Tag Archives: searching for sugar man

Cinema Eye Honors Fete 2012 Documentaries With 6th Annual Nominees

Documentary nominees take the deserved spotlight with 2012 non-fiction nominations unveiled by organizers of the Cinema Eye Honors Friday at AFI Fest with The Imposter and Searching for Sugar Man each receiving five nominations. Six films will compete for Cinema Eye’s Outstanding Achievement in Non-fiction Feature Filmmaking prize. Included are Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi’s 5 Broken Cameras , Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady’s Detropia , Bart Layton’s The Imposter , Matthew Akers’ Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims’ Only the Young and Malik Bendjelloul’s Searching for Sugar Man . The 6th Annual Cinema Eye Honors will take place January 9 as Cinema Eye at New York City’s Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking 5 Broken Cameras , directed by Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi Produced by Christine Camdessus, Serge Gordey, Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi   Detropia , directed by Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady Produced by Heidi Ewing, Rachel Grady and Craig Atkinson   The Imposter , directed by Bart Layton Produced by Dimitri Doganis   Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , directed by Matthew Akers; Produced by Jeff Dupre and Maro Chermayeff   Only the Young , directed by Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims Produced by Derek Waters   Searching for Sugar Man , directed by Malik Bendjelloul Produced by Simon Chinn Outstanding Achievement in Direction Detropia , Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady   The Law in These Parts , Ra’anan Alexandrowicz   Only the Young , Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims   Planet of Snail , Seungjun Yi   Tchoupitoulas , Bill Ross and Turner Ross   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Victor Kossakovsky Outstanding Achievement in Production Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry , Alison Klayman and Adam Schlesinger   Big Boys Gone Bananas!* , Margarete Jangård   The Imposter , Dimitri Doganis   Searching for Sugar Man , Simon Chinn   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Heino Deckert Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography Chasing Ice , Jeffrey Orlowski   The Imposter , Erik Alexander Wilson & Lynda Hall   Only the Young , Jason Tippet & Elizabeth Mims   Samsara , Ron Fricke   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Victor Kossakovsky Outstanding Achievement in Editing 5 Broken Cameras , Véronique Lagoarde-Ségot & Guy Davidi   Detropia , Enat Sidi   How to Survive a Plague , T. Woody Richman, Tyler H. Walk & Jonathan Oppenheim   Room 237 , Rodney Ascher   Tchoupitoulas , Bill Ross Audience Choice Prize 5 Broken Cameras , directed by Emad Burnat and Guy Davidi   Beauty is Embarrassing , directed by Neil Berkeley   Bully , directed by Lee Hirsch   How to Survive a Plague , directed by David France   The Imposter , directed by Bart Layton   Jiro Dreams of Sushi , directed by David Gelb   Kumaré , directed by Vikram Gandhi   Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , directed by Matthew Akers   Searching for Sugar Man , directed by Malik Bendjelloul   Trash Dance directed by Andrew Garrison Outstanding Achievement in a Debut Feature Film Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry , directed by Alison Klayman   How to Survive a Plague , directed by David France   Marina Abramović The Artist is Present , directed by Matthew Akers   Only the Young , directed by Jason Tippet and Elizabeth Mims   Room 237 , directed by Rodney Ascher   Searching for Sugar Man , directed by Malik Bendjelloul   The Waiting Room , directed by Peter Nicks Outstanding Achievement in Original Music Score Detropia , Dial.81 The Imposter , Anna Nikitin   Into the Abyss , Mark De Gli Antoni   Room 237 , Jonathan Snipes, William Hutson, The Caretaker (James Kirby)   ¡Vivan las Antipodas! , Alexander Popov Outstanding Achievement in Graphic Design or Animation Beauty is Embarrassing , Neil Berkeley, Anthony Maiuri   Herman’s House , Nicolas Brault, Tom Hillman   Indie Game: The Movie , James Swirsky   Room 237 , Carlos Ramos   Searching for Sugar Man , Oskar Gullstrand, Arvid Steen   Urbanized , Brooklyn Digital Foundry/John Szot Spotlight Award Argentinian Lesson , directed by Wojciech Staroń Bestiaire , directed by Denis Côté   Downeast , directed by David Redmon and Ashley Sabin   Meanwhile in Mamelodi , directed by Benjamin Kahlmeyer   Vol Special (Special Flight) , directed by Fernand Melgar Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Short Filmmaking Cutting Loose , directed by Finlay Pretsell and Adrian McDowall   Family Nightmare , directed by Dustin Guy Defa   Good Bye Mandima (Kwa Heri Mandima)  , directed by Robert-Jan Lacombe   Into the Middle of Nowhere , directed by Anna Francis Ewert   Paradise (Paraíso), directed by Nadav Kurtz

Continue reading here:
Cinema Eye Honors Fete 2012 Documentaries With 6th Annual Nominees

REVIEW: Searching For Sugar Man, The Extraordinary True Tale of a Mythic Cult Music Hero Reborn

Searching For Sugar Man , which tells the improbable story of how a singer-songwriter named Sixto Rodriguez rose, fell, and found superstardom in what amounts to a parallel universe, is an elegy in several keys. One is clear and familiar: Upon his excited discovery by a noted producer, the music business circa 1969 ate Rodriguez for breakfast, and a talent still acknowledged by his peers went to waste. The second is more personal, and although Swedish director Malik Bendjelloul leaves a distinct and ultimately frustrating berth around the man at the center of his documentary, it becomes poignantly clear that an abbreviated resume and a family to feed didn’t keep Rodriguez from living an artist’s life. And then, perhaps most resonant and abstract, there is the film’s charting of the confluence of circumstances that can create a legend and shape lives – a confluence whose particularities are less and less possible in an information-glutted age. Sugar Man opens with much but fleeting stylistic fanfare. Over a blend of vivid landscapes, a steady-cam tour of bleak and snowy Detroit, moody recreations of key scenes and a neat effect that moves from image to illustration and back, various players (beginning with a Cape Town record-store owner called “Sugar”) recount the film’s heavily fragmented story of a mysterious musician out of Detroit who, South African legend has it, staged “probably the most grotesque suicide in rock history.” Why “South African legend,” you might ask, and the answer is what takes Sugar Man ’s story from sad but common to extraordinary. In many ways that story belongs to the men who stand in for what was apparently a solid chunk of the South African populace in the 1970s, when apartheid was in full swing and the country was under totalitarian rule. A hilarious origin story has an American girl bringing a single Rodriguez album into the country, patient zero-style, with bootlegs and label requests proliferating from there. With sizable cuts from Rodriguez’s two studio albums of Dylan-esque folk rock accompanying them, those men (musicians and music fans) describe how songs like “I Wonder” and “Anti-establishment Blues” sparked something – a glimmer of rebellion, the comfort of fellow feeling – in them. Elsewhere referred to as an “inner city poet,” if Rodriguez’s lyrics lack a certain prosody they are written squarely and straightforwardly in the protest tradition of the time. A grassroots process that had to sidestep censors and a heavily restricted media helped foment a folk hero in the public’s imagination. Rodriguez, we are told, is bigger than Elvis in South Africa, and certainly bigger than the Rolling Stones. His sonorous tenor is sweet but strong and pleasingly clear – somewhere between Cat Stevens and Neil Diamond. Even so, the truth is that, though skilled and even singular, of the songs we hear nothing astonishes or even comes close; a couple sound too dated to be great. But then we’re not supposed to be evaluating his music for signs of greatness, not really. Perhaps under different circumstances, like the ones in South Africa, he might sound different; he would be different. Much discussed is the lack of personal details that fueled the Rodriguez enigma; his mystery was part of what made him great. Bendjelloul upholds that idea, whether he likes it or not, after a rambling exposition of how a couple of amateur Cape Town sleuths finally tracked the very much alive Rodriguez down. Mexican by birth and extremely reticent by nature, Rodriguez is an uneasy interview; we learn more about him just watching his delicate form move down a snow-laden sidewalk like an exotic but flightless, black-coated bird trapped in a crummily ordinary world. Interviews with his three daughters are sweet but a little unsatisfying, and in its final third – which details his triumphant arrival in South Africa and introduction to an adoring audience of twenty thousand – Sugar Man falters. Various threads of the story (including the rather major question of how an estimated half a million records sold resulted in zero royalties) are left to fray. It isn’t clear that the director recognized the most prominent among them: Bendjelloul is enamored not with the deeply organic nature but the novelty of this “instant” success story. And yet Sugar Man is most interesting when it touches on the conditions that combined to draw a cult hero out of some decent music and a generously enabled, imagination-firing mystique. I imagine even the wise and thoughtful Rodriguez himself would insist that more than one man’s third act justice, this is a story about time and a swiftly vanishing context. Follow Michelle Orange on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

Visit link:
REVIEW: Searching For Sugar Man, The Extraordinary True Tale of a Mythic Cult Music Hero Reborn