In Recap: Sheffield Doc/Fest
The 2015 lineup was angry, astonished by the times
(Image: The Look of Silence)Sheffield Doc/Fest has exploded in recent years, but the locals don’t seem to have noticed yet. An unpretentious old steel town-cum-developing Northern powerhouse, Sheffield becomes a cultural hub for six days each year. Many of the born-and-bred continue minding their own business in the meantime, apparently without realizing they’re rubbing shoulders with some of the most important and influential people in the world of documentary. Were any local to have followed the mysterious groups moving between screenings, though, they’d have found venues—a handful of small cinemas, theaters, city halls—bulging with filmmakers, press and prospective buyers.
The other major hint for outsiders as to the goings-on was, bizarrely, a traditional American school bus—with the words “Sheffield Doc/Fest” writ large on the side—awaiting passengers as they exited the Sheffield train station. Whether intentionally or not, the vehicle was perhaps an indicator from the off of the festival’s mindfulness this year of U.S. affairs. Recent American political history was served well by the likes of The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution and Greenpeace doc How to Change the World, eventual winner of the festival’s Environmental Award.
More urgent matters took priority, though, with features screened on topics as current as gun control (Surviving Sandy Hook), the war on drugs (Cartel Land), sexual abuse on university campuses (The Hunting Ground), economic disparity (The Divide), racial tension (3 ½ Minutes, Ten Bullets), and climate change and its continued denial (Merchants of Doubt). Adam Curtis’s phenomenal Bitter Lake, a mesmerizing collage charting U.S.-Middle Eastern relations from the 1950s to the present day, also got an airing, alongside drone warfare pic Drone.
There were, of course, films in the program not quite as interested in America or the current sociopolitical climate. One standout, The Confessions of Thomas Quick, sought to pull a trick on the audience by warping the traditional purpose of the documentary—to document the truth—in telling the story of Sture Bergwall, once believed to have been Sweden’s first serial killer. Doc/Fest is a U.K. festival, so Britain was well represented, too. But even there, the present political situation seemed the focus, with films on Margaret Thatcher’s legacy (Generation Right) and the far-right movement (Angry, White and Proud).
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