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Film & DocumentaryMarch 4, 2022 • View in browserPlayground Looks at the Psychological and Physical Carnage of ChildhoodLaura Wandel’s debut film examines the psychological — and physical — carnage wrought between children when grown-ups look the other way. | Eileen G'Sell The schoolyard and building serve as a breeding ground for the prejudices the children bring with them, baptism by fire for those who do not arrive with these biases. Before shooting, Wandel had a clear vision of the type of place she wanted to depict, scouting every public school in the Brussels area for a site that could evoke a prison, the corridors in which, as Wandel put it, “a child could get lost.” For those who have been bullied as young children, and for those who have done the bullying, Playground reveals the degree to which the two are swings on the same shaky set. SPONSORED Cannes Prizewinner Great Freedom Opens in Theaters This FridaySee Austria’s Best International Film submission to the 2022 Academy Awards, a searing queer love story starring Franz Rogowski (Transit). Learn more. HYPERALLERGIC INTERVIEWS ‘You Should Feel Disturbed’ — Talking to the Directors of AtticaIn the wake of the film’s nomination for the Best Documentary Feature Oscar, Stanley Nelson and Traci Curry speak to Hyperallergic about the uprising’s ongoing relevance. | Dan Schindel Traci Curry: It was never far from our minds that this was a profound trauma in the lives of all of the people who were touched by this. Thinking about the images, what to show and what not to, and where that line is, I feel an audience should not be able to walk away from a story in which more than three-dozen people were massacred by the American state and not feel disturbed. A lot of the screenings that we’ve done, people say, ‘It just haunted me. I couldn’t stop thinking about it.’ I think that is as it should be. SPONSORED Sloan Science & FilmWatch films, read articles, and learn science at the Museum of the Moving Image’s website covering the intersection of science, film, and culture. Highlights include interviews with filmmakers and scientists, the Peer Review column, and a growing collection of Sloan Award-winning short films to stream. Image: “A Hole” © Molly Murphy MORE IN DOCUMENTARY When You Could Get a Three-Course Meal and Coffee for 25 Cents in New YorkLisa Hurwitz’s documentary finds some impressive interviewees, including Mel Brooks and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, to remember the bygone vending machine restaurant chain Horn & Hardart. | Mark Asch SPONSORED Stream Without a Whisper – Konnon:Kwe Presented by the National Museum of the American IndianAfter watching this film about Indigenous women’s influence on the early US women’s rights movement, viewers can check out a panel with the director and subjects. Learn more. Jeen-Yuhs Knows That Kanye West Isn’t a Riddle That Can be SolvedThe gargantuan three-part documentary follows the famous, controversial rapper for 20 years, capturing his brilliance and contradictions. | Juan Barquin Become a member today to support our independent journalism. OSCAR NOMINEES FOR BEST PICTURE From Jane Campion’s latest feature to the newest iteration of Dune, revisit our reviews of some of this year’s Oscar nominees for Best Picture. The Power of the Dog Is a Different Kind of Western FilmAcclaimed director Jane Campion returns to film with an all-star cast featuring Benedict Cumberbatch, Kirsten Dunst, and more. | Ela Bittencourt The New West Side Story Brings the Show’s Father Issues to the ForeDirector Steven Spielberg, long fixated on absent dads, interrogates this theme and other issues of patriarchy and gender roles in his cinematic take on the classic show. | Kyle Turner Licorice Pizza, Paul Thomas Anderson’s Ode to the San Fernando Valley of the 1970sStoner jokes, unexpected pop culture references, and an unlikely love story jangle against each other like charms on a bracelet. | Mark Asch Dune Is Impressive but IncompleteThe biggest problem with turning Dune into a film is that the book appears increasingly derivative of generic sci-fi tropes. | Dan Schindel
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