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Anthony Weiner takes center stage in presidential race -- and IDA Awards

11/1/2016

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Doc on disgraced former Congressman -- who is under FBI investigation -- competes for IDA's top prize

Note: this article has been updated with information on additional awards categories, plus photos

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The International Documentary Association announced the nominees for its prestigious awards today, and one name came up that's been giving Democrats nightmares: Anthony Weiner.

The documentary Weiner, directed by Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg, earned one of six slots for the Best Feature Award, just a week before a presidential election in which Weiner's named has suddenly resurfaced.

​Kriegman and Steinberg's film documents Weiner's ill-fated attempt at political rehabilitation when he ran for mayor of New York City in 2013, an effort that imploded when it came to light he had continued to engage in salacious flirtations online -- sometimes using the risible moniker "Carlos Danger." A sexting scandal had previously forced him to resign from Congress in 2011.
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Weiner shows how the mayoral candidate's wife, Huma Abedin -- a close aide to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton -- stood beside her husband despite his sexting activities and disintegrating campaign. But Abedin finally announced her separation from Weiner in August of this year after yet another alleged sexting incident came to light.

Then came a report from the Daily Mail claiming Weiner had sent sexually suggestive texts to a 15-year-old girl, an allegation which attracted the attention of the FBI. Agents seized Weiner's laptop, tablet and cell phone as part of their investigation.

On Friday, in a much-criticized decision, FBI director James Comey announced new emails had surfaced that might bear on Clinton's use of a private email server while Secretary of State. Comey didn't disclose the source of those emails, but reports say they came from Weiner's laptop. As the New York Times put it in a headline on Sunday, "For Democrats, Anthony Weiner Makes an Unwelcome Return."

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Weiner will face competition from five other documentaries -- three that focus on America's troubled history with race.

>Ava DuVernay's 13th examines the country's history of racial discrimination going back to passage of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which outlawed slavery and involuntary servitude "except as punishment for a crime." The film demonstrates how that exception has been used to incarcerate African-Americans on a massive scale, in effect reconstituting slavery.

>I Am Not Your Negro, directed by Raoul Peck, explores race in America through the final work of the late writer James Baldwin, an unfinished book about the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X and Medgar Evers. The film won the audience award at the Toronto International Film Festival in September.

>OJ: Made in America, the monumental multi-part documentary by Ezra Edelman, has won acclaim for its intensely-researched examination of O.J. Simpson's trial for double murder. The 464-minute film situates the trial in the context of race relations -- both in the City of Los Angeles, where the trial took place, and in the nation generally.
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An image of the young O.J. Simpson from "OJ: Made in America," directed by Ezra Edelman. Courtesy ESPN Films
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James Baldwin, whose writings form the basis of the documentary "I Am Not Your Negro." Courtesy Magnolia Pictures
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A billboard for Ava DuVernay's documentary "13th" on Santa Monica Blvd. in West Hollywood, Calif. October 7, 2016 Photo by Matt Carey
Also in the running for the Best Feature Award is Kirsten Johnson's directorial debut, Cameraperson. The film from the renowned cinematographer is a meditation on the ethical dimensions of her work in such films as citizenfour, Fahrenheit 9/11, The Invisible War and many others.

Johnson is also nominated for the Best Short Award for her film The Above.

The sixth documentary in competition for the IDA's top award is Fire at Sea [Fuocoammare], directed by Gianfranco Rosi. His film takes place both on the Mediterranean island of Lampedusa and off the coast where thousands of migrants from North Africa and the Middle East have been attempting to reach Europe. In the midst of the crisis, Fire at Sea captures the coming of age of a 12-year-old Lampedusan boy, whose experience bears mysteriously on the plight of the migrants.

In February, Fire at Sea became the first documentary to win the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival.
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Samuele, the main character in Gianfranco Rosi's documentary "Fire at Sea," takes aim with a slingshot. Courtesy Kino Lorber
The IDA Awards will be presented on Friday, December 9 in Los Angeles. Fire at Sea will go into the night already assured of at least one award. The IDA announced it will honor the film and director Rosi with the Best Cinematography prize.

Best Writing will go to the late James Baldwin and director Raoul Peck for I Am Not Your Negro. Nels Bangerter, who edited Kirsten's Johnson's Cameraperson, will receive the Best Editing prize.
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Last year's IDA Awards drew an impressive crowd to the Paramount lot in Hollywood. Joshua Oppenheimer's film The Look of Silence earned the Best Feature Award in something of an upset over Amy, Asif Kapadia's documentary, which went on to win the Academy Award.

These are the directors in contention for the 2016 Best Feature Award.
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Kirsten Johnson. Photo by Matt Carey
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Gianfranco Rosi. Photo by Matt Carey
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Ava DuVernay. Photo by Matt Carey
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Raoul Peck. Photo by Matt Carey
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Ezra Edelman. Photo by Matt Carey
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Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg. Photo by Matt Carey
The IDA presents awards in a variety of categories. Here are some of the other contenders:

​Best Short Award

The Above
Director and Producer: Kirsten Johnson
Producer: Marilyn Ness
FIELD OF VISION

​Clinica De Migrantes: Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness

Director: Maxim Pozdorovkin
Producer: Jenny Lim
HBO

Extremis
Director and Producer: Dan Krauss
F/8 FILMWORKS LTD, NETFLIX

Pickle

Director and Producer: Amy Nicholson
MYRTLE & OLIVE, OSCILLOSCOPE

Red Lake
Director: Billy Luther
Producers: Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato
WORLD OF WONDER PRODUCTIONS

The White Helmets

Director: Orlando von Einsiedel
Producer: Joanna Natasegara
NETFLIX
___________________________


Best Curated Series Award

BBC Storyville
Executive Producer: Nick Fraser
BBC TV

DR2 Dokumania
Executive Producer: Mette Hoffmann Meyer
DR TV

Independent Lens
Executive Producers: Sally Jo Fifer and Lois Vossen
ITVS, PBS

Pacific Heartbeat
Executive Producers: Leanne Ferrer and Leslie Wilcox
AMERICAN PUBLIC TELEVISION, PACIFIC ISLANDERS IN COMMUNICATIONS

POV
Executive Producers: Justine Nagan and Chris White
POV, PBS
_______________________________________________


Best Limited Series Award

Belief
Executive Producers: Sheri Salata, Jonathan Sinclair, David Shadrack Smith and Oprah Winfrey
OWN: OPRAH WINFREY NETWORK

Cooked
Executive Producers: Alex Gibney, Stacey Offman, Michael Pollan and Caroline Suh
NETFLIX

The Circus: Inside the Greatest Political Show on Earth
Executive Producers: Scott Boggins, Ken Druckerman, Mark Halperin, John Heilemann, Mark McKinnon and Banks Tarver
Co-Executive Producers: Ted Bourne and Mary Robertson
SHOWTIME

 Making a Murderer
Executive Producers: Moira Demos and Laura Ricciardi
NETFLIX

Streets of Compton
Executive Producers: Brad Abramson, Elaine Frontain Bryant, Mark Ford, The Game, Alan Grunblatt, John Morayniss, Cash "Wack 100" Jones, Tara Long, Kevin Lopez and Shelly Tatro
ENTERTAINMENT ONE REALITY PRODUCTIONS, CREATURE FILMS FOR A&E
______________________________________________________________________

 Best Episodic Series Award

Chef’s Table
Executive Producers: David Gelb, Andrew Fried, Dane Lillegard, Brian McGinn and Matthew Weaver
NETFLIX

The First 48
Executive Producers: Elaine Frontain Bryant, Laura Fleury, John X. Kim, Alexis Robie and Peter Tarshis
Co-Executive Producers: Joey Grossfield and Maija Norris
A&E

Last Chance U
Executive Producers: Joe LaBracio and Greg Whiteley
NETFLIX

United Shades of America
Executive Producers: W. Kamau Bell, Jimmy Fox, Eli Holzman, Stephen Lambert, Star Price and Layla Smith
ALL3MEDIA AMERICA, CNN ORIGINAL SERIES, OBJECTIVE PRODUCTIONS USA

Woman with Gloria Steinem 
Executive Producers: Spike Jonze, Nomi Ernst Leidner, Eddy Moretti, Amy Richards, Shane Smith, Gloria Steinem and Ariel Wengroff
VICE MEDIA FOR VICELAND
_________________________


Best Short Form Series Award

30:30 Shorts
Executive Producers: John Dahl, Libby Geist and Connor Schell
ESPN

Children Deported
Executive Producer: Christer Fasmer
VGTV

Field Of Vision
Executive Producers: Charlotte Cook, Laura Poitras and AJ Schnack
FIELD OF VISION

NomiNation
Executive Producers: Lisa Leingang, Adam Pincus and AJ Schnack
VANITY FAIR / VANITYFAIR.COM

The New York Times Op-Docs 
Executive Producer: Kathleen Lingo
THE NEW YORK TIMES
________________________________


ABC News VideoSource Award
[THIS AWARD IS GIVEN EACH YEAR FOR THE BEST USE OF NEWS FOOTAGE AS AN INTEGRAL COMPONENT IN A DOCUMENTARY]

13th
Director: Ava DuVernay
NETFLIX

I Am Not Your Negro

Director: Raoul Peck
MAGNOLIA PICTURES

The Lovers and the Despot
Director: Ross Adam and Robert Cannan
MAGNOLIA PICTURES

Maya Angelou: And Still I Rise 

Directors: Bob Hercules and Rita Coburn Whack
PBS, AMERICAN MASTERS

Norman Lear: Just Another Version of You
Directors: Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady
LOKI FILMS, THIRTEEN/WNET, MUSIC BOX FILMS, PBS, AMERICAN MASTERS
 ​
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    Author

    Matthew Carey is a documentary filmmaker and journalist. His work has appeared on Deadline.com, CNN, CNN.com, TheWrap.com, NBCNews.com and in Documentary magazine.

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