As another year comes to a close, we have another opportunity to look back at what was. It is also, of course, the end of a decade, which is even more tempting to reflect upon — but let’s keep our eye on the recent past for a moment here.
And then there were the various docs that I think many here feel more interest in: the social issue and cultural narrative nonfiction films. It was a good year for fashionistas, with two really great films (The September Issue and Valentino: The Last Emperor) hitting it pretty big. But environmental-lifestyle issues seemed to be the hot subject this year, with Food, Inc., the number 5 film, being probably the most buzzed-about doc this year. There was also The Cove, the film about the dolphin slaughter in Japan.
Looking at the box office list also revealed a film I heard nothing about: Yoo-hoo, Mrs. Goldberg, which is about Gertrude Berg, a woman who had a radio show that became the first TV sitcom. Not only did I know nothing about Berg, I’d never heard of the doc, nor had I seen any media about it. And I see that it’s only playing in theaters in places like Schenectady, New York, Worcester, Massachusetts, and various cities in Florida — yet it’s made just over a million dollars. How could this film have made it to number 13 doc in terms of box office? I may have to track down director Aviva Kempner (The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg) and see just how she managed to tap into the little old Jewish lady syndicate to create a doc hit. It appears there are always new markets for doc filmmakers, as Kempner’s film reveals.
As for the past decade of docs — yeesh, it seems too large a subject matter to sum up in this post. I’ll just say that it was, indeed, “The Decade of the Documentary,” when you consider the way documentary films and reality television continued to explode throughout the culture, time and again. There were so many great films, and so many great filmmakers who emerged; it seems worthy of a book.
And the future? As I noted recently, the upcoming documentary slate at Sundance suggests that things are not slowing down. I look forward to seeing what the next decade brings.
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