Here a few documentaries that always make me feel good after watching.
Brainman
Born into Brothels
The real Rainman
Do you believe in miracles; story of the 1980 us olympic hockey team
Documentaries that make me feel like shit after watching
The decline of the western civilization
Crumb
Wallmart; high cost of low prices
Mardi Gras, made in China
Taxi to the dark side ( i know it's knew, but i saw it recently, made me feel really shitty)
the category that make me wanna pack up and run for the hills after watching
American zeitgeist
Jesus camp
Dan Akroyd on Ufo's
Out of the Blue
Originally posted by ImpedimentI would really like to see The Bridge.
F*ck - about the word f*ckThe Bridge - about how the Golden Gate Bridge is the world's #1 suicide site and how people from all over the globe travel there to commit suicide. It even has actual footage of jumpers.
The Question of God - a docu about Sigmund Freud and C.S. Lewis and their respective atheist beliefs, even though Lewis converted to Christianity.
Metal: A Headbangers Journey - About the origins and inspirations of heavy metal from it's beginning to as it is now. Very fun to watch, if you're a metalhead, like me.
Thought of more--you mentioned DIG, it was awesome--Mad Hot Ballroom and Spellbound were great, and there's a great doc on the lead singer of the Pogues, Shane McGowan, called If I Should Fall From Grace. Which he most certainly has.
I was poking around in anticipation of American Teen, and it turns out they have a KILLER facebook page--all kinds of detail on the bands on the soundtrack, the kids in the movie, advanced screenings, contests, the whole lot. They really took advantage of the platform. They even have an application where you find out what 'type' you were in high school--jock, princess, rebel, geek. I was totally a geek. Anyhoo.
Saw a great Woodie Guthrie doc on PBS, can't think of the name off hand--I think it was one of his songs, Ramblin' Man or something...
Netflixed Go Tigers! in anticipation of Friday's American Teen release...what it is about high school stories that get to me? I think it's cuz I was unpopular in high school that these stories still resonate with me (not just the docs--the John Hughes stuff, Buffy when she was in high school, Freaks & Geeks)--part of me wants to relive it vicariously to be someone else, and part of me has to watch like when you slow down to view an accident on the highway, and part of me just wants to see the nerd win for once...they always say you always see yourself as who you were in high school, no matter how old you are--anybody else find that to be true?
I haven't see that many,
but of the few I've seen,
here are my faves:
10. Crumb - Meet an eccentric who takes the idea of artistic integrity to most purest/extremist definition & who comes from a family in which he comes off as the most normal one of the bunch.
9. Grizzly Man - While we're on the subject of taking things to the extreme, this film follows a man's journey into the world of the grizzly bear.
Or as some may say, his journey into the gullet of the grizzly bear.
Now don't quote me on this,
but I heard that there's a rumour that this guy's remains were fined a citation by park officials.
For breaking the forest rule that states "Do not feed the bears".
8. Fahrenheit 9/11 - Political partisanships aside, any Michael Moore film is good to watch just for the sake of watching a master documentary film-maker at work.
7. Roger & Me - Ditto.
6. Brother's Keeper - A town comes together for one of their own.
Well....
one of their own that came "outta the the abandoned basement of society", which we have all seem to deny exists. Until, media comes arunnin' to shine it's light of "subjective truth" upon it.
A story that starts out macabrely weird & ends up macabrely moving.
5. Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse - With events like rented military helicopters being called off during a scene of Apocalypse Now, so they can go engage in an actual combat for an actual war that was going on at the time & then Martin Sheen having a heart attack between shooting scenes, all happening during the filming of this movie, the true story of how this movie was made is almost as surreal & engaging as actual the movie itself.
4. Jesus Camp - Back when I was a kid, I was sent to a Jesus camp for one summer.
I even earned a badge for being able to whistle thru my stigmatas.
3. Streetwise - An emotionally wrenching ending, because it's real life & not a script. This film focuses those who are easily forgotten & brings to the surface their reality & all the drama & emotion that the world of escapism entertainment can never really compare to.
2. 42 & Up - Taking the film segments of the various people chosen for this project as children & watching 'em up against the segments of them as adults, it's almost spooky on it's perspective & can beg the question, at what point in life do humans lose the expressionisms of freespiritness that naturally comes with being a child & become the more restrained walking representative of a crushed spirit that many adults can easily end up as?
1. Anne Frank Remembered - As with everyone else, sometimes, it gets pretty easy for me to forget how good I really have it in life. Every time I watch this movie, & hear the part when Anne writes in her diary of her waiting for things to get back to normal, as a viewer who knows that for her it never will, it serves as a great reminder to me that not taking things for granted is an act of appreciation that should never wait until tomorrow. The only existing moving-figure footage of Anne that is included in this documentary, truly serves to enhance the importance of this lesson of gratitude.