November 14, 2016

Dr. Sarno’s Unconventional Diagnosis

  Written by Whitney Marin   Dr. John Sarno had been a practicing physician for over 50 years. He worked as a professor and attending physician at New York University’s Howard A. Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine until 2012 when he retired. At a point in his career, Dr. Sarno realized that the way he […]

November 13, 2016

Life Lessons On and Off the Court

  Written by Megan Scanlon   In a world of “what’s next” the DOC NYC experience connects filmmakers and audiences, tethering them to a specific moment in time, a shared experience and marker in life that affirms presence, that makes it enough to say, “I was there.” The world premiere of Mr. Chibbs was one […]

November 13, 2016

A Global Perspective on Religious Rituals and Rites of Passage

Written by Whitney Marin   Academy Award-winning director Thomas Lennon took on an ambitious project with the film Sacred, commissioning the work of 40 filmmaking teams to tell one global story. Birthing rituals, coming of age traditions, weddings, funerals, and festivals of celebration were recorded in communities across the world. Lennon is no novice documentarian. […]

November 13, 2016

Dangerous Delusions and the Power of The Slenderman

  Written by Krystal Grow   The line between fantasy and reality can be blurry, but when you add the power of the internet and the confusion of adolescence, it can become nearly impossible to determine the difference. On May 31, 2014, two twelve-year-old girls lured their friend into the woods, where they stabbed her […]

November 13, 2016

Rikers: Exposing A Culture of Violence and Fear

  Written by Kate Hoos   “The truth of the film is almost unbearable” executive editor Bill Moyers said in his introduction of Rikers, making it’s world premiere at DOC NYC. Moyers also said on wanting to make the film that he had heard a lot about the culture of violence and brutality plaguing the […]

November 13, 2016

A Sentimental Screening on the Power of Poetry

  Written by Eric Shea   This year’s screening of the 2010 film To Be Heard carried even more sentimentality and emotional weight than when it made its premiere at the inaugural DOC NYC six years ago. Earlier this year one of the film’s directors, Roland Legiardi-Laura, passed away after a battle with cancer and […]

November 13, 2016

Mass Incarceration and the Fight for Justice

  Written by Whitney Marin   The United States is 5% of the world’s population, yet holds 25% of the world’s prisoners. Mass incarceration and the criminalization of the African American identity is explored in the film 13th, directed by Golden Globe-nominated filmmaker Ava DuVernay. DOC NYC Artistic Director Thom Powers introduced 13th and moderated […]

November 13, 2016

Hostage Situations and Worst Case Scenarios

  Written by Megan Scanlon   DOC NYC headed into day two of the festival with a screening of the much anticipated Captive: Cola Kidnap. A preview of the first episode out of eight, the audience saw the world premiere of the upcoming docuseries to be aired on Netflix, “the only place that could have […]

November 13, 2016

A Big List of Brilliant Things

  Written by Eric Shea   Every Brilliant Thing captured the deeply emotional, yet at times comical, one-man play of the same name. The film focused on British actor Jonny Donahoe as he delivered a powerful performance of the play he co-wrote with Duncan Macmillan. The play’s central character, played by Donahoe, attempts to cope […]

November 13, 2016

L7: Still Loud, Fast, and Definitely Not Dead

  Written by Kate Hoos   How do you best capture the narrative of a larger than life, over the top rock band – a band known for members dropping their pants on live TV, trolling Motley Crue in the studio with naked pictures of men, and who once raffled off a one night stand […]