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DOC NYC 2016

The U.S. premiere of Matt Tyrnauer’s CITIZEN JANE: BATTLE FOR THE CITY will open the 2016 DOC NYC festival

The U.S. premiere of Matt Tyrnauer’s CITIZEN JANE: BATTLE FOR THE CITY will open the 2016 DOC NYC festival

DOC NYC
IFC Center, 323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
SVA Theatre, 333 West 23rd St. between Eighth & Ninth Aves.
Cinépolis Chelsea, 260 West Twenty-Third St. at Eighth Ave., 212-691-5519
November 10-17, $10-$30 (badges $75-$750)
www.docnyc.net

DOC NYC continues its rapid growth with a wide-ranging schedule for its seventh year, featuring more than two hundred film screenings, workshops, university showcases, panel discussions, master classes, Q&As, and more. The festival of nonfiction film runs November 10-17 at IFC Center, the SVA Theatre, and Cinépolis Chelsea, with tickets ranging from $10 to $30. (Badges are necessary to attend “Short List Day,” “Documentary & Journalism Day,” “Smart Producing Day,” “Pitch Perfect Day,” and “Show Me the Money Day” events.) Among the many highlights are documentaries about David Lynch, Jane Jacobs, John Coltrane, Fred Hersch, Ken Loach, Sharon Jones, Robert Mapplethorpe, L7, and Tony Conrad as well as such topics as gender identity, abortion, religion, human rights, the ivory trade, African American journalism, disabilities, guns, food, and O.J. The impressive list of directors includes Werner Herzog, Barbara Kopple, Stanley Nelson, Katy Grannan, Raoul Peck, Ava DuVernay, Kirk Simon, and Kirsten Johnson. Below is a look at three festival films that have previously played in New York City and have been reviewed on twi-ny. Keep watching for more reviews as the festival approaches and gets under way.

NFL hero Steve Gleason takes a new look at life after being diagnosed with ALS

NFL hero Steve Gleason takes a new look at life after being diagnosed with ALS

GLEASON (Clay Tweel, 2016)
Thursday, November 10, Cinépolis Chelsea, 6:00
Thursday, November 17, Cinépolis Chelsea, 11:45
gleasonmovie.com

“It’s not gonna be easy but it’s gonna be awesome,” Steve Gleason promises his unborn child in the extraordinary documentary Gleason, a heartbreaking yet uplifting tale about dedication, family, and never giving up. On September 26, 2006, scrappy New Orleans safety and special teams stalwart Gleason became an all-time inspirational Saints hero when, on Monday Night Football, he blocked Atlanta Falcon Michael Koenen’s punt less than a minute and a half into the Saints’ first home game in the Superdome following the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina the previous summer. The play, which resulted in a touchdown when the ball was recovered by Curtis DeLoatch in the end zone, has been memorialized with a statue titled “Rebirth” in front of the stadium. But Gleason became a different kind of hero five years later when the undrafted free agent was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), better known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, a generally fatal neuromuscular disease. Right after that, the Washington State native, who at the age of thirty-four was given three to five years to live, found out that his wife, artist and free spirit Michel Varisco, was pregnant with their first child, a boy. Determined to pass on as much of a legacy as he could to his unborn baby, Gleason began a vlog, a series of deeply personal five-minute videos in which he spoke openly and honestly about how they would never have the traditional father-son relationship but he wanted the boy to know that he was loved and cherished. But that is only the beginning of an incredible story that is poignantly told in Gleason.

Directed and edited by Clay Tweel (Make Believe, Print the Legend), the film features powerful clips from Gleason’s video journal; intimate footage shot by Ty Minton-Small and David Lee, who lived with Gleason, Varisco, and their son, Rivers, for two years; and interviews with family members and friends as Gleason’s physical conditions worsens but his heart and will grow stronger. “People will say, ‘Oh, it’s such a sad, tragic story,’ Gleason explains in the film. “It is sad, and so they’re right, but it’s not all sad. I think there is more in my future than in my past.” Gleason, with Michel’s father, Paul Varisco, form Team Gleason, a grass-roots nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people with ALS have a better quality of life, taking them on adventure vacations and giving them access to cutting-edge technology that increases their ability to communicate as the disease destroys their speech and movement. Among Steve’s famous friends and supporters are Saints quarterback Drew Brees and his wife, Brittany, and Pearl Jam guitarist Mike McCready and singer Eddie Vedder. Steve and Michel hold nothing back, sharing their deepest fears and insecurities while his condition deteriorates. As he tries to get the most out of his limited time with Rivers, Gleason also reexamines his troubled relationship with his father, Mike, a born-again Christian who is often at odds with his son. The real superstar of the film, however, is the brave and courageous Michel, who devotes her life to her husband and son despite increasing difficulties. In a statement about the film, Michel said, “I hope people who need a good laugh or a heavy cry can get that from this film. I hope people who need to be reminded to love their kids or their friends can get that from this movie. I hope people with ALS who want to use this film to show others what their lives really are like can get that from this movie. I hope people who have strained relationships with their parents will want to work on those relationships after they watch this movie. I hope people who have wanted to do something great in life will go ahead and do it after seeing this movie. People have told me that they have gotten all of these things from watching Gleason. And I think that’s pretty awesome.” Gleason, which is not always easy to watch, achieves all that and more, and indeed, that’s pretty awesome. The Sundance hit will be at DOC NYC on November 10 and 17, with Tweel and Michel Varisco participating in a Q&A after the first screening. Tweel will also take part in the panel discussion “Short List Day: Character Studies” on November 11 at 12 noon.

Anthony Weiner

The colorful Anthony Weiner marches in the Gay Pride Parade as he runs for mayor in 2013, a bright future potentially ahead of him

WEINER (Josh Kriegman & Elyse Steinberg, 2016)
Monday, November 14, Cinépolis Chelsea, 3:45
Tuesday, November 15, Cinépolis Chelsea, 9:45
www.ifcfilms.com

Near the end of Weiner, one of the most revealing and entertaining documentaries about a political figure you’re ever likely to see, one of the directors, Josh Kriegman, asks subject extraordinaire Anthony Weiner, “Why have you let me film this?” It’s a great question, and one that can be inquired of Weiner’s wife as well, Huma Abedin, who stands alongside her scandal-ridden husband nearly every step of the way. (Of course, the film was made prior to the most recent scandal, which led to the dissolution of their marriage.) In May 2011, during his seventh term as a fierce, fiery congressman representing parts of Brooklyn and Queens, Weiner was forced to resign in disgrace after it was discovered that he had sent lewd pictures of himself to several women over a public social media account while lying about it as well. Just two years later, the Brooklyn-born Weiner decided to get back in the game, running for mayor of New York City. Kriegman, who was a senior aide to Weiner in 2004-5 and his New York chief of staff in 2005-6, thought the comeback campaign would make a fascinating story, and Weiner agreed, giving him virtually unlimited access to his family and staffers. Initially, everything is going better than expected: Weiner is leading in the polls and getting his message across. But then the sexting scandal rises up again, and it all starts falling apart. Weiner tries hard to fight the good fight, concentrating on communicating his political platform, but the media only wants to ask him and his brave wife about the sexting, even when it is clear that the people of New York City prefer to talk about the issues. “I guess the punch line is true about me. I did the things . . . but I did a lot of other things too,” Weiner acknowledges. Of course, maybe Weiner never really had a fair chance. The movie begins with a telling quote from Marshall McLuhan: “The name of a man is a numbing blow from which he never recovers.”

Anthony Weiner

Yet another texting scandal forces Anthony Weiner to reconsider his options under media scrutiny

PBS and MTV veterans Kriegman and codirector Elyse Steinberg amassed more than four hundred hours of footage for their feature debut, and very rarely does Weiner or Abedin shut them out, even when things appear to hit rock bottom. Kriegman focuses his camera on Weiner, who doesn’t flinch as he considers all his options and, all too often, takes the wrong path, whether it’s getting angry with a patron in a Jewish deli or arguing with Lawrence O’Donnell on a videolink interview. Weiner continually performs self-defeating acts that Abedin, a longtime Hillary Clinton supporter who is now vice chairwoman of the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee’s campaign, gracefully and painfully points out to him, but she sticks with her husband and his campaign to the bitter end. Kriegman and Steinberg show Weiner hanging out at home, walking around barefoot, and playing with son Jordan, who was born in December 2011. But it’s truly heartbreaking when the directors zero in on Abedin’s forlorn face as the scandal grows and grows and the media has a field day with it. Weiner is seamlessly edited by Eli Despres (Blackfish, Red Army), who keeps the tension high even when we know what is coming, as the narrative plays out like a unique kind of political thriller. It’s impossible to take your eyes off the screen, to stop watching Weiner and Abedin as they have to deal with his dirty laundry in public. In addition to allowing Kriegman and Steinberg to follow him everywhere, the usually charismatic Weiner is decidedly dour as he sits down for a candid wraparound interview with the filmmakers. “Shit. This is the worst. This is the worst. Doing a documentary on my scandal,” Weiner opines at one point, displaying a rare moment of genuine regret as opposed to his usual hubris. But the film, which makes no judgments — and which Weiner and Abedin have refused to see so far — is as much about the relationship between media and politics as it is about one specific politician who made some personal mistakes, and it does not bode well for our future. Will Weiner ever be able to stage another comeback? He’s a determined guy, almost to the point of obsession, with a deep desire to help the people of New York City and the country, but then there’s that name, and the photos he posted, and the strange faces that he makes, so a third chance might just be one too many. A most human drama that won the U.S. Grand Jury Documentary Prize at Sundance, the extraordinary Weiner will be shown at DOC NYC on November 14 and 15 at Cinépolis Chelsea. In addition, Kriegman and Steinberg will discuss the making of the film in the special programs “First Time Doc Maker Day: Morning Manifesto” on November 10 at 10:00 am and “Short List Day: Unfolding Stories” on November 11 at 10:30 am. By then we’ll know how much Abedin’s emails found on Weiner’s laptop impacted the 2016 presidential election.

Sharon Jones

Sharon Jones is nervous about returning to the stage after tough cancer battle in Barbara Kopple’s intimate, affecting documentary

MISS SHARON JONES! (Barbara Kopple, 2015)
Wednesday, November 16, Cinépolis Chelsea, 5:00
Thursday, November 17, Cinépolis Chelsea, 9:45
sharonjonesandthedapkings.com

“I feel my day is coming, it’s my time,” soul singer extraordinaire Sharon Jones is shown saying at the beginning of Barbara Kopple’s touching and intimate documentary, Miss Sharon Jones! But that was before the former wedding singer and Rikers Island corrections officer, who was born in 1958 in North Augusta, South Carolina, raised in Brooklyn, and later lived in Queens, was diagnosed in June 2013 with stage two pancreatic cancer. Jones, who has been called the female James Brown — she tells a story in the film about the time she met the Godfather of Soul — allows the Oscar-winning Kopple (Shut Up & Sing, Harlan County, USA) remarkable access as she cuts off her trademark locks and chooses a wig, undergoes painful chemotherapy, is cared for by her close friend and holistic nutritionist Megan Holken, and visits her old stomping grounds in Augusta, Georgia. Jones shares her thoughts about her future, feeling responsible for the financial well-being of her longtime band, the Dap-Kings. “First and foremost, we’re a family,” Daptone Records cofounder and saxophonist Neal Sugarman says. In fact, “family” is a word that pops up often in the film when people describe their relationship with Jones, who has never married and has no children. Among those who talk about Jones, her amazing talent, and her fight with cancer are her oncologist, Dr. James Leonardo; her manager, Alex Kadvan, who is with her every step of the way; her assistant manager Austen Holman, who tries not to break down on camera; Daptone Records cofounder and bassist Gabe Roth; guitarist Binky Griptite, who is up front about his financial troubles while the band is on hiatus; drummer Homer Steinweiss; and Dapettes Starr Duncan Lowe and Saundra Williams.

Sharon Jones

Sharon Jones, the female James Brown, takes the stage in Barbara Kopple’s MISS SHARON JONES!

Jones is a fiery dynamo onstage, pounding the floor in her bare feet, shaking her dreads wildly, a relentless performer in a compact package. (We’ve seen Miss Jones perform numerous times, including with Prince at Madison Square Garden, and Kopple does a masterful job capturing Jones’s infectious passion and energy.) She proves herself to be quite the character offstage as well, an unpredictable force who is at ease lighting up a cigar while fishing in a lake, not embarrassed to admit that her dream is to dance on Ellen with Ellen DeGeneres, and lifted by the power when delivering an awe-inspiring rendition of the Gospel standard “His Eye Is on the Sparrow” in a Queens church. Of course, the film is filled with lots of great music, all originals by Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings, including “I Learned the Hard Way,” “Get Up and Get Out,” “Longer & Stronger,” “I’ll Still Be True,” and “100 Days, 100 Nights.” As the chemotherapy nears its conclusion, Jones, itching to return to the stage, wonders whether she’ll be strong enough to go back out on tour behind their latest record, the aptly titled Give the People What They Want.After seeing the film, Jones posted on social media, “I never thought I had a story, but Barbara Kopple and her team captured a beautiful one during the most difficult months of my life. They were able to make the difficulty in what I went through mean a lot. You see a part of life I never would have looked at and it was moving for me to be able to see all the people it affected.” Miss Sharon Jones! is indeed a moving, deeply affecting film. It is playing at DOC NYC on November 16 and 17, with Kopple and coproducer David Cassidy participating in Q&As after the screenings. Kopple will also take part in the panel discussion “Short List Day: Character Studies” on November 11 at 12 noon.

STRANGER THAN FICTION — NEIL YOUNG: HEART OF GOLD

Jonathan Demme will present NEIL YOUNG: HEART OF GOLD at Stranger Than Fiction screening at IFC Center on October 18

Jonathan Demme will present NEIL YOUNG: HEART OF GOLD at Stranger Than Fiction screening at IFC Center on October 18

NEIL YOUNG: HEART OF GOLD (Jonathan Demme, 2006)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Tuesday, October 18, $17, 7:00
Series runs Tuesday nights through November 1
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com

For the last four decades, Baldwin-born writer-director Jonathan Demme has alternated between fiction films and documentaries, releasing such features as Something Wild, The Silence of the Lambs, and Philadelphia as well as such real-life tales as Haiti: Dreams of Democracy, Cousin Bobby, and Neil Young Trunk Show. IFC Center is dedicating its complete fall Stranger Than Fiction season to the latter, screening six Demme documentaries on successive Tuesday nights, each followed by a Q&A with the Oscar-winning director. The series began with Stop Making Sense, Swimming to Cambodia, and The Agronomist; on October 18, STF will present one of Demme’s very best, Neil Young: Heart of Gold. In March 2005, less than a week before a scheduled operation for a brain aneurysm, Canadian country-folk-rock legend Neil Young headed to Nashville, assembled friends and family, and in four days recorded one of the best — and most personal — albums of his storied career, Prairie Wind. On August 18, he had recovered enough to put on a poignant show at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, captured on film by Jonathan Demme (whose previous music-related works included Talking Heads in Stop Making Sense, Robyn Hitchcock in Storefront Hitchcock, and videos by the Pretenders and Bruce Springsteen).

The concert film begins with brief interviews with band members as they prepare for the show; Demme does not harp on Young’s health but instead focuses on the music itself and the warming sense of a family coming together. And what music it is. Using an ever-changing roster of participants, including Emmylou Harris, then-wife Pegi Young, steel guitarist Ben Keith, keyboarist Spooner Oldham, bass player Rick Rosas, the Nashville String Machine, the Fisk University Jubilee Singers, the Memphis Horns, and others, Young goes song by song through Prairie Wind (skipping only the Elvis tribute “He Was the King,” which appears as a DVD extra), a moving album written by a man looking death squarely in the face. (Pegi Young points out that it was like Neil’s life flashing before his eyes.) Young introduces several songs with stories about his recently deceased father, growing up on a chicken farm, his daughter’s departure for college, and Hank Williams, whose guitar Young plays. (He also does a few songs on a Steinway.) Cinematographer Ellen Kuras (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, No Direction Home: Bob Dylan) gets up close and personal with Young, zooming in for extended shots of his face, his eyes peeking out from under his cowboy hat. Eleven years later, Young is still at the top of his game, releasing great new music and playing incendiary live shows. The Stranger Than Fiction series continues October 25 with the New Orleans-set I’m Carolyn Parker: The Good, the Mad, and the Beautiful before concluding November 1 with Jimmy Carter Man from Plains.

BEING 17

BEING 17

Marianne (Sandrine Kiberlain) is caught in the middle in André Téchiné’s poignant BEING 17

BEING 17 (QUAND ON A 17 ANS) (André Téchiné, 2016)
IFC Center, 323 Sixth Ave. at Third St., 212-924-7771
Lincoln Plaza Cinema, 1886 Broadway between 62nd & 63rd Sts., 212-757-2280
Opens Friday, October 7
strandreleasing.com

André Téchiné’s Being 17 is a touching and sensitive coming-of-age drama set in and around the beautiful Pyrenees in France. Written by Téchiné and Céline Sciamma, who has made such poignant films about teens as Girlhood and Water Lilies, Being 17 is told from the point of view of seventeen-year-old Damien (Kacey Mottet Klein), a loner who has a strong relationship with his mother, Marianne (Sandrine Kiberlain), a local doctor, and his father, Nathan (Alexis Loret), a helicopter pilot fighting overseas. Damien starts getting into fights with classmate Tom (Corentin Fila), another loner who lives on a mountain farm with his adoptive parents, Jacques (Jean Fornerod) and Christine (Mama Prassinos). When Christine falls ill, Marianne treats her, letting her know that she is pregnant, which both delights and frightens the parents-to-be, who had previously gone through several unsuccessful pregnancies before adopting Tom. It also worries Tom, who tells Marianne sadly, “Finally, a real child.” She responds, “There are no fake children.” With Tom struggling at school, both families decide it is best for him to move in with Damien and Marianne, primarily because it takes him hours to get to and from school each day and this way he will have more time to study. But things get complicated when both Damien and Marianne become enthralled with the strapping, brooding teen.

BEING 17

Damien (Kacey Mottet Klein) and Tom (Corentin Fila) experience a rare quiet moment in BEING 17

Partly inspired by Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights, Being 17 uses nature as another character in this complex triangle. Tom is most at home in the mountains and valleys, among the grass and trees (beautifully photographed by Julien Hirsch), finding peace there even as his fights with Damien get more and more brutal. The physicality of their bouts, enhanced by the training Damien does with family friend and veteran Polo (Jean Corso), provides a flipside to Nathan’s experiences in a real war, which he relates to his wife and son over Skype. Marianne serves as mother and doctor to both boys, creating multiple forms of jealousy, especially as Tom, who is uncomfortable around people in general and wants to become a veterinarian, is attracted to Marianne as mother, doctor, and maybe more. But at the heart of the film is Damien’s burgeoning sexuality as he grows more and more interested in Tom as an object of desire, which further confuses Tom. Téchiné (Wild Reeds, Changing Times) tells the story with a gentle tenderness that is affecting, anchored by a splendidly nuanced performance by seven-time César nominee Kiberlain (Mademoiselle Chambon, 9 Month Stretch), who is extraordinary as her character evolves. Newcomer Fila brings an instant electricity to the screen; he and Klein (Sister, Gainsbourg) have a sizzling chemistry. Winner of the International Grand Jury Prize at the 2016 Outfest, Being 17 is a poignant collaboration between longtime French master Téchiné, who is seventy-three, and the vastly talented Sciamma, who is half his age.

DANNY SAYS

Danny Fields and the Ramones

Documentary details Danny Fields’s wild life in the music business, including managing the Ramones

DANNY SAYS (Brendan Toller, 2016)
IFC Center, 323 Sixth Ave. at Third St., 212-924-7771
Lincoln Plaza Cinema, 1886 Broadway between 62nd & 63rd Sts., 212-757-2280
Opens Friday, September 30
dannysaysfilm.com

“He’s a handmaiden to the gods. He’s been midwife to some of the most important people in music,” John Cameron Mitchell says at the beginning of Danny Says, Brendan Toller’s highly entertaining if scattershot documentary about Danny Fields. Born Daniel Henry Feinberg in Brooklyn in 1939, Fields graduated from the University of Pennsylvania when he was still a teenager, dropped out of Harvard Law School, and went on to one of the wildest careers in the music business. Attracted to both cutting-edge and celebrity culture, Fields was a DJ, a magazine editor, a record executive, a press agent, and a band manager, always doing things his way. “I always went against the grain,” he says in the film, which features family photographs, home movies (including scenes from his bar mitzvah), outstanding music clips, and new and archival interviews with Fields, a natural storyteller with a casual delivery, whether he’s talking about his sexual promiscuity, hanging out with Andy Warhol and Edie Sedgwick at the Factory, or trying to hook up Jim Morrison and Nico. Nothing is off limits as he shares tales about going to gay bars, making “Have a Marijuana” with David Peel & the Lower East Side, developing a friendship with Linda Eastman, and playing the Ramones for Lou Reed for the first time. “He had a way with words that made you want to become part of whatever he was doing,” Peel says in the film.

Others who sing Fields’s praises are Wayne Kramer, Judy Collins, Iggy Pop, Alice Cooper, Justin Vivian Bond, Leee Black Childers, Lenny Kaye, Jonathan Richman, Jann Wenner, and Tommy Ramone. Toller, who met Fields while finishing his 2008 debut film, I Need That Record! The Death (or Possible Survival) of the Independent Record Store, made when he was twenty-one, and editors Ian Markiewicz and Timothy Sternberg have a blast with the archival concert footage, especially of the Stooges and the Ramones (who honored Fields with their song “Danny Says” on End of the Century) in their early days as well as the Velvet Underground, the Doors, the MC5, and the Modern Lovers. Playful animation by Emily Hubley, Johnny Woods, and Matt Newman accompanies several of Fields’s longer anecdotes. The narrative flow is rough, bouncing around like an album with some great songs but doesn’t quite achieve greatness itself, but it’s still a whole lotta fun. “What motivates me is to be in the right crowd,” Fields says. Seeing this film puts moviegoers in the right crowd, at least for ninety minutes. Danny Says opens September 30 at Lincoln Plaza and IFC Center; Toller will be at IFC for a Q&A with Michael Musto following the 7:15 screening Friday night.

FELLINI: 8½

Guido Anselmi (Marcello Mastroianni) is in a bit of a personal and professional crisis in Fellini masterpiece “8½”

WEEKEND CLASSICS: 8½ (Federico Fellini, 1963)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
September 2-5, 11:00 am
Series continues through September 25
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com

“Your eminence, I am not happy,” Guido (Marcello Mastroianni) tells the cardinal (Tito Masini) halfway through Federico Fellini’s self-reflexive masterpiece 8½. “Why should you be happy?” the cardinal responds. “That is not your task in life. Who said we were put on this earth to be happy?” Well, film makes people happy, and it’s because of works such as 8½. Fellini’s Oscar-winning eighth-and-a-half movie is a sensational self-examination of film and fame, a hysterically funny, surreal story of a famous Italian auteur who finds his life and career in need of a major overhaul. Mastroianni is magnificent as Guido Anselmi, a man in a personal and professional crisis who has gone to a healing spa for some much-needed relaxation, but he doesn’t get any as he is continually harassed by producers, screenwriters, would-be actresses, and various other oddball hangers-on. He also has to deal both with his mistress, Carla (Sandra Milo), who is quite a handful, as well as his wife, Luisa (Anouk Aimée), who is losing patience with his lies. Trapped in a strange world of his own creation, Guido has dreams where he flies over claustrophobic traffic and makes out with his dead mother, and his next film involves a spaceship; it doesn’t take a psychiatrist to figure out the many inner demons that are haunting him. Marvelously shot by Gianni Di Venanzo in black-and-white, scored with a vast sense of humor by Nino Rota, and featuring some of the most amazing hats ever seen on film — costume designer Piero Gherardi won an Oscar for all the great dresses and chapeaux — is an endlessly fascinating and wildly entertaining exploration of the creative process and the bizarre world of filmmaking itself. And after seeing 8½, you’ll appreciate Woody Allen’s 1980 homage, Stardust Memories, a whole lot more. “Weekend Classics” continues September 9-11 with Fellini Satyricon before concluding September 23-25 with City of Women.

DISORDER

DISORDER

Alice Kruger and Matthias Schoenaerts star in Alice Winocour’s gripping paranoid thriller, DISORDER

DISORDER (Alice Winocour, 2015)
IFC Center, 323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St., 212-924-7771
Lincoln Plaza Cinema, 1886 Broadway between 62nd & 63rd Sts., 212-757-2280
Opens Friday, August 12
www.sodapictures.com

French director Alice Winocour follows up her 2012 Cannes hit, Augustine, with the pulse-pounding, heart-racing paranoid thriller Disorder. Matthias Schoenaerts is sensational as Vincent, a role Winocour wrote specifically for him. A veteran of special forces in Afghanistan, Vincent has been sidelined back in France, diagnosed with PTSD and awaiting medical clearance for a return to the field. He is distraught and frustrated, as his identity as a soldier is his life. While waiting to hear from the doctors, he is hired by his team leader, Denis (Paul Hamy), to join a security force for a party at a French Riviera estate, known as Maryland, owned by powerful Lebanese businessman Imad Whalid (Percy Kemp). During the party, Vincent witnesses an altercation involving Whalid, cabinet minister Pierre Duroy (Philippe Haddad), and some mysterious figures. Later, when Whalid suddenly has to leave on a business trip, Vincent comes back to the estate as a one-person security force protecting Whalid’s trophy wife, Jessie (Diane Kruger), and her young son, Ali (Zaïd Errougui-Demonsant). Vincent is instantly suspicious of everything and everyone, constantly looking over his shoulder and scanning for threats ahead, which disturbs Jessie — until it appears that Vincent just may be right.

Disorder is a deep, intense cinematic experience as Winocour, cinematographer George LeChaptois, editor Julien Lacheray, and composer Gesaffelstein create a dark world filled with unexpected twists and turns. The story was inspired by real-life interviews Winocour conducted with elite soldiers, while the different techniques she employs in crafting the film were influenced by filmmakers Michelangelo Antonioni and Alfred Hitchcock and photographers Philip-Lorca diCorcia and Gregory Crewdson, resulting in a taut, gripping thriller that never lets the audience take a breath. It’s an intense psychological journey that combines various genres, incorporating horror, home invasion, action-adventure, war, and politics into something unique and seductive. Schoenaerts (The Danish Girl, A Bigger Splash) is mesmerizing as Vincent; the entire film is shot from his frenzied point of view, and he pulls it off magnificently. (To get into the role, he embodied his character 24/7, sleeping only a few hours a day to attain the proper mind-set.) Kruger (Troy, Inglourious Basterds) is alluring as Jessie, who is cautiously skeptical of Vincent’s protection, refusing to acknowledge the situation she and her family are in; the scene in which Jessie and Vincent fall asleep on couches is a tender-hearted moment in their complex relationship. Winocour effectively turns the mansion into a war zone, one that exists inside Vincent’s head as well. It’s an exquisitely made, captivating film, as sharp as a knife edge, unyielding and unrelenting every step of the way. Disorder opens August 12 at IFC Center and Lincoln Plaza, with Winocour participating in Q&As at the latter after the 7:15 show and at the former following the 8:00 screening on opening night.

MISS SHARON JONES!

Sharon Jones

Sharon Jones is nervous about returning to the stage after tough cancer battle in Barbara Kopple’s intimate, affecting documentary

MISS SHARON JONES! (Barbara Kopple, 2015)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Opens Friday, July 29
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
sharonjonesandthedapkings.com

“I feel my day is coming, it’s my time,” soul singer extraordinaire Sharon Jones is shown saying at the beginning of Barbara Kopple’s touching and intimate documentary, Miss Sharon Jones! But that was before the former wedding singer and Rikers Island corrections officer, who was born in 1958 in North Augusta, South Carolina, raised in Brooklyn, and later lived in Queens, was diagnosed in June 2013 with stage two pancreatic cancer. Jones, who has been called the female James Brown — she tells a story in the film about the time she met the Godfather of Soul — allows the Oscar-winning Kopple (Shut Up & Sing, Harlan County, USA) remarkable access as she cuts off her trademark locks and chooses a wig, undergoes painful chemotherapy, is cared for by her close friend and holistic nutritionist Megan Holken, and visits her old stomping grounds in Augusta, Georgia. Jones shares her thoughts about her future, feeling responsible for the financial well-being of her longtime band, the Dap-Kings. “First and foremost, we’re a family,” Daptone Records cofounder and saxophonist Neal Sugarman says. In fact, “family” is a word that pops up often in the film when people describe their relationship with Jones, who has never married and has no children. Among those who talk about Jones, her amazing talent, and her fight with cancer are her oncologist, Dr. James Leonardo; her manager, Alex Kadvan, who is with her every step of the way; her assistant manager Austen Holman, who tries not to break down on camera; Daptone Records cofounder and bassist Gabe Roth; guitarist Binky Griptite, who is up front about his financial troubles while the band is on hiatus; drummer Homer Steinweiss; and Dapettes Starr Duncan Lowe and Saundra Williams.

Sharon Jones

Sharon Jones, the female James Brown, takes the stage in Barbara Kopple’s MISS SHARON JONES!

Jones is a fiery dynamo onstage, pounding the floor in her bare feet, shaking her dreads wildly, a relentless performer in a compact package. (We’ve seen Miss Jones perform numerous times, including with Prince at Madison Square Garden, and Kopple does a masterful job capturing Jones’s infectious passion and energy.) She proves herself to be quite the character offstage as well, an unpredictable force who is at ease lighting up a cigar while fishing in a lake, not embarrassed to admit that her dream is to dance on Ellen with Ellen DeGeneres, and lifted by the power when delivering an awe-inspiring rendition of the Gospel standard “His Eye Is on the Sparrow” in a Queens church. Of course, the film is filled with lots of great music, all originals by Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings, including “I Learned the Hard Way,” “Get Up and Get Out,” “Longer & Stronger,” “I’ll Still Be True,” and “100 Days, 100 Nights.” As the chemotherapy nears its conclusion, Jones, itching to return to the stage, wonders whether she’ll be strong enough to go back out on tour behind their latest record, the aptly titled Give the People What They Want.After seeing the film, Jones posted on social media, “I never thought I had a story, but Barbara Kopple and her team captured a beautiful one during the most difficult months of my life. They were able to make the difficulty in what I went through mean a lot. You see a part of life I never would have looked at and it was moving for me to be able to see all the people it affected.” Miss Sharon Jones! is indeed a moving, deeply affecting film. It opens at IFC Center on July 29, with Kopple and Jones participating in Q&As following the 7:45 screenings on July 29 and 30.