The Biggest Little Farm: Cleaned up and tends to be sappy, but it is also really beautifully shot and, as a city boy, I actually learned quite a bit.pic.twitter.com/6uvSDItORS
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Framing John DeLorean: I had no idea of the wild and complicated twin stories of John DeLorean and his eponymous car – IRA! Margaret Thatcher! FBI! Cocaine! Mostly enjoyable, although making actors participate in storytelling *as actors* felt like a rather weird choice.pic.twitter.com/xftrJZHD2X
Show Me A Hero: Rewatching this underrated docudrama miniseries about racial tensions, public housing, and urban politics of Yonkers, N.Y. 30 years ago. It’s very, very good, in the vein of The Wire – dense, written by David Simon, and with an excellent cast.pic.twitter.com/aLAJ8232UU
When They See Us: I decided to watch this docudrama this weekend as part of my education. It’s about the injustice and entrenched institutional racism underlying the 1989 NYC Central Park Five case, and I would encourage you to watch it, too – it’s on Netflix.pic.twitter.com/59o00vGj8r
Do Not Resist: A 2016 documentary about the militarization of the police in America. Maybe more relevant today than it was then. It weaves through Ferguson, protests in general, some pretty gross glorification of violence, James Comey (oof), and surveillance.pic.twitter.com/ixwmo790re
Selma: Somewhat embarrassed how little I knew about this moment in American civil rights history.pic.twitter.com/4q9DLDNkdV
The Force: A brutal fly-on-the-wall examination of the Oakland Police Department, mired in one awful scandal after another despite being under 13-year-long federal oversight, and having undergone a series of reforms.pic.twitter.com/oFCB4xIsC0
The Way I See It: I wished this documentary about the job of the official photographer of Barack Obama’s presidency went even deeper into the responsibilities of photojournalism, but still: the photos are so incredibly great, and remembering Obama as a president? Heartwarming.pic.twitter.com/liRP8uapbU
Feels Good Man: This is a documentary about Pepe, the infamous mascot. I found the movie surprisingly good and deep: Visually fascinating, surreal, absurd, and wild towards the end, but also with a great amount of humanity throughout.pic.twitter.com/A9s29D8m1G
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