New Haven Documentary Film Festival


New Haven Documentary Film Festival is an annual documentary film festival held in New Haven, Connecticut, in early June. Screenings take place at Yale University’s Whitney Humanities Center Auditorium, the New Haven Free Public Library and at the rock club Cafe Nine. NHdocs is a regional festival that showcases documentaries by filmmakers from the greater New Haven area and beyond. NHdocs was launched in 2014 when the film festival’s co-founders Charles Musser, Gorman Bechard, Jacob Bricca, and Lisa Molomot came together at the Big Sky Documentary Film Festival and decided to create a documentary film festival in New Haven that would “build a sense of community among documentary filmmakers from the greater New Haven area.” In 2014, the four filmmakers each showed one of their recently completed documentaries, three of which had just played at the Big Sky.
When Brica and Molomot left Connecticut to teach at University of Arizona, Bechard and Musser assumed the role of co-directors and programmers for NHdocs. The 2015 festival displayed over 20 documentaries including "first looks" at two nearly completed: Richard Wormser's NEH funded American Reds; What Must We Dream Of? and Audrey Appleby's Tiny Miracles-Awakening Memory and Emotion in an Alzheimer’s World. Brendan Toller's rock doc Danny Says, about music industry executive Danny Fields, was moderated by Timothy Young of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, which had recently acquired Fields' papers, and Gorman Bechard's animal welfare feature A Dog Named Gucci. Many of the films look at New Haven in terms of its openness to immigrants, the history of the New Haven Green, and efforts to combat homelessness.
In 2016, the festival grew to 11 days, featuring over 40 films, including Midsummer in Newtown, The Champions, and co-founder Bechard's own Who Is Lydia Loveless? Three Newtown/Sandy Hook-related shorts had their world premieres at the festival: Kim A. Snyder’s #WeAreAllNewtown, Notes from Dumblane and Sue Roman’s Team 26. The festival also paid tribute to documentarian Alex Gibney, with a three-day retrospective: “Revealing Scams, Lies, Trickery and Deceit: The Documentaries of Alex Gibney.” screening 5 of his feature films. Gibney himself was present for Q&A sessions, and lead a panel on filmmaking.
The Fourth Annual New Haven Documentary Film Festival ran June 1–11, 2017. The festival featured over 60 documentary features and shorts including I Am Shakespeare: the Henry Green Story, Travel Light, High School 9-1-1, and The Lavender Scare. The second weekend will conclude with a retrospective of work by D. A. Pennebaker and Chis Hegedus, including Unlocking the Cage.
The 2018 version ran from May 31June 10, 2018 and featured tributes to Amy Berg, Su Friedrich, and HBO's Sheila Nevins. The festival opened with a standing-room-only presentation of a work-in-progress screening of co-director Bechard's Pizza, A Love Story, and included over 80 films such as co-director Musser's Our Family Album, Allison Argo's The Last Pig, This is Home: A Refuge Story from director Alexandra Shiva and Joe Tropea's Sickies Making Films.
In the fall of 2018, NHdocs announced its fall screening series, which will reprise a number of festivals' most popular films.
The festival kept expanding in 2019. The 6th edition running from May 30-June 9, honors America’s best-known documentarian, Michael Moore. The second weekend of the festival will feature seven of his most notable works, including the 30th-anniversary screening of Roger & Me, Bowling for Columbine, Where to Invade Next, Fahrenheit 9/11 and Fahrenheit 11/9. All the films will feature Moore joined in conversation by other award-winning documentary filmmakers, including D.A. Pennebaker, Chris Hegedus and Peter Davis. In all, NHdocs will screen over 100 documentaries at five venues. There will also be a student film competition, filmmaking workshops, awards, works-in-progress screenings, panels, and musical performances.