Metro

HARD PILL TO SWALLOW Vitamania and the Science Behind Supplements

In this era of entertainment oversaturation, when films can live or die on word-of-mouth praise, the documentary is having a mini moment. Showing in Australian cinemas at the time of writing are blockbuster documentaries on two fashion luminaries (McQueen, Ian Bonhôte, 2018; Westwood: Punk, Icon, Activist, Lorna Tucker, 2018) and one on US President Donald Trump (Fahrenheit 11/9, 2018) by pop-doco superstar Michael Moore. Time reports that, over the 2018 American summer alone, three US documentaries with theatrical releases – Morgan Neville’s Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, Julie Cohen and Betsy West’s RBG, and Tim Wardle’s Three Identical Strangers – collectively grossed US$45.7 million at the domestic box office.1 And online it’s no different: streaming services Netflix, Stan and their competitors have stocked up on a cache of documentaries on everything from the murder of child-pageant star JonBenét Ramsey (Casting JonBenet, Kitty Green, 2017) to the phenomenon of relationships with sizeable age differences (Netflix’s Age Gap Love).

Among these expansive interest areas, there’s always a special spot in our hearts for what might be categorised as ‘pop-health’ docos: films exploring subjects in the health-sciences sector that are of great interest to

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Metro

Metro1 min read
Metro
Managing Editor Peter Tapp editor@atom.org.au Editor David Heslin metro@atom.org.au Contributing Editors Liz Giuffre, Rochelle Siemienowicz, April Tyack Art Director Pascale van Breugel Sales & Online Services Manager Zak Hamer online@atom.org.au
Metro11 min read
‘The Stars Are All Strange ’ Here
Inspired by the long-overlooked history of the cameleers who journeyed from Afghanistan and beyond to haul supplies across the late-nineteenth-century Australian outback, Roderick MacKay’s debut feature paints a complicated portrait of the country’s
Metro10 min read
Hip-hop Of A Different Hue
New Zealand hip-hop label Dawn Raid Entertainment has been a trailblazer since its launch in 1999, bringing a distinctly Polynesian sensibility to a traditionally African-American artform – a journey chronicled in Oscar Kightley’s new documentary. At

Related Books & Audiobooks