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  • EADD Moderators: Pissed_and_messed | Shinji Ikari

Good Documentaries

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Ha! Anything that opens with a fella sucking nang straight from the can has to be worth a watch :D

Have the one he did whilst fucked up on PCP and is good for a giggle so may give this a watch in a bit :)

The second one I've seen and the conclusion is:

NSFW:
no they don't.

What a surprise.
 
mondovinoBig.jpg


Great docu, didnt want to cheat and torrent it, so i ordered it ( region 2 dvd is deleted)



Synopsis
Jonathan Nossiter, whose 2000 drama SIGNS & WONDERS was nominated for the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival and whose 1997 fiction film SUNDAY won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, returns to the documentary format with MONDOVINO. Nossiter, who previously explored cinema verite in '90s RESIDENT ALIEN, about the iconoclastic Quentin Crisp, this time focuses his camera on the international wine trade, travelling to France, California, Italy, and New York, speaking with winemakers both great and small.

While old-timer Aime Guibert, of tiny Mas de Daumas-Gassac, pronounces that wine must be made by a poet, high-powered consultant Michel Rolland circles the globe ensuring that wineries make lots of money. Nossiter meets the Mondavi family, one of the wine world's largest conglomerates; the de Montille family of Burgundy, in which a daughter has chosen not to work with her father and brother but instead with a competitor; the Staglins, who financed their own high-priced vineyard in the Napa Valley; and critics James Suckling and Robert Parker, whose words can make or break a vintage.

Nossiter also visits with New York wine importer Neal Rosenthal, Christie's wine director Michael Broadbent, and Chateau Mouton-Rothschild CEOs Patrick Leon and Xavier de Eizaguirre to get even further perspectives. Although Nossiter set out merely to find the characters behind the wine industry, he ended up with a poignant look at some important issues, including deforestation, the corporation versus the independent company, and even communism. His bouncy handheld camera captured more than he had ever imagined. The result is an entertaining inside examination of a world very few people see, a fascinating exploration of wine and the families who produce it.
 
Religulous its a funny documentary about religions

I hated that film. Maher was funny enough in his comic asides, but his behaviour toward believers was despicable - he propped himself up on an supposedly-intellectual high horse and was demeaning and abusive to them. What was his actual purpose, I had read somewhere before watching it that he was gonna be doing an assessment of religion in the world today and how it got to be the way it is.

The movie was not that at all, he just alienated people with belief even further. His goal with the documentary wasnt to explore, understand and offer information - he used it to massage his own ego by completely taking the piss out of one of the easiest targets for laughs.

SHAMEFUL!!! (in the words of Akuma)
 
I like:

Zeitgeist

Zeitgesit Addendum

Journey of Man

Touching the Void (more reconstruction than doc but I think it counts)

When The Levees Broke

BBC Horizons :War on Science

The King of Kong

A Personal Journey With Martin Scorcese Though American Film

Loose Change

The Blue Planet

The Money Masters (delivered by the miost boring man ever over 4 hrs but still very good)

CIA Drug Ops Conspiracy

Everest Unmasked 1978 Messner
 
All of these can be found in google video simply buy searching for these names in google
DMT the spirit molecule
Threads
The day after
The war game
The Union:The business behind getting high
 
Dear Zachary, heart wrenching emotional rollercoaster, had me close to tears by the end.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1152758/

Also Home by Arthus Bertrand (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jqxENMKaeCU) is a great watch, pretty standard enviromentalist view point but the cinematography is just breath taking and the whole things really evokes emotions about the state of the planet. You can watch it on youtube in high quality and it's not too bad, bit jittery, definitely worth the watch.

Also there has been a few episodes on BBC4 of a docu about the South Pacific, really interesting and well filmed.
 
Nice find. Just remembered a documentary called Occupation 101, great info about Isreal's occupation of Palestine, some truly shocking stuff and a great analysis of the long term strategy Isreal is using against the Palestinians. There is a part where they show how the west bank is divided up by roads exclusively for Isrealis (Palestinians can use them on occasion but they have to wait at check points for hours) into little segregated islands of Palestinian Ghettos, completely walled off from each other. They never say it but it's quite clear what it is being compared to.
 
I watched Man On Wire earlier; wicked lil' docu-film, t'was on at the local cinema when it came out, but I never went to see it there. Worth a watch whilst it's still on iplayer, it's kinda extraordinary and jaw dropping, although yeah... a bit slow.

Bit weird seeing as all of that just... no longer exists, too. Or else it's all been transported to a CIA-reptilian-Illuminati island off the coast of Alaska.... 8) :| :D

This thread is a lil' goldmine.
 
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