Friday, December 12, 2014

Careless Netflix

A while back the predicted ratings in my Netflix queue suddenly shot up to just about five stars for all movies. Calls to customer service left the clear impression Netflix does not know why this happened and could care less. They as much as admitted nobody pays attention to those stars anyway, which I sort of confirmed by doing some Google searching to see who else was having this problem. So I’ll rate Netflix streamers when I watch them, just to be able to quickly tell at their site that I have watched it, but I will ignore their predictions for me. The average user rating for a Netflix movie may be of some use, but I will also compare that to the IMDB user rating.
 
Netflix stock is riding high now but analysts are wary of its prospects, saying the overseas ventures will not pay off and it is only a matter of time before streaming from competitors eats away at Netflix revenue. From my experience there is not much reason to stay with Netflix out of loyalty once the competition offers something better.
 
Parenthood (SeasonThree) – 2011 (3.3). Except for one clinker episode about a family caravan to visit the elderly family matriarch, the series maintains the same qualities that appealed in the second season. As in our own lives, some people come and go, while others stay and grow. We recognize issues family members are facing as we have either faced them ourselves or watched our own family members or friends face them. As in real life, when we watch others we tend to empathize, criticize or both.  This series provides real families a vehicle for talking about handling very personal family matters in a less threatening way, because the characters are fictional.
 
Parenthood (SeasonFour) – 2012 (3.2). Aging of the young is so more evident than aging of the old. Each passing year brings rapid biological growth for youngsters while grownups tend to look pretty much the same from one year to the next. But young and old alike face ongoing changes in relationships and problems encountered. All of this continues to be well presented in this series, though this season seemed more hurried than last, even more than the drop in the number of episodes by three.
 
The Paradise (SeasonTwo) – 2013 (3.1). This is one of those series that gets better in the second year as the characters and plot lines develop. The early episodes are definitely worthwhile, but unfortunately the writing falls flat in the final episode where instead of a batch of realistic cliffhangers, we are given a disappointing assemblage of quick plot developments intended to bring everything to an acceptable conclusion. This abrupt ending was probably caused by the expected or realized failure to secure commitment for a third season.
 
Aftershock – 2010 (3.1). The Tangshan earthquake in China in 1976 killed hundreds of thousands of people. This Chinese drama uses special effects to portray the quick devastation followed by the rescue and recovery efforts, but that part of the story is only the lead into the main thrust of the script. The aftershock of the title is not the second quake but rather the mental trauma the survivors suffer the rest of their lives. A couple with six year old twins, a boy and a girl, are the central characters and we follow them in the immediate aftermath and then in stages over the next three decades as they cope with the terrible memories while trying to live normal livers. This film effectively delivers the pain to produce empathy.
 
Altman – 2014 (3.0). This made for TV documentary tells the story of Robert Altman’s life and career as a movie director in a straightforward way with narration by his widow and children, archival interviews with Altman himself and lots of footage from his movies and the awards shows involved. After WWII service as a B-24 pilot, Altman bluffed himself into a job making industrial films as on the job training in film making. That led to TV directing and eventually movies, where his adventurous and innovative spirit ran afoul of studio execs and turned him into essentially an independent artist. Never repeating himself, he had hits and misses, and leaves a body of work definitely worth revisiting, encouraged by this movie.
 
Cold War Roadshow – 2014 (2.9). In 1959 Nikita Khrushchev became the first Soviet leader to visit the US. Using wonderful footage of his 10 day tour of the country together with memoir style interviews from people such as his son and the granddaughter of President Eisenhower, this documentary shows Nikita as a genuine people person who was fascinated by his visit, while also being a very astute politician sensitive about his lack of formal education and lowly roots. One has to wonder what would have become of the cold war if the U-2 spy plane had not been shot down over Russia causing Nikita to cancel the planned summit with Ike. Shown on PBS American Experience.
 
Solitary Nation – 2014 (2.9). Experts now seem to agree that long term solitary confinement causes makes inmates so mentally deranged that they become even more dangerous, but as this documentary set in a Maine prison chillingly shows, even a well-meaning warden trying to integrate solitaries back into the general prison population faces an overwhelming challenge. Shown on PBS Frontline.
 
History of the Eagles – 2013 (2.9). Everybody loves their music and this two part documentary includes lots of it as we see the band’s performances through the decades and learn the inside story of how they came together and evolved over time, with hard work, creativity, hard living, congeniality and conflict. Everyone involved in all phases is interviewed and lots of archival footage is mixed with some clever reconstructions to keep this longish movie moving. The first part ends with the split up in 19890. The second part picks up with the reunion in 1994. You can’t help but sing along.
 
Muscle Shoals – 2013 (2.9). For many decades this small town in the northwest corner of Alabama has been a mecca for blues, rock and related recording artists seeking a special studio in which to record. Studio founder Rick Hall narrates the documentary story of his life and his studio and its spinoff rival, abetted by some dramatic reconstructions, many interviews with artists looking back and lots of archival footage featuring great music. So many famous artists have recorded in this small town that a shorter list might include those who haven’t.
 
Happiness – 2013 (2.8).  The King decrees it is time for electricity and television to come to the mountains of Bhutan and this documentary intimately follows one family of villagers struggling with their daily lives and going through the process of raising money, traveling to the city to buy a set and then bringing it back to the village. Central to this quiet story are the beauty of the mountain scenery and the life of a young boy whose father has died and who is now experiencing strange new prospects, such as a time in a monastery, first car trip to the city and finally the awe of being able to sit in the glow of a broadcast of American wrestling.
 
Powerless – 2013 (2.7). Woefully inadequate and derelict power infrastructure in an extremely poor city in India causes massive outages, while daring power thieves dangerously tap lines to provide power to the poor. Meanwhile the power company puts the first woman executive in charge and she pushes to criminally prosecute everyone who uses power without paying. The lines for conflict are drawn, but this documentary does not quite capture the full impact, partly because it spends more time on the personalities than on the underlying issues.
 
Who Is Dayani Cristal? – 2013 (2.6). A documentary with much interlaced reenactment, this movie tells about a body of a man found in the Arizona desert. He appears to be someone who entered the US illegally and he has a tattoo on his chest “Dayani Cristal”. The documentary shows the medical examiner and embassy people in Arizona who work on trying to identify the dead man. We learn from them that their work has increased tenfold as increased border enforcement in California and Texas has forced immigrants to use more dangerous desert routes. We also begin to meet the family of the dead man and some living people who have made the same journey. The reenactments portray what the man likely encountered on his travel. The interlacing technique is more distracting than effective.
 
Burn – 2012 (2.6). Documentary film makers followed some Detroit firefighters for a year to make this movie but he result is not particularly organized and does not seem to have any editorial intent. The helmet cam shots are exciting and the stories of the personal lives of a 30 year veteran about to retire and a younger man permanently disabled in a fire fight are engaging, but the film includes no introspective dialogues among the fire fighters themselves or with community members whom they protect. We see a new fire commissioner come in but get little feel for the context of the fire department in the politics surrounding this terribly damaged city.
 
Barbara – 2012 (2.3). East Germany in 1980 was very bleak and this German drama about a medical doctor who was banished to a hinterland clinic because she had asked to be allowed to leave the country certainly captures that bleakness. The problem is the script is also bleak and the characters fit in perfectly.
 
The movies on this list streamed via Netflix were (though some of the streaming rights may now have expired):
 
Parenthood (Season Three)
Parenthood (Season Four)
Aftershock
Altman
History of the Eagles
Muscle Shoals
Who Is Dayani Cristal?
Burn
Barbara