Best Documentary About a Colorado Town
Creede U.S.A.
Kahane Corn Cooperman’s Creede U.S.A. captures the unlikely coexistence that defines one of Colorado’s strangest small towns. Creede, with a population of around 300, is home to miners, ranchers and artists who share a single main street, which is anchored by Creede Repertory Theatre, the company that helped reinvent the former silver boomtown in the 1960s. Cooperman patiently follows the town through two years of school board debates, Pride celebrations, mining contests and theater seasons. Arguments get heated, compromises disappoint, and neighbors still show up with cake afterward. It’s a deeply moving documentary about the messy and tenaciously human work that goes into small-town democracy.