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Video
Librarian
2007 Best Documentaries
The following list, selected and compiled by
Video Librarian staff, honors the best new
documentaries reviewed in the magazine and
online during 2007. Unless otherwise noted,
titles are available from most distributors.
9/12:
From Chaos to Community
(Eleventh Hour Films
[www.912film.com], 56 min., DVD or VHS: $19.99:
individuals; $99: high schools & public
libraries; $179: colleges & universities).
Susanna Styron’s cinéma vérité-style
documentary tells the moving story of a group of
unselfish volunteers who formed a unique
community together with recovery workers after
the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade
Center. (VL-5/07)

10 Questions for the Dalai Lama
(Monterey Video, 85 min., DVD: $24.95). Part
travelogue, part biography, and part historical
overview, former Video Librarian
contributor and writer-director-narrator Rick
Ray’s beautifully-lensed documentary weaves
together contemporary footage of the filmmaker’s
travels in India and the Middle East together
with clips from a private interview with the
impish Nobel Prize-winning spiritual leader, His
Holiness, the 14th Dalai Lama. (VL-11/07)
51
Birch Street
(Image Entertainment, 88 min., DVD: $19.99).
When filmmaker Doug Block’s mother died and his
father shortly after married his one-time
secretary, Block began to question the strength
of his parents’ 50-year marriage. Combining
interviews, diary excerpts, home movies,
archival stills, and newly-shot footage, this
deeply personal and surprising film offers a
profound look at family relationships. (VL-11/07)
After
Innocence
(New Yorker Video, 95 min., DVD: $29.95).
Focusing on both the efforts of the Innocence
Project (to use DNA evidence to free wrongly
convicted prisoners) and the Life After
Exoneration program (which aims to integrate
former inmates back into society), Jessica
Sanders’ documentary tells the incredible story
of seven innocent men. (VL-1/07)

The Believers
(Frameline Distribution [www.frameline.org], 80
min., DVD: $100: public libraries; $250:
colleges & universities). Emmy-award winning
director Todd Holland’s documentary profiles San
Francisco’s Transcendence Gospel Choir, the
world’s first (and, to date, only) professional
gospel choir comprised of transgendered singers.
(VL-7/07)
The
Boy Inside
(Fanlight Productions [www.fanlight.com], 47
min., DVD: $279, VHS: $249). Filmmaker Marianne
Kaplan’s heartbreaking documentary chronicles
her 12-year-old son Adam’s struggles with
Asperger syndrome (an autism-spectrum disorder)
during his tumultuous seventh grade school year.
(VL-1/07)
The
Camden 28
(First Run Features, 83 min., DVD: $24.95 [$298
w/PPR from First Run/Icarus Films,
www.frif.com]). Combining archival
footage and stills, interviews, and on-location
footage, Anthony Giacchino’s thought-provoking
documentary tells the story of a Vietnam War-era
break-in at the Camden, NJ draft board offices
by the titular group—consisting of four Catholic
priests, a Lutheran minister, and several young
men and women linked through the Catholic
Church—and their eventual trial. (VL-9/07)
Crazy
Love
(Magnolia Pictures, 92 min., DVD: $26.99).
Director Dan Klores’ aptly-titled documentary
combines archival news footage and contemporary
interviews to capture the weird tale of a
wealthy lawyer named Burt Pugach, who became so
obsessed with the beautiful young Linda Riss
that he hired thugs to deface her with acid when
she dumped him—and then he married her after
serving time for the crime. (VL-9/07)
Crossing
Arizona
(The Cinema Guild [www.cinemaguild.com], 77
min., DVD or VHS: $99.95: public libraries;
$350: colleges & universities). Filmed along the
Arizona-Mexico border, Joseph Mathew and Daniel
DeVivo’s extraordinarily evenhanded documentary
tackles the hot-button issue of illegal
immigration, featuring interviews with Mexicans
and Central Americans trying to cross into the
U.S, as well as official and unofficial border
patrol guards, and American ranchers caught in
the crossfire. (VL-7/07)
A
Crude Awakening: The Oil Crash
(Docurama, 85 min., DVD: $26.95). Backed by a
haunting soundtrack by Philip Glass, filmmakers
Basil Gelpke and Ray McCormack’s alarming
documentary delivers a serious wakeup call about
the impending oil crisis facing the world as
nations move beyond peak production and start
the precipitous slide toward inevitable
depletion. (VL-11/07)
Deep
Water
(IFC Films, 92 min., DVD: $24.95). Narrated by
Golden Globe nominee Tilda Swinton, Louise
Osmond and Jerry Rothwell’s riveting
documentary—which combines archival footage,
audio recordings, dramatic recreations, and
contemporary interviews—focuses on the story of
an enthusiastic though troubled amateur sailor
who entered an around-the-world solo yacht race
in 1968. (VL Online-10/07)
Deliver
Us from Evil
(Lionsgate Entertainment, 103 min., DVD:
$19.98). Amy Berg’s disturbing Oscar-nominated
documentary examines the case of Father Oliver
O’Grady, a priest in central California during
the 1970s and ‘80s, who abused scores of
youngsters of both sexes while being transferred
from parish to parish by Roger Mahoney, now the
L.A. Archbishop. (VL-5/07)
Flock
of Dodos
(Docurama, 85 min., DVD: $26.95 [$345 w/PPR from
Documentary Educational Resources [www.der.org]).
The debate between proponents of Darwinian
evolution and adherents of what’s come to be
called “intelligent design” is depicted with
remarkable balance and comic deftness in this
documentary by filmmaker Randy Olson, which
investigates a Kansas school board’s attempt to
mandate the teaching of intelligent design. (VL-3/07)
The
Ground Truth
(Universal Studios Home Entertainment, 78 min.,
DVD: $14.98). Presenting a brutally honest look
at the Iraq War from the perspective of
returning American soldiers, Patricia Foulkrod’s
powerful documentary combines interviews with a
number of veterans suffering from PTSD, together
with graphic war footage that underscores the
plights of innocent Iraqis. (VL-1/07)
Hacking
Democracy
(Docurama, 81 min., DVD: $26.95). Examining data
from the presidential elections of 2000 and
2004, Simon Ardizzone and Russell Michaels’
eye-opening HBO-aired documentary questions both
the truthfulness and reliability of electronic
voting machines, which currently count about 87%
of the votes cast in the U.S. (VL-5/07)
Jesus
Camp
(Magnolia Home Entertainment, 84 min., DVD:
$26.98). Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady’s
documentary spotlights Devil Lake, ND’s
evangelical “Kids on Fire” summer camp, run by
preacher Becky Fischer, where youngsters are
encouraged to speak in tongues, practice war
dances, and pray before a life-sized cutout of
George W. Bush. (VL Online-1/07)
Les
Paul: Chasing Sound
(Koch Vision, 90 min., DVD: $24.99).
Nonagenarian Les Paul’s six-string namesake
guitar is just the tip of the iceberg of the
man’s contribution to music and recording, as
evidenced in John Paulson’s entertaining and
illuminating biographical documentary, part of
the PBS-aired American Masters series. (VL
Online-11/07)
The
Mormons
(PBS Video, 240 min., DVD: $24.99 [$54.95 w/PPR]).
A joint American Experience/Frontline
production that aired on PBS, filmmaker Helen
Whitney’s fascinating documentary serves up a
warts-and-all survey of the Mormon religion—told
primarily by church historians and other LDS
faithful—that combines insightful interviews,
dramatic reenactments, and archival footage and
stills to trace the Saints march from New York
to Missouri to Illinois to Utah. (VL Online-9/07)
No
End in Sight
(Magnolia Home Entertainment, 102 min., DVD:
$26.98). Narrated by actor Campbell Scott,
Charles Ferguson’s Sundance Special Jury
Prize-winning documentary combines archival news
footage with insightful talking-head interviews
to offer a clear and damning assessment of the
American misadventure in Iraq. (VL Online-10/07)
Planet
Earth: The Complete Series
(BBC Video, 5 discs, 550 min., DVD: $79.98).
Quite simply the most impressive nature/wildlife
series ever produced, this astonishing 11-part
BBC series—narrated by Sir David Attenborough,
and filmed over five years in more than 200
locations—captures sights and sounds from around
the globe (and is especially impressive in the
HD DVD and Blu-ray versions). (VL-5/07)
Sicko
(The Weinstein Company, 123 min., DVD: $29.95).
Academy Award-winning filmmaker Michael Moore
combines interviews and archival footage
together with his own running commentary to take
aim at HMOs, insurance companies, pharmaceutical
corporations, callous hospitals, and
governmental complicity in this scathing
indictment of the American healthcare system. (VL-11/07)
Stagedoor
(Docurama, 79 min., DVD: $26.95). Following the
stories of five participating kids, Alexandra
Shiva’s charming documentary takes a winsome
look at the titular Catskill summer “theater
camp” for teens aspiring to break into Broadway
musicals. (VL-5/07)
The
Trials of Darryl Hunt
(THINKfilm, 107 min., DVD: $27.98). Wrongly
convicted of killing newspaper editor Deborah
Sykes in North Carolina in 1984, Darryl Hunt
spent 20 years in prison (10 of them after DNA
evidence proved his innocence). Filmmakers Ricki
Stern and Anne Sundberg’s documentary tracks
this travesty of criminal justice through a
combination of archival news footage and
interviews. (VL-9/07)
The
War
(PBS Video, 6 discs, 900 min., DVD: $129.99
[$159.95 w/PPR]). Filmmakers Ken Burns and Lynn
Novick’s seven-part, 14-hour documentary
combines narration, interviews, and readings (by
actors Tom Hanks, Josh Lucas, and Samuel L.
Jackson, among others) to offer a cinematic
window into the experiences of average Americans
during WWII, both on the battlefield and at
home. (VL-9/07)
White
Light, Black Rain: The Destruction of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki
(HBO Video, 85 min., DVD: $24.98). Looking back
at the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, filmmaker Steven Okazaki’s documentary
interviews over a dozen “hibakusha” (people
exposed to the bomb), who offer first-person
accounts of life during wartime and the horrors
of surviving atomic destruction. (VL-11/07)
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