Not exactly a documentary but, Spaulding Grays, "Swimming to Cambodia." It is a one man show dealing with his trip to Southeast Asia to be in the film, "The Killing Fields."
Another great film, that is not quire a documentary, more of a dramatization, I guess, is
And the Band Played On. It is based on the true accounts during the '80s of getting AIDS identified as "AIDS" and a fully recognised epidemic by the Center for Disease Control as well as Pres, Reagan, who at the time wouldn't even refer to it by name.
I lost many friends & coworkers at the time, and watched on the periphery of it take them down. This is a very moving account of it back then.
Joseph Campbell and The Power of Myth.

Great film. You will never look at "religion" quite the same way again.
I have "National Parks: America's Best Idea" on hold at the library. I'll report back but I can't imagine with the raw material it's less than amazing unless the filmmaker is terrible.
This was just on PBS two weeks ago.
I have now switched my plans of going to Scotland or Ireland next summer to one of the national parks, because of this documentary.
The brother of the
National Parks series, Ric Burns, made the documentary,
New York. It was made before September 11th, documenting the history of how resilient NYC is and how it constantly changes & rebuilds itself anew. Then when 9/11 happened, that documentary proved how true that really is.

A 7th episode had to be created for the series about 9/11 and the aftermath. This series was extremely sensitively written.
These brothers are both full of great integrity and insights.

They do not create the normal snoozer documentaries.
