jeanine Isabel Butler. The Lost Kennedy Home Movies is a 2011 documentary film written by Paul Boorstin and directed by Harrison Engle. In Our Heads About Our Hair is a historical documentary comedy drama film directed by Hemamset Angaza. Sekai o kaeta otoko: Sutîbu Jobuzu is a 2011 documentary film. When NBA star Tracy McGrady (T-Mac) heard about the massive challenges children from Darfur were facing in the refugee camps in Chad, he decided to travel there, discovering the ravaging effects of the recent ongoing genocide. 3 Points follows McGrady's journey in Chad and his return to the U.S. ID–WITHOUTCOLORS is a 2013 German documentary film by Riccardo Valsecchi produced by the Migrationsrat Berlin-Brandenburg. The film follows the 2012 sentence of the administrative court of Koblenz, Western Germany, which on February 27, dismissed a complaint by a black German man who was asked to show his papers while traveling by train. The judges ruled that skin color was reasonable grounds on which to carry out ID checks. The sentence confirmed for the first time the existence and practice of racial profiling in Germany since WWII. ID–WITHOUTCOLORS follows the works of such associations as KOP-Berlin, ISDB, Reach Out, Gangway Neukölln, which work in this field in Berlin, as well as it gives voices to activists, victims, policemen and politicians, analyzing deeply the psychological aspects of the practice of racial profiling on the victims. 7 Divov Bratislavy is a 2007 film directed by Alexandra Gojdičov. Exuma is a 2013 documentary, family, adventure film written and directed by Colin Ruggiero. Tour Smart - Martin Atkins (member of PiL, Pigface, Killing Joke, etc) talks about his Tour:Smart philosophies and explains his ground breaking theories in this video version of hiscritically-acclaimed book. Subjects as diverse as Routing, Merchandise,How to be a Better Opening Band and even more complex strategies are covered. Whether you are planning a national tour, or simply want to havemore successful regional shows, this DVD is not to missed. Over 80 minutesof footage. F for Fake is the last major film completed by Orson Welles, who directed, co-wrote, and starred in the film. Initially released in 1974, it focuses on Elmyr de Hory's recounting of his career as a professional art forger; de Hory's story serves as the backdrop for a fast-paced, meandering investigation of the natures of authorship and authenticity, as well as the basis of the value of art. Loosely a documentary, the film operates in several different genres and has been described as a kind of film essay. Far from serving as a traditional documentary on Elmyr de Hory, the film also incorporates Welles's companion Oja Kodar, notorious "hoax-biographer" Clifford Irving, and Orson Welles as himself. In addition to the 85-minute film, in 1976 Welles also shot and edited a self-contained 9-minute short film as a "trailer", almost entirely composed of original material not found in the main film itself. The Otherside is a 2013 documentary music film written by J.R. Celski, Vinny Dom, Jake Greene and Daniel Torok and directed by Daniel Torok. The End For Beginners is a 2008 short documentary film directed by David Lale. Momentum was the first film shot and released in the IMAX HD film format, which ran at 48 frames per second, and was also one of the first films to use Ambisonic surround sound. The film was produced for the Canada pavilion at Seville Expo '92 by National Film Board of Canada, by the same creative team that made the 1986 3D IMAX film Transitions for Expo 86. The film takes viewers across Canada, demonstrating the ability of the 48 frame/s process to portray motion on the giant IMAX screen with reduced strobing. La huella del doctor Ernesto Guevara is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jorge Denti. One Ten: Two Forty is a 1993 documentary film directed by Brian Bleak. Runnin' Rebels of UNLV is a 2011 sports documentary film. Bloodstained Memoirs is a professional wrestling documentary released online via an official stream in 2009. It is compiled by interviews featuring wrestlers synonymous with different eras in wrestling and different wrestling regions. Production was filmed in the UK, U.S., France, Japan and Italy. When interviewed for Fighting Spirit magazine, director David Sinnott stated, "I don't intend this film to be negative. It's too easy to sell people bad news." In October 2011, the documentary was made available on DVD. Njet smerti dlja menja... is a 2000 film directed by Renata Litvinova. World School: A Single Journey Can Change the Course of a Life is a documentary family adventure film directed by Mary Katzke. Hoxsey: Quacks Who Cure Cancer? is a 1987 film directed by Ken Ausubel. Brocket 99 is the name of an underground comedy audio tape that parodies aboriginal people in Canada and the name of two documentary films about the tape. Round Eyes in the Middle Kingdom is a 1995 documentary directed by Ronald Levaco, an American filmmaker who journeyed back to China, the nation of his boyhood days, to discover what became of an old friend of his family, Israel Epstein. Controversial documentary that highlights a series of alarming issues that were ignored by the mainstream media's coverage of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. El Salvador: Another Vietnam is a 1981 American documentary film directed by Glenn Silber. This political documentary illustrates the turbulent history of El Salvador from the 1920s-1970s, and the role of the U.S. government in that history. As the title suggests, the presence of U.S. military advisors in a military dictatorship fighting guerrilla factions that are labeled communist is highly reminiscent of the beginnings of the U.S. escalation of the war in Vietnam. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Magic Words (breaking a spell) is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mercedes Moncada Rodríguez. Catherine Deneuve, belle et bien là is a 2010 documentary biography film directed by Anne Andreu. Revelando Sebastião Salgado is a 2013 documentary film directed by Betse De Paula. D.O.A.: A Right of Passage is a 1980 rockumentary film directed by Lech Kowalski about the origin of punk rock. The rockumentary takes interview and concert footage of some of punk rock's earliest bands of the late seventies scene. Features live performances by the Sex Pistols, The Dead Boys, Generation X, The Rich Kids, the X-Ray Spex, and Sham 69, with additional music from The Clash, Iggy Pop, and Augustus Pablo. Ramones: Raw is a DVD of the punk band Ramones. It consists of home video footage from Marky Ramone of the band's extensive touring and backstage footage along with live performances of their best-known songs. Extras include a 1980 concert filmed in Rome, Italy. It also features the Ramones appearing in a partially ad-libbed skit from Channel 9's The Howard Stern Show and clips from The Uncle Floyd Show. The commentary to the DVD features Marky Ramone, Johnny Ramone and director John Cafiero together discussing various scenes from the movie. Ramones Raw went gold in the U.S.A in 2004 selling more than 50,000 copies. Ramones: Raw also went gold in Australia in 2007 selling more than 7,500 copies. The Festival is a 2012 documentary film written by Aleksey Igudesman and Sebastian Leitner, directed by Aleksey Igudesman. Awake in a Bad Dream is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Peter Lataster and Petra Lataster-Czisch. August 29th 2006 marked the one year anniversary of the devastation in New Orleans caused by the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. This Special Greg Palast Report brings you exclusive footage and the stories you won't hear on the other networks -- the hidden political agendas and the suppressed eyewitness reports. This groundbreaking one-hour event takes you into the whirling devastation of a tornado's heart as cutting-edge science meets over-the-edge filmmaking to capture incredible images of what happens inside one of nature's deadliest phenomena!Witness the construction and first deployment of the revolutionary Tornado Intercept Vehicle-8,000 pounds of ¼-inch armor plating, bullet-proof windows, state-of-the-art camera, and a crew of hardcore, thrill-seeking filmmakers.Plunge into the killing zone of tornadoes capable of generating 300-mph-plus winds as researchers risk life and limb to shoot never-before-seen footage from within these monster storms.From stunning computer-generated imagery, to riding shotgun in the first vehicle ever to take a camera into a tornado's vortex, it's extreme, adrenaline-driven science. Diego Rivera: mito o realidad is a 1982 documentary film. Stuff is a documentary about the house of Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist John Frusciante. It was made in 1993 by Johnny Depp and Gibby Haynes, the lead singer of the Butthole Surfers. Dr. Timothy Leary is also present in the video. The film's main purpose was to depict the chaos and instability of Frusciante's life. It was once aired in a Dutch TV show called Lola Da Musica, and was released in the '90s as a rare promo VHS. "Untitled #2" from Frusciante's Niandra Lades and Usually Just a T-Shirt is featured on this film with a poem read over it. Also featured in the film is an otherwise unreleased Frusciante song, which contains elements of another song named "Untitled #5" on his album Niandra Lades and Usually Just a T-Shirt. Untitled Flavor Flav Documentary is a 2011 documentary film directed by David Hausen. Insect Kingdom 3D is a 2014 documentary film directed by Kim Jin-Man. On the Land and the Sea is a 1964 documentary film directed by Miguel Spiguel. Myxomyceten - Pilz oder Amöbe is a 1987 short film directed by Georg Schimanski. "Theory collides with comedy in HOOTERS, a behind-the-scenes documentary of The Owls, itself a film that colors outside of the genre lines. For The Owls, a collective very loosely bound by sexuality and ideas of gender takes on a project to make a seminal lesbian film in three weeks. The cast of The Owls is a who’s who of queer film: landmark director Cheryl Dunye (The Watermelon Woman and Stranger Inside), Lisa Gornick (Tick Tock Lullaby), Guinivere Turner and VS Brodie (Go Fish), Deak Evangenikos (Itty Bitty Titty Committee), Skyler Cooper (Elena Undone), and writer Sarah Schulman. Funny interpersonal conflict never looked so good. HOOTERS director Albelo’s alias la Chocha sneaks around behind the scenes on the set of The Owls. She tracks down members of the filmmaking collective in order to get the real scoop. And boy, does she get some. As the group works hard to finish the film, film theory collides with the collective’s vision, gender theory of different generations collides with each other and the ideal collective process collides with the reality of strong (and sometimes volatile) personalities. HOOTERS is a quirky film that demystifies the collective filmmaking process. As anyone who has been in a collective knows, creating a truly collaborative project is often a twisting road. But with aplomb, HOOTERS shows that a daunting task can bring people together, change minds and create extremely compelling art." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Framelline 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. Think of Me First as a Person is a documentary film and home movie about Dwight Core, Jr., a boy with Down syndrome. The footage was originally shot throughout the 1960s and '70s by Core's father, Dwight Core, Sr. The footage was later discovered and completed by the filmmaker's grandson, George Ingmire. The film was first shown at New Orleans' 2006 Home Movie Day. Later that year, it was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry, an honor bestowed every year to twenty-five films deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant." The Library of Congress's statement announcing the 2006 additions to the Registry called the film a "loving portrait by a father of his son with Down syndrome" that represented "the creativity and craftsmanship of the American amateur filmmaker." The film's title comes from the 1974 Rita Dranginis poem of the same name. Sport minore is a 1951 Italian documentary film directed by Francesco Maselli. Margaret Atwood: Once in August is a 1984 documentary film about Canadian writer Margaret Atwood, directed by Michael Rubbo and produced by the National Film Board of Canada. The film was made in Rubbo's trademark style of self-conscious documentary filmmaking or metafilm, with Rubbo foregrounding the creative process in making the film, including his frustrated attempts to uncover autobiographical influences in Atwood's work. It was his last film with the NFB. Dante's Eyes is a 2012 short documentary drama film written and directed by Gonzalo Gurrea Ysasi. Bald! was a "fly-on-the-wall" documentary about baldness, broadcast on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom in April 2003. The show followed a number of men as they tried to hold back the advancement of hair loss, and the methods that they tried to cope with the problem. Outlawed in Pakistan is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Habiba Nosheen and Hilke Schellmann. The Undocumented is a 90-minute documentary film from director Marco Williams, which investigates the causes and effects of migrant deaths along the Arizona-Mexico border. "Monica and David are in love. Truly, blissfully in love. They also happen to have Down syndrome. Alexandra Codina's affectionate and heartwarming documentary is an intimate, year-in-the-life portrait of two child-like spirits with adult desires. Supported (and, for more than 30 years, sheltered) by endlessly devoted mothers, Monica and David prepare for their fairy tale wedding and face the realities of married life afterward." Quoting the description from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Pena De Muerte is a 2012 action, animation, crime, thriller and documentary film written and directed by Tevo Díaz. A look at the knowledge base of ancient civilizations that are only now being realized as even more technologically capable of construction and world navigation as current humanity is. VH1 Divas Live is a 1998 tv movie written by Martin Lewis and directed by Michael Simon. Makan esmoh alwatan is an Egyptian 2006 documentary film. Field Spotlight: President Anote Tong is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Peter Stonier. Celebrity News Reels: Hollywood's Most Infamous Couples and Ugliest Breakups is a 2005 documentary film. The Climb is a 2007 documentary of Laurie Skreslet's return to Mount Everest after twenty-five years. On October 5, 1982, Laurie Skreslet and Pat Morrow were the first Canadians to climb Mount Everest at the cost of four dead team members. Masculinity/Femininity is a biographical documentary film directed by Russell Sheaffer. We Are the Future is a 2006 film. Konzert im Freien is a 2000 film directed by Jürgen Böttcher. Folk Art Found Me is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Alex Busby. The Other Day is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ignacio Agüero. Transworld's Team Shoot Out 2009 is a 2010 documentary film directed by Christopher J. Scott. How Much Wood Would a Woodchuck Chuck is a 1976 documentary film by German director Werner Herzog, produced by Werner Herzog Filmproduktion. It is a 44 minute film documenting the World Livestock Auctioneer Championship held in New Holland, Pennsylvania. Herzog has said that he believes auctioneering to be "the last poetry possible, the poetry of capitalism." Herzog describes the auctioneering as an "extreme language ... frightening but quite beautiful at the same time." Herzog used two of the featured auctioneers as actors in his later film Stroszek. The Arbor is a 2010 documentary film directed by Clio Barnard. "Brilliantly blurring the borders of narrative and documentary filmmaking, artist-cum-director Clio Barnard beautifully reconstructs the fascinating true story of troubled British playwright Andrea Dunbar and her tumultuous relationship with her daughter. Working from two years of audio interviews, Barnard uses classic documentary techniques, actors, theatrical performance, and Dunbar's own neighborhood to generate a unique cinematic feast while unraveling the truths of a dark family past." Quoting the description from the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival site. Le faucon de Notre-Dame is a 1989 short, documentary film directed by Claude Farny. Recordar es vivir is a 1993 short documentary film directed by Alfredo Joskowicz. Journey of the African-American Athlete is a documentary of the multitude of struggles and small but significant triumphs made by black athletes through the years in sports as diverse as horse racing, bicycling, boxing, tennis, and baseball. The world's leading sea horse biologist journeys to Australia and the Philippines to explore the secret lives of these extraordinary fish. Stories of TRUST: Calling for Climate Recovery - Part 9: TRUST Massachusetts is a 2012 short biographical documentary film directed by Kelly Matheson, Deia Schlosberg, Katie Lose Gilbertson, Sean Solowiej, and Christi Cooper-Kuhn. Stalking the President: A History of American Assassins is a 1992 documentary film written by G.P. Samuels and directed by Peter Gust. ¿Quién es el señor López? is a 2006 film made by film director Luis Mandoki. It is a political non-fiction film about the 2006 and 2012 Mexican presidential candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador and the Mexican general election, 2006. The five-DVD documentary includes interviews with López Obrador and with journalists and academics, including Denise Dresser, Lorenzo Meyer; the lawyers Néstor de Buen, Javier Quijano and Juventino Castro y Castro, all of them sympathizers with the Revolutionary Democratic Party of the candidate. The film author has given his work a copyleft licence. It can be distributed at no cost. Fists of Pride is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Hélène Choquette. Forget Us Not is a 2013 feature-length documentary film by Heather Connell, which follows the stories of some of the 5 million non-Jewish Holocaust survivors including artist Ceija Stojka and is narrated by actor Ron Perlman. The documentary was released on the festival circuit in August 2013 and has won eight awards to date including Feature Documentary and Editing Awards Of Merit from Accolade Film Competition, Helping Hand International Humanitarian Award from the Rhode Island International Film Festival, Best of Festival at Vancouver's Columbia Gorge International Film Festival, Mark Of Distinction Film at the New York Independent Film Festival and Best Narration and World Peace Impact Award from the Artisan World Peace Hamptons Film Festival and Feature Documentary Audience Award at the First Glance International Film Festival Los Angeles. Yesspeak is a film chronicling the then current lineup of the progressive rock group Yes directed by Robert Garofalo and narrated by Roger Daltrey. It was premiered in theatres across the United States on January 26, 2004, and was followed by a closed-circuit live acoustic performance by Yes in front of a small studio audience. Divided into ten chapters, the programme systematically covers the background, history, and outlook of the group before an extended interview with each of the five members of the group. There are also discussions with members on the band's music and glimpses of the band's 2003 world tour. Os Melhores Do Samba is a 2004 documentary film. Jump Britain is a 2005 documentary about Freerunning. Directed by Mike Christie and produced by Carbon Media, it is a sequel to Channel 4's Jump London. Two of the three free runners from Jump London, Sébastien Foucan and Jérôme Ben Aoues, appear alongside the members of Urban freeflow, as they interact with numerous famous landmarks all over Britain. Another section of the documentary sees various members of Urban Freeflow go on a 'pilgrimage' to Lisses, France. The trip includes a visit to the famous Dame Du Lac. Free running is a physical discipline which grew from Parkour, led by David Belle. The free runners tackle some of the UK's most iconic sites including Edinburgh Castle and the Forth Rail Bridge in Scotland, the Giant's Causeway and Derry's walls in Northern Ireland, the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, the Tyne Bridge in Newcastle and the International Convention Centre in Birmingham. The original soundtrack was composed by Ian Masterson and Thomas Beach, and was released on iTunes, as well as appearing as an extra on the DVD release. Sakda is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul. Let There Be Light is a 1946 American documentary film directed by John Huston. The film was the last in a series of three films directed by Huston while serving in the United States Army Signal Corps. This documentary film follows 75 U.S. soldiers who have sustained debilitating emotional trauma and depression. A series of scenes chronicles their entry into a psychiatric hospital, their treatment and eventual recovery. Some of the treatments involved then-new drugs and hypnosis, and the impression was given of miraculous cures, though the narration says that there will be continuing psychiatric care. Much of the filming was done at Edgewood State Hospital, Deer Park, Long Island, New York which between 1944 and 1946 was part of Mason General Hospital, a psychiatric hospital run by the United States War Department named for an Army doctor and general. The film was controversial in its portrayal of shell-shocked soldiers from the war. "Twenty percent of our army casualties", the narrator says, "suffered psychoneurotic symptoms: a sense of impending disaster, hopelessness, fear, and isolation." Christmas with Dad is a 2008 short family documentary film directed by Conor McCormack. Darker Side of Black is a 1993 film directed by Isaac Julien. "KATI WITH AN I is an intimate documentary portrait of Kati, a teenage girl in Alabama, about to graduate high school. The film captures her moment-by-moment emotional transformation over the course of three tumultuous days that leave her future in doubt. With microscopic focus, through the searching lens of cinematographer Sean Price Williams, the movie explores the period in one’s life when the only constant is motion. As Kati says, "What happened...happened."" Quoting the synopsis from the Official Site. GhettoPhysics: Will the Real Pimps and Hos Please Stand Up! is a 2010 docudrama film written and directed by William Arntz and E. Raymond Brown. The film is based on Brown's 2003 book, Will The Real Pimps and Hos Please Stand Up! — Peeping the Multi-leveled Global Game. The book and the film examine the interplay between Pimps and "Hos" and how that dynamic is the oldest and simplest expression of the ways in which power is wielded in today's world. The film uses documentary footage, animation, satire and dramatization to illustrate examples culled from the "hood" to Wall Street. Whether the players are real-life pimps or corporate executives, they are all playing the “game” and repeating the same power dynamics. There have historically been many negative associations with the provocative language and images surrounding the sexual politics of the Pimp/Ho dynamic. GhettoPhysics looks closely at this reality, then goes beyond the world of prostitution to illustrate and clarify how the game is played. Weaving together theories of metaphysics and archetypal psychology, the film explains how the GhettoPhysics game crosses all races, all classes and all socio-economic levels. Journey to the Flames: 10 Years of Burning Man is a 2001 documentary film directed by Doug Jacobson. Within recent years, the formerly bright line separating U.S. military operations from domestic police work has become increasingly blurred. From Waco to the WTO protests, weaponry and tactics once reserved for the battlefield have been used in police operations on U.S. soil. ""Urban Warrior"" investigates the debate over the use of military tactics in law enforcement, and looks at the impact this trend is having on American civil liberties. Young, Jewish, and Left is an American documentary that presents several US-based leftist Jews grappling with identity, politics, and culture. Nalini by Day, Nancy by Night is a 2005 documentary film by filmmaker Sonali Gulati. This film explores business process outsourcing in India. Told from the perspective of an Indian living in the United States, the film provides us with a glimpse into India’s call centers, where telemarketers acquire American names and accents to service the telephone-support industry of the U.S. The film incorporates animation as a way to build in personal narrative in a doodle-like manner. It also includes live action footage which takes the form of cinema verité and innovatively edited interviews, and archival footage that provides contextual analysis to the socio-political history of globalization and capitalism. The film is a commentary on identity in the new millennium that intersects diaspora with global outsourcing. It was first shown at the 2005 Margaret Mead Film Festival. A Boom with No Boundaries is a short documentary film written by Andrew Satter and directed by Jessica Goad and Andrew Satter. David Wants to Fly is a 2010 German documentary film that follows its director, Berlin-based, film school graduate David Sieveking, as he interacts with his film hero David Lynch, and explores the Transcendental Meditation movement. The film chronicles a period of time in Sieveking's life that includes his off-and-on relationship with his girlfriend as well as his travels to the United States, Holland and India. The film has received awards and honorable mentions as well as criticism. At the gates of an abyss is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Christophe Giordani. Google Darfur is a 2007 documentary film directed by Robert Simental. The documentary was shot on HD video in Eastern Chad in early 2007, and independently released to DVD in the United States on October 9, 2007 via FilmBaby. A 28-minute cut of the documentary was broadcast on Seattle Community Access Television by Indymedia on February 26, 2009 then subsequently on other IndyMedia partner stations. The video crew consisted of director Robert Simental, cameraman Matt Bowen, translator Ahmed Borgoto and driver Zakaria Mahamat. The documentary was shot in several towns and refugee camps in Eastern Chad, including Gaga, Farchana, Adre, Breidjing and Abeche. The film exposes dangerous conditions such as rape and violence for refugees living in the camps and major inefficiencies of the camp management. Broken Silence is a 2002 documentary film directed by Pavel Chukhray, Vojtech Jasný, Marcel Lozinski, Luis Puenzo and János Szász. Die Tunisreise is a 2007 documentary film. We Always Lie to Strangers is a 2013 documentary film directed by AJ Schnack and David Boone Wilson. McConkey is a 2013 documentary film about extreme skier Shane McConkey. The film follows Shane from growing up as the son of skier Jim McConkey to his days as a professional freeskier. The film also focuses on Shane's 2009 death during a ski base jump and his continued influence over the sport of skiing. The film features interviews from notable athletes and friends of Shane such as JT Holmes, Tony Hawk and Travis Pastrana. Cooperage is a 1976 short documentary film directed by Phillip Borsos. The Happiest Day of His Life is a 2007 comedy film written and directed by Ursula Burton. Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam is an American grammy Award–winning 1987 documentary, inspired by the anthology of the same title, directed by Bill Couturié. Using real letters written by US soldiers and archive footage, the film creates a highly personal experience of the Vietnam War. The film won the Special Jury Prize: Documentary at Sundance Film Festival in 1988. It was also screened out of competition at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival. Roger Ebert commented, "There have been many great movies about Vietnam. This is the one that completes the story." ThuleTuvalu is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Matthias von Gunten. Earth's Children is a 2014 documentary/short film written by Álvaro Sarmiento & Jorge Tapullima and directed by Diego E. Sarmiento Pagan. Pater Damiaan terug is a 1936 silent documentary short directed by Clemens De Landtsheer. Pee On Presidents is a 2012 documentary film directed by Melanie Bonajo. You All Are Captains is a 2010 drama film written and directed by Oliver Laxe. "A European director is making a film with children from a social center in Tangiers. Because of his methods, his relationship with the children during shooting degenerate and transform the evolution of the project." Quoting the description from the 2010 Directors' Fortnight site. The Men Who Lost China is a documentary film created by Mitch Anderson. Released in 2013, the documentary explores the United States' attitude towards China following the 1911 Chinese Revolution and the First World War, and how this and the attitude of other Western nations at the time helped shape China's national identity and in particular, its foreign policy and alignment with the former Soviet Union. Infiltrators is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Khaled Jarrar. Me Bob Robert is a 2003 documentary film by Quebec films directors Denys Desjardins and Stéphane Thibault. The film follows the final days of a municipal election campaign by Robert "Bob" Filiatrault. Where the Sky Meets the Land is a 2000 documentary film written and produced by Frank Müller. The film features Kyrgyzstan, the home of poet Tschingis Aitmatov and his characters, encounters with nomads, Kyrgyz traditions and the impressive scenery. Grit & Grind is a 2014 LGBT short documentary film written by and directed by Felix Endara and Sasha Wortzel. Eclipse of Reason is a 1987 pro-life documentary video directed, filmed, and narrated by Bernard Nathanson, with an introduction by Charlton Heston. Eclipse of Reason is a follow up to Nathanson’s first film The Silent Scream. The film is perhaps most known for its controversial depiction of a late-term abortion. The subject matter of this film focuses more on the moral implications of abortion. It served as Nathanson’s call to the women of the world to end the practice of abortion. This film, as well as The Silent Scream, was instrumental in the Right to Life Committee's garnering the attention of the United States public regarding the issue of abortion. Eclipse of Reason represented the argument that the fetus is human, and therefore abortion is murder, a belief in line with the pro-life movement. The film also serves to combat critics to The Silent Scream who argue that, although Nathanson claimed the film relied only on imagery and not pejorative speech, the film was heavily reliant on upon the language of the narrator. Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father is a 2008 American documentary film conceived and created by Kurt Kuenne. Kuenne's close friend Andrew Bagby was allegedly murdered by Shirley Jane Turner after Bagby ended their tumultuous relationship. Shortly after she was arrested, she announced she was pregnant with Bagby's child, a boy she named Zachary. Kuenne decided to interview numerous relatives, friends, and associates of Andrew Bagby and incorporate their loving remembrances into a film that would serve as a cinematic scrapbook for the son who never knew him. As events unfold, the film becomes a sort of true-crime documentary. Kuenne is donating all profits from the film to a scholarship established in the names of Andrew and Zachary Bagby. Fire Eyes is a 1993 film directed by Soraya Mire. Plagues & Pleasures on the Salton Sea is a documentary film by Chris Metzler and Jeff Springer, with narration by John Waters and music by Friends of Dean Martinez. This offbeat and often humorous documentary tells the story of the accidental lake and environmental catastrophe known as the Salton Sea, located in the desert of Southern California, USA. Once known as the “California Riviera”, the Salton Sea is now called one of America’s worst ecological disasters: a fetid, stagnant, salty lake, that coughs up dead fish and birds by the thousands in frequent die-offs that occur. However, amongst the ruins of this man-made mistake, a few remaining eccentrics struggle to keep a remodeled version of the original Salton Sea dream alive. The film shares these people's stories and their difficulties in keeping their unique community alive, as the nearby cities of Los Angeles and San Diego attempt to take the agricultural water run-off that barely sustains the Salton Sea. The film ultimately explores the historical, economic, political, and environmental issues that face the Salton Sea, while taking a closer look at the people who have chosen to live in what they see as a surreal paradise. Cristo in India is a 1965 Italian film directed by Rinaldo Dal Fabbro. Beatriz González, Why Are You Crying? is a 2011 documentary film directed by Diego Garcia Moreno. Super Bowl's Greatest Commercials 2009 is a 2009 sport documentary film written by Mary Jane Morrison and directed by Paul Miller. The Curious Case of Curt Flood is a 2011 documentary film written by Aaron Cohen. Addicted to Acting is a 2003 film directed by Andres Veiel. Un salto de vida is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Eugenio Polgovosky. "Raed Andoni has a tension headache—one that has lasted generations and isn't going to end soon. That's because Andoni is a Palestinian, living in the Ramallah, where the prospects for a stress-free life are elusive. Fix ME, Andoni's latest documentary, follows him through 20 therapy sessions as he tries to cure his unwelcome condition. The internal terrain of displacement and alienation that is revealed to his therapist and through his daily encounters with friends and family mimics the lived reality of thousands of Palestinians who are themselves displaced from their history and homeland. Ironic in tone, stylishly shot, and with a haunting score, Fix ME deftly plays with the concept of detachment from every angle. In Andoni’s hands, life under occupation is rendered with sly humor and an unexpectedly light touch that culminates in a poignant statement about the universal longing for a way back home." Quoting the description from the 201 Sundance Film Festivals site. Roland Hassel is a 2012 comedy, crime, and drama film written and directed by Måns Månsson. Little Alien is a documentary by Bosnian-born, Austrian director and producer Nina Kusturica dealing with unaccompanied minor refugees. Mysteries of the Great Lakes is a short documentary film direted by David Lickley. 2 LINES is a 2011 Korean documentary film directed by Jimin. Venice Under Water is a 2013 documentary short film written and directed by Chip Lord. I Am Breathing is a biographical, documentary film directed by Emma Davie and Morag McKinnon. Doc Next: Epidermis is a 2011 short documentary directed by Alfonso Alcalá Olmo. Mana is a documentary film directed by Valerie Kontakos. Roswell Report: Case Closed: Declassified Evidence is a 1997 documentary short film. It's time to wake up and take control of your health and your life! In this incredible 1.5 hour special Gary Null Ph.D. and 26 of the of the world's top medical experts will take you on an in-depth journey of: - The causes of disease and how to prevent them - Lifestyle changes you can make to dramatically enhance your health - The truth about traditional medicine - What you must know before you go to your doctor - The frightening truth about the pharmaceutical industry - The real key to health and wellness - How to take control of your emotions - How to have a winning psychology - How to have everything you want in in your life by holding a new standard - How to create ultimate physical emotional and spiritual health After viewing this special you will gain awareness of eye opening information and learn proven methodologies that will dramatically improve the quality of your life. Warren Miller: Off the Grid is a documentary film directed by Max Bervy. The Barber of Birmingham is a 2011 documentary film about James Armstrong, one of the unsung heroes of the U.S. civil rights movement. A World War II veteran and an original flag bearer for the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches, Armstrong has run a voter education program out of his barbershop in Birmingham, Alabama for 50 years. The film was co-directed and produced by Gail Dolgin and Robin Fryday. It premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, three months after Dolgin's death in October 2010 from breast cancer. It was named best short documentary at the Ashland Independent Film Festival. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary at the 84th Academy Awards. Hot Wind: America's Fallout Casualties is a 2007 short documentary film directed by Kirsten Alaqidy. Il Mondo dell'orrore di Dario Argento is an Italian documentary film, released in 1985, which chronicles the career of the Italian horror and suspense movie director, Dario Argento. It was the directorial debut of Michele Soavi, who later went on to direct the cult classic Dellamorte Dellamore in 1994. The documentary features candid interviews with Argento and various stars from films he has directed, as well as extensive clips and behind-the-scenes footage of his films. The film includes segments focused on subjects as the soundtrack work, coloring and color filtering, and camerawork in Suspiria, the soundtrack for Inferno, the camerawork and insect effects in Phenomena, Tom Savini's make-up work in Dawn of the Dead, and the special effects, make-up and robotics in Dèmoni as well as interviews with Argento on a variety of esoteric subjects. Because most of Argento's films were only available at the time in heavily edited form, Dario Argento's World of Horror was sought after by many fans of the director's work because it contained numerous clips of footage removed from the released films, most notably the opening double murder sequence from Suspiria. Beyond Our Ken is a 2008 Australian documentary film directed by Luke Walker and Melissa Maclean by the controversial organization Kenja Communication. Released to Australian theatres on 18 September 2008, the film was nominated for Best Documentary at the Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards and also by the Australian Film Institute. In the spring of 1991, a rash of suspicious store fires in Los Angeles set fire investigators on the trail of a serial arsonist. Using ingenious techniques to "read" burn patterns and reconstruct the chain of events at each fire, the team uncovered a crucial clue—a fingerprint on a crude incendiary device. Eight months later, the team closed in on their chief suspect and revealed the shocking truth behind his identity. A classic scientific detective story with a final twist that will keep viewers guessing until the end. China's Wild West is a 2009 British documentary directed by Urszula Pontikos. The film received its world premiere at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, its European premiere at the 2009 One World Film Festival. It won Prix du Jeune Public at the 2009 Anûû-rû âboro International Film Festival in New Caledonia. The film has subsequently screened at many human rights, documentary and enthnographic international film festivals including Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, True/False Film Festival and Silverdocs. Deep Sea 3D is a 3D IMAX documentary film about sea life. The documentary is directed by Howard Hall who has also directed other undersea films such as Into the Deep and Island of the Sharks. The film is narrated by Johnny Depp and Kate Winslet. It also features music by Danny Elfman. The film is 40 minutes long. The film shows various sea animals, such as jellyfish, octopus and turtles as well as coral reef life. Bandes Originales: Lalo Schifrin & Bruno Coulais is a 2012 documentary, musical, biographical, music film directed by Pascale Cuenot. Project Wild Thing is a 2013 documentary, family adventure and drama film written by Ashley Jones and David Bond and directed by David Bond. Tomorrow Never Knows: Deconstructing The Beatles' Revolver is a 2012 multimedia film by Scott Freiman. ADD & Loving It?! is a Canadian documentary that aired on Global Television in September 2009. It was written and directed by Rick Green and stars Patrick McKenna. McKenna seeks a diagnosis for adult ADHD and talks to medical researchers, psychiatrists, psychologists, professors, and award-winning authors. McKenna talks about how his life as a husband and father are affected by ADD. The documentary includes Dr. Edward Hallowell, Thom Hartmann, Kate Kelly, Dr. Lenard Adler, Dr. Steven Kurtz, Dr. Umesh Jain, Dr. Annick Vincent, Dr. Laura Muggli, and Dr. Margaret Weiss. In 2010 ADD & Loving It?! won a Silver World Medal for best TV medical documentary at the New York Festivals. Forty Foot is about the older groups of mostly Irish locals who swim in Sandycove every day. The film tells the history of the place through the personal stories and characteristics of the featured swimmers. More than a film about them braving the elements everyday, this is a film about having a great and surprising spirit in the face of aging, death and economic hardship. It shows a classless section of older Irish nationals in a refreshing, encouraging and a completely unknown light to foreign eyes. Artesanos is a 2011 Spanish documentary film. It was selected by African Film Festival of Cordoba - FCAT. An Intense exploration into the secret world of incest. The sexual molestation of children by family members and trusted friends. Hear for the first time the truth of how this crime is committed and what's motivates this violation. Hear from the offenders themselves and learn what this violation does to its victims. The film also looks at how the creation of new laws designed to protect children have left them more exposed. Encounters is a 2011 family, adventure, drama, documentary film directed by Mélanie Carrier and Olivier Higgins. Parcours de réfugiés is a 2009 documentary film about refugees in Morocco, directed by Ali Benjelloun. Der Berufsindianer - Gojko Mitic in der Prärie is a 2002 documentary film directed by Ramon Kramer. Little Proletarian is a 2012 documentary film written by Wang Ping and directed by Shen Jie. Leonard Cohen: Live At The Isle Of Wight 1970 is a 2009 documentary film directed by Murray Lerner. Dirty Country is a 2007 documentary film that tells the real-life story of Larry Pierce, a small-town factory worker and family man who happens to be the raunchiest country music singer in America. Since 1993, Larry has quietly released over a dozen dirty country albums at truck stops across the country. Without the time or money to pursue a "legitimate" career in country music, Larry is content to lead an ordinary life and moonlight as a dirty country singer. But when he is forced into early retirement at his factory job of 30 years, Larry faces an uncertain future. That is, until an unexpected turn of events thrusts his songs out of obscurity and into the spotlight. Dirty Country introduces an ordinary man with an extraordinary gift for dirty music. The film also profiles several living legends of the raunchy music business, including piano virtuoso Dr. Dirty, rap pioneer Blowfly, and the original party band, Doug Clark’s Hot Nuts. With commentary from authors, experts and social critics, the film poses the question: is America a nation of prudes or are we living in a dirty country? I Am from Nowhere is a 2002 documentary film written by Silvia Beck and Georg Misch and directed by Georg Misch. I'm A Single Mom is a 2013 short documentary film written by Deise de Jesus and Thatyana Santiago and directed by Thatyana Santiago. Más allá del espejo is a 2006 documentary film written by Joaquim Jordà and Laia Manresa and directed by Joaquim Jordà. Alive from the Apocalypse is a double-disc DVD by metalcore band Unearth, released on March 18, 2008, containing documentary and live performance material. Live performance shot on location in Pomona, CA at the Glasshouse on October 9, 2007. The Way We Get By is a 2009 documentary film directed by Aron Gaudet and produced by Gita Pullapilly, about a group of senior citizens in Bangor, Maine who greet U.S. troops at the Bangor International Airport. The Way We Get By had its world premiere at the 2009 South by Southwest Film Festival, winning the Special Jury Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film also won the Audience Award at the 2009 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, the Standing Up Film Competition at the Cleveland International Film Festival, and the Best Documentary at the Atlanta, Little Rock, Naples, Phoenix, and Newport International Film Festivals. The film received a 2010 Cinema Eye nomination for Debut Feature Film. In May 2009, the film had its Maine premiere, one of the largest movie premieres in the state of Maine. Maine National Guard members lined outside the Collins Center for the Arts on the University of Maine campus and greeted the subjects of the film and other greeters as they entered the auditorium. The Governor of Maine presented Gaudet with a special award recognizing the film. The Way We Get By aired on the critically acclaimed PBS series, POV in November 2009 and August 3, 2010. 210 Days: Around the World with Jessica Watson is a 2010 documentary film. The Education of Dee Dee Ricks is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Perri Peltz. Dee Dee Ricks was living her dream: She had a successful hedge fund business, two beautiful sons, and a whirlwind social life. Then, at age 39, breast cancer changed her world. Director Perri Peltz candidly tracks the emotional rebirth of a survivor determined to help make life easier for less fortunate cancer patients even as she undergoes her own grueling treatment. While The Education of Dee Dee Ricks exposes the inequities of our healthcare system, it’s ultimately about the heroism of a Harlem doctor, the unlikely friendship between two women and how one woman was transformed by the experience. I Am Cuba, the Siberian Mammoth is the 2005 documentary film written and directed by Vicente Ferraz. Tokyo Fantasy: Sekai no Owari is a documentary film directed by Raphael Frydman. Novias Madrinas 15 Años is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Diego Levy and Pablo Levy. Fokusnoe rasstoyanie is a 2008 film directed by Raman Ramashka and Andrei Kutsila. The Nose is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Paul Rigter. The Modern Russian Design is a 2014 documentary directed by Sergey Shanovich and Veronika Chibis. Twist of Faith is a 2004 American documentary film directed by Kirby Dick about a man who confronts the Catholic Church about the abuse he suffered as a teenager. The film was produced for the cable network HBO and screened at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival. It received an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary Feature. Afro@Digital is a 2002 documentary film. The Forgotten Tree is a 2009 documentary film Diana Medina and Luis Rincón and directed by Luis Rincón. A Letter Without Words is a 1998 film directed by Lisa Lewenz. Made in America is a 2013 American documentary film, directed by Ron Howard, about the music festival of the same name founded by Jay-Z. It was screened in the Mavericks section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival. Howard said the festival documentary will be "a reflection of the fabric of what it means to be 'Made in America'—what the festival represents, why Jay is doing it and how he relates to each artist." The documentary features performances from Pearl Jam, Odd Future, Dirty Projectors, Skrillex, Santigold, Janelle Monae, and Run-DMC. Journal de France is a 2012 documentary film directed by Raymond Depardon and Claudine Nougaret. Guilty or Innocent of Using the N Word is a 2006 documentary directed by British director, Bhavna Malkani, in Warsaw, capital of Poland. The documentary explores questions and issues surrounding the word "nigger" that many feel constrained to discuss, as is often categorized as a taboo word. The twenty-eight-minute film investigates the word chronologically, discussing the history of the word from its origins all the way to hip hop's influence on the acceptance and commercialization of the term. Guest appearances in the documentary include M-1 of Dead Prez, Grouchy Greg, CEO of allhiphop.com, Philadelphia rapper The Last Emperor, hip-hop producer/rapper Marchitect and others. The documentary was filmed in London, England; New York City, New York; Newark, Delaware, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Guilty or Innocent of Using the N Word won the London Film Convention Award at the Portobello Film Festival in 2006 and Best Short Documentary at New York's 5th Annual H20 Odyssey International Hip-hop awards in 2007. The documentary was also short listed to win Best Film at the 5th Buffalo Film Festival in October 2007. Geschichte der Nacht is a 1978 film directed by Clemens Klopfenstein. Alleessi... an African Actress is a 2003 film directed by Rahmatou Keita. 16 Acres is a 2012 documentary film directed by Richard Hankin which provides an account of the recovery effort following the September 11 attack, specifically the reconstruction process of the World Trade Center site. The name of the documentary refers to the 16 acres of land that the aforementioned site is situated on. I'll use what is on hand, Tim is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Ricardo Machado. Leave Them Unbroken is a 2013 short film written and directed by Sara Brown. A documentary that reveals the complete behind-the-scenes story of Alexander Korda's ill-fated 1937 screen version of I, Claudius. This account chronicels the rehersals, the set construction and the financial excesses of this legendary, doomed production. Bred and Born is a 1982 documentary film directed by Joanna Davis and Mary Pat Leece. Ude af sig selv is a 1974 TV documentary movie written by Benny Anderson and directed by Dan Tschernia. Dirty Oil is a 2009 documentary film directed by Leslie Iwerks. Making Dazed is a 2005 documentary film directed by Kahane Cooperman. The World According to Monsanto is a 2008 film directed by Marie-Monique Robin. Originally released in French as Le monde selon Monsanto, the film is based on Robin's three-year-long investigation into the corporate practices around the world of the United States multinational corporation, Monsanto. The World According to Monsanto is also a book written by Marie-Monique Robin, winner of the Rachel Carson Prize, which has been translated into many languages. The rebuilding of the Blessed Seelos church in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina brings together Father Joseph Benson, a northern Irishman, and Arthine Vicks, an ex-Marine fluent in American Sign Language. The Curiosity That Kills the Cat is a 1975 short documentary film directed by Cedric Maggs. 20malegaynyc is a 2012 short documentary drama LGBT film directed by Blake Pruitt. Voyage to the Edge of the World is a 1976 French nature documentary film directed by Jacques-Yves Cousteau, his son Philippe Cousteau and Marshall Flaum. The film follows a four months expedition, led through Antarctica by the end of 1975 and the beginning of 1976. It was Cousteau's third and last full-length film, following The Silent World and World Without Sun. As a difference with those two earlier Cousteau films, both mainly narrated by Jacques-Yves Cousteau himself, on this film Jacques-Yves' voice-over alternates with co-director Philippe Cousteau's voice. Roots of the Cuban Missile Crisis is a 48 minute 2001 Cold War documentary by New Line Home Video with "film footage from the era [and] newly created interviews covering U.S./Soviet relations from post-WWII Europe through the end of the crisis". The documentary is a "Beyond the Movie feature" on the infinifilm DVD for the movie Thirteen Days and synthesizes archival footage and still photography, interviews, Trinity and Beyond documentary scenes, and Thirteen Days movie scenes and sequences. Topics regarding the crisis' roots covered by the film include the 1938 Munich Agreement, Yalta Conference, British withdrawal from Greece & Turkey, Berlin Airlift, Bomber Gap, Kennedy-Nixon Debate, Cuban Revolution, Missile Gap, Bay of Pigs Invasion, and Crateology. The last third of the film covers events of the crisis and includes film dramatized scenes from Thirteen Days. Pioneers and Heroes: A Documentary on the History of the Medical Profession in New Jersey is a 2012 historical documentary film written by Lisa Garrabrant and directed by Patrick Mirucki. What Is to Be Done? is a 2010 documentary film directed by Emmanuelle Demoris. Dreaming in Colour is a 2011 short biographical documentary film directed by Sabrina Catalogna and Gabriela Warrior Renaud. Mut ohne Befehl - Widerstand und Verfolgung in Stuttgart is a 1994 documentary film directed by Katrin Seybold. The Gentleman Tramp is a 1976 documentary and biography film written and directed by Richard Patterson. Ludwig Hohl. Ein Film In Fragmenten is a 1982 documentary film written and directed by Alexander J. Seiler. Chronos is a 1985 abstract film directed by Ron Fricke, created with custom-built time-lapse cameras. Originally released in IMAX theaters, it is now available on DVD, Blu-ray, HD DVD, and for free on Hulu and YouTube. Our Days, Absolutely, Have to Be Enlightened is a short musical and documentary film written and directed by Jean-Gabriel Périot. The Sea That Thinks is a 2000 Dutch experimental film directed by Gert de Graaff. The film makes heavily use of optical illusions to tell a "story within a story" revolving around a screenwriter writing a script called The Sea That Thinks. The script details what is happening around him and eventually begins to affect what happens around him. On Any Sunday: Motorcross, Malcolm, & More is a documentary about the most famous motorcycle film of all time, On Any Sunday, which was done by the father of this director. The film is directed by Dana Brown of Step Into Liquid and Dust to Glory fame. My Dinner with Jimi is a 2003 comedy film written by Howard Kaylan, dealing with events in 1966-67 which led up to the night in 1967 when the Turtles encountered the Beatles and Kaylan had dinner with Jimi Hendrix in London, England. The film was given an extremely limited theatrical release in Toronto in late September 2007. The Music According to Antonio Carlos Jobim is a 2012 Brazilian documentary film, directed by Nelson Pereira dos Santos and Dora Jobim that tells the history of the singer and songwriter Tom Jobim. La migala is a 1980 short drama film directed by Jaime Carrasco Zanini, Francisco Chavez, Luis Lupone and Jesús Sánchez. The Lazarus Effect is a 2010 documentary film about the positive impact of free antiretroviral drug therapy on HIV/AIDS patients in Africa. It was directed by Lance Bangs, and executive produced by Spike Jonze, after an organizer from AIDS awareness group suggested the project to them. The film features patients and medical staff in Zambia speaking about their experiences and was produced by and HBO. It was screened on HBO and Channel 4 in May 2010, and it is also available on YouTube. Granny's Got Game is a family documentary sports film directed by Angela Alford. The Missions of California is an in-depth documentary covering every aspect of the twenty one California Missions chronologically from San Diego to the Wine Country of Napa-Sanona by using a combination of HD color footage, crystal clear archival film and a rare collection of historic photographs. Corteo is a Cirque du Soleil touring production that premiered in Montreal, Canada on April 21, 2005. As of May 24, 2005, Cirque du Soleil had broken its record of spectators for the première location in Montreal; more than 200,000 people had viewed the production, far outpacing the prior record of 180,000 tickets sold for Varekai during its première. Cortéo—an Italian word meaning "cortège," or procession—is a contemporary circus show about a clown who watches his own funeral taking place in a carnival-like atmosphere. It is partly inspired by The Grand Parade: Portrait of the Artist as Clown on display at the National Gallery of Canada. Directed by Daniele Finzi Pasca, founder of the Swiss clown troupe Teatro Sunil and director of several shows by Cirque Éloize, Cortéo is presented in the round under a large tent. The action takes place on a large circular stage consisting of concentric rotating rings. This allows one area of the stage to rotate while another remains stationary. At times during the performance, the stage is divided by a large curtain illustrated with a painting called the Cortéo Procession. There are entrances/exits at either side of the circular stage. Pursuit of Honor: The Rise of George Washington is a 2006 documentary film written by John W. Metzger Jr. and Robert Matzen and directed by Robert Matzen. The Hamster Factor and Other Tales of Twelve Monkeys is a 1996 Documentary film written and directed by Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe. Vietnam Nurses is a 2005 television documentary directed by Polly Watkins. It tells the story of six Australian Army nurses who served in a field hospital in Vietnam between the years 1962 and 1972. Da Vinci is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Yuri Ancarani. Introversion is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Raymond Tou. Nuclear Nation is a 2012 documentary film directed by Atsushi Funahashi. "Johnny & Lyman: A Life Together profiles the extraordinary relationship of two men who have never parted since they met on VJ Day and who have lived together through tremendous social change. " Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. They Teach Us How To Be Happy is a 1996 documentary film written and directed by Peter von Gunten. America: Imagine the World Without Her is a 2014 American political documentary film by Dinesh D'Souza. It is based on D'Souza's book of the same name, in which he examines various accusations against the United States. D'Souza was executive producer of the film and co-directed it with John Sullivan. Gerald R. Molen also produced. He had served as producer of D'Souza's previous film, 2016: Obama's America. "In this insightful autobiographical mashup of Super-8 home movies, vibrant animated cartography, and Dutch pidgin-speak, a family’s 1981 vacation to the Kennedy Space Center is chronicled in exquisite detail." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. This is a dynamic documentary about two 1970s era marijuana smugglers who were forced to separate when they got too successful. Nothing could prepare them for what they saw when they reunited 20 years later. Hell and Back Again is a 2010 documentary film directed by Danfung Dennis. "In 2009, U.S. Marines launched a major helicopter assault on a Taliban stronghold in southern Afghanistan. Immediately upon landing, the marines were surrounded by insurgents and attacked from all sides. Embedded in Echo Company, filmmaker Danfung Dennis captures the action with visceral immediacy. As he reveals the devastating impact a Taliban machine-gun bullet has on the life of 25-year-old Sergeant Nathan Harris, Dennis’s film evolves from being a war exposé to becoming a story of one man’s personal apocalypse. From the bloody battlefields of Afghanistan, to his home in North Carolina, Harris struggles to conquer the physical and mental fallout of war. A shell of the man he once was, will Harris ever return to the happy life he shared with his loving wife, Ashley? Contrasting the horrors of the battlefield with the battle back home, Hell and Back Again is a transcendent film that comes full circle as it lays bare the true cost of war." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. Zarqa, Jordan's second largest city, is an industrial center with more than one million residents. At a time of America's ongoing "Global War on Terrorism," the everyday conversations of its citizens revolve around not only the local economy or the lack of freedom of expression, but also on the need for pan-Arab unity, the rise of political Islam, and whether or not a faithful Muslim has a religious duty to engage in jihad.The latter debates are particularly topical since Zarqa is also the birthplace of Ahmad Fadeel, better known as Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the notorious leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq until his death in a U.S. bombing in June 2006. Many in the city knew Zarqawi, his relatives still live there, and it remains a source of new recruits for the global jihad. Love in Our Time is a 1968 British film documentary about sex. A Photograph Goes Around the World is a 1981 short documentary film directed by Pedro Chaskel. Rage Against the Machine is the official self-titled debut video release by Rage Against the Machine. The video was released in 1997 and includes footage from various performances as well as video clips. Hank Aaron: Chasing the Dream is a 1995 American documentary film directed by Michael Tollin. The story follows baseball slugger Hank Aaron's pursuit of Babe Ruth's all time record for home runs. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Issa le Tisserand is a 1983 Burkinabé film. Life Challenges is a 2012 Short documentary family film. Ballot Measure 9 is a 1995 documentary film directed and produced by Heather Lyn Macdonald. The film examines the cultural and political battle that took place in 1992 over Oregon Ballot Measure 9, a citizen's initiative proposition that would have declared homosexuality "abnormal, wrong, unnatural, and perverse." Ladakh: In Harmony with the Spirit is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Clemens Kuby. Mystery of the Nile is a 2005 IMAX film documenting the first successful expedition to navigate the entire length of the Blue Nile and Nile from its source in Ethiopia to the Mediterranean Sea. The expedition was led by geologist Pasquale Scaturro. The journey took 114 days and was finished on April 28, 2004. The film was released in 2005. The programme explores how those in power in post-war America used Freud's ideas about the unconscious mind to try and control the masses. Politicians and planners came to believe Freud's underlying premise - that deep within all human beings were dangerous and irrational desires and fears. They were convinced that it was the unleashing of these instincts that had led to the barbarism of Nazi Germany. To stop it ever happening again they set out to find ways to control this hidden enemy within the human mind. Sigmund Freud's daughter, Anna, and his nephew, Edward Bernays, provided the centrepiece philosophy. The US government, big business, and the CIA used their ideas to develop techniques to manage and control the minds of the American people. But this was not a cynical exercise in manipulation. Those in power believed that the only way to make democracy work and create a stable society was to repress the savage barbarism that lurked just under the surface of normal American life. Val Lewton: The Man in the Shadows is a documentary tribute to Val Lewton, the producer of a series of distinctive low-budget horror films for RKO Radio Pictures, presented and narrated by director Martin Scorsese. For Example: A Critique of Never is a documentary film directed by Shusaku Arakawa. Sketches of Frank Gehry is a 2006 American documentary film directed by Sydney Pollack and produced by Ultan Guilfoyle, about the life and work of the Canadian-American architect Frank Gehry. The film was screened out of competition at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival. Pollack and Gehry had been friends and mutual admirers for years. The film features footage of various Gehry-designed buildings, including a hockey arena for the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, and the Walt Disney Concert Hall. The film includes interviews with other noted figures, including the following: Charles Arnoldi Barry Diller Michael Eisner Hal Foster Bob Geldof Dennis Hopper Charles Jencks Philip Johnson Thomas Krens Herbert Muschamp Michael Ovitz Robert Rauschenberg Edward Ruscha Esa-Pekka Salonen Julian Schnabel Dr Milton Wexler The film also discusses work on Gehry's own residence, which was one of the first works that brought him to notoriety. A Note of Triumph: The Golden Age of Norman Corwin is a 2005 documentary short subject about writer Norman Corwin. In addition to Corwin, the cast includes Robert Altman, Norman Lear, Walter Cronkite, Studs Terkel, and radio historians Timothy Troy and Norman Gilliland. On March 5, 2006, it won the Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. Life Goes to War: Hollywood and the Home Front is a 1977 war documentary directed by Jack Haley, Jr. Afro-Punk: The Rock is a 66-minute documentary film directed by James Spooner, exploring race identity within the punk scene across America and abroad. The film focuses on the lives of four people dedicated to the punk rock lifestyle, interspersed with interviews from scores of black punk rockers from all over the United States. The interviews cover issues of loneliness, exile, interracial dating, black power, and the dual lives led by people of color in communities that are primarily white. Afro-Punk features performances by Bad Brains, Tamar-kali, Cipher, and Ten Grand. It also contains exclusive interviews by members of Fishbone, 24-7 Spyz, Dead Kennedys, Candiria, Orange 9mm, The Veldt and TV on the Radio, among others. The Silk Tree Ballad is a documentary film directed by Mariko Miyagi. Lapland Calendar is a 1957 Norwegian documentary film directed by Per Høst. It was entered into the 1957 Cannes Film Festival. Shooting Beauty is a 2009 documentary film directed by George Kachadorian. The Oil Gush in Balakhany is a film directed by the pioneer of cinema in Azerbaijan, Alexandre Michon, it was filmed on August 4, 1898 in Baku and presented at the International Paris Exhibition. The film was shot using a 35mm film on a Lumière cinematograph. Live At Camden Underworld is a split live album by As Friends Rust and Strike Anywhere, released in 2002 by Punkervision. Recorded at the Camden Underworld in London, England, on November 16, 2001. The video was released in both VHS and DVD, as well as in PAL and NTSC formats. Überflieger - The Art of Skijumping is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Matthias Thönnissen. In the Shadow of the Stars is a 1991 documentary film about the San Francisco Opera. It depicts the lives of the various members of the chorus, rather than the big name stars. The film was co-directed, co-produced and edited by the husband and wife team of Irving Saraf and Allie Light. The film won the 1991 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for Light and Saraf. Le Joli Mai is a 1963 French documentary film by Chris Marker and Pierre Lhomme. Beginning in the Spring of 1962, just after the close of the Algerian War and the Évian Accords, Marker and his camera operator Pierre Lhomme shot 55 hours of footage interviewing random people on the streets of Paris. The questions, asked by the unseen Marker, range from their personal lives, as well as social and political issues of relevance at that time. As he had with montages of landscapes and indigenous art, Marker created a film essay that contrasts and juxtaposes a variety of lives with his signature commentary. The film has been compared to the cinéma vérité films of Jean Rouch, and criticized by its practitioners at the time. It was shown in competition at the 1963 Venice Film Festival, where it won the award for Best First Work. It also won the Golden Dove Award at the Leipzig DOK Festival. While making Le Joli Mai, Marker was simultaneously making the 1962 science fiction short La Jetee. It was shown as part of the Cannes Classics section of the 2013 Cannes Film Festival. Orchard Revolution is a drama documentary film directed by Matt Byron. Mein Schloss is a 2012 short documentary biography film written by Amy Adler and Kate Nielsen and directed by Amy Adler. Somewhere Between is a 2011 documentary film directed by Linda Goldstein Knowlton. Jose Canseco: The Truth Hurts is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Bill McAdams Jr. Margaret Barr is a 1978 documentary film directed by Ross R. Campbell. Peperina is a 1995 documentary musical drama film written and directed by Raúl de la Torre. Ladies and Gentlemen: The Rolling Stones is a concert movie featuring the British rock band The Rolling Stones that was first released in 1974. Directed by Rollin Binzer and produced by Binzer and Marshall Chess, it was filmed in 16mm by Bob Freeze and Steve Gebhardt of Butterfly Films during four shows in Fort Worth and Houston, Texas from the band's 1972 North American Tour in support of their classic 1972 album Exile on Main St. A true exhibition of the most dangerous and terrifying stunts as the Death Riders Motorcycle Thrill Show tours the country, illustrating a rare breed of daredevils and their adoring fans. A profile of the pioneering rocket scientist Bob Truax, who designed many of Americas first generation of military rockets, including the Thor and Polaris missiles, as well as designing the engines of world record setting cars. Luggi L. ist nicht zu fassen is a 1995 documentary film directed by Hans-Erich Viet. Motherhood By Choice, Not Chance is a 2004 documentary film directed by filmmaker, Dorothy Fadiman, which takes key moments from each of the three films from Fadiman's trilogy called, CHOICE: From the Back-Alleys to the Supreme Court & Beyond, by weaving together selected scenes and interviews. The film comes in two versions, the Activist and Educational. A Spanish Activist version was also created called, "Maternidad por Elección, No por Obligación," with an introduction by Dolores Huerta. Of making the film, Dorothy Fadiman said, "After six years in production, I realized that the 2.5 hour series was too long to show in most setting, such as meetings or classrooms. Working with a core member of my production team, Katie Peterson, we put together MOTHERHOOD by CHOICE a film based on the most powerful and provocative moments from each of the three films. The result was a half-hour DVD which could easily be shown at conferences, in academic settings and as a highlight of any gathering. While each of the individual films are still shown, many groups find the 30 minute constellation of clips a perfect length." Love in Time of Fires is a 2013 short, family, documentary and romance film written and directed by Gil González. Pizza Pizza Daddy-O is a 1967 short documentary film written and directed by Robert Eberlein and Bess Hawes. Once I Entered a Garden is a 2012 documantary film directed by Avi Mograbi. Colors Straight Up is a 1997 American documentary film directed by Michèle Ohayon about the non-profit organization Colors United, which teaches drama to inner city youth. The film depicts the creation of a musical called Watts Side Story. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Intangible Asset No. 82 is a 2008 music documentary film written and directed by Emma Franz. When God Left the Building is a drama documentary film directed by Thom Schultz. The Shark's Eye is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Alejo Hoijman. Citizen Boilesen is a 2009 documentary film directed by Chaim Litewski. The Trouble With Aid is a 2012 documentary film, directed by Ricardo Pollack. Nicky's Family is a 2011 Czech documentary film directed by Matej Mináč. The Reinactors is a [2008] documentary film about the lives of film character impersonators and celebrity look-a-likes on the Walk Of Fame of Hollywood, CA. The film was well received by critics and audiences during its world premier at the 2008 Rotterdam Film Festival, going on to screen around the world at various Film Festivals in Buenos Aires, Lisbon, Dallas, Veritmiglia, Bucheon, New York City, Montreal, Luanda, Basel, & Berlin. The documentary also aired on Canada's Super Channel in September and October 2009. The DVD was released in the United States September 2009 by We Got Power Films. Filmmaker Spike Jonze has gone on record calling the film "A strange and tragic portrait of a dream that lives on one square block in Hollywood, and kind of in our whole country, too. Thank god Dave Markey made it funny at least." The Restless Conscience: Resistance to Hitler Within Germany 1933-1945 is a 1992 American documentary film directed by Hava Kohav Beller. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Rikers High is a 2005 documentary film directed by Victor Buhler. The Blues Accordin’ to Lightnin’ Hopkins is a 1968 short documentary film directed by Les Blank. Deckname Dennis is a 1996 documentary film written by Matthias Beltz and Thomas Frickel and directed by Thomas Frickel. Memoria is a 1997 documentary film written by M. Pezzetti and L. Picciotto Fargion and directed by Ruggero Gabbai. Violette Leduc: In Pursuit of Love is a 2013 documentary film directed by Esther Hoffenberg. Turksib is a 1929 Soviet documentary film directed by Viktor Alexandrovitsh Turin documenting the building of the Turkestan–Siberia Railway. The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray by the British Film Institute in 2011 as part of The Soviet Influence: From Turksib to Night Mail, with a newly commissioned soundtrack by Guy Bartell of British group Bronnt Industries Kapital. The Last Days of Left Eye is a documentary directed by Lauren Lazin which premiered on VH1 and VH1 Soul on May 19, 2007. Filmed from March 30, 2002 until her death on April 25, 2002, it centered on the life, last days spent in spiritual retreat in Honduras, and accidental death of rapper and TLC member Lisa Lopes, featuring prehumously-narrative insight and commentary from interviews of the singer. New World Disorder IV - Ride the Lightning is the title of the fourth film in the New World Disorder Mountain-biking film series, the film was released in 2003 and was enough of a success that another film was produced as a result of it. Festa na Boca is a 1976 short film directed by Ozualdo Ribeiro Candeias. Terrorists Among Us: Jihad in America is a documentary film by counter-terrorism expert Steven Emerson. It first aired in the United States in 1994 on the PBS series Frontline. The film has won numerous awards for journalism, including the George Polk Award. According to Emerson, the impetus for the film came in 1992, when he happened to come across a conference of Arab youths in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. After gaining entrance by pretending to be Muslim, Emerson said that he found tables of pro-terrorism literature from groups such as Hamas and heard speeches calling for death to Americans. The film features hidden camera footage of men publicly raising money for terrorism in U.S. hotel conference rooms. The men are often speaking in Arabic. Emerson also identifies Sami Al-Arian as the primary supporter of Islamic jihad in the United States. He said that Al-Arian was an Islamic extremist, and headed the Palestine Islamic Jihad in the U.S. In 2006, Al-Arian pleaded guilty to aiding the PIJ, a terrorist organization, and was sentenced to 57 months in prison. Hackers Are People Too is a 2008 documentary film about the hacker community, written and directed by Ashley Shwartau. The Eleventh Year is a documentary film directed by Dziga Vertov. The No Name Painting Association is a 2013 documentary short film written by Rene Balcer and directed by Joe Griffin. Sterling Hallard Bright Drake is a 2012 documentary film directed by Robert Sickels. Flaiano: Il Meglio È Passato is a 2010 Italian documentary film directed by Giancarlo Rolandi and Steve Della Casa. The younger cast members discuss Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. Secret of the Cardboard Rocket is a 2003 short documentary animated family film. On a Tightrope is an award-winning documentary film by Petr Lom, co-produced by Piraya Film and Lom Films, in cooperation with the Rafto Foundation for Human Rights. The film revolves around four children living in an orphanage in Xinjiang province, China. The children are Uyghurs, members of China's largest Muslim minority. Their dream is to become tightrope walkers, an ancient Uyghur tradition. The children start learning to tightrope walk, but within a few months, they are judged inadequate by their coach. Now some of their dreams change: one wants to become a teacher, another a professional singer. One of them however, feels he is simply too small to be good at anything. Eventually, even the one judged most talented at tightrope walking, and the one who dreams of a place in the Guinness Book of World Records for tightrope walking, is let go by the unscrupulous coach who seems only interested in money. One year later, a different coach comes to the orphanage. Through love and kindness, he turns the children's initial failure at tightrope walking into success. The film culminates with their performance on a high wire - without a safety net - in front of their entire home town. Star Wars: The Legacy Revealed is a TV documentary which premiered on The History Channel in May 2007. It was produced by Prometheus Entertainment in association with The History Channel and Lucasfilm Ltd. The executive producer and director was Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Kevin Burns. The special focuses on how Star Wars is relevant today and the history that inspired it, and also makes various connections to Greek mythology. It consists of a number of interviews with well-known politicians, journalists, and critics, along with historical content and clips from all six of the Star Wars movies. The Life of Rayful Edmond Vol. 1 The Rise and Fall is a documentary film written and directed by Kirk Fraser. It was released by May 3rd Films on July 12, 2005 in Washington DC. Outing is a 2012 documentary drama film written and directed by Sebastian Meise and Thomas Reider. Sábado de Gloria is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Francisco Javier Padilla. New Eastenders is a 1996 documentary film directed by Ruhul Amin. Inselkind is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Cristina Amrein. Le Mythe de la 5ème île is a 2007 documentary film directed by Mohamed Saïd Ouma. It was selected by the African Film Festival of Cordoba - FCAT. In the spring of 1996, several children of suburban Conyers, GA, were found to be victims of syphilis. These teenagers of Rockdale County, who had come from comfortable homes, were interviewed by epidemiologists to find the cause of the epidemic. The startling results showed that teens as young as 14 were involved with many sex partners, often during all-night orgies. The Lost Children of Rockdale County takes a look at how this community has struggled with the revelation. Sul vulcano is a 2014 documentary film, written and directed by Gianfranco Pannone. Up Syndrome is a critically acclaimed, multi-award winning documentary directed by Duane Graves. It was picked up for distribution by CineClix shortly after its world premiere at the 2001 Slamdance Film Festival in Park City, UT, and made available in the USA via Hulu. The movie - known for its playful, stirring and otherwise unorthodox approach to a more serious subject - has since garnered international acclaim as one of the most honest portrayals of Down Syndrome ever committed to film. Its director and subject, both lifelong friends, took home the National Media Award from the National Down Syndrome Congress in 2002. The film was selected to join the permanent archives of the United States Library of Congress in 2009. Song of a Jewish Cowboy is a 2002 documentary about Scott Gerber, a rancher and musician from Sonoma County, California, who sings cowboy music and Yiddish folk songs. The documentary shows clips from his performances and a personal interview with Scott. Between Dreams is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Iris Olsson. Life Without Death is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Frank Cole. Sadermania: From Fanship to Friendship is a 2011 documentary film directed by Adam Gacka. Voices of Bam is a 2006 Dutch-made documentary feature film about 2003 Bam earthquake. The film was produced and directed by Dutch filmmakers Aliona van der Horst. The film is inspired by photographs that were recovered from the town's debris... the only tangible mementoes left of life before the earthquake. Invisibles is a 2007 documentary drama film written and directed by Fernando León de Aranoa, Isabel Coixet, Mariano Barroso, Javier Corcuera and Wim Wenders. So Sorry is a 2012 documentary film directed by Ai Weiwei. NOVA probes the 1994 Los Angeles earthquake. Even as the city struggles to repair itself from the tragedy, seismic pressure continues to build. Scientists fear that newly discovered faults could, at any moment, trigger California's most devastating natural disaster. The Clash: Westway to the World is a 2000 documentary film about the British punk rock band The Clash. In 2003 it won the Grammy Award for Best Long Form Music Video. Directed by Don Letts, the film combines old footage from the band's personal collection filmed in 1982 when The Clash went to New York with new interviews conducted for the film by Mal Peachey of members Mick Jones, Paul Simonon, Topper Headon, and Joe Strummer and other people associated with the group. Although The Clash: Westway to the World ostensibly provides an overview of the band's history, the film implies that The Clash broke up in 1983 when Mick Jones left the band, making no mention of the post-Jones version of the band that existed between 1983 and 1986, nor the album that iteration produced. Danny Garcia's 2012 documentary film The Rise and Fall of The Clash covers this period in some depth, placing an emphasis on the band's declining years and the repercussions of Mick Jones' ouster. Garcia's film also features interviews with latter-day Clash members Pete Howard, Nick Sheppard, and Vince White. Fulmaya, the Girl with Skinny Legs is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Vendula Bradáčová. The Man Who Skied Down Everest is a documentary about Yuichiro Miura, a Japanese alpinist who skied down Mt. Everest in 1970. The film was produced by Canadian film maker Budge Crawley. Miura skied 6,600 feet in 2 minutes and 20 seconds and fell 1320 feet down the steep Lhotse face from the Yellow Band just below the South Col. He used a large parachute to slow his descent. He came to a full stop just 250 ft. from the edge of the crevasse. The 1970 Japanese Everest Expedition was a combined ascent of the normal route, the first attempt at the South-West Face, and this ski descent. The film does not make this clear. Eight died during the expedition's ascent. Crawley won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for this picture. Miura also has a documentary skiing down Mount Fuji. Order of Service is a 2012 short film written and directed by Henk Otte. The Tugendhat House is a 2013 documentary film written & directed by Dieter Reifarth. The Battle of Mexico City is the second video release by Rage Against the Machine. The concert was recorded in Mexico City's MX Palacio de los Deportes in 1999 as part of their Battle of Los Angeles world tour. The city was chosen as the band had been longtime supporters of various political causes in Mexico. The VHS was released in 2001 and later released on DVD in 2002, including a one-on-one interview with Noam Chomsky. Che - The Last Hours is a 2003 film directed by Romano Scavolini. The Mission of Raoul Wallenberg is a 1990 film directed by Alexander Rodrijanski. A Place of Truth is a documentary film directed by Barrett Rudich. Shooting In The Wild is a 2013 documentary film, written by Aditi V. Desai, James Jackson, Christopher N. Palmer and Greg Smith, and directed by Ed Beimfohr. Biography is a 2012 short documentary written and directed by Magnus Bärtås. High Ground is a 2012 documentary film about eleven veterans who set off to climb one of the tallest peaks in the Himalaya to heal the physical and emotional wounds of war. The expedition is led by blind adventurer Erik Weihenmayer, the first blind man to summit Mount Everest, and a team of experienced Everest summiters who guide this team of wounded veterans on an astounding journey of body and mind. After an initial premiere at the Boulder International Film Festival Boulder, Colorado, the film was selected for participation in the Newport Beach Film Festival, Sarasota Film Festival,and the Seattle International Film Festival. Domestic release is planned for August 2012; DVD release is planned for Veteran's Day 2012. China. Die Künste - der Alltag. Eine filmische Reisebeschreibung is a 1985 documentary film directed by Ulrike Ottinger. Warren Ellis: Captured Ghosts is a feature-length documentary that takes an in depth look at the life, career and mind of the British comic book writer Warren Ellis. The film combines extensive interviews with Ellis with insights from his colleagues and friends, as well as ambient visual re-creations of his prose and comics work. Essai d'ouverture is a 1988 French 15-minute-long film by Luc Moullet. It's about one narrator and his attempts at opening a Coca-Cola bottle. The history of the Le Mans endurance race from its birth in 1923 to the present day. Includes the famous pre-war Bentleys, Ferraris, Aston Martins, the Porsche and the Jaguar. This film tells story of Britney Spears' rise to her status as global pop princess. From the tiny wannabe on the Mickey Mouse Club to one of the most famous and talented women on the planet, this program uses previously unseen footage and interviews to achieve the finest Britney Spears doc yet. The Motivation is a 2013 documentary sports film directed by Adam Bhala Lough. Janssen: Ego is a 1989 documentary film written by Peter Voss-Andreae, Stefanie Möbius and directed by Peter Voss-Andreae. Fabian Debora A Life For Art is a 2013 short documentary film written and directed by Jessica Kaye. Tailings is a 2012 short documentary film directed by Sam Price-Waldman. This Is My Element is an Element skateboarding video. It was their 8th video, and was released and premiered on June 21, 2007, Go Skateboarding Day, at 100 locations in the U.S., 34 of them in California alone. It was highly anticipated, and features tricks performed at 350 worldwide locations. The list price for the video was $23.99. Sisters in Resistance is a 2000 documentary by Maia Wechsler that tells the story of four young Frenchwomen who fought against the German occupation of France during World War II. The film won Outstanding Documentary by the Academy Award Screening Committee and won Best Documentary in the Woman in Cinema Film Festival. Kleine Nachtgespenster is a 1950 short documentary film directed by Eugen Schuhmacher. Guambianos is a 1981 film directed by Wolf Tirado and Jackie Reiter. Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience is a 2007 American documentary film directed by Richard E. Robbins, which portrays the lives and experiences of American combat soldiers who have been to the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. To Shoot an Elephant is a 2009 documentary film about the 2008-2009 Gaza War directed by Alberto Arce and Mohammad Rujailahk. American Lawn is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Robert Sickels. Niggaz4Life: The Only Home Video is a 1992 documentary film starring rap group N.W.A The film was released on November 2, 1992 and was distributed by Priority Records. It featured groups behind the scenes of their music videos, concert performances, interviews and at parties, as well as three music videos from the groups album, Niggaz4Life, "Alwayz Into Somethin'", "Appetite for Destruction" and "Approach to Danger". On October 8, 2002 the film was released on DVD format. Comme un coup de tonnerre is a French documentary about socialist candidate Lionel Jospin's campaign of 2002 for president and his subsequent ousting from the second election turn by Jean-Marie Le Pen. It was directed by Stéphane Meunier. Brasch - Words of Want, Words of Fear is a 2011 documentary world cinema film directed by Christoph Rüter. The Executioner's Tear is a documentary film written and directed by Layth Abdulamir. The Girls of the Rain is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Alinda Dimitriou. Amma Ariyan is a 1986 Malayalam film directed by avant-garde filmmaker John Abraham. The story revolves around the incidents following the death of a young Naxalite, upon whose death his friends travel to the village where his mother lives to inform her of the death of her only son. Amma Ariyan is considered to be a complex movie. Since its release in 1986, critics have read several layers of meaning in its story. The film was the only South Indian film to feature in British Film Institute's Top 10 Indian Films list. Eraserheads: The Reunion Concert The Movie is a film of the historical reunion concert of the Filipino alternative rock band Eraserheads on August 30, 2008. It was shown in theater on November 26, 2008, twenty-three days after the releasing of the DVD copy. Paul Goodman Changed My Life is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jonathan Lee and distributed by Zeitgeist Films. It will be released theatrically in the United States on October 19, 2011 at Film Forum in New York City. Italy: Love It or Leave It is a 2011 adventure romantic drama documentary film written and directed by Gustav Hofer and Luca Ragazzi. Feast of Friends is a 1970 music documentary film directed by Paul Ferrara. Crude Oil is a 2008 Chinese documentary film directed by Wang Bing. Filmed in the Inner Mongolian portion of the Gobi Desert, it follows a group of oil field workers as they go about their daily routine. Like Wang's debut feature — the nine-hour Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks — Crude Oil is notable for its extreme length, running 840 minutes. The original plan called for a 70-hour film, but Wang felt compelled to exert additional editorial control and reduced the work to its present length. The director himself came down with severe altitude sickness and left the location three days into the one-week shoot; his crew completed the remainder without him. Crude Oil premiered at the 2008 International Film Festival Rotterdam, where it received a "Special Mention" for "its dispassionate expose of the hardship of human labour which is the basis of economic progress." The project was commissioned by the IFFR, with additional support from the Hubert Bals Fund. It had its Asian premiere at the 2008 Hong Kong International Film Festival. Its North American premiere was at The Los Angeles Film Festival in June 2009, with screenings held in Gallery 6 at the Hammer Museum. The Witnesses of the War is a 2012 documentary film directed by Sami Solmaz. In search of Ted Demme is a 2010 documentary film. This Filthy World is a one-man show/documentary film by John Waters concerning his origins in the trash genre and his successful career navigating Hollywood. It was filmed at the Harry DeJour Playhouse in New York City in 2006. Something about Georgia is a 2009 documentary film directed by Nino Kirtadze. Inside My Head is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Erna Slotboom. Lombardi is a 2010 documentary film surrounding Pro Football Hall of Fame head coach Vince Lombardi produced by NFL Films and HBO. The documentary is one of three productions detailing Lombardi, along with a Broadway theatre and ESPN feature film. Besides focusing on his coaching career with the Green Bay Packers, it also details his playing days at Fordham University and being part of the Seven Blocks of Granite offensive line, along with being a high school coach and teacher at Englewood, New Jersey's St. Cecilia High School. Among the people interviewed are Lombardi's children and Hall of Famers Sam Huff, Frank Gifford, Bart Starr and Sonny Jurgensen. HBO found much of the clips in the documentary at the UCLA Film and Television Archive. The documentary was aired at Lambeau Field on November 18, the Pro Football Hall of Fame on November 27, and the College Football Hall of Fame on December 1 before airing on HBO on December 11. The documentary won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Sports Documentary. Dying at Grace is a 2003 documentary film directed by Allan King. The Shepherds of Berneray was a 50-minute television programme that aired in 1981. The documentary revolved around the people on the island of Berneray, North Uist, Scotland, during that time, and how they lived. The show starred the people of Berneray, who had lived there for most of their lives. It was filmed by Allen Moore and the late Jack Shea. A Guy Like Dieter - Native of Golzow is a 2000 film directed by Barbara Junge and Winfried Junge. Murray Walker: Life in the Fast Lane is a 2011 documentary film directed by Tim Gaunt. To Have or to Be is a 1994 documentary film directed by Helena Třeštíková. Every Day Except Christmas is a 37-minute documentary film filmed in 1957 at the Covent Garden fruit, vegetable and flower market, then located in the Covent Garden area of East central London. It was directed by Lindsay Anderson and produced by Karel Reisz and Leon Clore under the sponsorship of Ford of Britain, the first of the company's "Look at Britain" series. Every Day and other short, mostly documentary films made within two or three years, reflected the concept of Free Cinema, films which were "free" in the sense that they were made outside the traditional structure of filmmaking. Innerstate is a 2007 documentary film that chronicles the “inner states” of three adults living with chronic diseases of the immune system: psoriasis, Crohn's disease, and rheumatoid arthritis. The film was produced and directed by Chris Valentino and is notable for being entirely funded by Centocor Inc., a biomedicines company. According to the New York Times, the film is "an unusual form of soft-pedal marketing of a blockbuster drug, Remicade". Remicade is a pharmaceutical used to treat auto-immune diseases made by Centocor, a unit of Johnson & Johnson. Overnight is a 2003 documentary by Tony Montana and Mark Brian Smith. The film details the rise and fall of filmmaker and musician Troy Duffy, the writer-director of The Boondock Saints, and was filmed at his request. Duffy is presented as a victim of his own ego, and as the film progresses and his fortunes fade Duffy becomes increasingly abusive to his friends, relatives and business partners. According to co-director Montana, "Troy seemed to revel in the attention of Hollywood's lights and our cameras. Only three times during the production did he ask not to be filmed. It was on those occasions that he threatened us." Paris Was a Woman is a 1996 documentary film written by Andrea Weiss and directed by Greta Schiller. Tony & Janinas American Wedding is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Ruth Leitman. Between Hitler and Stalin: Ukraine in World War II is a 2003 film produced and directed by Slavko Nowytski and narrated by Jack Palance. The one-hour documentary, part black-and-white and part color, is a project of Ukrainian Canadian Research and Documentation Centre - an attempt to tell the story of the Second World War from a Ukrainian perspective. In a chronological manner, Nowytski's film unfolds during the years of Soviet-Nazi collaboration recounting the losses and suffering of the Ukrainian people; the documentary shifts to the destruction wrought by Joseph Stalin's scorched earth policy as the Soviet Union military retreated, and shows the ruins left behind by the German and then the Soviet offensives. Between Hitler and Stalin describes the activity of the underground resistance movements, and specifically the long and large-scale struggle of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army on two fronts - against both totalitarian powers - for Ukraine's independence. Schramm is a 1993 German horror film directed by controversial taboo-breaking auteur Jörg Buttgereit. It is stylised and artfully shot on 16mm film. It tells the story of a man who has been known in the media as the 'Lipstick Killer'. Loosely based on true crime criminology profiles of Carl Panzram and similar serial killers. Malcolm X: Prince of Islam is a 2006, 2 DVD, English language documentary by Green 72 Media about the life of Malcolm X, or El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz. It purports to be an "explosive new documentary with never before seen footage". The documentary was narrated by James Earl Jones, produced by Abdullah Jafri Shabbaz, sound by Abdul Razzaq, camera and edits by George Fernandes and directed by Muhammad Abdullah. On July 2 and 9 2006 the documentary was shown, in an edited version, on the Islam Channel. The DVD blurb on the back of the case states: In 2006 the documentary 'Malcolm X: Prince of Islam' was released. Antoine is an 82-minutes 2008 Canadian documentary film directed by Laura Bari. The film features a 5-year old blind kid named Antoine Houang. living in Montreal. It tells the real and imaginary life of Antoine, a boy detective who runs, drives, makes decisions, hosts radio shows and adores simultaneous telephone conversations. Over the course of two years, he uses a mini-boom microphone to discover and capture the sounds surrounding him. In this manner he also co-created the sound track of this film. INSIDE HANA'S SUITCASE A Theatrical Documentary Synopsis "Inside Hana's Suitcase", is the poignant story of two young children who grew up in pre-WWII Czechoslovakia and the terrible events that they endured just because they happened to be born Jewish. Based on the internationally acclaimed book "Hana's Suitcase" which has been translated into 40 languages, the film is an effective blend of documentary and dramatic techniques. In addition to tracing the lives of George and Hana Brady in the 1930's and 40's, "Inside Hana's Suitcase" tells the present-day story of "The Small Wings", a group of Japanese children, and how their passionate and tenacious teacher, Fumiko Ishioka, helped them solve the mystery of Hana Brady, whose name was painted on an old battered suitcase that they received from Auschwitz, the notorious Nazi death camp built in Poland. The film's plot unfolds as told through contemporary young storytellers who act as the omniscient narrators. They seamlessly transport us through 70 years of history and back and forth across three continents, and relate to us a story of unspeakable sadness and also of shining hope. For this is a Holocaust story unlike others. It provides a contemporary global perspective and lessons to be learned for a better future. Directed by award-winning filmmaker, Larry Weinstein, "Inside Hana's Suitcase" is a powerful journey full of mystery and memories, brought to life through the first-hand perspectives of Fumiko, Hana's brother George, and of Hana herself. Derby-Fieber USA is a 1979 documentary film directed and written by Roland Klick. Crocodiles Without Saddles is a 2012 short documentary family film written and directed by Britta Wandaogo. Kissed by Angels is 2001 short documentary film directed by Daniela Zanzotto. Hairspray: Inside the Recording Booth is a 2007 documentary short film directed by David Noel. Bayou Maharajah is a 2013 historical documentary music film directed by Lily Keber. Year of the Horse is a 1997 documentary directed by Jim Jarmusch following Neil Young and Crazy Horse on their 1996 tour. A Dangerous Game is a 2014 documentary film written by Richard Phinney and Anthony Baxter and directed by Anthony Baxter. The Magic of Flight is a 1996 short documentary film written by Jack Stephens and directed by Greg MacGillivray. This powerful program features amazing, never-before-seen photos and personal stories of North Vietnamese war photographers as they relive their unforgettable experiences in the war. This is the companion to the new book Another Vietnam, an unprecedented view of the war in Vietnam from the perspective of Vietnamese photojournalists. At All Costs is a 1996 documentary film directed by Claire Simon. Marisa Monte: Memories, Chronicles and Declarations of Love is a music film performed by Brazilian singer Marisa Monte. Full Circle is a 1993 Canadian documentary, third and last of the National Film Board of Canada's Women and Spirituality series, focusing on women's spirituality in the Western World at the end of the 20th century, the Goddess movement and feminist Wicca new religious movements, as the preceding Goddess Remembered and The Burning Times featuring neopagan activist Starhawk. In this documentary, authors, teachers, social activists and feminists explore manifestations of contemporary women's spirituality in the Western world. Drawing on the customs, rites and knowledge of the past, Full Circle envisions a sustainable future where domination is replaced with respect. At the centre of these discussions is a reverence for the Earth. Shattered Dream is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Yin Jiang, Weiming Ma, Hualian Xu and Rongshan Zhao. Buster Keaton Rides Again is a 1965 documentary film about the filming of Buster Keaton's film The Railrodder, which was also released in 1965. Although it is a production documentary, this film is actually longer than The Railrodder, which was only 24 minutes long. Both films were produced by the National Film Board of Canada. Buster Keaton Rides Again also features footage from Keaton's previous films The Butcher Boy, The Frozen North, Seven Chances, and The General. The film was directed by John Spotton and narrated by Michael Kane. Moments of Play is a 1986 documentary film written and directed by Jørgen Leth. Vieuphoria is a long form music video by American alternative rock band The Smashing Pumpkins, originally released on VHS on October 4, 1994 and DVD on November 26, 2002. It was certified gold by the RIAA in late 1996. The video consists of various Smashing Pumpkins performances, mostly from the Siamese Dream tour, interspersed with comedy bits, interviews, featurettes, and other short videos. The soundtrack for the film, Earphoria, was released as a promo CD in 1994 and officially in 2002. The White Game is a 1968 Swedish documentary film about the protests against the 1968 Davis Cup tennis match between Sweden and Rhodesia, in Båstad, Sweden. Mountain of Fire: The Search for the True Mount Sinai is a 2002 documentary film written by Jim Schmidt and directed by John Schmidt. Gen Silent is a 2010 documentary film, directed and produced by Stu Maddux. The documentary follows the lives of six LGBT seniors living in the Boston area who must choose if they will hide their sexuality in order to survive in the long-term health care system. It has been screened at numerous colleges and universities as well as in front of government agencies and healthcare organizations. It premiered at the Boston LGBT Film Festival and has won numerous awards at others. The title of the film is a reference to the generations of older LGBT people who remain in the closet or re enter the closet out of concern for their safety or quality of life. As a result of the documentary, the term Gen Silent has increased in use as a way to refer to this group. Holyland Journey is a 2003 documentary, world cinema and travel film. Gotoma the Buddha is a 1956 Indian documentary film directed by Rajbans Khanna. It was entered into the 1957 Cannes Film Festival, where it won a Special Mention for Best Director and was nominated for the Golden Palm. In Our Water is a 1982 documentary film directed by Meg Switzgable, about a family in South Brunswick, New Jersey who discover their drinking water is contaminated by a nearby landfill. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. Olavi Virta is a 1972 documentary film written and directed by Peter von Bagh. Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel is a 2011 documentary about the life and career of Diana Vreeland, a fashion legacy famous for her time at Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue. The film was directed and produced by Lisa Immordino Vreeland, Bent-Jorgen Perlmutt, and Frédéric Tcheng. It premiered at the 2011 Venice International Film Festival and the Telluride Film Festival. It has a total running time of 86 minutes, and can be seen with English, French, and Italian subtitles. The Archive Project is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by John Hughes. World of Kids is a 1951 American short documentary film directed by Robert Youngson. It won an Academy Award in 1952 for Best Short Subject. Alex Campos: Back to You is a 2014 documentary concert film. Confessions of an Eco-Terrorist is a 2010 documentary film written by Timothy Wade Huntley and directed by Peter Jay Brown. Pescado Rabioso, Una Utopía Incurable is a documentary film written and directed by Lidia Milani. Masked Monkey - The Evolution Of Darwin's Theory is a 2014 documentary film written by Ismail Fahmi Lubish and Oyjai Nanta and directed by Ismail Fahmi Lubish. Portrait of a Lone Farmer is a 2013 Nigerian Danish documentary film by Jide Tom Akinleminu, about life on his father's chicken farm in Nigeria. Cartas de uma Escrita Comum is a 2013 short documentary drama written by Rúben Gonçalves and Isabel Pestana and directed by Rúben Gonçalves. Vernon, Florida is a 1981 documentary film produced and directed by Errol Morris profiling various eccentric residents living within the town of Vernon, Florida. Originally titled Nub City, this follow-up to Gates of Heaven was initially focused on residents of the Southern town who cut off their own limbs as a way to collect insurance money. After Morris's life was threatened by the subjects of the film, he re-worked Nub City into Vernon, Florida. Various clips of the movie would later be included as intro/outro segments for The Heart, She Holler. Jimmy Carr: Making People Laugh is a 2010 documentary and comedy film directed by Paul Wheeler. My Mother's Compass is a 2012 documentary directed by Hatice Kamer. Big Rig is a 2007 documentary film by Doug Pray about long-haul truck drivers. The film consists of a series of interviews with different drivers, focusing on both their personal life stories and also the life and culture of truck drivers in the United States. Disputed Vision is a 2012 short, historical documentary film written by Fernando Severo and directed by Fabianne Balvedi. Facing Goliath is a 2006 documentary film about a competitive bodybuilder who assists a visually impaired friend transform from middle aged, over weight, couch potato to natural bodybuilder. The story deals as much with the transformative power of the human spirit, when facing big obstacles, as it does with the subject of bodybuilding itself. The film was produced by Canadian film producer, actor, and bodybuilder, Sebastian MacLean, along with director, Kirk Pennell. It has been aired in over 116 countries, through affiliate networks associated with Al Jazeera English, via a program slot known as 'Witness'. Other networks that aired the program have included CBC Country Canada and New Zealand's Sky TV. It also currently circulates for free on the internet. The Peacekeepers is a 2005 documentary film directed Paul Cowan, following the United Nations mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the Democratic Republic of Congo between 2002 and 2004. Beyond Sight: The Derek Rabelo Story is a sports documentary directed by Bryan S. Jennings and Bruno Lemos. Pripyat is a 1999 documentary film directed by Nikolaus Geyrhalter. Motown 40: The Music Is Forever is a 1998 music documentary film written by Suzanne De Passe and Ruth Adkins Robinson and directed by Yvonne Smith. Welcome to the picturesque Kullu Valley. Nestling under the shadow of the majestic Himalayas, in the Northern Indian State of Himachal Pradesh. This region is also known as Dev Bhoomi, The Land of Gods, where every village is home to several Gods and Goddesses. Fårö-dokument 1979 is a 1979 documentary film directed by Ingmar Bergman. Back to the Square is a 2012 documentary film written by Torstein Grude and Petr Lom and directed by Petr Lom. The Melbourne Cup is a 1896 sports documentary short film directed by Marius Sestier When the Girls Were Flirting with the Gods is a 2011 documentary film directed by Damien Faure. 8 Bit is a documentary film directed by Marcin Ramocki. Keep on Rockin', aka Little Richard: Keep on Rockin is a film of a 1969 Little Richard concert at the Sweet Toronto Peace Festival, originally released in 1970. The film is in colour. THE LAST SURVIVOR is a character-based, feature-length documentary film that presents the stories of genocide Survivors and their struggle to make sense of tragedy by working to educate, motivate and foster a civic response to these horrific acts. Following the lives of survivors of four different genocides and mass atrocities -- The Holocaust, Rwanda, Darfur, and Congo -- THE LAST SURVIVOR presents a unique opportunity to learn from the lessons and mistakes of our past in order to have a lasting social impact on how we act collectively in the face of similar issues today.In choosing four survivors who work as activists in the anti-genocide movement, the film promotes the vital importance of Survivor advocacy -- the need for genocide Survivors to become leaders in a movement that seeks to remind the world what happens when apathy and inaction prevail. By presenting these stories of loss, survival, and hope side by side, the film highlights the commonalities these individuals share both as Survivors and, more broadly, as human beings.Having shot on location in five countries across four continents, the film focuses on the universality of the horror of genocide -- combating the misguided notion that genocide is something that happens "over there." Rather, the film asks its audience to consider genocide as an evil that has occurred on nearly every single continent and one that affects all of us as human beings. In the end, THE LAST SURVIVOR is above all else an intimate meditation on how one begins to pick up the pieces of a broken life after experiencing such tragedy.To learn more about how you can help survivors and prevent genocide, visit www.TheLastSurvivor.com Guru – Bhagwan, His Secretary & His Bodyguard is a 2010 historical biographical documentary film written and directed by Sabine Gisiger and Beat Häner. Kalama Sutta: Seeing Is Believing is a 2000 film directed by Holly Fisher. After Cook... is a 1969 documentary film directed by Donald Murray. At the Floral Ball is a 1900 short Documentary film directed by Alice Guy. Expedition Linné is a 2007 documentary film made for the 300th anniversary of the birth of Swedish botanist, physician, and zoologist Carl Linnaeus. The film was made by Swedish wildlife photographer Mattias Klum and journalist Folke Rydén and is intended to increase public understanding of and respect for nature in a journey through the seven continents, into space, and across the oceans. Prince Carl Philip of Sweden was on the film team for training in his studies of graphic design. Hollywood Mavericks is a 1988 film directed by Florence Dauman. Break the Silence: Kids Against Child Abuse is a short, partially animated documentary of a four young child abuse survivors. This film provides practical information on what kids and their parents can do to stop and prevent child abuse. Just shoot me is a 2011 documentary action drama film directed by Claudia Nunes. The Children of Russia is a 2001 documentary film from Spain, written and directed by Jaime Camino. It's All in Lebanon is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Wissam Charaf. Flower Power Ost - Die Blumenkinder des Sozialismus is a 2007 Documentary TV movie directed by Lutz Rentner and Frank Otto Sperlich. Tropicalia is a 2013 documentary film written by Vaughn Glover, Marcelo Machado and Di Moretti, directed by Marcelo Machado. Night lodgers is a documentary directed by Licínio Azevedo about squatters living in the former Grande Hotel Beira in Mozambique. InRealLife is a 2013 documentary film directed by Beeban Kidron. Scavenger is a 2012 documentary film directed by Torben Bernhard. The Architecture of Doom is a 1989 documentary by Swedish director Peter Cohen and narrated by Rolf Arsenius. German- and English-language versions have also been released. The Netherlands were occupied by the Germans in May 1940. After 5 years of suffering they were liberated by Canadian troops amongst others. The Long Walk Back is a 2012 drama documentary short film directed by Jonas Klittmark. Pina is a 2011 German 3D documentary film about the contemporary dance choreographer Pina Bausch. It was directed by Wim Wenders. The film premiered Out of Competition at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival. During the preparation of the documentary, Pina Bausch died unexpectedly. Wenders cancelled the film production, but the other dancers of Tanztheater Wuppertal convinced him to make the film anyway. It showcases these dancers, who talk about Pina and perform some of her best-known pieces, inside the Tanztheater Wuppertal and in various outdoor locations around the city of Wuppertal. Ward 54 is a 2010 documentary film directed by Monica Maggioni and co-written with Dario Curatolo. Jam is a 2006 drama film written by Craig E. Serling and Nicole Lonner and produced by Dianne Burnett for Burnett Entertainment in association with Thanksgiving Films. Directed by Serling as his first feature film, the film is the feature-length version of a short film by the same name that he shot in 2004. Starring Elizabeth Bogush, Dan Byrd, Julie Claire, and David DeLuise, Jam premiered at the Vail Film Festival on April 1, 2006, aired on television on the Starz! TV channel, and was released on DVD on July 3, 2007, by the Starz! distribution branch of Anchor Bay Entertainment. Mighty Uke: The Amazing Comeback of a Musical Underdog is a documentary film about the ukulele. It combines graphics, photographs, interviews and performance footage to tell the story of the ukulele and its recent resurgence in popularity. Gold Star Children is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Mitty Griffis Mirrer. For the first Time: Information you were never meant to know. Amazing UFO photos and footage you were never meant to see. Fastwalker is a code word created by NORAD to classify unidentified flying objects which approach our Earth from space and enter our atmosphere. It has been reported that from its subterranean facility deep inside Cheyenne Mountain Colorado, USA, the Air Force NORAD facility tracks a rough average of 500 of these Fastwalkers each year. Fastwalkers provides astounding revelations by some of the world’s foremost authorities on the subject of UFO’s and seeks to provide a world view of what is really happening on planet Earth, through contactee testimonies, experiences accounts, and abductee’s stories. Hear the analysis of scientists and experts. Discover the reality of extraterrestrial contact. Ileksen is a 1978 documentary film directed by Dennis O'Rourke. You Think You Really Know Me: The Gary Wilson Story is a documentary about the experimental musician Gary Wilson, directed by Michael Wolk. The film documents Wilson's career during the late 1970s/early 1980s and his return to the public eye in 2002 after two decades of self-imposed exile. It was shot entirely in DV, with 35mm, 16mm, and 8mm archival footage. The film was screened at several sold out independent theaters in 2005. The movie was released by Plexifilm on June 17, 2008. Wilson sold out a rare New York City concert on June 6, 2008 at The Knitting Factory to promote the film. Nick Bougas' sequel to his own Death Scenes (1989) is a nauseating mondo documentary about violent death. The bulk of the tape is consumed with the same war-atrocity footage already overused in dozens of other mondo films, but the last 20 minutes do hold some interesting surprises. Das höchste Gut einer Frau ist ihr Schweigen is a 1980 documentary film directed and written by Gertrud Pinkus. This is Justin Bieber is a 2011 documentary film. Unplugged is a 2013 dramatic-comedy musical documentary film written and directed by Mladen Kovacevic. Info Wars is a 2004 film which shows the mechanics of modern information warfare and media hacking. The featured stories are intertwined but circle around the central subject of the film: How the modern mass media can be used to reach certain ends by all involved parties. The film is named after the Ars Electronica title of 1998. Traveling With Che Guevara is a 2003 film directed by Gianni Minà. Robert Williams Mr. Bitchin' is a 2013 documentary biographical film written by Nancye Ferguson and directed by Mary C Reese and Nancye Ferguson. The Girls in the Band is a 2011 documentary, biographical, historical fiction, and music film written by Judy Chaikin and Edward Osei-Gyimah and directed by Judy Chaikin. Unauthorized: The Harvey Weinstein Project Award winning film. Zizek!, sometimes written as Žižek!, is a 2005 American/Canadian documentary film directed by Astra Taylor. Its subject is philosopher and psychoanalyst Slavoj Žižek, a prolific author and former candidate for the Presidency of Slovenia. Zizek! premiered at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival on September 11, 2005 and opened in one theatre in New York City on November 17. It eventually grossed $20,177 in the US and $20,154 in foreign markets for a total worldwide box office of $40,331. The Boy Kumasenu is a 1952 feature film made in Ghana by a British film crew. It was produced and directed by Sean Graham from a script by Graham and John Wyllie. The score was by Elisabeth Lutyens. Four Letters Apart—Children in the Age of ADHD is a 2013 documentary film directed by Erlend E. Mo. This Unfamiliar Place is a 1992 short documentary film directed by Eva Ilona Brzeski. Hamburg damals – Die Jahre 1970-74 is a 2006 documentary film directed by Christian Mangels. The Thought Exchange is a 2012 New Thought Documentary Film based on a book by the same title, it was the directorial debut of Usher Morgan who also produced the film. The film stars David Friedman and Lucie Arnaz among others who appeared on the film and testified to the concepts taught by Friedman throughout the film, this was the first film ever released by Digital Magic Entertainment. Remember Chek Jawa is a 47-minute documentary made on digital video by freelance cinematographer Eric Lin Youwei. It documents a biodiversity survey conducted in 2001, by a small group of volunteer conservationists, headed by botanist Joseph Lai, months before the Singapore government's reclamation project at Chek Jawa, Pulai Ubin. Chek Jawa is an inter-tidal area of about 1 square kilometre which supports a vast amount of plant and animal lives encompassing six ecosystems. The volunteers' efforts were rewarded when the government agreed, in December 2001, to defer use of the Chek Jawa land for the next ten years. The documentary is available as a DVD under Objectifs Films, available in the libraries under the National Library Board, Singapore. The Road to Independence is a 2007 documentary film directed by Mike Church. An Attempt to Find Out is a 2003 documentary film by Almantas Grikevičius. Felix: Self-Fictions of a Smuggler is a 2011 drama documentary written and directed by Adriana Trujillo. The Ultimate Wave Tahiti is a 2010 documentary film directed by Stephen Low and written by Alexander Low. Playing With Shadows is a 2013 documentary film directed by Xiaoyu Niu. Let the Good Times Roll is a 1973 rockumentary / concert film directed by Robert Abel and Sidney Levin. It features numerous stars from the American pop and rock music scene of the 1950s. Romantic Warriors II: A Progressive Music Saga About Rock in Opposition is a 2012 feature length documentary film about the Rock in Opposition movement of the late 1970s, the music genre it spawned, and the influence it has on experimental groups across the world. The film was written and directed by Adele Schmidt and José Zegarra Holder, and was released in the United States by Zeitgeist Media. It premiered in Washington, D.C. on September 28, 2012. The film was generally well received by critics, with a reviewer at AllMusic saying that it "covers all the points an aficionado could possibly want". Romantic Warriors II is a sequel to Zeitgeist Media's 2010 documentary on progressive rock by Schmidt and Holder, Romantic Warriors: A Progressive Music Saga. In 2013 Zeitgeist also released Romantic Warriors II: Special Features DVD, comprising additional material filmed during the making of Romantic Warriors II. Tibesti Too is a 1976 short, documentary film directed by Raymond Depardon. Tierra caliente... Se mueren los que la mueven is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Francisco Vargas. Killing Oswald is a 2013 documentary film directed by Shane O'Sullivan. 4000 Steps To The Sky is a 1963 short film directed by Titus Mesaros. Burger is a 2013 short drama film written and directed by Magnus Mork. The Guardians of the Earth is a short 2010 film directed by Eric Matthies. Se Hai Una Montagna Di Neve, Tienila All'Ombra is a 2010 Italian documentary film written and directed by Elisabetta Sgarbi. The Iceman Interviews is a 2003 documentary film directed by Arthur Ginsberg. Cesar's Last Fast is a 2014 American documentary film co-directed and produced by Richard Ray Perez and Lorena Parlee. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2014. Before the premiere of the film at Sundance Film Festival, Participant Media and Univision News acquired the TV rights of the film. The film will premiere simultaneously in English on Pivot and in Spanish on the Univision Network. Tapia is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Eddie Alcazar. Orgasmic Birth: The Best-Kept Secret also called Orgasmic Birth: 11 Mothers, 12 International Experts or just Orgasmic Birthis a 2008 documentary film that examines the intimate nature of birth. It had been shown at women's and film festivals since May 2008, before being shown for the first time in primetime on January 2, 2009 by ABC’s 20/20. The documentary follows the journey of eleven women through labour, presenting how blissful birth can be. Interviews with experts, (doulas, doctors, midwives, gynecologists, anthropologists, neonatologists, nurses, Lamaze educators, and mothers and fathers) explore how the birthing process has become a medical procedure rather than a natural process. Noted narrators include Ina May Gaskin. While the documentary features several mothers who claim to have had an orgasm during labor, it is primarily about natural labour at the home without drugs. "Piecing together the various narratives of Philip Hoffman's brilliant All Fall Down, his first feature-length work after innumerable magnificent shorts, is one of the most invigorating and rewarding pleasures you're likely to have in a cinema this year. Merging a personal essay with a regional history, All Fall Down is constructed from artifacts, beginning obliquely with scratched, black-and-white aerial footage of southern Ontario and an agitated man describing the deterioration of his health on the soundtrack. The voice belongs to writer George Lachlan Brown, whose life took an unforeseen and tragic course when he was in his thirties. Seen only in home-movie footage and heard on countless phone messages that grow increasingly aggravated and anxious, Brown resorts to living in shelters (he has health, economic and immigration problems) after losing his car. An outsider desperate for any attention and unable to deal with the situation in which he finds himself, Brown struggles to find equilibrium while his imagination turns to wild conspiracy theories. Developing alongside this tale is an investigation of a genuine regional historical figure, who we discover to be hardly what she seems. These two storylines are juxtaposed with Hoffman's serio-comic use of footage from a historical docudrama that he made but was never properly paid for. (A running tally counts the value of the footage until Hoffman uses enough to balance the fee he expected for the project.) All Fall Down smartly references Wallace Stevens's classic modernist poem “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird,” which analyzes how different perspectives can seem utterly irreconcilable yet completely logical depending on the context. As Brown's entreaties to his unnamed former wife grow more disconnected and outrageous, we start questioning how much we actually know about people – and what constitutes a personality. Is the real George Lachlan Brown the person we hear on the voicemails, the father playing with his daughter in the home movies or someone else entirely? Hoffman's own links to Brown are intimate and complex. What emerges is a film that is at once mysterious, visually and aurally stunning, heart-rending and intellectually rigorous." Quoting Steve Gravestock on the 2009 TIFF site. Vast is my Native Land, also known as Great is my Country, from the song of the same name, which is featured in the film, by the Russian composer Isaac Dunaevsky was the first film shot in the Soviet wide-screen film format known as Kinopanorama. The film was directed by Roman Karmen, known for various documentary films produced in the Soviet Union. The music was composed by Kirill Molchanov, a noted composer of music for ballet and opera. The Sovcolor film, which is 90-minutes in length, was premièred on 28 February 1958 at the Mir Kino Theatre in Moscow. The film was screened throughout the USSR. An edited version of the film was screened In June and July, 1958, at the Mayfair Theatre in New York City in conjunction with Soviet Trade Exhibition at the New York Coliseum. The film was released in France on 12 May 1961 as Pokoriteli morya. Children of the Pyre is a 2008 film documentary directed and produced by Rajesh S. Jala. The film documents the stories of seven children who cremate dead bodies and steal cremation shrouds at India's largest crematorium, Manikarnika, on the banks of the Ganges. Jalal, also the cinematographer, shot over 100 hours of footage at the crematorium and surrounding sites, including candid interviews with the seven children described in the film, who discuss their difficult life cremating dead bodies and stealing shrouds from the bodies brought to the crematorium and reselling them to merchants for a nominal fee. In 2009, the filmmaker launched a project to improve the lives of the 300 children working at the crematorium. The film was awarded "Best Documentary" at the 2008 Montréal World Film Festival, 2008 Sao Paulo International Film Festival, 2008 Indian Film Festival of Los Angeles, 2009 Asiatica Film Mediale, 2009 IDPA, and the "Silver Lotus Award" for "Best Audiography" at the 56th National Film Awards. Following the Ninth: In the Footsteps of Beethoven's Final Symphony is a documentary drama film directed by Kerry Candaele. War Torn - Stories Of Separation is a nominated work in the 2007 British Academy Television Craft Award for Interactive Innovation. After exploring the phenomenon of TREKKIES, filmmaker Roger Nygard takes on The Nature of Existence. As he roams the globe to the source of each of the world's philosophies, religions, and belief systems, Nygard interviews spiritual leaders, scholars, scientists, artists, pizza chefs, and others who have influenced, inspired, or freaked out humanity. Hanging With The Racers is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Sabrina Anselment. Old Man and the Lady is a 2009 documentary short film written and directed by Markku Heikkinen. American Boy: A Profile of Steven Prince is a 1978 documentary directed by Martin Scorsese. Its subject is Scorsese's friend Steven Prince, best known for his small role as Easy Andy, the gun salesman in Taxi Driver. Prince is a raconteur telling stories about his life as an ex-drug addict and a road manager for Neil Diamond. Scorsese intersperses home movies of Prince as a child as he talks about his family. When talking of his years as a heroin addict, Prince tells a story about injecting adrenaline into the heart of a woman who overdosed, with the help of a medical dictionary and a Magic Marker. This story was re-enacted by Quentin Tarantino in his screenplay for Pulp Fiction. Prince also tells a story about his days working at a gas station, and having to shoot a man he caught stealing tires, after the man pulled out a knife and tried to attack him. This story was retold in the Richard Linklater film Waking Life. The Neil Young song "Time Fades Away" is featured during the film's closing credits. A sequel, American Prince, was released in 2009 and was directed by Tommy Pallotta. Wild Safari 3D: A South African Adventure is a 2005 documentary directed by Ben Stassen. One Dollar, el precio de la vida is documentary directed by Hector Herrera and Joan Cutrina. The documentary portrays a stark vision of the reality of life on the streets of Panama, focusing on the city of Colon. The film was shot in the months of September to November 1999, January to August 2000 and January and February 2001. Filming took place in the slums of Panama and the film features performances from several local reggae artists such as DJ LOLO, Julio Moreno and Kafu Banton. There were two wars going on in Iraq - one was fought with armies of soldiers, bombs and a fearsome military force. The other was fought alongside it with cameras, satellites, armies of journalists and propaganda techniques. One war was rationalized as an effort to find and disarm WMDs - Weapons of Mass Destruction; the other was carried out by even more powerful WMDs, Weapons of Mass Deception.The TV networks in America considered their non-stop coverage their finest hour, pointing to the use of embedded journalists and new technologies that permitted viewers to see a war up close for the first time. But different countries saw different wars. Why?For those of us watching the coverage, war was more of a spectacle, an around the clock global media marathon, pitting media outlets against each other in ways that distorted truth and raised as many questions about the methods of TV news, as it did the armed intervention it was covering-and it some cases-promoting.WMD busts through so-called "objective reporting" to challenge media complicity with the government and its cooperation in presenting the Iraq War the way it did. This is a hard-hitting, yet personal film that looks at the television war and asks why the American audience lapped it up and how the Pentagon helped shape media coverage. Land of Widows a 21-minute Indian documentary film directed by Aarti Shrivastava. The film focuses on the unsustainable working conditions of mine workers in the state of Rajasthan, India. Set in the Bhilwara district of Rajasthan this film captures the exploitation the workers have to go through on a daily basis to work in illegal mines for a ‘dollar a day’. Blending investigative journalism with helplessness and dark humour, the film tells the stories of average sandstone miners victimized by corporate greed and political corruption. It examines how sandstone mining has affected the local communities and also people occupied with this occupation. Despite stone mining’s links to several occupational diseases such as psychoneurosis, silicosis, tuberculosis, asbestosis and asthma, abject poverty keeps driving villagers in many parts of the state to illegal mining. More than 70 men from 60 families have died in the last few years of silicosis caused by inhalation of dust containing free crystalline silica. God Went Surfing with the Devil is a 2010 surfing documentary directed by Alexander Klein that follows the story of a group of activists who are trying to get a shipment of 23 surfboards into the Gaza strip. The group is met with several problems, including the border of Gaza being sealed by Israel. The DVD was released in the US on May 24, 2011 and shortly thereafter was distributed on Netflix. The Cloudy Bridge is a documentary film directed by Jeong Il-geon. Wetlands Preserved is a 2008 documentary film directed by Dean Budnick. Roger & Me is a 1989 American documentary film directed by Michael Moore. Moore portrays the regional negative economic impact of General Motors CEO Roger Smith's summary action of closing several auto plants in Flint, Michigan, costing 30,000 people their jobs at the time. In 2013 the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". Cruel and Unusual is a 2006 American documentary film directed and produced by Janet Baus, Dan Hunt and Reid Williams about the experiences of male-to-female transsexual women in the United States prison system. It was screened on television as Cruel and Unusual: Transgender Women in Prison. How Ping-Pong Saved the World is a 2013 sport documentary film written and directed by Ed Mabe. Del Poder is a 2011 documentary film directed by Zaván. The Mystery of Picasso is a 1956 French documentary film about the painter Pablo Picasso, directed by Henri-Georges Clouzot, and showing Picasso in the act of creating paintings for the camera. Most of the paintings were subsequently destroyed so that they would only exist on film, though some may have survived. The film begins with Picasso creating simple marker drawings in black and white, gradually progressing to full scale collages and oil paintings. It won the Special Jury Prize at the 1956 Cannes Film Festival and was shown out of competition at the 1982 Festival. This famous art movie wasn't the first documentary showing Picasso painting images on glass plates from the viewpoint of the camera. The Belgian documentary film Visit to Picasso did it almost seven years earlier. Elf Jahre alt is an East German film. It was released in 1966. Obama Mama is a 2014 biographic documentary film about Ann Dunham by producer/director Vivian Norris. It was co-produced with Brian Woods. The film was a featured selection at the 2014 Seattle International Film Festival, where it premiered in May, 2014 at the Kirkland Performance Center in Kirkland, Washington. Tom Tangney of the Broadcast Film Critics Association listed it as one of his ten "best bests" for SIFF. The Punk Syndrome is a film about Finnish punk rock band Pertti Kurikan Nimipäivät. The film is directed by Jukka Kärkkäinen and J-P Passi and premiered in cinemas in Finland on 4 May 2012. Sorting It Out at Ocho Rios is a 2010 short documentary film directed by Vijay Sekhon. The Player is a 2009 documentary film written and directed by John Appel. "As this film makes clear, its director John Appel has a deeply rooted interest in gambling. His father was an ardent horserace player, which caused problems in the family to say the least. Shortly before he died, Appel's father wrote him a letter while he was still at school. This letter serves as Appel's point of departure for an investigation into the causes of his father's destructive gambling mania, which he blends in the film with the stories of several other men, alter egos of his father. Interestingly, it is almost exclusively men who suffer from this dependence on gambling. Using family photos and films, Appel relates anecdotes to characterize his father and shed light on the events that led to his downfall. In between, we visit the horse races, where we meet an extremely good-humored bookie named Harry. Another Harry is a compulsive liar and gambling addict who is in jail for the umpteenth time. Even there, he cannot resist being deceptive. And we see a poker player who makes his tragic way from a Spartan hotel room to the casino each day. In Appel's psychological portrait of his father, it gradually emerges just what drives the gamblers and why their addiction is so difficult to put a stop to." Quoting the description form the 2009 iDFA site. Isole nella laguna is a 1948 documentary film written and directed by Luciano Emmer. Standing on Sacred Ground: Islands of Sanctuary is a 2013 documentary film written by Jessica Abbe and directed by Christopher McLeod. Burning the Future: Coal in America is a 2008 documentary film produced and directed by David Novack. The film focuses on the impacts of mountaintop mining in the Appalachians, where mountain ridges are scraped away by heavy machinery to access coal seams below, a process that is cheaper and faster than traditional mining methods but is damaging to the environment. Some environmental problems discussed in the film include disfigured mountain ranges, extinct plant and animal species, toxic groundwater, and increased flooding. The film's run time is 89 minutes. The Executive Producer of the film is CJ Follini, Founder and CEO of the former Gun For Hire Production Studios. Patto d'amicizia is a 1951 Italian film. The Thin Green Line is a documentary film, made by Australian Park Ranger Sean Willmore. In 2004 Willmore travelled the world, across six continents and nineteen countries, interviewing and filming the lives and stories of park rangers, recounting their experiences and extreme difficulties. The film premiered simultaneously in 50 countries on International Rangers Day, 31 July 2007, to an audience of about 15,000 people in 330 locations worldwide, including many of the more remote locations featured in the documentary. Following this event, Californian State Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger was inspired to declare 31 July California State Park Ranger Day. The Thin Green Line is also the name of the not for profit foundation set up by Sean Willmore in the wake of the documentary's success. The aim of the foundation is to support rangers on the frontline, including the International Ranger Dependency Fund which supports the families of committed rangers who have lost their lives, or rangers who have been severely injured in the line of duty. The Thin Green Line is also the title of a book in the series by Retired U.S Fish and Wildlife Service Agent Terry Grosz. Lisboa Orchestra é uma música, curta-metragem e documentário de 2012 escrito e dirigido por Guillaume Delaperriere. The Unfinished Journey of Robert Kennedy is a 1970 documentary film written by Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and directed by Mel Stuart. White Horse is a short documentary by filmmakers Maryann DeLeo and Christophe Bisson that features a man returning to his Ukraine home for the first time in twenty years. Evacuated from the city of Pripyat, Ukraine in 1986 due to the Chernobyl disaster, he has not returned since then. DeLeo is the same filmmaker of the 2004 Academy Award-winning short film Chernobyl Heart. The Private Life of Cinema is a 2011 documentary by Quebec film director and producer Denys Desjardins. Green Fire: Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for Our Time is a 2011 documentary and biography film directed by Ann Dunsky, Steve Dunsky and Dave Steinke. To Have or Not to Have is a documentary film. It was the first writing and directorial effort of Niki Karimi. "Glenn Gould is arguably the most documented classical musician of the last century. In addition to numerous films about him (including François Girard's seminal Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould and two fine portraits by Roman Kroitor), Gould appeared in countless radio and television programmes, culminating with John McGreevy's legendary Glenn Gould's Toronto. Still, few of these pieces have managed to truly capture all of the myriad contradictions that made up Gould. Most have readily accepted his carefully groomed public persona. One of the more notable aspects of Michèle Hozer and Peter Raymont's Genius Within: The Inner Life of Glenn Gould is how it explores the incongruities between Gould's private reality and his wider image. It investigates Gould's personal life, specifically his long-running affair with painter Cornelia Foss, his drug intake and how his public facade began to take over his existence. Genius Within is packed with compelling interviews with key people in Gould's life, including childhood friends, collaborators and even pop singer Petula Clark (a semi-ironic obsession for Gould). Hozer and Raymont have unearthed some truly extraordinary unseen footage, like the short film Gould made with writer and photographer Jock Carroll in the Caribbean. The documentary is a fascinating record of a key moment in our cultural history – that post-war period in the fifties and sixties when you could actually begin to discuss Canadian culture as a distinct entity. But what ultimately emerges is a man imprisoned by his own eccentricities and an image that came to dominate his life. In many ways, the film is a portrait of loneliness and isolation, which some saw as Gould's overriding themes in his radio work and writing. Genius Within is an assured, comprehensive and balanced portrait of one of Canada's most significant cultural icons." Quoting Steve Gravestock on the 2009 TiFF site. Dolphins and Whales 3D: Tribes of the Ocean is a 2008 documentary short adventure film directed by Jean-Jacques Mantello. William Shelton And The Sklaletut Pole is a 2013 short documentary film directed by Jeff Boice. Recycled Life is a 2006 American short documentary film directed by Leslie Iwerks. It relays the story of a massive toxic landfill near Guatemala City, and the local residents who scavenge there to eke out their meager living. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Art of Transcending is a 2013 short documentary film written by Ricardo Valenzuela Pinilla and directed by Camila Bascuñán Svendsen and Ricardo Valenzuela Pinilla. Ukraine Is Not a Brothel is a 2013 Documentary film directed by Kitty Green. The Mangoes is a 2012 documentary film directed by Tonny Trimarsanto. The Camp is a 2013 Arabic language documentary film by Egyptian photographer, filmmaker and director Tamer Eissa, about the "Arab Spring Camp" attended by children of martyrs who fell in Gaza and children of martyrs of the Egyptian revolution. The children's camp took place in July 2012 for 2 weeks in two locations: in Cairo and in Nuebaa by the Red Sea. Through interviews of the organizers and of the children, and by following their activities in the camp, the documentary depicts the experience of the children in the camp during the two weeks, focusing on the personal stories of three of the children: Siraj, Rizk and Shahd. The film first screened in Cairo on April 1, 2013. Multiple Man is a 1970 short documentary film directed by Georges Dufaux and Claude Godbout. Vertical City is a 2011 short documentary film directed by Avijit Mukul Kishore. Malaysian Gods is a 2009 Malaysian documentary film by Amir Muhammad and produced by Da Huang Pictures. Although not fully banned, the Malaysian Film Censorship Board disallowed it from screening in cinemas and on TV. It thus was screened in college campuses and private venues. It premiered on 18 April 2009 at the 22nd Singapore International Film Festival. Souls of Zen is a 2012 documentary film written by Tim Graf and directed by Tim Graf and Jakob Montrasio. The Real Patsy Cline is a 2009 musical film. Le pouvoir is a 2013 Documentary film written by Pierre Favier and directed by Patrick Rotman. Dieppe 1942 is a 1979 documentary film written by Timothy Findley and William Whitehead, and directed by Terrence McCartney Filgate. El Antillano is a documentary film directed by Tito Román Rivera. When We Play For Real is a 2011 documentary film directed by Patti Rhodes. The Geometry Part 1: Standard Deviants is a 1999 documentary film. The Major is the first BBC natural history documentary film to be made in colour, though it was originally screened, in 1963, in black and white, as colour television broadcasts did not begin in the United Kingdom until 1967. After that it became one of the BBC Natural History Unit's most repeated shows. It describes the felling of an eponymous, three-century-old, oak tree, which has become considered a hazard to traffic, and the effect that that has on the wildlife that lives in it, and on the fictionalised English village in which it grew. Actor Paul Rogers narrated a script by Desmond Hawkins. Filming was by Eric Ashby and Leslie Jackman, the latter filming the insect scenes at his home in Paignton. The 35-minute film was produced by Christopher Parsons. The music was composed and conducted by George Shears and performed by the BBC's West of England Players. Although the tree was in the Forest of Dean, filming of the "nearby" village was actually done at Eastcombe in the Cotswolds, and the village cricket match there was played by actors. Homework looks at Radiohead's entire history from their university days through to the global success they have achieved today. Contains rare footage of the band, classic performances, rare interviews, exclusive contributions from friends and colleagues, review and insight from journalists and the group's biographers, seldom seen photographs and a host of other features. With so much coming out of the music industry that is shallow, uninspiring and downright dull, it's more than a little refreshing when a band do things a bit differently. In the case of Radiohead - who do things a lot differently - it's not just refreshing, it's life changing! Argentinísima is a 1972 Argentine musical documentary film directed by Fernando Ayala and Héctor Olivera written by Félix Luna. The film premiered on 8 July 1972 in Buenos Aires. The film consists of musical performances, mostly Argentine folklore, many of which are accompanied by dancing. Several sequences were filmed in scenic locations throughout the country. Argentinísima II was released the following year in 1973. De stad die nooit rust is a 1928 film directed by Andor von Barsy. Anukampan is a 1993 documentary film directed by Balaka Ghosh. Citizen Havel is a 2008 film directed by Pavel Koutecky and Miroslav Janek. Wal-Mart's plan to build a large store in a small town is the backdrop for this sharp-edged comedy. All goes well for the corporate giant until an 11th hour citizens' rebellion resists the lure of low prices to reveal another side of the bargain--a side which paves over open land, annihilates Main Street businesses, and rolls back wages. The story goes still deeper--following, over a period of seven years, one town's decision contrasted with another town 20 miles away. Personal and incisive, Talking to the Wall examines the proliferation of big box chain stores, and citizens turned into a nation of consumers, with depth and humor. This award-winning movie has helped numerous groups learn how to fight Wal-Mart. (summary from www.talkingtothewall.com) iThemba is a feature-length documentary film shot in Zimbabwe, directed and produced by Elinor Burkett and produced by Errol Webber, who also shot and edited the film. It premiered at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam in November 2010. The film follows the members of the Zimbabwean band Liyana, a group of eight musicians with physical disabilities who navigate a country where many of their neighbors consider them to be cursed. The funny and talented young people take viewers with them as they travel across the city of Bulawayo and into remote villages, to rural bottle shops and urban marketplaces, inside the huts of traditional healers and the neighborhoods of the urban poor – into an Africa rarely seen by outsiders, a place where tradition is not necessarily gentle, where it threatens to trap the unfortunate, and where a few fight back. Meet Marvelous Mbulo, the lady-killing lead singer, whose wit provides the film's heart. Listen to Prudence Mabhena, Liyana's musical heart. And travel Zimbabwe with the wise-cracking Energy Maburutse, whose humor belies the seriousness of his situation. Love Man Love Woman is a 2007 documentary film directed by Nguyen Trinh Thi. 10% - What Makes A Hero? is 2013 documentary, adventure and biography film written and directed by Yoav Shamir. Harry: A Communication Breakdown is a 2008 documentary film written, produced, and directed by Jon Doscher and Fran Ganguzza, and executive produced by Kevin Leckner of Starline Films, modeled after Roberta Roesch's novel Anyone's Son. Actor Danny Aiello narrates this documentary which follows the story of the 1976 De La Roche family murders in Montvale, NJ, and the testimony of people involved in the case, including Harry De La Roche. Harry gives his explanation of what happened in his first interview, after serving almost 30 years in prison for allegedly murdering the four family members. Finding The Footprints - A Look Back At Mise Éire is a 2011 Irish documentary that looks back on the making of one of Ireland's most iconic films "Mise Éire" Peter and Ben is a 2008 documentary short film directed by Pinny Grylls. Kofi Annan: Center of the Storm is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by David Grubin. Utopia is a 2013 documentary film written, produced and presented by John Pilger and directed by Pilger and Alan Lowery. The documentary takes its title from Utopia, an Aboriginal homeland in the Northern Territory of Australia and explores the experiences of indigenous Australians and what he terms "the denigrating of their humanity". Wood for War was a 1942 color short produced by the United States Department of Agriculture. Wine for the Confused is a documentary hosted by John Cleese. It is a light-hearted introduction to wine for novices. Cleese guides viewers through the basics of wine types and grape varieties, wine making, wine tasting and terminology, buying and storing wines, through direct narrative and interviews with wine makers and wine sellers. The film duration is 92 minutes and includes visits to wineries in California. The film concludes with a large group conducting a blind wine tasting. One of the tasting results was the fact that most tasters could not distinguish between red wine and white wine. Another was that most tasters rated an inexpensive wine equal in taste to an expensive prestige wine, and both of these out scored the rest of the mid-priced and high-priced wines in the blind test. Me & Bobby Fischer is a documentary about Bobby Fischer's last years as his old friend Saemundur Palsson gets him out of jail in Japan and helps him settle in Iceland. The film premiered at the Green Light Films’ Bíódagar film festival in April 2009. "The film bears witness to German artist Anselm Kiefer’s alchemical creative processes and renders as a film journey the personal universe he has built at his hill studio estate in the South of France. In 1993 Kiefer left Buchan, Germany for La Ribotte, a derelict silk factory near Barjac. From 2000 he began constructing a series of elaborate installations there, comprising 48 buildings, a labyrinth of tunnels, bridges, lakes and towers. Traversing this landscape, the film immerses the audience in the total world and creative process of one of today’s most significant artists. Shot in cinemascope, the film constructs visual set pieces alongside observational footage to capture both the dramatic resonance of Kiefer’s art and the intimate process of creation. This polarity - in terms of scale, sensibility and time - animates the film, creating a multi-layered narrative through which to navigate the complex spaces of La Ribotte. Here creation and destruction are interdependent; the film enters into direct contact with the raw materials Kiefer employs to build his paintings and sculptures - lead, concrete, ash, acid, earth, glass and gold..." Quoting the synopsis from the 2010 Cannes Film Festival site. West: What I Know About Her is a 2011 short, documentary biography film directed by Kathryn Ramey. Her Aim Is True is a 2013 documentary, biography, history and music film directed by Karen Whitehead. Torment in the Paradise is a documentary film directed by Heo Chul. Jim Lauderdale: The King of Broken Hearts is a 2014 documentary film directed by Jeremy Dylan. The Planet is a Swedish documentary film on environmental issues, released in 2006. The film was made by Michael Stenberg, Johan Söderberg and Linus Torell for the big screen and was shot in the English language to reach an international audience. It includes interviews with 29 environmental scientists and experts including Dr. Stephen Peake, Herman Daly, Lester Brown, Gretchen Daily, Mathis Wackernagel, Norman Myers, Jill Jäger, George Monbiot, Robert Costanza, Will Steffen, and Jared Diamond. At 8pm GMT on 21 March 2007, as part of the OXDOX:MK documentary film festival, it became the first ever simultaneous round the world screening of a film. After the screening, a panel of leading environmental experts answered questions from around the world from the Berrill Lecture Theatre at The Open University, England. Wild Style is a 1983 hip hop film produced by Charlie Ahearn. Released theatrically in 1983 by First Run Features and later re-released for home video by Rhino Home Video, it is regarded as the first hip hop motion picture. The film featured seminal figures within the given period, such as Fab Five Freddy, Lee Quinones, Lady Pink, the Rock Steady Crew, The Cold Crush Brothers, Queen Lisa Lee of Zulu Nation, Grandmaster Flash and Zephyr. The protagonist "Zoro" is played by New York graffiti artist "Lee" George Quinones. The year 2013 marked the 30th anniversary of the film and a Blu-ray edition was slated for release to include various interviews and additional features. Ten Minutes Before Dying is a 2001 documentary short film directed by Michel Cayla. There Isn't A More Diverse Place is a 2012 documentary film directed by Felipe Degregori. In Their Room: London is a 2013 documentary drama film written and directed by Travis Mathews. One Minute to Nine is a 2007 documentary film written and directed by Tommy Davis and produced by Quinto Malo Films. It was later re-edited and screened on HBO as Every F---ing Day of My Life. The film chronicles the last five days of freedom for Wendy Maldonado before she and her son are sentenced for the manslaughter death of her husband and explores the years of domestic abuse the family experienced prior to his death. Travis: A Soldier's Story 2013 documentary film directed by Jonathon Link. Changed Lives: Miracles of the Passion is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Jody Eldred. Tell It On The Mountain – Stories Of The Pacific Crest Trail is a 2013 documentary adventure spors film written and directed by Lisa Diener. Between Two-Spirit: Becoming a Woman at Sixty is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Laurence Périgaud. Boxing Gym is a 2010 documentary film directed by Frederick Wiseman. Inventing L.A.: The Chandlers and Their Times is a 2009 documentary film written by Peter Jones and directed by Peter Jones and Mark Catalena. Dreams of a Life is a 2011 drama-documentary film, released by Dogwoof Pictures, directed by Carol Morley and starring Zawe Ashton. Mingus: Charlie Mingus 1968 is a 1968 American documentary film directed by Thomas Reichman that follows the later life of jazz musician Charles Mingus and his five year-old daughter in 1966, as they are being evicted from his New York apartment for not paying the rent. Reichman talks with Mingus in a very personal setting as the film documents Mingus' outlook on society, women, music, his daughter, politics, and the country as a whole. The camera crew talks with Mingus conversationally and spends time with him and his daughter so that the film takes on an intimate air. The film highlights their way of life and how political and racial tensions affected people of the 1960s personally. The reason for Reichman’s investigation into Mingus’ eviction was to show the lifestyle of a prominent jazz musician and to show how American society was structured during the Civil Rights era. At a time when the Jim Crow laws had recently been rescinded, there were African Americans who didn't feel they were treated equally; in many cases they weren't. The Other Side of the Ice is an adventure drama documentary film directed by Sprague Theobald. Venecijus's Life and Cerzaris's Death is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Janina Lapinskaitė. Frantz Fanon: Black Skin, White Mask is a 1996 documentary film written by Isaac Julien, Harold Manning and Mark Nash and directed by Isaac Julien. Calling the Ghosts: A Story about Rape, War and Women is a 1997 documentary film that details the experience of Nusreta Sivac and Jadranka Cigelj at the Bosnian Serb-run Omarska camp in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Bosnian War. The film's premiere was sponsored by Amnesty International, the Coalition for International Justice, the Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian law, and the Bosnian branch of Women for Women International. Runnin' Down a Dream is a 2007 documentary film about Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, directed by Peter Bogdanovich. The 4-hour documentary chronicles the history of the band, from its inception as Mudcrutch, right up to the 30th-anniversary concert in Petty's home town of Gainesville, Florida, on September 21, 2006, at the Stephen C. O'Connell Center, University of Florida. The film features interviews with George Harrison, Eddie Vedder, Stevie Nicks, Dave Grohl, Jeff Lynne, Rick Rubin, Johnny Depp, Jackson Browne and more. Petty's solo career is also touched on, as is his time with The Traveling Wilburys. The film was commercially released as part of a four-disc box set. The film spanned the first two discs, while the 30th anniversary concert and a CD of rare tracks were the components of the remaining two discs. On October 28, 2008, a two-disc set of the film, featuring previously unreleased bonus performances, but not the Gainesville concert or audio CD, was released to the public. Runnin' Down a Dream was released on Blu-ray Disc on November 15, 2010. Fall of the Republic is a documentary film written by and directed by Alex Jones. Children of Beslan is a 2005 documentary film directed by Ewa Ewart and Leslie Woodhead. The United States of Football is a 2012 sports documentary film directed and written by Sean Pamphilon. Kenk is a 2010 documentary film directed by Alex Jansen and Craig Small. This program takes a humorous look at the thoughts and feelings of the Apollo astronauts and missions to the Moon's surface. Finding Fidel: The Journey of Erik Durschmied is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Bay Weyman. Page One: A Year Inside the New York Times is a 2011 documentary film written by Kate Novack and Andrew Rossi directed by Andrew Rossi. "With the Internet surpassing print as our main news source, newspapers going bankrupt, and outlets focusing on content they claim audiences (or is it advertisers?) want, Page One chronicles the media industry’s transformation and assesses the high stakes for democracy if in-depth investigative reporting becomes extinct. The film deftly makes a beeline for the eye of the storm or, depending on how you look at it, the inner sanctum of the media, gaining unprecedented access to the New York Times newsroom for a year. At the media desk, a dialectical play-within-a-play transpires as writers like salty David Carr track print journalism’s metamorphosis even as their own paper struggles to stay vital and solvent. Meanwhile, rigorous journalism—including vibrant cross-cubicle debate and collaboration, tenacious jockeying for on-record quotes, and skillful page-one pitching—is alive and well. The resources, intellectual capital, stamina, and self-awareness mobilized when it counts attest there are no shortcuts when analyzing and reporting complex truths." Quoting the description from the 2011 Sundance Film Festival site. The Unplaceables is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by René A. Hazekamp. The Amish is a 2012 documentary film created by PBS as an episode of American Experience. The documentary, as the title implies, is centered on the Amish. It was uploaded on the PBS website in February 2012. Topics in the video range from the Ordnung to the Nickel Mines shooting to Rumspringa. The documentary was written and directed by David Belton. The documentary includes interviews of current and former Amish. A companion book was released in 2013. Blue Note: A History of Modern Jazz is a documentary story of Frank Wolff and Alfred Lion, two German immigrants who escaped Nazi persecution in 1939 and founded Blue Note Records shortly after landing in New York. Rudy Giuliani continues to exert great influence over politics in the United States, based in part on his glowing reputation as 'America's Mayor'. But Giuliani had a much less favorable reputation during most of the eight years he ran New York City.RUDYLAND explores the roller-coaster relationship New Yorkers have with their controversial and now-celebrated former mayor. The film takes us back to early 2001. His contentious reign is coming to a close, and some New Yorkers cannot wait to see Giuliani go. Then comes September 11th. Suddenly the most divisive and combative figure in the city emerges as an international symbol of leadership and unity. Many now wonder if his standing will eventually smooth Giuliani's rise to higher office. Thank You for Judging is a 2011 documentary, comedy, drama film Selma Al-Faqih, Travis Flournoy, Sean Fornara and Michael Urie. 4 de Julio, La Masacre de San Patricio is a 2007 film directed by Pablo Hernn Zubizarreta and Juan Pablo Young. Paul Bowles: The Cage Door is Always Open is a 2012 documentary/ biographical film written and directed by Daniel Young. There Is More to Come is a 2008 documentary film written and directed by Calle Overweg. Tigerwomen Grow Wings is a 2005 documentary film written and directed by Monika Treut. Ps Your Mystery Sender is a 2010 short film directed by Benjamin Wigley. Spiriti is a 2012 documentary, short, drama film directed by Yukai Ebisuno, Raffaella Mantegazza. Yakona is a 2014 historical documentary film written and directed by Paul Collins and Anlo Sepulveda. Sahodaran Ayyappan is a short documentary from Kerala, India. It depicts the life of Sahodaran Ayyappan through recreated events and archival photos. Ayyappan was a social reformer and the organizer of the Sree Narayana Movement. The film is narrated by M.K. Sanu. It is part of a series of documentaries on eminent Malayalis who contributed to the shaping of modern secular Kerala. Sahodaran Ayyappan was screened at two film festivals; the Orma Film Festival and Padamudrakal Film Festival. Scenes of a Crime is a documentary film that focuses on the case of Adrian P. Thomas who was the subject of nearly 10 hours of interrogation by Troy, New York police, culminating in a controversial confession and high profile murder trial. The film won multiple festival awards, a Gotham Award for "Best Film Not Playing At Theater Near You," played theatrically and was broadcast nationally. Reviews of the film were highly favorable. American Casino is a 2009 documentary film about the American subprime mortgage crisis. It is directed and produced by Leslie Cockburn with Andrew Cockburn as co-producer. The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City on May 2, 2009, and opened at the Roxie Theater in San Francisco on August 21 and at the Film Forum in New York City on September 2. The film features Phil Gramm, Henry Paulson, Ben Bernanke, Henry Waxman, Baltimore mayor Sheila Dixon, and financial writer Mark Pittman. As of September 29, 2009 the film has grossed $23,974. Kano: An American and His Harem is a 2010 documentary film directed by Monster Jimenez. Aisha's Song is a 2011 short documentary and biography film directed by Orlando von Einsiedel. The Education of Auma Obama is a 2011 German documentary on the life of Barack Obama's half-sister Auma Obama. It won the Best Diaspora Documentary Award at the Africa Movie Academy Awards. A2-B-C is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Ian Thomas Ash. Bollywood Bound is a 2003 documentary film directed by Nisha Pahuja. Wings of Hope is a 2000 made-for-TV documentary directed by Werner Herzog. The film explores the story of Juliane Koepcke, a German Peruvian woman who was the sole survivor of Peruvian flight LANSA Flight 508 following its mid-air disintegration after a lightning strike in 1971. Herzog was inspired to make this film as he narrowly avoided taking the same flight while he was location scouting for Aguirre, Wrath of God. His reservation was canceled due to a last minute change in itinerary. In the film, Herzog and Koepcke visit the scenes of her flight, crash, and escape from the jungle. They take a flight from Lima to Pucallpa, and sit in the same row of seats where Koepcke sat during the crash. They unearth many large fragments of the plane in the jungle, and then visit the river routes where she traveled for 10 days on foot, and the small village where she was eventually found by three men, one of whom appears in the film. Wings of Hope is often seen as a companion piece or sequel to Herzog's 1997 film Little Dieter Needs to Fly, in which he retraces the steps of a German/American Navy pilot's successful escape from a POW camp during the Vietnam War. Favela on Blast is a 2008 music and documentary film written by Leandro HBL, Ricardo Mehedff and Wesley Pentz and directed by Leandro HBL and Wesley Pentz. Incident at Oglala is a 1992 documentary by Michael Apted, narrated by Robert Redford. The film documents the murder of two Federal Bureau of Investigation agents, Jack R. Coler and Ronald A. Williams, on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in the summer of 1975. It examines the legal case surrounding the subsequent trials of Robert Robideau and Darrell Butler, and later the separate trial of Leonard Peltier, who had to be extradited from Canada. Robideau and Butler were acquitted at their trial, but Peltier was convicted of murder in 1976. Many supporters, including the International Indian Treaty Council, believe Peltier is innocent of the crimes. It also discusses tribal chairman Dick Wilson. Art of Conflict is a documentary film directed by Valeri Vaughn. Boy Cheerleaders is a 2010 documentary film directed by James Newton. The Story of Slapstick is a 2009 comedy/documentary film directed by Breid McLoone. In the Hell of Chaco is an Argentine black-and-white documentary directed and filmed by Roque Funes from his own script. It premiered on December 21, 1932 . Mr. Philadelphia recounts the extraordinary life and career of Albert M. Greenfield (1887-1967). A Russian immigrant, Greenfield was the embodiment of the “American dream,” working his way up from humble beginnings to become a real estate mogul, university trustee and philanthropist. Eventually he became an adviser to church leaders, educators, mayors, governors, four Presidents of the United States and world leaders. Addiction Incorporated is a documentary and biographical film directed by Charles Evans Jr. War Experience: The Great War won an Honourable Mention at the 1966 Australian Film Institute Award for Best Documentary Film. Roadtrip Goes to Hong Kong and Beijing is a 2008 documentary film. Wiener Takes All: A Dogumentary is a 2007 documentary film that chronicles the lives of America's top competitive dachshunds and their owners. Directed by Shane MacDougall, the film follows five competitors in the Wienerschnitzel "Wiener Nationals" dachshund racing circuit, from the scandal of the 2003 Wiener Nationals, through to the 2005 championships this December in San Diego. The film opens with Noodles' controversial 2003 loss, and the ensuing Noodles-Pretzel rivalry - one that is cut short with Pretzel's tragic sudden death. Only a few weeks later Noodles triumphantly wins the 2004 Wiener Nationals - this time free and clear. The glory is short-lived, as he is forced into retirement by race organizers, and Team Noodles has to decide whether to accept his premature sojourn from the sport, or try and qualify out of state. The film also follows some of America's top show dogs as they go to the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, then switches gears and heads to the heartland of Texas for the DCA Earthdog championships. The Battle of China was the sixth film of Frank Capra's Why We Fight propaganda film series. It follows an introduction to Chinese culture and history with the modern history of China and the founding of the Republic of China by Sun Yat-sen, leading on to the Japanese invasion. The invasion of China is explained in terms of the four-step plan for Japanese conquest, mentioned in the Tanaka Memorial. "Here was their mad dream. Phase One - the occupation of Manchuria for raw materials. Phase Two - the absorption of China for manpower. Phase Three - a triumphant sweep to the south to seize the riches of the Indies. Phase Four - the eastward move to crush the United States." Special attention is paid to Japanese atrocities such as the bombing of Shanghai, including an attack on civilians shown in "Bloody Saturday", the famous image of a burned Chinese baby crying in a bombed-out railroad station. As well it includes graphic film footage of the Nanking Massacre atrocities. The film mentions a Nanking massacre death toll of 40,000 – far lower than modern estimates; the true death toll was unknown at the time. Alfred Jarry & Pataphysics is a 2014 short animated documentary film written and directed by Skizz Cyzyk. Smash!: Badminton for Everyone is a 2007 documentary film. Esta es mi Argentina is a 1974 Argentine film. Rebuilding the World Trade Center is a documentary film directed by Marcus Robinson. On the Way to School is a 2008 Turkish documentary film directed by Orhan Eskiköy and Özgür Doğan. It has attracted 78,000 people in eight weeks, an impressive showing for a documentary. The film is an openhearted account of a young Turkish teacher during a school year in a Kurdish village in southeastern Turkey. Emiterio is a 2006 short documentary film written by Diego Seppi and directed by Diego Seppi and José Tabarelli. Shado'man is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Boris Gerrets. Chris & Don: A Love Story is a 2007 documentary film that chronicles the lifelong relationship between author Christopher Isherwood and his much younger lover, artist Don Bachardy. Chris & Don combines present-day interviews, archival footage shot by the couple from the 1950s, excerpts from Isherwood's diaries, and playful animations to recount their romance. It was directed by Guido Santi and Tina Mascara, and was the centerpiece film at NewFest, the New York LGBTQ Film Festival, in 2008. Examining the mysterious people of northern Italy who predated and influenced Roman culture. Included: recent archaeological discoveries. Lost Berlin is a 1983 film directed by Martin Koerber and Richard Kostelanetz. A Philosophy Of Closed Eyes is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Sacha Kullberg. Vampir-Cuadecuc is a 1970 experimental feature film by Catalan filmmaker Pere Portabella. The entire film is photographed on high contrast black & white film stock, which gives it the appearance of a degraded film print, evoking early Expressionist horror films such as F. W. Murnau's Nosferatu or Carl Theodor Dreyer's Vampyr. It was shot on the set of Jesus Franco's Count Dracula, starring Christopher Lee and Herbert Lom. The sound track is by frequent Portabella collaborator Carles Santos, and the only spoken dialogue in the film appears only in the last scene, which features Lee reading from Bram Stoker's original novel. Lee would appear in another Portabella film the same year--Umbracle. The word "cuadecuc" is the Catalan word for "worm's tail." The term also refers to the unexposed footage at the end of a roll of film. Jonathan Rosenbaum, a critic for the Chicago Reader, listed this film as the fourth best in 2006. Eyes of the Navy is a 1940 American short documentary film. It was nominated for an Academy Award at the 13th Academy Awards for Best Short Subject. Waverider is an action sports documentary film directed by Karl Lear. Off the Menu: The Last Days of Chasen's is a 1997 American documentary film directed by Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini. RECONNAISSANCE is a 2012 documentary short silent film written and directed by Johann Lurf. Uplifting tale of Staten Island woman who creates modern underground railroad and rescues 2,000 dogs condemned to death in Amish Country puppy mills. The film chronicles Laura F on her weekend rescue missions to Amish Country. With her Brooklyn mom and Staten Island girl friends by her side, Laura embarks on a four-year odyssey to rescue dogs from the hellish conditions of Amish puppy mills. The film follows four of the dogs from the time their lives are spared until they are nursed back to health and placed with their forever families. We see the dogs leave the cages where they have spent their entire lives and watch these dogs, who were given up for dead, transform the lives of the people who adopt them Un mito antropologico televisivo is a 2011 documentary film written and directed by Maria Helene Bertino, Dario Castelli and Alessandro Gagliardo. The War Zone: Hitler's War is a 2005 war history film written by David Irving and Alasdair Simpson and directed by Michael Campbell. The Proustian From Osasco is a 2013 drama film written and directed by Marcos Katudjian. Desert Blues is a 2006 documentary film. Throw Down Your Heart is a 2008 documentary film directed by Sascha Paladino. Is Anybody Doing Anything About It? is a 1967 short documentary film directed by Donald Crombie. El Ejido, la loi du profit is a Belgian 2006 documentary film. Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room is a 2005 documentary film based on the best-selling 2003 book of the same name by Fortune reporters Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, a study of one of the largest business scandals in American history. McLean and Elkind are credited as writers of the film alongside the director, Alex Gibney. The film examines the 2001 collapse of the Enron Corporation, which resulted in criminal trials for several of the company's top executives during the ensuing Enron scandal; it also shows the involvement of the Enron traders in the California electricity crisis. The film features interviews with McLean and Elkind, as well as former Enron executives and employees, stock analysts, reporters and the former Governor of California Gray Davis. The film won the Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary Feature and was nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the 78th Academy Awards in 2006. In “Roger & Me”, Michael Moore tried in vain to get an interview with GM CEO, Roger Smith. Now, Michael Wilson searches for the American Dream and sets off on a quest to interview another millionaire: the "documentary" filmmaker, Michael Moore. No matter whose side of the fence you’re on, you’ll agree that there’s nothing quite so humbling, or hilarious, as a taste of one’s own medicine. Dzikow Stary is a 1984 documentary film directed by Hans Fels. Fonqui is a 1985 short documentary film written by Juan Guerrero and Carlos Monsivåis. Think About Wood, Think About Metal is a 2011 film directed by Manon de Boer. Manassas: End of Innocence is a 2002 short film directed by Ben Burtt. Matthew Barney: No Restraint is a 2006 documentary directed by Alison Chernick. It follows artist Matthew Barney and his collaborator, singer-songwriter Björk, as they embark on a filmmaking journey in Japan. It reveals Barney's process in creating Drawing Restraint 9, a cinematic "piece" that combines a whaling vessel; 45,000 pounds of petroleum jelly; and traditional Japanese rituals into a fantasy love story. It premiered at the Berlin Film Festival and had its theatrical release in December 2006 after being acquired by IFC/The Weinstein Company. In 1985, 27 years after its Broadway premiere, Leonard Bernstein went into a New York studio for Deutsche Grammophon to conduct his most famous work for the first time." Kiri Te Kanawa, Jose Carreras, and Tatiana Troyanos sing; Christopher Swann directs. The Valley of the Moon is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Giovanni Buccomino. Ron Hynes: The Irish Tour is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by Rosemary House. Ein Neues Produkt is a 2012 short documentary film written and directed by Harun Farocki. "In this experimental documentary short, Dorian Wayne, a retired NYC female impersonator who starred as Dominita in the cult film She Man, worked with the Jewel Box Revue and at the 82 Club, shares memories, film clips and a picture from his career that began in the 1950s." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. Do It For Johnny is a 2007 documentary film developed by Haylar Garcia and Scott Baxendale, and directed by Garcia about how a group of indie filmmakers try to get Johnny Depp to support their unknown and unfunded screenplay "Narcophonic". Photo Wallahs is a 1991 film directed by David MacDougall and Judith MacDougall. Mama Rainbow is a 2012 documentary film directed by Fan Popo. Par Dzimteniti is a 2008 film directed by Laila Pakalnina and Maris Maskalans. Forest of Bliss is a 1986 documentary film by ethnographic filmmaker Robert Gardner about everyday life in Benares, India. Nan Goldin – I Remember Your Face is a 2013 documentary film written by Irene Höfer, Nan Goldin, and directed by Sabine Lidl. The Last Klezmer is a 1994 documentary film directed by Yale Strom. Ash : Re is a 2013 documentary film directed by Oh Min-wook. The New Public is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Jyllian Gunther. A feature-length Discovery-quality documentary without the evolutionary bias. Stunning nature footage, scientific insights and Scriptures combine to reveal the wonders of our Creator as observed throughout His creation. God's wonders surround us. And these marvels reveal much about our Creator. Through creation we glimpse His power and wisdom, His majesty and care. Creation is speaking to those who will listen... Join us on a remarkable journey of discovery as we explore the Creator's handiwork and what His creation reveals about His character. Survey the unimaginable size of the universe and ponder the vast energy present in all matter. Examine the elegant water molecule essential to all life and discover how God combines these molecules to form beautiful and symmetrical snow crystals. Learn about the incredible complexity of DNA and the miraculous workings of the tiny seed. From the design functionality of birds to the incredible transformation of butterflies, these and many other features of creation are highlighted in this visually stunning presentation. God of Wonders is a breath-taking tour of God's creation wonders, visible and invisible, and the greatest wonder of all - His redeeming love! "Declare His glory...His wonders among all peoples." - Psalm 96:3 The Tree in a Test Tube is a short film produced by the U. S. Department of Agriculture and distributed by the U.S. Forest Service, featuring Laurel and Hardy, with narration read by MGM announcer and producer Pete Smith. I Stop Time is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Gunilla Bresky. The Animal Condition is a 2014 action adventure documentary film directed by Michael Dahlstrom. Here is Germany is a 1945 propaganda documentary film directed by Frank Capra. Like its companion film, Know Your Enemy: Japan, the film is a full-length exploration of why one of the two major Axis countries started World War II and what had to be done to keep them from "doing it again". The film opens with scenes of everyday life in Germany, described by narrator Walter Huston. It shows people such as housewives, mailmen, farmers and policemen at work, and notes that these people were not so different from us, and seem like people Americans can understand. Anthony Veiller then interrupts with "Or can we?", as the film then switches to a montage of Nazi concentration camps and piles of dead bodies. The narrator notes that this is not the only time that Germany has unleashed war on the world, stating that while its generation fought the "Nazis", its fathers fought the "Huns", and its grand father remembers the "Prussians". The narrator claims that it was all part of the same German lust for conquest. I'm Carolyn Parker: The Good, the Mad, and the Beautiful is a 2011 documentary film directed by Jonathan Demme. EverCracked! The Phenomenon of EverQuest is a 2009 documentary film written by Nic Aragon, Jason "Jace" Hall, Stephen Reedy and Todd Roy and directed by Nic Aragon and Todd Roy. American Hot Rod: Celebrate the 75th Anniversary of Route 66 is a 2004 documentary directed by John Stefanic. The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle is a mockumentary film directed by Julien Temple and produced by Don Boyd and Jeremy Thomas about the British punk rock band Sex Pistols. Target for Today is a documentary film describing the preparation and mounting of a United States Army Air Forces raid on East Prussia It contains much combat footage of B-17 and B-24 bombers and named for the phrase used at briefings before air raids. The October 1943 footage was filmed during Eighth Air Force attacks on Nazi Germany industrial targets in Anklam, Marienburg, and Gdynia in occupied Poland. Prior to the combat footage, the documentary explains Operation Pointblank target selection and depicts planning, briefing, and preparation. Jung Speaks of Freud is a 1958 documentary short film. Devotional – A Performance Filmed by Anton Corbijn is a video release by Depeche Mode, featuring almost an entire concert from their 1993–1994 Devotional Tour, filmed in Barcelona, Spain, Liévin, France and Frankfurt, Germany. It was directed by Anton Corbijn, and released in 1993 band and it was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Long Form Music Video in 1995. The soundtrack was recorded in Liévin, Stade Couvert Régional, on 29 July 1993. This tour was particularly notable for the personal troubles the band members were struggling with at the time, most notably Dave Gahan's heroin addiction. The video is the last release to feature Alan Wilder before his departure in 1995. In 2004, the movie was re-released in DVD. The film is the same, but there are extras, such as songs that were left out of the VHS movie for time, isolated footage of setlist projections, an interview with Corbijn on Devotional, pictures from the Devotional Tour booklet, and all the music videos from the Songs of Faith and Devotion era. For the first time, the complete soundtrack of Liévin is available. Only a few dead airs and speeches were edited. Making 'Wild Child' is a 2009 short documentary film. "Anyone who has visited the famed Tom & Jerry Christmas Tree display on 21st Street and wondered, “how the hell did they pull that off?” will adore Making Christmas, a documentary framing the couple who, for more than twenty years, puts together the City's most spectacular holiday display. Making Christmas draws the audience into the history of the glitz with lively commentary from Tom Taylor and Dr. Jerome Goldstein, the unforgettable personalities behind the sparkle. —ALEX CHOUSA" - Quoting the description from the 2011 San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival site. A Journey to Tarakan is a 2002 documentary film written and directed by Karel Doing. Audre Lorde - The Berlin Years 1984 to 1992 is a 2012 documentary film written by Dagmar Schultz, Ria Cheatom, Ika Hügel-Marshall and Aletta von Vietinghoff and directed by Dagmar Schultz. Where Are We? Our Trip Through America is a 1993 documentary film directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. Upside Down: The Creation Records Story is a 2010 film by Document Productions which charts the story of Creation Records. Directed by Danny O'Connor, the film features Alan McGee, Noel Gallagher, Bobby Gillespie, Mark Gardener and more. Holocaust: Theresienstadt is a documentary film written by Simon Wiesenthal and Wolfgang Scheffler and directed by Irmgard von zur Mühlen Wonders of the Arctic 3D is a short documentary film directed by David Lickley. African Cats is a 2011 nature documentary film directed by Keith Scholey and Alastair Fothergill about a pride of lions and a family of cheetahs trying to survive on the African savannah. The film was released theatrically by Disneynature on Earth Day, April 22, 2011. The film is narrated by Samuel L. Jackson. A portion of the proceeds for the film were donated to the African Wildlife Foundation and their effort to preserve Kenya's Amboseli Wildlife Corridor. The film's initiative with the African Wildlife Foundation is named "See African Cats, Save the Savanna," and as of May 2, 2011, ticket sales translated into 50,000 acres of land saved in Kenya. A fatal mining accident in the hills of Pennsylvania, the subsequent suicide of the mine's owner, and the forced abandonment of eight of the last twelve surviving anthracite mines in the United States. These are the recent plagues that have defined the once proud and prosperous tradition of anthracite coal mining. They are also the tragedies that have prompted the drastic transformation of this feature documentary. HARD COAL: LAST OF THE BOOTLEG MINERS explores the near eradication of this group of hard-working Americans who merely wish, as their fathers and grandfathers before them, to provide for their families while helping their country develop a sustainable energy policy. They don't want to receive welfare. They don't want to go to prison. They don't want to die in an accident or by their own hands. They just want to mine the anthracite whose veins run deep through their native soil. Les Forgerons is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Louis Lumière. Given its age, this short film is available to freely download from the Internet. The film formed part of the first commercial presentation of the Lumière Cinématographe on 28 December 1895 at the Salon Indien, Grand Café, 14 Boulevard des Capuchins, Paris. Who Get's In ? is a 1989 documentary film written by Steve Lucas and directed by Barry Greenwald. Waiting for Mamu is a 2013 biographical short documentary film written by Thomas A. Morgan and directed by Francois Caillaud, Dan Chen and Thomas A. Morgan. Once Upon A Tree is a 2013 documentary film written by Marleen van der Werf and Misja Pekel and directed by Marleen van der Werf. Ten years ago a unique dance company was established in Barcelona with the aim of turning a selection of the best contemporary dance students from around the world into first class professionals. The person responsible for this extraordinary challenge was Catherine Allard, protégé of the late, eccentric, Maurice Béjart, and right hand of the king of contemporary Spanish dance master, Nacho Duato. IT DANSA forms part of the prestigious Institut del Teatre in Barcelona. It is a stepping stone, offering a two year Masters which enables the young artists to continue their formation while, bit by bit, getting used to the rigours of the life of a professional dancer. We go behind the scenes at the company as it celebrates its 10th anniversary with a gala performance in the famous Mercat de les Flors theatre and Catherine Allard gave a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to one of the company’s first ever graduates; the chance to debut her first choreography in the gala. For Nora Sitges-Sardà it will not be an easy process. While the dancers struggle with injuries, exhaustion and the stress of auditions, Nora has to learn how to inspire them, how to control the rehearsals, supervise the creation of the wardrobe, music and lighting, how to please her mentor, Catherine Allard, and above all, how to deal with the pressure of sharing a stage with stars such as Nacho Duato and Rafael Bonachela. Scars of Silence is an upcoming documentary film directed by Nubar Alexanian. Mur-mur is a 2012 documentary film written by Juan Miguel Gutiérrez, Kany Peñalba Zazpi and directed by Juan Miguel Gutiérrez. Staub (Dust) is a 2007 film directed by Hartmut Bitomsky. Ether is a 2003 documentary film directed by Velu Viswanandhan. Just, Melvin: Just Evil is a 2000 documentary film written and directed by James Ronald Whitney. Urban Rez is a 2013 documentary film written by Lisa D. Olken and directed by Larry T. Pourier. Love in the Grave is a 2011 film written and directed by David Vondráček Marvin Hamlisch: What He Did For Love is a 2013 documentary, biographical and musical film written and directed by Dori Berinstein. Stalking Jihad is a 2007 documentary film written by Aaron Bowden and directed by Mark Bowden and Aaron Bowden. Sacred Planet is a 2004 documentary. Robert Redford provided narration for the film. The film was released by Walt Disney Pictures on April 22, 2004, and grossed $1,108,356. Was lebst du? is a 2004 documentary film written and directed by Bettina Braun. Simply Rob is a 2011 documentary short biographical film directed by Tom Shrapnel. A Screening at the Tatry Cinema is a 2010 short documentary film written and directed by Igor Chojna. "Dariusz Ambroszczyk runs one of the oldest cinemas in Łódź – Tatry. He is boss of the cinema and its only employee at the same time so among his duties are selling tickets, admitting to the cinema, and screening films. Although Dariusz is waiting for viewers every day, they seem to have totally forgotten about his cinema, visiting it only occasionally. The man is beginning to understand that the cinema, the sense of his life, is slowly declining." Quoting the description from the 2011 South by Southwest Film Festival site. Kalamandalam Gopi is a 1999 documentary short film directed by Adoor Gopalakrishnan. REFUGE: Stories of the Selfhelp Home is a United States documentary by director Ethan Bensinger. It tells the story of the final generation of Holocaust survivors and refugees through the lens of the Selfhelp Home in Chicago, a little-known community which has provided a home to more than 1,000 Jewish Holocaust survivors and refugees since World War II. Stolen Childhoods is a 2005 documentary film written by Len Morris and directed by Len Morris and U. Roberto Romano. Nargis - When Time Stopped Breathing is a 2009 documentary film directed by Maung Myint Aung and Kyaw Kyaw Oo. Sans Soleil is a 1983 French film directed by Chris Marker, a meditation on the nature of human memory, showing the inability to recall the context and nuances of memory, and how, as a result, the perception of personal and global histories is affected. In a 2014 Sight and Sound poll, film critics voted Sans Soleil the third best documentary film of all time. The title Sans Soleil is from the song cycle Sunless by Modest Mussorgsky. Burma VJ: Reporting from a Closed Country is a 2008 Danish documentary film directed by Anders Østergaard. It follows the Saffron Revolution against the military regime in Burma. The "VJ" in the title stands for "video journalists." Some of it was filmed on hand-held cameras. The footage was smuggled out of the country, physically or over the Internet. Other parts of it were reconstructed, which caused controversy. Project Chariot is a 2012 documentary film directed by Rachel Naninaaq Edwardson. The Earth Sings is a 1993 documentary film written and directed by Karel Plicka. Comedian is a 2002 documentary focusing on Jerry Seinfeld that explores the other side of stand-up comedy; that is, the preparation, politics, nerves, creativity, and so on. The film also features an up-and-coming comic named Orny Adams as he struggles to make it in show business. Many other recognizable humorists also make at least a cameo, including Colin Quinn, Greg Giraldo, Jim Norton, Ray Romano, Godfrey, Chris Rock, George Wallace, Mario Joyner, Jay Leno, Tom Papa, and Bill Cosby. The film's unusual trailer featured famous voice-over artist Hal Douglas speaking in a recording booth. The film was theatrically released in the United States on October 11, 2002 and grossed about $2.8 million domestically. The documentary is rated R for language. Soul Migration is a 2013 short advenure documentary film written by Debra Weistar and directed by Debra Weistar and Tom Weistar. Facing the Truth with Bill Moyers is a 1999 documentary TV Movie directed by Gail Pellett. Mysteries Of The Driftless is a 2013 documentary film written by Dan Bertalan, George Howe, Timothy S. Jacobson, Rob Nelson and directed by Rob Nelson and Dan Bertalan. That Night in Toronto is a live concert DVD featuring Canadian rock band The Tragically Hip, filmed and directed by filmmaking brothers Pierre and Francois Lamoureux. It was recorded November 26, 2004 at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada during The Hip's In Between Evolution tour. It differs from most concert DVDs in the fact that nothing was edited out of the set. It is not a composite of several different shows, and the chronology is exactly that of the actual concert, one that was not booked or in any way influenced by or for the filming of the DVD. Originally released November 1, 2005, as a part of the Hipeponymous box-set, it was released separately on November 8, 2005. The audio is exclusively available from the iTunes Music Store. The title of the DVD is taken from a line of the popular Hip song "Bobcaygeon", which was included in the concert's set, much to the pleasure of the crowd at the Air Canada Centre that evening. Talked to Death is a 1997 documentary directed by Eames Yeates. Sushi: The Global Catch is a 2012 documentary film directed by Mark Hall. Flashing on the Sixties: A Tribal Document is a 2008 film written by John Paul DeJoria and directed by Lisa Law. The Bull Laid Bear is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Zanny Begg and Oliver Ressler. Code 2600 is a 2012 documentary film written and directed by Jeremy Zerechak. Yatasto is a 2011 documentary film written by Hermes Paralluelo, Ezequiel Salinas and Jimena González Gomeza and directed by Hermes Paralluelo. The Face of Lincoln is a 1955 short documentary film in which sculptor Robert Merrell Gage models the features of Abraham Lincoln while narrating the story of Lincoln's life. It won an Academy Award at the 28th Academy Awards in 1956 for Best Short Subject and was also nominated for Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject. The film was directed by Edward Freed and produced by USC School of Cinematic Arts instructor Wilber T. Blume. Son Buluşma is a Turkish documentary film produced in 2007 and directed by Nesli Çölgeçen. The film depicts the memoires and the daily life of the three last veterans of the Turkish War of Independence, Ömer Küyük, Veysel Turan and Yakup Satar. The last witnesses of the war of independence tell their memories. "Nişancı Er Ömer" from Çorum pays first a visit to his commander, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, at Anıtkabir in Ankara. He then travels to meet his comrades, "Sıhhiyeci Onbaşı Veysel" in Konya and "Süvari Yakup" in Eskişehir. At the time of the film shooting in 2006, Ömer Küyük was 106 years of age, Veysel Turan 105 and Yakup Satar 108. In the film, they remember the wartime and say farewell to each other. Not long after the material for the documentary was filmed, all three veterans died, Ömer Küyük on January 13, 2006, Veysel Turan on March 25, 2007, and Yakup Satar on April 2, 2008. No one of them was able to watch the premiere held on November 14, 2008, in Çorum, the hometown of Ömer Küyük. 20: Entertainment Weekly's Best Holiday Movies is a 2004 documentary film directed by Troy Miller. Forgive Me Mother is a 2013 documentary film directed by Heidi Lindvall. Split Decision is filmmaker Brin-Jonathan Butler's cautionary examination of Cuban-­American relations, and the economic and cultural paradoxes that have shaped those relations since Fidel Castro’s revolution, through personal stories and interviews with the world’s most famous contemporary Cuban boxers and international authorities on Cuba. The Man with an Opera House in His Living Room is a 2003 documentary film directed by Mira Erdevicki. Buried in the Backyard is a 2005 short, documentary film written and directed by Monica Bigler and Sarah Prior. Coca - The Dove From Chechnya is a 2005 documentary film directed by Eric Bergkraut. Phantom Foreign Vienna is a 2004 short documentary film directed by Lisl Ponger. Baryshnikov: The Dancer and the Dance is a 1983 TV Movie. Award-winning documentary that focuses specifically on the conflict in the Drenica Valley of Kosovo during the late 1990s. The Kosovo Liberation Army contained many angry Albanians, sick and tired of a loss of rights, which had been revoked by their Serbian masters. Fighting to reclaim the land they believed to be historically theirs, they ran up against Serb forces who were full of their own righteous indignation and similarly fuelled by a strong and ancient claim to the land. Musicwood is 2012 documentary, adventure, drama and music film directed by Maxine Trump. Cocaine Cowboys is a 2006 documentary film directed by Billy Corben and produced by Alfred Spellman and Billy Corben through their Miami-based media studio Rakontur. The film explores the rise of cocaine and resulting crime epidemic that swept the American city of Miami, Florida, in the 1970s and 1980s. The producers of Cocaine Cowboys use interviews with law enforcement, journalists, lawyers, former drug smugglers and gang members to provide a first-hand perspective of the Miami drug war. Jingle Bell Rocks! is a 2013 documentary, comedy,history film written and directed by Mitchell Kezin. Beyond Imagining: Margaret Anderson and the 'Little Review' is a 1992 American short documentary film about Margaret Caroline Anderson, produced by Wendy L. Weinberg. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. The Burning Season is a documentary about the burning of rainforests in Indonesia which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2008. The main characters featured in the film are: Dorjee Sun from Australia; Achmadi, a small-scale palm oil farmer from Jambi province in Indonesia; and Lone Drøscher Nielsen, a Danish conservationist based in Kalimantan, Indonesia. The Swell Season is a 2011 documentary music romance film written and directed by Nick August-Perna, Carlo Mirabella-Davis and Chris Dapkins. Joe & Claire is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Hannah Quimper. SolarMax: IMAX is a 2000 short documentary film directed by John Weily. The Worlds of Mei Lanfang is a 1999 film directed by Mei-Juin Chen. Champions of Faith is a direct-to-video 2008 documentary, based on Major League Baseball players and how their faith has strengthened their careers. "In 1880, the city of San Francisco passed a health and safety ordinance—all laundries in wooden buildings had to get the approval of the Board of Supervisors in order to obtain a license. The law, on its face, didn't single out the Chinese. But when it was applied, every Chinese laundry owner in the city was denied a permit. Every white-owned laundry was granted a permit. Yick Wo refused to shut down his business and was arrested. He fought his case from behind bars. He took it all the way to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court determined that the ordinance was unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment's "equal protection" clause because of the unequal application of the law. It was the very first Supreme Court case to use this standard and it did so almost eighty years before the Court's landmark rulings striking down Jim Crow statutes enacted in the segregationist south. Yick Wo was not an American citizen—because by law he wasn't allowed to be. Yet the Court ruled that his rights were still protected by the 14th Amendment because it says that no state shall "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." It does not limit that protection only to citizens." Quoting the description from the 2010 United Nations Association Film Festival site. The truth about this sunken war secret was uncovered by four Italian divers, who are on board, helping and advising the Americans. This was the site of an allied operation that proved to be a turning point in the Italian campaign of World War II. September 9th, 1943. 'Operation Avalanche' is launched. An Allied landing fleet of more than 400 naval units arrives off the coast of Salerno. Fifty years later two local scuba experts stumble upon wreckage in the area of the invasion . As they investigate further they uncover one wreck after another, including an American top secret weapon that all records show wasn't deployed until the D-Day invasion, a year later. Using archival material, eye witness accounts and fishermen's reference points, they start to piece together a remarkable and little known story from World War Two. Head Cold is a 2010 film directed by Gamma Bak. This Is! Ralph Carney is a documentary film on reedman/multi-instrumentalist/singer Ralph Carney by filmmaker Laura Torell. It showcases to viewers and takes them through the journey of Ralph's career, and how he got started. From dating back to his earliest resume as a member of the Akronite avant-rock band Tin Huey, to his backing up and collaborating with other musicians, to his solo works. The footage shows him in action both live in concert and in the studio, as well as being interweaved with several interviews and intriguing sights and sounds. Its release date is yet to be confirmed, but sneak peeks can be seen at Laura's website. She is my husband is a 2013 LGBT documentary film directed by Annamaria Gallone and Gloria Aura Bartolini. Treasure: The Story Of Marcus Hook is a 2013 Documentary film directed by Valerio Ciriaci. 911: The Falling Man is a 2006 documentary film about the picture of a man falling from the World Trade Center during the September attacks  and the story behind it. "They say you can never go home again. But in Out in the Silence, Joe Wilson decided to make a brave pil grimage back to his home community in the rust belt of Western Pennsylvania, this time as an out gay man, documenting his experience with his partner Dean. While there, they meet CJ, a teenager forced to leave his high school due to constant abuse, abuse that has escalated as every school official turns a blind eye. Despite feeling threatened in his community, CJ makes the courageous choice to be himself. Joe, Dean, CJ and CJ’s amazing mother, Kathy, support each other as they find the empowerment to begin creating the change they seek. Across the country and the world, brave people are fighting for their right to simply be who they are, and they often have to fight twice as hard to belong to their community. And yet they accept this challenge. Out in the Silence is a truly inspiring portrait of a community that is just beginning to open its eyes to the wonderful diversity hidden in its midst. Put This on the {Map} is a short doc about queer youth in the suburbs of Seattle as they break through the veil of invisibility to speak about their identities and journeys towards self-acceptance. The times, they are a-changin’." Quoting Philippe Gosselin from the 2010 Framelie 34 - SF LGBT Film Festival site. The Story of the 14th Air Force was a 40-minute propaganda film produced by the US Army Air Force circa 1945. The film opens by showing China as it was before the Japanese occupation, the industry, professions etc. and then moves on to its conquest by the Japanese, and the struggling Nationalists in the hinterland. The Flying Tigers and General Chenault are briefly introduced and it is explained that they started out as a business operation - $500 a month and an extra $500 for each plane shot down. The tortuous supply routes through Assam and the Himalayas are described as well as the substandard equipment that is used by the Flying Tigers. Then the move into Eastern China in 1943 is covered, and the building of the South Eastern air bases and their use against Japanese shipping is described in detail. along with rare combat footage of Flying Tigers sinking a Japanese merchant ship and engaging enemy pilots over the Chinese mainland. In Search of History: The Monkey Trial is a 1998 documentary about the Scopes trial. In the World Tonight is a 1997 documentary about the making of Paul McCartney's Flaming Pie album. The Dialogues with Solzhenitsyn is a Russian television documentary by Russian filmmaker Alexander Sokurov on Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. The documentary shot in Solzhenitsyn’s home shows his everyday life and covers his reflections on Russian history and literature. Polanski and My Father is a 2010 documentary film directed by Pauline Horovitz. Divine Waters is a documentary film released in 1985 starring Divine and John Waters as themselves, along with Waters' father John Waters Sr. and sister Trish Waters. Who Takes Away the Sins: Witnesses to Clergy Abuse is a 2013 documentary film directed by John Michalczyk. Phoolan Devi - Rebellion einer Banditin is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Mirjam Quinte and Pepe Danquart. Stremt 89 is a 2012 history comedy short documentary film directed by Dragos Dulea and Anda Puscas. A documentary about the "Australian Taliban", David Hicks. The film follows the struggles of David's father, Terry Hicks, as he tries to free his son from the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay. Terry Hicks travels the world, locking himself in a cage on street corners in major cities as a demonstration of the harsh conditions his son is unjustly suffering under. At the same time, the movie traces David Hicks' path through Pakistan and Afghanistan, where he eventually joined the Taliban. In the Shadow of the Light is a documentary film directed by Sarah Payton and Chris Teerink. As produced by (and aired on) A's History Channel, the speculative documentary Clash of the Cavemen travels back in time tens of thousands of years to the Earth's premier Ice Age. The program theorizes that at this point in early history, two early sub-species of homo sapiens walked the Earth: the brawny and sinewy Neanderthals, who exhibited tremendous physical strength, prowess and a resistance to pain but limited mental power, and the Cro-Magnons, who, conversely, exhibited astonishing intelligence but suffered from weak and disease-prone physical constitutions. To put it more bluntly, the repeated confrontations between these two species pitted brain against brawn in a contest for survival of the fittest. As time wore on, each sub-species found its very existence threatened by such external forces as extreme temperatures, a decline in available food, and animal predators. Clash of the Cavemen revisits this era and relays the tale of the Cro-Magnons and Neanderthals, abetted by data from the genome-mapping project at the Max Planck Institute in Germany and by dramatic onscreen recreations. Amons Tochter is a 2003 documentary film written and directed by Matthias Kessler. Land of Dreams is a 1988 Swedish essay film by Jan Troell. Its original Swedish title is Sagolandet, which means "The land of tales". Through a series of reportages from contemporary Sweden, Troell uses the film to ponder on the country's transformation since his childhood, into a society he argues has become permeated by rationality at the expense of creativity. Interweaved with the reportages are conversations with the American existential psychologist Rollo May, the politician Ingvar Carlsson soon before he became the prime minister of Sweden, and former prime minister Tage Erlander. Filming took place from 1983 to 1986. Billy Childish Is Dead is a 2005 rock n’ roll themed documentary on the life of Billy Childish. It is directed by Graham Bendel. It features live footage of his bands Thee Headcoats, Thee Milkshakes, and others. The Art of Failure: Chuck Connelly Not for Sale, a documentary television film directed by Jeff Stimmel, premiered at the L.A. Film Festival in June 2008 and was shown on HBO in July. Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg is a 1990 film directed by Petra Tschörtner. Our Summer in Tehran is a 2010 documentary film written and directed by Justine Shapiro. Shooting Bigfoot is a 2013 documentary film directed by Morgan Matthews. Spirits Rising is a 1996 documentary film directed by Ramona S. Díaz. The Zen of Bennett is a 2012 documentary film directed by Unjoo Moon. Winterurlaub mit dem FDGB is an East German film. It was released in 1953. Dreaming Of A Family is a 2013 documentary film written and directed by Mira Jargil. Man kann ja nie wissen is a 1987 film written by Gerhard Hostermann and directed by Gerhard Hostermann and Diethard Küster. Full Tilt Boogie is a 1997 documentary directed by Sarah Kelly that chronicles the production of the 1996 film From Dusk till Dawn. It features extensive interviews with the cast and crew covering a variety of topics related to the film. This includes the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees protesting the non-union status of the film. The production crew for the documentary are also non-union. The Homeland Welcomes is a 1945 documentary film directed by J.A. Holman and Otakar Vávra. The Marginal Way is a documentary film directed by Bill Benenson. The Tide of Traffic is a 1972 British short documentary film directed by Derek Williams. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short. Road to Brooklyn is a 2012 short film directed by Danny Lee. Saluzzi - Ensayo para Bandoneón y tres Hermanos is a 1999 film directed by Daniel Rosenfeld. At a Colorado prison, hard-core criminals are taught the training methods of 'horse whisperers' and given ninety days to break and train mustang horses. Can two wild creatures tame each another? Massaker is a 2004 film directed by Monika Borgmann, Lokman Slim and Hermann Theissen. How Some Jellyfishes Are Born is a 1960 short documentary film directed by Geneviève Hamon and Jean Painlevé. Nömadak Tx is a 2006 documentary film written by Raúl de la Fuente, Pablo Iraburu, Harkaitz Martinez de San Vicente, Igor Otxoa and directed by Raúl de la Fuente. Rabbaba Man is a 2010 documentary film directed by Mario Mabor. Pages Of Bravery is a 1958 documentary film directed by Mirceau Saucan. We Ain't Stupid is a 2013 documentary film directed by Mitch Panayis. Tom og Mette på sporet is a 1952 family adventure documentary film directed by Lauritz Falk and Arne Hverven. Alaide Foppa la sin ventura is a 2014 documentary film written and directed by Maria del Carmen De Lara Rangel. They Killed Sister Dorothy is a 2008 documentary film about American-born Brazilian nun Dorothy Stang, who was murdered on February 12, 2005, in Anapu, a city located in the Amazon Rainforest. Directed by Daniel Junge, the film is narrated by Martin Sheen in the English version and by Wagner Moura in the Portuguese version. No Hair Day: Laughing Our Way Through Cancer is a 1999 documentary film about a photo-shoot of three women undergoing treatment for breast cancer, which was broadcast on PBS on October 10, 2001, as part of the Independent Lens series and on WGBX-TV. The Indomitable Teddy Roosevelt is a 1986 tv program. Inner Cabin is a 2013 short, biographical documentary film written and directed by Jonathan Lemieux. Cayuco is a Spanish documentary film from 2007. Jetzt leben - Juden in Berlin is a 1994 documentary film written and directed by Helma Sanders-Brahms. Only Sky & Water is a short documentary film written and directed by Tamara Scherbak. From the Ashes... Nicaragua Today is a 1983 Emmy News and Documentary Award winner for Outstanding Background/Analysis of a Single Current Story - Programs aired in 1982 in the United States of America. Les Poussières is a 1954 short documentary film written and directed by Georges Franju. Gore Vidal: The Man Who Said No is a documentary film directed, produced, and edited by Gary Conklin. The film follows famed American writer and political gadfly Gore Vidal in his quixotic campaign against incumbent California Governor Jerry Brown for the Democratic nomination for the United States Senate in 1982. Vidal and State Sen. Paul B. Carpenter each won the support of 15.1% of voters in the primary election, but were easily outdistanced by Brown, who racked up 50.7% of the vote. The Boy Whose Skin Fell Off is a 2004 documentary TV movie directed by Patrick Collerton. From a Marilyn Monroe robot, to the ethics of artificial intelligence, to a robotic rock band, "Machine Dreams" explores the emotional, psychological, and mythic aspects of humanilty's love affair with the Machine. Mine Your Own Business is a 2006 documentary film directed and produced by Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney about the Roșia Montană mining project. The film documents environmentalists' opposition to the mine as unsympathetic to the needs and desires of the locals, prevents industrial progress, and consequently locks the people of the area into lives of poverty. The film shows that the majority of the people of the village support the mine, and the investment in their hometown. The film presents foreign environmentalists as alien agents opposed to progress, while residents are depicted as eagerly awaiting the new opportunity. Circus Kids is a 2010 film directed by Alexandra Lipsitz. Our morning ritual speaks of our love affair with cotton: we throw off crisp cotton sheets, shower and dry ourselves with thick cotton towels, sweep fluffy cotton balls over our face, then slip on cotton panties, socks, t-shirts, jeans and jackets. With cotton so much in demand, we ask growers and seed developer Monsanto if the trade is fair, in a film that beats to the ancient rhythms of cotton production. My Mother is a 2013 documentary short film directed by Jay Bedwani. Driving Test is a 2011 documentary film directed by Mahbouba Ebrahimi. Once Upon a Time in the East is a Bulgarian documentary film based on the books by the late Georgi Stoev. The feature length documentary tells the story of the Bulgarian transition period and includes reconstructions, TV archive from Bulgarian National Television, NOVA TV, bTV and features interviews with contemporary Bulgarian figures like Palmi Ranchev, Atanas Orachev, Rumen Leonidov, Haralan Alexandrov, Andrey Pantev and Georg Kraev. Other witnesses and participants in the power structures tell their stories of the establishment of VIS & SIC and the fierce brutality that is required to survive the days of the transition. Produced and directed by Demir Yanev the film was chosen to participate in the Al Jazeera Documentary Film Festival in April, 2011 and also in the Golden Rhyton in Plovdiv. Faces of Death II is the first sequel to the 1978 mondo film Faces of Death. Like its predecessor, the film was written and directed by John Alan Schwartz. Schwartz puts in another cameo appearance, this time as the wounded criminal in front of the drug store. Dr. Francis B. Gröss again narrates the proceedings. This film focuses largely on stunt work gone wrong, as well as death in sports. Several scenes involve the attempt by Kenny Powers to jump a rocket-powered car over the Saint Lawrence River in Canada and land over one mile away in New York. Also featured nearly in its entirety is the 1980 boxing match between Johnny Owen and Lupe Pintor, with Owen being knocked out and later dying from the injuries sustained in the match. Por Un Puñado De Yuanes is a 2008 short documentary film directed by María Cañas. All Alone and Lonely is a 2009 short documentary film written and directed by Fokiya Akhtar. Cleaver is a metafictional film within a TV-series that serves as an important plot element toward the end of the HBO television drama series The Sopranos. Although very little film material is actually shown in the series, its planning and development are discussed at large throughout multiple seasons of the show. The extent to which Sopranos character Christopher Moltisanti mixes confidential and personal information about the Soprano mob family into the story elements of Cleaver is the focal point throughout its development. After the project eventually materializes, Cleaver can be categorized as a direct-to-DVD mafia-slasher film — described alternately as "Saw meets the Godfather II", "the Ring meets The Godfather", and "a story about a young man who goes to pieces and then manages to pull himself together again" —. Several characters are credited for their involvement in the project. The screenplay was written by J. T. Dolan based on a story by Christopher Moltisanti, directed by Morgan Yam and produced by Carmine Lupertazzi, Jr. and Moltisanti. The film starred Jonathan LaPaglia as Michael "the Cleaver" and Daniel Baldwin as mob boss Salvatore. I clowns is a 1970 television film by Federico Fellini about the human fascination with clowns and circuses. It was made for TV, the Italian station RAI with an agreement that it would be released simultaneously on TV and as a cinema feature; RAI and co-producer Leone Film compromised on its release, with RAI broadcasting it on Christmas Day, 1970, and Leone Film releasing it theatrically in Italy the following day, December 26, 1970. It is a part-documentary, part fantasy. The New Spirit is a 1942 American animated short film produced by Walt Disney Productions and the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and released by the War Activities Committee of the Motion Pictures Industry. The cartoon, which stars Donald Duck, was the first film created as part of Walt Disney's World War II propaganda production. It was commissioned by Henry Morgenthau, Jr., then Secretary of the Treasury, to encourage American citizens to pay their income tax in support of the war effort. The film was directed by Wilfred Jackson and Ben Sharpsteen, and features Clarence Nash as the voice of Donald, Fred Shields as the radio announcer, and Cliff Edwards singing the theme song. The New Spirit was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 15th Academy Awards, an honor it shared with 24 other films. The following year, Disney released The Spirit of '43 which had a similar purpose and reused many of the scenes from The New Spirit. The film was released, for the first time since its original theatrical release, in 2004 on the DVD set Walt Disney Treasures: On the Front Lines. Ayrton Senna is a 1995 documentary sports biographical film directed by Stuart Cabb. Open Field is a 2012 documentary biographical film directed by Juan Carlos Martín. Manya! is a 2004 documentary film written by Silke Schütze and directed by Silke Schütze and Armin Plöger. That Guy Dick Miller is a 2014 documentary that was directed by Elijah Drenner. The film had its world premiere on March 7, 2014 at South by Southwest and looks into the life and career of character actor Dick Miller. Funding for the film was raised through a successful Kickstarter campaign. The Anonymous People is a 2013 documentary film written by Aaron Cohen, Jeff Reilly and Greg D. Williams; and directed by Greg D. Williams. The Ballad of Hugh is an animated comedy documentary film directed by Marco DiFelice. Japan Lies: The Photojournalism of Kikujiro Fukushima, Age 90 is a 2012 documentary film about a Japanese photographer Kikujiro Fukushima, and was directed by Saburo Hasegawa. Constraints is a 2013 biographical Documentary short film that was written and directed by Eric Gulliver Hawaiian: The Legend of Eddie Aikau is 2013 documentary action biography film directed by Sam George. Live at DMPO's on Broadway is a VHS/DVD of the Dead Kennedys' performance at the old San Francisco avant-garde theater, DMPO's on Broadway. It was filmed on June 16, 1984, the last night the theater was open before it was torn down. The show is about an hour long and includes 14 songs. Originally released on VHS in 1985 as Live In San Francisco, is was released on DVD on August 29, 2000 under its current title. The set list for this concert was: "Police Truck" "Hop with the Jet Set" "A Child and His Lawnmower" "Religious Vomit" "Do the Slag" "Moral Majority" "M.T.V. − Get off the Air" "Life Sentence" "Jock-O-Rama" "Goons of Hazzard" "Riot" "Bleed for Me" "Nazi Punks Fuck Off!" "We've Got a Bigger Problem Now" Sto lyko is a 2013 documentary drama film directed by Aran Hughes and Christina Koutsospyrou. MISS YOU CAN DO IT debuting 06.24. This next film spotlights Abbey Curran, Miss Iowa USA 2008, the first woman with a disability to compete at the Miss USA Pageant, as well as eight girls and young women from around the country living with special needs, who participate in the Miss You Can Do It Pageant. Created in 2004 by Curran, the pageant offers them and their families a chance to bond and participate in a special event where inner beauty and abilities reign. Directed by Ron Davis. The High Five is a 2014 documentary short film directed by Mike Jacobs. Just As I Remember is a 2012 documentary,short, family and drama film directed by Andrew Moir. Hubert Selby Jr: It/ll Be Better Tomorrow is a 2005 documentary film about writer Hubert Selby, Jr.. The film's title It/ll Be Better Tomorrow is taken from Selby's novel, The Demon, the slash is included in Selby's typography. In the film, Selby explains that, on his manual typewriter, an apostrophe meant typing an "uppercase 8", so it was simpler to use a slash. Selby objects to apostrophes generally, preferring the spelling "dont" to "don't". The 79-minute film features new interviews with Selby, known by his nickname "Cubby", as well as Lou Reed, Ellen Burstyn, Jared Leto, James Remar, Darren Aronofsky, Uli Edel, Gilbert Sorrentino, Nick Tosches, Jerry Stahl, Richard Price, Amiri Baraka, James Ragan, Michael Silverblatt, Jem Cohen, Kenneth Shiffrin, Nicolas Winding Refn, Desmond Nakano, Susan Compo, and Kaytie Lee with archival appearances by Henry Rollins and Anthony Kiedis. The film is narrated by Robert Downey, Jr. Hollywood Legends is a 2004 documentary film directed by Eckhart Schmidt. "A film that explores how the form of the body can become a powerful physical language to express dissent over societal norms and conventions. It profiles Sunil Gupta, a world renowned photographer, who has fearlessly announced that he is gay and HIV positive." Quoting the description from the 2010 Kashish-Mumbai International Queer Film Festival site. How I Became An Elephant is a 2012 documentary film edited and directed by Tim Gorski and Synthian Sharp. The Heart of Jenin is a 2008 film directed by Marcus Vetter and Leon Geller. 10,000 Cigarettes is a 2004 action documentary film written by Adrian Foiadelli and Phil Hobden, and directed by Ross Boyask and Phil Hobden. Cohen on the Bridge is a documentary about Operation Entebbe by director Andrew Wainrib, who gained unprecedented access to the surviving commandos and hostages. An animated short of the documentary won the St. Louis International Film Festival's Festival Prize was an Award Winner at the Palm Springs Short Fest and played many festivals in 2010 and 2011 including Big Sky, Tall Grass, Jerusalem International, and Santa Barbara International. The feature length documentary is slated for release in 2011, the 35th anniversary of Operation Entebbe. De Carthage à Carthage is a Tunisian 2009 documentary film. McLaren's Negatives is a 2006 short animated documentary directed by French Canadian filmmaker Marie-Josée Saint-Pierre. The film is a study of the Canadian animator Norman McLaren, and his personal view of film making. The short film won several awards, including the 2007 Jutra Award for best animated short film. I, Superbiker is a 2011 British film documentary directed by film maker and biker Mark Sloper. It focuses on four contenders for the 2010 British Superbike Championship: Tommy Hill, James Ellison, Josh Brookes and Gary Mason. I Superbiker was released in UK cinemas in 2011 & followed the 4 superbike riders through their dramatic British Superbike Season. The film's strap-line being 'Only one can be the true champion', I Superbiker not only follows our four contenders through the race meetings, it gives equal attention to the girlfriends, wives, team mates and friends that make the drama and tension associated to such an exhilarating season spectacular. The film score was written and recorded by David Vanian David Vanian, the frontman of the punk and alternative rock band The Damned. The title track 'I, Superbiker' was written by Phil Collen of Def Leppard with his band Manraze which also features drummer Paul Cook of the Sex Pistols. The documentary was inspired by the David Essex film Silver Dream Racer. Eyes of the Mothman is 2011 documentary film written and directed by Matthew J. Pellowski. 30 Years From Here is an American made-for-television documentary about the 30 years war on the HIV and AIDS pandemic. The documentary was directed by Josh Rosenzweig for the LGBT cable network here!. The documentary debuted on November 25, 2011. In 2012 30 Years From Here was nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award by the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. The Woman Who Wasn’t There is a 2012 documentary TV movie directed by Angelo Guglielmo.