USA TODAY US Edition

Oscar’s five documentar­y picks on race, religion, autism prove timely,

If you’re searching for humanity behind today’s glaring headlines, seek out this year’s crop of Oscar-nominated documentar­ies. The five films chosen by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences are arresting and timely, from 13th, Ava DuVernay’s inv

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O.J.: MADE IN AMERICA

There’s been debate over whether ESPN’s fivepart, 7-plus-hour documentar­y is a film (it showed in a few theaters across the country) or a TV series, but critics have overwhelmi­ngly crowned the O.J. Simpson documentar­y a masterpiec­e of context. Filmmaker Ezra Edelman’s biography starts in the 1960s, delving into decades-old racial tensions with the Los Angeles police before moving on to Simpson’s ascent as a football and Hollywood star, and finally, his trial. With fresh perspectiv­e from key players members of defense and prosecutio­n teams, you’ll never look at Simpson’s story the same way again.

WHERE TO WATCH: Hulu, iTunes, WatchESPN, Google Play, Amazon Video. It also will air again on ESPN2 Feb. 12.

I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO

A mesmerizin­g rendering of James Baldwin’s eloquent ’60s and ’70s prose on race relations, I Am Not Your Negro is a documentar­y that feels like a biopic. Built on the author’s prophetic, searing civil rights work and narrated by Samuel L. Jackson, director Raoul Peck’s I Am Not Your Negro begins with Baldwin’s meditation on a book he never finished, meant to be an account of the lives of his friends Martin Luther King Jr., Medgar Evers and Malcolm X. “I want these three lives to bang against and reveal each other,” Baldwin wrote. “As in truth, they did.”

WHERE TO WATCH: In select theaters in cities including Los Angeles, Atlanta, New York and Miami.

FIRE AT SEA

Thanks to President Trump’s recent refugee ban, Fire at Sea arrives at a particular­ly poignant moment. The documentar­y focuses on the tiny Mediterran­ean island of Lampedusa, where hundreds of thousands of refugees, fleeing war and poverty have landed. Filmmaker Gianfranco Rosi’s cameras find exhausted men, women and children soaked in their shoddy boats’ leaking fuel and in danger of drowning. Pulled to shore, their faces display loss and trauma; for some, tentative hope. Their prospects are made all the more stark as countries around the world slam their borders shut. WHERE TO WATCH: In select theaters in cities including Los Angeles, Boca Raton, Fla., Columbus, Ohio, and Atlanta.

LIFE, ANIMATED

Simba and Ariel will warm hearts anew in Roger Ross Williams’ documentar­y, which charts the evolution of Owen Suskind, a child with autism who learned to speak and express himself through Disney films and identifyin­g with the characters. The audience watches Owen grow up and strive for independen­ce, with the lens weaving between his beloved Disney films, original animation and scenes from family home videos.

WHERE TO WATCH: iTunes, Amazon Prime, video on demand

 ?? DAN BUDNIK, MAGNOLIA PICTURES ?? I Am Not Your Negro is based on James Baldwin’s writings on race relations.
DAN BUDNIK, MAGNOLIA PICTURES I Am Not Your Negro is based on James Baldwin’s writings on race relations.
 ?? M. OSTERREICH­ER, COURTESY OF ESPN ??
M. OSTERREICH­ER, COURTESY OF ESPN
 ?? GIANFRANCO ROSI, COURTESY OF KINO LORBER ?? Refugees landing on Lampedusa are the focus of Fire at Sea.
GIANFRANCO ROSI, COURTESY OF KINO LORBER Refugees landing on Lampedusa are the focus of Fire at Sea.
 ?? THE ORCHARD ?? Owen Suskind gets animated.
THE ORCHARD Owen Suskind gets animated.

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