Using Google Sheets, I have now updated my movie ratings links in the sidebars through 2017, covering just under 3500 shows. The next step is to add in the 2018 shows after the end of the year. When I do that, I will amend this post to show the 2018 update is done.
I could take advantage of the Google Sheets feature of automatic updates, using Sheets as my actual data entry source and maintaining an ongoing list of all movies rated alpha and another for all movies in ratings order, but for now I prefer to just update the online lists manually at the end of each year.
Sunday, November 18, 2018
12 over 3 for 2017
I am finally getting my video spreadsheets updated to add in what I watched in 2017. Here are twelve things I watched in 2017 that I rated over 3:
Call The Midwife Christmas Special 2016 | 2016 | 3.3 |
Mother of Mine [re-watched in 2017] | 2005 | 3.2 |
All the Way | 2016 | 3.2 |
Wadjda | 2012 | 3.2 |
Witness, The | 2015 | 3.2 |
Home Fires (Season Two) | 2016 | 3.2 |
Veep (Season Five) | 2016 | 3.1 |
Little Big Lies | 2017 | 3.1 |
Tower | 2016 | 3.1 |
Victoria (Season One) | 2016 | 3.1 |
13th | 2016 | 3.1 |
Call The Midwife (Season Six) | 2017 | 3.1 |
Saturday, September 15, 2018
And into the Fall
And here are more.
Red Oaks (Season Two)
– 2016 (2.9). The second season maintains the style and approach of
the first and thankfully does not bombard us with lots of new
characters as it moves through the next year in the lives of the
principals. One gets married, one pair of parents divorces, a young
pair are sort of on again off again, a father faces possible jail
time and at season end pretty much everyone is making changes for the
coming year. We shall see what season three has in store for the next
year of these lives.
The Dressmaker
-2015 (2.8). Sent away from her small Aussie town as a young girl,
supposedly for killing a young boy, the woman returns years later as
an accomplished dressmaker and quickly acquires the women of the town
as customers, even as they continue to gossip about her. Revenge is
likely in her cards as she learns the true back story and we are
entertained enough to watch it through.
Harold and Lillian: A Hollywood LoveStory – 2015 (2.8). This
documentary is surprisingly fun watching. It tells the personal and
professional story of a Hollywood couple who rose to the pinnacle of
their movie professions ( he a story board artist and production
designer and she a research librarian)while raising their three sons
(the oldest with autism)and being known to all in Hollywood as the
tops in their field and two of the most fun people to spend time
around. Interviews with the couple and with many of their
professional and personal friends are combined with archival footage
from some of the mtriad of Hollywood classics on which they have
worked.
The Man in the High Castle (Season
Two) -2016 (2.8). This series
takes significant liberties with the book on which it is based, but
since it is all made up anyway, maybe that is not very important. As
the Nazis plot to eliminate the Japanese, all the plots and subplots
thicken for the principal characters, but leaving the viewer with the
question how long one would want to play along with this fantasy,
which started way back in 1962 and has barely moved forward in time.
Nowhere to Hide
– 2016 (2.8). When the US led coalition pulled out of Iraq and
turned control over to the Iraqui government, a man in central Iraq
was give a video camera by a filmmaker who told him to record what
happens. This resulting documentary edits five years of videos with
written inserts of what is happening in the country as the videos
move forward. It is just home movies, but of a dangerous place in a
dangerous time.
Red Oaks (Season Three)
– 2017 (2.8). The third season is short by a couple episodes as the
characters move on another year, some relationships ripen, some are
replaced and situations morph. Still a pleasant enough watch as we
are invested in the characters. Unfortunately, it has been announced this will be the last season of the series
Training Day
- 2001 (2.8). Denzel Washington won the top Oscar playing an LA cop
heading a small narc unit practicing its own brand of “street
justice”. The movie takes place on the first day of training a new
white officer transferring in as a step to becoming a detective. The
recruit is shocked by the outrageous way the mentor disregards the
rules, but he tries to bend and hang on even as situations quickly
escalate and he begins to realize he may be getting setup as a patsy.
This is another example of the Oscar going to a portrayal of a
mentally unhinged person, but Denzel is such a good actor he deserved
to have an addition to his supporting Oscar for Glory (which still
holds up on watching anew).
Voices of the Sea
-2018 (2.8). In an extremely impoverished Cuban fishing village an
older respected fisherman haas married a young widow resulting in a
blended family. Though dissatisfied with what the Castro revolution
has delivered, the man nevertheless is content to carry on his life
in the village. But the woman wants more out of life and dreams of
fleeing to the USA. She is not alone in that dream and this
documentary shows the lure of the dream and the reality of the
difficulty of achieving it and the consequences of failing to
complete the quest.
Wonder
- 2017 (2.8). A home schooled boy born with major facial
abnormalities starts attending a large middle school in this
appealing movie. He is strong of character and has supportive parents
and older sister, but the kids at the school handle relating to their
new schoolmate with mixed success. There are plenty of messages in
this well acted film, but it does not get too bogged down until maybe
a bit at the end. The DVD special features are disappointing in not
telling about the genesis of the book on which the movie was based
and on not telling more about the casting, direction and makeup of
Jacob Tremblay the excellent young actor who also played the boy in
the movie Room.
Mr. Robot (Season One)
– 2015 (2.7). This series about an Asperger's type computer hacker
who gets involved in taking down an evil global corporate
conglomerate started off with lots of promise but by the end of the
season it was a bit disappointing as the lead character became more
unbalanced and took us with him to the point where we did not quite
know what was going on for real and what was just in his head. The
prospect of more seasons of such disorientation is not appealing.
Still Tomorrow – 2016 (2.7). A
Chinese woman about 40 years old with muscular dystrophy lives in a
small village with her parents. She has a husband who works
construction in big cities and comes to the village once a year where
the couple end up arguing about her wanting a divorce. Though she
never finished high school, she has used the Internet and been
discovered as a talented poet. Once her work is published she becomes
a minor celebrity particularly to young people and she travels to
book signings and media interviews. Her mother is diagnosed with
terminal cancer and the daughter is not much emotional support. The
poet and her husband have a young son, but we never see him, possibly
because PBS POV once again cut a 88 minute documentary down to fit in
a time slot of less than one hour.
All the Money in the World
-2017 (2.6). This is the movie that was basically completed with
Kevin Spacey in the role of J. Paul Getty when Spacey's scandals came
to light. The decision was made to re-shoot all the Spacey scenes
with Christopher Plummer in the role. Most likely this disruption did
not improve the finished product, but the real problem is the script.
It jumps around so much at the start that it threatens to undermine
what is certainly a compelling story about the Rome kidnapping of a
grandson of the richest man in the world. Things settle down enough
by the end of the film to keep viewers watching. Even though we know
the boy is going to live, we stay tuned for the details.
Dunkirk
– 2017 (2.6). We have become so used to CGI footage in action
movies that it is surprising to learn that Christopher Nolan made
this movie about the evacuation of trapped British forces in 1940
with only a minimal amount of CGI and movie lot water tank work. A
tremendous amount of logistical work went into recreating the time,
place and events but the weakness of this movie is in the script. The
attempt to tell the massive story from a subjective point of view of
a few participants does not come across effectively, because of the
lack of back story on the characters and the absence of cohesion from
cutting back and forth between the various activities.
Human Flow
– 2017 (2.6). The eye of the artist is evident in the beautiful
cinematography of this documentary by Ai Wei Wei about the world wide
refugee flows. Footage and interviews of refugees, commentaries by
government and NGO officials and on screen data facts are the
methodology, but there is no in depth analysis or proposals for
improvements to dealing with the largest refugee traffic since WWII
in spite of the fairly long running time of the movie.
Whose Streets?
-2017 (2.5). The story of the police shooting of Mike Brown in
Ferguson Missouri and the aftermath as the community came together in
protest was extensively followed by the media at the time. This
documentary was made during the events and included additional
interviews in the aftermath. While we did get to meet a few of the
activists up close, we did not see or learn anything we did not
already know.
The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher: The Murder at Road Hill House– 2011 (2.4). Tell the true story of an 1860 murder of a young boy
in a British country estate house from the wrong point of view and
the result is an inferior mystery drama. This movie treated it like a
whodunit that ended in failure to detect, only to quickly turn to a
post scripted denouement that was disconnected from all that preceded
it.
Sunday, July 29, 2018
Making it through the Summer
With an old
computer hooked up to the TV in the living room, Amazon Prime videos
are now streaming. The last few library holds should be coming in
soon and as fall arrives PBS should start some of their dramas for
new seasons.
Instructions Not Included-
2013 (3.0). Eugenio Derbez plays an Acapulco man whose father scared
the hell out of him trying to make him unafraid. He has an active sex
life but then one day a woman shows up on his doorstep and leaves him
with a baby girl he did not know he fathered. He tracks the woman to
Los Angeles but then loses her trail as he gets work as a dangerous
stunt man (English not required) and carves out a life as a dotingly
loving father. He writes fake letters to the girl purportedly from
the mother who is off on world saving adventures, which is why she
cannot come see her daughter. One day when the girl is seven the
mother reappears on the scene, just as the doctor has given the man
terminal medical news. At this point we can pause to speculate where
the script goes from here, but whn we play on we learn that we were a
little bit right but not prepared for the actual ending and
explanation of the message of the movie.
I, Daniel Blake
– 2016 (2.9). For over fifty years Ken Loach has made British TV
shows and movies, almost always with the feel of a documentary even
if the story was actually a drama. The themes are invariably critical
of the governmental status quo and advocating the need for
progressive change. He won the Golden Palm for this story about an
older widowed worker recovering from a heart attack and a struggling
young single mother of two young kids. The meet at the government
agency which is supposed to be helping them but which frustrates both
of them by its bureaucratic incompetency and non-concern. There is a
sort of father daughter relationship and the pain and frustration
they feel comes across in the film.
Red Oaks (Season One)
– 2014 (2.9). Humor, romance and drama are nicely blended in this
series about college age kids working summers at a 1980's country
club. The cast is filled out with some parents, older club workers
and club members, the President of the club and his daughter and
other romantic foils. The first season ends with people heading in
lots of different directions and the audience wanting to watch more
to see what develops.
Singing with Angry Bird– 2016 (2.9). A Korean opera singer decides to start a choir for
children in a slum in India in this documentary. He is very intense
in his style and the kids jokingly nickname him Angry Bird. But the
kids thoroughly enjoy learning from him and singing the eclectic mix
of songs he teaches them. The parents of the children are not sure
what it is all about and when Angry Bird tries to explain it to them
he soon realizes the best way to explain it to them is to get them
involved in learning to sing and perform. The kids love the idea and
it is uplifting to see the interaction of love between these parents
and children who are so used to being considered of little or no
value. The scene of the children in rehearsal sing to their mothers
as they hold their hands is extremely moving. For some reason the
version of the movie shown on PBS was cut down by about 30 minutes to
fit an hour time slot.
Atlanta(Season One) – 2017 (2.8). Three charismatic young black men in
Atlanta are trying to crack the local rap scene in this TV series.
One gets some payola air play and creates a minor stir. One tries to
be the manager while also working on his relationship with his
daughter and her mother. The third just hangs around, philosophizes a
bit and maintains a low profile. Some violence is expected, though it
is taken more for granted than seriously. Marijuana is the norm and
dealing provides a supplemental, though dangerous, income.
Ferdinand
– 2017 (2.8). The classic story of the kind and loving bull comes
warmly to the screen in this fun animated movie with humor and music
and dancing and heart. The lack of industrial scale bombast and
overly cute characters with famous celebrity voices is endearing, as
is the fact that there will not be scads of rehashes and spin off
merchandising.
The Insult
– 2017 (2.8). In Beirut a verbal dispute between a Lebanese
Christian man and a Palestinian worker leads to an aborted apology
attempt, further insults and then a physical assault and ultimately a
lawsuit that takes on a life of its own in this Arabic language
drama. The men and their opposing attorneys (a father and daughter)
represent political baggage and different viewpoints that have been
smoldering for decades. On a larger scale, the movie is about “us
versus them” thinking and the need for reconciliation.
Lindy Lou, Juror Number 2
– 2017 (2.8). After serving on a Mississippi jury that voted a
death sentence to a young man for the stabbing murder of a woman,
juror Lindy Lou struggled with issues of her own guilt for not
listening to her heart and gut that were telling her not to kill him
but to imprison him for life. In her struggles she visited the man in
prison and became friends with him before he was executed. Over
twenty years later she decided to find the other jurors and see if
they shared any of her feelings. Her visits with the other jurors and
her musings with her own family are the subject of this documentary
which makes one wonder what it would be like to actually serve on
such a jury. Though the case was in Mississippi and with an all white
jury, the defendant was also white, so no issues of race were
involved. Once again,for some reason the version of the movie shown
on PBS was cut down by about 30 minutes to fit an hour time slot.
The Man in the High Castle (Season
One) – 2015 (2.8). Based on
the novel by Philip K. Dick, this series from the “what if”
school of history takes place in a post WWII world where the axis
powers have prevailed. The eastern US is Nazi occupied and the West
is under Japanese control, with the Rocky Mountains a neutral zone.
The Nazis have weapons supremacy, but Hitler is content to not try to
overpower the Japanese. However, some top level Nazis want to strike
Japanese forces and are willing to “remove” Hitler if need be.
The Japanese are trying to hold on to the fragile detente, though
some believe stealing Nazi weapon secrets is the only way to insure
peaceful balance of power. The drama is told through following
individual Nazis and Japanese officials as well as American members
of the underground resistance. The first season was interesting
enough to invite a look at the second.
Marshall– 2017 (2.8). This drama involving the great Thurgood Marshall
centers on one legal case, but it is not the school desegregation
victory in the US Supreme Court in the 1950s. This movie is about a
case in 1941 in Connecticut in which a black chauffeur is accused of
raping his white employer. Marshall is the sole attorney for the
NAACP and is sent throughout the states to defend Negroes on trial.
He usually needs permission from the local court to associate with a
local attorney on the case. In Connecticut, he is matched with a
reluctant Jewish attorney with no criminal law experience. The movie
is a combination of a “did he do it” movie with an unusual
mentoring of a Jewish attorney by a Negro one.
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (Season
One) – 2017 (2.8). Amazon
Prime produced this series about a college educated 1950s NYC
housewife who dotes on her husband and tries to abet his desire to be
a stand-up comic in spite of his lack of talent. After their marriage
breaks apart over his affair, she stumbles into doing stand-up
herself, and she does have talent. The relationships between Mrs.
Maisel and her husband, her lesbian manager and the parents and
inlaws all provide legitimate fodder for humor tinged with pathos.
Unfortunately we once again have too many f-words in the dialogue,
which is not the way I remember the 1950s.
Victoria & Abdul– 2017 (2.8). Sixty two years into her reign Queen Victoria was
emotionally and physically exhausted and felt there was no one
including her children who could inspire her. Then along came Abdul.
A tall, dark and handsome young Indian clerk, he had been selected to
present the Queen a ceremonial coin from India. He was excited to go
to England and see the Queen, but was instructed to merely present
the gift, not make eye contact and back away. But he could not resist
the majesty of the Queen and she could not resist his adoration and
charm. Based on a true story of a short term but deep relationship at
the end of Victoria's life, the drama benefits from the consummate
regal acting of Judi Dench and the on scren chmistry with her young
Indian acting partner.
Cameraperson-
2016 (2.7). After shooting documentary footage for various directors
over 25 years, Kirsten Johnson decides to make her own movie as a bit
of a memoir and also as an explanation of her work style. Directors
were various generous in allowing her to go through all the footage
she made for them, and most of what she selected for her film is
actually outtakes. The resulting movie is also self-help counseling
for PTSD like symptoms experienced in covering so many dangerous
stories around the world. Watching the editing special feature on the
DVD before watching the movie will help better understand what is
being shown and how it came to be put together in the final form.
Versus: The Life and Films of KenLoach – 2016 (2.7). This
documentary uses extensive interviews with the British director and
those who have worked with him through the years and with his family
members, combined with clips from over fifty years of his work to
tell the personal and professional story of this progressive
activist.
War & Peace
– 2015 (2.7). At over 1,000 pages, it is no wonder few people have
actually read the Tolstoy novel. This BBC adaptation mini-series has
the look and feel one would expect and actually makes it possible to
follow the characters on their war of attrition through the
Napoleonic wars, but the bottom line is that it is hard to care what
happens to these aristocrats except for the evil Helene and her
brother, for both of whom one cannot help but wish the worst.
The Workers Cup
– 2017 (2.7). Migrant workers from Asia and Africa are being
exploited as they work on building venues for the 2022 World Cup in
Qatar. This documentary follows some of them while they engage in
what the government and contractors hope will be a morale booster –
a World Cup style tournament between teams from the various
contractors. The individuals followed are interesting but there is
not much depth developed,. The filmmaker also purposely avoided
getting into exposing and commenting on the economic and social
issues to any depth.
Roman J. Israel, Esq.
- 2017 (2.6). Denzel Washington nails the role of an Asperger's
attorney lost in a 1970s time warp in this drama. Sadly the script
for the movie is not up to his level. It fumbles around and goes in
various directions before deciding to become a bit of a thriller.
Monday, June 18, 2018
More from the Library
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.
Wednesday, May 23, 2018
Nominees, Winners and PBS
So the award
nominees and winners are starting to become available on DVD at the
library and most are only marginal or worse. The few better ones rise
to the level of the several PBS shows also at the top of the list
presented below.
Call the Midwife (Season Seven)
-2017 (3.2). The series
continues to maintain its quality as it progresses chronologically
further into the 1960s, with character progression, succession and
suppression. Color is added by a midwife from Jamaica.
Loving Vincent –
2017 (3.0). One hundred or so artists painted thousands of oil
paintings over the course of two years, in a style like Van Gogh, and
these were brought to life through animation to make this evocative
movie. The story line is that the postmaster who was friends with
Vincent was given a letter Vincent had written to his brother Theo
but not mailed before Vincent died, The postmaster deputizes his
aimless son to deliver the letter, but the young man quickly finds
Theo is also dead. He then embarks on an inquiry of the locals,
trying to determine whether Vincent had in fact shot himself or been
shot by someone else, perhaps by accident. The frames of the film
pulse with the motion evoked by the paintings of Van Gogh, and the
faces of the historical people are rendered as there similar looking
actors. As the young man discovers the real Vincent, we are motivated
to reacquaint ourselves with him also.
The Breadwinner
-2017 (2.9). Adapted from a novel, this animated drama tells the
story of a young girl in Afghanistan who poses as a boy in order to
work and earn money for her family after her father is sent to prison
by the Taliban. The movie alternates between the somewhat bleak story
of the family struggles and a more colorful storytelling of an
ancient fable about a young boy facing monsters in order to save his
village.
Little Women
-2018 (2.9). The Alcott classic makes yet another appearance, this
time on PBS as a two part presentation. The appeal of the story and
quality of production and acting beg for a more in depth treatment
spread over many episodes. Though there are items from the life of
the author in this story, it is not an autobiography. The American
Masters film on Alcott gives the true story of her life and makes a
good double billing with the new movie.
Unforgotten (Season Two)
-2017 (2.9). The series improves ever so slightly as we know the
detectives and the investigative techniques better and become better
detectives ourselves. Still the ending to the second season is a new
twist product of cleverly believable writing.
The Big Sick
-2017 (2.8). Based on a true story and starring the real Pakistani
American comedian, this romantic comedy starts of fun decently paced
but then begins to bog down a bit and seem a little draggy. The
chemistry is good between the leads and the supporting cast is
adequate, but the script spends too much time on the comedy club
supporting characters and too little time on the Pakistani family
conflicts over the cultural traditions. Nevertheless it is basically
a fun movie to watch, knowing the big sickness is not going to be the
end.
The Florida Project
– 2017 (2.8). Independent filmmaker Sean Baker wanted to entertain
and inform with this movie about a six year old girl and her single
mother living a “nearly homeless” life in a rundown motel near
Disney World in Florida. The girl and her playmates are intended to
be entertainingly reminiscent of Spanky and Our Gang, while the
plight of the mother trying to come up with motel rent informs us of
this other world under our noses. The mother is not a particularly
sympathetic character, indeed she is an easy target for justified
criticism. Willem Dafoe, the only professional in the cast, playing
the beleaguered resident motel manager serves as a brusquely
sympathetic link between the precarious life of the girl and her
mother and the rest of the world that is considered more normal. The
DVD special features are helpful in understanding how Baker works and
in meeting the cast.
I, Tonya
– 2017 (2.8). In a variation on Rashomon, the story of ice skater
Tonya Harding is told through enacted interviews with the skater and
others in her life, interwoven with enactments of the events in her
life as they are being told by the various participants. We may
already know the story, the movie says, or do we only have an
amalgamation of viewpoints with varying truth. The film moves along,
the skating special effects are seamless and while you may not
particularly like her, you have to begrudge a degree of sympathy.
Supporting Actress Oscar winner Allison Janney as the mom is a real
life Cruella.
Lady Bird –
2017 (2.8). A promising writing and directing debut for actress Greta
Gerwig, this dramedy brings some freshness to the story of a high
school student wanting to break out of her shell and go to a college
away from home. There is a lot going on in her life and it would be
fun to follow her experiences in more depth as was done in a very
good TV series with similar themes almost 25 years ago – My
So-Called Life.
The Post
– 2017 (2.8). The decision whether to publish the Pentagon Papers
revealing the decades of deceit behind America's involvement in
Vietnam was a monumental one for Katherine Graham, the owner of the
Washington Post. She had taken over the helm after the unexpected
death of her husband and was in the process of taking a huge segment
of the company public. The New York Times was under a temporary court
injunction not to publish, so legal exposure for the Post could be
enough to scare off investors and potentially be the beginning of the
end for the paper. In the short period of time portrayed in the
movie, Graham with the support of her editor Ben Bradlee decides to
do it and the Supreme Court ultimately comes down in favor of the
newspapers. Steven Spielberg puts his familiar touch on the
direction, at times unable to resist a tendency to be hokey, but
Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks do good jobs as the principals.
Unforgotten (Season One)
-2015 (2.8). In this Brit mystery miniseries a body is discovered
after being buried for who knows how many years. Identifying the
deceased, determining if there was foul play and trying to track down
witnesses and suspects after decades falls to a special task force
dedicated to seeking justice for the unforgotten. The format of the
script alternates between the crime lab and detectives diligently
pursuing every lead, while we also get glimpses into the current
lives of several people who soon become persons of interest. They all
seem to be hiding something, but is it material to determining
responsibility for the death and will the police be able to figure it
out by season end?
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing,
Missouri – 2017 (2.7). This
movie had a lot of promise, with an unsolved heinous crime in a small
town, a dying policeman taken to task by the mother of the victim and
supporting characters who interestingly filled out the cast.
Unfortunately about midway through the script took a turn for the
worse deteriorating into a succession of criminal acts of vengeance
that nobody seemed interested in stopping or punishing and that did
nothing to actually solve the crime.
Molly's Game
– 2017 (2.6). This overlong drama about a very bright Olympic skier
who became the organizer of a poker game for high rollers contains
lots of fast and witty dialogue but the movie drags and fails to
create any empathy or much drama. We know from the start that she
will eventually run afoul of the law, but we are not sure until the
end what will be her punishment. Apparently we are supposed to be
uplifted by her ultimate decision on a plea bargain and the effect
that has on her sentencing, though the main effect on the audience
may be relief that the movie is finally over.
Call Me By Your Name
– 2017 (2.5). The 17 year old precocious son of a professor spends
the summer at their Villa in northern Italy and is enraptured with a
confident man who comes to stay a while and work under the professor.
This happens at a time when the boy is confronting his sexual
identity, a task with which the visitor helps him, while the parents
seem to remain a bit disengaged. This movie is for those drawn to the
subject matter, otherwise it plods.
The Shape of Water
– 2017 (2.5). Guillermo del Toro likes his creatures and odd
stories and this movie is another one. A fish man from the Amazon is
of interest to cold war scientists. He is in an American facility
being tortured by the evil security head while a mute cleaning lady
becomes romantically interested in him. Lonely oddball people meet
fish man, so therefore give it the Oscar.
The Square
– 2017 (2.4). This movie had something to say, but good luck
figuring out what it was, in spite of two and a half hours of trying.
The fact that it is a Swedish film is not the problem. The script is
a muddle with scenes supposedly connected but with the links not
actually interesting enough to click on; yet nevertheless they just
keep playing themselves. Beggars and people needing help, immigrant
prejudice, pretentious art and a hodgepodge of other garbage, like a
predator ape man at a fund raising gala for a museum and quite
literally an overhead shot of the museum director looking through a
dumpster of trash bags. Oh and do not forget about the after sex
scene where the participants have a tug of war over the used condom.
Sunday, April 22, 2018
Long Again
Here is another list of some length, some from the library and PBS and some from cable Watchathon week. Scouring the awards nominees from the last couple months of awards lists has produced a couple dozen prospects for the library hold list and those should be coming available in the next few months. This Is Us made it to the top again.
This Is Us (Season Two) – 2017
(3.2). It can be hard for a new series to improve in the second
season, especially when the first year was very impressive, so a drop
off for this series was probably expected. The originality of the
story line and the time shifting techniques held attention throughout
the first year but did lose a bit of novelty in the second.
Nevertheless, viewers were able to learn more about the background
and depth of the central characters and their relationships even as
some new characters were introduced. Some questions from the first
season were answered in the second but new questions also came into
play. Near the end of the season, some episodes seemed to lag at
times or have less consequence. The last episode offered a couple
teases for next season.
The Crown (Season One) – 2016
(3.0). Nice production values and acting with decent writing make for
an enjoyable experience reliving the years of the reign of Queen
Elizabeth II. The first season takes us up to the retirement of
Churchill (played well after the initial casting jolt by John
Lithgow). Claire Foy as the Queen captures the noblesse oblige and
the basic humanity of this monarch most of whose family come off as
pretty insufferable. Historians may quibble with various details and
political characterizations, but the gist of what it is like to be
the one wearing The Crown and upholding its symbolism and meaning is
what the series is about and that is well presented.
Victoria (Season Two) – 2017
(3.0). The second season of this series did not show improvement in
writing and in fact flattened and fell slightly. The problem is lack
of historical information on the bigger picture of what was going on
in the empire Victoria ruled and in the world at large. The series
takes more of a romance novel approach to the Queen and her
relationship with Albert and her extended family, which is not that
bad in itself, but then too much time is spent on the romantic novel
aspects of the lives of minor characters. There is much production
quality to hold faithful viewers, but covering more significant
historical matters and spending less time on the love lives of
peripheral people would take the series up a few notches.
Brooklyn – 2015 (2.9). Saoirse
Ronan does a star turn of acting in this story of a young woman from
a small Irish village who comes to Brooklyn in 1952 to start a new
life of opportunity. Under the guidance of an old Irish priest she
lives in a boarding house and gets a department store job and goes to
night school at Brooklyn College to gain bookkeeping certification.
Along the way she falls for a son of Italian immigrants. Meanwhile
back in the old country her older sister cares for the widowed mother
and lives vicariously through the younger girl. On a trip back to
Ireland the immigrant sees her old home through new eyes and likes
some of what she sees, but also remembers there is much not to like.
The movie and work of Ronan capture some of the inner turmoil, but
the novel on which it is based had more opportunity for depth,
capturing the inner thoughts of the young woman which are hard to
fully transmit on the screen. The movie script also took some
liberties with the novel, not only leaving out parts but also
changing some of the aspects of the story.
Crown, The (Season Two) – 2017
(2.9). The series moves along chronologically and we continue only
briefly to touch on major world events but go into rather a lot of
detail on the personal lives of the members of the royal family. This
is apparently what the series will continue to be as it runs up to
date. It is rather like a docudrama with a bit more drama than doc.
Game of Thrones (Season Seven) –
2017 (2.9). The penultimate season has the protagonists narrowing
down to the dragon queen, the evil Cersei and the dreaded white
walkers. Political machinations continue and relationships develop as
we anticipate the final year of the series and speculate on the
ultimate denouement.
Icarus – 2017 (2.9). Illegal
doping in sports is common but especially practiced by the Russian
State and Putin. This documentary involves one American bicyclist
working with a Russian whistle-blower doctor. As we follow the
Russian we are first enchanted by him and then become fearful for his
safety.
Mudbound – 2017 (2.9). In
rural Mississippi after WWII a white bomber pilot and a black tank
driver are depressed by what they have come back to and they bond
over their common experiences in the war in Europe. This does not sit
well with those, black and white, who remained home during the war.
Racial tensions are great and are inevitably going to come to a head
creating drama in wondering what the outcome will be. Some may see
the ending of the movie as a bit of a compromise.
Their Finest – 2016 (2.9).
England in 1940 during the blitz and after Dunkirk needed morale
boosters and propaganda to encourage the US to enter the war. A movie
about the heroism of the English people in rescuing their trapped
troops from Dunkirk so that they could fight on was just what was
needed. Desperate for writing talent, they recruited a young
secretary to work on the script. She was talented and attractive and
came with her own life story as she encountered her new work mates on
the film. The resulting movie within a movie is effective in evoking
the danger of the blitz, the heroism of ordinary people, the
serendipity of life and death in wartime on the home front and the
connections that people need and find in times of strife.
Winnie – 2017 (2.9). Behind
every great man, they say, there is a great woman. This documentary
does an effective job of persuading viewers that Winnie Mandela was
that woman behind her husband Nelson. During all his years of
imprisonment she was the defiantly activist face of the African
National Congress movement to end apartheid and allow black South
Africans the right of self-determination. The white government fought
her all the way both openly and by clandestine operations such as
infiltration and planting of false news. Under the pretext of Winnie
being unfaithful to their marriage during his imprisonment, Nelson
chose to ditch Winnie in order to become the first black leader of
South Africa. She still serves in the SA Parliament and was a key
interviewee in this film along with one of her daughters, black
advocates and white SA officials who discuss their tactics to
undermine her. Winnie is disappointed that SA did not become a more
socialist country.
Dolores -2017 (2.8). Dolores
Huerta was a cofounder of the farmworkers union movement with Cesar
Chavez, but she is much less well known, something this earnest
documentary is intended to change. Using much archival footage and
current interviews with still living activists of the time, with some
of her eleven children and with Dolores herself, the movie chronicles
the movement and touches on her personal life, though not always in a
linear trajectory.
Get Out – 2017 (2.8). An Oscar
nominated horror movie by a first time black director is worth a
look, even for someone not a fan of the scary genre. The movie holds
interest as we realize the white New England gentry hosting the black
boyfriend of their daughter are a little creepy and they and their
friends more than a bit awkward in the way they readily accept the
black man. Even weirder are the black maid and gardener who seem
related to the Stepford Wives. The original story was written about
the time of the first Obama election, but the ending was changed as
the Obama Presidency continued and the idea of what type of
conversation on race the movie might prompt also changed.
Stronger – 2017 (2.8). Based
on a true story of a man who lost both legs while a spectator in the
Boston Marathon bombing, this drama starts out strong as he and his
off again on again girlfriend and his alcoholic mother and various
relatives and friends cope with the aftermath. He becomes a poster
boy for the Boston Strong movement, which while well intended adds to
his burdens. But the movie loses some steam as the character of the
man who saved his life at the scene enters the picture and the
transformation in attitude of the victim seems a little abrupt.
When God Sleeps – 2017 (2.8).
This documentary follows an Iranian rap/rock musician in exile in
Germany. His writing and music has resulted in an Iranian fatwa with
a bounty on his head that increases as he continues to put his music
on the internet. Living in constant fear for his life, his band
members quit but some Germans take their place. His girlfriend and
mother worry about him as he vows not to be intimidated from
performing. In the course of the movie we learn a little more about
his early life and how he became an opponent of religion in general
and the state religion in particular, and ultimately whether he is an
atheist, agnostic or maybe someone who just thinks God is asleep.
The Red Turtle – 2016 (2.7).
Studio Ghibli reached out to a European animator to create the first
animated movie Ghibili would produce that was not made by a Japanese
artist. Without dialogue and with noninvasive music and simple but
highly detailed drawings, the story of a man stranded on a bamboo
forested island is a timeless tale of fighting nature evolving into
integrating with nature. However, the film does not have the same
allure and spirit as the traditional Ghibli offerings as its subtle
message plays out over eighty minutes.
Baby Driver – 2017 (2.6). A
mysterious young man who is always listening to music on his i-pod as
he drives getaway cars for a rotating band of bank robbers is the
central character of this offbeat movie. At the start of the film the
music choreographed with the movements of the man and the cars he
drives is engaging, but then the film devolves into a more standard
actioner with a young girl love interest and conflict with the gang
boss. Never mind all the innocent victims along the way.
The Boss Baby -2017 (2.6).
Animation from DreamWorks checks off all the blocks for what is
supposed to be worth producing, but the story line is a curious mix
of corporate management ills and young sibling rivalry. Fortunately
it moves along fast enough that the audience does not have to be
concerned about esoteric corporate aspects.
Do Not Resist – 2016 (2.6).
The maker of this documentary is the son of a police officer with
significant SWAT team experience. Concern for undue militarization of
police forces and SWAT teams was the impetus for the movie. For a
couple years such police teams were followed and filmed in action.
There is also much footage of police involvement with community
protestors and of teams executing search warrants. There is some
showing of politicians in public forums considering the acquisition
of military equipment for police forces. There are no interviews with
opinionated experts and there is no narration, just occasional screen
text with information and data. We are left feeling like a case was
made against excessive militarization of police but without clarity
of the details of the case.
The Child in Time – 2017
(2.4). This novel turned into a movie is about a man whose four year
old daughter disappeared while he was checking out at the
supermarket. Over time he and his wife from whom he becomes estranged
try to cope with the loss of their only child. We see a little bit of
his parents and too much of his publisher (he writes children's
books). We get many flashbacks and false sightings but no real news
about the investigation or search for the child. We know the stories
of all the characters are supposed to tell us something about lost
childhood as well as a lost child – but it comes across as a
tedious effort for naught.
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.
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.
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