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Ken Burns' Rousing, Repetitive Doc
TV & Streaming

Ken Burns’ Rousing, Repetitive Doc

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

In mentioning Ken Burns‘ upcoming The American Revolution to casual observers, the most frequent response has been a variation on: “Wait. Hasn’t he done that already?”

The short answer is “No.” The longer explanation is that Burns and his collaborators have hit the battlefield for documentaries about the Civil War, World War II and Vietnam, while our American origins have played a role in documentaries about Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, the adventures of Lewis and Clark, and the demise of the American buffalo — but that the American Revolution has not gotten the standalone Burns & Company treatment. 

The American Revolution

The Bottom Line

Rousing, if repetitive.

Airdate: 8 p.m. Sunday, November 16 (PBS)
Directors: Ken Burns, Sarah Botstein and David P. Schmidt

It must be acknowledged, though, that if Ken Burns had already made a docuseries about the American Revolution, be it 45 years ago or one year ago, it would have been exactly like The American Revolution, which premieres the first of its six chapters on PBS on November 16. 

Though it’s hard to watch The American Revolution without awareness of the anti-monarchic sentiments shared at recent rounds of “No Kings!” protests — to hear the noble egalitarian sentiments that launched the American experiment without pondering the ways the fulfillment of our freedoms has fallen short of our loftiest aspirations — the doc does not overtly acknowledge Donald Trump. It isn’t fueled by the propulsive anger of The Vietnam War and The U.S. and the Holocaust, nor does it possess the hints of aesthetic experimentation exhibited by last year’s Leonardo da Vinci.

Directed by Burns, Sarah Botstein and David P. Schmidt, The American Revolution is smart, thorough, sincere in intent, and still of undeniable and uncomfortable importance with or without direct reference to the current political moment. 

At 12 hours, it’s also dry and a little languid, relying on storytelling techniques — many reasonably fresh and vital back in 1990, when The Civil War planted Burns’ flag as a key chronicler of our nation’s history — that are treated with earnestness despite passing into the realm of parody long ago.

Not strictly limiting itself to the war, The American Revolution stretches from 1754 to the ratification of the Constitution and then the Bill of Rights decades later, from the existence of a group of geographically proximate colonies with seemingly no shared interests to the establishment of a tenuous government that Franklin famously described as “A republic, if you can keep it.” It connects the chronological dots from civil unrest to vigilante violence to a rag-tag military operation to a model for revolution that, over multiple centuries, leap-frogged around the world, all from a spark created by the likes of George Washington, Thomas Paine and a group of tea-disposing men in Indian costumes. 

The filmmakers touch on key battles, essential political and military figures and pivotal decisions made along the way, using a brigade of historians as primary sources for a target audience of bored kids eagerly awaiting the arrival of an AV cart and slightly older viewers whose primary point-of-entry for this period is the Hamilton soundtrack. That demographic, not insignificant, isn’t directly pandered to and might wonder how Alexander Hamilton could be treated as a historical footnote. But they’re still sure to relish context for previously mumbled references to Kips Bay, the code word being “Rochambeau” and how, exactly, General Charles Lee shat his bed at the battle of Monmouth.

The directors and their selected ensemble of scholars — there is no single Shelby Foote-style centerpiece or breakout — are explicitly wary of Great Man interpretations of history. So even if George Washington has deserved pride of place as the documentary’s “hero,” various experts are practically giddy to highlight his myriad blunders and lucky escapes, as well as his unapologetic status as slaveowner and unscrupulous encroacher on Native lands, without denying him ample instances of genius. The documentary goes the other way as well, with Benedict Arnold receiving ample credit for his battlefield heroism and ample empathy for the adversity he faced over the years before eventually settling into his more familiar role as traitor.

The doc is generally enamored of the internal conflicts and hypocrisies of the American Revolution, the celebrations of equality that excluded Blacks and Native Americans and left women in the background — the latter sometimes integral participants in their own way like Abigail Adams, but more often figures at the mercy of the whims of more active husbands or fathers. Multiple scholars focus on the Black and Native experiences, allowing those sides of the stories to feel like more than mere footnotes, if never truly focal.

Because The American Revolution fits snugly into the unprecedented tapestry that Burns has been weaving since Brooklyn Bridge in 1981, it’s easy to spot the direct connections to previous films on Jefferson and Franklin. Ditto the echoes of The Civil War, also examining a battle that pit brother against brother, and The Vietnam War, in which America became the occupying imperial force failing to understand or successfully combat a domestic insurgence.

With an absence of primary source footage or even photographs, The American Revolution relies heavily on familiar Burnsian tracking shots and zooms on paintings. There is also pretty but not always energetic imagery filmed in different referenced parts of the current American wilderness — snow gathering in fields, mist rising above mountaintops — and never-energetic shots of re-enactors loading muskets or preparing for battle. The smartest way the documentary fills visual space is by using period maps embellished with animated diagrams to show the strategy behind a dozen crucial battles. Military history nerds will be pleased.

In addition to the historians, the primary voices in the documentary are celebrity recitations of the words of both key historical figures and a handful of civilians, including teenaged Virginian Betsy Ambler (Maya Hawke), aspiring fife player John Greenwood (Joe Keery) and young Joseph Plumb Martin (Alden Ehrenreich), who found his way into many of the key skirmishes. If you can hear the latest assortment of love letters back from the front without giggling at the now-hoary device, you’re more mature than I am.

Over the years, Burns has assembled and cultivated an astonishingly good cast of recurring A-listers, whether it’s Mandy Patinkin, back to voice Ben Franklin; Paul Giamatti, getting still more mileage out of embodying John Adams; or ensemble favorites like Meryl Streep or Tom Hanks. Sometimes somebody like Morgan Freeman will pop up for a three-line performance for a character who was, at that time, 15, and it makes no sense. But if Morgan Freeman or Samuel L. Jackson or Craig Ferguson — voicing every Scot in history — wants to drop by for fun, who says no? Plus, the open-tent approach occasionally yields a delightful piece of casting like Amanda Gorman proclaiming for slave-turned-poet Phillis Wheatley.

Intentionally or not, parts of The American Revolution become repetitious, and the script (written by Burns regular Geoffrey C. Ward and narrated with trademark wry detachment by frequent Burns collaborator Peter Coyote) becomes overripe with the litany of battles, the listing of famous men, the pronouncement of yet another winter spent in a state of near-mutiny and near-starvation. The documentary frequently over-explains the war’s fascinating but simple-to-comprehend ironies on one hand and then rushes through some moments — the Bill of Rights feels like it should be fodder for a 10-parter all its own — on the other.

Flaws and familiarity aside, The American Revolution is characterized by the pervasive patriotism and pragmatism of its filmmakers, who make us feel the chill of the Delaware on Christmas Day, the betrayal of a general flipped to the enemy, and the optimism that we sometimes forget as we squirm through the latest evolution or devolution of the American experiment.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Stunning Trailer for 'The Tale of Silyan' Doc Film from North Macedonia
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Stunning Trailer for ‘The Tale of Silyan’ Doc Film from North Macedonia

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Stunning Trailer for ‘The Tale of Silyan’ Doc Film from North Macedonia

by Alex Billington
November 4, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You poor bird. From today on, we will live together.” National Geographic has unveiled the official trailer for one of the best documentaries of 2025 – a film titled The Tale of Silyan, from acclaimed Macedonian filmmaker Tamara Kotevska, best know for her doc Honeyland from 2019. She filmed a farmer for years in a town in North Macedonia following him and his friendship with one of the local white storks. The story follows Nikola, who is unable to sell his land & crops. His family abandons him to look for a future abroad. Nikola gets a job at a landfill, where he comes across an injured white stork, Sylian. Nikola saves the bird, with the two forming a bond. Through folklore, striking images and intimate observation, Kotevska crafts a story about absence and resilience, and about the delicate thread that ties human survival to the natural world. It’s a beautiful, stunning, amazing film about our connection with nature. My rave review from the Venice Film Festival is quoted in it: “a spectacularly cinematic creation it’s almost completely unbelievable that it’s actually a documentary and these are all real people and this is a real story.” A must watch new doc.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Tamara Kotevska’s doc The Tale of Silyan, direct from YouTube:

The Tale of Silyan Doc Trailer

The Tale of Silyan Doc Poster

Via AFI Fest: “Documentarian Tamara Kotevska returns with a poetic & lyrical documentary set in rural Macedonia where family farms are struggling as their traditional way of life has become unsustainable. Looking down on this are the town’s majestic storks perched in enormous nests atop telephone poles while their clattering beaks provide a constant soundtrack. Rooted in the Macedonian myth of Silyan — a boy transformed into a stork after defying his father — [drawing] a parallel to its subject, Nikola, a weathered farmer left behind when his adult son and family depart for Germany in search of a more secure future. When Nikola encounters an injured stork and tends to the fragile bird, a tender bond forms — one that reflects both his yearning for companionship and the looming uncertainty of his vanishing way of life.” 🇲🇰

The Tale of Silyan is directed by acclaimed, Oscar-nominated Macedonian filmmaker Tamara Kotevska, director of the doc films Honeyland and The Walk previously, and a few other short films as well. Produced by Tamara Kotevska, Jean Dakar, Anna Hashmi, Jordanco Petkovski. This premiered at the 2025 Venice Film Festival this fall (read our review). National Geographic will debut Kotevska’s The Tale of Silyan doc in select US theaters starting on November 28th, 2025 coming soon this fall. Who wants to watch this doc?

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November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Janus Films Acquires Nathan Silver's Carol Kane Doc Short Carol & Joy
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Janus Films Acquires Nathan Silver’s Carol Kane Doc Short Carol & Joy

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Janus Films has acquired all U.S. rights to “Carol & Joy,” a vérité documentary short featuring Oscar-nominated actress Carol Kane and her 98-year-old mother, Joy.

The film — directed by Nathan Silver (“Between the Temples”) — had its world premiere at the 2025 Telluride Film Festival and continued its fall festival run at the New York Film Festival, Hamptons International Film Festival and Woodstock Film Festival. It had its international premiere at the Viennale.

“Carol & Joy” will now debut exclusively on the Criterion Channel on Dec. 1, 2025. Janus will be supporting the film’s efforts for best documentary short category at the 2026 Academy Awards.

On New York’s Upper West Side, Kane lives with her 98-year-old mother Joy, an active music teacher, former dancer, and lifelong Francophile. In this intimate short vérité documentary shot on 16mm, the filmmaking team behind the acclaimed “Between the Temples” —  for which Kane was recently nominated for a Spirit Award — visit the pair in their home for an afternoon of music and friends and stories.

The film is produced by Jamie Gonçalves (“Predators, “Dos estaciones”), C. Mason Wells (“Between the Temples,” “Thirst Street”), Dweck Productions’ Hannah Dweck and Theodore Schaefer (“Maddie’s Secret,” “The Adults”), and Brian Liebman (“Brats,” “The Featherweight”). Executive producers include Natalie Portman and Sophie Mas’ MountainA (“May December,” “Arco”) and Diane Lanyi (“Between the Temples”). The film was shot in the tradition of legendary cinema vérité makers Albert and David Maysles by Sean Price Williams (“Good Time,” “The Sweet East”) and Hunter Zimny (“Funny Pages”).

“We filmed Carol & Joy on 16mm in a single New York City apartment, using an observational and conversational style indebted to our verite nonfiction heroes from the ‘60s and ‘70s,” said Silver. “I think every one of the documentaries that inspired us is — of course! — in the Janus Films library and streaming on the Criterion Channel. It’s an unbelievable honor for our film to be welcomed to live alongside these greats in the same beautiful building.”

Kane’s career has spanned five decades. She was nominated for best actress at the Academy Awards for “Hester Street,” won two Emmy Awards and earned a Golden Globe nomination for her work on the television series “Taxi,” and garnered an Emmy nomination for “Chicago Hope.” She was also a series regular on the Netflix series “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt” and “Hunters.”

“Between the Temples, which world premiered in competition at the Sundance Film Festival, was released by Sony Pictures Classics in 2024. The film was nominated for Best Screenplay at the Gotham Awards and won Kane the New York Film Critics Circle Award for best supporting actress.

Janus Films recently announced the acquisitions of Sophy Romvari’s acclaimed debut feature “Blue Heron,” Carla Simon’s 2025 Cannes selections “Romeria,” auteur Lav Diaz’s latest “Magellan,” the Cannes award-winning “Resurrection” from director Bi Gan, Hlynur Pálmason’s “The Love That Remains,” Sergei Loznitsa’s acclaimed “Two Prosecutors,” and Ira Sachs’ Sundance and New York Film Festival selection “Peter Hujar’s Day.”

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Pisie Hochheim and Tony Oswald Take on Their Family in Doc 'Newville'
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Pisie Hochheim and Tony Oswald Take on Their Family in Doc ‘Newville’

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

In the upcoming doc “Newville,” Pisie Hochheim and Tony Oswald follow 10 siblings who “cover the entire American political spectrum.” 

“They have many different spiritual beliefs and lifestyles. We’ve watched over the years as they’ve managed to ‘leave their swords at the door’ when they gather, as one aunt says,” says Hochheim, who is also a part of the family. 

Now, they return to their childhood home in Newville, NY, for the first time in 35 years. They attempt to repair it, but tensions arise. 

“Many people in the U.S. feel completely at odds with their families politically, and it’s understandable to choose to shut out or cut off and move on. But for Tony and me, living with difference and trying to find common ground is a belief we desperately try to hang onto.”

“Newville” won the Ji.hlava New Visions Award for the most promising U.S. project in partnership with AmDocs and the Jacob Burns Film Center Award. 

“Europe has an appetite for supporting daring, bold work,” notes Hochheim. The awards will be useful, as resources for U.S. filmmakers are dwindling and they’ve self-funded the project, working as a two-person team. 

Oswald says: “In the U.S., specifically lately, government-backed funding bodies have been cut, existing grants have been slashed and some are closing completely. Private equity or streamers look to a familiar slate of celebrity profiles or true crime docs. Everyone else has to fight over the scraps.”

Hochheim used to go to the house depicted in the doc for family events and holidays. She later married Oswald on the premises. 

“We still visit at least once a year, but for most of the year it sits empty. It’s beautiful, but it’s also 250 years old, and my family doesn’t have the money or time to address all of its problems, although my mother tries.”

“Some days, we feel so connected to it we can’t imagine a world where it doesn’t exist. My mum and I have nightmares about it catching on fire or a tree falling on it. But then we hear one of the siblings speaking about it without sentiment, and we remember we haven’t chosen to move back there either. As much as we love it, the house resists us, and we’ve begun to wonder what it wants as much as what we want from it.” 

In “Newville,” the house becomes a “container” to showcase the vibrant siblings who grew up there. 

“They’re hilarious, warm and unique, and have completely different worldviews. We’re very interested in how these worldviews shape their approach to the house, and why some have stayed involved while others think it’s time to let it go.”

This isn’t the first time the filmmaking duo has talked about family. 

“All of the films Tony and I have directed together so far are either about, or feature, our families. Even our narrative fiction work,” says Hochheim. “Our goal is to see how these small stories can be stretched through art and playful collaboration into more cinematic, universal narratives. We wouldn’t live long enough to make all the films that could spring from our family, but that doesn’t mean they’re biographical.”

Oswald, whose sister Alicia was featured in their short doc “Cycles,” adds: “We think it’s part of the reason our body of work is so diverse. We try to discover the films through our relationships with them. This has created a mini cinematic universe in which the same faces and locations appear across our very different films.” 

Though personal, “Newville” has already resonated with its Ji.hlava audience. 

“We’ve been so heartened to hear how universal this story is. People have come up to us to share their experiences: the sadness of losing a childhood home in Sudan, a house being sold and the discord it caused in Bosnia, or one whose future is unsure in Finland. This very specific story about Newville resonates with people across cultures,” he says, also recalling his experience on “Cycles.” 

“It’s a perfect example of how we work: Alicia [who used to anonymously donate eggs] wanted to document the experience and we wanted to tell a story about the wider context of egg donation in America by focusing solely on her,” observes Oswald. But working with family “isn’t without its challenges.” 

“We can’t wait for the day when we can be at a reunion without considering how it will fit into our movie, or actually help them fix the house instead of just filming them do it!” 

They’ve been filming for almost seven years and really got to know the siblings, notes Hochheim.  

“Because they’ve spread out across the country and are mostly in their 70s and 80s, filming was honestly the first time I’d had an in-depth conversation with some of them as an adult. We are also interested in what they are finding out about each other. We’ve taken to asking them: ‘What’s the one thing you wish your siblings knew about you’?”

Based in Nashville, Hochheim and Oswald are also co-producing and editing “Kinfolk” by Nicole Craine, executive produced by Jesse Plemons and Kirsten Dunst. 

“It’s a great joy and privilege, and every dinner is a write-off because we live and breathe our movies,” says Hochheim of their creative partnership. Oswald adds: “Our production company is called Same Person Productions. Having someone who can fill in your gaps, someone you trust more than anything, is the greatest gift.”

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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We Are the Fruits of the Forest
TV & Streaming

‘We Are the Fruits of the Forest’ Review: Rithy Panh’s Insightful Doc

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Rithy Panh can credibly hold the title of both Cambodia’s most important film director and one of the greatest documentarians alive. A survivor of the brutal Khmer Rouge regime that claimed the lives of his family members, he began studying filmmaking in France before returning to his native country in the late 1980s. His nonfiction output largely focuses on the aftermath of the Cambodian genocide and moves fluidly between brutally direct vérité (“S21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine,” 2003), archival material (“Irradiated,” 2020) and, in the case of the his most celebrated film “The Missing Picture” (2013), claymation. With his most recent film, “We Are the Fruits of the Forest,” Panh opts for a more restrained but still incisive approach to the plight of a specific group of downtrodden people in his nation’s present.

After a brief drone shot over the trees, “We Are the Fruits of the Forest” begins with Panh’s main recurring formal gambit for this particular project: a split screen presentation of silent black-and-white archival footage. The subject in both that found material and his film at large is the Bunong people, an indigenous ethnic group living in the highlands of northeastern Cambodia. Historically, they have grown large-grain rice in mountain forests, clearing sections of trees to create fields according to their ancestral ceremonies and offerings. By the 21st century, the Bunong have become beholden to the demands of companies seeking to access their cultivations, forcing them to harvest and clear forests at a much more rapid pace and take on additional products like cassava, rubber and honey.

Panh’s contemporaneously shot footage forms the bulk of “We Are the Fruits of the Forest,” remaining focused on the inhabitants of what appears to be one unnamed village as they cycle through the various duties needed to maintain their already precarious status. Though there are scenes reflecting a more relaxed way of life, including a few of the village children watching an action movie on a cellphone, the vast majority of sequences take place without any obvious visual signifiers of a more putatively modern world.

To convey that, “We Are the Fruits of the Forest” relies equally on extensive voiceover. Though no specific credits are provided, it seems that one single male voice is used to represent the anxieties of his village, if not his entire people as a whole. It is his words that are used to contextualize the images of work on screen, explaining various customs and the animist beliefs that govern their society. Also addressed are the various classifications of forests that the Bunong may or may not work in, the increasingly predatory bank loans that they must rely on as their crop yields become ever poorer, and the racist insults that wider Cambodian society uses to refer to them. The man occasionally mentions his father, but his words are generally used in an explanatory manner, informed by a deserved pride in his people’s work and understandable concerns about their future.

Such a monovocal approach, especially considering that little of the frequently heard dialogue between the village people is actually subtitled, does run the risk of being repetitive, as the same problems surrounding each facet of the Bunong people’s lives are evoked again and again. But there’s an elegance to Panh’s rhythms and his focus on the many faces of the village that continually proves of interest. Even as this might be Panh’s first nonfiction film to avoid even a glancing reference to the Khmer Rouge, the numerous references to modern capitalism’s erosion of Bunong customs (including some of their people’s adoption of Christianity) ensures that this new focus for Panh is by no means a lighter or less urgent topic.

All this, of course, is tied back into Panh’s use of archival footage. While past and present are juxtaposed less frequently than might be expected, the material is used in an overtly poetic manner, offering brief glimpses of a previous way of life. Most strikingly, the same image is often displayed in both frames, as if to suggest a double vision that seeks to divine a greater understanding of these long-gone figures and landscapes. Woven throughout “We Are the Fruits of the Forest” is an image of a topless Bunong woman, often shown in a brief flash that intrudes into the present. Whether this is meant as a literalization of the spirits of the forest or (as suggested by the voiceover) a bad omen is left up to interpretation, but it captures the vivid past and present lives of these people, and how quickly modern forces can cause them to fade away.

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Official Trailer for 'The White House Effect' Doc About Climate Change
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Official Trailer for ‘The White House Effect’ Doc About Climate Change

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Official Trailer for ‘The White House Effect’ Doc About Climate Change

by Alex Billington
October 29, 2025
Source: YouTube

“We need a new attitude about the environment.” Cinetic debuted the trailer for a compelling documentary film called The White House Effect, made by a trio of some of the best doc filmmakers around – Bonni Cohen, Pedro Kos, Jon Shenk. It will be streaming on Netflix to watch starting this week – after premiering at film festivals in 2024. The title comes from an actual quote used by President George H.W. Bush who said he would use “the White House effect” to tackle climate change problems in the 80s. However, things didn’t really go well. Three decades ago, the world was poised to stop global warming. Using exclusively archival materials, The White House Effect tells the dramatic origin story of the climate crisis and how a political battle in the George H. W. Bush administration interrupted that moment, changing the course of history. So sad and infuriating. “How it happened is a question that we can still learn from – and one that [this film] answers with shocking & eye-opening timeliness with a virtuoso use of archive footage. Clips from TV news, presidential speeches, documents reveal how the US was on the brink of historic climate change [action], but instead laid the groundwork for decades of polarization.” Still as important than ever to show the truth.

Here’s the official trailer for Cohen, Kos, Shenk’s doc film The White House Effect, direct from YouTube:

The White House Effect Doc Trailer

The White House Effect Doc Trailer

A riveting look at a key moment in the history of the climate crisis, The White House Effect travels back in time to show how a crucial opportunity to take real action on global warming was not just squandered but deliberately undermined. Woven entirely of archival material, the film focuses on the pivotal years of the George H.W. Bush administration — 1988 to 1992 — when the entire country was waking up to the reality of global warming and Bush had pledged to use “the White House effect” to tackle it. Infuriating and irrefutable, the film tracks cause & effect with devastating precision to reveal just how hollow that promise became as Bush finds himself increasingly caught between his chief of staff John Sununu and industry power brokers on one side and his EPA chief Bill Reilly and climatologists on the other. As the world prepares for the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, Bush faces mounting pressure to make a decision that will change the course of history—culminating with the U.S. undermining a global agreement to set hard limits on emissions, setting the stage for the increasingly hot, dangerous, polarized future we all now face.

The White House Effect is co-directed by three award-winning doc filmmakers: Bonni Cohen (director of The Rape of Europa, Audrie & Daisy, Athlete A, Make a Splash) & Pedro Kos (director of Bending the Arc, Rebel Hearts, In Our Blood) & Jon Shenk (director of Lost Boys of Sudan, The Island President, Audrie & Daisy, An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power, Athlete A). Produced by Noah Stahl, Josh Penn, Justine Nagan. This initially premiered at the 2024 Telluride Film Festival a few years ago. Cinetic / Netflix debuts The White House Effect doc streaming on Netflix starting on October 31st, 2025 this fall. Look any good?

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October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Tom Hardy Narrates This Black Rhino Eco-Thriller Doc 'Rhino' Trailer
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Tom Hardy Narrates This Black Rhino Eco-Thriller Doc ‘Rhino’ Trailer

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Tom Hardy Narrates This Black Rhino Eco-Thriller Doc ‘Rhino’ Trailer

by Alex Billington
October 29, 2025
Source: YouTube

“This is what conservation looks like.” Kaleidoscope Ent. has unveiled an official trailer for a documentary film titled simply Rhino, a vital story about saving rhinos in Kenya. Narrated by Academy Award-nominee Tom Hardy, the film follows an audacious mission to save the critically endangered black rhino against impossible odds. A dedicated wildlife ranger has protected his black rhino population so well (there’s only roughly ~6000 left in the world), that they have now run out of space. Hemmed in by ruthless bandits, the rhinos risk turning on each other. His team launches a major plan to move 21 rhinos across the country to provide a new safe haven. Highlighting the daily struggles experienced by those risking their lives to protect biodiversity, whilst simultaneously giving voice to those on the other side of the armed conflict, this hard-hitting, authentic film – crafted from 4 years of living & working within Kenya’s conservancy community – is both timely and urgent, as banditry violence spirals out of control, and the demand for illicit rhino horn climbs ever higher. Yep this looks like a thrilling and invigorating watch! Save these rhinos! We always need to share good stories like this – inspiring and especially moving in soulful, exhilarating ways. 🦏 Take a look.

Here’s the first official trailer (+ poster) for Tom Martienssen’s doc film Rhino, direct from YouTube:

Rhino Doc Trailer

Rhino Doc Poster

A unique eco-thriller, and story of resilience and victory in the fight to protect our natural world, narrated by Oscar-nominee Tom Hardy, and directed by cinematographer Tom Martienssen. With only 6000 black rhinos left on earth, one dedicated wildlife ranger, Kiloku, has made it his life mission to protect the species against all odds. With ~5% of the global population being poached each year, Kiloku’s team in Kenya has not lost a single rhino in nearly 10 years… A remarkable achievement, but one that does not come without consequences. They are running out of space. Hemmed in by ruthless bandits, the rhinos at his sanctuary risk turning on each other in a deathmatch for territory. With the help of a newly qualified ranger named Rita, the pair launch an audacious plan to move a group of the formidable herd to a new safe haven, 60 miles west. A potentially deadly mission, but one that the team are willing to risk their lives for in order to help launch a new population, and further Kenya’s incredible ongoing conservation efforts.

Rhino is a documentary film directed by acclaimed cinematographer / doc filmmaker Tom Martienssen, director of TV doc Gaucho: The Last Cowboys of Patagonia and a few other shorts; plus a cinematographer on many other adventure & nature docs. Produced by James May, Cassandra Roberts, Tom Martienssen. This hasn’t premiered at any festivals or elsewhere, as far as we know. Kaleidoscope debuts Martienssen’s Rhino doc in UK cinemas starting on November 28th, 2025 this fall. No US release is set yet – stay tuned.

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October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Morgan Neville's Doc 'Paul McCartney: Man on the Run' Teaser Trailer
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Morgan Neville’s Doc ‘Paul McCartney: Man on the Run’ Teaser Trailer

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Morgan Neville’s Doc ‘Paul McCartney: Man on the Run’ Teaser Trailer

by Alex Billington
October 27, 2025
Source: YouTube

“I thought – we should start from square one. It’s a puzzle I had to unravel.” Prime Video has revealed the first look teaser trailer for Paul McCartney: Man on the Run, yet another new Beatles documentary – though this isn’t really about them, it’s about what happened after The Beatles. Man on the Run is a film by acclaimed, Oscar-winning doc director Morgan Neville (of 20 Feet from Stardom, Best of Enemies, Keith Richards: Under the Influence, Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, They’ll Love Me When I’m Dead). Currently set for release in February 2026, after first premiering at the 2025 Telluride Film Festival this fall. After The Beatles break up (in 1970), Paul McCartney forms new band called Wings with his wife Linda. Archival home footage shows Paul’s life with Linda, who influenced his music, as well as his experiences after The Beatles fame. The doc film follows Wings from formation through 1970s during which Paul wrote hit songs. The description says the film “captures Paul’s transformative post-Beatles era through a uniquely vulnerable lens.” Which sounds like we get to learn about a whole other side of him that we haven’t seen before. Enjoy.

First look teaser for Morgan Neville’s doc film Paul McCartney: Man on the Run, from YouTube:

Paul McCartney: Man on the Run Doc Teaser

Paul McCartney: Man on the Run Doc Teaser

The film takes viewers on an intimate journey through Paul McCartney’s extraordinary life following the breakup of The Beatles and formation of Wings with his wife, Linda. From director Morgan Neville, the doc film chronicles the arc of McCartney’s solo career as he faces down a myriad of challenges while creating new music to define a new decade. Through unprecedented access to previously unseen footage & rare archival materials, the doc captures McCartney’s transformative post-Beatles era through a uniquely vulnerable lens. Paul McCartney: Man on the Run is directed by acclaimed American filmmaker Morgan Neville, director of many great doc films Troubadours, 20 Feet from Stardom, Best of Enemies: Buckley vs. Vidal, Keith Richards: Under the Influence, Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, They’ll Love Me When I’m Dead, Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain, Bono & The Edge, and The Saint of Second Chances previously, plus the recent STEVE! (martin) a documentary in 2 pieces doc. Produced by Chloe Simmons, Meghan Walsh, Scott Rodger, Ben Chappell, Michele Anthony, David Blackman, & Morgan Neville. Amazon will release Neville’s Man on the Run doc streaming on Prime Video starting in February 2026 next year.

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October 28, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix Doc 'The New Yorker at 100' - An Inside Look Official Trailer
Hollywood

Netflix Doc ‘The New Yorker at 100’ – An Inside Look Official Trailer

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Netflix Doc ‘The New Yorker at 100’ – An Inside Look Official Trailer

by Alex Billington
October 23, 2025
Source: YouTube

“It’s only 100 years old? Look what it’s done.” Netflix has debuted their official trailer for a documentary film titled The New Yorker at 100, made by Oscar winning filmmaker Marshall Curry. It first premiered at the 2025 Telluride Film Festival and it’s also screening at the Denver Film Festival before debuting for streaming on Netflix in December. Along with The New Yorker Festival in NYC this weekend, of course. For the first time in its extensive history, The New Yorker opens up its offices to filmmaker Marshall Curry, allowing unprecedented access to its newsroom at a pivotal moment for all media – a rare look at what it takes to publish a century of intrepid journalism, generation-defining fiction, and unforgettable cartoons. “I’m fascinated by people with obsessions.” New Yorker at 100 follows all the editors, writers, fact-checkers, photographers, cover artists, and others who bring The New Yorker to life, providing a rare glimpse into the inner workings of one of the great print magazines of our time. This is executive produced by Judd Apatow, and features narration by Julianne Moore, stepping inside the offices in 2024 as they prepare their 100th anniversary issue. Looks like a very fascinating doc in so many different ways about publishing and beyond.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Marshall Curry’s doc The New Yorker at 100, from YouTube:

“The New Yorker is full of people who are obsessed with what they do, whether it’s exposing a government scandal or profiling an obscure musician or policing the use of commas. I wanted to introduce audiences to these obsessives — partly because I found them interesting and funny and insightful, and partly because I think what they do is really important. It’s a tough time for fact-based journalism, and I wanted audiences to understand and celebrate the important work that’s under threat. I knew we wouldn’t be able to capture every aspect of The New Yorker in one film, but I was excited to introduce people — give them a tasting menu — to this long-standing institution and to the vital significance of journalism in general.” –Director Marhsall Curry

The New Yorker at 100 Doc Trailer

The New Yorker at 100 Poster

It’s the fall of 2024, and editor David Remnick and his team at The New Yorker are preparing to face one of their most important deadlines yet: their seminal 100th anniversary issue due on newsstands in just a few months. Meanwhile, journalism is facing unprecedented challenges from every direction. In a new film narrated by Julianne Moore, The New Yorker at 100 gives viewers a rare glimpse inside the century-old machine, showing how the words and images printed on its pages have shaped politics and culture, from changing how we think about nuclear war to introducing the world to the Addams family. Using archival materials alongside interviews with heavy-hitting contributors like Hilton Als, Roz Chast, and Ronan Farrow as well as notable fans of The New Yorker including Jesse Eisenberg, Ronny Chieng, and Molly Ringwald, among others, the film provides a rare glimpse into the legacy and current dynamics of one of America’s preeminent publications. The documentary film brings viewers inside its peerless fact-checking department, lively story meetings, and delightfully idiosyncratic cartoon selection process that showcases the journalistic integrity & intrepid creative spirit required to preserve a celebrated institution.

The New Yorker at 100 is a documentary directed by acclaimed, Oscar-winning doc filmmaker Marshall Curry, director of the films Street Fight, Racing Dreams, If a Tree Falls: Story of Earth Liberation Front, Point and Shoot, SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night, and the “P.O.V.” doc series previously. Produced by Xan Parker. Exec produced by Judd Apatow, Michael Bonfiglio, Josh Church, Amanda Rohlke, Helen Estabrook, Sarah Amos. This initially premiered at the 2025 Telluride Film Festival this year. Netflix will debut Curry’s The New Yorker at 100 film streaming on Netflix starting December 5th, 2025 this fall. Want to watch?

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October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Official Trailer for Doc Film 'Being Eddie' Profiling Eddie Murphy's Life
Hollywood

Official Trailer for Doc Film ‘Being Eddie’ Profiling Eddie Murphy’s Life

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Official Trailer for Doc Film ‘Being Eddie’ Profiling Eddie Murphy’s Life

by Alex Billington
October 22, 2025
Source: YouTube

“There’s only one Eddie Murphy. The laughter, the legacy, the life.” Netflix has revealed the main official trailer for another new celebrity biopic documentary – this one titled Being Eddie – a comprehensive look at Eddie Murphy’s life and career. After a few years out of the spotlight, Murphy has come back recently in the last few years, starring in a bunch of movies and series and coming back for Shrek 5 sometime soon. The documentary (out on Nov. 12) gathers comedy and Hollywood legends like Dave Chappelle, Tracee Ellis Ross, Jamie Foxx, Jerry Seinfeld, Reginald Hudlin and more to celebrate the Oscar-nominated actor and his nearly 50-year career that’s seen him break barriers, invent genres, and inspire generations of talent. For the first time ever, Eddie Murphy also invites the public into his home to revisit his breathtaking body of work, all the while revealing the dazzling interior life that has long driven — and grounded — this once-in-a-century star. With appearances by Arsenio Hall, Brian Grazer, Chris Rock, Jerry Bruckheimer, John Landis, Kenan Thompson, Kevin Hart, Michael Che, Pete Davidson, Ruth Carter, & many more. Take a look below.

Here’s the official trailer (+ poster) for Angus Wall’s documentary film Being Eddie, direct from YouTube:

Being Eddie Doc Trailer

Being Eddie Doc Poster

It goes without saying that there is only one Eddie Murphy. No other teen comedian shared a stage with Jerry Seinfeld at 17, and joined the cast of Saturday Night Live right out of high school. No actor has ever played a cop, a doctor, and a donkey — and dominated every facet of Hollywood he’s touched. Fewer still have been an A-list celebrity for over four decades and counting, and never succumbed to its darker side. Eddie’s unusual combination of explosive charisma, focused ambition, raw talent, deep-set circumspection puts him in a league of his own, and is on full display in Being Eddie. This documentary film is directed by two-time Oscar winner producer / editor filmmaker Angus Wall, making his feature directorial debut after a few other shorts previously. He won Oscars for Best Film Editing on Fincher’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo & The Social Network before getting into producing & directing. Produced by John Davis, John Fox, Charisse Hewitt-Webster, Terry Leonard, and Kent Kubena. Netflix will debut this new doc Being Eddie streaming on Netflix worldwide starting on November 12th, 2025 this fall. So who wants to watch this?

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October 23, 2025 0 comments
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