3 stunning HBO Max documentaries to watch this weekend (July 10-12)
Derek Malcolm has been covering the worlds of tech and entertainment for more than two decades.
Before coming to How-To Geek in 2025, Derek was a contributing editor and writer for the A/V and Home Theater section at Digital Trends, where he wrangled and wrote everything from what to watch on Netflix to reviews, explainers, and guides on the latest Bluetooth speakers, turntables, projectors, and other A/V gear.
Based in Toronto, Derek graduated from Humber College's Journalism program in 1999, after which he started covering the worlds of music, movies, TV, and celebrity for publications such as TV Guide, Hello! magazine, and Inside Entertainment. He then got the bug for covering tech and gadgets in 2006, when he served as editor-in-chief of Canadian tech magazine Connected for more than a decade.
An avid skier, when all the snow's gone Derek can be found at home spinning vinyl with his daughter or cheering on his favorite F1 team, McLaren.
A good weekend of real documentary viewing relies on a nice mix of fascination, education, and exasperation. A little music is also welcome, too. Luckily, HBO Max has been in the documentary game long enough to have a deep library of films and series that tick all those boxes and more, and it's just there for the taking.
This weekend (and into the week, of course), I've got a few suggestions, new and old, that offer that well-rounded mix. The first is a highly anticipated deep-dive new series about the phenomenon that is Burning Man, while the last two are older-but-excellent picks—one a terrifying look at an internet meme that sparked a tragedy, and the other the story behind the most famous breakup album of all time. Here they are in order of which I'd watch first.
1 The Man Will Burn
Inside Burning Man's most chaotic years yet
Fresh off its Tribeca Film Festival premiere just a month ago, and now streaming on HBO Max, The Man Will Burn is a new four-part docuseries that lands just as the radical desert festival known as Burning Man heads into its 40th year in August. And buckle up, because it’s going to be one helluva ride.
With Oscar-nominated director Jehane Noujaim (The Square, The Vow) and Vikram Gandhi (Kumare) behind the camera, the series traces the event's unlikely evolution from Larry Harvey's 1986 modest eight-foot bonfire on San Francisco’s Baker Beach to the now fully-realized Black Rock City, the temporary Nevada metropolis of 80,000 revelers that rises and vanishes every summer. Then things get messy as the series highlights some of the festival’s struggles, including back-to-back COVID cancellations, 2021's renegade burn, and the 2023 rains that stranded thousands in the mud.
Compiled from five years of embedded filming and decades of rare archival footage, it features candid interviews with the people behind the event, including co-founder John Law, and celebrity burners including Sergey Brin and Grover Norquist. The cinematic series offers a fascinating look at the ins and outs of the makeshift civilization and the passion of those who make it happen and attend. Episode one is streaming now, with new chapters arriving Thursdays until July 30.
The Man Will Burn
- Release Date
- 2026 - 2026-00-00
- Network
- HBO
- Directors
- Jehane Noujaim
- Main Genre
- Documentary
- Producers
- Geralyn White Dreyfous, Dana O'Keefe, Teddy Schwarzman, Nina Sing Fialkow, Nancy Abraham, Lisa Heller, Michael Heimler, David Fialkow, Paul McGuire, Karim Amer, Lyn Davis Lear, Muriel Soenens, Yariv Milchan, Sara Rodriguez, Natalie Lehmann, Eric Forman, Kristín Ólafsdóttir, Jillian Li
- Seasons
- 1
2 Beware the Slenderman
When an internet boogeyman inspired a real crime
"The palest man, the blackest suit, bigger than the tallest brute. Six black arms will grab you up, or stalk you till you just give up ... Fear the man, the Slender Man, for he can do what no one can." That little British girl's voice-over still gives me heebie-jeebies. I saw this goosebump-inducing documentary when it came out in 2016, and—much like the sinister beanpole figure at its center did to its devotees—I couldn’t get it out of my head for days.
One of the internet age's defining true-crime documentaries, Irene Taylor Brodsky's (Leave No Trace, I Am: Celine Dion) Beware the Slenderman is a two-hour film that examines the 2014 case in which two 12-year-old Wisconsin girls, Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weier, lured their friend Payton Leutner into the woods and stabbed her 19 times, claiming it would appease Slender Man, a faceless boogeyman from the internet's creepypasta horror canon that the girls believed was real.
Leutner luckily survived the attempt on her life, and this feature-length film traces the ordeal, following the attackers' families over 18 months. Brodsky mixes haunting police interrogation and courtroom footage with interviews including Morgan's mother Angie Geyser, Anissa's father Bill Weier, and evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, who speaks on how ideas can infect young minds.
- Runtime
- 117 minutes
- Director
- Irene Taylor
- Producers
- Sophie Harris
3 Music Box: Jagged
Alanis Morissette revisits her album that defined the '90s
Part of HBO’s amazing Music Box series that includes several other beautifully executed instalments, including spotlights on Counting Crows, Yacht Rock, Jason Isbell and more, Alison Klayman's (White Hot: The Rise & Fall of Abercrombie & Fitch) 2021 film Jagged premiered at TIFF and was promptly disowned by its own subject—Alanis Morissette called it "reductive" and skipped the premiere. Intrigued? Me too! But judge for yourself.
Music Box: Jagged is built around a long, candid present-day sit-down with Morissette herself and stitched together with '90s MTV clips, home video, and energetic tour footage. It charts her path from her days as mononymous teen-pop castoff "Alanis" from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, through her reinventions and eventual rise to superstardom with her breakthrough break-up album Jagged Little Pill, the 1995 juggernaut that sold 33 million copies.
Name that music movie
Trivia challenge
From biopics to rockumentaries — how well do you know the greatest music films ever made?
In the 2018 Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody, which actor portrays lead singer Freddie Mercury?
Which legendary rock band is the subject of Martin Scorsese's 2008 concert documentary The Last Waltz?
In the 2019 Elton John biopic Rocketman, which genre is the film officially classified as, setting it apart from most music biopics?
Which 1984 mockumentary follows a fictional heavy metal band on a disastrous American tour?
The 2015 biopic Straight Outta Compton chronicles the rise of which pioneering hip-hop group?
Which 1991 documentary film follows Madonna on her Blond Ambition World Tour and is considered a landmark in music film history?
Walk the Line, the acclaimed 2005 biopic about Johnny Cash, features which actress playing June Carter Cash?
The 2000 coming-of-age film Almost Famous is loosely based on whose real-life experiences?
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Along the way, Morissette speaks frankly about navigating industry sexism, her struggle with eating disorders, and the inappropriate behavior she faced from older men as a teenager trying to break into a male-dominated industry. Producer and co-writer Glen Ballard, Garbage frontwoman Shirley Manson, Kevin Smith, and the late Taylor Hawkins—her friend and touring drummer before Foo Fighters fame—round out the standout interviews. The 99-minute doc has an impressive 82% critics’ score on Rotten Tomatoes.
Jagged
- Release Date
- September 14, 2021
- Runtime
- 97 minutes
- Director
- Alison Klayman
- Cast
- Alanis Morissette, Glen Ballard, Taylor Hawkins, Guy Oseary, Chris Chaney, Jesse Tobias, Kevin Smith
- Producers
- Bill Simmons, Nancy Abraham
A well-rounded weekend
Great documentaries prove that truth really can be stranger than fiction—not to mention dustier, creepier, and catchier (see what I did there?). When the credits roll, How-To Geek's streaming coverage has plenty more recommendations for whatever's in your subscription quiver.
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