All the Way –
2017 (3.2). Movies made from stage plays are often a bit static, but this film
defies its stage origins. Bryan Cranston gives an awesome performance as LBJ
pushing Congress to pass the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The humanity and profanity
of President Johnson are on good display along with his empathy, self-doubt and
prodigious political ability.
Hannah Arendt –
2012 (3.0). Quite a bit of research paid off in accomplishing the difficult
task of making an entertaining and thought provoking movie about a brilliant
German-Jewish professor in the US who was an early exile from Germany and then
from a concentration camp in France. The film wisely concentrates on four years
of her life, when she covered the Nazi Eichmann trial in Jerusalem and eventually
wrote about it in The New Yorker and in a book and then had to weather enormous
criticism for her portrayal of Eichmann as a thoughtless bureaucrat mindlessly
following orders and for her questioning of whether Jewish community leaders
could have done more to protect their people. More of a thinker than a feeler,
Arendt failed to properly account for the emotional weight Holocaust survivors
were carrying. A great philosopher of political theory, she did significantly
contribute to discussions which remain highly relevant. The DVD has some very
good special features.
Joe's Violin –
2016 (3.0). This short documentary briefly introduces us to two people in NYC,
a 91 year old Holocaust survivor and a 12 year old Hispanic girl attending an
all-girl school composed of mostly children of immigrants. The man donates his
violin to an instrument drive for school kids and the girl is chosen to have
the use of the violin for one school year. His love of the instrument and music
is wrapped in family memories, especially of his mother who died in the
Holocaust. Her love of music is genuine and deep which is why she was chosen to
have the use of this beloved instrument. When the two eventually meet, the
connection is immediate, heartfelt and inspiring.
The Vietnam War –
2017 (3.0). This ten part documentary telling of the story of the US
involvement in the Vietnam War should be considered definitive, at least by
those interested enough to take the time to watch it all and digest what is
being documented. Ken Burns and Lynn Novick worked for several years putting
this series together, using much historical footage (some of which includes
enactments) and interviews with various participants, all woven together by
effective narration. The interviews with Americans give the sweep from their
initial involvement and then all the years that have passed with new
information about the war and more time for contextual reflection. With the
help of a Vietnamese producer, the interviewees also include Vietnamese who
were involved in the war from three different elements, North Vietnamese Army,
South Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong guerillas. Even for someone who lived
through the time and has followed events closely, the film includes new
information and perspectives, especially from the Vietnamese. This series
documents that the war was a huge mistake and those who prosecuted it for the
US knew that it was going to be a loser, but still persisted. Sadly, the
lessons taught by the war have not been well learned and this series will probably
not do much to change that.
Trumbo – 2015
(2.9). Bryan Cranston augments a good
script in portraying Dalton Trumbo as he takes on the HUAC and is blacklisted
and convicted of contempt of Congress. We see the pressures he faces at home,
the turmoil the witch hunt created in the Hollywood community and the clever
workarounds Trumbo concocted for himself and his fellow screenwriters. Some
actual news footage is seamlessly incorporated.
Everything is Copy
– 2015 (2.8). Nora Ephron was a well-regarded magazine essayist before becoming
a movie director. This nicely paced documentary by her son chronicles both
careers and includes personal biographical materials, all presented through
home movies, archival footage and lots of interviews with family and colleagues.
Kubo and the TwoStrings – 2016 (2.8). Five years of animated stop motion filming combined
with computer techniques to tell an epic story enmeshed in Japanese culture is
an impressive effort. The resulting film about the young son of a deceased samurai
who goes on a quest to find the lost armor of his father is quite showy but the
exact meaning of the quest is not particularly clear, especially for young
audiences.
Last Men in Aleppo
– 2017 (2.8). This intimate documentary follows a group of "white
helmets", self-appointed rescuers, Syrian men from Aleppo who respond to
bombings and use their knowledge of construction trades to dig survivors from
the rubble. Over some years, we meet the individuals, see them interact, watch
them in action and in moments of contemplation, despair and recommitment. There
are no interviews with other talking heads and no political views other than
condemnation of Assad and the Russians.
Prime Suspect:Tennison – 2017 (2.8). Shown to
Brits as Prime Suspect 1973, this six part prequel shows us Jane Tennison when
she first joins the police force while still living with her parents. She is a
natural cop and is so good looking that her boss can't resist the mutual
attraction. An early ethical challenge affords an opportunity to prove she is a
loyal team member or to take the high road. An ongoing case leads to catching
bank robbers in the act, with devastating results. No word yet on whether there
will be a second season.
Shalom Italia –
2016 (2.8). Three surviving Jewish brothers, born in Italy and driven with
their family during WWII first from their Florentine home, then from a small
town and finally into hiding near a small village in the hills, decide to go
back to the village and look for the cave where their family lived for a time.
We travel with them in this documentary and watch the men as they try to
sharpen their recall, re-experience the Italian life, philosophize, bicker and
complete their quest. We learn once again how fragile and personal memories are
and how revisiting those by talk and by travel can be an emotional journey.
Tribal Justice –
2016 (2.8). Tribal Judges on two Indian
reservations in California are followed as they work with tribe members who
have run afoul of the law, both on and off the reservation. Both Judges are
women, one with considerable experience and one fairly new. Dealing with
repeating patterns of addiction and low aspirations, the Judges adopt a more
mentoring approach to help the offenders deal with their personal problems.
Captain Fantastic
– 2016 (2.7). In this drama, a father raising his six kids off the grid in the
Pacific Northwest learns that his hospitalized wife has died. Her father tells the
man not to come to the funeral or he will have him arrested. Of course the man
and grieving kids do travel to and attend the service, leading to strange
confrontations with the "civilized" world and the family of the
deceased woman. Unfortunately a very important part of the movie was never
made, the story of how the couple decided to live off the grid in the first
place and the conflicts they had in their relationship in doing so.
Denial – 2016
(2.7). The problem with this movie about the libel suit brought by a Brit
historian holocaust denier against an American historian who calls him a liar
is that the script is unfortunately clumsy. The true story calls for a
concentration on the British law of libel, the legal tactical decisions of the
defense and the presentation of the case in court, which is more appropriate in
a documentary film or in a miniseries. In making it as a feature length drama,
the script writer has to decide on the major area of concentration, and the
script for this movie settled for touching all areas without any concentration.
Lili – 1953
(2.7). Young Leslie Caron embodies the role of the naïve orphan who finds a
home with the circus where she talks to puppets as if they were real people.
Her acting is the highlight with her dancing playing a lesser role.
Presenting Princess Shaw – 2015 (2.7). A young African-American woman from an abusive
background writes and records songs on YouTube. An Israeli video artist
composer likes her work and puts it into a video with some of his own musical
ideas. We see her struggling in her life and him working on a kibbutz. Eventually
they meet and her dream of performing on stage is met. The movie mostly follows
the singer, so we get to know her much more than we do the quiet Israeli. The
filmmaker says her posting on YouTube was like a message in a bottle thrown
into the sea. Though she is quite sincere in her singing, she does not seem to
have star potential. It would have been nice to know more about the Israeli.
Hitchcock/Truffaut
– 2015 (2.7). In 1962, Alfred Hitchcock granted an extended interview week to
the fast rising young film director Francois Truffaut. In spite of the need for
a translator, the two men hit it off and Truffaut recorded 27 hours of
conversation covering in detail the art and craft of cinema in general and of
Hitchcock in particular. Truffaut published a book presenting the interview
with numerous pictures from Hitchcock films. This documentary took on the task
of presenting the story of the two men and that week in less than 90 minutes.
The movie is a decent introduction to the book, especially for film students
and cinephiles.
Raising Bertie –
2016 (2.7). Six years in the lives of some young boys growing into men in rural
Bertie County, North Carolina are documented in this movie. The cycle of
poverty, incarceration, lack of education and absence of male role models
swirls around them. Stern but overworked mothers do the best they can and one
local woman starts an alternative high school that shows promise, but the odds
seem stacked against these fellows.
Remember Me –
2014 (2.2). The BBC wasted talent and resources for three episodes of this
drivel about an elderly widower who escapes from a nursing home after a woman
dies a mysterious death. There is a scary Indian woman ghost who may think she
has a good reason for doing bad things. The investigating detective ultimately
decides he doesn't care about solving the murder. The potential series viewer
would be well advised to make the same decision before starting to watch.
No comments:
Post a Comment