Over the weekend, simply blocks away from President Trump’s June 14 navy parade in Washington, D.C., the third annual DC/DOX bought underway. The four-day documentary movie pageant kicked off on June 12 and highlighted movies that discover a few of America’s most urgent points, together with college shootings, e-book banning that focus on race and LGBTQIA+ points, assaults on free speech and the nation’s rising revenue and wealth divide.
Director Anayansi Prado was at DC/DOX with “Uvalde Mother,” a characteristic doc in regards to the 2022 mass college capturing that rocked the small city of Uvalde, Texas, and left 19 kids and two academics lifeless. Prado stated that screening her movie in D.C. throughout the navy parade felt significant.
“There are such a lot of movies right here which can be addressing actually vital social justice and world points, so I feel it’s actually important and fascinating that this pageant is going down on the day of the navy parade,” Prado stated. “The truth that we’re all right here as a neighborhood of documentary filmmakers, I have a look at it as if we’re holding house, and that’s an act of resistance.”
Based by Sky Sitney and Jamie Shor in 2022 with the purpose of bringing collectively revolutionary visions, daring voices, and well timed tales in Washington, D.C., the 2025 version of DC/DOX included 59 options and 35 shorts from over two dozen international locations.
A number of hit docs from Sundance 2025 have been a part of this 12 months’s DC/DOX lineup, together with Geeta Gandbhir’s “The Good Neighbor,” “2000 Meters To Andriivka” directed by Oscar-winner Mstyslav Chernov (“20 Day In Mariupol”), David Osit’s “Predators,” Kim Snyder’s “The Librarians,” Ryan White’s “Come See Me within the Good Gentle,” and Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady’s “Folktales.”
As crowds gathered throughout the U.S. to take part in “No Kings” rallies protesting the Trump administration, Erika Dilday, who runs PBS’ POV and America ReFramed, addressed latest information that the Home of Representatives accredited laws to eradicate the subsequent two years of PBS federal funding.
“We aren’t going anyplace,” Dilday stated throughout the fest’s June 14 state of the trade panel dialogue. “We’re going to combat.”
One of the vital controversial docs to return out of Sundance 2025 – Bao Nguyen’s “The Stringer” – made its DC/DOX debut on June 15. It’s solely the second fest that “The Stringer” has screened at since its debut in Park Metropolis.
The movie claims that Nick Ut, the Related Press photographer who gained a Pulitzer Prize for taking a 1972 Vietnam Battle photograph popularly often known as “Napalm Woman,” wasn’t the photograph’s writer. As an alternative, the doc alleges that Nguyen Thanh Nghe, a freelancer and a driver for NBC, truly captured the picture and has been denied recognition for many years.
Nguyen and an investigative workforce led by Gary Knight, founding father of The VII Basis, and producers Fiona Turner and Terri Lichstein, interviewed 55 individuals, together with Nghe and former AP photograph editor named Carl Robinson, who claims he was pressured to alter the credit score by his boss. Additionally they drew on forensic proof, resembling pictures and photographs taken of the occasion, and commissioned 3D modeling to attempt to show Ut was not able to take the photograph that made him world-renowned.
After “The Stringer” premiered at Sundance, the blowback was intense. James Hornstein, an lawyer for Ut, stated in an electronic mail that “a defamation motion will quickly be filed towards the filmmakers.” Nguyen, who was in D.C. for the screening of “The Stringer,” stated {that a} lawsuit from the AP by no means surfaced. The director added that he was “a little shocked” by the blowback.
“We knew that the story can be disruptive for a lot of causes within the photojournalist and journalism neighborhood as an entire,” Nguyen stated. “However my statement from what has gone on for the reason that movie premiered at Sundance is that merely asking the query will get individuals in hassle in some methods. I imagine that one of many tenets of journalism is asking the questions and pursuing the reality. Sure features of the dialog and dialogue in regards to the movie and the topic have made me rethink whether or not individuals need the query to be requested, and whether it is, they’re anticipating a sure reply, or they don’t seem to be keen to pay attention.”
In Could, after a prolonged investigation, World Press Photograph suspended Ut’s credit score for the long-lasting {photograph}. That very same month, the AP determined to not change the credit score on the well-known {photograph}.
DC/DOX concludes on June 15.

















































