5 Must-Watch Documentaries for Oscar Nominations


A chimp, a horseman, a New York Times photographer and a high school football team are among the stars of the year’s best.One never really knows what to expect from the Academy’s quirky documentary branch, a portion of which selects the short list from which the five nominees are ultimately selected each year.

Of the 15 on the list this year, I think that five stand apart from the rest: Critics’ Choice Award best doc nominee and Boston Society of Film Critics best doc winner Project NimJames Marsh’s follow-up to his 2008 best doc Oscar winner Man on Wire, which revisits a decades-long experiment on a chimpanzee to see whether or not he could communicate with humans; Critics’ Choice Award best doc nomineeBuckCindy Meehl’s profile of famed “horse whisperer” Buck BrannamanIf a Tree Falls, a look at a landmark “eco-terrorism” case from 2005 best doc Oscar nominee Marshall Curry; Boston Society of Film Critics best doc runner-up Bill Cunningham New YorkRichard Press’ appreciation of a noted — and eccentric — fashion photographer; and Critics’ Choice Award best doc nominee UndefeatedDaniel Lindsay and T.J. Martin’s TWC-distributed and celebrity-endorsed look at a high school football team that reverses its fortunes under the tutelage of a new coach.
I would also keep a close eye on Michael Galinsky and Suki Hawley’s Battle for Brooklyn, which follows a local activist as he wages a seven-year fight to prevent his home and neighborhood from being demolished to make way for a massive real estate development; Long Way Home: The Loving StoryNancy Buirski’s look back at an interracial couple’s effort to defeat anti-miscegenation laws during the Civil Rights era;David Weissman’s We Were Here, which recounts the early days of the AIDS epidemic in San Francisco; PinaWim Wenders’ German-subtitled 3D tribute to the noted dance choreographer Pina BauschHell and Back AgainDanfung Dennis’ powerful portrait of the struggles facing American veterans of the war in Afghanistan; and Sing Your Song,Susanne Rostock’s behind-the-scenes look at the life and times of singer/civil rights activist Harry Belafonte.

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