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‘For Sama’ Wins Top IDA Documentary Award; ‘Leaving Neverland’ and ‘The Cave’ Also Score

'Honeyland' also took two prizes, as the wins focus attention on a narrowing field of nonfiction contenders.
For Sama
"For Sama"

Filmmakers Waad al-Kateab and Edward Watts’ “For Sama” (PBS) took top honors at the 35th Annual IDA Documentary Awards at the Paramount Theatre Saturday night. The harrowing and intimate portrait of a young couple who continued to live in Aleppo with their new baby while under intense fire from government troops took home Best Feature. “It’s a dark time in the world,” said British filmmaker Watts, who helped Al-Kateab shape her extraordinary footage into a film. “When I think about documentaries right now I feel hope that things are going to get better.”

A show of enthusiastic IDA support came early in the evening with a rousing standing ovation when Al-Kateab accepted the coveted Courage Under Fire award, given to someone who demonstrates extraordinary courage in pursuit of the truth. The Channel 4 film has already notched documentary wins from the European Film Awards, the British Independent Film Awards, and the Cannes Film Festival, as well as a PGA nomination.

Another Syrian film, “The Cave” (NatGeo) took home Best Writing for Alisar Hasan and director Feras Fayyad, who was not able to re-enter the country to attend the IDA awards due to “Trump travel ban issues,” he tweeted. “Hope to be back in US soon.”

Honeyland
“Honeyland”Neon

Macedonian Oscar submission “Honeyland,” which was an arduous eight-year journey for directors Tamara Kotevska and Ljubomir Stefanov, came away with two prizes: Best Cinematography and IDA’s Pare Lorentz Award. Stefanov thanked the film’s central character, bee hunter Hatidze Muratova, who “opened her life for us,” as well as Neon and SFFilm for their support. “We are not stopping here,” he said.

Dan Reed’s searing Michael Jackson exposé “Leaving Neverland” scored Best Multi-Part Documentary; HBO did not submit the Sundance premiere for the Oscars.

Other winners include Julia Reichert and Steven Bognar, who accepted IDA’s inaugural Best Director Award for their China-Ohio culture clash “American Factory.” Bognar thanked the people in the glassworks factory “who let us dive deep into their lives. Working people are giving more and getting less while the billionaire class keeps growing.” And he thanked backer Participant Media, as well as the Obamas’ Higher Ground and Netflix, for taking the film “farther and wider than we ever dreamed.”

IDA executive director Simon Kilmurry also announced a new initiative, the IDA Global Grant. Underwritten by Netflix, in its first year the grant will provide a $25,000 cash award and ongoing support to an emerging filmmaker from one of four countries – Brazil, Mexico, South Korea and India.

The IDA and the Doc Society are taking Secretary of State Michael Pompeo and the acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Chad Wolf to court over rules that require visa applicants to provide their social media handles to the government, which “infringes their rights and freedom of expression,” Kilmurry said.

"Homecoming"
“Homecoming”Courtesy of Parkwood Entertainment

Netflix’s “Homecoming: A Film by Beyoncé,” directed by Beyoncé Knowles-Carter and Ed Burke, won Best Music Documentary, accept by musician and memoirist Moby, who offered the filmmakers in the room financing for a movie about the impact of animal agriculture on climate change.

A&E and Lifetime’s “Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone (if you’re a girl)” landed Best Short. Director Carol Dysinger, who has been shooting in Afghanistan since 2005, said she “loved the girls who get so little but are so bright, so insane and so lovely.” As for making documentaries, “it may not be a living, but it’s a wonderful life.”

Honorary awards were presented throughout the ceremony. The Career Achievement Award went to Oscar-winner Freida Lee Mock (“Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision”), who also helped create the documentary branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Documentary funder Cinereach, launched in 2006, accepted the Pioneer Award, per the IDA, “for its bold support of filmmakers.” Sundance Director of Documentary Tabitha Jackson compared the organization to the NASA space program, and praised its catalytic art-driven philosophy, artist fellowships, and championing of producers. Cinereach has pushed fiction and non-films forward with 200 grants (including Oscar nominees “Hale County, This Morning This Evening” and “Strong Island”), and produced and/or co-financed 15 feature films (including “I Am Not Your Negro”) as well as giving grants to 15 groups and organizations.

The Emerging Documentary Filmmaker Award went to Rachel Lears, whose Netflix film “Knock Down the House” won the Audience Award at Sundance 2019. “Documentary storytelling tells a vital role,” said Lears, “in expanding empathy in a way only true stories can.”

Presented by her friend Chelsea Handler, Leah Remini took home the inaugural Truth to Power Award for exposing abuse within the Church of Scientology in her series “Leah Remini: Scientology and its Aftermath.” The Amicus Award went to the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press for their work in defending press freedoms for almost 50 years.

Here’s the full list of 2019 IDA award winners.

Best Feature
“For Sama” (Syria, UK / PBS Distribution, Channel 4, FRONTLINE. Director/Producer: Waad al-Kateab. Director: Edward Watts)

Best Director
Steven Bognar and Julia Reichert (“American Factory,” USA / Netflix)

Best Short
“Learning to Skateboard in a Warzone (if you’re a girl)” (Afghanistan, UK, USA / Lifetime
Films, A&E IndieFilms. Director: Carol Dysinger. Producer: Elena Andreicheva)

Best Curated Series
“Dokumania” (Denmark / Danish Broadcasting Corporation. Executive Producer: Anders Bruus)

Best Episodic Series
“Abstract: The Art of Design” (USA / Netflix. Executive Producers: Scott Dadich, Morgan Neville, Dave O’Connor, Justin Wilkes and Jon Kamen)

Best Multi-Part Documentary
“Leaving Neverland” (USA / HBO. Director/Producer: Dan Reed. Executive Producers: Nancy Abraham and Lisa Heller)

Best Short Form Series
“A Moment in Mexico — The New York Times Op-Docs” (Mexico, USA / The New York Times. Executive Producer: Kathleen Lingo. Coordinating Producer: Lindsay Crouse)

Best Audio Documentary
“A Sense of Quietness” (UK / BBC Radio 4. Producer: Eleanor McDowall. Executive Producers: Alan Hall and Rachel Hooper)

Best Music Documentary
“Homecoming: A Film by Beyoncé” (USA / Netflix. Director/Producer: Beyoncé Knowles-Carter. Director: Ed Burke. Producers: Steve Pamon and Erinn Williams)

David L. Wolper Student Documentary Award
“Brewed in Palestine” (USA, Israel, Palestine / UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism. Director/Producer: Emma Schwartz)

Best Cinematography
“Honeyland” (Macedonia / NEON. Cinematographers: Fejmi Daut and Samir Ljuma)

Best Editing
“Midnight Family” (Mexico, USA / 1091. Editor: Luke Lorentzen. Co-Editor: Paloma López Carrillo)

Best Music Score
“The Raft” (Denmark, Sweden, USA / Metrograph Pictures. Composer: Hans Appelqvist)

Best Writing
“The Cave” (Denmark, Syria, USA / National Geographic. Writers: Alisar Hasan and Feras Fayyad)

Pare Lorentz Award
“Honeyland” (Macedonia / NEON. Director: Tamara Kotevska. Director/ Producer: Ljubomir Stefanov. Producer: Atanas Georgiev)

Honorable Mention
“Anthropocene: The Human Epoch” (Canada / Kino Lorber. Directors: Jennifer Baichwal, Nicholas de Pencier and Edward Burtynsky. Producer: Nadia Tavazzani)

ABCNEWS VideoSource Award
“Mike Wallace Is Here” (USA / Magnolia Pictures. Director/Producer: Avi Belkin. Producers: Rafael Marmor, John Battsek, Peggy Drexler and Christopher Leggett)

2019 IDA Documentary Awards Honorary Awards

Amicus Award
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

Career Achievement Award
Freida Lee Mock (“Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision,” “Anita”)

Courage Under Fire Award
Waad al-Kateab (“For Sama”)

Emerging Documentary Filmmaker Award
Rachel Lears (“Knock Down The House,” “The Hand That Feeds”)

Pioneer Award
Cinereach

Truth to Power Award
Leah Remini

See details on all winners here.

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