AFI DOCS 2018 Opening and Closing Night Films, Centerpiece and Special Screenings

Posted by Larry Gleeson

AFI DOCS

AFI DOCS has announced its Opening and Closing Night films, and Centerpiece and Special Screenings — with AT&T returning as Presenting Sponsor of the festival for the fifth consecutive year.

For its 16th edition, AFI’s annual celebration of documentary film in the nation’s capital will open with the world premiere of PERSONAL STATEMENT (DIRS Juliane Dressner and Edwin Martinez) and will close with UNITED SKATES (DIRS Dyana Winkler and Tina Brown).

This year’s program also includes ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASA’S JOURNEY TO TOMORROW (DIR Rory Kennedy) as the Centerpiece.  The four Special Screenings will be the world premiere of THE COLD BLUE (DIR Erik Nelson), KINSHASA MAKAMBO (DIR Dieudo Hamadi), MR. SOUL! (DIRS Sam Pollard and Melissa Haizlip) and WITKIN & WITKIN (DIR Trisha Ziff).

ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASA'S JOURNEY TO TOMORROW
ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASA’S JOURNEY TO TOMORROW

The Opening Night screening of PERSONAL STATEMENT will be held on June 13 at the Newseum and will be followed by a Q&A with directors Juliane Dressner and Edwin Martinez.  The film centers on three Brooklyn high school seniors who are working as college counselors in their schools because many of their classmates have no one else to turn to for support.

The Closing Night screening of UNITED SKATES will be held on June 17 at the Landmark E Street Cinema and will be followed by a Q&A with directors Dyana Winkler and Tina Brown.  The film chronicles the fight to save roller-skating rinks, which have played a critical role in modern African-American culture.

The Centerpiece screening of ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASA’S JOURNEY TO TOMORROW will take place at the National Air and Space Museum.  As NASA heads into its 60th anniversary, filmmaker Rory Kennedy looks back at the men and women who have built the institution, and whose boundless curiosity drives scientific progress forward.

Tickets to AFI DOCS, including Opening Night and Closing Night screenings, are now on sale at AFI.com/afidocs.

Descriptions of the films are below.

OPENING NIGHT SCREENING

PERSONAL STATEMENTPERSONAL STATEMENT:  Karoline, Enoch and Christine are Brooklyn high school seniors who just want to go to college, but like so many public school students, their schools don’t have enough college guidance support. But they refuse to give up and are determined to carry their classmates with them as they pursue their dreams.

CLOSING NIGHT SCREENING

UNITED SKATES:  Roller-skating has played a critical role in modern African-American culture, with rinks serving as both a haven of community and of artistic expression, and a flashpoint in the civil rights movement.  UNITED SKATES chronicles the fight to save these rinks, and the souls of communities nationwide.

CENTERPIECE SCREENING

ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASAS JOURNEY TO TOMORROW:  Rory Kennedy tells the stories of the women and men behind the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s decades-long exploration of our solar system, our universe and our planet, in this enlightening film that celebrates NASA’s triumphs, mourns its tragedies and affirms the importance of its mission both in space and on Earth.

SPECIAL SCREENINGS

THE COLD BLUETHE COLD BLUE:  In 1943, legendary Hollywood director William Wyler crafted MEMPHIS BELLE, a celebrated tribute to the titular WWII bomber.  Using footage of the film from the National Archives, THE COLD BLUE features gripping narration from some of the last surviving B-17 pilots.  A meditation on youth, war and stunning bravery.

kinshasa_makambo_stillKINSHASA MAKAMBO:  Amid the backdrop of seemingly never-ending political and social unrest that hangs over the Democratic Republic of the Congo, three young activists take to the streets with their fellow countrymen to overthrow their country’s President and help enact much needed change in their politically beleaguered country.

MR. SOUL!:  An in-depth look at the late 1960s WNET public television series SOUL! and its producer Ellis Haizlip.  The series was among the first to provide expanded images of African Americans on television, shifting the gaze from inner-city poverty and violence to the vibrancy of the Black Arts Movement. SOLD OUT

WITKIN _ WITKINWITKIN & WITKIN:  The artwork of septuagenarian twins Joel-Peter and Jerome Witkin transcends genres and traditional form.  WITKIN & WITKIN explores the brothers’ complicated relationship with one another, while examining depths and divisions in their work.  Joel-Peter’s stunning photography and Jerome’s powerful figurative paintings distinctly capture the human condition, reflecting differing emotional and intellectual approaches.

*Featured photo UNITED SKATES

(Source: afi.com)

The AFI DOCS Interview: INTO THE OKAVANGO Director Neil Gelinas

Posted by Larry Gleeson

National Geographic photographer Neil Gelinas makes his directorial debut with INTO THE OKAVANGO, a visually stunning journey along the titular river that is the lifeline for wildlife throughout the African continent. Gelinas follows three passionate individuals — an ornithologist, bushman and a young scientist — as they embark on a four-month mission, plagued with uncertainty, to discover why the Okavango Delta is rapidly drying up. Spanning three countries, and witnessing Africa’s animal and bird population in visceral, jaw-dropping close-up, the team encounters the natural world in all its beauty, sadness and even danger, while trying to understand how to save one of the world’s last untouched wildernesses.

AFI spoke with director Gelinas about the film, which screens at AFI DOCS on Thursday, June 14, and Friday, June 15. Get tickets here.

AFI: There’s inevitably a point where, as a filmmaker, you read or see or realize something that lights that fire to make a subject into a documentary. When did that happen for you here?

NG: In 2012, I took vacation time to meet Steve and his brother Chris in the Okavango Delta in Botswana. They were doing their research on cavity nesting birds and I took along a camera. I’d film them working and exploring, and eventually put together a little reel. Steve was clearly a compelling character and the delta landscape and wildlife were so cinematically rich that I knew this was going to be my first attempt at a feature doc.

Into-the-Okavango_[Roger-Horroks]_4

AFI: There’s such an obvious and incredibly difficult craft to making a documentary like this. What would you say was the most difficult scene to accomplish?

NG: It was really clear to me how we should introduce Water and Adjany, but Steve was far more challenging, because we’re simultaneously introducing this place, the Okavango Delta. How do you make it informative, but also emotionally engaging, without becoming too saccharine? It took so many iterations and interviews to get the tone right. In the end, it became like a romance that Steve has with the wilderness. At least, that’s what Brian and I were going for.

AFI: Steve appears incredibly personable, even vulnerable, right from the start. Was he readily happy to appear like this on camera or did this develop over time?

NG: I’ve known Steve since 2011, and the majority of the filming took place in 2015. We’ve worked together to materialize both the project and the film. He’s the closest thing I’ve ever had to a brother. So, by 2015, for him to be filmed by me, it was a safe place. He and I share a lot of trust and respect for each other. We have to. We’ve taken this giant leap together.

IntoTheOkavango_NGM_16

AFI: How did Water come into your life?

NG: Steve worked with Water years ago in the delta. Steve was a camp manager and Water was a guide. Steve had kept in touch with him over the years, and it was sort of a shot in the dark when he asked him to join on the 2015 expedition. I hadn’t met Water, and was counting on GB to fill that on-camera role. GB’s still in the film, but it was clear there’s something magical about Water. It was a four-month expedition, but I think it was by day two that I’d made up my mind that Water would be a leading character.

AFI: There’s so much happening beyond Steve’s mission, things like the difference in background of the people involved, Adjany’s first memory being one of war. How did you find that balance of capturing both the personal motivations and stories within the film and the vast scenes of wildlife and the wilderness?

NG: Before even starting the 2015 journey, I knew the expedition wasn’t going to be compelling enough to carry a feature doc all by itself. I could rely on natural history, but for this character-driven story to mean anything, the audience was going to have to care about them. And of course, each character moment has to be motivated by the larger narrative. So it turned … [into] a lot of time in edit trying to make a delicious sandwich that had the right combination and balance of meat, veg and bread.

AFI: What are you hoping that people will take away from this documentary?

NG: Beyond understanding what the Okavango is and wanting to help save it, I hope they…value the relationship we as humans have with wilderness, and that we need to conserve the few wilderness areas we have left. Not just for the sake of wilderness or nature, but for us as human beings.

(Source: afi.com)

AFI DOCS

Steve James Is the 2018 AFI DOCS Guggenheim Honoree

Posted by Larry Gleeson

 

AFI DOCS has announced that it will pay tribute to Steve James as the 2018 Charles Guggenheim Symposium honoree. James is the remarkable, Academy Award nominated filmmaker best known for HOOP DREAMS (1994) and ABACUS: SMALL ENOUGH TO JAIL (2016).

Each year, the AFI DOCS Charles Guggenheim Symposium honors a master of the nonfiction art form. Taking place at the Warner Bros. Theater at the National Museum of American History in Washington, DC, on June 14, the Symposium will include an in-depth conversation with James along with clips from his acclaimed works and episode one of his new Starz docuseries, AMERICA TO ME. The Symposium will be moderated by Michael Phillips, film critic of the Chicago Tribune.

Each year, the AFI DOCS Charles Guggenheim Symposium honors a master of the nonfiction art form. Taking place at the Warner Bros. Theater at the National Museum of American History in Washington, DC, on June 14, the Symposium will include an in-depth conversation with James along with clips from his acclaimed works and episode one of his new Starz docuseries, AMERICA TO ME. The Symposium will be moderated by Michael Phillips, film critic of the Chicago Tribune.

In AMERICA TO ME, James returns to the subjects that have marked his career — class, race and how the two affect social and economic mobility. James follows students at a public high school in suburban Chicago that is considered the gold standard of diversity, yet on the ground, he discovers a different story.

The acclaimed HOOP DREAMS began James’ long and fruitful affiliation with Kartemquin Films. James’ next documentary, STEVIE (2002), won major festival awards in the U.S. and internationally. THE INTERRUPTERS (2011) was a hit on the festival circuit, winning a dozen awards. LIFE ITSELF (2014) premiered to critical acclaim at Sundance and was named the best documentary of the year by more than a dozen critics’ associations. ABACUS: SMALL ENOUGH TO JAIL was a 2018 Academy Award nominee for Best Documentary Feature, and was nominated for numerous other awards, winning Best Political Documentary at the Critics’ Choice Documentary Awards.

James joins a renowned list of Guggenheim Symposium honorees: Charles Guggenheim (2003), Barbara Kopple (2004), Martin Scorsese (2006), Jonathan Demme (2007), Spike Lee (2008), Albert Maysles (2009), Frederick Wiseman (2010), Chris Hegedus and D A Pennebaker (2011), Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky (2012), Errol Morris (2013), Alex Gibney (2014), Stanley Nelson (2015), Werner Herzog (2016) and Laura Poitras (2017).

AFI DOCS is proud to have AT&T return as this year’s Presenting Sponsor. Passes and tickets to AFI DOCS, including the Charles Guggenheim Symposium, are now on sale at AFI.com/AFIDOCS.

AFI DOCS

(Source: afi.com)

Guillermo del Toro President of the 75th Venice International Film Jury

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Screen Shot 2018-05-30 at 1.47.16 AM

The Jury will assign the Golden Lion for Best Film as well as other official awards.

 

Director Guillermo del Toro (The Shape of Water, Pan’s Labyrinth, The Devil’s Backbone) will be the president of the International Jury of the Competition at the 75th Venice International Film Festival (August 29 – September 8, 2018). The decision was made by the Board of Directors of the Biennale di Venezia chaired by Paolo Baratta, who embraced the recommendation of the Director of the Venice Film Festival Alberto Barbera.

Upon accepting the proposal, Guillermo stated: “To serve as president in Venice is an immense honor and responsibility that I accept with respect and gratitude. Venice is a window to world cinema and the opportunity to celebrate its power and cultural relevance.”

Del Toro participated in the Competition of the recent 74th Venice International Film Festival 2017 with The Shape of Water, which won the Golden Lion for Best Film, awarded by the Jury chaired by Annette Bening.

On the final night (September 8, 2018) of the upcoming 75th Venice Film Festival, the International Jury will assign the following official prizes to the feature-length films in the Competition:

  • Golden Lion for Best Film
  • Silver Lion – Grand Jury Prize
  • Silver Lion – Award for Best Director
  • Coppa Volpi for Best Actor
  • Coppa Volpi for Best Actress
  • Award for Best Screenplay
  • Special Jury Prize
  • Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best New Young Actor or Actress.

Screen Shot 2018-05-30 at 2.11.43 AM

*Featured photo – Director Guillermo del Toro  (Photo credit: La Biennale di Venezia)

(Source: labiennale.org)

Call for Film Submissions – Venice International College Program

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Screen Shot 2018-05-28 at 11.18.22 PM

The Venice International Film Festival’s Biennale College –Cinema International is open for submissions on the college cinema website through July 1st, 2018.

The Call for the Biennale College – Cinema International is open to teams composed of directors making their first or second film, associated with producers who have made at least three audio-visual subjects, or one feature-length fiction film, or a documentary, distributed and/or presented at Film Festivals.

Nine micro-budget projects will be selected and invited to participate in a preliminary developmental workshop, to be held between October 6th and 15th 2018 in Venice, together with the three projects selected from the Italian call (Biennale College – Cinema Italia).

Of these twelve projects, three (including one from the Italian section) will be selected to receive a supporting grant from the Biennale that will cover the production costs (which must not exceed 150,000 euro). The three feature-length films produced during this process will be presented at the 76th Venice International Film Festival 2019. They will also be screened online in the Sala Web, the virtual theatre that coexists with the traditional screening venues of the Venice Film Festival on the Lido.

 

The complete official text of the Biennale College – Cinema International is available online at collegecinema.labiennale.org.

(Source: labiennale.org)

 

Venice International Film Festival Celebrates 75th Edition This Year

Posted by Larry Gleeson

The Venice International Film Festival is the oldest film festival in the world and one of the most prestigious. The Festival was organized for the first time in 1932, under the auspices of the President of the Biennale, Count Giuseppe Volpi di Misurata, the sculptor Antonio Maraini, and Luciano De Feo and obtained a great popularity, so as to become an annual event from 1935 onwards.

Screen Shot 2018-05-28 at 10.12.16 PM

The Venice Film Festival is today a prestigious event that presents every year a selection of world-class films, bringing some of the most successful directors and actors of our time on the red carpet at Lido di Venezia, continuing the tradition that adds the glamour and charm that always marked the Festival as a high artistic value program.

About 75th Venice International Film Festival

The 75th Venice International Film Festival is organized by La Biennale di Venezia, and will take place at Venice Lido from August 29th to September 8th, 2018. This year’s President of the International Jury of the Competition is Guillermo del Toro. The Festival is officially recognized by the FIAPF (International Federation of Film Producers Association).

The aim of the Festival is to raise awareness and promote international cinema in all its forms as art, entertainment and as an industry, in a spirit of freedom and dialogue. The Festival also organizes retrospectives and tributes to major figures as a contribution towards a better understanding of the history of cinema.

Screen Shot 2018-05-28 at 10.21.20 PM
Director Guillermo del Toro (The Shape of Water, Pan’s Labyrinth, The Devil’s Backbone) will be the president of the International Jury of the Competition at the 75th Venice International Film Festival (August 29 – September 8, 2018), which will assign the Golden Lion for Best Film as well as other official awards. (Photo credit:La Biennale di Venezia)

(Source: labiennale.org)

The AFI DOCS Interview: Juliane Dressner, Director of Opening Night World Premiere PERSONAL STATEMENT

Posted by Larry Gleeson

Karoline, Enoch and Christine are Brooklyn high school seniors who just want to go to college, but like so many public school students throughout the country, their schools don’t have enough college guidance support. Refusing to give up, they decide to work as college counselors in their schools, becoming the very resource they don’t have themselves. Inspirational and moving, heartwarming and heartbreaking, PERSONAL STATEMENT is a testament to the power of knowledge and the ability to lead with a dream.

PERSONAL STATEMENT opens AFI DOCS on Wednesday, June 13 at the Newseum. Get tickets here.

AFI spoke with filmmaker Juliane Dressner, in an interview below.

AFI:What led you to pursue documentary filmmaking?

JD: Before my film career, I worked as a consultant in the nonprofit sector, documenting best practices in social programs, including youth organizing. I was so inspired by the young people who were addressing problems in their communities that I decided to become a filmmaker so that others could see the power of their work.

AFI: What inspired you to tell this story?

JD: College access is one of the dominant civil rights issues of our time. People from low-income backgrounds are increasingly excluded from higher education. One reason why this disparity exists is because many low-income students don’t have access to enough college guidance support.

When I learned that young people were taking it upon themselves to close the college guidance gap in their schools, I realized this was an extraordinary opportunity to both understand the obstacles they face, and to draw attention to their inspirational determination to surmount them.

AFI: How did you find the subjects in your film?

JD: I reached out to the staff at CARA (College Access: Research & Action), the organization that trains students to work as college counselors in their schools, and they were open to collaborating on a film. They knew that seeing these young people bringing about change in their communities is the best way to understand just how effective they can be.

CARA invited me to the peer counselor training, and that is where I met Karoline, Christine and Enoch. They were three of the 70 inspirational young people I met that day who had decided to step up and fill the guidance gap in their schools by working as peer college counselors.

AFI: What was a particular obstacle you faced while making the film? 

JD: When I showed up on the first day of the peer college counselor training with a camera crew, I had raised enough money to make a short video.

After meeting Karoline, Christine and Enoch, and understanding the enormous responsibility they were taking on, we realized that the best to way tell their stories was to follow them through their senior year and into college. This would mean shooting at their schools and homes at least weekly — and sometimes even more often. But I did not have the funds to pay for a crew to do that much filming. I considered delaying to raise money in order to film the next cohort of peer college counselors. But after meeting Karoline, Enoch and Christine, who were all interested in collaborating on a film, I felt compelled to continue. So I used what little money we had to purchase a camera.

I ended up doing much of the filming on my own. In some cases, and especially when capturing sound would be challenging with a one-person crew, Eddie Martinez and I would work as a two-person crew, with Eddie shooting. Even as I was filming, I was raising funds for the film. It was hard, but I think that the film benefited from having a small crew. Karoline, Christine and Enoch, as well as their families, classmates and teachers, became accustomed to us. As a result, we were able to capture pivotal and intimate moments.

AFI: What do you want audiences to walk away with after screening your film?

JD: Low-income teenagers want all that higher education promises: the possibility of prospering and moving beyond survival mode. They know that a college degree is their best bet. But many of them can’t get there, and as a result, income inequality persists.

One of the main barriers keeping low-income students out of college is the lack of college guidance in public schools. Many people don’t realize that most public schools don’t employ college counselors. Instead, guidance counselors are expected to provide help with the college process. But nationwide, the guidance counselor to student ratio is one to 490. And guidance counselors report that they can spend only 22% of their time on college guidance. The lack of college guidance support is especially troubling for students who don’t have someone at home who can help them with the college process.

I hope that audiences walk away from the film with a better awareness of the college guidance gap. The film sheds light on both the systemic barriers that keep so many young people from attaining a college degree, and the power that already exists within their communities to address problems of inequality. In the film we see that the very people who are affected by a problem are in fact the ones who are best situated to solve it.

AFI: Why is Washington, DC, a valuable location to screen your film?

JD: There is no better place for PERSONAL STATEMENT to premiere than Washington because the issues addressed in the film are national ones. We hope that the film will build support for systemic change throughout the U.S.

AFI: Why are documentary films important today?

JD: Documentary films are a powerful vehicle for transporting viewers to worlds they have never experienced. Watching PERSONAL STATEMENT, the audience comes to understand what it is like to navigate the daunting college process on a terribly uneven playing field. We see how challenging it can be for low-income students to become the first in their families to go to college. We hope the film will build support for the reforms that are needed to enable all young people to fulfill their potential.

 

AFI DOCS

(Source: blog.AFI.com)

The AFI DOCS Interview: ALONE IN THE GAME Creator/Executive Producer David McFarland

Posted by Larry Gleeson

ALONE IN THE GAME exposes the outdated ideas and outright prejudices that make competitive sports one of the gay rights movement’s final frontiers, and shows how a new generation of queer and transgender athletes are scoring victories on and off the field by standing up for their rights and demanding a chance to compete.

Athletes featured include NBA center Jason Collins; soccer stars Megan Rapinoe and Robbie Rogers; Vanderbilt football player Riley Tindol; high-school athlete Trevor Betts; and Layana White and Haley Videckis, who found love on the Pepperdine Christian University women’s basketball team and lost their scholarships.

AFI spoke with creator/executive producer David McFarland about the film, which plays AFI DOCS Friday, June 15. Get tickets here.

AFI: What led you to pursue documentary filmmaking?

DM: The advocate in me was called to action, and the creative in me couldn’t be left behind. For me, documentary storytelling is about bringing a hidden world to audiences to help create change and make a real difference in the lives of others.

AFI: What inspired you to tell this story?

DM: I have the privilege to examine these issues at the highest levels of sport — live these issues, really — up close and in person, and these experiences have given me a true and factual understanding of just how serious these problems are for LGBT athletes and how great an impact the world of sport can make when the right decisions are made by those in positions of power. When there is no current out gay male professional athlete actively playing in the Big 5 major leagues, you know we have a serious problem that affects the future of sport and the well-being of our LGBT athletes.

AFI: How did you find the subjects in your film?

DM: Being immersed in the world of sport and the LGBT community for the past three decades, combined with my professional experience, I have developed a trusted and confidential network that often leads me to closeted athletes, athletes in crisis and/or athletes who have faced head-on a culture of exclusion from sport.

AFI: What was a particular obstacle you faced while making the film? 

DM: One of the biggest obstacles in making the film was getting certain key power parties in sport to show up and participate. This begs a very serious question for our leaders in sport: are we living in a time when equality and inclusion truly exists for LGBT athletes?

What do you want audiences to walk away with after screening your film?

DM: I really want the audience to understand that even though America’s cultural, social and political climate is becoming increasingly accepting of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) citizens, competing and participating in sport is still considered to be an unsettling and unsafe environment for many LGBT athletes, coaches and sport administrators on and off the field. I hope that communities all across this country will see this important film and take action to ensure that the opportunities and dreams are the same for all athletes, coaches and those who participate in sport regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity. The obligation is on us all, regardless where in the sports power matrix you reside, or even in society as a whole.

AFI: Why are documentary films important today?

DM: They allow us to walk in the shoes of others, building a sense of shared humanity through real-life experiences, that give voice to the truth and strives to hold those in power accountable. In a time of uncertainty and “alternative facts,” telling stories in the documentary form matters more now than ever. Documentary films can and do inspire change, and while that change may be incremental, it is nonetheless real. They engage the heart and the mind with evocative, inspiring and emotional storytelling that can make a significant difference in the lives of others.

AFI DOCS

(Source: AFI DOCS Press Release)

AFI DOCS 2018 Unveils Full Slate of Films

Posted by Larry Gleeson

AFI DOCS

The Nation’s top documentary film festival has announced its 2018 film slate!

The American Film Institute’s AFI DOCS has announced its full slate of films for 2018 — with AT&T returning as Presenting Sponsor of the American Film Institute’s five-day documentary film festival in the nation’s capital.

The 16th edition will showcase 92 films representing 22 countries — including five world premieres, one international premiere, one North American premiere, eight U.S. premieres and four East Coast premieres.  This includes films in the VR showcase, which invites audiences to participate in immersive virtual reality experiences that represent the cutting edge of documentary storytelling.  AFI DOCS 2018 runs June 13–17 in Washington, DC, and Silver Spring, MD.

Audience Awards will be bestowed upon films based on the results of ballots cast by festival attendees.  The winners of the Audience Awards for Best Feature and Best Short will be announced on Monday, June 18.

As previously announced the festival will open with the world premiere of PERSONAL STATEMENT and will close with UNITED SKATES. ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASA’S JOURNEY TO TOMORROW screens as the Centerpiece Screening.  Special Screenings include THE COLD BLUE, KINSHASA MAKAMBO, MR. SOUL! and WITKIN & WITKIN.

Passes and tickets to AFI DOCS 2018 are on sale to AFI members (at a discounted rate) and the public at AFI.com/AFIDOCS.  To become an AFI member, visit AFI.com/join.

Pictured at top: DON’T BE NICE

AFI DOCS 2018 PROGRAM 

OPENING NIGHT SCREENING – Wednesday, June 13

PERSONAL STATEMENT:  DIRS Juliane Dressner and Edwin Martinez.  USA.  Karoline, Enoch and Christine are Brooklyn high school seniors who just want to go to college, but like so many public-school students throughout the country, their schools don’t have enough college guidance support. Refusing to give up, they decide to work as college counselors in their schools, becoming the very resource they don’t have themselves.  World Premiere.

CLOSING NIGHT SCREENING – Sunday, June 17

UNITED SKATES:  DIRS Dyana Winkler and Tina Brown.  USA.  Roller-skating has played a critical role in modern African-American culture, with rinks serving as both a haven of community and of artistic expression, and a flashpoint in the civil rights movement.  UNITED SKATES chronicles the fight to save these rinks, and the souls of communities nationwide.

CENTERPIECE SCREENING – Friday, June 15

ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASA’S JOURNEY TO TOMORROW:  DIR Rory Kennedy.  USA.  Rory Kennedy tells the stories of the women and men behind the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s decades-long exploration of our solar system, our universe and our planet, in this enlightening film that celebrates NASA’s triumphs, mourns its tragedies and affirms the importance of its mission both in space and on Earth.

SPECIAL SCREENINGS

THE COLD BLUE:  DIR Erik Nelson.  USA.  In 1943, legendary Hollywood director William Wyler crafted MEMPHIS BELLE, a celebrated tribute to the titular WWII bomber.  Using footage shot by Wyler from the National Archives, director Erik Nelson has made a new film, featuring gripping narration from some of the last surviving B-17 pilots.  A meditation on youth, war and stunning bravery.  World Premiere.

KINSHASA MAKAMBO:  DIR Dieudo Hamadi.  DRC, France, Germany.  Amid the backdrop of seemingly the neverending political and social unrest that hangs over the Democratic Republic of Congo, three young activists take to the streets with their fellow countrymen to overthrow their country’s President and help enact much needed change in their politically beleaguered country.  East Coast Premiere.

MR. SOUL!: DIRS Sam Pollard and Melissa Haizlip. USA.  An in-depth look at the late 1960s WNET public television series SOUL! and its producer Ellis Haizlip.  The series was among the first to provide expanded images of African Americans on television, shifting the gaze from inner-city poverty and violence to the vibrancy of the Black Arts Movement.

WITKIN + WITKIN:  DIR Trisha Ziff.  Mexico.  The artwork of septuagenarian twins Joel-Peter and Jerome Witkin transcends genres and traditional form.  WITKIN & WITKIN explores the brothers’ complicated relationship with one another, and examines depths and divisions in their work.  Joel-Peter’s stunning photography and Jerome’s powerful figurative paintings distinctly capture the human condition, reflecting differing emotional and intellectual approaches.  U.S. Premiere.

FEATURE FILM SELECTIONS

209 RUE SAINT-MAUR, PARIS 10ÈME – THE NEIGHBOURS:  DIR Ruth Zylberman.  France.  After selecting a building at random in a Jewish neighborhood in Paris, French director Ruth Zylberman meticulously reconstructed its community of inhabitants during the German occupation.  What results is the spellbinding 209 RUE SAINT-MAUR, an experimental historiography that tells the emotional story of lives uprooted and destroyed under the Nazis.  U.S. Premiere.

ALONE IN THE GAME:  DIRS Natalie Metzger and Michael Rohrbaugh.  USA.  Outdated ideas and outright prejudice have made competitive sports one of the gay rights movement’s final frontiers.  ALONE IN THE GAME reveals how a new generation of queer and transgender athletes are scoring victories on and off the field by standing up for their rights — including the right to compete.  World Premiere.

AMÉRICA:  DIRS Erick Stoll and Chase Whiteside.  USA.  At the heart of this film is 93-year-old matriarch América.  When an accidental fall lands her son in jail for neglect, her three freewheeling grandsons must reunite to get their father out of prison and their grandmother out of bed.  What emerges is an unforgettable and tender tale of familial love.

AMERICA TO ME:  DIR Steve James.  USA.  In this first episode of his excellent miniseries, Steve James returns to the subjects that have marked his career — class, race, and how the two affect social and economic mobility.  James follows students at a public high school in suburban Chicago that is considered the gold standard of diversity, yet on the ground, he discovers a different story.

BATHTUBS OVER BROADWAY:  DIR Dava Whisenant.  USA.  Steve Young is obsessed with industrial musicals, the often bizarre and hilarious productions commissioned by companies to celebrate their products at corporate conventions.  Follow him as he investigates this odd aspect of midcentury corporate culture, while continuing his search for gems like “Diesel Dazzle” and “The Bathrooms Are Coming!”

BISBEE ’17:  DIR Robert Greene.  USA.  Bisbee, Arizona, an old copper-mining town on the Mexican border, finally reckons with its darkest day: the deportation of 1,200 immigrant miners left to die in the middle of the desert in 1917.  Filmmaker Robert Greene captures the city’s residents as they commemorate this tragic event by staging a reenactment on its 100th anniversary.

BLOWIN’ UP:  DIR Stephanie Wang-Breal.  USA.  A New York City courtroom recommends a unique and compassionate intervention option to young women charged with prostitution: submit to free counseling sessions designed by a mentoring program to get you off the street, and your record will be expunged.  Are they ready to make that change?

CENTRAL AIRPORT THF:  DIR Karim Aïnouz.  Germany, France, Brazil.  A decade after ceasing operations, Berlin’s historic Tempelhof Airport has found a second life serving a new group of arrivals and departures: refugees now seeking asylum in Germany.  CENTRAL AIRPORT THF looks at the absurdity of life for migrants making the most of the long layover.

CHARM CITY:  DIR Marilyn Ness.  USA.  On the streets of Baltimore, the murder rate is approaching an all-time high, and distrust of the police reaches a fever pitch.  With neighborhoods in peril, residents attempt to diffuse the violence through cooperative efforts helmed by community leaders, compassionate law-enforcement officers and a progressive young city councilman.

COMBAT OBSCURA:  DIR Miles Lagoze.  USA.  Miles Lagoze was deployed as a combat photographer in Afghanistan, making videos for official Marine Corps recruitment purposes.  Compiled of outtakes from those videos, this disturbingly raw portrait of the conflict in Afghanistan exposes the gulf between the war we’re meant to see and the war as it really is.  East Coast Premiere.

CRIME + PUNISHMENT:  DIR Stephen Maing.  USA.  In 2015, a group of 12 whistleblower cops sued the NYPD for using illegal quotas despite a 2010 statewide ban on the practice.  A blood-boiling investigation into a corrupt organization, CRIME + PUNISHMENT follows these officers as they face retaliation for attempting to resist against racist practices.

DARK MONEY:  DIR Kimberly Reed.  USA.  A portrait of democracy under fire, DARK MONEY pulls back the curtain on big money in national politics.  Revealing how right-wing giants like the Koch brothers hide behind super PACs to do their bidding — in the forms of corporate-funded smear campaigns and dangerous legislation — this film is as timely as it is eye-opening.

THE DISTANT BARKING OF DOGS:  DIR Simon Lereng Wilmont.  Denmark, Finland, Sweden.  Taking an observational approach, this masterful film follows 10-year-old Oleg and his grandmother as they cope with life mere miles from the frontline of the war in Ukraine, showing how children navigate the trauma of conflict, while still seeing the world with naiveté and wonder.

DON’T BE NICE:  DIR Max Powers.  USA.  Following a diverse team of slam poets as they mine their feelings and personal experiences about race, sexuality, gender and popular culture to craft poems for national competition, DON’T BE NICE demonstrates how collaboration and communication between artists can allow them to better understand who they are and what they want to say.  U.S. Premiere.

FOR THE BIRDS:  DIR Richard Miron.  USA.  In Richard Miron’s surprising and empathetic film, we follow a woman named Kathy who lives with 200 pet birds.  What starts as a story about Kathy’s battle with local animal advocacy groups slowly transforms into an intimate drama about the toll of Kathy’s bird-hoarding — on her marriage and mental health.  North American Premiere.

FOSTER:  DIR Mark Jonathan Harris.  USA.  Oscar® winners Mark Jonathan Harris and Deborah Oppenheimer (INTO THE ARMS OF STRANGERS: STORIES OF THE KINDERTRANSPORT) roam courtrooms, foster homes, juvenile halls and the streets of Los Angeles to tell the moving human stories behind the largest county child protection agency in the United States.  World Premiere.

THE GOSPEL OF EUREKA:  DIRS Michael Palmieri and Donal Mosher.  USA.  A tiny Arkansas town is home to a popular live-action Passion Play — and a tightknit gay community centered around a lively drag bar.  A touching, upbeat look at an enlightened town that maintains a peaceful coexistence of two seemingly divergent groups through tolerance, love and inclusion.

GURRUMUL:  DIR Paul Williams.  Australia.  With the release of his debut album, blind indigenous Australian musician Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu became an unlikely star in both his homeland and in the larger world music scene.  But as Gurrumul’s fame grew, the balance between his culture’s way of life and a career in music proved tricky to maintain.  U.S. Premiere.

HAL:  DIR Amy Scott.  USA.  Surveying the works of iconoclastic filmmaker Hal Ashby (HAROLD AND MAUDE, THE LAST DETAIL, COMING HOME), director Amy Scott identifies how Ashby’s brilliant and seminal works helped define both the New Hollywood of the 1970s and the American experience for a decade.

HALE COUNTY THIS MORNING, THIS EVENING:  DIR RaMell Ross.  USA.  Winner of a Special Jury Prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, RaMell Ross’ assured feature debut is a lyrical look at the lives of two young African-American men born and raised in Alabama’s Hale County, the community that surrounds them and the paths they follow throughout the years.

HAPPY WINTER:  DIR Giovanni Totaro.  Italy.  The escapism of being on holiday gets a fascinating twist in Giovanni Totaro’s shrewdly observant HAPPY WINTER.  Mondello beach in Palermo, Italy, is a seemingly pleasant circus of bronzed vacationers milling about.  But behind the happy goings-on is a different story of collective denial about the looming economic crisis.  U.S. Premiere.

HESBURGH:  DIR Patrick Creadon.  USA.  He counseled presidents and popes, served on corporate boards and infuriated Richard Nixon.  He was one of the only friends to whom Ann Landers turned for advice.  During his 35 years as president of the University of Notre Dame, Theodore Hesburgh became one of the most influential and inspiring people of the 20th century.  World Premiere.

INTO THE OKAVANGO:  DIR Neil Gelinas.  USA.  National Geographic photographer Neil Gelinas makes his directorial debut with INTO THE OKAVANGO.  This visually stunning film follows three passionate individuals as they embark on a four-month journey along the titular river — witnessing Africa’s animal and bird population in visceral, jaw-dropping close-up — to discover why the Okavango Delta is rapidly drying up.

INVENTING TOMORROW:  DIR Laura Nix.  USA.  Laura Nix’s inspiring film follows high school students from around the world, many of whom hail from dangerously polluted countries, as they tackle daunting environmental issues affecting their communities.  Watch as the teens then bring their ingeniously proposed solutions to “the science fair of science fairs” — the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair.

IT WILL BE CHAOS:  DIRS Lorena Luciano and Filippo Piscopo.  USA.  Follow an Eritrean man and a Syrian family on dual quests for freedom amid the refugee crisis in the eastern Mediterranean.  Tension mounts as they battle the rough seas, harsh conditions and red tape standing in their way.  Will they make it to a new life in Europe?

THE LIBERATION:  DIRS Christoph Green and Brendan Canty.  USA.  Therapy sessions, cooking lessons and raw personal stories provide the drama in THE LIBERATION, DC-based filmmakers Christoph Green and Brendan Canty’s story of the formerly incarcerated men and women struggling to get through DC Central Kitchen’s 14-week culinary training program.  Can they make it and turn their lives around?  East Coast Premiere.

LOVE, GILDA:  DIR Lisa D’Apolito.  USA.  Lisa D’Apolito’s moving documentary LOVE, GILDA looks back at the exuberant life and courageous death of Gilda Radner, the first female superstar of SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE.  Using an abundance of archival photos and clips, along with confessional narration by Radner, the film paints a loving portrait of her short but spectacularly eventful life.

MATANGI / MAYA / M.I.A.:  DIR Stephen Loveridge.  UK.  Drawn from 22 years’ worth of personal video footage, MATANGI / MAYA / M.I.A. is an intimate look at the life of rapper, songwriter and activist M.I.A., from her childhood in war-torn Sri Lanka, to her eventual rise to international stardom as one of the most thought-provoking artists working in music today.

MCQUEEN:  DIRS Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui.  UK.  This intimate profile offers unparalleled access to one of the fashion industry’s brightest stars, Alexander McQueen.  Brilliant, bold and informed by a British punk aesthetic, the designer was known for his exquisite and strikingly original clothes and his legendary runway shows — theatrical spectacles influenced by contemporary art, theater and photography.

MINDING THE GAP:  DIR Bing Liu.  USA.   First-time filmmaker Bing Liu turns the camera on himself, his family members and his skateboarder friends in this deeply moving depiction of three young men in a small Midwestern town grappling with issues of class, race and learning to overcome the cycles of family violence.

A MURDER IN MANSFIELD:  DIR Barbara Kopple.  USA.  Two-time Oscar® winner Barbara Kopple takes on true crime, revisiting a horrific 1989 domestic murder in Ohio.  Collier Boyle was 12 when his father killed and buried his wife under the flooring of a remote countryside home.  Now an adult, Collier returns to Mansfield to face the lingering impact of his mother’s murder.

ON HER SHOULDERS:  DIR Alexandria Bombach.  USA.  Filmmaker Alexandria Bombach follows Nadia Murad, a young Yazidi woman who gained international attention after escaping captivity by the Islamic State.  Forgoing sensationalism, Bombach’s award-winning film offers a fresh perspective on Nadia’s new life as a human rights activist raising awareness for her people and their plight.

OVER THE LIMIT:  DIR Marta Prus.  Poland, Germany, Finland.  As the 2016 Summer Olympics loom, Russian gymnast Margarita Mamun prepares to represent her country at this historic event.  But the path to the Olympics is not an easy one in this unflinching portrait of an athlete straining to retain her humanity while going for gold.  U.S. Premiere.

PICK OF THE LITTER:  DIRS Dana Nachman and Don Hardy.  USA.  Shortly after birth, five Labrador puppies enter the intensive two-year training program at California’s Guide Dogs for the Blind.  Here, only the best pups will make the cut to protect and serve blind partners, while others will have to change careers for good.

THE PRICE OF EVERYTHING:  DIR Nathaniel Kahn.  USA.  An examination of the contemporary art market through the eyes of artists, dealers and collectors, THE PRICE OF EVERYTHING is the latest work from Oscar® nominee Nathaniel Kahn.  Illuminating complex dynamics between artistic intention and consumer behavior, the film begs the question: What value do we place on the priceless?

THE PROVIDERS:  DIRS Anna Moot-Levin and Laura Green.  USA.  THE PROVIDERS follows three “country doctors” — health care providers working for a small network of clinics in northern New Mexico — as they confront the challenges of keeping those in their poor and opioid-plagued communities safe.  As the film movingly shows each doctor’s day-to-day responsibilities, a complex portrait emerges of small-town America.

SHIRKERS:  DIR Sandi Tan.  USA.  In 1992, Sandi Tan shot a film in Singapore with her friends and her American mentor, Georges.  As the film neared completion, Georges disappeared with the footage, leaving Sandi heartbroken.  Twenty years later, the footage is discovered, and the strange mystery of Georges begins to unravel.

THE SILENCE OF OTHERS:  DIRS Almudena Carracedo and Robert Bahar.  USA, Spain.  A quest for justice by those who suffered under the repressive regime of General Francisco Franco is at the heart of this powerful and provocative film.  Those who were tortured or had family members murdered are demanding the truth be told to the Spanish people, and the remaining perpetrators put on trial.  U.S. Premiere.

STUDIO 54:  DIR Matt Tyrnauer.  USA.  An Icarus tale unfolds to a disco beat in STUDIO 54, an intimate peek behind the velvet ropes, where mirror balls twinkled over Liza Minelli, Diana Ross, Mick Jagger and Andy Warhol in Matt Tyrnauer’s illuminating history of the rise and fall of the legendary New York nightclub.

THIS ONE’S FOR THE LADIES:  DIR Gene Graham.  USA.  Diving inside an unexpected subculture of Newark, THIS ONE’S FOR THE LADIES follows a group of women who throw weekly underground male exotic dance parties.  Exploring sexual identity and the meaning of community, the film is a unique portrait of the black experience in 21st-century America.

TRANSMILITARY: DIRS Gabriel Silverman and Fiona Dawson.  USA.  Gabriel Silverman and Fiona Dawson make their stirring feature debut with TRANSMILITARY, following four individuals who come out as transgender to top officials at the Pentagon — a brave move that puts their military careers in jeopardy, and shows a struggle for equality that is more relevant than ever.

TRE MAISON DASAN: DIR Denali Tiller.  USA.  With a parent in prison, three Rhode Island boys tackle adult realities few of their peers can even imagine.  Unfettered access to three troubled but promising young lives produces an unforgettable perspective on the multigenerational consequences of U.S. incarceration, where one out of 14 kids has a parent with a prison history.

UNDER THE WIRE:  DIR Chris Martin.  UK.  In 2012, acclaimed journalist Marie Colvin illegally crossed the Syrian border to cover the country’s civil war.  She became one of the only voices reporting on the atrocities being committed against the Syrian people.  With breathtaking footage, UNDER THE WIRE profiles one woman’s drive to uncover the truth, no matter the cost.  International Premiere.

UNITED WE FAN:  DIR Michael Sparaga.  Canada.  UNITED WE FAN follows the ingenious save-our-show campaigns that have been spurred by passionate television uber-fans throughout the decades.  From STAR TREK to CAGNEY AND LACEY and CHUCK — plus many more — this delightful doc highlights the grassroots efforts needed to save beloved TV shows.  U.S. Premiere.

YOURS IN SISTERHOOD:  DIR Irene Lusztig.  USA.  More than four decades after the birth of Ms. Magazine, director Irene Lusztig combs the publication’s archives and pairs some of the most memorable letters, many never published, with contemporary readers to comment on just how far we’ve come — and what we still have to accomplish.

SHORT FILM SELECTIONS

THE ARTIFACT ARTIST:  DIR Russ Kendall.  USA.  An urban archaeologist unearths 300 years of New York City garbage to create 21st-century art.

BABY BROTHER:  DIR Kamau Bilal.  USA.  Chaos ensues when the youngest sibling moves back in with his parents.

BROTHER:  DIRS Daniel Klein and Hunter Johnson.  USA.  An American soldier befriends the Afghan translator who helped save his life.

LOS COMANDOS:  DIRS Joshua Bennett and Juliana Schatz-Preston.  USA.  In El Salvador, gang violence has overrun the country. Los Comandos de Salvamento is one of the few institutions standing up to the gangs’ reign of terror.

CRISANTO STREET:  DIR Paloma Martinez.  USA.  These are the moments that shape a childhood.

DEAD. TISSUE. LOVE:  DIR Natasha Austin-Green.  UK.  A female necrophile recounts her life experience and sexual awakening.

THE EARTH IS HUMMING:  DIR Garrett Bradley.  USA.  In Japan, earthquake preparedness is a way of life — and a full- blown industry.

EARTHRISE:  DIR Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee.  USA.  In 1968, the first image of Earth was captured from space. The world would never be the same.

EVERYTHING IS STORIES: REVILED AND MALIGNED:  DIR Daniel Navetta.  USA.  A Massachusetts mortician finds himself in the center of controversy over an infamous decedent.

FANTASY, FANTASY:  DIR Kaspar Astrup Schröder.  Denmark.  A charming look at the crucial years of development for autistic twin sisters Molly and Smilla.

FOOTPRINT:  DIR Sara Newens.  USA.  A contemplative view of how visitors experience and interact with the World Trade Center Memorial.

GIVE:  DIR David de Rozas.  USA.  A reverend seeks to preserve the monumental visual archive he has created, which displays centuries of black achievement.

GRAVEN IMAGE:  DIR Sierra Pettengill.  USA.  An exploration of the history of Georgia’s Confederate Memorial Carving and the memorial’s close ties to the Ku Klux Klan.

JULIUS CAESAR WAS BURIED IN A PET CEMETERY:  DIR Sam Green.  USA.  Visit the final resting place of some legendary companions.

KOKA, THE BUTCHER:  DIR Bence Máté.  Germany.  A young pigeon flyer leads his birds into a battle for the skies over Cairo.

MINI MISS:  DIR Rachel Daisy Ellis.  Brazil.  Amid the sparkle and the glamour, five preschoolers compete to be crowned Mini Miss Baby Brasil.

MY DEAD DAD’S PORNO TAPES:  DIR Charlie Tyrell.  Canada.  A filmmaker seeks to connect with his late father through the personal belongings he left behind.

ONE TWO ZERO:  DIR Anna Pawluczuk.  Poland.  Enter the intense world of Justyna, a nine-year-old girl training in rhythmic gymnastics.

PERIOD. END OF SENTENCE.:  DIR Rayka Zehtabchi.  India, USA.  In a rural village in Northern India, a group of local women acquire a new skill that helps them gain independence in more ways than one.

PERSONAL TRUTH:  DIR Charlie Lyne.  USA.  A look at how “fake news” and conspiracy theories emerge — and why they linger in the imagination.

PRACTICE:  DIR Iyabo Kwayana.  USA, Guyana.  Students near the Shaolin Temple engage in simple yet rigorous rehearsals.

QUIET HOURS:  DIR Paul Szynol.  USA.  A poet laureate lives in the fragile space between loneliness and welcome solitude.

REBUILDING IN MINIATURE:  DIR Veena Rao.  USA.  A displaced Iraqi artist makes incredibly detailed dioramas of places he has read about but has never seen.

ROOM 140:  DIR Priscilla Gonzalez Sainz.  USA.  Immigrants just released from detention centers spend their first night in an Oakland motel, paid for by one of the motel workers.

SKYWARDS:  DIR Eva Weber.  UK.  Filmmaker Eva Weber’s latest meditation on urban environments features striking scenes of pigeon enthusiasts in Delhi, India.

THEY JUST COME AND GO:  DIR Boris Poljak.  Croatia.  A Croatian beach town plays host to aging regulars and raging revelers in this sly observational study.

TRUE LOVE/TRUE CRIME ON AN AMERICAN BUS:  DIR Nicholas Coles.  USA.  A couple on a bus are helping to save historic Los Angeles one crime scene at a time.

THE VELVET UNDERGROUND PLAYED AT MY HIGH SCHOOL:  DIRS Robert Pietri and Tony Jannelli.  USA.  An animated remembrance of a legendary band’s not-so-legendary gig.

THE WATER SLIDE:  DIR Nathan Truesdell.  USA.  Tragedy strikes the world’s tallest water slide.

VR SHOWCASE

AUTHENTICALLY US: SHE FLIES BY HER OWN WINGS:  Lead Artist: Jesse (Jesus) Ayala.  USA.  Driven by the military tenet of “Leave No One Behind,” Shannon Scott urges freedom and justice for all — from the marbled halls of Washington, DC, to the hallowed ground of those who championed equality before her.

DINNER PARTY:  Lead Artists: Angel Manuel Soto, Charlotte Stoudt, and Laura Wexler.  Puerto Rico.  Based on the true story of Betty and Barney Hill, an interracial couple who in 1961 reported the first nationally known UFO abduction, DINNER PARTY dramatizes with dazzling immersive intensity the radically different accounts that each of the Hills recalled through hypnosis.

GREENLAND MELTING:  Lead Artists: Catherine Upin and Nonny de la Peña.  USA.  In September 2016, NASA scientists went to Greenland to better understand what’s causing the ice to melt so fast. Experience what it’s like to be in Greenland: stand in the water in front of a glacier, fly at low altitudes over some of the world’s most stunning scenery and dive beneath the ocean’s surface to see what NASA’s studies are revealing.  East Coast Premiere.

THE HIDDEN:  Lead Artist: Lindsay Branham.  India.  Ten years ago in southern India, a family took out a loan of $70 U.S. dollars. When it wasn’t repaid, the creditor enslaved them, and their very bodies became a promissory note in an illegal debt scheme.  When the Indian government discovered the case, they set out to free the family.

MY AFRICA:  Lead Artists: David Allen, Dr. M. Sanjayan.  Kenya.  MY AFRICA is a virtual-reality journey to Northern Kenya, where the futures of wildlife and humans are intertwined.  Stand amid a thundering wildebeest migration, witness a lioness snatch her prey, go nose-to-trunk with an inquisitive baby elephant and meet a community dedicated to saving Africa’s wildlife.

MY AFRICA: ELEPHANT KEEPER:  Lead Artists: Adam May and Elliott Round.  UK, USA.  Learn more about the remarkable work undertaken at the Reteti Elephant Sanctuary in Kenya as you become an elephant keeper.  Audiences can welcome and feed the baby elephant, Dudu, at the sanctuary, with real-world props creating an innovative and photorealistic interactive VR experience.

SANCTUARIES OF SILENCE:  Lead Artists: Adam Loften and Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee.  USA.  Silence just might be on the verge of extinction, and acoustic ecologist Gordon Hempton believes that even the most remote corners of the globe are impacted by noise pollution.  In SANCTUARIES OF SILENCE, join Hempton on an immersive listening journey into Olympic National Park, one of the quietest places in North America.

THIS IS CLIMATE CHANGE: FEAST:  Lead Artists: Danfung Dennis and Eric Strauss.  USA, Brazil.  Witness the beautiful expanse of Brazil’s ecologically valuable rainforest, threatened by loggers as massive trees are cleared to make way for sprawling industrial cattle ranches.  Can the Amazon survive the growing global demand for beef?

THIS IS CLIMATE CHANGE: FAMINE:  Lead Artists: Danfung Dennis and Eric Strauss.  USA, Somalia.  Audiences are transported directly into the arid expanse of Somalia, where crushing drought caused by rising temperatures has made once-fertile lands into a year-round desert, and has put the survival of a generation of malnourished children at great risk.

THIS IS CLIMATE CHANGE: FIRE:  Lead Artists: Danfung Dennis and Eric Strauss.  USA.  In just the last three decades, changes in climate have doubled the amount of land burned by wildfires in the western United States. Experience the scorching California fires of 2017, and follow the dedicated fighters — by air and on the ground — whose jobs have turned into year-round battles against these catastrophic blazes.

WHERE THOUGHTS GO:  Lead Artist: Lucas Rizzotto.  USA.  An intimate, social VR experience, WHERE THOUGHTS GO is set in a world where all human thoughts exist as sleeping creatures, each holding a voice message left by a previous visitor.  As they awaken, they reveal the dreams, experiences and fears of other people, and give the participant the opportunity to leave their own for others to find.

(Source: AFIDOCS Press Release)

AFI DOCS 2018 ANNOUNCES OPENING AND CLOSING NIGHT FILMS

Posted by Larry Gleeson

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE — MAY 4, 2018, WASHINGTON, DC — AFI DOCS has announced its Opening and Closing Night films, and Centerpiece and Special Screenings — with AT&T returning as Presenting Sponsor of the festival for the fifth consecutive year. For its 16th edition, the American Film Institute’s annual celebration of documentary film in the nation’s capital will open with the world premiere of PERSONAL STATEMENT (DIRS Juliane Dressner and Edwin Martinez) and will close with UNITED SKATES (DIRS Dyana Winkler and Tina Brown).

This year’s program also includes ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASA’S JOURNEY TO TOMORROW (DIR Rory Kennedy) as the Centerpiece. The four Special Screenings will be the world premiere of THE COLD BLUE (DIR Erik Nelson), KINSHASA MAKAMBO (DIR Dieudo Hamadi), MR. SOUL! (DIRS Sam Pollard and Melissa Haizlip) and WITKIN & WITKIN (DIR Trisha Ziff). The full slate will be announced in the coming weeks. AFI DOCS runs June 13–17, 2018, in Washington, DC, and Silver Spring, MD.

“We are at a cultural crossroads where identity, race and personal agency are redefining what it is to be American in 2018,” said Michael Lumpkin, Director, AFI Festivals. “With PERSONAL STATEMENT, UNITED SKATES and this year’s Centerpiece and Special Screenings, AFI DOCS will continue its legacy of introducing new perspectives to audiences, while challenging longstanding conventions.”

AT&T’s ongoing support as Presenting Sponsor enables AFI DOCS to connect audiences, policymakers and storytellers in the heart of our national government.

The Opening Night screening of PERSONAL STATEMENT will be held on June 13 at the Newseum and will be followed by a Q&A with directors Juliane Dressner and Edwin Martinez. The film centers on three Brooklyn high school seniors who, lacking support services at school, band together to help each other get into college.

The Closing Night screening of UNITED SKATES will be held on June 17 at the Landmark E Street Cinema and will be followed by a Q&A with directors Dyana Winkler and Tina Brown. The film chronicles the fight to save roller-skating rinks, which have played a critical role in modern African-American culture.

The Centerpiece screening of ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASA’S JOURNEY TO TOMORROW will take place at the National Air and Space Museum. As NASA heads into its 60th anniversary, filmmaker Rory Kennedy looks back at the men and women who have built the institution, and whose boundless curiosity drives scientific progress forward.

OPENING NIGHT SCREENING

PERSONAL STATEMENT: DIRS Juliane Dressner and Edwin Martinez. USA. Karoline, Enoch and Christine are Brooklyn high school seniors who just want to go to college, but lack the resources most American teens take for granted, including guidance counselors. Refusing to give up, they learn to counsel each other, and carry their classmates with them as they pursue their dreams.

CLOSING NIGHT SCREENING

UNITED SKATES: DIRS Dyana Winkler and Tina Brown. USA. Roller-skating has played a critical role in modern African-American culture, with rinks serving as both a haven of community and of artistic expression, and a flashpoint in the civil rights movement. UNITED SKATES chronicles the fight to save these rinks, and the souls of communities nationwide.

CENTERPIECE SCREENING

ABOVE AND BEYOND: NASAS JOURNEY TO TOMORROW: DIR Rory Kennedy. USA. Rory Kennedy tells the stories of the women and men behind the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s decades-long exploration of our solar system, our universe and our planet, in this enlightening film that celebrates NASA’s triumphs, mourns its tragedies and affirms the importance of its mission both in space and on Earth.

SPECIAL SCREENINGS

THE COLD BLUE: DIR Erik Nelson. USA. In 1943, legendary Hollywood director William Wyler crafted MEMPHIS BELLE, a celebrated tribute to the titular WWII bomber. Using footage of the film from the National Archives, THE COLD BLUE features gripping narration from some of the last surviving B-17 pilots. A meditation on youth, war and stunning bravery.

KINSHASA MAKAMBO: DIR Dieudo Hamadi. Democratic Republic of the Congo. Amid the backdrop of seemingly never-ending political and social unrest that hangs over the Democratic Republic of the Congo, three young activists take to the streets with their fellow countrymen to overthrow their country’s President and help enact much needed change in their politically beleaguered country.

MR. SOUL!: DIRS Sam Pollard and Melissa Haizlip. USA. An in-depth look at the late 1960s WNET public television series SOUL! and its producer Ellis Haizlip. The series was among the first to provide expanded images of African Americans on television, shifting the gaze from inner-city poverty and violence to the vibrancy of the Black Arts Movement.

WITKIN & WITKIN: DIR Trisha Ziff. Mexico. The artwork of septuagenarian twins Joel-Peter and Jerome Witkin transcends genres and traditional form. WITKIN & WITKIN explores the brothers’ complicated relationship with one another, while examining depths and divisions in their work. Joel-Peter’s stunning photography and Jerome’s powerful figurative paintings distinctly capture the human condition, reflecting differing emotional and intellectual approaches.

Tickets to AFI DOCS, including Opening Night and Closing Night screenings, will be available early to AFI members exclusively beginning May 11, and to the public on May 14. Passes for AFI DOCS 2018 are now on sale at AFI.com/afidocs. More information about AFI DOCS screenings and other special events will be announced in the coming weeks.

AFI DOCS

About AFI DOCS
AFI DOCS is the American Film Institute’s annual documentary festival in Washington, DC. Presenting the year’s best documentaries, AFI DOCS is the only festival in the U.S. dedicated to screenings and events that connect audiences, filmmakers and policy leaders in the heart of our nation’s government. The AFI DOCS advisory board includes Ken Burns, Davis Guggenheim, Chris Hegedus, Werner Herzog, Barbara Kopple, Spike Lee, Errol Morris, Stanley Nelson, D A Pennebaker, Agnès Varda and Frederick Wiseman. Now in its 16th year, the festival will be held June 13-17, 2018, at distinguished Washington, DC, venues, the Landmark E Street Cinema and the historic AFI Silver Theatre in Silver Spring, MD. Visit AFI.com/AFIDOCS and connect on twitter.com/AFIDOCS, facebook.com/AFIDOCS, youtube.com/AFI and instagram.com/AmericanFilmInstitute.

About the American Film Institute
The American Film Institute was established by presidential proclamation in the White House Rose Garden, and launched its national mandate on June 5, 1967 — to preserve the heritage of the motion picture, to honor the artists and their work and to educate the next generation of storytellers. AFI‘s founding Trustees included Chairman Gregory Peck, Vice Chairman Sidney Poitier, Francis Ford Coppola, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Jack Valenti and George Stevens, Jr., as Director.

About AT&T
AT&T is proud to be the Presenting Sponsor of the 2018 AFI DOCS. We help people connect in ways that improve lives – every day. Through DIRECTV, DIRECTV NOW and AT&T U-verse, we deliver the kind of entertainment people love to talk about. And you can watch almost anytime, anywhere. For 10 years, we’ve supported AFI‘s commitment to honor the heritage of film and the artists who make them. And through a variety of programs, we’re focused on giving amateur and underrepresented filmmakers the support they need to succeed.

(Source: Press release courtesy of AFI DOCS Press Office)