Tag Archive for 'Documentary'

How to Watch: “Born to Be Wild”

Step 1: Go, IMAX! The brilliant IMAX technology works its magic again with the fascinating and heartwarming nature tale Born to Be Wild.

Step 2: Start with a dedicated idea. This documentary, narrated by the always good Morgan Freeman, follows the efforts of two animal activists. In the lush rainforests of Borneo, world-renowned primatologist Dr. Biruté Mary Galdikas has set up a compound where she nurses orphaned baby orangutans, whose mothers have been killed, usually by some form of deforestation. Then across the rugged Kenyan savannah, celebrated elephant authority Dame Daphne M. Sheldrick does the same thing with baby elephants, whose mothers have been killed by poachers. These women and their trusted teams rescue, rehabilitate and return these incredible animals back to the wild — and we get to watch with wonderment on how they do it.

Step 3: Love the orangutans. Born to Be Wild is only 40 minutes, but in that time you get to know the characters intimately. With Dr. Galdikas, we see how her mostly female team bonds with the orangutans. Adult orangutans are generally solitary creatures but as babies, they cling to their mothers, rarely ever touching the ground. In the compound, these expressive primates wrap themselves around their human surrogates and grow to love them as much as if they were monkeys themselves. Dr. Galdikas also keeps in touch with some of the adult orangutans she has raised, who are now happily surviving in the wild. In one scene, she shares a bowl of noodles with one.

Step 4: Love the elephants. With Dame Sheldrick, her team is mostly male, and they, too, form close attachments with the baby elephants. Elephants are far more social than orangutans and only feel truly comfortable when they are surrounded by other elephants and their human friends. Most rescued baby elephants have been traumatized when they are brought into the camp, having witnessed their mothers killed and shunned by the male elephants, so it takes a lot of TLC to get them to trust the humans. In fact, each handler assigned to an elephant sleep with their charge so to make the animal feel safe. Then when it comes time for the elephants to go back into the wild, Sheldrick takes the elephants to an even more remote location, where the animals stay for another three years. In that time, adult elephants – who were raised by Sheldrick but are now living in the wild – come back to this camp and actually help rehabilitate the younger elephants so the transition goes smoother. It still kind of brings a tear to my eyes.

Step 5: Go, IMAX… again! The best part is watching Born to Be Wild in an IMAX theater. Filmmaker David Lickley apparently had a time of it getting all that equipment into these remote places, especially in Borneo, but the captured images are truly breathtaking and spectacular. Adding the 3D element is also a must. At one point, one of the orangutans looks close enough to touch. I complain about all the friggin’ 3D movies out there and having to wear those glasses, but when in an IMAX theater, the technology still astounds me.

Step 6: Be an animal lover. If you’ve ever thought about leaving the comforts of society and going into the wild to study and help animals, Born to Be Wild will definitely urge you in that direction. There is something so selfless and amazing in seeing people dedicated to preserving natural wildlife – and focusing on such adorable animals as orangutans and elephants is just a plus.

How to Save Bees

Remember Jerry Seinfeld’s Bee Movie, which showed what would happen if all the bees went on strike? All the greenery died and the world looked like a wasteland. Sure, that was make believe, but the reality isn’t too far off the mark. If the bee population were to disappear completely, we’d be in a world of hurt.

Unfortunately, it’s happening. Colony Collapse Disorder is very serious problem affecting the worldwide honeybee population, particularly in North America, since 2006, in which worker bees, the ones who actively go out and pollinate, are vanishing.

The documentary Save the Queen investigates the causes of CCD (pesticides is a big factor), as well as its effects on both the honeybee and native bee species. Producers Ashley J. Hillard and Cameron Tucker have gone out into the field, interviewing a variety of bee keepers, bee relocation specialists, presidents of bee keeper associations, staff at the National Resources Defense Council and professors at UC Davis, including Dr. Eric Mussen, Dr. Neal Williams and Professor Lynn Kimsey, among others.

Save the Queen is still in production but is shaping up to be an eye-opening look at the world of bees and how important they are to the ecosystem. Stay tuned for more info or visit the official website!

“When You’re Strange: A Film About The Doors”

By Robert Sims, Special to TheMovieKit.com

Like many charismatic singers who died sad and untimely deaths, Jim Morrison continues to live on in the collective hearts and minds of rock fans the world everywhere. Director Tom DiCillo’s When You’re Strange: A Film About The Doors attempts to set the record straight about rock’s poetic laureate’s life, death and musical legacy.

With narration by Johnny Depp, the documentary details The Doors’ formation, its rise to glory, Morrison’s descent into drugs and alcohol, and the band’s failed efforts to soldier on following his 1971 death in Paris. More important, When You’re Strange boasts footage of The Doors never before seen — shot between 1965 and 1971 — and excerpts from HWY, a film Morrison made several years before his death.

Prior to its theatrical release, Doors guitarist Robby Krieger brought the film to SXSW and told the documentary’s audience during a post-screening Q&A about how Morrison influenced his songwriting, his reaction to his band mate’s death, and the bids to replace him with a new singer.

Step 1: Find the footage
Robby Krieger: “Most of it was shot by a guy named Paul Ferrara, who came on tour with us, just followed us around whenever we went. Wish we had more of it, but it’s all we’ve got. So lucky we have it.”

Step 2: Pay homage to a fallen comrade
Krieger: “Jim was a mentor to me. He kinda taught me how to write songs, at least the words. What was my most favorite story about that was probably at one time I was still living at home and my parents left town for a couple weeks, so I had Jim stay over at my house, which might have been a mistake. We had a great time writing song, and that’s where we wrote a whole buncha stuff, including ‘The End.’ ‘The End’ was just a love story when we first started. It was just, ‘This is the end, beautiful friend,’ and as we played it in person, it would get longer and longer until that night at [the LA nightclub Whiskey a Go Go], when the Oedipal part came out.”

Step 3: Recall the first meeting with Morrison
Krieger: “Jim was always weird, you know, from the very first time I met him. We had our very first rehearsal — he was very cool, the music was great. After the rehearsal, some guy comes in and Jim grabs him, throws him in this room, and it sounded he was going to kill the guy or something. ‘Jesus Christ, this is my lead singer?’ Turned out it was this dope was a dope dealer, a bad dealer.”

Step 4: Don’t speculate
Krieger: “We don’t really know exactly what happened because he was over there in Paris, and Pam [Courson] was the only one who really knew what happened, and unfortunately she died about a year later. She was totally heartbroken and got into hard drugs and she was gone in a year. It was terrible.”

Step 5: Realize hindsight is 20/20
Krieger: “In a way I wasn’t surprised because, you know, it seemed like he was always trying his hardest to crash his car or jump out of a window or something. But then again I always thought he’d be one of those guys, those crazy Irish drunks who’d live to be 80 years old and just never give up, give up the ghost. But I was wrong.”

Step 6: Accept that life goes on
Krieger
: “The three of us continued to record after Jim died. We did two albums and we thought about getting a lead singer but it really didn’t make sense right away, but after the second album we did we said, ‘God, Ray and I are not the greatest singers, so on, we should get a singer, it’s been two years, three years.’ So we actually went over to London. We all moved over to London: ‘Maybe we’ll find a singer over here.’ And we talked about Iggy Pop and we never did get around to trying him out. I don’t know whether he would have wanted to do it or not. [Audience’s] Howard Werth was one of the guys that we talked about. The guy from Free, Paul Rodgers. But we never really got to try anyone out because Ray’s friend was pregnant and she kinda freaked out and Ray decided to go back to L.A., and that’s when the three of us kinda broke up The Doors, in 1972, 1973.”

Step 7: Dissect Hollywood’s version of The Doors’ brief reign
Krieger:
“I did like The Doors movie. I worked on it as an advisor, and if you remember the part about when we wrote ‘Light My Fire,’ that was kinda my idea that I asked Oliver to do, and I basically wanted the musical parts of the movie to be true to life, and they really were. They really tried hard to recreate the concert scenes in that movie, as true to life a possible. There was some stupid stuff in the movie, but I thought for a Hollywood movie about rock ‘n’ roll it was pretty damn good.”

How to Watch SXSW: “Hubble 3D”

By Robert Sims, Special to TheMovieKit.com

Step 1: Buy yourself a spacesuit. This “you are there” 3D IMAX spectacular rockets you to the outer edges of the universe. Narrated by Leonardo DiCaprio, Hubble 3D will leave you gasping at stunning footage shot thousands of miles about the Earth by various space shuttle crews and crystal-clear images captured 10-15 billion light years away by the orbiting space telescope.

Step 2: Avail yourself to the difficulties of working in space. Director Toni Myers chronicles the Herculean efforts of the seven-member crew of the space shuttle Atlantis in 2009 to repair the Hubble Space Telescope. We’re first introduced to the crew as they dive into four-story swimming pool practice the installation of a powerful new camera on a full-scale replica of Hubble. But whatever problems they endure underwater are nothing compared to those they encounter in a working environment 325 miles above the Earth with zero gravity and subzero temperature. As strange as this may sound, there is great tension to be found in even the simplest of tasks, from trying to unscrew a stuck bolt to removing a handle. It’s impossible not to come away with a respect and admiration for the crew as they spend nine days floating above Earth fixing a telescope that continues to unlock the secrets of the universe.

Step 3: Appreciate your place in the universe. You feel so small as Hubble 3D takes you through the countless of galaxies in our universe. And it makes you wonder what, if any, life is out there. Watching this in 3D clearly enhances the experience of getting up close and personal to dying stars and new galaxies. You feel like you are floating past these beautiful celestial wonders.

Step 4: Accept that you will leave Hubble 3D wanting more. No matter how intimate this guided tour is, you never feel you have seen as much as you could of the Carina Nebula or the end of the observable universe. Still, after sitting through Hubble 3D, you won’t look up at the stars again in the same way you did before.

Level of difficulty in watching Hubble 3D: Hate wearing 3D glasses? Don’t worry about it. Running just 45 minutes, this IMAX masterpiece offers a unique 3D experience that cannot be replicated by the likes of James Cameron.

How to Wake “Sleeping Beauty”

Here’s an interesting trailer to the documentary Waking Sleeping Beauty — about how Walt Disney Animation came back from the brink of extinction in the early 1980s, with the release of The Little Mermaid, to having huge success for the next 10 years.

I’m thinking Disney may need some other kind of miracle now since they are sort of back in the crapper again.

How to Watch: “Capitalism: A Love Story”

michael-moore_003Step 1: Love him or hate him. Michael Moore makes us think; he makes us talk. And if you agree with what he has to say, especially with his latest opus Capitalism: A Love Story, he can inspire you to make a difference.

Step 2: Admit it. There’s one thing we can all resoundingly agree upon: The U.S. economy is in bad shape. In his first documentary Roger and Me, Moore showed us just the tip of the iceberg when he spotlighted the demise of Flint, Michigan, his hometown, due to General Motors’ downsizing. So, it only makes sense Moore would want to revisit the very same problems he warned us about in 1989, now seen played out on a massive national scale. Peppered with very real and very heart-wrenching stories of economic woe – a Moore specialty – the filmmaker drives home the point that corporate America, capitalism at its core, will be the downfall of us all unless we change things, stand up for ourselves and stop those greedy bastards from stealing any more dimes from us. Basically, Moore would like the American people, the 99 percent who are not super rich, to start a revolution – and he isn’t kidding.

Step 3: Thank god for the freedom of speech. For all of the U.S. faults, there are still some basic fundamental rights still in place – and the freedom to say what you want is one of them. Moore has become that guy who just isn’t going to keep his mouth shut. Sure, he’s heavy handed with his message, and yes, he typically only searches out those things that will support his agenda, rather than perhaps showing the whole picture (he IS a filmmaker, after all – a darn entertaining one at that). But he doesn’t pretend to be non-partisan. When we watch his documentaries, we know exactly what he stands for, and we want him to be out there asking the hard questions. Over and over and over again. Problem is, now Moore has now lost some of the element of surprise because of his notoriety. There’s a pretty hilarious part in Capitalism when he tries to go into the now bankrupted GM headquarters and is AGAIN turned away. “Come on, I’ve been trying for 20 years to get in there,” Moore says. “Don’t you think it’s time to let me in? I’ve got some pretty good ideas capitalismon how to help.” I just bet you do, Michael.

Step 4: Get your hands on some crime scene yellow tape. One of the best – and lighter – moments in Capitalism is Moore storming Wall Street, looking to get our money back from the big guns who took it in the bailout, making some citizen’s arrests of the banks’ CEOs for their white-collar crimes and finally cordoning off the buildings themselves with crime scene tape. It’s classic Moore – and it’s great.

Level of difficulty in watching Capitalism: A Love Story: As a compelling documentary, it’s easy but it’s also hard because we’ve got a lot of work to do to fix things in this country.


How Michael Moore Wants His Money Back

You know, I realize some people feel documentary filmmaker Michael Moore has become a parody of himself, with his grandstanding on very prickly social and economic issues, but dammit, he entertains me. And makes me think. Here’s the trailer to his latest opus, Capitalism: A Love Story, in which he zeros in on the corrupt banks of the world:

Somebody’s got to ask the difficult questions, might as well be Michael.

How to Watch What We Eat

Go see Food, Inc. This latest documentary is yet another very important look at what foods we put into our bodies, where it comes from, how its processed and why much of it is making us sick and obese on a global level. But most importantly, Food, Inc. tries to illustrate that as a collective voice, we may be able to effect change.

How to Celebrate Earth Day

EarthThat’s easy — just get the Walt Disney Co. involved and you are all set. They are releasing Earth, a 99-minute feature-length version of the superb Discovery Channel mini-series Planet Earth. The film follows our planet’s most favorite denizens, including adorable polar bears, whale family pods, swimming elephants and more.

It’s nice to have a condensed version of Planet Earth but I strongly suggest you invest in the complete DVD series at some point. It’s truly some amazing stuff. Let’s hope we can keep the planet this way.