This Week’s DVD Releases

Perhaps in the midst of SIFF you would like to take a break? That would be crazy. But if you would like to watch a film at home for a change, there are plenty of options new to DVD.

Unfortunately, the big new releases for this week are not very good. I Am Number Four, based on the first book in the “thrilling paranormal teen romance sci-fi adventure” series, is about an alien or something, while Gnomeo and Juliet is yet another kids’ film overly heavy on adult pop culture references. Which means that you’re going to have to split the difference and watch The Royal Wedding: William and Catherine instead.

Better bets for new DVD releases this week are in the documentary section. There’s Martin Scorsese’s look at writer Fran Liebowitz in Public Speaking, while Picasso and Braque Go to the Movies shows early filmmaking’s influence on cubism. A Small Act is the true story of how a young Kenyan boy’s life is changed when his education is paid for by a woman he never met, and after he becomes a success, he decides to pay it forward. Similarly, there’s Phish: Live in Utica.

This week also brings four documentaries to DVD by French director Nicolas Philibert: In The Land Of The Deaf, his 1992 film chronicling the lives of hearing-impaired people of all ages and walks of life; Every Little Thing (1997) follows patients at a psychiatric clinic as they put on a play; and Louvre City (1990) goes behind the scenes of the world-famous museum. His latest film Nenette is a portrait of a 40-year-old orangutan who lives at the Paris zoo.

And that’s when the documentaries started to get weird. Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo played SIFF a few years ago, and explores the number of beetles and other insects kept as tiny pets in Japan! Do not see Eatrip until after you’ve already had a big meal. The film explores the interpersonal relationships that food nurtures via an “eating trip” (hence the title), and this documentary takes you on a journey through Japan looking at how life can be lived richly simply through the daily ritual of eating. Meanwhile, in God Went Surfing with the Devil, young surfers (Israelis and Arabs) risk their lives to hit the waves by smuggling surfboards into Gaza.

Seasons 1 and 2 of Adult Swim’s Grey’s Anatomy satire Children’s Hospital are now on DVD, in anticipation of the beginning of season 3 next week. Also on the comedy tip is The Kids in the Hall’s latest, Death Comes to Town. Transformers: The Complete Series is out on DVD, as is The Unknown War: WWII and the Epic Battles of the Russian Front, which are really the same thing, if you think about it. If you have not lived until you’ve seen Ice Road Truckers taking on India, there’s season 1 of Deadliest Roads. And surely you’ve heard of the sitcom pairing up Melissa Joan Hart and Joey Lawrence? Whoa.

Also this week, Platoon has a new two-disc Blu-Ray DVD combo pack, the Gettysburg director’s cut is now on Blu-Ray, and not to be outdone, Gods and Generals has an expanded director’s cut out this week. The Criterion Collection has two new releases, and they’re big ‘uns: Charlie Chaplin in The Great Dictator and Andrey Tarkovsky’s Solaris. Shout Factory has another new Roger Corman Cult Classics double feature with Eat My Dust and Grand Theft Auto. Also new to Blu-Ray: Tigerland, Grand Prix, Le Mans, and Papillon.

In the grab bag, The Big Bang is a budget bin private investigator thriller that somehow stars Antonio Banderas, James Van Der Beek, and Snoop Dogg. And I don’t know what a Lemonade Mouth is, but apparently it’s family-friendly.

SIFF: Week One Dispatches

the SunBreak at SIFF 2011

One week of SIFF down, three weeks of film festival to go! Be sure to check the SIFF updates page to see which films are already sold out or are selling fast. Individual tickets for most films cost $11 for the public and $9 for SIFF members. Matinees are a bit cheaper ($8/$7) and those who are more willing to commit can consider all sorts of passes still for sale as well as slightly discounted packs of tickets in bundles of 6 or 20.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at what SIFF films all of us at The SunBreak saw this week as well as the films that we’re most looking forward to seeing over the next couple days. Note that this weekend is ShortsFest Weekend, SIFF’s exploration of mini-masterpieces.

WHAT WE SAW:

Josh: I can see why Natural Selection charmed the pants of audience and jury alike at SXSW. Rachel Harris is luminous as a dowdy Christian housewife who, in shock from learning that her husband’s been secretly donating sperm at the clinic while keeping their marital bed chaste, undertakes a wild road trip to fulfill a his stroke-addled mumbled request to find one of his children. Her quest turns up an escaped convict on the run and the mismatched pair hit the road. In his first feature Robbie Pickering strikes a near-perfect blend of comedy and drama. (Friday May 27, 4 p.m. @ Egyptian)

I misread a description, accidentally saw a burlesque movie, and sort of liked it! On Tour finds Mathieu Amalric directing himself as a fallen impresario leading an American “New Burlesque” troupe around the harbor towns of France. As the women get restless from shuffling from venue to venue without seeing much of the country but hotels and theaters, Amalric’s motivations for returning to France after a stint in the U.S. slowly become more clear. The film captures the sense of being constantly on the move without really going anywhere. The same could be said for the story, which plays like a hybrid documentary and narrative (the dancers are all real performers) but the vignettes, performances, and behind-the-scenes looks at the unglamorous aspects of show business make it worthwhile. (Saturday, 9 p.m. @ Admiral; June 9, 9:30 p.m. and June 11, 3:30 p.m. @ the Neptune)

MvB: Page One, the behind-the-scenes New York Times documentary, is both tumultuous and a lot more fun than you might expect of a film that begins with mass layoffs as newspapers across the country die. Director Rossi gets into meetings that even Times staffers don’t get to attend, and you meet an unlikely star, David Carr, a recovering addict who also happens to break huge stories as you peer over his shoulder or listen in to phone calls. (Saturday, 11 a.m. @ the Egyptian; Monday, 3:30 p.m. @ Everett)

Steam of Life, if you’re up for confessional sauna-ing, is a fascinating glimpse of unflinching male soul-baring as you traverse the Finnish social spectrum in the company of Nordic men. At times hard to watch, it’s also beautiful, surprising, and funny, as men damaged by divorce and custody hearings break down, homeless men find a respite from the world, and Santas ruefully discuss a lack of respect for the office, all within sauna walls. (June 7, 6:30 p.m. @ the Admiral)

Treatment is a bumpy, semi-pro local comedy that both delights and bores in almost equal measure. Scenes between a cherubic, bushy-bearded Sean Nelson and John Hodgman sparkle–this is the film you’d like to see–while the main story about a hustler screenwriter who infiltrates a swanky rehab to net a star for his film just isn’t that compelling. (Saturday, 11 a.m. @ the Neptune)

FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION:

Friday, May 27

  • Rothstein’s First Assignment Richard Knox Robinson finds unsettling stories beneath the surface of New Deal photographer Arthur Rothstein’s documentation of Depression-era Appalachia.  (6:30 p.m. @ Admiral; Saturday, 3:30 p.m. @ Harvard Exit)
  • Jucy This Australian “womantic” comedy focuses on the ups and downs of the platonic bond between two best friends. (6:30 p.m. @ the Egyptian; Saturday, 3:30 p.m. @ Harvard Exit)
  • ShortsFest Opening Night Celebrate the best in shorts! (7 p.m., SIFF Cinema)
  • The Poll Diaries It’s not easy being an orphaned teenage girl in Germany on the verge of WWI. (9 p.m. @ the Admiral, Monday, 9:30 p.m. @ the Neptune)
  • Hit So Hard Hole’s original drummer and all her issues are the subject of this documentary. (9 p.m. @ the Egyptian; May 29, 4 p.m. @ Neptune)

Saturday, May 28

  • Mysteries of Lisbon Have five hours to kill? Sink into this 19th century continent-spanning epic. (1 p.m. @ Egyptian)
  • The Whistleblower Based on a true story, Rachel Weisz battles sex trafficking in a war-torn Bosnia. (6:45 p.m. @ Egyptian; Sunday, 1 p.m. @ Egyptian)
  • Saigon Electric Explore the inner world of Vietnamese hip hop dance battles. Or just hit up the post-film Asian Crossroads party at the Hotel Deca. Free movie ticket here with RSVP. (7:15 p.m. @ the Neptune; May 30, 3 p.m. @ Pacific Place; June 1, 6:30 p.m. @ Everett)
  • Codependent Lesbian Space Alien Seeks Same Because either you’re interested or not, based on the title alone. (9:45 p.m. @ Egyptian; 4:00 p.m. @ Egyptian)
  • Above Us Only Sky In this German drama, when a woman’s husband disappears, she takes up with another man, who strongly resembles her husband. But is she able to have feelings for him? (9:30 p.m. @ Pacific Place; May 29, 4 p.m. @ Pacific)
  • Shut Up Little Man! An Audio Misadventure follows two punk kids in San Francisco who recorded the rants of their crazy neighbor, that then went viral. (10 p.m. @ Neptune; May 30, 9 p.m. @ Egyptian)

What’s the Buzz? Jesus Christ Superstar at the Village Theatre

From the Village Theatre's production of Jesus Christ Superstar (Photo: Jay Koh)

A bit late for Easter but worth seeing nevertheless is the Village Theatre’s production of the rock opera by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, Jesus Christ Superstar (at the Gaudette Theatre in Issaquah through July 3, and at Everett Performing Arts Center July 8 – 31).  With pyrotechnic vocals and contemporary staging, this show is yet another great example of how the Village continues to produce strong musical theatre productions that hold up against those of some of the bigger theaters.

Alternating the lead roles of Jesus and Judas are Michael K. Lee and Aaron C. Finley. Lee, who played Judas at last Friday’s show, is a veteran of Broadway and various international productions. He comes out swinging vocally with a strong, rich voice that seemed to have no upper limit. While I found his acting a bit stiff, his singing more than made up for it.

Finley played Jesus that night, and he pretty much matched Lee in the vocal department. His high notes – and there are several – were just as Adam Lambert-ian as his counterpart’s. (Side note: Apparently Lambert has been interested in playing Judas in a future JCSS revival for a while. Yeah, I’d cast him.) His big aria, Gethsemane, was spot-on, with soaring highs that grabbed you. As with Lee, I found that I was having a difficult time engaging with the character. This could have been completely just my issue, as several times during the performance, at key emotional high points, I could hear sniffles from people nearby. They were clearly more moved than I was.

Oddly enough, the performance I found most engaging was Brandon Whitehead’s King Herod. He first appears on the massage table, and even face-down, he’s a presence. With lipstick, mincing minions, and sparkly wardrobe, he plays Herod somewhere between Nathan Lane and Harvey Fierstein, and his over-the-top “King Herod’s Song” is a total show-stopper. As good as he was, it made me wonder why directors–and audiences–still buy into the “gay = comedy gold” conceit. You would think that would be getting a bit tired by now.

Also (and always) good was Jennifer Paz as Mary Magdalene. She’s a good actor and has the archetypical Eponine/Belle/Kim Broadway voice. Director Brian Yorkey’s choice to place the action in what looked like in the ruins of a contemporary warehouse–with chain link on the outside and Christ-focused tags on the inside–worked for me. Maybe because the music is so 1971, the “set in our time” staging made this production feel less like a period piece. Watching some of the actors scale the proscenium-height chain link (seemingly without harnesses) in the opening scene was thrilling. Apostles = ninjas?

Finally! The Killing and Zoo News Intersect

A female Steller's sea eagle, was euthanized after re-injuring a fractured wing. Her male companion remains on exhibit at the award-winning Northern Trail. Photo credit: Ryan Hawk/Woodland Park Zoo

It seems like most people have given up on The Killing by now. Jon Talton, Seattle Times economics columnist, tweeted his top 5 reasons for doing so last weekend. Maureen Ryan didn’t bother to write a recap of the last episode, and Alan Sepinwall is even more checked out than he was last week: “We’re at the point in the season where I’m just repeating the same complaints over and over again, and that’s a waste of my time as much as it is yours.” But never you worry. I’m still watching. Besides, after Sunday’s episode (“Undertow”), there’s only four hours to go. So we soldier on.

In this week’s episode, it actually stopped raining for a bit. That does happen from time to time! (And anyways, as previously discussed, it is always raining too hard in this version of Seattle. An even more glaring error: two episodes have included the crackle of thunder overhead.) Linden continued to be a terrible cop, mother, and fiancee, as delineated by Gabe at Videogum. Even after revealing that Mayor Adams has a pregnant mistress, Richmond’s campaign is still tanking, because Adams countered by holding a press conference to lie about having had a vasectomy and to call Richmond out for releasing such sordid rumors. Also because Richmond is a gutless mayoral candidate with a candidate run by bickering yahoos Gwen and Jamie. Lucky for him, Richmond is a good shot. He went back to see Tom Drexler, libertarian megalomaniac/Mark Cubanesque basketball owner of local team The Seabirds, who need a new stadium, of course, though they could always just move to Oklahoma and choke in the playoffs. He won another $5M to keep his campaign afloat with one high-stakes basket. Meanwhile, at the request of his wife, Stan kidnapped Bennet Ahmed again. Stan beat up Bennet, while Belko beat up a rock. Who does that? That behavior alone makes Belko a top suspect for being Rosie’s killer.

To get back to the headline: So how does The Killing finally have something in common with the Woodland Park Zoo? Because there was recently a death at the zoo, and even terrible detectives like Linden and Holder could crack the case. A female Steller’s sea eagle, estimated to be fourteen years old and on loan from the San Diego Zoo, had to be euthanized a couple weekends ago, due to a reinjury to her fractured wing. The only other option would have been amputation, which is not much of a life for a bird, so no, this was not murder. Case closed.

In other zoo news, in the poll to name the zoo’s new reticulated python, “Kaa” (like the Jungle Book character) was the winner with 44% of the vote. In happier zoo bird news, the zoo blog has the story (and cute photos) of one-year-old penguin Diego, who is recovering from having a bobby pin removed from his stomach, after it was found by a metal detector. And while it’s not one of our zoo’s humboldt penguins, on a happy-sad-but-definitely-cute note, Lucky the penguin has a bum foot, but lives life to the fullest thanks to his friends at Teva:

Earthquake Prep: The Enemy is Us

Union Pacific Railway Damage from Ground Deformation, Seattle, Washington Earthquake of April 29, 1965, Seattle, Washington. (Photo: University of California, Berkeley)

Here is the third and final part of my talk with Carol Dunn, who works for Bellevue’s Office of Emergency Management, about earthquakes and the Puget Sound. Here, Carol discusses why it’s so hard for people to get focused on the long-term seismic threat, and explains what the disastrous earthquakes in 2010 and 2011 have done to get people to pay attention to the threat.

What’s the most formidable natural disaster threat facing the region? In terms of both likelihood and potential damage?

It may surprise you, but to me, the most formidable natural threat to our region is human nature. There is a biological reason we don’t prepare, our minds are wired in a way to make it really hard to think clearly about future risks. Behavioral psychologists have studied it—and now neuroimaging confirms that it takes place.

Recent neuroimaging studies have shown that we make decisions a split second before we are aware we of it, confirming what was suspected, that it is not the noisy part of our brain that we are aware of that is the boss in our brain, it is our subconscious. This isn’t really surprising though, and it makes sense. While we are going through the complicated thoughts and actions that are required to stay healthy and well, our subconscious is constantly scanning for dangers and opportunities. It needs to have the ability to direct our focus, and even make us act without thinking in a crisis, or we wouldn’t survive very long.

The part of our brain that handles this is very similar in how it works to animals and reptiles and it has a limited number of things it can do some of them are: “Engage or Avoid” and “Fight or Flight.” It can have us prioritize thoughts on a topic that it thinks we need to act on. It can make us not think about something. It can make us hyper-aware of the risk of something—even when there isn’t really one (public speaking, for example)–it can make thoughts of risk feel as if they don’t matter.

The reason that this is our biggest natural danger is that the “default” mode of our subconscious is to consider future risk something that we shouldn’t think about. I suspect our minds are like this for two reasons: 1. The risks from disasters can be radically reduced just by deciding to do so—but it is a multi-step process, and 2: our subconscious doesn’t do multiple step activities—it can incline us to variations on “engage,” “avoid,” and “do both.” From the subconscious perception, the best thing to do about future risk is to “avoid” thinking about it, until it happens, then the subconscious acts—by spurring a fear response that actually makes it much harder to think clearly and bounce back quickly. It is really important to learn how to approach risk differently—and it isn’t that hard, once you try.

After human nature, I rank our dangers like this: The most likely situation that will happen to each of us is having a fire in our house—we have mainly wooden houses and they catch fire easily.  Last time I checked there was a house fire in King County happening every 10 hours. The main cause for that is unattended cooking—you go and start your lunch, for instance, then get sucked in to Farmville. After that, our severe weather—windstorms that cause trees to fall into houses or power lines which causes a cascade of problems.

The disaster that can have the greatest long term impact on all of us is a large earthquake.  They don’t happen very often, but once you know what to look for, you see that everything about our area is defined by its history of massive earthquakes. Our mountains, our Sound—many of our hills even. West Seattle, Somerset in Bellevue—they only have such great views because past earthquakes have lifted the ground up to such great heights. Our area is on one of the most fascinating geological points on the planet—which, of course, is always sort of bad news for the residents.  Not entirely though—with earthquakes, we residents have a lot to say. It isn’t the earthquake that causes the harm. If you are in the largest earthquake on the planet and you are in a field, the most likely outcome is you will just fall down. It isn’t the earthquake, it is what, how and where we build and place things.

We have the skillset to make and place buildings and things in ways and places that are unlikely to be harmed by earthquakes, we just need to work through our mental blocks and make it happen. If society as a whole won’t do that, we as individuals can take the time to learn what types of buildings handle earthquakes well (hint: up to current code, low and square—not too many openings like windows or garages spaced too close together). Expect that there will be periods where general supplies of water, food and medicine will be cut off: build your own back up supply.

A lot of the natural dangers to the region are recurring and highly visible: floods, mudslides, windstorms; and with the example of St. Helens, it’s pretty easy to look at the mountains and imagine them erupting. How do you combat the tendency to overlook the seismic danger?

For me, it goes back to biology—we overlook seismic danger for the same reason that zebras overlook the danger of lions. When we are aware of danger our body’s shift focus to being ready for combat, our heart rate increases, our digestion slows down, we are tense because we are ready to burst into action if we need it. If zebras were constantly thinking of lions, they wouldn’t be able to function, so our brains make our awareness of the threat go away. You can see signs of this all the time. We live over an active surface fault. The logical and rational thing to do would be to make it a top priority to be sure that all of our buildings, infrastructure and systems are the optimal choices to be sure we all make it through alright. We don’t though; we feel very comfortable with our mental reasons why we aren’t going to take the opportunity we have been given to identify each of the things we know will be hurting people and fix them so they won’t. We have our reasons. It is too bad that the Earth doesn’t understand or take our reasons into account when it does what it does. The earth moves, physics happens.

The families in the buildings that hold up well in shaking will do better than the families in buildings that don’t hold up well in shaking. The people with resources and good information will have an easier time than those without resources or access to information. It is already possible to see which groups will be doing better and which will be doing worse. It’s our decision to say that only new or massively renovated buildings need to be brought to code. The residents in the new renovated buildings will be doing much much better than the residents in the older buildings. Though, we do have a head start. Low, wood square buildings often handle earthquakes quite well: That describes a lot of our residential building stock. If we can get as many of them as we can bolted to their foundations, with their water heaters braced, we’ll be doing pretty well.

Have the big earthquakes of the past 15 months brought in a lot of people calling and emailing to inquire about the local seismic risk? Do people recognize that the urban earthquakes in New Zealand and Haiti could happen here, on the Seattle Fault, or are they not connecting earthquakes in the news to a threat around Puget Sound?

There wasn’t a large surge in calls after Haiti, Chile or New Zealand, which surprised me—but there has been a huge surge in presentation requests after the triple tragedies in Japan. It is interesting because I spend a lot of time reaching out to non-profits asking if we can work together to build the resilience of their clients, I have had to get used to not being called back very often. Now it is a lot easier.

This is Part 3 of a three-part series. See also Part 1 and Part 2.

Brian Stelter on Page One, Twitter, and Storm-Chasing

Brian Stelter

Brian Stelter normally reports on media for The New York Times, but he’s also a self-confessed “weather geek,” which is why when I sit down with him for an interview about Page One, the documentary he appears in, he’s just back from tornado-ravaged Joplin, Missouri–and still processing.

“I want to buy new shoes and a raincoat,” he says. “I was wearing these shoes. I feel like I was walking through a cemetery.”

As it happened, he owes the experience to Oprah. He’d “raised his hand” to cover a few storms over the past year, but the timing had never worked. This time, he was flying to Chicago for Oprah’s last show and when he landed in Chicago the departure board showed a flight in an hour to Kansas City. He called the national desk and told them, “I could be in Joplin by noon,” and they said to catch the plane.

Reporting what he saw was difficult because “communication was really, really weak. It was almost impossible to get a phone call or an email out.” He ended up turning to Twitter: ” I thought Twitter was my best reporting, my most immediate reactions.”

His story in the Times retains the telegraphic qualities of on-the-ground impressions:

Lauren Johnson used her iPhone as a flashlight to trek through the basement where she had taken shelter with her father when the storm enveloped their neighborhood.

She shook her head as she walked upstairs. “Our neighborhood, it” — she paused — “it ceases to exist.”

As one of the “next generation” of journalists at The New York Times, Stelter treats multi-platform reporting as a fait accompli, telling me that he gets “annoyed with some of my colleagues in the media who only use Twitter as a one-way medium. I also like using it to talk back. To anyone who replies to me, I try to reply back. I have this crazy idea that if we reply to people maybe they will be one percent more likely to pay,” he says, referring to the Times‘ newly instituted, much discussed paywall.

“People are going to know you’re the one to go to when they have a story idea,” he continues. “When they have a tip. When they’re pissed off about something.”

As for the paywall itself, “it’s early days,” he says. “We haven’t had firm numbers on the paywall yet, we’ve been told it’s exceeding expectations. I think the journalists in us would like to know what the expectations were. We’d like to see the raw numbers, but I understand that they share that with investors before they share it with us.”

As someone who’s been “nervous about the paywall, nervous about losing audience, nervous that people my age wouldn’t pay,” he admits, he’s heartened by the news that people are in fact paying, and that he has not heard his readers complaining about not being able to read articles. “That’s how it affects writers,” he adds, “writers want to reach the broadest number of people they can.”

Stelter plays the incredible shrinking man in Andrew Rossi’s Page One documentary (playing at SIFF twice more: May 28, 11 a.m. at the Egyptian and May 30, 3:30 p.m. in Everett, where Stelter will appear for Q&As). He happened to go on a diet as the film began, and lost 90 pounds during filming. He and David Carr get significant screen time, for different reasons. Carr comes across as the hard-nosed (but adaptable, and warm-hearted) veteran, generating huge stories like the Chicago Tribune management frat-partying the paper into bankruptcy, while Stelter, recruited from his blog TVNewser, is always-on, tech-savvy, and thoughtful about his coverage of what could be a parade of media glitz.

“There’s still too much chasing of the ball, blindly,” he argues. “Especially when it comes to court cases and celebrities and entertainment news. I think a lot of that is on the television side.”

Stelter is quick to point out that television news can of course do fine work, but there’s a damning scene in Page One about a story of Stelter’s that didn’t run, where NBC seems to announce the end of the Iraq War to their viewers, massaging a convoy of trucks into a “Mission Accomplished” moment. The film shows New York Times staff frantically checking to see if they had somehow missed the memo from the Pentagon, and ultimately deciding that they would simply ignore this bit of theater.

“To watch my editors decide not to run my story was interesting because–frankly I can’t disagree with them, they made the right call–but I never get to see that back and forth between editors,” says Stelter. “Same with the page one meeting [in which editors pitch stories for coveted front page placement]–to see something that I can’t actually go to, that was pretty exciting.”

In contrast to his blogging days, Stelter says he finds the newsroom a “more deliberative” environment.

The final product is more of a team effort, a team production. There are days when that annoys me because I just want to get the story up, but the final product is almost always better when my editor and I have talked it out, hashed it out, and fought over it a little bit…. What comes out ends up being a lot better. So much of journalism is really storytelling–we’ve grown up as storytellers verbally and visually, we don’t generally tell stories in print, we tell them face to face, in person. I’ve been lucky I’m surrounded by editors who have the time to do that.

As much as Page One is an almost unfettered glimpse into the workings of the nation’s paper of record, it’s also a story of how the Titanic of the newspaper industry only sideswiped the iceberg.

As murky as the crystal ball remains, the film recalls the panicky moment when nothing seemed certain, when the Times engineered the sale-leaseback of its own building to generate capital. That and the mass layoffs, says Stelter now, feel “like the reactions of a trauma surgeon. For a while, I don’t think I knew how dire the straits were in ’08 and ’09, at times. It feels markedly better now.” It’s at this moment that The Atlantic chose to speculate on the unthinkable: the death of The New York Times, a story that still inspires some heated rejoinder.

But, Stelter points out, it’s not just the economy, stupid: Things were happening that were not as clearly evolutionary at the time: “the generation-long shift of audience from print to the web […] was happening in the middle of all these dire economic problems, and I think the film is able to hit on both. It’s able to show how our consumption patterns are changing, while at the same time, day to day, advertising revenue was collapsing.”

An associated campaign, Consider the Source, hopes to build on one area the film explores: the role of aggregators and search in relation to a news source. (“I like the Huffington Post, I read it a lot. I like how they repackage my stories,” says Stelter, when I ask if he’s bugged at all by Huffington’s recent payday.)

But there’s much more to the film: the reinvention of subscriptions as gadget-based (and the concomitant question of dependencies on third-party platforms like the iPad), the effects of Judith Millers and Jayson Blairs, the sea changes in overall business model.

The sheer amount of money that is needed to sustain fact-gathering (and fact-checking) remains a conundrum. “You think journalists are everywhere,” warns Stelter, “but there’s actually a rather small number of people getting the basic facts for us,” listing the few organizations that keep staffed overseas bureaus.

While he admits to chafing a little at speed constraints (“They created infrastructure so we can publish blog posts 24 hours a day, which we didn’t used to have. So we’ve made progress on that front.”), in the end, he says, “I don’t want to risk the Times‘ reputation even a little bit by putting [rumors] online. We take risks of other kinds, by putting people into war zones, we don’t need to be taking risks with our facts.”

You can hear the institutional voice of the Times in that–though Keith Olbermann might disagree on particulars. I was struck particularly by Stelter’s contention that, “Maybe it’s because I have better sources, but I don’t find myself [often] wanting to publish something and struggling to prove it.” In the film, the acid-test of that assertion comes as Carr brings sources speaking on background to talking on the record to the Times–a Chicago Tribune competitor. It’s far from easy, but as the Tribune would be eager to sue for any misstep, Carr knows he needs an ironclad story, and works like a terrier until he gets it.

“My readers at the Times don’t care as much about…rumors as my readers on my old blog,” concludes Stelter, who is supposed to be calling his agent back about ideas for a first book. “I want to write a television book, I just don’t know exactly what the topic should be. I think as a journalist you’re always looking for another challenge…. I’m so comfortable on 140-character tweets and 1,000-word stories–I know I can write those, I don’t know if I can write a book. I’m interested in that challenge.”