New York artist Garrett Bradley became the first Black woman to win Sundance’s directing award for this incarceration documentary about a man, Robert Richardson, sentenced to 60 years – sixty – in prison for a botched bank robbery. If Ava DuVernay's similarly themed doc 13th is a furious examination of America's prison-industrial complex, Bradley's film is a hymn to the hope and steadfastness it takes to survive it.
July 2025 update: In this update, we've added two recent Oscar winners for Best Documentary Feature: Ahmir 'Questlove' Thompson's Summer of Soul, a stirring act of musical rediscovery covering the long-forgotten 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival, and 2024's No Other Land, a remarkably powerful piece of activist filmmaking documenting one Palestinian village's fight against forced displacement by the Israeli military.
Everyone’s a documentarian these days, but the best documentary films go beyond simply filming real life and uploading it to the internet. They put real life into context. Sometimes, they reshape it and change our understanding of the world. They teach us about the people that surround us – and the truly successful documentaries make us rethink our ideas of ourselves.
It is true, though, that there are a lot of docs out there, whether streaming on Netflix or earning Oscar buzz. To make it easier for you to choose what to watch, we’ve sorted the must-sees from the glorified iPhone videos. From David Byrne in an oversized suit to Andy Warhol staring at the Empire State Building for eight hours, here are our picks for the best documentaries ever made.
Written by Joshua Rothkopf, Cath Clarke, Tom Huddleston, David Fear, Dave Calhoun, Phil de Semlyen, Andy Kryza, David Ehrlich, Matthew Singer and Ava Scott-Nadal
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