Though this list is being posted on Halloween, it is not a list of horror movies. In fact, since the genre is not a favorite of mine, none are on this list. This list is a typical hodge-podge of PBS and library materials. Some of the library ones come from old lists of showings at the Seattle International Film Festival. The gap since the last posting is a summer watching doldrum.
The Crown (Season Three) – 2019 (3.1). The cast changes as the characters age. The production values remain impressive and the acting as always is first rate. We begin to understand the people more as we live through their personal struggles in the midst of significant events in the outside world. Phillip has a reckoning with his cynicism and Charles grows into a fairly likable young man of sensitivity. The Queen continues her strong performance and Margaret continues to struggle. Sometimes it is strikingly evocative; even though these people are royals, they are still people.
Muhammad Ali – 2021 (3.1). This production from Ken Burns is a biography of the fighter as a man, an African-American a Muslim and a boxer, adeptly interweaving all elements chronologically with ample movie footage, some still photos and frequent comments from family, friends, boxers and sportswriters. The movie feels like a new generation from Burns, perhaps in part due to the more contemporary subject matter but also to a realization that the old Burns techniques had become dated. Ali was a highly talented fighter and a very charismatic man, but he had lots of human flaws and contradictions which he finally came to realize and atone for, but not until he had fought on too long past his prime with the sadly pathetic toll it took on his body.
Citizen Hearst – 2021 (2.9). An American Experience production on PBS this documentary uses movie footage, still photos and numerous interviews to tell the biography of William Randolph Hearst and his building of the first major American media empire. Along the way we touch on American history from the 1849 Gold Rush that made his father to rich, through his fling at Harvard, his battles with Pulitzer on entry into the newspaper business, yellow journalism, the progressive movement, anti union actions, more war mongering, romantic flings, marriage and absentee fatherhood, the movie business, Marion Davies, the Depression, financial fiascoes with the empire, losing control, a personal war against Japanese Americans, financial salvation via WWII, declining health and death by whimper instead of bang. Not a nice man, but fairly portrayed in this movie.
The Most Dangerous Year – 2018 (2.9). Filmed in the Seattle area in 2016, this documentary addresses the issue of transgender people and attempts to change public laws to restrict the manner in which they use public bathrooms. The movie puts a human face on transgender people especially by following some young transgender children and their families. It also includes interviews with medical and psychological professionals who give scientific insight on transgender issues. And finally coverage is given to the political arena where efforts to discriminate against transhgender people are defeated.
The Nightingale – 2018 (2.9). Though a bit long and expected to be maybe just another revenge movie, this film pleasantly surprises by holding attention and having a genuine feel for telling the story of a time and place very unfamiliar, 1825 in Tasmania. Writer director Jennifer Kent and her team made some wise choices in how to tell this tale of horrors in an authentic context. The characters have nuances but not unrealistic ones, the costumes are accurate right down to original dies, wooded Tasmania is rally wooded Tasmania, the screen is narrow, the shots are close and no drones or modern technology is indulged. Good to see a rarely told story presented so effectively.
Sandra Day O'Connor: The First – 2021 (2.9). This PBS American Experience documentary not only captures the personal biography of the late Supreme Court Justice, but also manages to effectively inform how the Republican party became beholden to the so-called moral majority.
Becoming Helen Keller – 2021 (2.8). From the Miracle Worker movie the story of Helen Keller is familiar, how a deaf blind child is brought out of her gloom by a gifted teacher. But this American Masters documentary passes over the early story quickly and moves on to the brilliant student who graduated from Radcliffe and became a socialist human rights advocate, not just for deaf and blind people but for all the oppressed. The movie also manages to touch on her personal life and emotional feelings. This should be a prompt to rread her writings.
Marriage Story – 2019 (2.8). This movie was intended to be a bit different in covering the story of a marriage breakup, with more emphasis on the mechanics of the legal process and with a better look at the dynamics of the marriage itself. While there may have been some different nuances presented, the net effect is pretty much the same as most divorce movies,though the parts about the divorce lawyers analyzing and strategizing are all too true and sadly funny. Starting with a scene where the wife basically rejects efforts at counseling, the movie goes through familiar territory in covering the frictions and frustrations, but never seems to approach the fundamental question of why people who obviously are not a long term match nevertheless get married.
Minari – 2020 (2.8). Lee Isaac Chung wrote and directed this authentic memoir of growing up on a farm in rural Arkansas in the 1980s with his Korean immigrant parents, older sister and maternal grandmother. Though the struggle of the parents in their relationship and in operating the farm are the heart of the story, it is still understandably written from the viewpoint of the young son.
The Rider – 2017 (2.8). Director Chloe Zhao came to the US from China graduating here from high school and college and going on to film school at NYU. Forr her NYU project Chloe, who had lived all her life in big cities decided to go to the prarie land, where she shot her first movie. While there she met a charismatic young rodeo rider who was recovering from a debilitating rodeo accident ad she decided to use his story as a basis for The Rider. The movie effectively captures the feel of the prarie life the young man and his friends and family live. The cinematography of the landscape is appropriately reverential. Watching the DVD special features after the movie is valuable. Chloe went on to win Oscars for movie and direction for Nomadland.
Unforgotten – 2020 (2.8). A carload of newly minted coppers is somehow involved in the death 30 years ago of a young criminal type whose body just turned up in a freezer at a salvage yard. Cassie, though only about 48 years old has PTSD and wants to retire, but budget constraints are delaying the move, so in need of income she decides to lead her team on one more case to determine if any of the coppers might have committed a crime. Of course her team resolves issues surrounding the death, but the most significant development is actually in the unsettled personal life of Cassie.
Us– 2020 (2.8). This Brit miniseries is based on a novel whose author collaborated on the screenplay. After about 20 year of marriage a wife tells her husband she thinks it is time to end the marriage and each go their own way. He is unpleasantly surprised and says they should go ahead with the European tour they had planned, hoping it might bring them back together and strengthen the poor relationship the father has with the son who is going to be heading off for college. The trip takes place and with the help of flashbacks we learn that the scientist husband and artistic wife were an odd couple but truly loved each other, overcame tragedy together and had a workable marriage. The son seems to have inherited the artist genes which helps explain the problem with the father. The trip takes place, problems are compounded, understanding is sought and a realistic conclusion is reached.
Mountain – 2018 (2.7). A collaboration between a documentary director, a noted chamber orchestra conductor and a writer of books on mountain climbing whose sparse words of narration are delivered by Willem Dafoe, those involved in this production are all devotees of climbing mountains. The cinematography is tremendous, the feats shown harrowing and the music at times inspiring and sometimes (especially the new compositions) a bit jarring. Obviously appealing to aficionados, the appeal is less for those of use not fond of the cold, in fear of heights and inclined to avoid strenuous physical exercise. The fast moving footage of people coming down the mountains by speed skiing, paragliding and combining both are breath taking and make those of us who would not do such a thing wonder why other do.
Rita Moreno: Just a Girl Who Decidedto Go For It – 2021 (2.7). Though it covers the basics of her biography, this American Masters documentary does not leave the viewer wanting to learn more about Rita. In fact, to a small degree it seems to leave a feeling that we got a lot of Rita in interviews but not much depth into her soul.
Guilt – 2019 (2.6). From the BBC this mystery miniseries was muddled and more twisted than need be as it told the story of various people in Edinburgh entwined in an accidental death of an elderly man dying of cancer. People are all hiding something from each other and have reason to feel guilt, but the audience has no understanding of the back story of anyone and no reason to care about any of them. When the show first started it was hard to tell whether it was intended to be part comedy, but that aspect soon disappeared; maybe it would have worked better as a comedy.