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Tag Archives: Lynn Zhang

Christopher Llewellyn Reed’s 10 Documentaries to Watch from Sundance 2019

Posted on February 3, 2019
Written by: Christopher Llewellyn Reed

The Sundance Institute was founded in 1980 by actor Robert Redford in Park City, Utah, as a filmmaking laboratory to promote the art and craft of independent cinema. In 1985, the Institute took control of the U.S. Film Festival, later … Continue reading →

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Posted in Christopher Llewellyn Reed, Featured, Festivals | Tagged Alex Gibney, Alexandre O. Philippe, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Alien, Andrew McConnell, Anthropocene: The Human Epoch, Apollo 11, China, chrisreedfilm, Christopher Llewellyn Reed, documentaries, documentary, Edward Burtynsky, Elizabeth Holmes, Fog of Truth, Garry Keane, Gaza, Hail Satan?, Hammer to Nail, Harvey Weinstein, Hassan Fazili, Jennifer Baichwal, Kim Longinotto, Knock Down the House, Lynn Zhang, Maiden, Matt Tyrnauer, Memory: The Origins of Alien, Midnight Traveler, Nanfu Wang, Nicholas de Pencier, One Child Nation, one child policy, Park City, Penny Lane, Rachel Lears, refugees, Robert Redford, Satanic Temple, Shooting the Mafia, Sundance 2019, sundance film festival, sundance institute, The Inventor: Out for Blood in Silicon Valley, Theranos, Todd Douglas Miller, Tom Skerritt, Untouchable, Ursula Macfarlane, Utah, Where's My Roy Cohn? | Leave a comment
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  • Featured Specialty

    Film Review: Magnificent “Midnight Family” Sheds Light on the Human Condition

    Midnight Family (Luke Lorentzen, 2019) 4 out of 4 stars. Imagine a country with a terrible national health-care infrastructure and little regulation over the ways that desperate citizens seek to not only do business, but survive. No, it’s not the … Continue reading →

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    Film Review: “7 Days to Vegas” Is a High-Stakes Real-Life Gamble

    7 Days to Vegas (Eric Balfour, 2019) If you do a quick Google search on the question “can you walk to Las Vegas?” you’ll be met with results spanning from walking from the airport to the Strip, among other reasonable … Continue reading →

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    Film Review: “White Snake” Is a Charming, Fantastical Chinese Adventure

    White Snake (Amp Wong/Ji Zhao, 2019) 3 out of 4 stars. I’m not one to typically watch Far Eastern animated films. I never got into anime, and I rarely catch animated films in the United States, to be frank. However, … Continue reading →

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    Film Review: “Ernie & Joe: Crisis Cops” Offers Hope for a Troubled World

    Ernie & Joe: Crisis Cops (Jenifer McShane, 2019) 4 out of 4 stars. Jenifer McShane’s new documentary Ernie & Joe: Crisis Cops begins with the statistic that 1 in 5 Americans has a mental-health diagnosis. Then – bam! – we cut … Continue reading →

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