Chris Marker réalise un portrait de son ami Alexandre Medvedkine qui retrace conjointement l'histoire de l'URSS et celle d'un réalisateur partagé entre idéologie et indépendance.
Ce n'est pas une biographie de film habituelle, mais un voyage dans les coulisses de Gregory Peck et de son one man show. Le programme itinérant de l'acteur propose des séances de questions-réponses avec l'icône américaine et permet à l'acteur de se remémorer sa carrière.
En 1996, Marcello Mastroianni parle de la vie d'acteur. C'est un mémoire anecdotique et philosophique, passant d'un sujet à l'autre, pleinement conscient d'un homme "d'un certain âge" regardant son passé.
Debtocracy (Χρεοκρατία (Chreokratía)) est un film grec documentaire sorti en avril 2011 de deux journalistes grecs : Katerina Kitidi et Aris Hatzistefanou. Le film traite principalement de la crise de la dette grecque de 2010, et prend pour exemple le cas de l'Équateur, et montre comment ce pays a réussi à s'en sortir grâce à un audit de sa dette et en répudiant une partie de sa dette. Les fondateurs du projet Debtocracy soutiennent que la Grèce doit suivre la même voie en commençant par créer une commission d'audit de la dette souveraine1 puis en sortant de l'euro. Ce film a connu un vif succès en Grèce. Près de 500 000 personnes ont visionné le film une semaine après sa sortie sur internet, plus d'un million quelques semaines plus tard. Le projet a été intégralement financé par des donations.
This documentary traces the careers of cinematographers László Kovács and Vilmos Zsigmond. These lifelong friends are Hungarian expatriates who had been studying cinematography in Hungary and defected following the 1956 Soviet invasion. Coincidentally, they also photographed many of the tumultuous events during the invasion.
The film opens on a beach in Malibu, where Tobolowsky recounts a miraculous swim he took on an earlier birthday. It continues in the kitchen of his home, as he boils sausages for his guests and recounts stories about his early auditions in Los Angeles. After some stories in the backyard, where he is grilling the sausages, the guests arrive. Then Stephen entertains his guests with stories about being nominated as one of 100 coolest people in LA, being in a rock 'n' roll band, and working on such films as Bird on a Wire and Mississippi Burning.
The film opens as South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone leave New York City and the 2011 opening night of their Broadway production The Book of Mormon to return to Culver City, Los Angeles to begin the fifteenth season of South Park. The documentary chronicles the production of the season premiere, "HumancentiPad", beginning the Thursday prior to airing. Parker and Stone, alongside producers Anne Garefino, Vernon Chatman, Bill Hader, and Susan Arneson, toss out ideas for the episode. Parker mentions his frustration with downloading the latest version of iTunes, and being forced to comply with the software's long list of terms and conditions. The anecdote leads to ideas, with Parker instructing the storyboard team on how to stage a shot. The film covers various aspects of production, including voice acting, animation, lip sync, communication with standards and practices, character design, and editing.
The documentary follows four salesmen as they travel across New England and southeast Florida trying to sell expensive Bibles door-to-door in low-income neighborhoods, and attend a sales meeting in Chicago. The film focuses in particular on salesman Paul Brennan, a middle-aged Irish-American Catholic from Jamaica Plain, Boston, who struggles to maintain his sales.