Letter from the editor:
This past Independence Day, Hyperallergic took a look at how the cinema of other countries has depicted the United States over the decades, and what lessons we might take from their approaches. In the context of mass protests against systemic injustice, it’s vital to look outside the usual institutional channels. On a similar note, Eileen G’Sell reviewed Good Trouble, a new documentary on longtime civil rights activist and politician John Lewis.
We also reviewed two recent films set in Japan: Werner Herzog’s latest is a doc/fiction hybrid about a service that allows you to “rent” actors to play family members; and fresh from Sheffield Doc/Fest, Serena Scateni reviewed Me and the Cult Leader, in which the director confronts members of a group that committed a terrorist attack which injured him decades before.
Meanwhile, a new season of the rebooted Twilight Zone is now available to stream. Read about how it grapples with the legacy of the original classic. And I talked to the Ross Brothers, the directors of Bloody Nose, Empty Pockets, one of the best documentaries of the year. As long as cinema is quarantined online, Hyperallergic will be on top of everything streaming.
Until we can see you at the movies again, stay safe.