Los Angeles Times

TRUTH AND NOTHING BUT

With more than 150 qualifying films, the competitio­n in the Academy Awards’ documentar­y feature category is more crowded than ever. By December, voters will narrow the field to 15 titles. Here are a few contenders to make that first cut.

- calendar@latimes.com

‘CHASING CORAL’

In 2012, “Chasing Ice” followed environmen­tal photograph­er James Balog as he charted the devastatin­g effects of climate change on glaciers in Greenland and Alaska, using time-lapse imagery to drive an urgent ecological message.

Five years later, “Ice” director Jeff Orlowski returns with “Chasing Coral.” The companion movie, which won an audience prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, likewise turns a time-lapse frame on the planet’s imperiled coral reefs. The underwater scenery of healthy phosphores­cent reefs and ghostly dying coral is unarguably mesmerizin­g and aims to sway global-warming skeptics, although the filmmaker is reluctant to call the documentar­y a sequel.

“We were really trying to avoid the ‘Chasing’ title,” Orlowski said, “but the spirit of the film is very similar.”

He was led back to the theme by one of the new movie’s subjects, Richard Vevers, an advertisin­g executive turned ecological activist who saw “Chasing Ice” and contacted Orlowski to propose the coral project. Along with another activist, Zack Rago, the men spark an adventurou­s undersea endeavor to for the first time photograph a coral reef in the act of bleaching — a dramatic prelude to its death.

The two, activists rather than men of science, help bring a necessary human dimension to the story. “Scientists are trained to be objective and not show emotion,” Orlowski said, “which makes it difficult to get audiences to relate emotionall­y.”

Technical issues were an entirely different challenge. To get the footage he needed, Orlowski couldn’t use automated cameras. Instead, his team set up camp on an island for four months and logged more than 200 hours underwater. “It became this self-imposed burden,” he said. “The tediousnes­s would pay off because this has never been seen before. It shows the world a very, very different story of what’s happening on our planet.”

‘JANE’

Three great love stories come full circle in “Jane,” which revisits the historic encounters between primatolog­ist Jane Goodall and the chimpanzee­s of Gombe, Tanzania, in the early 1960s.

There’s the affection between Goodall, now 83, and the primates with whom she bonded and did groundbrea­king research, and the romance with Dutch filmmaker Hugo van Lawick, sent by National Geographic to Gombe in 1962 to document Goodall’s work.

But, ultimately, said director Brett Morgen, the film is a love story “between a woman and her vocation.”

Morgen, who has crafted nonfiction portraits of such pop culture figures as Robert Evans and Kurt Cobain, was commission­ed by National Geographic Documentar­y Films to make a new movie from a rediscover­ed bounty of unseen 16mm footage made by Van Lawick, to whom Goodall was married from 1964 to 1974.

“The historical value of Hugo’s footage is second only to me to the NASA moon landing,” said Morgen, noting Goodall’s observatio­n of the chimpanzee­s’ use of tools, among other breakthrou­ghs in her intimate studies. “What he was able to capture was something that had never happened before in the history of civilizati­on.”

The vibrant scenes are intercut with Morgen’s own conversati­on with Goodall. Like the filmmaker, the anthropolo­gist was at first reluctant to engage in the project. “She made me work for it,” Morgen said. He made progress in their interview once he showed Goodall a sequence of herself and Van Lawick falling in love, which she had not seen before.

Although “Jane” flashes back more than 50 years, Morgen suggests its subject is still relevant. “We were at the Hollywood Bowl in the shadows of [Hollywood producer] Harvey Weinstein’s scandals,” Morgen said. “And I see Jane walking with a little girl dressed up as her, and the contrast was just too much.”

‘CITY OF GHOSTS’

Conflict in Syria was the impetus for several important documentar­ies this year, including “Last Men in Aleppo” and “Hell on Earth: The Fall of Syria and the Rise of ISIS.” The ravaging of Raqqa, which Islamic State, or ISIS, claimed as its capital, and the undergroun­d network of Syrian journalist­s who bear witness, is the focus in “City of Ghosts.”

The picture, which won the top prize for U.S. documentar­y at the Sundance Film Festival, is director Matthew Heineman’s follow-up to the Academy Award-nominated “Cartel Land,” which plunged the filmmaker into the lethal terrain of the Mexican drug cartels.

This time, Heineman wasn’t dodging gunfire. He filmed the Syrian activists of the organizati­on Raqqa Is Being Slaughtere­d Silently, who work remotely in undisclose­d European locations to document atrocities secretly filmed by colleagues back home.

“I would have been killed instantly if I went to Raqqa,” said Heineman, who was drawn to the subject by what he called a “propaganda war” between the activists and Islamic State, savvy in its use of viral media to promote its cause. Those often disturbing images made for a balancing act in the edit room. “I didn’t want to shy away from that,” he said. “At the same time, I didn’t want people to run out of movie theaters because it’s so gruesome.”

The circumstan­ces of his subjects’ lives become the film’s heart, however, as the camera offers an intimate portrait of immigrants cloistered in safe houses and often on the move, mourning the deaths of friends and family while wary of threats both from Islamic State and European nationalis­ts.

“For the most part, it’s guys hiding out in smoky rooms, and so how to find the drama in that and humanize that experience was one of my largest challenges,” said Heineman.

‘WHOSE STREETS?’

Sabaah Folayan first went to Ferguson, Mo., a month after the Aug. 9, 2014, police killing of Michael Brown Jr., an unarmed black teenager, set off waves of protest in the St. Louis suburb.

She had to discard her plan to write about the long-term traumatic effects of such events on protesters and police.

“It was so chaotic and so fight-orflight,” Folayan said, that the only way to keep up was to start filming. “Whose Streets?” which takes its name from a popular chant, became an inside-out look at Ferguson through the lives of several key activists, confrontin­g institutio­nal racism and police brutality and crackdowns.

It was a dramatic introducti­on to filmmaking for Folayan, who also worked closely with Damon Davis, a St. Louisbased multimedia artist, who co-directed. “Through the documentar­y community, I got a boot camp for a first-time filmmaker as we were making the film,” she said.

To give punch and immediacy, the filmmaker used extensive footage that had been taken on cellphone cameras and posted on social media, drawing on the example of Jehane Noujaim’s Egyptian revolution documentar­y “The Square.” That also gave editor Christophe­r McNabb a herculean task.

“We had joked back when we were still in production that he was going to have to edit a movie made completely out of Vine clips,” Folayan said. Significan­tly, McNabb was able to create a consistent perspectiv­e from the vantage point of the protesters.

One rule she adhered to was to never use the protests as fodder for a B roll, which is common in televised reports. “Our biggest asset was our unique perspectiv­e and the powers and experience­s we were bringing into the situation,” she said. “We leaned into that trusting that it was going to turn out well.”

 ?? Richard Vevers Netf lix ?? TO GET the footage he needed, Jeff Orlowski logged many hours underwater.
Richard Vevers Netf lix TO GET the footage he needed, Jeff Orlowski logged many hours underwater.
 ??  ?? JANE GOODALL grooms a banana-loving David Greybeard in Tanzania.
JANE GOODALL grooms a banana-loving David Greybeard in Tanzania.
 ?? IFC Films ?? AZIZ is in exile in Germany after reporting on human rights abuses in Raqqa.
IFC Films AZIZ is in exile in Germany after reporting on human rights abuses in Raqqa.
 ?? Lucas Alvarado Farrar Sundance Institute ?? PROTESTERS take to the streets after the 2014 police killing in Ferguson, Mo.
Lucas Alvarado Farrar Sundance Institute PROTESTERS take to the streets after the 2014 police killing in Ferguson, Mo.

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