The Death Tour (2024) [Slamdance 2024]

The Slamdance Film Festival runs Digitally and In-Person from January 19th to January 28th.

Directors Stephan Peterson and Sonya Ballantyne’s documentary is probably one of the most important and meaningful documentaries about the art of pro wrestling ever released. It’s a movie just not about the love and sacrifice for the art form, but also a documentary about the marginalized and how more and more the indigenous community is quietly being pushed out off the edges of Canada and being transformed in to a sea of blank and forgotten people. Stephan Peterson and Sonya Ballantyne chronicle the weeks long tour across Manitoba known as “The Death Tour” where a group of pro wrestlers visit various indigenous and small communities in the dead of winter to perform for children and families.

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Invaluable: The True Story of an Epic Artist (2014) [Blu-Ray]

Now Available from Synapse Films.

Behind every good movie series there are the fans that help fuel it and Tom Sullivan is probably one of the biggest and best of them all. One of the biggest indie horror success stories is Sam Raimi’s “Evil Dead” and how it rose from low budget feature to horror masterpiece. It wasn’t an overnight success but one that was helped by the fervent love and passion by its creators Sam Raimi, Bruce Campbell and Tom Sullivan. Sullivan was one of the FX artists that helped Sam Raimi engineer “Within the Woods” in to “The Evil Dead” and worked very hard on “The Evil Dead.”

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The War on Disco (2023)

Lisa Quijano Wolfinger’s “The War on Disco” is a great documentary—if you have minimal to zero knowledge about disco music. For an hour long documentary it does very little to take advantage and explore the lesser known corners of the Disco boom of the 1970’s. It’s all pretty much a superficial and speedily paced buffer about the entire craze called Disco Music. Known for a long time as an enemy to rock music, Disco was a sub-genre of dance music that allowed for a lot more diversity, which prompted a lot more people to hate it.

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Milli Vanili (2023)

If you were alive during the early nineties, you remember the infamous rise and shocking fall of the pop band Milli Vanilli. For many, many years they were synonymous with really bad pop music. Their crash and burn on stage with a malfunctioning machine that revealed their lip synching to a massive crowd also amounted to their ultimate downfall. Although what many didn’t know over the last twenty five years is that while Milli Vanilli were perceived as con artists, they were sadly pawns in a massive scheme to artificially build pop super stars.

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The Day the Music Died: The Story of Don McLean’s American Pie (2022)

“And do you believe in rock and roll? Can music save your mortal soul?”

 Director Mark Moormann’s documentary is probably one of the more interesting stories about one of the most important, if not the most important rock and roll song ever made. Don McLean’s epic ode to “The Day the Music Died” is a compelling rock epic that bemoans the end of a more innocent time in rock music. This is not only a time where three titans of rock and roll perished in a tragic crash, but it also seemingly ushered in a wave of events that began to change America and society.

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Priscilla (2023)

After last year’s goofy “Elvis” failed to really bring us anything new about the actual man known as Elvis, it’s refreshing to see “Priscilla” come along a year later. Sofia Coppola’s biopic about Elvis’ iconic wife Priscilla is the absolute antithesis of a love story. It’s the anti-romance, and the unsensational depiction of Elvis and Priscilla and how their marriage and romance came out of a utilitarian circumstance more than a genuine love and passion. What may trouble fans of Elvis and Priscilla is that this is a movie that finally views Elvis in a new light. He was a man who was possessive, controlling, self-obsessed, and often times incredibly abusive.

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Nightclubbing: The Birth of Punk Rock in NYC (2022)

“Max’s was where punk was a movement; CBGB’s is where you went to get a record deal.”

I’ll admit that while I’m very well versed in the history of rock and roll, I almost never heard of Max’s Kansas City. I always heard about CBGB’s throughout my life, but almost never heard about Max’s Kansas City. The club was known as the premiere scene for not just rock and roll stars, but movie stars, celebrities, tabloid makers, and anyone that the alternative scene could produce. There’s a very fascinating story behind Max’s Kansas City and how it set the template for the punk rock scene, but never really got the credit it deserved. All the while CBGB’s was almost universally heralded.

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