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| Perfectly A Strangeness follows three donkeys |
The Oscars, one of the biggest film events of the year is fast approaching on March 15, and art house movie theatres around town are showing the nominees for Best Live Shorts, Best Documentary Shorts and Best Animation Shorts.
I hunkered down for the Best Documentary Shorts, which turned out to be 157 minutes long, screening all five docs one after the other.
Perfectly a Strangeness by Alison McAlpine (15 mins)
This Canadian entry seems strange at first -- why are we following three donkeys as they slowly walk up a hill. Where are they going? The sweet docile trio end up by an unmanned astronomical observatory that opens up at night and reveals some amazing footage of the universe, and a juxtaposition of nature and technology.
The Devil is Busy by Christalyn Hampton and Greeta Gandbhir (31 mins)
I quickly surmised this film was about an abortion clinic and it was sad to see the measures the staff had to take to ensure their clients, who they call guests, feel safe and supported during their visit. The main character is Tracii, who is the first to arrive at the clinic and explains how safety is so crucial, as well as her own personal story. Viewers also meet the doctor who performs the procedures and says how politics is making it harder for women to have control over their own bodies. She never imagined it was easier for her to get access to this kind of healthcare when she was young than her daughter today. Meanwhile outside there are male protesters who use religion to try to guilt the women from going in. The filmmakers don't speak to them directly, but Tracii gives the audience the backstory on one of them. The Devil is Busy is a highly emotional film, showing how women are losing their reproductive rights today, and that there are people who are trying to help them.
Armed Only with a Camera: The Life and Death of Brent Renaud by Craig and Brent Renaud (38 mins)
The brothers from Little Rock, Arkansas were only two years apart and older brother Brent became a video journalist going to war zones and his younger sibling Craig followed him. But Brent became the first American journalist to die soon after the Ukraine war broke out in March 2022. Craig is determined to bring his brother's body back, and reminisces about the places they covered, from Afghanistan to Somalia, Haiti, Iraq and Mexico. Some of the footage is frightening to watch, but that is what Brent wanted to show people, that war is horrific and we cannot pretend it doesn't happen. The documentary is a tragic tribute to Brent, and ends by letting viewers know that hundreds of journalists have died trying to report the truth.
All the Empty Rooms by Joshua Seftel (33 mins)
Journalist Steve Hartman was known on CBS Evening News as the guy who would find human interest stories to lighten the end of news casts. But in 1997 he was assigned to cover his first school shooting, and it wasn't his last. He said he became numb reporting them as was the rest of America was hearing them. So he started his own project of contacting families whose children had died from school shootings and got his photographer friend Lou Bopp to take pictures of the kids' bedrooms. It's absolutely devastating to get an idea of who these children were through their bedrooms, and how their parents and siblings are coping.
Children No More: "Were and are Gone" by Hilla Medalia (36 mins)
After the October 7 attacks and Israel retaliates with attacks on Gaza, a large group of protesters in Tel Aviv stand silently and stoically holding candles and pictures of Palestinian children killed in the war. Week after week they stand and sit in public places to get attention, which leads to emotionally charge scenes. Some passersby tell the protesters they are delusional, or that the priority should be the Israeli hostages, not children in Gaza.





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