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    Sundance Film Festival 2013

    Dick Cheney, Anita Hill and late-term abortion doctors are focus of Sundance documentaries

    Jane Howze
    By Jane Howze
    Jan 20, 2013 | 3:30 pm

    PARK CITY, Utah — The Sundance Film Festival is in full swing, with lots of stars (Jennifer Hudson, Alicia Keys, Naomi Watts) and filmgoers eager to offer instant analysis of the movies they just saw as they wait in line for shuttle buses or at theaters and restaurants.

    After finding opening night drama May in the Summer, the story of a young American-Jordanian woman with second thoughts about her wedding, to be predictable, I decided to purge myself of the experience by only attending documentaries for the next 48 hours.

    And how can you go wrong with documentaries at Sundance when four of the nominees for Best Documentary at next month's Oscars were showcased at last year’s festival?

    Among the more thought-provoking documentaries I have seen at this year's edition of the festival are:

    After Tiller

    In 2009, George Tiller, one of only five U.S. physicians who perform third-term abortions, was murdered at his church in Wichita. Filmmakers Martha Shane, in her directorial debut, and Lana Wilson, in her first film, let the remaining four physicians tell their stories in After Tiller.

    For the first time I can remember at Sundance, we had to go through metal detectors to enter the theater and there were armed guards everywhere.

    For the first time I can remember at Sundance, we had to go through metal detectors to enter the theater and there were armed guards everywhere.

    The film allows you to hear in the words of the patients and their physicians the personal, professional, ethical and spiritual struggles that they face. As moving and emotional as the film is, it could have been tightened up for maximum impact and benefited from a more experienced editor.

    Even so, I fear this film will not see the light of day commercially given its controversial topic. And that is a shame.

    Whatever your views may be on late-term abortion, this film will challenge them. And isn’t that what a good documentary is all about?

    Anita

    In 1991, law professor Anita Hill was propelled into the center of national politics when she accused Supreme Court Justice nominee Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment. Hill was attacked in public hearings before the all-male Senate Judiciary Committee and Thomas was confirmed.

    In Anita, a documentary tribute to Hill, Oscar-winning filmmaker Freida Mock revisits these events which seem incomprehensible in retrospect. We learn there were corroborating witnesses that were not allowed to testify and are reminded that Hill successfully passed a lie detector test.

    Though the film tends to lionize Hill as "St. Anita," it is a powerful film and history lesson.

    It is painful to watch how the accuser became the accused. Interestingly, Hill shows no bitterness.

    Although she at first tried to quietly retreat into the private life, Hill has taken on the public role of shining a light on sexual harassment and bringing about change through legislation and education.

    Hill, her longtime boyfriend and many of her family members attended the showing and most of the audience questions afterwards were from grateful women thanking her for making a difference. Though the film tends to lionize Hill as "St. Anita," it is a powerful film and history lesson.

    The World According to Dick Cheney

    Some might think there could not be a less welcome subject at Sundance, with its liberal constituency, than Dick Cheney. Not true. Sundance has never shied away from polarizing figures be they on the left or the right. One of Sundance’s most popular documentaries was Reagan, shown in 2011.

    I was excited about gaining a better understanding of Cheney in the hands of award-winning filmmaker R.J. Cutler (The September Issue). It starts off promisingly enough with Cheney giving short answers to questions.

    During a question-and-answer session, some in the audience took Cutler to task for being too easy on Cheney while others complained the film didn't reveal anything new.

    His favorite meal? Spaghetti.

    His favorite virtue? Integrity.

    When asked to name his greatest fault, Cheney replies, "I don't spend a lot of time thinking about my faults, would be the answer."

    Oh-oh.

    I gained hope again as Cheney opened up about flunking out of Yale University, landing in jail twice for DUI, and working as a lineman for an electrical utility before getting his life together. Twelve years later, in his early 30s, he was the youngest White House chief of staff in U.S. history.

    But the rest of the film reveals little we didn't already know about Cheney. It ignores such topics as his loving relationship with his family (he is supportive of his gay daughter) and his controversial tenure at Halliburton, instead spending way too much time on his mentor, former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld.

    A long sit-down interview with Cheney, which is interspersed throughout the movie, yields precious little new information. One suspects that Cutler agreed to stringent ground rules to snag the interview and shied away from confrontation.

    During a question-and-answer session, some in the audience took Cutler to task for being too easy on Cheney while others complained the film didn't reveal anything new. You can judge for yourself as it will premiere on Showtime on March 15.

    The Summit

    For some reason any film about dangerous mountain climbing always draws audiences. Maybe it's the scenery that attracts us or the opportunity to experience the thrill and danger vicariously. The Summit is an absorbing tale of a doomed 2008 expedition to Pakistan’s K2, the second highest peak in the world, in which 11 people died.

    Filmmaker Nick Ryan has some amazing footage from the climbers but seems ambivalent how to approach the story.

    Filmmaker Nick Ryan has some amazing footage from the climbers but seems ambivalent how to approach the story.

    The narrative moves from the mystery of what really happened, to reenactments, to interviews with survivors, the heroism of Sherpa Pemba Gyalje and finally interviews with Italian mountain climber Walter Bonatti's whose 1954 expedition was the first to summit K2.

    I had whiplash trying to figure out which one of these of these angles to focus on. In trying to please too many, The Summit ended up falling short of the peak.

    Ah, but I must be making a mountain of a molehill since, the film was picked up by Sundance Selects.

    The World According to Dick Cheney drew fire from some audience members for being too soft on the former vice president.

    Dick Cheney, Sundance Film Festival, January 2013
      
    Courtesy photo
    The World According to Dick Cheney drew fire from some audience members for being too soft on the former vice president.
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    Movie Review

    Disturbing new horror film Bring Her Back will shock fans of the genre

    Alex Bentley
    May 30, 2025 | 4:00 pm
    Sally Hawkins and Sora Wong in Bring Her Back
    Photo courtesy of A24
    Sally Hawkins and Sora Wong in Bring Her Back.

    While there have been plenty of great horror movies that have come out of the United States, there are also many examples of other countries delivering films that put American ones to shame. Whether it’s the freedom of working outside the U.S. studio system, different sensibilities, or something else, international horror movies often hit way harder than domestic ones.

    The latest example is the Australian film Bring Her Back, directed by Danny and Michael Philippou, the same filmmakers behind the 2023 sensation Talk to Me. The fantastically unnerving story centers on Andy (Billy Barratt) and his sister, Piper (Sora Wong), who’s legally blind. The two are put into foster care after the death of their father, finding a home with Laura (Sally Hawkins), a former social worker. Laura is enthusiastic about having Piper, who reminds her of her blind daughter who passed away, but Andy feels a coolness toward him right away.

    Also living with Laura is Oliver (Jonah Wren Phillips), whom Laura says has been mute since her daughter’s death. But Oliver’s actions are much weirder than him not being able to talk, and Laura alternates between being dismissive of him and overly attentive. Things start to go off the rails when Andy witnesses a horrific event, and he and Piper - along with the audience - are unprepared for how awful things will get.

    The film, written by Danny Philippou and Bill Hinzman, ranks extremely high on the list of most disturbing films you’re likely to see. It’s not just the blood and gore that can be found in many other horror movies; it’s the manner in which the carnage comes about that may haunt the dreams of viewers. The things that the filmmakers choose to show are so shocking that it’s fair to wonder what kind of a mind comes up with such atrocities.

    But the Philippous have more on their mind than trying to traumatize viewers visually. It’s a movie about grief and a broken foster care system mixed with a tinge of the supernatural. While it’s not entirely clear what’s going on with Laura and Oliver, it involves something spooky that has affected both of them in inexplicable ways. The film combines the horrors of real life and the incomprehensible for a highly effective story.

    The film also veers far away from your typical horror film arc. While Laura is the “villain” of the film, she’s also a victim in a certain way, and the filmmakers have empathy for the trauma that she has endured. They don’t excuse her actions, but the reasons behind them are explained, and so the journey that Andy and Piper go on becomes more meaningful than if it involved a monster with no back story.

    Hawkins, who’s been nominated for two Oscars, elevates the film with her high-level acting. No matter what kind of weird thing Laura does, it feels grounded because Hawkins is bringing it to life. Barratt and Wong play their roles well, but it’s Phillips who’s the real revelation. Without speaking a word, he turns in a supremely creepy performance, one that’s especially amazing for the physical things he’s asked to do.

    Even horror film aficionados may not be able to anticipate the level of depravity on display in Bring Her Back. Unlike other movies in the genre, it’s not out for cheap thrills. The Philippous give it heart and soul, along with some of the most messed-up scenes you’ll see this year.

    ---

    Bring Her Back is now playing theaters.

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