When two shows from the same year are given the same score
on this blog, I think the previously expressed protocol says they should be
listed in alphabetical order, which is why Becoming
Santa tops this list. And anyway, it is the holiday season. Ho Ho Ho and
away we go.
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].
Becoming Santa
-2011 (3.0). A pleasant surprise, this well-made documentary about a forty
something man with no family left, shows how he decides to spend the holiday
season volunteering his time as a Santa Claus and then gets professional
training from a Santa Claus school and starts becoming the Santa man. In the
course of the film, we enjoy the sincerity, gentle humor and marginally cynical
personality of our hero as he has his costume made, selects and attends the
school, meets other Santas and spends a holiday season at various events as
Santa Claus. The history of the Santa tradition is documented and the meaning
of the Santa spirit for adults and children is shown in touching ways.
Boardwalk Empire
(Season Two) – 2011 (3.0). The
Prohibition Era takeoff on The Sopranos
continues with a few new characters, escalated violence, loss [euphemism] of
some old characters and the prosecutorial process starting to zero in on
Atlantic City. Some of the freshness is off the series, but the story moves
along and makes it difficult not to grit out the violence and start season
three when it comes to DVD, just to see what happens next.
A Separation –
2009 (2.9). Winner of the Best Foreign Film Oscar, this Iranian drama tells the
story of a contemporary couple with a sixth grade daughter. They live with the
man’s father, who has Alzheimers, but the woman wants to leave Iran to find a
better life for their daughter. The man will not leave his father and refuses
to let the daughter go, so they engage the legal system to get a separation and
the woman goes to live with her parents. Desperately seeking a caregiver to
watch his father, the man quickly hires a woman in-law of a friend of his wife,
but she is incompetent and comes with her own problems and those of her
husband. Almost like a documentary, we follow these people without music as
they struggle with their marriage, the education plans for their daughter, the
care of the father and the additional problems brought on by the caregiver and
her husband. Along the way we see different ways in which moral decisions can
be approached, religiously, ethically and by the civil law system.
Doc Martin
(Season Four) – 2009 (2.9). The series perks up as the story arc moves along
with Doc working on his hemophobia, struggling with his newly complicated
relationship with Louisa, considering a move back to London and being pursued
by an old flame.
The Dust Bowl –
2012 (2.8). On PBS from Ken Burns, an interesting subject told in the standard
Burns fashion, with interviewees recalling the experience from childhood memories.
Again, interweaving the stories of several people is a bit confusing and the
anecdotes get repetitious, especially without any technical expert interviewees
or enough in the way of historical context. This should have been cut down to
two hours from four, or the extra time could have been given to providing more general
information and less survivor interviews.
The Women on the 6th
Floor – 2010 (2.8). Set in Paris in the 1960s, this French film had
potential for development of the initial story about a stuffy older businessman
married to an insecure country girl turned socialite, and the disconnect with
the Spanish maids who live upstairs [the reverse of the English Upstairs
Downstairs] in the man’s ancestral home in an old apartment house [condo type].
The comedy was true to life in showing the different lifestyles. Unfortunately,
the story took a turn for the worse when it veered off to follow the man’s
romantic interest in his maid.
Patrik, Age 1.5 –
2008 (2.8). A gay couple think they are getting a one and a half year old boy
to adopt in this Swedish movie, but the boy is really a teenager of 15. The
men, who are adapting to living in their new hetero neighborhood, have trouble
in their relationship and the boy is homophobic which adds to the problems.
Well-acted and decently directed, the film starts a little slow but has some
humor, sadness and enough drama to keep its audience.
The Pope’s Toilet
– 2008 (2.8). Based on the true story of
a 1988 visit by the Pope to a small Uruguayan town on the border with
Brazil,this Spanish language film centers on a poor man who smuggles goods over
the border by bicycle in return for payment by competing corrupt smuggling
lords. The battle between competing lords often catches the bicyclists in the
middle and they lose the goods and the money they were to make. The man has a
sympathetic wife and a teen daughter who wants to study to be a journalist. The
poor villagers prepare sausages and other food to sell to pilgrims, especially
better off Brazilians, who will come to see the Pope, and our hero gets the
bright idea to build a public toilet and charge for its use. From the tile one
might think this is a broad comedy, but it is actually a fairly gritty drama of
these poor villagers and of the man and his relationship to his wife and
daughter.
Alice – 1990
(2.8). A lesser film written and directed by Woody Allen, this tells of a
devout Catholic girl who married a rich man and lives the life of a spoiled
wife and mother of a young pampered child. Complaining of yet another ache, she
is referred to an eccentric Chinese herbalist who identifies her problem as an
unsatisfied heart for which he prescribes a succession of special herbs that
introduce a fantasy element as she dabbles with an affair, re-evaluates her marriage
and decides what she wants to do with the rest of her life. Not too heavy and
not too light, this movie is watchable but ultimately does not have much to
say.
Doc Martin
(Season Three) – 2007 (2.8). Dropping off a little more, this season sees a new
policeman with even more quirks, a silly detour with Auntie Joan, no
sensitivity training for the Doc, the same disproportionate amount of medical
emergencies and a continuation of the awkward relationship between the Doc and
Louisa, which cools and then warms and then might be headed for really serious
turf.
Gifted Hands: The Ben
Carson Story – 2009 (2.7). Made for cable TV, this earnest biopic tells the
true story of an African-American boy who overcame tremendous obstacles to
finally realize near in middle school that he was actually smart and could
learn. He went on to become a world renowned pediatric neurosurgeon, pioneering
many wonderful surgeries. Trying to cover all personal and professional stages
of such a life in a straightforward 90 minutes is a scriptwriting challenge,
and this movie, by trying to cover some of all the stages, inevitably had
difficulty finding the right balance of time to spend at the various life
stages. It probably would have been better to concentrate on his handling of a
major case in the impending prime of his career, with flashbacks for the
relevant back story telling us how he got where he did.