PBS is going into
summer rerun mode but the DVD holds are continuing to roll in from
the library, so here are several more.
The Handmaid's Tale (Season One)
– 2017 (3.1). Imagine Trump continues to wreak his havoc on our
democracy and then is followed by the sanctimonious Pence and you
have the scary warning story behind the 1985 novel that became this
series. The author Margaret Atwood is working with the series
producers to keep things true to the novel and in planned future
seasons to take it beyond. The show garnered several Emmy awards,
most notably for the drama itself and for the lead actress Elizabeth
Moss. Sinclair Lewis told an earlier fascist menace version of this
story in his 1935 novel, “It Can't Happen Here”. [Update March 2019: I watched the first couple episodes of season two, which takes the story beyond the book, and found them slow moving, wallowing in horror, and not able to hold my interest enough to watch further].
Coco
– 2017 (3.0). Colorful, well-paced and with an interesting story
and characters, this movie about family and the remembering of our
dead ancestors earned the Best Animated Feature Oscar. The featured
song “Remember Me” also won. It is refreshing to watch an
animated film without being distracted by the use of many well known
actors to supply the voices and the insertion of scenes too cute for
their own sake.
The Man Who Invented Christmas
-2017 (3.0). This under appreciated movie about Dickens writing “A
Christmas Carol” starts a little slow but then soon takes off and
draws us into story of the man himself, the writing process and the
way he came up with the story that gave Christmas the human empathy
we celebrate. The characters truly speak to him as he is writing,
especially Scrooge himself (wonderfully played by Christopher
Plummer). The production values, acting and directing (Bharat Nalluri
needs to do more feature films) in this Canadian and Irish movie are
excellent.
Darkest Hour
– 2017 (2.9). Gary Oldman inhabits Winston Churchill in this Oscar
winning performance about the few weeks starting in May 1940 when
Britain faced invasion by the Nazis and pressure at home to let
Mussolini broker a peace with Hitler. This is another story so open
to the “what if” school of history. If Churchill had not rallied
the people and government to stand and fight, it is impossible to
tell what would have happened.
Paterson
– 2016 (2.9). Paterson lives in the same named city in NJ , which
is where he was born and now drives a bus. He is married to Laura and
they have an English bulldog. He leads a fairly repetitive life, up
in the morning, walk to work, drive the bus, walk home, take the dog
out for an evening walk and stop at the local bar for a beer. Laura
spices things up a bit with her home and personal improvements,
always in black and white and without an particular showing of
talent. In his quiet way he does not discourage her, while she overly
encourages his artistic endeavor of writing poetry. The city of
Paterson has lots of celebrity connections celebrated by thebarkeep,
including with the great poet William Carlos Williams. This is a Jim
Jarmusch movie, so not a lot happens, but we get to watch quietly as
Paterson lives his so-so life, deeply in love with Laura and always
observing the people and places he will put into poetry.
Aquarius
– 2016 (2.8). Sonia Braga plays 65 year old Brazilian widow Clara
still living a block from the beach in the Recife condo unit where
she and her husband raised their three children. Developers have
bought all the other units and want to tear the old building down and
build a new one, but Clara adamantly refuses to sell. The filmmaker
is a native of Recife and loves to make movies there. The film is
watchable as a bit long study of the current life of Clara with some
flashbacks about her past, but it is also intended as an allegory on
the social, political and economic change forces in Brazil.
How to Be a Latin Lover
– 2017 (2.8). Eugenio Derbez is a very popular actor in Mexico and
the humor he brings to this comedy shows why. His character learns
early in life in Mexico that working for a living is not the way to
go. He scores his ideal lifestyle by marrying a much older American
woman of wealth, but after 25 years is supplanted by a younger man.
In desperation he seeks out his estranged sister to house him. She
has an 8 year old son who the Lothario uses to try to snare his next
rich meal ticket. Lots of laugh out loud slapstick and self
deprecating humor are blended with just enough heart to not be
kitschy, in spite of the low ratings at IMDB. Time to try his earlier
hit, “Instructions Not Included”.
My Life as a Zucchini – 2016
(2.8). Animated puppetry is labor intensive as shown in the special
feature on the DVD of this French movie about a small group of
orphans living at a rural orphanage. Our hero is 10 years old with a
no-show Dad and an alcoholic mother he may have accidentally killed.
The kids all have similar hard life stories and quite different
personalities and coping styles, but they all are ultimately bonded
by their common plight and hope that their futures might not be so
bleak,
Served Like a Girl
– 2017 (2.8). In this documentary several women who served in
various branches of the US military are followed as they struggle
with the transition back to civilian life. Though their personal
stories have differences, there are also commonalities in their
struggles. Another common thread in the movies is that they all
participate in a competition to be crowned “Ms. Veteran America”,
which is intended, like this film, to call attention to the needs of
our women veterans.
Carol
– 2015 (2.7). In 1952, a wealthy unhappily married New Yorker with
a young daughter is instantly drawn to an attractive young woman who
works in a department store and has ambitions to be a photographer.
While a child custody hearing is pending in the older couple's
divorce, the divorcing New Yorker decides to take a break and go on a
road trip west, inviting the young girl along. As can be expected,
about halfway through the trip they have sex. Despite the age, wealth
and class differences, both people are struggling with their sexual
identity even as they are clearly drawn to each other. But the
greatest difficulty with the relationship is that they are both
women. Based on a novel written at the time, the movie goes to great
effort to get everything right in the feeling for the time and place
and the internal feelings of the women. The story is told on a very
personal and non-societal level, which seems to limit the impact it
can make on an audience today.
The Disaster Artist
– 2017 (2.7). In 2003 a mysteriously eccentric no talent man who
believed he was a great actor and cinematic master was befriended by
a newbie classmate in an acting class in San Francisco. They moved
together to LA and the mystery man self-funded an indie film [The
Room] he wrote and directed and in which he played the lead and his
friend the second role. Though the movie reportedly cost around $6
million, it was a total box office dud. However, it was so bad that
it became a midnight movie cult laugh fest and eventually earned
enough to break even. The current movie tells the ludicrous story of
making that dud, but never answers any questions about the mysteries
of the man. If you want to make a film about the making of a truly
lousy film, this may be about as good as you can do.
Faces Places
– 2017 (2.7). Agnes Varda, octogenarian movie director, teams up
with a young male photographer muralist for a road trip to villages
in France, where they park his van and attract locals to pose for
photos which he then prints out on large sheets and works with his
crew and Agnes to install them on local buildings. The documentary
has the charm of an inter-generational road trip and the warmth of
interactions between the two artists with each other and with the
locals. There is commentary on the philosophy of art and life, but
not enough of a message to make the film especially memorable.
The Greatest Showman
– 2017 (2.7). Lots of work went into creating this lavish musical
about the making of P.T. Barnum. We have a classic rags to riches
story with a fall and recovery, lots of vigorous dancing and varied
songs, elaborate production values and costumes, and the incredible
cast of natural (more or less) oddities. But somehow all the gusto
and the songs and music and story do not quite come together enough
to fully take hold and remain memorable.
The Revenant –
2015 (2.7). DiCaprio
wins an Oscar (on his sixth nomination) for doing survivalist revenge
as an 1823 fur trapper (an actual historical person) in the Rockies
(at first filmed in Canada and then moved to Argentina as the
Canadian weather warmed) who is left behind in the hands of three men
after being mauled by a bear. Unfortunately one is a scoundrel who
must be hunted down in the next two and a half hours of screen time,
for which the director Alejandro
G. Iñárritu also
won an Oscar (his second in a row). The beautiful all natural light
cinematography of winter in the Rockies (and Argentina) by Emmanuel
Lubezki also won (for three in a row).
Things to Come– 2016 (2.7). A pair of French philosophy professors are settled
into their lives and emptying their nest when the man unexpectedly
announces he is leaving his wife for another woman. We follow her as
she is at first disrupted and then seeks to identify and explore her
new found freedom, including visits to a mountain retreat commune
where a young former student is exploring his own emerging activism.
There is not much that actually happens in this French movie, though
it passes easily enough.
Inside Out
– 2015 (2.2). Pixar again used celebrities to voice odd looking
animated characters in this psycho babble story about an 11 year old
girl unhappy over her move to Frisco from Minnesota. Supposedly we
are able to see the girl from the outside and also her emotions from
the inside. The interior world is drawn in excruciatingly extensive
detail.
Phantom Thread
- 2017 (2.2). Put a top notch actor in the role of a temperamental
fashion genius in 1950s Britain, mix in his very uptight sister who
is his fashion partner, then add a young foreigner waitress who is
drawn to him in a sickish way, clothe in ridiculously expensive silly
gowns and serenade first with jazzy music and then with classical
pieces, make sure it is slow moving, boring and overlong and you have
this dud.
Anomalisa
– 2015 (1.7). This stop motion animated movie about a bored middle
age man having an evening with an ingenue who enchants him is
supposed to be a life changing inspiration, at least for him. Rather
good animation techniques are marred by three gimmicks, in no
particular order of annoyance: faces with visible modular joints,
male voices for all characters except the ingenue who speaks with a
beguilingly cute voice, and oral sex performed by the old bugger on
the young woman.