Andrew Neel

Andrew Neel
Total Credits at Criticker: 7 (Director), 6 (Writer)
Find more information about Andrew Neel at The Internet Movie Database
Titles you haven't rated - Director (7) | Writer (6)
Alice Neel
Directed by her grandson Andrew Neel, this feature-length documentary tells the story of American painter Alice Neel (1900-1984). Exploring the struggles she faces as a woman artist, a single mother, and a painter who defied convention, the film males use of extensive textual, photographic, and filmic archives. (SeeThink Productions)
+2
Darkon
As swords are raised and the battlefield air flows thick with tension, the participants in a full-scale role-playing game called Darkon shed their mundane identities to assume the role of warrior knight, mystical wizard, or fierce maiden. This is the story of Darkon, a game that allows hundreds of adventure-seeking adults to live out their wildest medieval fantasies... (All Movie Guide)
New World Order
The film concentrates on the activities of Alex Jones, Jim Tucker, Jack McLamb, Luke Rudowski, and Timuçin Leflef, with particular focus on their efforts to expose the highly secretive meetings of the Bilderberg Group, promotion of the 9/11 Truth Movement, and opposition to the erosion of traditional American, Constitutionally-based civil and political rights and liberties. (Wikipedia)
King Kelly
The story of a wannabe Internet star, King Kelly (Louisa Krause), who performs online stripteases when not running drugs around the city. Things turn sour when Kelly's embittered ex-boyfriend steals her car - together with its trunkful of narcotics - kicking off a riotous 4th of July weekend fuelled with sex, drugs, violence and good ole fashioned hedonism. (twitch.com)
+3
Goat
Reeling from a terrifying assault, a 19 year-old boy enrolls into college with his brother and pledges the same fraternity. What happens there, in the name of "brotherhood" tests the boy and his loyalty to his brother in brutal ways. (imdb)
+3
A Teacher
A Teacher (2020) - TV Mini-Series
+2
The Feature
Using a collection of videos that Michel Auder had created over 40 years, in combination with original present-day footage of Auder shot by Andrew Neel, the two filmmakers explore the story of Auder's life.