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  The Times of Harvey Milk  A devastatingly skillful and emotionally compelling documentary, The  Times of Harvey Milk charts the political rise and brutal slaying of  the first openly gay city official in the United State, Harvey Milk.  Ironically, the same election that brought Milk to the board of city  supervisors of San Francisco also elected the man who killed him, a former  police officer and fireman named Dan White. After White shot both Mayor  George Moscone and Milk, his defense lawyers convinced the jury that  White's judgment was impaired by depression and junk food, resulting in a  conviction for manslaughter instead of murder--a verdict that prompted  riots. With care and conviction, The Times of Harvey Milk captures  not only Milk himself, but also the political and social landscape in  which these events took place. The interviews--with friends, politicians,  and journalists--are articulate and heartfelt, expressing the impact that  Milk had upon this historical moment. --Bret Fetzer  Where Are We? (Our Trip Through America)  Accomplished documentarians Rob Epstein and Jeff Friedman (Common  Threads: Stories from the Quilt, The Celluloid Closet) take a  trip across the American South and Southwest, asking people about their  hopes and fears. Along the way they interview a mobile-home salesman, gay  and lesbian soldiers (including Gulf War veterans), a woman whose husband  built her miniature version of Graceland, a recovering drug addict who  aspires to movie stardom, a 15-year-old mother-to-be, and a casino owner  whose role models include Nelson Mandela and Mother Theresa. Where Are  We? (Our Trip Through America) is simple; none of the interviewees  says anything profound or complex--yet the movie captures an intriguing  and contradictory cross-section of the U.S., observing how people forge  ahead regardless of their circumstances, seeking happiness as best they  can. It's a striking portrait of resilience, illustrated with some amazing  hairstyles. --Bret Fetzer   Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt  As of 2004, a variety of drugs have been developed to resist, if not  cure, AIDS--yet Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt remains as  emotionally powerful as it was during the height of the crisis, when  people were dying by the thousands every year. With a combination of  photo-montages, interviews with friends and family members, home movies,  and news footage, this 1989 documentary captures the grief of those who have  survived victims of AIDS. It's wrenching to hear the mother of a  hemophiliac boy describing giving him blood transfusions in the middle of  the night, or seeing pictures of a former Olympic athlete with the  daughter he fathered with a lesbian mother, or hearing a Naval officer  describe his relief when he learned that he, like his dead lover, had the  virus--that the stress of waiting was over. A moving combination of art  and politics. --Bret Fetzer
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