November 17, 2016

Fortitude at the Finish Line

  Written by Megan Scanlon   Life can change in an instant. At any given moment, our worlds can implode. How do we move forward, how can we heal? How do we respond to tragedy, and how does the world respond? Marathon: The Patriots Day Bombing investigates these questions as directors Ricki Stern and Annie […]

November 17, 2016

Beekeeping and the Business of Family

  Written by Kate Hoos   Many of us can relate to being caught between two worlds, the old and the new, the past and the present, and the tension between parent and child. Director Diedie Weng explores these dynamics in The Beekeeper and His Son, which made its North American premiere at DOC NYC […]

November 17, 2016

A Modern Day Love Letter to an Analog Writing Machine

  Written by Megan Scanlon   Watching California Typewriter is an immersive experience, and the DOC NYC audience was treated to the film’s NYC premiere last Sunday night. Directed by Doug Nichol, the film is named after a Berkeley, California typewriter repair shop, one of the last vestiges of an analog era, and unfolds the history […]

November 16, 2016

Burning Down Barriers

  Written by Rebecca DeRosa   In a time when 88 percent of the FDNY was white and male, one woman broke the mold to become the very first openly transgender firefighter of New York City. First Lady of NYC, Chirlane McCray, appeared at the world premiere screening of  Woman on Fire, directed by Julie […]

November 16, 2016

Finding Love and Beauty in the Most Unlikely Place

    Written by Rebecca DeRosa   In The Nine, which premiered at DOC NYC on Monday, photographer turned director Katy Grannan turns the lens on a community of people—many of whom are drug addicts, prostitutes, and victims of abuse—living on South 9th St. (the Nine) in Modesto, California. Kiki (a.k.a. Artimise Fairley), the main […]

November 16, 2016

Pultizer Power!

  Written by Megan Scanlon   Power. What is it? What does it look like, how does it move, and how do we know it when we see it?  Is power a container that is filled and emptied, shaped and reshaped? What gives power to writing, to music, to art? The NYC premiere of The […]

November 16, 2016

Breaking Down Sounds and Building Brilliant Songs

  Written by Kate Hoos   Soundbreaking: Stories From the Cutting Edge of Recorded Music is a treat for both serious and casual music fans. But it might be an even bigger delight for gear heads and those who are interested in the ways in which the songs they love were crafted, with an intimate, […]

November 15, 2016

Telling the Story of a Storyteller

  Written by Whitney Marin   James Foley, or Jim as he was best known, was a brother, a son and a friend. Like many of us, Jim tried to find his way in the world, as a teacher, as a writer and ultimately as a journalist. His last approach would take him to the […]

November 15, 2016

An Unsung Guitar Hero Gets His Moment in the Spotlight

  Written by Eric Shea   The Terry Kath Experience, which had its US premier this Sunday at DOC NYC, delves into the far-too-short life of Terry Kath, a founding member of the band Chicago and one of the rock world’s unsung guitar heroes. The film was conceived by Kath’s daughter, Michelle Kath Sinclair, whose […]

November 15, 2016

Mumford & Son’s South African Sojourn

  Written by Whitney Marin   The British indie-rock band Mumford and Sons rose to popularity in the U.K. and in the U.S. with their debut album Sigh No More in 2009. Since then, the band has released two more studio albums and has gone on to win a Grammy for Album of the Year, […]