The coronavirus pandemic pushed the release of a slew of narrative films into 2021, reducing the number of Best Picture contenders this Oscar season. But it’s a completely different story with documentary. Streaming platforms and other players didn’t hold back their nonfiction slate, and with the Academy relaxing qualification rules, the record for films in […]The coronavirus pandemic pushed the release of a slew of narrative films into 2021, reducing the number of Best Picture contenders this Oscar season. But it’s a completely different story with documentary. Streaming platforms and other players didn’t hold back their nonfiction slate, and with the Academy relaxing qualification rules, the record for films in […]FeedzyRead More
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The coronavirus pandemic pushed the release of a slew of narrative films into 2021, reducing the number of Best Picture contenders this Oscar season. But it’s a completely different story with documentary. Streaming platforms and other players didn’t hold back their nonfiction slate, and with the Academy relaxing qualification rules, the record for films in contention for Best Documentary is about to be shattered this year.

That makes this the perfect time to launch Deadline’s first Contenders Documentary, a virtual showcase of top nonfiction films this awards season. The event kicks off today at 8 a.m. PT. Click here to register and join the livestream, and follow along for the day on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram via @Deadline and #DeadlineContenders. See the full schedule of panels below.

The Contenders Documentary program, featuring conversations with a raft of Oscar-winning and Oscar-nominated filmmakers including Alex Gibney, Liz Garbus, Ron Howard, Bryan Fogel, Errol Morris, Gianfranco Rosi, Amy Ziering and Kirby Dick, reflects how filmmakers confronted some of the world’s most dire problems, like Covid-19. Hao Wu jumped into action when the novel coronavirus erupted, making the verite documentary 76 Days for MTV Documentary Films, a riveting look at patients and medical staff in locked-down Wuhan, China. Gibney wasted no time either, combining forces with two fellow filmmakers to document the Trump administration’s failed response in Neon’s Totally Under Control.

This past year also brought a reckoning with systemic racial injustice after the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. America’s legacy of intransigent racism forms the backdrop of two films from Amazon Studios: All In: The Fight for Democracy and Garrett Bradley’s Time. The latter title takes a granular view of the racial dimension to mass incarceration, examining the experience of a Black woman who spent years trying to win the release of her imprisoned husband.

All In, featuring Democratic party superstar Stacey Abrams, shows how the former Georgia gubernatorial candidate has fought to counteract the country’s long history of voter suppression targeting communities of color.

It’s another civil rights movement, one that empowered people with disabilities, that gets long overdue attention in the Netflix documentary Crip Camp. Judy Heumann, a key subject of the film and a leading disability rights activist, joins our conversation on that film.

Heumann began her activism in the 1970s. A new activist on the world scene, climate change warrior Greta Thunberg, is the focus of Hulu’s I Am Greta. And the threat from global warming also factors in Ron Howard’s Rebuilding Paradise, for National Geographic, a film about the California town wiped out by voracious wildfires in 2018, and in Sony Pictures Classics’ The Truffle Hunters. Even the pursuit of truffles in Italy’s Piedmont region, it seems, is endangered by climate change.

The explosion of documentary film in recent years has been driven largely by the emergence of streaming platforms. Along with films from Netflix, Hulu and Amazon, Contenders Documentary highlights award-winning documentaries from Apple TV+ and HBO Max.

Here’s the full rundown of today’s lineup and panelists:

CONTENDERS DOCUMENTARY PANEL SCHEDULE
(all times PT)

8 a.m. – WELCOME

8:0-8:23 a.m. – Hulu

I Am Greta
Nathan Grossman

8:23-8:44 a.m. – Amazon

Time
Garrett Bradley

All In: The Fight For Democracy
Liz Garbus
Lisa Cortes

8:44-9:29 a.m. – Showtime

My Psychedelic Love Story
Errol Morris

Belushi
R.J. Cutler

Kingdom of Silence
Rick Rowley
Mohamed Soltan

9:30-9:40 a.m. – MORNING BREAK

9:42-10:01 a.m. – Focus Features

The Way I See It
Laura Dern
Jayme Lemons
Dawn Porter

10:01-10:24 a.m. – Sony Pictures Classics

The Truffle Hunters
Michael Dweck
Gregory Kershaw

The Human Factor
Dror Moreh

10:24-11:09 a.m. – Netflix

Dick Johnson is Dead
Kirsten Johnson

Athlete A
Bonni Cohen
Jon Shenk

Crip Camp
Judy Heumann
Jim LeBrecht
Nicole Newnham

The Social Dilemma
Jeff Orlowski

11:10-11:40 a.m. – LUNCH

11:41 a.m.-12:22 p.m. – Neon

Gunda
Victor Kossakovsky

The Painter and the Thief
Barbora “Barbar” Kysilkova
Benjamin Ree

Totally Under Control
Alex Gibney
Ophelia Harutyunyan
Suzanne Hillinger

Notturno
Gianfranco Rosi

12:22-12:42 p.m. – HBO Max

On the Record
Kirby Dick
Drew Dixon
Amy Ziering

12:42pm – 1:03 p.m. – MTV Documentary Films

76 Days
Hao Wu

A Life Too Short
Safyah Usmani

1:03-1:13 p.m. – AFTERNOON BREAK

1:14-1:35 p.m. – Briarcliff Entertainment

The Dissident
Bryan Fogel
Jake Swantko

1:35-1:53 p.m. – Nat Geo

Rebuilding Paradise
Ron Howard
Michelle John
Xan Parker

1:53-2:12 p.m. – Apple TV+

Boys State
Amanda McBaine
Jesse Moss

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