: Since 2000, the number of annual documentary theatrical releases has more than tripled.
Do you prefer or dark investigative exposes ?
was that the videos would be sold only on DVDs to private collectors overseas and would never be posted on the public internet. To seal the deal, victims (typically 18 to 23 years old) were often plied with alcohol or marijuana and rushed into signing contracts they were not allowed to read. Once filming was over, Pratt and his team did the exact opposite: the videos were uploaded to the web and heavily promoted on free tube sites to drive subscriptions, exposing the women to public ridicule, doxxing, and harassment.
Another notable example is "The Improv: Laughter, Tears and the Inside Story of a Hollywood Institution" (2017), a documentary that explores the history of the famous Improv comedy club in New York City. The film features interviews with comedy legends like Alan Arkin, Chevy Chase, and Robin Williams, who got their start at the Improv.
Documentaries are no longer just non-fiction; they are a core pillar of modern entertainment. Whether you’re a viewer looking for the truth or a creator trying to make your mark, the unscripted space is where the most important stories are being told.
For decades, studios only allowed "making of" featurettes—those fluffy, 5-minute promotional reels where everyone said, "It was a joy to work with so-and-so." Boring.
If you want one doc that explains how the industry really works : 👉 (2022 – scripted but based on real doc research) is a dramatization, but for pure documentary: Showrunners (2014) or This Film Is Not Yet Rated .
These documentaries go behind the scenes of film, TV, music, theater, and digital media. Common focuses: