Tuesday, January 30, 2018

A Longer List


This list is larger than usual, extending an extra month. Normally the movies through year end would be added to my ratings lists and then the new lists published here. Unfortunately, the host server for my lists has been down for an extended period and may not return. I have tried to post the lists as blogger pages, but they are in long Excel spreadsheets and do not convert well in Blogger. I need to find a new server or a better way to convert them to Blogger.

This Is Us (Season One) – 2016 (3.7). NBC came up with a winner when they approved this series about a couple delivering a multiple birth in 1980. That starting point takes us to multiple intertwining story lines both forward and back and even a bit sideways as we get to know the characters in ever increasing depth. It is almost like the arc was written out on index cards which were then cleverly rearranged out of sequence to take us back and forth relevant to what we are learning at a given time about the characters and about life cycles in general. The experience would be familiar to a genealogist who develops the family history from expanding research that is never completely linear. Individual characters ebb and flow in our likability index as we learn more about them and how, in the words of a favorite cliche, they play the hand they were dealt. Often a development in the show makes the viewer realize that is something they never thought about in their own life; for example, who was present and waiting at the time of your birth.

Wadjda – 2012 (3.2). Saudi Arabia does not even have any movie theaters, but a Saudi woman director managed to film this movie in that country, the first feature length movie ever made there. The story is about a free spirited girl who wants a bicycle and joins the religion club at her school in order to enter a Koran knowledge contest to win the money to buy the bike. With help from Germans and other Europeans, the script was perfected and the movie shot under restrictive circumstances, including the director not being allowed to be present in public for the filming (she had to direct some scenes by walkie-talkie from a nearby van. The heroine is perfectly cast for the role and the movie offers a knowledgeable peek inside everyday Saudi Arabia. The DVD special features about making the film and an interview with the director are very good.

Little Big Lies – 2017 (3.1). The story from an Australian novel is transported to Monterrey California and made into a miniseries giving several actresses a chance to showcase their talent. A tale of female rivalries and friendships interwoven with issues of stress and violence in family and personal relationships, the plot also involves some whodunit aspects, with a few different twists. Smoothly directed and well-acted by the women and also the children, with good support from the men, the series was well enough received that it is being extended into a second season, where it will face the challenge of extending original material without deterioration.

Close-Up – 1990 (2.9). This Iranian movie is considered a classic because of its uniqueness. In real life Iran, a sad and weak man with maybe some talent but certainly some delusions that he could do impressive artistic work falls into an opportunity to pose as a famous young movie director. The upper middle class family he targets figures the ruse out quite soon and goes to the authorities. The man is charged with fraud and the story makes the papers where it intrigues an older movie director. This all really happened. The older director then decides to make a movie reenactment of the story, using the actual people. The DVD includes a follow up interview with the faker and some people who know him and a couple interviews with the older director.

Gifted – 2017 (2.9). This is a story of a first grade girl who is a super math whiz. She is being raised by her uncle in Florida who wants her to live a more normal life instead of the prodigy life that was forced on the similarly gifted mother of the girl. But Grandpa has a different plan. Shot entirely on location (actually in Georgia) with a small cast, the movie is emotionally effective, primarily because of the winning performance by the young actress Mckenna Grace.

After the Storm – 2016 (2.8). A flash in the pan novelist working as a detective to make ends meet is also a barely-show Dad. The man finally spends some time with his son and pines for his ex-wife who now has a financially successful suitor. Widowed grandma would like to see the whole family reunited. The sister of the flaky dad is rightfully concerned about him taking advantage of grandma. Not a lot of story is presented here, but the characters and interactions hold interest.

Call the Midwife Christmas Special 2017 – 2017 (2.8). Set during the deep freeze during which 1962 changed to 1963, the various stories covered seem to lack any connection other than the weather. An older grouchy police sergeant pops up in the neighborhood and could become a foil for the oldest midwife.

I Am Another You -2017 (2.8). A young female Chinese filmmaker studying in New York travels to Florida and meets an interesting young American from Utah who is joyously living the free life of a homeless person, so she decides to follow and film him. All starts well enough, but then problems develop and she aborts the project. Sometime later she decides to track him down and see how he is doing. What she finds is a more complete story on the man and his family and the mental health issues with which he and so many other homeless people contend. The technique is mostly interviews and filmed interactions. There are no experts or analysts.

Land of Mine -2015 (2.8). During WWII the Germans heavily mined Danish beaches to thwart any Allied invasion. After the war, German prisoners were forced by the Danish to remove these mines. This gripping Danish drama centers on an abusive Danish sergeant in charge of a detail of young Germans given this very dangerous task. This movie is yet another reminder that wars do not actually end when we think they are over.

The Salesman – 2016 (2.8). In this Iranian drama, a husband and wife both are appearing in a stage production of Death of a Salesman when she is assaulted by an intruder in their apartment. The incident causes strain in their relationship and the husband embarks on a mission to find and punish the perpetrator, without having a clear idea of what the punishment should be. Tying in with the stage play, humiliation is a theme in the movie.

Unrest – 2017 (2.8). A newlywed Harvard doctoral candidate became ill with a mysterious disease and she and her husband struggled to get it diagnosed. When they finally learned it was chronic fatigue syndrome, she decided to make a documentary about her efforts to cope with it. What could have been a depressing movie for the audience is avoided by the realistically upbeat attitude of the couple and by her finding other people around the world with the same problem and incorporating their stories into the film. This effort should help raise awareness of this very misunderstood disease which afflicts twice as many people as MS.

The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin – 2017 (2.8). The San Francisco writer and his friends and colleagues are interviewed and shown in archival footage to deliver an enjoyable documentary about his life and his stories celebrating the humanity of the individual without prejudgment based on race, gender or sexual preference.

Winter Sleep – 2014 (2.8). An actor and his divorced sister have inherited a historic hotel in a secluded Middle Eastern village in this Turkish drama. The actor has a young wife who is trying to be a community school activist. The actor has a long time foreman and a long time tenant family seriously in arrears. Since it is winter, only a few international guests pass through the hotel. Many conversations take place between the various characters, revealing underlying tensions without any apparent progress being made.

Shadow World- 2016 (2.7). Archival footage and interviews with various people familiar with how arms dealers and defense contractors peddle their wares to governments are the components of this documentary intended to shine a light on the shadowy arms trading. But the movie jumps around to different parts of the story in different places and times and never gives any hopeful possibilities for reigning in this dangerous beast.

Sully – 2016 (2.7). The Story of the "Miracle on the Hudson" emergency landing of a commercial jetliner on the river is told through the vehicle of following the inquiry into the accident and interleaving it with flashbacks of the lead up to and actual time of the crash, all focused on the celebrated pilot. At first, his decision to ditch on the river rather than head back to the airport is questioned by computer simulations, but the pilot challenges the accuracy of the sims. This is a formulaic but entertaining celebration of the value of sill, temperament and experience.

I Am Not Your Negro – 2016 (2.6). At the time of his death James Baldwin left the beginnings of a novel he was writing about the deaths of Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King. This documentary attempts to envision the completed book, but it never seems to come together. Lots of archival footage is shown of Baldwin and the three men who were killed, tied together with footage from old movies intended to make some points which at times are obvious for the stereotyping of black characters and at other times are just not clear as to why they were included. There is a fair amount of Baldwin giving talks and dialoguing and debating on interview shows at an intellectual level that can be hard to digest. The final talk by Baldwin makes the point that white America created "the Negro" so it is really the problem of white America to figure out how that creation has failed and to correct it.

Steve Jobs – 2015 (2.6). Eschewing the cradle to grave biopic approach, this script uses the backstage before three Apple product reveals for dialogue intensive reveals of back story and relationship frictions. Jobs is so unlikable and two of the three Apple products featured were flops. This movie comes close to being a match to the person and those products. 

Where Do We Go Now? – 2011 (2.6). Lebanon barely has a film industry, so this movie by a female Lebanese director is a rarity. Her goal was to make a statement about the stupidity of wars between people who foolishly allow themselves to be divided into rival groups. Set in a small village in a generic Middle Eastern country, the villagers are composed of Christians and Muslims who all get along fine – until trouble between the groups in other part of the country breaks out into fighting. Soon, the village is caught up in the same nonsense and the women decide they must do something to stop it. The concept is good, the amateur acting is authentic enough and the locations are excellent, but the script is problematic. The characters are not adequately developed or nuanced, musical numbers are inserted at odd times, occasional attempts at humor are inconsistent and there is little if any dramatic arc.

Saturday, January 13, 2018

Movie Ratings Lists Being Revised

January 2018

My lists of movies rated Alphabetically and from high to low are in the process of being revised. New lists will be posted here when the revision is completed.