Robert Greene returns to his roots to film pro wrestlers in "Fake It So Real"
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
Robert Greene is an award-winning filmmaker who directed the highly regarded Netflix documentary, "Procession." But 12 years ago, Greene was only beginning to refine his voice and vision as a young filmmaker. A lifelong wrestling fan, Greene parlayed a family connection into documentary treasure, following a handful of pro wrestlers over a week leading up to a show in rural North Carolina. Greene's film, "Fake It So Real," dives into a subculture that is poorly understood by city dwellers, and a subculture that would soon push its way to the foreground of the American conversation ..read more
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Drew Xanthopolous leans on his humanity to enter the world of "The Sensitives"
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
Drew Xanthopolous was a young, unestablished filmmaker when he came across a New York Times photo essay that would launch his career—as well as change the next five years of his life. The essay documented the lives of people who suffer from Multiple Chemical Sensitivity, a crippling condition that forces the afflicted to rethink everything about their day-to-day lives (including where they live and how they interact with family). Xanthopolous was intrigued and decided to learn more. He met several MCS sufferers and decided to tell their story. Over the ensuing handful of years, Xanthopolous un ..read more
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Drew Xanthopolous leans on his humanity to enter the mysterious world of "The Sensitives"
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
Drew Xanthopolous was a young, unestablished filmmaker when he came across a New York Times photo essay that would launch his career—as well as change the next five years of his life. The essay documented the lives of people who suffer from Multiple Chemical Sensitivity, a crippling condition that forces the afflicted to rethink everything about their day-to-day lives (including where they live and how they interact with family). Xanthopolous was intrigued and decided to learn more. He met several MCS sufferers and decided to tell their story. Over the ensuing handful of years, Xanthopolous un ..read more
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Elizabeth Lo captures the romance of urban dog life in "Stray"
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
In the United States, stray dogs are not allowed to live on the street. They are whisked away to live in concrete cells. The approach is very different in some cities in Europe and Asia, where stray dogs are allowed to live freely alongside the human population. Elizabeth Lo pondered these differences and what it all means. She wanted to create a visual document that captures stray dogs as seen from their perspective, not ours. The result is a stunning visual achievement that also carries a message about what it means to live free. Lo's film, Stray, was released in 2021. It won the jury priz ..read more
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Justin Schein faces an unthinkable dilemma in "Left on Purpose."
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
Justin Schein is a veteran filmmaker who has worked with scores of documentary subjects, but nothing could prepare him for an aging yippee named Mayer Vishner. Schein thought he was making a documentary about Vishner’s life. Vishner had a different idea, and it shook Schein to his core and tested his mettle as a friend, filmmaker and human being. Schein's 2015 film, "Left On Purpose," follows the colorful, unforgettable Vishner through a minefield of emotional and ethical issues ..read more
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Joe Brandmeier hits the road to interview married couples in "I Do?"
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
Joe Brandmeier was an average married guy who accepted the ups and downs of being coupled. But then a particularly tough patch in his marriage prompted him to think more deeply about the institution. Brandmeier became deeply curious about why we get married, what it means to be married, and how different kinds of couples make it work. He hit the road and interviewed a variety of married couples throughout the upper midwest. The interviews became the crux of his 2016 film, "I Do?" It's an amiable look at how real couples love, laugh, cope and persist ..read more
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Pamela Littky spends 10 years following kids voted "Most Likely to Succeed"
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
Hollywood photographer Pamela Littky was overtaken by a nagging curiosity ... what happens, she wondered, to the thousands of kids named Most Likely to Succeed in high schools all across America? Littky embarked on her first documentary film to find out. Ten years later, she answered the question in her 2019 film, "Most Likely to Succeed." It's an endearing and honest look into life's most vulnerable period where even high school stars get bumped around along the way ..read more
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Jesse Alk explores Kolkata's mysterious native dogs in "Pariah Dog"
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
Jesse Alk's father, Howard, was a documentarian who died when Jesse was a child. Decades later, Jesse wound up retracing his father's footsteps to Kolkata, India, where Howard had documented West Bengali musicians in the early '70s. Jesse fell in love with the city, its people, and particularly its native street dogs. He filmed the dogs and the people who care for them, capturing the loneliness and suffering of both. His film, Pariah Dog, debuted in 2019 at the Big Sky Documentary Film Festival and won Best Feature ..read more
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Dani Connor Wild discovers she's a filmmaker while locked down in northern Sweden
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
Dani Connor Wild was volunteering for a wildlife photographer in northern Sweden when the Covid pandemic descended and locked her in place. For the next six months she lived alone in a town of 20 mostly elderly residents and found solace and meaning by heading into the dense, rustic woods near her home. What she found there altered the trajectory of her young career and transformed her into a successful multi-platform documentarian. Her first documentary film, The Squirrels & Me, was released on YouTube in February and has already racked up nearly a million views ..read more
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Michael Lucid goes back to school to tell the story of "Dirty Girls"
Talking Documentary
by Scott Lacy
1y ago
In 1996, Michael Lucid was a senior at the Crossroads school in Santa Monica, California. He noticed a social phenomenon that had the school buzzing and wanted to know more. So he grabbed a camcorder and began documenting a group of impossibly young female idealists whose brash manners and clothes were ruffling feathers on campus. In the process, he created a time capsule that still captivates people 25 years later ..read more
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