Best documentaries

Jazz on a Summer’s Day. Still the best music documentary around. It has been said that the makers of Woodstock got some of their ideas from seeing this film.

Kevin Brownlow’s Hollywood series

The Man in the Silk Hat, a documentary about French silent comic Max Linder

Maximillian Schell’s Marlene

"Crumb and The Thin Blue Line aren’t documentaries. "

Crumb is SO a documentary! And a great one.

Another one that will upset the hell outta you is “Southern Comfort.” I was so pissed off after seeing it that I could barely see straight.

Crumb
Shoah (nine hours of holocaust study may be a bit much but you will never be the same after you see it)
Project Grizzly
Paradise Lost

Thanks. Netflix has a surprising number of these.

I’ll google him later, but what kind of cartoonist was Crumb (i.e. comic strip, political, Charles Addams-ish, etc.)? I certainly wouldn’t have gone looking for a documentary on him, but with this many recs it must be good.

NANOOK OF THE NORTH- if I’m not mistaken, that’s the one whos subject died of starvation in the Arctic while the movie about him was the toast of Gotham- one of those great ironies, sort of like Sharbat Gula, who was world famous for her haunting beautiful eyes on the NAT’L. GEO cover even as she was covered in a burqa surviving bombs and poverty (or Al Bundy, whose heroism is sung across the galaxy but sells shoes on his own planet).

Crumb was a sorta counterculture cartoonist from the late 60s-70s who made the icon “Keep On Truckin” and other tasty bits. He drew for a few mags but mostly did solo work, all very sexually depraved, misogynist, racist and wonderful. I guess he was mostly comic-strip-ish but he seemed to defy any solid category.

He is amazing, I’ll give him that.

Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control

Project Grizzly

The Line King

Grey Gardens

Gates of Heaven

Mr. Death

Hands on a Hard Body

Trekkies.

Just those which come to mind…

hrh

Wasn’t that Ric Burns, brother of Ken Burns?

hrh

One day in September*

No it’s not what you think. It’s about the Munich olympics where some of the Israeli team where held hostage and well … lets just say it turned nasty.

Great docu. You’ll be shock at some of the fuck ups made by the Germans. One of the great montage sequence in movies IMO is at the end of the movie backed by Sweet child in Time by Deep Purple.

two thumbs up

I’ll also chime in re: Crumb.

Given my interest in history, and the role Virginia played in the Civil War, am very, very partial to Ken Burns’ “Civil War.”

'ONE DAY IN SEPTEMBER- thanks for reminding me- I’ve actually read that book and meant to see the documentary for years but forgotten.

I loved TREKKIES- entertaining without being too belittling of the group.

I love James Burke’s stuff also, though I’ve never seen the last two CONNECTIONS series. I particularly enjoyed DAY THE UNIVERSE CHANGED.

PARAGRAPH 175 is a good (not great) documentary on the Nazi persecution of homosexuals. (Only about 6 of the few known survivors agreed to be interviewed on camera.) Does anybody know of any other Holocaust documentaries to focus on groups other than Jews?

This is Spinal Tap. :smiley:

“Trinity and beyond”
about the development and testing of atomic weapons.
Shatner’s narration is subtle, exquisitely ironic.

Harlan County, USA by Barbara Kopple

Liberty - The American Revolution (1998)

Koyaanisqatsi (koy-yan-iss-katsi) (1982)

I see you’re a Georgian, so I’ll recommend:

Sherman’s March - The filmmaker planned to do a documentary of Sherman’s march to the sea, but winds up with a documentary of Georgia culture circa 1983, and of the filmmaker’s own neuroses (and his search for love/sex in the course of his travels). It is funny as hell, like a Flannery O’Connor story come to life.

One of my favs, but certainly not a documentary. Heck, not even close.

Clay, Wood, Fire, Spirit.

My faves, some of which have been mentioned by other discerning viewers:

Atomic Cafe - funny and scary
Crumb - brilliant
Hands on a Hard Body - very emotional and scary at the same time
Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Story - fascinating story, fantastic footage, good narration, great soundtrack
Bowling for Columbine - a bit preachy at times, but good journalism for the most part
Hoop Dreams - probably the best follow-the-life-of documentary ever made (although i do like the 7up series from Britain a lot too)
The Eyes of Tammy-Faye - brilliantly done; quite a sympathetic portryal of a very odd person
Death of a Nation: The Timor Conspiracy - excellent look at Indonesia’s atrocies in East Timor and the complicity of western governments
Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media - a good introduction to the thought of an important twentieth century thinker
Canetoads: An Unnatural History - absolutely fucking hilarious; a good insight into the stranger side of Australians (or Queenslanders, anyway)
Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter, Jr. - fascinating account of an engineer and execution equipment designer who attempted to refute the idea that there were gas chambers at Auschwitz, and his subsequent decline into notoriety and then obscurity