TimeOut film critic Peter Calder plunges into the doco programme for this year's New Zealand International Film Festival and comes up with some recommendations.
The films in this year's documentary line-up number more than 50 and the canny festivalgoer will recognise that most of them won't be seen on a big screen here again, and book accordingly.
Lee Hirsch's Bully and The Ambassador by Dane Mads Brugger, whom festival director Bill Gosden calls this year's Morgan Spurlock, look unmissable, and those Neil Young fans whose brains weren't fried by bad acid will surely be queuing for Jonathan Demme's well-regarded solo-concert film.
The most striking of the films I previewed was certainly Marina Abramovic: The Artist is Present of which the less said the better, in order to protect the pristine experience that it gave me. A biopic of a noted performance artist, it also depicts her preparation for and presentation of the title's piece which she staged at MoMA in New York in early 2010. Be moved and amazed.
If you can't remember the 60s, you may have trouble appreciating the impact that Bernadette Devlin McAliskey made. A miniskirted, mouthy firebrand, she was elected to the House of Commons at the age of 21 - where she memorably whacked the Home Secretary after being denied the right to address his claim that British soldiers in the Bloody Sunday massacre had fired in self-defence. The comprehensive and engrossing Bernadette: Notes on a Political Journey includes oodles of archival footage - though not the slap - and present-day interviews with the woman herself.