A filmmaker who literally saved lives

Director Bruce Sinofsky
Director Bruce Sinofsky

Not many filmmakers could say that they LITERALLY saved someone’s life, but Bruce Sinofsky could. Sinofsky has died at age 58 from complications of diabetes.

Sinofsky and Joe Berlinger co-directed the three Paradise Lost documentaries, which chronicled the eighteen-year ordeal of the West Memphis Three, who were wrongly convicted of child murders in Arkansas. The three were released from prison in 2011 – one of them from death row. This wouldn’t have happened without the first two Paradise Lost documentaries that Sinofsky and Berlinger made for HBO.  The 1996 film is available steaming on Vudu, YouTube, Google Play and Xbox Video; the 2000 and 2011 films are available from those providers plus Amazon Instant Video.

Sinofsky and Joe Berlinger also co-directed the wonderful Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, which was among on my top ten movies for 2004.  It’s available on DVD from Netflix.

This Week on HBO: the documentaries that freed a condemned man

Last August, three men were released from prison in Arkansas – one of them from death row. This wouldn’t have happened without two HBO documentaries, the 1996 Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills and its 2000 sequel Paradise Lost 2: Revelations.  Every night this week, HBO is airing its third documentary Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory, which wraps up the series.  You don’t need to have watched the first two to get the full impact of Paradise Lost 3.

The men had served over eighteen years each for a horrific crime that they apparently had nothing to do with. Three second grade Cub Scouts were brutally raped, murdered and their bodies mutilated. The authorities, under understandable pressure to solve the crime, arrested three Metallica-loving teenagers and railroaded them for a supposed Satanic ritual killing. Although no physical evidence tied them to the crime, one teen with an IQ of 76 was browbeaten for twelve hours into a confession that he later recanted.

The HBO films spawned media interest and public and celebrity support for the convicted men, who became known as the West Memphis Three.

Recently processed DNA evidence was inconsistent with any of the defendants.  Facing the specter of a futile new trial, the prosecutor accepted a plea bargain that freed the men without their having to acknowledge guilt. Interestingly, the father of one of the victims has gone from the villain of the second HBO film to a supporter of the recently freed men. Here’s the New York Times coverage of the August 2011 developments.

Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory is on the short list for the Best Documentary Oscar this year.

[youtube-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GqQnnXTTm3w]

 

Buck, Project Nim and Paradise Lost 3 make Oscar short list.

The Academy’s short list of candidates for the Best Documentary Oscar includes two films on my Best Movies of 2011 – So FarBuck and Project Nim.  Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory from the HBO Paradise series also made the list.  All fifteen films on the short list are here.

Movies free condemned man from death row

Last week, three men were released from prison in Arkansas – one of them from death row.  This wouldn’t have happened without two HBO documentaries, the 1996 Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills and its sequel Paradise Lost 2:  Revelations.  HBO is rebroadcasting them on Monday, August 29th (the first one) and Tuesday, August 30th (the sequel).

The men had served over eighteen years each for a horrific crime that they apparently had nothing to do with.  Three second grade Cub Scouts were brutally raped, murdered and their bodies mutilated.  The authorities, under understandable pressure to solve the crime, arrested three Metallica-loving teenagers and railroaded them for a supposed Satanic ritual killing.  Although no physical evidence tied them to the crime, one teen with an IQ of 76 was browbeaten into a confession that he later recanted.

The HBO films spawned media interest and public and celebrity support for the convicted men, who became known as the West Memphis Three.

Recently-processed DNA evidence was inconsistent with any of the defendants.  Facing the specter of a futile new trial, the prosecutor accepted a plea bargain that freed the men without their having to acknowledge guilt. Interestingly, the father of one of the victims has gone from the villain of the second HBO film to a supporter of the recently freed men.   Here’s the New York Times coverage.

And here’s a trailer for the first film.