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The Apprentice and Other Post-Election Campaigns

An actor portraying Donald J. Trump smirks.Sebastian Stan in The Apprentice

Every Tuesday Tyler Coates publishes his new Filmmaker newsletter, Considerations, devoted to the awards race. To receive it early and in your in-box, subscribe here. I really didn’t want to write a newsletter about how a Trump victory might disrupt an already chaotic Oscar season, but here we are. When I had multiple publicists reaching out about their films on Thursday morning, proving our post-election malaise was limited to a single day, I realized that the show must go on—and the show, I fear, might become a lot dumber. I can’t help but think back to the 2017 Oscars, in which none of the films were at all reactions or comments to Trumpism’s rise—but that didn’t stop people from forming parasocial relationships…  Read more

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Tokyo International Film Festival 2024: Dementia, Optimism and Béla Tarr

Teki Cometh ⓒ1998 Yasutaka Tsutsui / Shinchosha ⓒ2023 TEKINOMIKATA

I was delighted to be invited to the Tokyo International Film Festival, which came with the particularly desirable bonus of being elsewhere during the US election cycle’s final days. Taking into account the time difference on my date of return, I hoped an election-night nailbiter would let me fly back in unperturbed ignorance, but... The route back flew over the international date line; the metaphorical obviousness of literally going backwards in time to the States was too hamhanded for my taste, albeit appropriately overstated in keeping with the bludgeoning that’s about to occur. Before that hammer fell, the city more than lived up to expectations—if you get bored in Tokyo, it’s possible you have literally no interests—but fortunately the festival’s…  Read more

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18 Recommended Titles at 2024’s DOC NYC

Yalla Parkour

Returning for its 15th edition, DOC NYC presents yet another robust lineup of over 200 non-fiction short and feature-length films. Taking place in-person from November 13-21 and online through December 1, the largest documentary film festival in the country features buzzy future Oscar contenders, hidden gems from this year’s global festival circuit and even a handful of world premieres amid its 2024 program. Screenings will be held at several Manhattan theaters (namely IFC Center, SVA Theater and Village East) and via the festival’s own streaming platform. Below, from Filmmaker's writers, find a selection of recommended titles to seek out, which range from the personal to the political (and often feature a healthy dose of both). Links to previous Filmmaker coverage, from…  Read more

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“Doc Filmmaking Can Be a Very Weird Process of Interpersonal Negotiations”: Debra Granik on Conbody vs Everybody

Conbody vs Everybody

Though Debra Granik is no stranger to Sundance — 2004’s Down to the Bone, 2018’s Leave No Trace and 2010’s Oscar-nominated (in four categories) Winter’s Bone all premiered in Park City — I was a bit surprised to see the indie vet’s name attached to a project at the fest’s 40th edition earlier this year. Unlike the director’s prior critically-acclaimed films, Conbody vs Everybody is neither narrative nor a traditional feature doc, but a documentary in five chapters (six at Sundance, of which only parts four and five were screened) that took Granik and her longtime collaborators, EP Anne Rosellini and EP/editor Victoria Stewart, close to a decade to make. Over eight years the team followed Coss Marte, a man on a Herculean mission…  Read more

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“I Had Given Up on this Film”: Payal Kapadia on All We Imagine as Light

An audience of female Indian nurses sits in a movie theater watching a film.All We Imagine is Light

On a dull white piece of archival paper measuring 39.3 x 27.3”, ghoulish figures in wispy gray and red stenciled figures are engaged in various jousting poses. Text is sandwiched between the figures: “One day the streets all over the world will be empty. From every tomb I’ll learn all we imagine of light.” The 2016 painting by Nalini Malani, one of India’s foremost video artists, is titled All we Imagine of Light. Years later, her daughter Payal Kapadia would ask to borrow and rework the title for her film All We Imagine As Light, which would eventually go on to win the Grand Prix at the 2024 Cannes Festival and play at festivals including New York Film Festival before…  Read more

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“It’s Punk Rock to Be Hopeful These Days”: Harley Chamandy on His Self-Distributed Feature Debut Allen Sunshine  

A man with a recording microphone capturing sounds in the woods.Allen Sunshine

The somber existence of a reclusive electronic musician is the focus of Allen Sunshine, the feature debut of 25-year-old Harley Chamandy. The eponymous character (played by Vincent Leclerc) resides in a charming lakeside cabin in Quebec, yet the idyllic nature of his surroundings is tempered by inconsolable grief over his wife’s recent death. As a big-name musical talent in her own right, the solitary Allen is pained by the fact that his grief is not just his own; though he deeply adored her and produced most of her music, it’s clear that fans, both rabid and casual alike, feel equally entitled to a piece of their relationship. The only people who seem to genuinely care about Allen’s wellbeing—and don’t simply…  Read more

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Failure as Creative Inspiration: How I Shot — and Recorded — My Christmas-Set Musical Long December in 12 Days

Shooting "Long December" (Photo: Joshaun Anderson)

In 2015 I directed my first feature. It would be six years before I was able to direct my second. But once I had completed the first draft of that script, we had the film in the can within six months. It was a breakneck pace making Long December, a Christmas-set musical drama about a singer/songwriter chasing his dreams of stardom. Its process was complicated further by my choice to not only fill the story with musical numbers performed by the cast but to capture those performances live on-camera — with no lip-syncing or back-tracking. Pulling it off took a community of artists — musicians, first-time actors, recording engineers and sound designers. It was a wonderful way to spend the…  Read more

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