After deciding to power watch Doc Martin on Netflix Instant
Play and getting a few episodes into season two, the series, except for season
one, abruptly disappeared without the usual week or two warning, causing lots
of angry comments to be posted. So, I’ve added it to my library queue and have started
watching Foyle’s War on Instant Play. The rest of what I have been watching is
about half documentaries, and that’s the better half of a pretty unremarkable group.
I have finished entering all my Netflix movie ratings to my
account at the IMDb and also added a few hundred more of the older Netflix ratings
to my own movie database. At the end of the year, or maybe sooner, I plan to
update the movie lists linked in the sidebar of this blog. When that happens,
there will be a posting about the update. Going through the ratings and seeing
all the old movies that I really liked, I am tempted to start watching some of
them again to see if they still seem that great. They sure should be a lot
better than most of the movies I have been watching over the last couple years.
Here is what I have watched since I posted my last list.
[The ratings I give are on my own number system which is explained at the link
on the sidebar].
Doc Martin (Season One) – 2004 (3.2). After watching bits of
episodes of this BBC series the last few years, I decided to start from the
beginning. The Doc (Martin Clunes) leaves a London surgical practice to become
GP for a scenic fishing village in Cornwall, where he finds a close knit
community of somewhat eccentric locals. His aunt still lives there, but he has
not seen her since childhood. There is an attractive school teacher for a
possible love interest. He takes over the neglected office of the last GP, who
died a while back, and is unfortunately saddled with his defiantly incompetent
receptionist. Episodes move forward the story of his personal life as he
engages with the locals and treats some illnesses which often turn out to be
different from what they first seemed.
Woody Allen: A Documentary – 2011 (2.9). The American Masters TV
version that I watched is twice as long as the theatrical version. The first
part deals with Woody’s childhood and start in show business, phasing into
movie making. The last part covers his movies through the years and some of his
personal life. Lots of film clips, interviews with Woody and his sister and
actors and film critics provide plenty of information on Woody, but nothing
particularly new, though he does come across as much less eccentric than the
media sometimes has portrayed him.
Guilty Pleasures – 2010 (2.9). Three women who read romance novels,
a young Japanese wife and mother who is a ballroom dance competitor, an older
remarried woman in England, and a young woman in India who is estranged from
her romantic partner are followed in this documentary, as are two American men,
a model who poses for pictures used on the covers of these books, an an older
man who writes these novels under a pseudonym. I don’t know that I learned much
about anything in particular from this movie, but I did enjoy the gentle approach
of the young woman filmmaker and found the cutting back and forth between
stories of the people to be excellent, whereas such editing is too often
disruptive and confusing.
The President’s Photographer - 2010 (2.9). This National Geographic
hour long documentary follows the official photographer for President Obama as
he captures images of the President for posterity, offering an inside look at
Presidential endeavors. The movie also interviews some past Presidents and
their photographers. LBJ started this photographic practice and all Presidents
since have embraced it, except Nixon who restricted it during his time in
office. The thousands of photos these photographers take all become part of the
National Archives.
Up Heartbreak Hill – 2011 (2.8). This documentary about the college
aspirations of two high school senior track athletes (a boy and a girl) on the
Navajo reservation in New Mexico was straightforward in covering the kids,
their families and some of the school teachers, coaches and administrators, but
it did not explore issues in much depth. We don’t see many movies about young
people like these, so while the choice of subject adds to the rating, it could
have been better covered.
Crude – 2009 (2.8). For decades, Chevron/Texaco drilled oil from
the Ecuadorian Amazon region and then when the government of Ecuador refused to
extend the right to drill, an Ecuadorian government sponsored company took over
and Texaco conducted a superficial cleanup as part of a deal to hand over its
facilities and get a complete release from any liability. Thousands of
indigenous people have been involved for almost 20 years in class action
litigation against the American company for the environmental, cultural and
health calamity it created. This documentary follows a few years of the
litigation, led by a young Ecuadorian lawyer aided by an American and funded by
an American law firm. The movie includes some denial interviews with Chevron
spokespeople, and scenes of the lawyers coming to the US for meetings seeking publicity
and support, but most of the footage is of the jungle and village areas and
people showing the damage that persists. The film does not explain any of the
laws and rules involved in the dispute, nor is the litigation decided by the
time the film ends.
Breaking the Maya Code – 2008 (2.8). This documentary is produced
and directed very well and tells a fascinating story of the centuries long
effort to decipher the abundant Mayan glyphs sculpted into the numerous
structures which have been reclaimed from the Central American jungles.
Narration, archival footage and some reconstructions combine with numerous
interviews with experts to tell how scholars of all levels have contributed
through the years to finally being able to understand the writings and learn
the written history of the Mayan world. The Maya had significant libraries
which were totally destroyed by the Spanish conquerors, except for three or
four books that survived. This movie is so thorough in explaining the
intricacies of the Mayan glyphs and the details of each step in the scientific
quest that it comes across as a little too scholarly for general audiences.
Witness for the Prosecution – 1957 (2.8). Based on an Agatha
Christie play, this movie directed by Billy Wilder has a clever script and
crisp direction, but the acting and staging is too theatrical. This one is all
about the story, which is clever enough to justify the “request from the
theater management” during the closing credits not to reveal the outcome of the
movie.
My Darling Clementine – 1946 (2.8). Director John Ford returned
from the War and turned to his favorite genre for this film, the second time
Wyatt Earp appears in the movies. Like most Earp stories, this one is about
half true and it has all the classic hallmarks of Ford’s style, plus it mingles
a romantic triangle with the expected OK Corral shootout. Henry Fonda is
appropriately subtle as Wyatt and Walter Brennan is an effective villain as Old
Man Clanton.
Warrior – 2011 (2.7). This movie about two brothers who became
estranged when they each went with a different parent when the family split,
shows the attention that was paid to getting the details right for the mixed
martial arts fight scenes as the two men compete in an elite MMA tournament,
with the alcoholic father training one son while desperately trying to make
emotional connection with both of them. More attention should have been paid to
the script though, which wanders a little aimlessly at first and never goes too
far from the tension between wallowing in the past and stepping into the
future. The contrast between the viciousness of MMA and the humanity of the
fighters is shown, but not adequately explored.
The First Grader – 2010 (2.7). This BBC movie from National
Geographic Entertainment about an 84 year old former Mau Mau freedom fighter in
Kenya who wants to go to school to learn to read should have been better than
it is. The script is the problem, starting slow and using too many flashbacks
to tell of the tortures and abuse the man and his family endured in the fight
against British colonial rule. The locations and children are authentic as is
the story, but the conflict between the people from the different tribes and
the fact that some fought for freedom while others served as British lackeys, and
which differences were supposed to have been left behind after independence are
not developed in a satisfactory way by the script even though they underlie the
entire story.
Throw Down Your Heart – 2008 (2.7). The American banjo virtuoso Bela
Fleck takes the instrument back to its native Africa in this documentary,
travelling to a handful of nations to meet and play music with African
musicians. The musical groups offer an interesting variety of sounds and
characters, while the charming Fleck manages to blend in quite well, but
overall the movie comes across as unorganized and not particularly informative.
The Cutting Edge – 1992 (2.7). A female figure skater is too temperamental
to be satisfied with the various skating partners she has tried through the
years, and then is matched up with a star college hockey player whose eye
injury has ended his hockey career. Predictably, they clash and then develop
togetherness. Formulaic, but good chemistry between Moira Kelly and D. B.
Sweeney make it worth watching.
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