Sundance Film Review: The Black Panthers: The Vanguard of the Revolution

Sundance Film Review: The Black Panthers: The Vanguard of the...
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With the heightened sense of racism that has been projected in the media in the last 12 months (not that it didn’t exist without all the publicity), director Stanley Nelson’s recollection of the fight for civil rights with The Black Panthers on the front lines seems highly appropriate at this juncture. … read more

Slamdance Film Review: Across the Sea

Slamdance Film Review: Across the Sea
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While the All-American Kevin is eager to learn about Damla’s roots, she is just as eager to avoid them, and when local fisher Burak reappears in her life, tensions begin to arise as her old life catches up to her new one. … read more

Sundance Film Review: Beaver Trilogy Part IV

Sundance Film Review: Beaver Trilogy Part IV
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Director Brad Besser sets two paths into motion in this “Where Are They Now?” endeavor as he seeks to find the whereabouts of Mr. Griffiths nearly 36 years after his first Beaver film. It’s the candid interviews and uproarious tales from friends and family in central Utah that provide the most entertainment.  … read more

Sundance Film Review: The Games Maker

Sundance Film Review: The Games Maker
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After an accident leaves Ivan Drago orphaned, the young inventor finds himself whisked away to a harsh boarding school only to escape and uncover the mystery behind the creator of a board game contest.  … read more

Sundance Film Review: Princess

Sundance Film Review: Princess
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Adar detests going to school amid this flourishing of hormones, but it also becomes increasingly clear that life at home isn’t particularly healthy: Michael plays “games” with Adar that walk the line between fun and, well, downright creepy and molesting. … read more

Sundance Film Review: The Hunting Ground

Sundance Film Review: The Hunting Ground
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Though the bulk of the film focuses on articulating how colleges like Harvard, Stanford and Berkeley spend more of their resources on covering up sexual allegations than actually punishing the perpetrators, the stories of the survivors and their efforts to gain national traction and support leaves the audience with the feeling that things are slowly changing for the better. … read more

Sundance Film Review: Homesick

Sundance Film Review: Homesick
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Homesick is an interesting character study of Charlotte, who must work to forgive her mother and—for lack of better words—grow up by delving into this queerness. It’s an interesting, fun drama that thrives in the discomfort it engenders with Charlotte’s and Henrik’s transgressive love. … read more

Slamdance Film Review: On Her Own

Slamdance Film Review: On Her Own
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Director Morgan Schmidt-Feng begins on a happy note in 2009, showing the Prebilichs benefiting from the well-earned fruits of hard labor. With help from Cindy’s husband and three young kids, Nancy struggles to keep the farm afloat in the face of debt and loss. … read more

Sundance Film Review: Censored Voices

Sundance Film Review: Censored Voices
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Censored Voices recollects recordings from Israeli soldiers of the Six Days War, originally recorded by Amos Oz. This documentary reveals their true feelings—as opposed to proclamations of national pride—about the pressures of Zionism and the horrors and hypocrisy of war. … read more

Sundance Film Review: Things of the Aimless Wanderer

Sundance Film Review: Things of the Aimless Wanderer
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Things of the Aimless Wanderer, a film in the New Frontiers section of Sundance programming, challenges traditional approaches to narrative filmmaking. This drama offers three disjointed accounts of what became of a disappeared black girl in an East/Central African country (likely Rwanda) after she had a fling with a white, American journalist/travel writer—presented as “Working Hypotheses,” each claimed to be based on a “true story.”     … read more