Posted Jul 1st 2008 9:42PM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: RumorMonger, The Weinstein Co., Michael Moore, Miramax

For everyone who's ever watched a bad movie and thought, "If this is what they produced, I wonder what they threw away?," the
Village Voice has found an answer. In an amusing and fascinating
article posted today, reporter Tony Ortega says he and a buddy accidentally stumbled across a recycling bin full of paper from
Harvey Weinstein's office -- and not just from the office, but from Weinstein's own desk. Ortega proceeds to tell us all the juicy details he learned about the daily work of a movie mogul.
So what is Harvey Weinstein throwing away? Lots of copies of screenplays, naturally, as well as daily sheets (prepared by an assistant, no doubt) listing phone calls he needs to make or return. As you might imagine, the roster of people seeking Weinstein's attention is staggering, with actors, agents, lawyers, producers, and reporters all vying for his time. Michael Moore called him on April 25 and Weinstein didn't return the call for over a month. I'd say being able to ignore Michael Moore for a full month is the very definition of power.
Strangely, Weinstein's e-mails are printed out for him to peruse. (Maybe he gets eye strain from looking at a computer monitor? Maybe he just likes wasting paper?) There were some pretty interesting tidbits in the copies he tossed, including lots of stuff about the Weinstein-produced
Project Runway, if you're into that.
Continue reading What's in Harvey Weinstein's Recycling Bin?
Posted Jul 1st 2008 2:32PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Comedy, Drama, Independent, Lionsgate Films, Michael Moore

If you read any part of that draft of
W., Oliver Stone's Bush biopic,
which hit the net a few months back, you might think it ludicrous for the film to be likened to Shakespeare. But Stone himself has done so, as part of
an L.A. Times set visit interview. Lumped in with a quote in which Stone also contrasts the project to the work of
Michael Moore, the Oscar-winning director's statement is in response to the film's level of seriousness: "W. isn't an overly serious movie, but it is a serious subject. It's a Shakespearean story. . . . I see it as the strange unfolding of American democracy as I have lived it."
The
Times piece, which reports from Shreveport, Louisiana, where Independence Bowl stadium fills in for the Texas Rangers' Arlington Stadium, is very filling for anyone with an appetite for more
W. updates. Included are a description of and dialogue from a scene between George W. Bush (
Josh Brolin) and George H.W. Bush (
James Cromwell), details on a "baseball-oriented fantasy" sequence, Brolin stating that he's not out to do a
SNL-style caricature and admitting his initial hesitance to take on the role, a general overview of the project's coming together, and, best of all, a picture (seen, cropped, above) of Brolin as the future Commander in Chief looking like he's just had the crap beaten out of him. Also a fact I'd somehow never known prior to reading the article: Stone was "briefly a Yale classmate of Bush."
Continue reading Oliver Stone Calls 'W.' Shakespearean
Posted Jun 5th 2008 8:02PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Documentary, Movie Marketing, Michael Moore

Because Michael Moore can't make enough movies to piss people off 24/7, we fortunately have people like
Bill Maher, whose new anti-religious documentary,
Religulous,
hits theaters this fall. Of course, Maher has said that he shouldn't be compared to Moore, whom he considers to be a genius. Plus, Maher didn't direct the film,
Larry Charles, of
Borat,
Seinfeld and
Curb Your Enthusiasm fame, did. But in the same way that Al Gore is credited with
An Inconvenient Truth, Maher, who hosted one of my favorite shows of the past (
Politically Incorrect) and currently hosts HBO's
Real Time with Bill Maher (which I've never seen, because I don't have HBO), will be continually given credit for this film. No matter who gets the higher billing, though, it's certain that
Religulous is going to be hilarious thanks to the talents of both gentlemen.
Now, to help promote the film and presumably to get people either laughing or offended a few months early, Maher has unleashed a new website called
Disbeliefnet.com. It seems to be part satire, part examination of the world's religions, part blog of religion-related news and part movie marketing. Movie fans might want to check out the grouping of clips/trailers from films detailing the endless suffering of Jews. Personally, my favorite gag is the "Donate Now" button that goes to a randomly chosen religion's donation form. Now I can give to everyone equally with ease.
And speaking of equal coverage, Maher and Charles' film seems to touch on all the major and minor religions of the world, bringing their "guerilla" shooting style into places cameras have supposedly never been before. But if the film doesn't focus any attention on your religion, don't worry: you can be offended about not being able to get offended. Or something.
Religious opens October 3rd.
Posted May 13th 2008 4:02PM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: Documentary, Deals, Distribution, The Weinstein Co., Politics, Michael Moore, Paramount Vantage

Michael Moore's
Fahrenheit 9/11 was pretty good as far as anti-Bush jeremiads go, but it ended with a cliffhanger. Would George W. Bush be reelected in 2004 despite all the reasons Moore laid out for his dismissal? Or would he overcome the odds, focus the campaign on silly non-issues, and get lucky by having a weak, boring opponent?
We know what wound up happening, and now
Variety reports that Moore is making a sequel, as yet untitled but scheduled for release around this time next year. (There's a chance it'll premiere at Cannes, like
Fahrenheit and
Sicko did.) Moore is working with Paramount Vantage and Overture Films this time around, splitting from the Weinstein Company, which distributed his last two films. We're guessing he wasn't happy with the way
Sicko underperformed and has struck out for new territory.
So what will the
Fahrenheit sequel cover? Everything that's happening since the last film, apparently. It's interesting how much things have changed in four years. In 2004, Bush and the Iraq War were not terribly popular, but they both had enough supporters to get him reelected. Now, Bush's approval rating is at a record low -- and I mean it's a record not just for him but for all presidents since the polling began -- and a majority of Americans feel the war was a mistake and should be ended ASAP. All of which means Moore's new film will probably find a larger, more receptive audience than the last one did.
Posted Jan 12th 2008 6:32PM by Kevin Polowy
Filed under: Fandom, Michael Moore, George Clooney, Lists, Best/Worst, Hold the 'Fone

It was a damn fine year for movies, 2007. It's hard enough picking 10 top flicks from the crop after a just-decent year, so the task was especially tricky this time around. (At least at Moviefone
we're able to pick the 50 best.) That's why I'm thankful for the unwritten critics' rule that Top 10 lists can start with a tie, so long as there's common thematic bond between them. Here are my
11 10 favorite movies of the 007.
10. Tie: Dan in Real Life / Grace is Gone (Widower Special)What can I say, I'm a sucker for widowers. Some critics found the loving family in
Steve Carell's poignant dramedy
Dan unrealistic. I feel sorry for some critics. Plot contrivances aside, it succeeds both in capturing the dynamics of a large clan and telling a helluva love story. In a career-best performance in
Grace,
John Cusack is a flag-waving father of two whose wife is killed in Iraq. This tear-jerking drama might be misconstrued as a political statement, but finally it's a heartrending tale of human loss.
9. Hot FuzzYes, this hilarious send-up of (tribute to?) Bruckheimer schlock tops
Shaun of the Dead, the brilliant debut from Brits
Simon Pegg,
Nick Frost and
Edgar Wright. Whereas
Shaun's first hour is pure bliss, it loses some steam in the third act.
Fuzz gets better as it speeds along, offering up surprises and side-splitters in equal measure. Really, who would've thought anyone would ever pay homage to
Bad Boys II?
8. No End in SightAs you can surmise from the title, this ain't exactly a sunshiney look at the Iraq War. But it's the most thorough, eye-opening detailing of the mega-blunders made the Bush Administration in planning and executing the war to date (so THAT'S where the insurgency came from!), with nary a
Michael Moore stunt in sight. Prepared to be educated, maddened.
7. RatatouilleLike I've been saying it for a while now: The machines at Pixar appear to be challenging themselves more and more with each release: "What DON'T audiences think they'll fall in love with? How about a rat who cooks? Better yet, a French rat!" And of course, after 111 minutes of Pixar magic, most of us left with a newfound respect for rodents. (Reminds me of '91 when I saw
Beauty and the Beast; haven't been afraid of beasts since.)
6. SuperbadForget
Knocked Up. Forget
Walk Hard. This deliciously raunchy buddy comedy/love story will stand the test of time and prevail as the most influential Apatow movie of '07, defining a generation like
Dazed and Confused and
Fast Times at Ridgemont High did before it. Here's hoping
Christopher Mintz-Passe (a.k.a. McLovin) will ever be able to convincingly play another character, though I wouldn't mind more McLovin.
Continue reading The Ten Best Films of 2007 - Polowy's Picks
Posted Dec 23rd 2007 5:02PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Documentary, Independent, Michael Moore, Cinematical Indie
Jeffrey Blitz had enormous success with his debut film
Spellbound. It is the 14th highest grossing documentary (better than it sounds; it made more than $7 million worldwide, while most docs never break $1 million), it was nominated for an Academy Award and it has lasting acclaim (it's #4 on IDA's
list of all-time best docs). So it's OK that his follow-up, the fiction film
Rocket Science, only made a tenth of what
Spellbound grossed (yeah, that means it didn't break $1 million -- but it did win Blitz a directing award at Sundance). You can't hit the jackpot twice, right? Well, Blitz might know best, since he's returning to non-fiction for a documentary about the lottery.
According to the Hollywood Reporter, the film is expected to finish in time for a 2008 release, it's being produced by
Peter Saraf (
Little Miss Sunshine) and it currently has no title.
The doc apparently won't be much of an investigation into the industry, at least not in the scrutinizing vein of
Michael Moore or
Morgan Spurlock. As Saraf has said: "It's not the
Fahrenheit 9/11 of lotteries," which is pretty disappointing considering
I heard that lotto winners collect their money for a few years and then some guy with a bat comes to their house and convinces them they don't need anymore money. I'm sure that is just a rumor/urban legend, but I'd like a film to tell me for sure. The film will focus partially on the lives of winners, though, particularly on how those lives have changed or not changed since winning. Other people interviewed for the doc include obsessive players who have never won, and Saraf assures us that Blitz is far more interested in the people than in the industry. If you've seen
Spellbound, you can kind of imagine what the lotto film will be like. But will he ever be able to find a subject as interesting as his little poster boy, Harry Altman?
Posted Dec 17th 2007 6:02PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Obits, Michael Moore, Cinematical Indie
St. Claire Bourne (1943-2007) - Filmmaker who directed the documentary John Henrik Clarke: A Great and Mighty Walk and was the unit manager for When We Were Kings. He also appears as himself in the doc How to Eat Your Watermelon in White Company (and Enjoy It), which is about Melvin Van Peebles. His most familiar work, though, is likely Making 'Do the Right Thing', which can be found on Criterion's DVD release of the Spike Lee film. He died after an operation to remove a brain tumor December 15, in New York. (Daily News via The Reeler)
- John Clark (? - 2007) - Art director for Jesus Christ Superstar, Tommy, Secret Ceremony, The Railway Children, Performance and Sidney Lumet's The Offence. He died December 12 in London. (IMDb)
- Philippe Clay (1927-2007) - French singer and actor who appears in Bell, Book and Candle, Jean Delannoy's The Hunchback of Notre Dame (the Anthony Quinn/Gina Lollobrigida one), Jean Renoir's French Cancan and Roger Planchon's Lautrec, in which he portrayed the painter Auguste Renoir. He died of cardiac arrest December 13, in Paris. (Find a Grave)
- Freddie Fields (1923-2007) - "Superagent" and talent manager who co-founded Creative Management Associates, the precursor to International Creative Management (ICM). He also produced Glory, American Gigolo, Looking for Mr. Goodbar, Victory, Poltergeist II: The Other Side, Millennium and Crimes of the Heart. He died of lung cancer December 11, in Beverly Hills. (Variety)
- Jillian Kesner (1950-2007) - Actress and karate expert who starred in Beverly Hills Vamp, Raw Force (aka Kung Fu Cannibals), Firecracker (aka Naked Fist) and Student Body, which is familiar to fans of Errol Morris' documentary The Thin Blue Line, in which it is featured. She later became a production coordinator and associate producer. She died of a staph infection December 5. (Voy.com)
- Tom Miller (1922-2007) - Unit publicist for Shaft, Alex in Wonderland, The Cotton Club, The Last Dragon, Blow Out, The Happy Hooker, Easy Money and Paul Newman's Harry & Son and The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds. He died of an embolism following surgery December 6, in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. (Tuscaloosa News)
Continue reading RIP: Reel Important People -- December 17, 2007
Posted Dec 17th 2007 5:02PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Comedy, Documentary, Drama, Awards, Michael Moore

I was a little hard on the International Press Academy
last year, but they made some ridiculous decisions when handing out their Satellite Awards. Still, at least they came off as being different than every other year-end awards giver by picking winners like
Joseph Cross and
X-Men: The Last Stand (best comedic actor and best editing, respectively). Those are at least some interesting, unpredictable picks, right? This year, I feel the need to be harder on the organization, because it's gone totally predictable in honoring
No Country for Old Men,
Juno,
Sicko,
American Gangster,
Ratatouille,
Diablo Cody and
Christopher Hampton, among others. The actors they honored --
Marion Cotillard,
Viggo Mortensen,
Ellen Page,
Ryan Gosling,
Tom Wilkinson/
Casey Affleck (tied) and
Amy Ryan -- aren't all the most obvious choices, but they aren't shocking, either. Couldn't they have at least gone with nominee
Clive Owen or his nominated "comedy or musical"
Shoot 'Em Up (!?!?!?), or something?
Not that the winners aren't deserving, but what good is yet another awards ceremony if it's not going to distinguish itself from the Golden Globes, which are the Satellite's unrecognized yet unmistakable "baby daddy". Yeah, the Hollywood Foreign Press will likely go with some other winners, but they won't
seem that different. Again, I do salute the IPA for having a documentary category, though it wouldn't have hurt to give
The King of Kong its one possible prestigious(?) award -- not that it was actually a better film than fellow nominee
No End in Sight. Also, it's always enjoyable to see what the IPA picks for best DVDs (
The Prestige for overall;
Borat and
Masters of Horror Season 1
(tied) for extras;
Ratatouille for youth-oriented; Ken Burns'
The War for documentary;
The Graduate 40th Anniversary Edition for classic). For the rest of the nominees and winners, head
over to Variety.
Posted Dec 9th 2007 2:02PM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: Documentary, Foreign Language, Independent, Awards, Michael Moore, Cinematical Indie

According to the International Documentary Association, the best doc of 2007 is one that the Oscar people don't even think is good enough to be on the list of potential nominees. It's
A Walk to Beautiful (pictured), a
Brazil-produced U.S.-produced story about five Ethiopian women in search of medical care, and it beat out
Sicko,
Crazy Love,
Taxi to the Dark Side, and
Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience to win the top prize at the
IDA's awards ceremony Friday night.
In the category for short docs (under 40 minutes), the winner was
A Son's Sacrifice, about a young American Muslim whose father operates a New York City slaughterhouse. There was also a new category, the Alan Ett Music Documentary Award, given to the film that best uses music. The winner was
We Are Together (
Thina Simunye), about the children at a South African orphanage who lift their spirits by singing.
Documentary filmmaking often encompasses news reporting, which leads to the Courage Under Fire award, given to reporters who put themselves in harm's way to get important stories. This year's recipient was CNN's Christiane Amanpour, whose
The War Within was a special report on Islamic unrest in the U.K.
If Michael Moore was disappointed that his
Sicko didn't win its category, he was probably comforted by being given the IDA's career achievement award. That prize had been
previously announced, as had
several others, including one for Spike Lee's Hurricane Katrina doc
When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts. It won the Pare Lorentz Award, named for the pioneering documentarian and given to films that carry on his activist spirit.
So what's the deal with
A Walk to Beautiful? It's played at about a dozen film festivals and will be broadcast on PBS next spring. The film's
website indicates they'd love to get a theatrical distributor, too, but no one's bought it yet. The only review I can find is in this
article, where it is highly praised.
UPDATE: Sorry, folks, I messed a couple things up. First, the film was U.S.-produced, not Brazil. Second, the film was not eligible for the Oscars because it had not yet been released theatrically. The director, Mary Olive Smith, tells us it will get its Oscar-qualifying run in New York in January, and will thus be eligible for the following year's Academy Awards.
Posted Dec 3rd 2007 5:02PM by Christopher Campbell
Filed under: Obits, Michael Moore, Cinematical Indie
Marit Allen (c.1941-2007) - Costume designer who worked often with Ang Lee (on Brokeback Mountain, Hulk and Ride with the Devil) and Nicholas Roeg (on The Witches, Eureka, Bad Timing and Don't Look Now). She also produced wardrobes for Eyes Wide Shut, Smilla's Sense of Snow, Dead Man, Mrs. Doubtfire, Mermaids, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and 2007's La Vie en Rose and Love in the Time of Cholera. She had recently been working on costumes for Justice League of America. She died of a brain aneurism November 26, in Sydney, Australia. (Variety)
- Jeanne Bates (1918-2007) - Actress who co-starred in the 1943 serial of The Phantom. Known for playing nurse characters in TV and film, she appears as such in Gus, The Strangler and Paula. She also appears in Eraserhead, Mulholland Dr., Die Hard 2 and Grand Canyon. She died November 28 in Woodland Hills, California. (FindaGrave.com)
- Fred Chichin (1954-2007) - French musician and songwriter who composed music for André Téchiné's latest, The Witnesses. He also appears as himself, with his band Les Rita Mitsouko, in Godard's Keep Your Right Up. He died of cancer November 28, in Paris. (France 24)
- Mali Finn (c.1938-2007) - Casting director who worked on many on many films by James Cameron, including Terminator 2: Judgement Day, Titanic and True Lies, and by Joel Schumacher, including Batman Forever, Batman & Robin and Tigerland. She also worked on The Untouchables, L.A. Confidential, The Matrix trilogy, Wonder Boys, All the Real Girls, Running with Scissors, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, Shooter and the upcoming 10,000 B.C., among others. She died of melanoma November 28, in Sonoma, California. (Variety)
- James M. Hart (1943-2007) - Special effects coordinator who worked on Newsies, Apollo 13, The Vanishing and Witness. He died November 19. (IMDb)
- Evel Knievel (1938-2007) - Daredevil stunt motorcyclist who appears as himself in Viva Knievel! and Freebie and the Bean (as "motorcyclist"). He was portrayed by George Hamilton in 1971's Evel Knievel and by Sam Elliott and George Eads in separate TV movies of the same name. He died November 30 in Clearwater, Florida. (AP)
- Al Mancini (1932-2007) - Actor who plays a soldier "Tassos Bravos" in The Dirty Dozen. He also appears in Miller's Crossing, Falling Down, Big Business, Turk 182! and The Public Eye and voices a fish in Babe: Pig in the City. He died of Alzheimer's disease November 12, in London, Ohio. (FindaGrave.com)
Continue reading RIP: Reel Important People -- December 3, 2007
Posted Nov 28th 2007 9:02AM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: Comedy, Documentary, Drama, Independent, Awards, Michael Moore, Cinematical Indie

IFP's 17th annual
Gotham Awards were held Tuesday night in Brooklyn, honoring the best in independent film for 2007. With only six categories, the Gothams seem like a pretty reasonable alternative to the bloated spectacles of certain other award ceremonies I could name.
Sean Penn's
Into the Wild (pictured) took Best Picture honors, beating out
Great World of Sound,
I'm Not There,
Margot at the Wedding, and
The Namesake. Michael Moore's healthcare exposé
Sicko won Best Documentary, up against
The Devil Came on Horseback,
Jimmy Carter: Man from Plains,
My Kid Could Paint That, and
Taxi to the Dark Side.
Since this is the first awards event of the season, a victory here could be seen as a good sign for the Golden Globes and Oscars.
Sicko was probably a shoo-in for an Oscar nod anyway, but
Into the Wild definitely needed the boost, since the field of excellent films this year is especially crowded.
The Best Ensemble Cast category had some heavyweights --
Before the Devil Knows You're Dead,
The Last Winter,
Margot at the Wedding,
The Savages, and
Talk to Me -- and apparently the juries couldn't choose, because
Before the Devil and
Talk to Me shared the award.
Craig Zobel was named Breakthrough Director for his music-biz satire
Great World of Sound, which had more nominations (three) than any other film.
Juno's Ellen Page took the Breakthrough Actor award.
The sixth category is my personal favorite: Best Film Not Playing at a Theater Near You, honoring a flick that's been well-received at festivals but that hasn't gotten distribution yet. The winner was
Frownland, Ronald Bronstein's dyspeptic do-it-yourself quasi-comedy about a neurotic, stammering mess of a man. I saw it at South By Southwest and loathed every frame of it; others have adored it. It's that kind of movie.
The Hollywood Reporter has more details on the ceremony itself, which also included tributes to Roger Ebert, director Mira Nair, actor Javier Bardem, production designer Mark Friedberg, IFC Center founder Jonathan Sehring, and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg. The ceremony will be broadcast on NYC TV and The Documentary Channel on Dec. 4 and 8.
Posted Nov 6th 2007 3:02PM by Kevin Polowy
Filed under: DVD Reviews, New on DVD, Home Entertainment, Michael Moore, Hold the 'Fone
Ratatouille
Really, what else is there to say about the omnipotence of Pixar? How about this: They're robots from outer-space that have concocted a flawless entertainment formula (typically blending visual mastery, imaginative storytelling, witty humor and John Ratzenberger) that wins over critics and normal human beings alike time and again (even if Cars showed a few slight glitches in the matrix). What's scary is that Ratatouille is one of their best films yet, easily among their top three. What's even scarier is that they appear to challenging themselves, "What can't we make audiences fall in love with? How about a rat who cooks?!" Well, turns out Remy (Patton Oswald) is the most lovable rodent since Splinter, and has surely given his species a fighting chance to coexist more fruitfully with future generations of humanoids. Just think how many kids pleaded for pet rats after this one (hey, hamsters are close). Young buck Peter O'Toole continues chewing up the scenery as a stuffy food critic (Pixar's revenge for the staggering 24% percent of critics on Rottentomatoes who didn't deem Cars fresh pickings?), while Lou Romano marks the studio's latest in-house talent to thrive as the voice of Remy's man-pal Linguini. You have eight months to enjoy repeated viewings of Ratatouille on DVD before Pixar's next film drops: It's called Wall-E, and it's about -- get this -- robots in outer-space.
Read Erik's full DVD review | Go inside the Ratatouille DVD at Pixar
Continue reading DVD Picks of the Week: 'Ratatouille' and 'Sicko'
Posted Nov 2nd 2007 3:32PM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: Documentary, Independent, Awards, Michael Moore, Cinematical Indie

With five feature documentaries under his substantial belt and plenty more on TV,
Michael Moore will be honored Dec. 7 with the International Documentary Association's Career Achievement Award. That's right: For many conservatives, Dec. 7 is a date which will live in infamy all over again.
A
statement from IDA president Diane Estelle Vicari says, "Michael Moore still has many more extraordinary films ahead of him. Our members are thankful for his fearless commitment to tell compelling stories. He is a role model for young documentary filmmakers everywhere in the world."
Personally, I disagree with that last part. I don't think would-be filmmakers should emulate him. Even though I agree with almost all the points he makes in his films, I'm often embarrassed by his antics and shenanigans. His most recent,
Sicko, was his sloppiest yet, and Moore shot himself in the foot by behaving like a buffoon.
Dec. 7 is also the night of the IDA's general awards, the nominees for which were
previously announced. Moore's already a contender there, as
Sicko is up for best feature-length documentary. He's no stranger to the IDA awards, having previously won for
Roger & Me and
Fahrenheit 9/11.
The IDA was founded in 1982. Previous Career Achievement honorees include
William Greaves,
D.A. Pennebaker and
Chris Hegedus,
Jean Rouch, and
David Attenborough.
Posted Oct 14th 2007 3:32PM by Eric D. Snider
Filed under: Documentary, Awards, Shorts, Michael Moore, Cinematical Indie

Universal health care, torture, the war in Iraq, African medical procedures, and married couples who hate each other -- those are the subjects addressed in the films that are up for the International Documentary Association Awards. The
nominees were announced Thursday, and the awards will be handed out Dec. 7 in L.A.
The feature film nominees are
Sicko, Taxi to the Dark Side,
Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience,
A Walk to Beautiful, and
Crazy Love.
The IDA also gives an award for outstanding short film. There's a pretty diverse mix of subject matter in these nominees, too:
Black and White (about Ukrainian street kids),
Body & Soul: Diana & Kathy (women with disabilities),
The Fighting Cholitas (female Bolivian wrestlers),
Freeheld (domestic-partnership rights), and
A Son's Sacrifice (American Muslim running a slaughterhouse).
The IDA's
press release about the nominations indicates that they were chosen by peer-group juries, but it doesn't indicate how they determine which films are eligible. Personally, I think
No End in Sight is the best documentary of the year, and
Sicko is by far Michael Moore's sloppiest work. But for all I know,
No End in Sight wasn't submitted or wasn't eligible or something.
This is the 23rd year for the IDA Awards. The organization was founded in 1982.
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