The films in this program contain some of the most powerful images to be seen on the screen this year. Lucy Walker's The Tsunami and the Cherry Blossom, a chronicle of the tidal wave that struck Japan last March, opens with rough footage from a cell phone of the water surging in, sweeping along with it houses, cars, burning buildings, and the people trying to rescue those climbing the hill from which the video is taken. Against this horror, the cherry trees blossom a month later. Not much mitigates the tragedy in James Spione's Incident in New Baghdad as an ex-soldier recovering from PTSD relives his nightmare when he sees on the news an image of himself carrying a wounded child. And Gail Dolgin and Robin Fryday's The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement honors James Armstrong, who marched for voting rights in Alabama in 1965, a struggle for justice that is far from over.
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If a Neil Young neophyte can find himself rocking in a cinema seat to the spirited, soulful music performed in this second of a rumored triptych of Demme-directed, Young-starring concert documentaries, long-time fans are bound to break their armrests.
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This autopsy of an unfinished 1964 film by the great French director Henri-Georges Clouzot ( The Wages of Fear ) holds fascinations — and frustrations — for the avid franco-cinephile.
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Labor Day weekend at the Bourne Bridge has nothing on New Year's in China, when 130 million migrant workers leave the cities to visit their families in the sticks.
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The winter blahs are over. The first great cinema treat of 2011: the five surprisingly superb documentary shorts vying for an Academy Award, opening this Friday as "2011 Documentary Oscar Shorts" at the Coolidge Corner Theatre.
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- Photos: The RIIFF Oscar Night at Veteran's Memorial Auditorium
Rhode Island International Film Festival (RIIFF) hosts their own Oscar Night at the Veterans Memorial Auditorium on Sunday, February 27, 2011.
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It's Oscar time again, and, as usual, the Academy is trotting out the same old bullshit.
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, Lucy Walker, Civil Rights, Oscars, More
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