On November 11, two days after the opening of the 14th edition of the Montreal International Documentary Festival (RIDM), the event’s organizers received a letter calling into question the selection of Crazy Horse, Frederick Wiseman’s documentary about the famed Parisian cabaret, as the festival’s opening film.
Signed by 20 filmmakers, producers and cinephiles, as well as nine other individuals who had not seen the film but supported the idea of a public debate on the topic, the letter expressed the group’s shock and outrage at the programming choice. They called the film an “indulgent and sexist work” and found the selection all the more perplexing since its status as the opening film left no room for discussion after the screening. Accusing the RIDM team of using tired marketing ploys to draw people in, the letter calls for a public discussion about the “representation of women onscreen.” Lire la suite