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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe best documentaries of 2011 from Roger Ebert
1. The InterruptersSteve James (in center above), who made the masterpiece "Hoop Dreams," now makes his most important film, telling the story of ex-convicts who go daily into the streets of Chicago to try to talk gang members out of shooting at each other. All have done prison time. Some have murdered. They were young when were seduced by the lure of street gangs. Today they see young people throwing their lives away and often killing bystanders by accident.
James' film follows members of CeaseFire, tough negotiators who monitor gang activity in their neighborhoods and try to anticipate developing warfare. They make it their business to know the gang leaders and members. They build trust. In some shots in this film they are physically in the possible line of fire--and so are Steve James and his small crew. This film has true impact.
8. Garbo the Spy
He was called "Garbo" because an Allied spymaster thought he was the best actor in the world. Juan Pujol García, a Spaniard based in Lisbon, fed the Nazis a stream of misleading information from a spy network that existed entirely in his imagination. Using invented facts and a spy network that didn't exist, he convinced the Nazis that the Allied landing at Normandy was a decoy operation to draw their troops away from the "real" landing site, at Calais. One man's imagination changed the course of the way.
Lacking period footage of Garcia (naturally), director Edmon Roch ingeniously cobbles together newsreel footage, scenes from old war movies, and modern talking heads to piece together his story of a startling deception.
All 20 here: http://blogs.suntimes.com/ebert/2011/12/the_best_documentaries_of_2011_1.html
Would like to see some of these!
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The best documentaries of 2011 from Roger Ebert (Original Post)
Are_grits_groceries
Dec 2011
OP
Ichingcarpenter
(36,988 posts)1. If you like WW2 spy stories :Double Agent - the Eddie Chapman Story
The most extraordinary spy in British history
writer and presenter Ben Macintyre returns to the small screen to bring to life his other best selling book - Agent Zigzag. As part of the Timewatch series, Macintyre will reveal the gripping true story of Britain's most extraordinary wartime double agent, Eddie Chapman.
A notorious safe-breaker before the war, Chapman duped the Germans so successfully that he was awarded their highest decoration, the Iron Cross. He remains the only British citizen ever to win one. Including remarkable and newly-discovered footage from an interview Chapman gave three years before his death in 1997, Macintyre goes on the trail of one of Britain's most unlikely heroes in this true-life ripping yarn - a story of adventure, love, intrigue and astonishing courage.
Reviews
A dream story told with great flair The Times
Very entertaining... a terrific tale The Independent
A thrilling war documentary Metro
A rip-roaring tale, expertly and enthusiastically told The Guardian
Fascinating The Telegraph
Riveting The Times
frazzled
(18,402 posts)2. I haven't seen it yet, but ...
Mr. Frazzled (who saw a preview) says "The Interrupters" is totally top-notch.