Los Angeles Times

ULTRA-GRITTY SLICES OF LIFE

>>> Selections for the 2018 Academy Award documentar­y shortlist will be announced Dec. 17, with some 160 titles — and counting — to be considered. Here's a look at four contenders whose strong festival performanc­es and critical receptions suggest a good c

- BY STEVE DOLLAR

“Hale County This Morning, This Evening”

Daily life in an African American community in rural Alabama is the focus of filmmaker RaMell Ross’ visually arresting debut, which reconsider­s accepted ways of seeing black subjects on camera.

“The film is intended to be more than a black film,” said Ross, an establishe­d photograph­er and Brown University professor, whose project emerged gradually over the several years he spent doing community work and coaching basketball in western Alabama. “We’ve been telling very similar stories of what it is to be black. You have so little time in a film and so much to say that you wind up missing a larger point: that perhaps humans are more than their stories.”

The film’s impression­istic flow of images compresses five years into the arc of a single day — as implied in the title — as it tracks the lives of Daniel and Quincy, two high school basketball players, and those around them. The immersive visual approach, sensitivel­y attuned to the natural world and the characters’ movements through it, has prompted comparison­s to the work of cinematic visionarie­s Andrei Tarkovsky and Terrence Malick.

Ross said his technique owes something to basketball. “How do you use the camera as an extension of consciousn­ess and not so much as a capture mechanism?” he asked. “When you’re a pro basketball player, the ball is almost literally attached to your hands and in some physical sense it’s part of your body.” Ross discovered it was much the same with his DSLR camera.

“You write to get to know what you think,” he said. “You can use the camera to get to know how you see the world.”

“On Her Shoulders”

Given the opportunit­y to follow human rights activist Nadia Murad on a global media tour, documentar­ian Alexandria Bombach knew that her biggest challenge would be more than booking last-minute airline reservatio­ns.

“There’s a very particular cliche we assign to this role,” said Bombach of her subject, who recently won the Nobel Peace Prize, having in 2014 survived the Islamic State slaughter of 700 people in her Yazidi village and three months as a captive. Murad wrote powerfully of the experience in the memoir “The Last Girl: My Story of Captivity and My Fight Against the Islamic State,” and travels as a United Nations goodwill ambassador. In “On Her Shoulders,” Bombach’s camera is right behind Murad, revealing the 25-year-old’s extraordin­ary poise amid growing disillusio­n with the media, striving to frame her as a person, not a symbol — even as the television and radio hosts she meets often do the opposite.

“The packaging of trauma is a disservice,” said Bombach, who won the U.S. documentar­y directing prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, and best documentar­y feature at the doc-centric Camden Internatio­nal Film Festival. Her previous film, 2015’s “Frame by Frame,” co-directed with Mo Scarpelli, grounded the filmmaker in stories of conflict as she captured the struggles of four Afghan photojourn­alists.

“Simplifyin­g these stories and then throwing them over our shoulders is part of the problem,” she continued. “I wanted to bring out Nadia’s character, to see her as the three-dimensiona­l human that she is. That’s why I stuck so close to her. She’s looking you in the eye.”

“Free Solo”

What started as a character portrait of the American free climber Alex Honnold took a surprise turn the day he told the filmmakers — Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin — he wanted to scale El Capitan, a nearly 3,000-foot-high spike of granite in Yellowston­e National Park. No one had ever done a free solo climb of the wall, which was dangerous enough even with ropes. Honnold’s chosen “Freerider” route promised sheer, vertiginou­s peril.

“The filmmaker in me was, like, ‘Wow!’” Vasarhelyi recalled. “But I’m not the pro climber or risk expert.”

“I thought it was very risky,” said Chin, a filmmaker and profession­al climber, who had known and climbed with Honnold for many years. He asked Vasarhelyi, his wife and creative partner, several times, “Are you sure he meant El Capitan? It’s so far beyond what the climbing community could even conceive of, and it was hard to digest.”

Making “Free Solo” required extensive physical preparatio­n. It was a head game, as well. The task also posed a stark ethical question that the filmmakers put forth in their National Geographic documentar­y. They didn’t want to shoot if their presence compromise­d Honnold’s focus on the climb. “Alex had to perform perfectly on that day, but so did the team,” said Chin, whose tiny crew practiced with Honnold for 18 months prior to the historic June 3, 2017, feat.

The filmmakers spent a lot of time living with Honnold in his van, capturing the Zen-like intensity of his commitment. And then they got another surprise. “It was one of those really lucky documentar­y moments,” Vasarhelyi said, when Honnold began a romantic relationsh­ip with a new girlfriend, Sanni McCandless. The van became a lot cozier. And a project about extreme athletic endeavor took on an unexpected dimension.

“She was someone who was emotionall­y intelligen­t, and articulate and selfconfid­ent enough to push back on him but love him for who he is,“Vasarhelyi said. “You end up seeing him evolve emotionall­y.”

“Of Fathers and Sons”

The notion that “father knows best” turns chilling in this intense documentar­y, which won the world cinema documentar­y grand jury prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.

Director Talal Derki presented himself as an inquisitiv­e acolyte shooting propaganda in order to spend more than two years in northern Syria embedded with a fighter for what was then known as Al Nusra Front. There, patriarch Abu Osama trains his many sons to become terrorists, when he isn’t disarming landmines or sniping at off-camera enemies.

“Violence for them is a mission,” said Derki, a Syrian who now lives in Berlin. The intimacy of the family scenes can be unbearable at times, as paternal affection seems inseparabl­e from lessons of death.

The filmmaker is no stranger to risky production­s. His 2013 “The Return to Homs,” also a Sundance award winner, considered the fight of young men to survive in a city destroyed by the Syrian Civil War. Derki’s familiarit­y with the turf allowed him close access to the subjects of his new film, but he had to maintain their confidence in his sympatheti­c pose. “This was the game,” he said. “I had to be an acrobat, to balance myself all the time.“

The dangers were physical as well as psychologi­cal. Derki and his brave cinematogr­apher Kahtan Hassoun tread carefully with Osama into minefields, trusting his experience, but then the jihadist gets his foot blown off — an incident revealed only in its aftermath. “In the beginning, I thought I had just to close my eyes and follow his steps and nothing will happen,” Derki said. “But when that happened, I was really scared.”

Derki said he was told that a man identified as Osama was killed while dismantlin­g a car bomb on Oct. 17.

‘In the beginning, I thought I had just to close my eyes and follow his steps and nothing will happen.’ — TALAL DERKI, on following a subject through a minefield

 ?? Cinema Guild Cinema Guild ?? WILLIE rides a horse in “Hale County This Morning, This Evening,” a look at a rural Alabama community where director RaMell Ross coached basketball.
Cinema Guild Cinema Guild WILLIE rides a horse in “Hale County This Morning, This Evening,” a look at a rural Alabama community where director RaMell Ross coached basketball.
 ?? Oscillosco­pe Laboratori­es ?? NADIA MURAD and fellow activists attend a rally honoring Yazidi victims in 2016 in “On Her Shoulders.” She has since won the Nobel Peace Prize.
Oscillosco­pe Laboratori­es NADIA MURAD and fellow activists attend a rally honoring Yazidi victims in 2016 in “On Her Shoulders.” She has since won the Nobel Peace Prize.
 ?? Jimmy Chin National Geographic ?? ALEX HONNOLD becomes the first person to scale the vertical face of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park without ropes or safety gear in “Free Solo.”
Jimmy Chin National Geographic ALEX HONNOLD becomes the first person to scale the vertical face of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park without ropes or safety gear in “Free Solo.”
 ?? Kino Lorber ?? “OF FATHERS AND SONS” shows boys in Syria training with their father, Abu Osama, to be jihadists for the then-Al Nusra Front in northern Syria.
Kino Lorber “OF FATHERS AND SONS” shows boys in Syria training with their father, Abu Osama, to be jihadists for the then-Al Nusra Front in northern Syria.

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