Five Essential Contemporary Documentary Filmmakers

You can learn a lot about the world by watching a great documentary film. Interested in learning more about this fascinating film genre? Here are five skilled practitioners of the art of documentary filmmaking whose work you should know.
 
Ken Burns
Ken Burns is a filmmaker with a range of interests, having produced engaging films on topics ranging from the Civil War, the history of baseball, jazz, and America's national parks. Burns uses photographs and other archival footage to bring the past to life. His work has won multiple Emmy awards and garnered two Oscar nominations.
 
Steve James
Steve James is known best for his ambitious and important documentary Hoop Dreams. That film chronicles the lives of two Chicago-area high school students with basketball ambitions. James followed that award-winning film with several other projects, including documentaries like Stevie and The Interrupters.
 
Michael Apted
An acclaimed filmmaker, Michael Apted has created a variety of award-winning documentary work. Most impressive is his Up Series, a project following the lives of several British children from different backgrounds. The first installment of the series was made when the children were seven years old; Apted has revisited them every seven years since, producing in the process a catalogue of films that chronicle how people change — or don't — across the years.
 
Kavery Kaul
Born in India, Kavery Kaul is a documentary filmmaker who has received a variety of honors, including fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts. Kaul's best known films include Long Way From Home, One Hand Don't Clap, Back Walking Forward, and Wild at Art.
 
Errol Morris
Best known for his ambitious engagements with difficult subjects, Errol Morris is a documentary filmmaker who also occasionally writes for the New York Times. Morris's best-known works are The Fog of War, a sustained interview with former Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, and The Thin Blue Line.

5 Must-See Documentaries That Will Leave You In Awe

Though it's fun to escape into the fictional world of Hollywood movies, sometimes it's equally exciting to explore the real life tales that are the subjects of intriguing documentaries. Here are five destined to dazzle viewers:

Six O'Clock News
Filmmaker Ross McElwee explores the stories behind the headlines in this understated yet powerful film. Throughout it, McElwee interweaves events from his own life with closer looks into stories he's seen on the evening news.

Grey Gardens
This film is a quirky portrait of two of Jackie O’s distant relatives that are living in Hamptons squalor. The Maysles Brothers, who produced this documentary, are legends of their craft.

Man On Wire
This film chronicles the world’s greatest tightrope artist, Phillipe Petit, and his death-defying stunts. Petit is an unforgettable protagonist who will enthrall you every step of the way.

Gates Of Heaven
Director Errol Morris has long been known for this portrayals of interesting characters. In this documentary, the focuses his lens on the somewhat eccentric operators of a pet cemetery.

Hands On A Hard Body
S.R. Bindler’s amazing film about an endurance contest in rural Texas, where ordinary folks stand touching a truck until they pass out in hopes of winning the prize.

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