PORCELAIN WAR (2024, doc)

November 22, 2024

Greetings again from the darkness. While we have grown accustomed to movies about war, this documentary is a true and stunning war movie. There are no special effects or stunt doubles or guns with blanks. The bombs are as real as the three people bringing us an all too intimate look at the war.

Slava Leontyev creates porcelain figurines, and his wife Anya Stasenko paints them – often with color and inspiration from nature. Slava and Anya are dedicated artists and it’s art that connects them to their friend Andrey Stefanov. Slava and Anya bring the personal aspect to this film, while Andrey’s work with the camera speaks the horrific truth. The war in Ukraine began in 2022, and when we meet Slava and Anya, they are in Kharkiv, a mere 25 miles from Russia.

“We are ordinary people in an extraordinary situation.” What initially hits as such an understatement, soon make sense as we watch Slava and Anya go about living within their new reality … a reality that involves warning sirens, underground shelters, and the whistle of incoming bombs that lead to explosions causing and property damage and human deaths. The tenacious and disrespected Ukrainian army is made up mostly of civilians willing to fight for their country after the invasion. Slava spends a good amount of time training civilians on basic firearm usage. It’s quite a contrast to his art, yet both are crucial.

We are told, “If one doesn’t stop evil, it keeps going” … a lesson we hope world leaders understand. The homes and lives of these folks will never be the same, but as they explain, stories told through art prevent erasure. Andrey states, “Bad people are not as creative at being bad, as good people are at being good.” We hope he’s right and we hope that matters. These stories are told amidst craters and rubble and incoming missiles. The danger and urgency of each minute ensures the horror is always as present as their pet pooch, Frodo. It is explained to us that porcelain and Ukraine are similar in that they both break but are nearly impossible to destroy. Co-directed by Brandon Bellomo and Slava Leontyev, this was the Grand Jury Prize winning documentary at Sundance.

PORCELAIN WAR will open in theaters, beginning on November 22, 2024 in NYC, on November 29 in Los Angeles, followed by a roll out across North America

WATCH THE TRAILER


THE REMARKABLE LIFE OF IBELIN (2024, doc)

October 24, 2024

Greetings again from the darkness. As parents we fool ourselves into believing we know our children and what they are up to. After all, they live in the same house and eat the same meals. Norwegian documentarian Benjamin Ree shows us quite a contrast to this theory. What happens when a loving family discovers their son’s secret life much too late?

Trude and her husband Robert were thrilled when their son Mats was born in 1989. Shock and disappointment hit hard when Mats was diagnosed with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, a rare degenerative muscle disease for which there is no cure. Trude describes the pain of watching her son grow weaker. He had little appetite, became wheelchair bound, and made no real friends. As he got older, the parents refused to limit his computer time, as it was the only thing Mats seemed to want to do.

At age 18, Mats started a blog. By age 25 he was dead. His final blog entry was “Musings of Life”. Since the parents had Mats’ password, Robert posted “The Journey has Come to an End.” The family, including Mats’ sister Mia, assumed that was the end of it. What followed was a true blessing (and shock) for the family. Tributes and remembrances of Mats streamed in from the online community. It turns out, Mats was a vital and active member of the Starlight group within the World of Warcraft gaming field. Mats had created a new persona known as Ibelin, and he lived an online life that was impossible for him in the real world.

Some of these Starlight folks held a memorial for Mats, which meant so much to the family. We hear directly from some of the folks Mats had helped along the way. He was described as intuitive at helping other lost souls. His dad calculated that Mats had spent approximately 20,000 hours online over the last ten years of his life, and the family was elated that Mats had not led the life of isolation they assumed, and instead thrived behind the Ibelin avatar. This revelation was a true blessing, and it’s told beautifully in this documentary.

On Netflix beginning October 25, 2024

WATCH THE TRAILER