Posts Tagged ‘the house I live in’

Sundance Review: The House I Live In

Sunday, January 22nd, 2012

This film started out a little slow for me, and it also does two things I’m generally not fond of in documentary films: it uses a great deal of voiceover, and the director integrates himself heavily into the story. But wait, bear with me, because if you stick with this film, it pays off very well in spite of — perhaps even because of — those things. Jarecki’s a tremendously talented documentarian, and he deftly weaves together his family’s personal history and his own relationship with Nannie Jeter, the Black housekeeper/nanny who cared for him and his brothers when they were growing up, with his own growing understanding of the disparity between the paths he and his brothers took and the paths the members of Nanny’s family, with whom the Jarecki brothers grew up, into a greater tale about the War on Drugs and its disproportionate impact on African-American men.
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Sundance Preview: US Documentary Competition

Saturday, January 14th, 2012

Man, there are a lot of documentaries I want to see at Sundance this year. Last year I wasn’t so enamored of many of the catalog selections, which was a shame because I love docs as a genre. This year they’re making it tough, though … I’m going to have to really push my limits on how many films I can digest during Sundance in order to squeeze in all the docs I want to catch amongst the equally intriguing narrative choices. And I haven’t even started really digging into the World categories or Premieres yet, much less things like New Frontier. Whew. It’s shaping up to be another promising year for Sundance. Here are my top picks in the US Documentary category. (Note: All film descriptions from the Sundance catalog.)
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