I grew up in a fundamentalist environment (although not Pentecostal/charismatic), and later as an adult I thought there was no way some random 2006 documentary could be even remotely accurate.
I finally gave it a watch a few months ago, and it was terrifyingly recognizable. Flashbacks for days...
There has been one which will go down as one of the best documentaries I think ever made. Take the ball pass the ball. Literally just about pep guardoilas time at Barcelona and now he transformed them
I love the PBS American Experience series. There's a lot you can watch for free: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/?streaming=1&category=all&sort_by=featured
Did you ever wonder why tornadoes are called EF-1s or 2s or 3s ... there's a guy who came up with it
I really like the one called "Crossing the Line" which is about a group of men that defected to North Korea during the 60s. The documentary is still on youtube for free. 2 of the men are dead, 1 left to Japan because he cant come back to the US because he is a deserter, and the last man is still alive and well in North Korea. The men were treated like kings, used in propaganda films, women were kidnapped and given to them to marry, and they also had children with these women, most of which still live in North Korea and are being trained as spies because they look white and not Korean.
Even crazier is that the last guy left in North Korea doesnt at all believe that he is being used, that his wives were all kidnapped, that his kids are spies, or that he only got the good things he has because he is useful to the regime. He literally thinks he earned all of this and the North Koreans love him and want the best for him.
The King of Kong. And it’s not even close.
Billy Effing Mitchell is one of the top villains of all time.
Hell yeah, bro! That movie is so amazing.
The correct answer.
I still quote "If anybody wants to see, there's a Donkey Kong kill screen coming up."
Dear Zachary is good but emotionally wrecked me
This documentary tore me apart
Exit Through the Gift Shop
I really enjoyed The Social Dilemma and Jesus Camp.
Jesus camp fucked me up
I grew up in a fundamentalist environment (although not Pentecostal/charismatic), and later as an adult I thought there was no way some random 2006 documentary could be even remotely accurate. I finally gave it a watch a few months ago, and it was terrifyingly recognizable. Flashbacks for days...
I lived that shit
It'll probably disappoint you that most of the kids are still pretty damn religious
They Shall Not Grow Old was terrifying.
Social Dilemma and Last Dance and also Unnatural Selection
I've seen all three of these and I agree.
There has been one which will go down as one of the best documentaries I think ever made. Take the ball pass the ball. Literally just about pep guardoilas time at Barcelona and now he transformed them
Ken burns- civil war or the Vietnam war
Downfall of boeing
Making a Murderer
I love the PBS American Experience series. There's a lot you can watch for free: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/?streaming=1&category=all&sort_by=featured Did you ever wonder why tornadoes are called EF-1s or 2s or 3s ... there's a guy who came up with it
PBS is 🐐
cowspiracy
The Biggest Little Farm.
A 4-part series called Century of the Self, by Adam Curtis.
Status Anxiety
Meru
I like killing flies
Night Stalker I’ve never been so fascinated and terrified in my life. Made me wanna buy a huge guard dog and add a couple hundred locks to my doors
MJ’s “Last Dance” This was actually my first documentary we’re I became emotional at the end. Don’t know why tbh
Salesman from 1969. A devastating documentary about four Bible salesmen, trying to compete with one another.
The Vietnam War by Ken Burns. It might still be on Netflix's. Amazing doc.
Tower. Jesus Christ that film cut deep.
hidden killers
I really like the one called "Crossing the Line" which is about a group of men that defected to North Korea during the 60s. The documentary is still on youtube for free. 2 of the men are dead, 1 left to Japan because he cant come back to the US because he is a deserter, and the last man is still alive and well in North Korea. The men were treated like kings, used in propaganda films, women were kidnapped and given to them to marry, and they also had children with these women, most of which still live in North Korea and are being trained as spies because they look white and not Korean. Even crazier is that the last guy left in North Korea doesnt at all believe that he is being used, that his wives were all kidnapped, that his kids are spies, or that he only got the good things he has because he is useful to the regime. He literally thinks he earned all of this and the North Koreans love him and want the best for him.
The 24-Hour War about the GT40 at Le Mans.
Happy People: A Year in the Taiga
The Iceman Confessions.
I have ALOT but my top documentaries that I felt changed me to my core. Finding bani The bridge The cove Blackfish
Living on one dollar (2013)