Below are the 10 best documentaries I saw this year. Most of
which were released theatrically or at least online in 2012. Best features
coming soon.
1. Marina Abramovic the Artist Is Present
Easily the most inspiring film I saw this year. It documents
the Serbian performance artist’s recent residency at MOMA where she sat in the
foyer of the museum, motionless, staring at whoever was in front of her for 8
hours a day, everyday, for 3 months. It also goes into her incredible history
of performance work that, upon serious consideration, really boggles the mind.
I saw the show in NY and it stuck with me for months. The film also plays as a
wonderful love story about two extreme artists growing apart. I can’t remember
the last time I actually shed a tear for any reason whatsoever but during the scene
when Ulay sits with Marina-
a salty drop of water rolled down my face.
2. The Imposter
This is one of the more incredible stories I can recall hearing about. I first read the long form article on con man Frederic Bourdin
in the New Yorker years ago. That piece makes him come across as a monster but
in this documentary he actually seems kind of sane- it’s the unfathomably
idiotic and possibly criminal white trash family that look
bad. If you’re not familiar with the story: Bourdin was a French man that
traveled around Europe pretending he was a kid to get into social programs for
youth- not because he was a pervert but because he was alone and had nowhere to
go. In order to stay in a boarding house he had to come up with an identity
and through a series of conniving manipulations, Frederic convinced the staff
he was a missing boy from Texas .
Then, after he flies out to San
Antonio , things get crazy. While some of the
re-enactments in the film are distracting, it is an otherwise engrossing and
well told tale. At the heart of the story is a mystery- what happened to the
missing boy? We may never know.
3. Bones Brigade: An Autobiography
3. Bones Brigade: An Autobiography
A late entry for documentary of the year. Stacy Perelta’s film is a fascinating look at the personalities behind the boards that dominated 80’s skateboarding. These guys are truly legends- they created a vocabulary of tricks and moves that shaped a culture. Their dedication, innovation and love for the sport is intoxicating and inspiring. Rodney Mullen is the best on screen character of any movie this year. The man is an actual genius on the level of Glenn Gould. His analogy that ends the film comparing skateboarding to the unread literary classics is nothing short revelatory.
4. Jiro Dreams of Sushi
Pure inspiration. A film about what happens when a man
dedicates his life to a craft and the resulting human excellence. Essential
viewing for any artist or any one that eats food. If you like this movie also check out El Bulli: Cooking In Progress.
5. Give Up Tomorrow
A very fucked up story about corruption at the highest
levels of power in the Philippines .
I thought American cops and politicians were bad- but these people are truly the
scum of the earth. Two young sisters are found savagely gang raped and
murdered. It turns out the father is connected to organized crime and is about to
testify against a colleague- the murders may have been a warning to him. As usual, the crime family has the government paid off so they pick
a bunch of kids to blame for the murders in order to protect the
father. Some of the kids have mountain of proof that they didn’t do it and the one
the story focuses on, Paco, wasn’t even in the country at the time. Regardless,
they are given a death sentence. The story goes on from there- check it out.
6. There’s Something Wrong With Aunt Diane
A portrait of a family in deep, deep denial and totally blinded with grief. I found it
fascinating to watch these people that can’t come to grips with the fact that
their beloved Diane was not a good person. Aunt Diane was by most accounts not
very likable. She had major abandonment issues, was irritable and grumpy and
was secretly alcoholic. One day while driving her and her brothers kid’s home,
she drove the wrong way down a highway and into an oncoming car- killing
herself, the 5 kids with her and 3 men in the other car. The film thoroughly
dissects the events leading up to the incident and the resulting pain experienced
by loved ones. The sad sack husband comes off as particularly pathetic. My
theory is that it was suicide. Even if you are stoned and a little buzzed- you
don’t drive down the highway at full speed for mile after mile until you hit
someone. I think she was deeply disturbed and wanted to die so she took the kids out with her. A hard scenario to grasp but
people really are that evil. Great documentary.
7. Better This World
Two young American protesters are coerced, fooled and entrapped by a piece of shit undercover fed. I got so angry watching this film I almost snapped. An excellent example of just how scary, real, and twisted the Patriot Act, “Homeland Security” and the resulting surveillance state has become. Essential viewing for any American.
Two young American protesters are coerced, fooled and entrapped by a piece of shit undercover fed. I got so angry watching this film I almost snapped. An excellent example of just how scary, real, and twisted the Patriot Act, “Homeland Security” and the resulting surveillance state has become. Essential viewing for any American.
8. Hot Coffee
Don’t let the name fool you, this is one of the headier,
more intellectual docs I have seen in a long time. Remember the case where the
grandmother sued McDonalds for the coffee being too hot after she spilled it on
herself? That’s the launching point for this discussion on tort reform (a law forbidding
companies to compensate people they fuck over, hurt or kill), forced
arbitration by corporations (clauses hidden in the fine print of contracts
saying you cant take the company to court if shit goes down), and most
importantly, the corporate takeover of the judicial branch of government.
Corporations truly run American and they don’t give a fuck about you. The woman who spilled the coffee, Stella Liebeck, is an American hero.
9. Marley
Any documentary on Bob is going to be awesome by default.
This one was done particularly well. Though 1992’s Time Will Tell had better and
longer interview footage (some re-used here), this film spent more time on his
last months alive when he was sick- a period usually glossed over in Marley
docs. The footage of the hills in Jamaica where he grew up, pre-Trenchtown,
was amazing. One can only imagine what Bob would have done were he still alive.
JAH! RASTAFARI.
10. Pink Ribbons, Inc.
A really interesting expose on breast cancer culture and the
scumbag companies that exploit and benefit from a painful and deadly
disease- and the fools that buy into it. It’s good to see what most consider a
sacred cow completely shot down.