Documentaries

Documentaries show what AI looks like in the real world – not the imagined future, not the sci-fi dystopia, but the everyday decisions, trade-offs, and innovations already shaping communities, workplaces, and public life.

This section isn’t about hype or fear. It’s about perspective.

Here you’ll find films that explore:

  • Bias in algorithms
  • Automation and labor
  • Data privacy and civic rights
  • Surveillance and public safety
  • Health, creativity, and emerging science

These stories feature real people navigating questions we’re all facing:

How much technology is too much? Who controls the code and the data? How can cities use AI responsibly, equitably, and transparently?

Documentaries give us context – the human side of innovation. They help policymakers, educators, parents, and community leaders see beyond headlines and into lived experience.

AI, Automation & Society

Do You Trust This Computer?  (2018)

Why it matters: Accessible, big-picture exploration of AI’s rise, featuring Elon Musk, Ray Kurzweil, and academics.

iHuman (2019)

Why it matters: Brilliant global survey of AI power — from state surveillance to activist responses.


Education, Equity & Ethics

The Social Dilemma (2020)

Why it matters: Examines algorithmic reinforcement, social media addiction, and civic polarization.

Screened Out (2020)

Why it matters: Focuses on mental health implications and digital attention — great for Next Wave’s community focus.

Terms and Conditions May Apply (2013)

Why it matters: Essential foundation for understanding surveillance capitalism and data consent.


Work, Labor & Automation

Humans Need Not Apply (YouTube, 2014 – 15 min)

Why it matters: Quick, accessible overview of job displacement due to automation.

The True Cost (2015)

Why it matters: Not AI-specific, but crucial for understanding global supply chains, consumer systems, and the ethics automation sits inside.

American Factory  (Netflix, 2019)

Why it matters: Shows automation’s impact on workers, culture, and local economics in a Midwest community.


Government, Policing & Public Data

All Light, Everywhere (2021)

Why it matters: Examines body cams, surveillance systems, and who controls “the digital truth.”

Citizenfour (2014)

Why it matters: Snowden story — indispensable context for data rights and government control.


Health, Biology & Emerging Science

Unnatural Selection (Netflix series, 2019)

Why it matters: CRISPR & biotech storytelling that maps directly to AI-enabled research decisions.

AlphaGo (Netflix, 2017)

Why it matters: Emotional narrative of human creativity vs. machine skill — ideal bridge between fiction and civic AI.

Human Nature (2019)

Why it matters: Gene editing debate that mirrors AI ethics: who decides, who benefits, who is at risk.


Culture & Creativity

We Live in Public (2009)

Why it matters: Early warning on digital identity, surveillance, and public vs. private life.

The Great Hack (Netflix, 2019)

Why it matters: Cambridge Analytica, democracy, voter manipulation — core to Next Wave’s mission.