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Old 07-21-08 | 01:33 PM
  #126  
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From: Region Free
Originally Posted by Randy Miller III
Maybe not all "Top 5", but here's some great ones:

Radio Bikini
Battle of Algiers
My Flesh and Blood
White Light / Black Rain
Hoop Dreams
Night and Fog
Salesman
Harlan County, USA

...and any of Ken Burns' stuff is great, too.

Originally Posted by Randy Miller III
1. Gimme Shelter
2. Radio Bikini
3. Capturing the Friedmans
4. Waco: Rules of Engagement
5. Gates of Heaven
Can't wait to see what you come up with next time.
Old 07-21-08 | 01:47 PM
  #127  
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Ha! And the sad thing is, my list will be different in another year when this thread gets bumped again!
Old 07-21-08 | 01:55 PM
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From: Puyallup
Hoop dreams
Civil War
Baseball
Roger and Me
Enron

Last edited by superdeluxe; 07-21-08 at 02:06 PM.
Old 07-21-08 | 02:02 PM
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From: Region Free
Originally Posted by superdeluxe
Hoop dreams
Civil War
Baseball
Please update your post as soon as you've seen two more documentaries.
Old 07-21-08 | 04:40 PM
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From: Nightmare Alley
Originally Posted by grem458
1. Albert Fish (and H.H. Holmes) - both by the same director in the same
While it was morbidly interesting to hear about Holmes elaborate, maze-like house of horrors, the annoying habit of the true crime author (I forgot his name) to turn every sentence into a question made him sound like some sort of middle-aged Valley Girl.
Old 07-21-08 | 04:42 PM
  #131  
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In no order, except for first five:

Best Boy
Dying at Grace
Hoop Dreams
My Flesh and Blood
Hearts of Darkness

Times of Harvey Milk
The Corporation
Koyaanisqatsi
Common Threads
Scared Straight
Waterwalker
Fahrenheit 9/11
Winter Soldier
Warrendale
Shackleton's Voyage of Endurance
A Married Couple
Roger & Me
Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam
Lessons of Darkness
Memory of the Camps

That's 20 (sorry), but there are numerous terrific docs not on DVD (Streetwise comes immediately to mind).
Old 07-21-08 | 04:44 PM
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From: Lyon Estates
no love for Chickenhawk?
Old 07-21-08 | 04:54 PM
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From: Nightmare Alley
Originally Posted by cfloyd3
High School
If you weren't already aware, Wiseman's films, including High School, are now available as (expensive) DVD-Rs directly from him. Discussion/review thread is located here.
Old 07-21-08 | 10:20 PM
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From: TEXAS!!
Originally Posted by NoirFan
While it was morbidly interesting to hear about Holmes elaborate, maze-like house of horrors, the annoying habit of the true crime author (I forgot his name) to turn every sentence into a question made him sound like some sort of middle-aged Valley Girl.
This was one of the main things I hated about the Holmes documentary. It made it almost impossible for me to concentrate on what he was saying since "uptalkers" drive me insane.
Old 07-21-08 | 11:12 PM
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Originally Posted by dick_grayson
no love for Chickenhawk?
Yeah, that's another good one...creepy. I remember seeing this on vhs years ago...I'm going to have check to see if it's on dvd yet.
Old 07-22-08 | 12:57 PM
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1. Decasia

2. No Direction Home

3. No End in Sight

4. Blind Spot

5. Salesman
Old 07-22-08 | 04:47 PM
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From: Nightmare Alley
Originally Posted by Gobear
Ah, good choice. I suppose I had never thought of this in terms of it being a documentary in the traditional sense. Hilary Harris works in a somewhat similar vein - amazing time-lapse/experimental stuff from the 60s and 70s. It's a pity so little of his work is available on dvd.
Old 07-22-08 | 08:33 PM
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My faves...

#1. Technically, The Power of Nightmares, is on DVD. You can get it from back issues of Wholpin .
#2. Orwell Rolls In His Grave
#3. F-9/11
#4. Sicko
#5. The Corporation (an outstanding DVD)

Hollywood needs a release as does the original uncut versions of Vietnam - A Television History and Eyes on the Prize (I & II) and a number of American Experience & Nova titles.
Old 07-24-08 | 09:55 AM
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I am surprised (and a bit dismayed) to see Michael Moore's productions listed here as documentaries. What ever else Moore may be, a documentarian is not one. Errol Morris is, Moore is not. Moore's left-wing rantings (I'm a liberal, BTW) can in no way be considered objective reporting or factual documentaries, and to include him with such luminaries as Errol Morris or Frederick Wiseman is an insult to their labors. That said, my list:

Grey Gardens
High School
Fog of War
White Light/Black Rain
Thin Blue Line
Old 07-24-08 | 10:45 AM
  #140  
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Originally Posted by Roy Batty
I am surprised (and a bit dismayed) to see Michael Moore's productions listed here as documentaries. What ever else Moore may be, a documentarian is not one. Errol Morris is, Moore is not. Moore's left-wing rantings (I'm a liberal, BTW) can in no way be considered objective reporting or factual documentaries, and to include him with such luminaries as Errol Morris or Frederick Wiseman is an insult to their labors.
If you want to call Moore a propagandist, I'll agree with you. If you want to say that you don't regard propaganda as documentary, I'll say to each his own. If you want to tell me that all your friends, some dictionary, and some film guy agree with your opinion too, I don't have a problem with that either. However, if you tell me that there's only one meaning of the term documentary film and it's not broad enough to include the films of Michael Moore, I'm going to have to disagree.
Old 07-24-08 | 01:01 PM
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Originally Posted by Roy Batty
I am surprised (and a bit dismayed) to see Michael Moore's productions listed here as documentaries.

Imagine the horror of the premier organization of documentary filmakers naming three of Moore's films on their 25 best ever list. Oh wait, the IDA did just that, so experience the horror.
Old 07-24-08 | 08:11 PM
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Originally Posted by TimJS
Imagine the horror of the premier organization of documentary filmakers naming three of Moore's films on their 25 best ever list. Oh wait, the IDA did just that, so experience the horror.
Not to mention that Best Documentary Feature Oscar and DGA award.

Anyway, I'm a documentary junkie. Watch as many as I can, my favorites in no real order and I can't just do 5-

Kurt & Courtney
Biggie & Tupac
American Movie
Spellbound
bowling for Columbine
Fog of War
Crumb
Koyaanisqatsi (the whole trilogy really)
Paradise Lost
Brother's Keeper
DiG!
Inside Deep Throat
Lost in La Mancha
The War Room
In the Shadow of the Moon
No End in Sight
The Aristocrats
Koko, A Talking Gorilla
Murder on a Sunday Morning
The Weather Underground

That's off the top of my head and glancing at my DVDs. I'm sure I could double the list but will stop there.
Old 07-25-08 | 08:51 AM
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Four that deserve mention:

BBS Documentary (and I listed it first for a reason!)
Metal: A Headbanger's Journey
Judgment Day: Intelligent Design On Trial
Taxi To The Dark Side

I probably won't watch Taxi To The Dark Side again though.

My other favorites have already been posted:

No End In Sight
Grizzly Man
The Smartest Guys in the Room
Step Into Liquid
Dogtown And Z Boys
Cosmos
The World At War

Last edited by dugan; 07-25-08 at 09:26 AM.
Old 07-27-08 | 09:47 AM
  #144  
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Originally Posted by NatrlBornThrllr
A lot of love for March of the Penguins. Did I miss something?
If you didn't see March of the Penguins theatrically then you did miss something, because the visuals were truly stunning on a big screen. As a documentary, though, I think the DVD bonus documentary called "Of Penguins and Men" about the difficulties in making the film is actually a better documentary overall.

(But at least the English version of March of the Penguins had a standard narration and completely dumped the anthropomorphism of the original French version in which individual penguins "talked" to each other - that version sounds completely silly!)
Old 07-27-08 | 11:18 AM
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Originally Posted by TimJS
Imagine the horror of the premier organization of documentary filmakers naming three of Moore's films on their 25 best ever list. Oh wait, the IDA did just that, so experience the horror.
Yeah, the fact that Super Size Me is 11th on their list of the top 25 documentaries OF ALL TIME really shows how me just how much weight I should give their collective opinion.

I had a PM discussion with Yakuza Bengoshi about Moore's films, because I didn't want this thread to turn into idiotic political bickering, so please don't take my reply here as something politically motivated.

However, backing up your opinion by pointing out that someone else agrees with you is ridiculous, especially when it comes to criticism of movies.

My definition of a documentary is apparently more restrictive in that I don't think a documentary should use lies (of omission or otherwise), outrageous distortions, and editing tricks to deceive the viewer. But that's just me (and the actual definition used in dictionaries, if not the one used by reputable organizations like the IDA or the Academy or the people at Cannes). In my opinion, propaganda films are just that: propaganda films, not documentaries.

So my definition says that Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9/11 aren't documentaries, but Sicko is (maybe). Although I disagree with Moore's opinion about health care, I think the information he presents is basically sound (except for the Gitmo scene, and some debatable opinions about the reality of the system in Canada), but overall it's information that it seems people should know--especially when they try to debate the subjects related to health care in the US and the rest of the world.

It should also be noted that Moore lost a lawsuit against him for a kind of character assasination in Roger and Me where some lawyer was portrayed in an inappropriate (and supposedly inaccurate) way. I don't know the guy in question, and I saw Roger and Me in maybe 1991, and I don't remember it very well, so I certainly can't claim to know what was accurate or not. There was also supposedly some manipulation of truth about whether he ever met with "Roger," the GM Chairman, but again, I don't really know the details, and because of all the controversy and finger-pointing whenever Moore's name gets brought up, it's difficult to know who to trust for info about it.

So, the 3 Moore films listed in the IDA's top 25 are arguably not documentaries at all.

Again, I don't want to turn this thread into poitical bickering that will just get it shut down. I am just trying to explain why some people don't consider some of his films "documentaries."

Just because some board decides that they are doesn't mean they are (they don't own the word, and they aren't free from bias, political or otherwise), and just because some dictionary says that they aren't documentaries doesn't necessarily mean that they aren't. But if you're going to accept F-9/11 as a documentary, you also have to accept Fahrenhype 9/11 and Michael Moore Hates America as documentaries, too (even if the latter two are terrible films, IMO, from what little I made it through of each). And before someone tries to paint me as an ideologue of some kind, I'll say that I think Outfoxed is a decent documentary in that it exposes some pretty inappropriate things going on at FNC.

If you want to discuss politics, then let's take it to PMs or another, appropriate, place. If you want to discuss the definition of a documentary, let's at least try to keep it respectful (like it has been so far).
Old 07-27-08 | 11:50 AM
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My favorites

1. The WWII Documentaires of Humphrey Jennings ("Listen to Britain", "A Diary for Timothy", "Fires Were Started, I Was A Fireman", et al)
2. "Why We Fight"
3. "Still We Believe: The Boston Red Sox Movie"
4. "Farhenheit 451"
5. "Hell House"

I wasn't sure if the Jennings fils were out on DVD, so I did a search and was pleased to find that they were. I'm surprised that they haven't been mentioned as they are extraordinary! I highly recommend them.
Old 07-27-08 | 02:38 PM
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Originally Posted by Yakuza Bengoshi
If you want to call Moore a propagandist, I'll agree with you. If you want to say that you don't regard propaganda as documentary, I'll say to each his own. If you want to tell me that all your friends, some dictionary, and some film guy agree with your opinion too, I don't have a problem with that either. However, if you tell me that there's only one meaning of the term documentary film and it's not broad enough to include the films of Michael Moore, I'm going to have to disagree.

Well, I guess any disagreement between us lies in the definition of documentary. For some, any film that portrays non-professional actors talking about a factual story constitutes a 'documentary'; my definition requires as little injection of the filmmaker's agenda and viewpoint as possible (knowing full well that some of those creep in). Fredrick Wiseman's work lets the topic speak for itself while he turns the camera on it, and the audience gets to draw its own conclusions. I was a bit disappointed in "Grey Gardens" when the filmmakers started talking to and asking questions of the mother and daughter. Up to that point, IMHO, they had done an exemplary job.

BTW, just watched "White Light/Black Rain." Very powerful. Had I not found this thread, I'm not sure I would have found that film.

Last edited by Roy Batty; 07-27-08 at 02:40 PM.
Old 08-01-10 | 08:09 PM
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Re: Top Five Documentaries on Dvd

I put my 6 best down in Jan 2006. Since then, in the past 4 years, the main 2 I could add is An Incovenient Truth and Man on Wire.
Old 08-01-10 | 10:01 PM
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Re: Top Five Documentaries on Dvd

Wow, Darkhawk. Nice threadbump. Reminded me how few docs I've seen since the last go-around. I've got The Cove, Food, Inc, & Moore's Capitalism in my unwatched stack.

I went back and looked at the last couple of years of Oscar nominees and saw several that I'd like to check out, plus Gibney's Casino Jack as well as his latest on Spitzer...I'm not sure whether that has been shown localy yet. Just out of curiousity, how many recent docs have you seen?

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