White Light Back Rain. Timely for August and something that should not be allowed to pass from cultural consciousness. Extremely well done but a soul crusher.
anything by Jem Cohen...
documentaries that push boundaries/bend things. aka expiremental.
Dude's work is amazing. not readily available on netflix.
most well known possibly for ten year project on Fugazi (which I liked even though not a big fan of the band) Jem Cohen Films ›
"Beauty is the visible expression of man's pleasure in labor."—Frederic Goudy
Dave Wofford . | . H O R S E . & . B U G G Y . P R E S S
graphic design, letterpress printing, fine press books and more . . . for the jet age and beyond.
I know the filmmaker and have a spare copy or two if anyone is interested.
"As an homage to the EPOdays of yore- I'd find the world's last remaining pair of 40cm ergonomic drop bars.....i think everyone who ever liked those handlebars in that shape and in that width is either dead of a drug overdose, works in the Schaerbeek mattress factory now and weighs 300 pounds or is Dr. Davey Bruylandts...who for all I know is doing both of those things." - Jerk
This is a great thread. And count this as another nod for Man on Wire. It's maybe a little quirky in the way they tell the story, but my god, it still blows my mind that they pulled it off. It is also a refreshing look back a time when things didn't immediately go viral.
Recaps a news conference with a NYPD officer holding a press conference after the stunt was pulled off. Imagine a prototypical early-70's NYC cop saying "well, I wouldn't say he was walking on the wire, he was more like dancing on it."
Just a beautiful moment.
[potential spoiler alert, but it's really kind of old news]
And, to show how amazing we can be sometimes: All charges were dismissed against Petit in exchange for his doing a performance in Central Park for children.
The recommendations are coming in way faster than I can keep up. I think we'll be watching Man on Wire soon.
Ditto.
While the Netflix original shows are often really good (Orange is the new black, House of Cards, Peaky Blinders, Sense 8, and others I'm forgetting at the moment...Marco Polo...) the documentaries are one of the best draws, there is so many I would have never seen otherwise.
Dustin Gaddis www.MiddleGaEpic.com
Why do people feel the need to list all of their bikes in their signature?
Lots of good ones already mentioned!
I'll add Muscle Shoals
The west coast version: The Wrecking Crew. I'm :205, but it was a good watch.
While its an interesting look behind the scenes, I've lost some of the magic involved in music.
Ken Burns' The War was really good too. Very specific in following a few people from a few towns.
Suprisingly the documentary about Green Day was enjoyable. Never was really a fan, but knowing the 'why' behind some of the music makes it make more sense. Ditto with the singer from Bikini Kill (forget her name). I've never been a Punk, so its a look inside a strange culture. (Imagine them listening to cyclists!)
The west coast version: The Wrecking Crew. I'm :205, but it was a good watch.
While its an interesting look behind the scenes, I've lost some of the magic involved in music.
Ken Burns' The War was really good too. Very specific in following a few people from a few towns.
Suprisingly the documentary about Green Day was enjoyable. Never was really a fan, but knowing the 'why' behind some of the music makes it make more sense. Ditto with the singer from Bikini Kill (forget her name). I've never been a Punk, so its a look inside a strange culture. (Imagine them listening to cyclists!)
M
I meant to mention this one: The Punk Singer, about Kathleen Hannah. A well-presented story of a very compelling person.
An Honest Liar-- about stage magician and professional debunker James Randi.
The Final Member-- about the quest of the Icelandic penis museum to get a human specimen.
Last Days Here-- I don't think this is on Netflix any more, which sucks, but it's a great music documentary about one of my favorite musicians. I was at the Baltimore comeback show in the movie and it was one of the best concerts I've ever seen.
Objectified -- Helvetica was already mentioned, and Objectified was their next documentary about design in more of a general sense.
Going Clear -- just in case you needed more evidence against Scientology...
A few already mentioned I would echo:
An Honest Liar
Cave of Forgotten Dreams (Werner Herzog could narrate anything and I would watch it)
Waltz with Bashir
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