I
IndieSnob
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That was somewhat based on me, since I'm hung like a horse.
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Auschwitz: The Nazis and the 'Final Solution.
Great doc.
Gates of Heaven (because Errol Morris is a god)
The Imposter (stylistically interesting and good story)
Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father (very amateur shooting/editing, but story is heartbreaking)
New York Doll ('cause New York Dolls and it's an awesome, well-edited/shot story that even non-NYD fans enjoy because of the Mormon angle)
There's tons, but this is all I got now. I like docs.
Spinal Tap
Spinal Tap
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ll7rWiY5obI*laughs* but it goes to eleven.
You must have created a magnetic thought-wave.Weird... I was thinking about Droogs the other day. Freaky.
Couldn't stand Kill Your Idols. As much of a fan I am of Sonic Youth and bits and pieces of the No-Wave scene, interviewing Karen O (god she's such a fucking joke) and even The Liars (like the band, but they're dipshits) about that scene, well, I couldn't take the stupidity.
Yeah. I like Sonic Youth and Kim Gordon is cool and all, but I am struggling to get what Thurston has to with the punk rock scene in NYC. In the vid he claims to have moved there in 1982-83 (IIRC)--just before the scene became commercialized (there's a wonderful quote by someone about Basquiat that sums up how ridiculous things got in there). For me he'll always be associated with the grunge scene more than the avant-garde--I feel like someone more appropriate should have been interviewed in his place, but David Byrne was obviously out to lunch so...
Fun Fact: For those who haven't seen the film, there is a brief, brief clip in it where Lydia appears to be going down on one of the actors in one of her films. I don't know much about her, but I get the impression she would've enjoyed Lit a lot.
Program Description
Of all the continents on Earth, none preserves a more spectacular story of our planet's origins than Australia. NOVA's four-part "Australia's First 4 Billion Years" takes viewers on a rollicking adventure from the birth of the Earth to the emergence of the world we know today. With help from host and scientist Richard Smith, we meet titanic dinosaurs and giant kangaroos, sea monsters and prehistoric crustaceans, disappearing mountains and deadly asteroids. Epic in scope, intimate in nature, this is the untold story of the land "down under," the one island continent that has got it all. Join NOVA on the ultimate Outback road trip, an exploration of the history of the planet as seen through the window of the Australian continent.
The marsupial lion is just one of numerous megafauna, or "big animals," that once lived in Australia. All of them are gone, rendered extinct under still mysterious circumstances sometime after humans first arrived on the continent some 50,000 or 60,000 years ago. In this slide show, see evocative illustrations of some of these extinct wonders as they might have appeared when alive, and find out what made them stand out.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/nature/australias-vanished-beasts.html
I'm hoping this one gets funded and made:
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/smogberrytrees/under-the-smogberry-trees-the-true-story-of-dr-dem
The Holocaust and My Father. Dunno if still available on iplayer.
The Australians, or the animals?... and how Oz ended up with such a bizarre set of creatures.
Meerkats. Anything with meerkats is the best kind of documentary.