So a useful companion piece is The Social Dilemma (MC-78,
All In: The Fight for Democracy (MC-78, AMZ) involves two women whom I definitely admire: political activist Stacey Abrams and filmmaker Liz Garbus. So I was happy and inspired to watch it, but can’t claim to have learned much from this solid civics lesson, though I do recommend it to anyone who is not well-versed in the history and tactics of voter suppression. (I favored Stacey over Kamala for VP, as a forceful and committed speaker if nothing else, but I have to shamefacedly admit she’ll need to do an Oprah and lose some weight before she’ll be a viable national candidate.)
It’s hard to believe that
Alex Gibney is an individual and not a consortium of documentary filmmakers,
because he’s just out with another: Totally Under Control (MC-80,
Hulu). This timely film, released in a
rush before the election, covers the federal government’s role in the
coronavirus disaster, focusing not so much on Mafia Don’s personal idiocies,
but instead, with a deafening chorus of whistleblowers, on the administration’s
ideological and political calculations, which crippled the government’s
response. If you start with the premise
that “government is the problem, not the solution,” you clear the field for the
grifters and grafters to profit while the public suffers. Make money for your friends and allies,
instead of taking the steps necessary for public health in a pandemic. This film lays the whole thing out step by
sickening step. If you can bear to
relive it, this will give you a new and fuller perspective.
From documentary to
docudrama, in the realm of the just-released, I have to enter a strong
recommendation for The Trial of the
One more well-received – and
artful – new documentary to cite: Dick
Johnson is Dead (MC-89, NFX). I
found Kirsten Johnson’s highly-praised directorial debut Cameraperson to
be unwatchable, and this follow-up to be indescribable, but definitely
watchable in its uniqueness. It’s a
portrait of her psychiatrist father, who is gradually succumbing to the
dementia that has already taken her mother.
She moves him from their old home in
In passing, let me offer a firm shrug of the shoulders to Flesh and Blood (MC-75, PBS). I’m far from a regular viewer of Masterpiece Mystery, but the presence of Imelda Staunton led me to give this a try. And indeed she is the best, if not the only, reason to watch this derivative ensemble piece. As is typical of British tv, the ensemble’s acting is quite good, led by Francesca Annis (best remembered as Lady Macbeth in Polanski’s Macbeth) and Stephen Rea (think back to The Crying Game) as two widowers getting together much to the anxiety of her children, and the sweet but intrusive neighbor (Imelda). This four-part series follows the Big Little Lies template of starting with an apparent murder without revealing the victim, and also in its reliance on coastal scenery and luxurious surroundings. In this case, the White Cliffs of Dover and adjoining beaches are featured prominently. So it’s not a hardship to watch by any means, but hardly expands one’s horizons. (A side note: these days I’m rarely able to make a distinction between programs shot on film vs. hi-def video, but with this one I was constantly aware of the latter’s visual deficiencies.)
On the other hand, let me offer a big thumbs up for The Queen’s Gambit (MC-78, NFX). At times, whoever at Metacritic is assigning rating numbers to reviews seems rather prejudicial. The reviews for this Netflix limited series are mostly raves, and so is mine. So many good things about it, with my only quibble that the seven episodes might better have been cut to the canonical six (there’s a reason why a sonnet has 14 lines), or expanded indefinitely. Written and directed by Scott Frank, from a novel by Walter Tevis (The Hustler, The Man Who Fell to Earth, The Color of Money), with vast sweep to go with psychological insight, the series revolves entirely around the transcendent performance of Anya Taylor-Joy as Beth Harmon, the chess prodigy who goes from Kentucky orphanage to World Championship match in Moscow. With production values to rival The Crown, the story spans the Sixties, with the focus on the chessboard, though tournaments in Mexico City, Las Vegas, Paris, and the Soviet Union are convincingly rendered, and Beth certainly registers the changes in style through the decade (cf. Mad Men). Outstanding acting all round, but special mention has to go to Marielle Heller – the estimable director of A Beautiful Day... (see above) – as Beth’s adoptive mother who goes from mad housewife to confidante of her gifted daughter, and to Bill Camp as the reclusive orphanage janitor from whom she learns the game. The boys and men that Beth humbles on her climb up the ladder of chess mastery are also well portrayed. I’m no more a chess player than I was a billiards player, but the variety of ways and places that the game is cinematically depicted keeps the viewer leaning in and hanging on the action. But it all comes down to the stunning looks and bewitching gaze of Anya Taylor-Joy, as she navigates the perils and promise of her chosen obsessions.
Emma. (MC-71, HBO) is likewise graced by Anya T-J and likewise undervalued by Metacritic. I feel quite proprietary about Jane Austen, and quite severe about some pop culture appropriations of her novels. Anya can’t supplant Kate Beckinsale as my favorite Emma, but rockets ahead of Gwyneth Paltrow and Romola Garai. In Autumn de Wilde’s directorial debut, she starts out in Wes Anderson or Marie Antoinette territory, with an arch, pastel-toned, anachronistic approach, but soon settles into quite faithful adaptation, with good performances all round, hitting all the high points of the story. Bill Nighy is amusing as Mr. Woodhouse, and Johnny Flynn makes a believable Knightley, and other familiar faces from British TV admirably fill out the subsidiary roles. The settings and costume design are delightful, as expected, justifying the punctuation that announces the film as a period piece. All round, quite satisfying to Janeites and newbies alike.
The next section of this
composite review is a follow-up to my “Black films matter” post. First off, The 40-Year Old Version (MC-80,
NFX). Radha Blank wrote and directed, as
well as starring in, this highly but not totally autobiographical – self-aware
and serio-comic – take on the Black artist’s life. Besides the nod in the title, this black
& white (in several senses) film takes after She’s Gotta Have It and
Time (MC-94, AMZ) is a powerful collaboration between two strong Black women, director Garrett Bradley (award winner at Sundance this year) and subject Sibil Fox Richardson, who goes by Fox Rich as a New Orleans businesswoman, motivational speaker, mother of six boys, and tireless advocate for her husband Rob, incarcerated at Angola on a no-reprieve 60-year sentence. They were both arrested for a desperate and hapless armed robbery attempt; she took a plea bargain for 12 years and was out in 3½, he went to trial and was subjected to punitive retribution. So Fox has to raise her boys without a father and hold her tight-knit family together through two decades. One thing she does is take a wealth of home movies, which make up a good portion of the film. Bradley is the daughter of two painters, and takes an artistic, associative approach to the material, mixing her own footage and Fox’s into a fluid amalgam, a meditation on the many meanings of doing time. This film makes a highly-personalized companion to Ava DuVernay’s more comprehensive documentary 13th, advancing the case for mass incarceration as the new slavery.
Driving While Black: Race, Space, and Mobility in America (MC-92, PBS) offers abundant history and context to the many dimensions of DWB, from the days when slaves weren’t allowed to leave the plantation, to the rise of Jim Crow and the KKK terrorizing Blacks who wandered into White space, to the segregation of transport, to the development of the automobile and The Green Book, through the decimation of black neighborhoods by interstate highways, all the way to the horrifying results of way too many white-on-black traffic stops these days. This comprehensive and well-put-together informational documentary by Gretchen Sorin and Ric Burns makes a valuable contribution to the current vital public conversations on the legacies of racism.
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