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Adriane McCray’s documentary installation—“MVMTLS: Movement of Lone Stars,” the memories of life in South Dallas decades ago—is at the South Dallas Cultural Center through March 24.
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A new documentary takes a look at the LBJ biographer and his editor: “They’re in a kind of race against time to finish their life’s work.”
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“What we learned is that for Willie, family is obviously blood relatives. It’s his band. It’s his fans. Family is the record buying public. Family is people who come to concerts. Family is something that he does so naturally. And this is part of his magic,” co-director Oren Moverman says.
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A group of University of Texas at Dallas students made headlines in 2013 by establishing the first Muslim fraternity in America. Now two Dallasites have released a documentary that follows them from their first rush week.
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The Oak Cliff Film Festival kicks off today for its 11th year showcasing local talent and independent films, many of which aren’t yet available to watch online.
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The new documentary "Echoes from the Hill" tells the story of Arlington's historic Black neighborhood through former residents and archives. The first episode of the five-part series premieres during the city's Juneteenth celebration, and a new episode will roll out each year.
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Actor Melissa McCarthy and her husband, filmmaker Ben Falcone, are big fans of Ross. But they found it was difficult to land interviews about the celebrity painter — people were scared of being sued.
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Sam Pollard's documentary deftly examines the FBI's intense surveillance of Martin Luther King Jr. in the final years of his life.
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From Texas Standard:There’s a historical marker in Presidio County that tells the story of a massacre that took place a century ago in the small town of…
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Linda Holmes takes a look at the list of this year's nominees, which includes some heartening nods and surprising snubs.
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Mimi is 92, but it's her 64-year-old daughter who must leave their suburban Dallas home for an assisted living facility. Sophie Sartain's documentary…
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In late 2012, filmmaker Steve James and Roger Ebert began talking about filming a documentary based on Ebert's memoir. Ebert's wife, Chaz, agreed. They didn't know that he would die within months.