This is a summary account of events / screenings at Sheffield Doc/Fest 2015
More views of – or before – Cambridge Film Festival 2015 (3 to 13 September)
(Click here to go directly to the Festival web-site)
9 June
This is a summary account, in a sentence each (well, almost), of events / screenings at Sheffield Doc/Fest 2015 (5 to 10 June)
Congratulations to all nominees & winners at the #sheffdocfest 2015 Awards. Full listings can be viewed here http://t.co/AtWCZzVvOG
— Sheffield Doc/Fest (@sheffdocfest) June 12, 2015
Saturday 6 June
* 12.30 – A Young Patriot (2015) (Showroom Screen 2, Vimeo) – inadvertently raises questions both about one’s reasons for choosing a subject and what one has meaningful consent to film (reviewed here) – probably 10+ minutes too long
* 3.45 – Match Me ! How to Find Love in Modern Times (2014) (Odeon Screen 8) – the Q&A essentially confirmed what one had really already suspected, that it was not really about match-making, but had been made to be to complement the story of a couple who had met through a type of arranged yogic marriage – also probably 10+ minutes too long
* 7.00 – (screening at around 9.45) Mavis ! (2015) (The Botanical Gardens) – Mavis Staples is a figure whose musical significance is worth bringing to greater prominence, with the sort of voice that is normally called lived in and an impressive career, but fairly conventional / unremarkable in documentary terms themselves
Sunday 7 June
* 12.15 – Containment (2015) (Showroom Screen 2, Vimeo) – a title that IMDb (@IMDb) will have to disambiguate, as there are also two features of this name, but they will not skilfully look at a range of issues such as where nuclear waste comes from, serious mistakes in our understanding that prove to have been made in attempts to store and process it, and how (perhaps not a wholly integrated theme ?) we warn those in AD 12,000 of its existence / presence (reviewed here)
Isotopes, becquerels, control-rods, fission, reprocessing, contamination - not all used in @ContainmentDoc at @sheffdocfest , but reminders.
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 7, 2015
If one had not tarried, to talk to directors Robb Moss and Peter Galison after the Q&A, there might have been a chance to get to Imperialism or Inquiry : How Fair is Our Foreign Filming ? at 2.30 (ITV Town Hall Council Chamber) (or, at 3.30, How Interactive Content is Shaping the Future of Cinemas and Film Festivals (Memorial Hall, City Hall))...
* 5.45 – Iris (2014) (Odeon Screen 8) – unlike with Mavis !, a film that was not exactly awash with humility, although Iris Apfel is a great encourager and collector with definite tastes and flair, and where doing a deal – having justified the concept of haggling in its appropriate place – seemed part of the thrill of the chase in remorseless acquisitiveness (although tempered by giving archive material, both temporarily and permanently)
We admire Iris Apfel's obvious flair, but her acquisitiveness - though hardly unique - makes her hard to like much... pic.twitter.com/yZV32HrFx1
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) July 27, 2015
Monday 8 June
* 12.00 – The Nine Muses (2010) (Showroom Screen 1, AP Archive) – excellent melding of readings (Naxos Audiobooks) from sourced such as Dante, Homer, Beckettt’s trilogy (Molloy and The Unnameable) with music, images and displayed quotations – directive, but largely through meditative juxtaposition of powerful source and new material (reviewed here – and as prophetically Tweeted ?) :
So far, two main approaches from @sheffdocfest films : a broadly chronological unfolding (sometimes in real time) and complementary strands.
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 7, 2015
Best film that @THEAGENTAPSLEY has seen at @sheffdocfest so far, The Nine Muses (2010) - great for Beckettt lovers ! https://t.co/v2sBv03Lj6
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 8, 2015
Little White Lies (@LWLies) had this to say : Even more of a revelation was the screening of Akomfrah's The Nine Muses (2010), which effectively demands the cinema experience. Abstract, demanding but never less than compelling, we can't pretend to have grasped its every free-associating allusion, but its intoxicating riffs on diasporic identity and memory are assembled with the eye of an obvious master.
Here are our five top picks from the 2015 @sheffdocfest: http://t.co/o6s6vh6oG4 pic.twitter.com/rdwDIpBIY1
— Little White Lies (@LWLies) June 17, 2015
* 2.15 – Jungle Sisters (2015) (Showroom Screen 2, Vimeo) – the combination of an incipient headache and motion-sequences that felt overly jerky did not make for a screening that could be sustained
* 4.00 – Influence Film Club : Almost There (2014) (The Adelphi Room, The Crucible Theatre) – a pleasant chance to meet, off Twitter, the directors and producers and share and chat with them, as well as seeing a trailer and a clip, and hear them interviewed
A @sheffdocfest discussion with Almost There directors Aaron Wickenden/ Dan Rybicky, Tim Horsburghof @Kartemquin : http://t.co/yYpBiy0o62
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 8, 2015
Dan Rybicky and Aaron Wickenden (directors) and Tim Horsburgh (Kartemquin Films)
* 6.00 – The Making of Long Lost Family (The Crucible Theatre) – apologies if it is wrongly recalled as in Rotherham, but, anyway, the story of Yorkshire twins, only one of whom knew of the other’s existence, and what the programme did to help her track down her sister, who turned out to have been living just three miles away the whole time, and even to have been registered with the same medical practice – as Nicky Campbell tellingly described it, they became young girls again as they ran towards each other, and Davina McCall could scarcely contain herself that they were there to join the panel on the stage of The Crucible, which was just one unexpectedly moving moment in this session about Long Lost Family, and its commitment to quality and care for its subjects
* 8.15 – Meet the Makers : The Revolution will be Televised (The Crucible Theatre) – despite the fact that the chat was ably chaired by Owen Jones (@OwenJones84), nothing altered the fact that comedy’s effects can be wildly subjective (in a Freud-like way, one can see that something is amusing, but not laugh), and this seemed less hard hitting than much other British satirical work, and more like Dom Joly’s stunts (with a political slant)
Owen Jones
Tuesday 9 June
* 10.30 – The BBC Interview : Charlotte Moore (Controller, BBC1) interviewed by Alex Graham (Festival Chair) – proof (one has done it in Q&As, and in interviewing Ken Loach) that one can be so keen that those listening are aware of the store of one’s knowledge that one swamps the interviewee with propositions (mixed up with a question somewhere), and then, lively to engage, irritatingly (?)** cuts short the answer…
* 12.45 – Newsnight and documentary : Ian Katz (Editor, Newsnight) interviewed by Nick Fraser (Executive Producer, Storyville) – Nick Fraser, by contrast, used fewer words, but to better effect, and integrated clips highly appropriately into talking to Ian Katz (@iankatz1000), who spoke with such a fluency and command of language that he well conveyed what helped us understand his editorial approach and decisions at, and hopes for the use of documentary for, Newsnight and in relation to other BBC factual output
Ian Katz
* 3.00 – The Channel 4 Interview : Dan Reed (maker of documentaries (and feature films)) interviewed by Ralph Lee (Deputy Chief Creative Officer, Channel 4) – flagging too much for little other than sustenance by caffeine and chocolate brownie (courtesy of those welcoming people upstairs in The Influence Film Club) and an energy drink (donated by delegate Ravinder Surah), but with little glimpses through Dan Reed’s lens into worlds of depravity, violence and threat
Ralph Lee (L) interviews Dan Reed (R)
* 6.15 – A Sinner in Mecca (2015) (Odeon Screen 8) – despite director / cinematographer Parvez Sharma’s hope that his film was not self indulgent, and the insights that he wished to share – through going on a Hajj – about Mecca and other holy sites, and the ruling Saudi dynasty and its attitude to the past, how he pursued, and attained, the object of his quest seemed to stay very personal to him and his experience (unsure now : see after-thought – and, which is more considered, the review now here)
On @parvezsharma's A Sinner in Mecca at @sheffdocfest, reflecting on Arthur Koestler's thoughts, v. in / v. out of communism / Christianity.
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 10, 2015
Watching @parvezsharma's A Sinner in Mecca (2015) at @sheffdocfest had me in knots about what risk he ran, @kingqueen3065 @BeresfordPeter !
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 11, 2015
* 8.45 – DS30 (2014) (Odeon Screen 8) – three films (the first two, being contemporary to the NUM strike, between them totalling around 14 mins, and the third around 33 mins) that, respectively, documented or revisited (a commission for AV Festival in 2014) the mood and music of the time, the latter as made by Test Dept and The South Wales Striking Miners' Choir :
Popular @camfilmfest 2014 film @EnemyWithin1984 tells the story of the miners strike from the miners themselves. #Orgreave #CamFF
— Cambridge Film Fest (@camfilmfest) June 12, 2015
Good, @MusicMattersR3, to hear @tomservice talking to @Test_Dept after seeing them after the @sheffdocfest screening of DS30 (2014) ->
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 13, 2015
-> Less obviously than @BurundiDrummers, when @THEAGENTAPSLEY asked about influences, @Test_Dept named Penderecki, Gorecki, Shostakovich.
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 13, 2015
Burundi and Kodo too of course! https://t.co/7aK9EN2J1c
— Test Dept (@Test_Dept) June 17, 2015
[...]
Wednesday 10 June
* 11.00 The Awards Ceremony (The Crucible Theatre) – a pleasure to be 'inside' this event, hearing the wit and versatility of Jeremy Hardy as host first hand, both before and during :
The ever-entertaining and sharp Jeremy Hardy hosted for @sheffdocfest at @crucibletheatre - here, looking balletic ? pic.twitter.com/quC6ChLotX
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 10, 2015
Day 6 at @sheffdocfest, and back at the @crucibletheatre for the awards ceremony, setting up photos for the hopefuls pic.twitter.com/E09oZ7gr7e
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 10, 2015
* 2.00 – Volunteers' Secret Screening : The Confessions of Thomas Quick (2015) (The Void, Sheffield Hallam) :
Apart from ducking out of Jungle S. for image-quality, the volunteers' free surprise screening felt gratuitous for re-enacting violent acts.
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 10, 2015
* 6.30 Monty Python : The Meaning of Live (2014) (The Crucible Theatre) – to Holly Gilliam’s (Terry Gilliam’s daughter’s) impulse to get a camera to document what happened at the script-reading for Monty Python (Almost) Live, and afterwards, much is owed, in this skilful snapshot of the surviving Pythons by Roger Graef and James Rogan (reviewed here)
The Pythons at @TheO2 in Roger Graefand @J_Rogan1's masterly Monty Python : The Meaning of Live (2014) very suitably closed @sheffdocfest.
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 11, 2015
It was @THEAGENTAPSLEY's pleasure, as @sheffdocfest volunteer, Doc/Lovers-wristband-holder and writer, to be there ! https://t.co/w9XjVPD7He
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 11, 2015
To be expanded / continued...
A new sign-off, following @sheffdocfest... A:\emptydisk\recharge
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 13, 2015
End-notes
* These Tweets refer :
Not of all the sheep that have been much around @sheffdocfest, but a round-up of events / screenings so far : http://t.co/233OsbI9ns
— THE AGENT APSLEY (@THEAGENTAPSLEY) June 9, 2015
** Assured by Charlotte Moore that the style of the interview had not felt antagonistic, one still felt uncomfortable watching more than short sections of it, and others did not disagree with having been disquietened.
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Unless stated otherwise, all films reviewed were screened at Festival Central (Arts Picturehouse, Cambridge)