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Review: Alive Day Memories: Home from Iraq



One of the toughest films I've sat through in recent memory wasn't at a film festival (though, to be sure, you can always find some good downers at a fest), it was a screener of James Gandolfini's first project since The Sopranos, a documentary for HBO called Alive Day Memories: Home from Iraq. Disconcerting though it was to see Tony Soprano being warm and fuzzy, that wasn't the tough part to get through; the hard part was watching ten young men and women who, while serving in the armed forces in Iraq, nearly died there. All of them have been scarred in one way or another by their near-death experiences in Iraq.

The format is pretty simple: take a group of battle-scarred soldiers, sit them down one-by-one with Gandolfini on a sparse set hung with black velvet curtains, and let their stories speak for themselves. The soldiers' stories are interspersed with footage -- some of it, we're told at the beginning, taken by insurgents -- of the events that caused their injuries. It's not pretty; actually, it's pretty damn horrifying to watch a truck or tank driving down the road, see it get blown up, and know there are people inside, someone's sons and daughters. It's pretty damn horrifying, too, to see an arm or leg or head or torso all mangled and bloody, to see men and women crying in pain.

It's horrifying, too, to see a solidier, strong and active, intelligence shining out of his eyes, in home video and then to see that same solidier now, in a wheelchair, living with the effects of a traumatic brain injury caused by two bullets to his head. It's hard to hear the slight tremor underlying his mother's voice as she talks optimistically about the hope that her son will walk again, to see the pain in her eyes when he sings "From the halls of Montezuma, to the shores of Tripoli ... " with all the exuberance of a small child. She is happy to have her son still alive, no doubt, and proud of his service to the Marine Corps, but this is what her son is now, and the likelihood that he will ever again be the man he was before Iraq is slim.

Continue reading Review: Alive Day Memories: Home from Iraq

Indie Online: Summer Fun, 'Maxed Out,' and a Slew of Serious Shorts

I've been scouring the web lately looking for films available online. I think we're going to see more and more indie filmmakers using the internet as a means of at least initial distrib for their films -- a way to get their films noticed, to get grass-root support and word-of-mouth-buzz going, even to sell their film and maybe pay off some of those credit card bills.

Even if a film gets accepted on the fest circuit, getting it sold, and ever making money off it, is such a crap shoot, that more and more filmmakers are taking advantage of the ability to self-distrib their own films.
But are they any good? Here are some films you can see online right here, right now, and see for yourself what's out there ...

Maxed Out -- This feature-length doc explores the economics of credit and how and why so many Americans have over-extended themselves financially in their quest to have bigger and bigger houses and more stuff to fill them. Particulary scary? The revelation of the extent to which the major banks are involved in the highly profitable business of payday loans -- preying on the poor with high interest rates in the name of profit. If you, like a lot of folks, are thinking of buying more home than you can reasonably afford with one of those nifty loans that seem like such a good deal, watch this first.

Summer Shorts Online -- If you just can't get enough short films until the next film fest, never fear. IFC and Rooftop Films have partnered to keep your summer hot, hot hot with a new short film going up every day in their Summer Shorts Online program! Up for August so far: Monkey Versus Robot, a bizarre little music video, and a special treat: Take My Life, a new (at least I assume new) short by Kelly Oliver and Keary Rosen, who previously had another short, First Firing, in the "Welcome to Normal" program in April's New York Underground Film Festival. Reverse Shot had this to say about First Firing: " ... a play of associative and rhyming terms rattled off in British deadpan over some matching and non-matching images that's fun and strangely inspiring, especially if you, like me, enjoy words." That pretty much sums up Take My Life as well, so if you're into spoken word and/or experimental film, check it out.

Don't overlook the entries for June and July while you're there (don't miss Nutria, a short about the battle to eradicate a species of water rat that's taken over the Louisiana wetlands ... you'll never look at rats the same way again once you see one of these suckers -- they look like they could take on NYC sewer rats and come out on top) ... heck, invite your favorite cinephile over, order in some pizza, toss up a nice caesar salad and serve it all up with a bottle of decent-ish wine. Then dim the lights fire up your trusty laptop, and snuggle up on your secondhand couch for your own private shorts fest -- it's a perfect cheap date night.

If you're feeling a little more socially conscious, mosey on over to the Media that Matters Short Film Festival, where you can check out a wide array of shorts on social issues, many of them made by filmmakers under 21. It's a great way to see the next generation of filmmakers while getting educated about some important issues. For your convenience, the site even has the films broken down by category, so if you're in the mood to see films on, say, family and society, you can click on that and you'll find a list of films to check out including A Girl Like Me, about "African-American women struggling to define themselves," All That I Can Be, about a young man choosing the military as a means of making a better life for himself, and As We Sleep, the story of a young woman in a long-term care facility who was abused by her caregiver. Other categories include Gay and Lesbian, Criminal Justice, Economic Justice, Environment, Gender/Women, Health/Health Advocacy, Religous Freedom and more. Who knows? The next generation's Michael Moore may have his or her film on this site right now ... and years from now, you can say you saw the first film they made.

AOLs True Stories
continues to bring you some great documentaries online. They still have Summercamp! up, and you can also catch Operation Dreamland -- both these films can be viewed in their entirety -- and there's a whole list of docs you can watch previews and trailers for as well.

Last but not least for this round-up, if you still haven't caught Four Eyed Monsters online in spite of our repeatedly telling you how great it is, never fear, you still have time to catch it over on YouTube. If you like what you see and want a higher quality DVD that you can watch over and over again, you can order the DVD from the Four Eyed Monsters website.

Indie Online: Watch 'Summercamp!' and Share Your Own Camp Stories

I saw the documentary Summercamp! when it premiered at SXSW in 2006, and thought it was just as cute as a bug. When I reviewed the film, I called it "a film for grownups who want to remember their own days at summer camp, both the fun times and the embarrassing moments." Also, I loved the Flaming Lips music on the soundtrack. The light-hearted film was co-directed by Austin filmmaker Bradley Beesley (who also made Fearless Freaks, the doc about the Flaming Lips) and Sarah Price (The Yes Men). But I don't need to keep telling you what I thought, because you can watch the movie for yourself, right this minute if you want.

AOL True Stories has made Summercamp! available to watch online in its entirety or download onto your own computer. The documentary runs a little less than 90 minutes long, so budget some time to sit back and enjoy the film on your monitor. When you're done, you can tell your own summer-camp tales by posting comments on the Summercamp! blog, which includes entries from Holly, one of the campers featured in the film. If you don't have the browser plugins or other requirements needed to watch the film on your computer, you can always buy the DVD from the Summercamp! website. Or check out the list of theatrical screenings around the U.S. for the documentary, starting on July 18 at IFC Center in NYC and currently running through September.

[Screening info via Austin Movie Blog]

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