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Film Picks

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Europeans and the artistic doc: Heddy Honigmann’s Forever
Every once in a while I will see a documentary that will totally yank my mind out of my “American doc headspace.”…
Posted by Maggie on April 30

Postcards From Tora Bora
At this point Americans know about Afghanistan.  Post 9/11, there has been a lot of media about the region.  It is on…
Posted by laimah on April 27

Planet Earth
Ever since I was old enough to tell the various barnyard animals apart, I’ve liked nature documentaries. “Cow! Chicken! Sheep!â€? quickly grew to include “Leafcutter ant! Bushbaby! Komodo Dragon!â€? But the excitement of watching nature programs faded over the years and it became hard not to zone out when yet another wildebeest was devoured by yet another crocodile. I also grew to dislike that draining feeling of hopelessness that came at the end of most films. “There are fewer than twenty left in the wild today,” the narrator says, after having spent the past hour explaining how wonderful the creatures are.  “Because of habitat loss, their numbers are dwindling rapidly.” “They have only one thing to fear: Man.” Cue dirge. So despite Planet Earth‘s great reviews, I was only mildly interested in catching the series on Discovery Channel. Yesterday (Earth Day), I finally did. It was glorious. Planet Earth is an 11-part series produced by the BBC with Discovery and is intended to be “the definitive look at the diversity of our planet.” Scenes of the familiar (even the wildebeest and crocodile) are so well shot they feel new again, and scenes of the unfamiliar (the undulating sea of roaches that live off bat droppings) are spectacularly so. Because of the scope of the subject — five years in the making and over 200 locations, say the promotional materials — the series does meander at times. Also, however fond I am of Sigourney Weaver (Alien!), I would have loved to hear David Attenborough’s original narration. But these are quibbles. Planet Earth is amazing for all of the things it does right: from a snow leopard chasing a mountain goat down a sheer cliff to a vast cave system that grows crystal formations that look like snowflakes. And at the end the narrator doesn’t even have to say, “It reminds us of how much we still have that’s worth saving.â€? Planet Earth is currently on Discovery Channel and available on Amazon.com.
Posted by Maggie on April 23

Killer Of Sheep Extended
Charles Burnett is a big hero of mine (and our ED, Katy).  His first film, Killer Of Sheep, thirty years after its…
Posted by on April 13

Where is This Generation’s John Lennon?
Ari and I finally got around to watching The U.S. vs. John Lennon, a documentary about John and Yoko’s peace activism and…
Posted by Shira on April 3

Staff Picks
Read on to find out which films have inspired the Arts Engine staff members! Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control (1997) Errol…
Posted by Jennifer on April 2

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