IDA Announces FallDocs 2023 Film Lineup, Big Platform For Documentaries Seeking Awards Glory
31.08.2023 - 19:47
/ deadline.com
EXCLUSIVE: The International Documentary Association announced the lineup for its prestigious FallDocs 2023 program, featuring a slew of Oscar contending nonfiction films as well as more than two dozen films that haven’t yet nailed down distribution.
FallDocs (previously known as the IDA Screening Series) launches on Tuesday, September 19 with Apple TV+’sStill: A Michael J. Fox Movie, screeningat The Culver Theaterin Los Angeles with a post-screening reception. Deadline confirmed today that Davis Guggenheim’s film about the Canadian-born actor will be submitted for Academy Award consideration this year; it earned seven Emmy nominations earlier this year, more than any other documentary project.
The FallDocs series runs from September 19 through November 16, with all in-person screenings held in Los Angeles at The Culver Theater and virtual screenings on IDA’s Eventive streaming platform. Scroll for the full lineup.
In addition to Still, FallDocs will showcase Beyond Utopia, directed by Madeleine Gavin which plays at the Telluride Film Festival this afternoon; Bobi Wine: The People’s President (directed by Moses Bwayo and Christopher Sharp; Silver Dollar Road, Raoul Peck’s new documentary that premieres at the Toronto International Film Festival; Every Body (directed by Oscar nominated filmmaker Julie Cohen); Stephen Curry Underrated (directed by Peter Nicks and produced by Ryan Coogler); Sound of the Police (directed by Stanley Nelson); The Eternal Memory, the Sundance-winning film directed by Maite Alberdi; Lakota Nation vs. United States (directed by Jesse Short Bull and Laura Tomaselli), and Roger Ross Williams’ Stamped From the Beginning.
In addition to the Bobi Wine documentary from National Geographic, the NatGeo
The website popstar.one is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can
send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.