Thursday, April 30, 2020

People of Color Unite in Monsters and Men, Reinaldo Marcus Greens Powerful Debut

Following the fourth season of HBOs Ballers and an Oscar-buzzed role in Spike Lees BlackKklansman, John David Washington the talented son of Denzel steps up with another forceful, socially relevant performance in Monsters and Men. In a striking debut feature, writer-director Reinaldo Marcus Green uses three perspectives to examine the shooting of an unarmed black man by a white cop in Brooklyns Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood. The victim is Darius Larson, a.k.a. Big D (Samel Edwards), a local who sells loose cigarettes outside a Bed-Stuy deli And if Big D reminds you of Eric Garner who died in 2014 after police placed him in a chokehold its not accidental.

Spike Lee on 'BlacKkKlansman' and Life in Trump's America Fall Movie Preview 2018: From Oscar Hopefuls to Big-Name Blockbusters Toronto Film Festival 2018: 'A Star Is Born' Is Damn Near Perfect

Washington plays Dennis, an African-American man shown singing along to Al Green in his car before a white cop pulls him over. Its racial proofing in action. Theres a gun on the front seat. It turns out Dennis is a cop, currently working undercover and sadly accustomed to being hassled by his colleagues. Its also Dennis who sees the shooting of Big D by a fellow cop. Caught in a vise of indecision does he rat on his brother in blue or let it go? Dennis brings his crisis of conscience home to his wife and children.

Theres no uncertainty in the mind of Manny (Anthony Ramos), a Latino family man who films Big Ds murder on his smartphone, goading the police in the process and getting threatened by two white cops after his video goes viral. Ramos, who costarred in Broadways Hamilton, has a talent that jumps off the screen. Mannys scenes with his wife (Jasmine Cephas Jones, another Hamilton vet) show whats at stake when fate forces your hand.

The video also impacts Zyric (an outstanding Kelvin Harrison Jr.), a high-school student this close to a college baseball scholarship. Zyrics political awakening worries his father (Rob Morgan) who believes his sons planned participation in a march against the murder of Big D will hurt his career. But like quarterback Colin Kaepernick, Zyric symbolically takes a knee by raising his voice against police brutality.

As Patrick Scolas camera prowls the landscape of protest, Monsters and Men grows in strength and purpose.The master plan of the film, expertly laid out by Green, is to show how these three otherwise unrelated characters each a person of color are united in condemning inaction as another form of complicity. Green sometimes hits his points too hard, letting his fierce human drama drift into polemic. But theres no denying the righteous indignation that fuels Monsters and Men, a powerhouse that couldnt be more timely or necessary.


People of Color Unite in Monsters and Men, Reinaldo Marcus Greens Powerful Debut

Trailers of the Week: Black Monday, Miss Bala, Destroyer

This week, we got some good looks at some 2019 releases, including the English-language remake of the Mexican thriller Miss Bala and a new Don Cheadle Wall-Street-gone-wild series for Showtime; plus a peek at Nicole Kidman scuzzing herself up for the cop-on-the-edge thriller Destroyer. Ladies and gentlemen, you best-trailers-of-the-week round-up.

The Aftermath
Hamburg, Germany, 1946 a woman (Keira Knightley) steps up off a train, awkwardly greeting her British-colonel husband (Jason Clarke) after having barely seen him during the last of the war years. Shes set to join him as her helps lead the reconstruction of the bombed-out city. Only theres a catch, see: The couple is living with a widower and his daughter. And since the single father is played by Alexander Skarsgrd, a.k.a. the seventh handsomest man in existence, well you can probably guess where this is headed. There will be prestigious historical drama. There will also be lightly brushed shoulders, torrid glances and some highly illicit romantic shenanigans. It opens on April 26th, 2019.

Why Is 'A Star Is Born' So Indestructible? Nicole Kidman: Lust and Trust Paul Greengrass: Why I Needed to Make '22 July'

Black Monday
I am the Black Moses, and Im gonna put the brother in Lehman Brothers. Did you like The Wolf of Wall Street but wish that Don Cheadle had starred in it instead? This trailer brings on the beaucoup adrenaline-rush fun Chair-throwing! Ass-slapping! Revved-up Lambos! before dropping folks (literally, via one plummeting stockbroker) into October 19th, 1987, the day stock markets took a massive nosedive. Cut to a ticking clock and a choice Lil Wayne track, this barrage of images from Cheadle & Co.s upcoming cable dramedy is one of the best edited trailers weve seen in a while. Girls Andrew Rannells and the mighty Regina Hall costar. Premieres January 20th, 2019. Were psyched.

Destroyer
Insanely photogenic actors they do love to get down and dirty in the name of serious acting. Not that we didnt think Nicole Kidman was a great performer before (see, well, virtually everything shes done in the past decade). But apparently we were not getting the message, so the movie star goes to great lengths to look like shes been sleeping off a weeklong booze bender in a Toyota Corolla in Karyn Kusamas cop thriller. It starts with a mystery corpse found on the mean streets of Hell-Ay and then slowly starts to fill in the pieces of how this body got there; what sort of connection it has to Kidmans burnt-out detective; and why an undercover case years ago left this woman scarred beyond repair. See for yourself when this opens on December 25th. Merry, er, Christmas?

Miss Bala
Jane the Virgins Gina Rodriguez is an Angeleno visiting a friend in Tijuana. Then the nightclub theyre at gets raided by drug cartel bad guys, who kidnap both women and tell the American shes got to smuggle narcotics back into the States. Soon, the D.E.A. are trying to flip her and turn her into a double agent. By the end of this trailer, guess whos walking around in evening gowns while toting machine guns? If this English-language remake is half as intense as Gerardo Naranjos original 2011 thriller, it should be a wild, violent-as-hell ride. Regardless, we get a good look at what Gina Rodriguez, Future Action Hero will look like. It hits theaters on February 1st, 2019.


Trailers of the Week: Black Monday, Miss Bala, Destroyer

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

How to Stream This Years Oscar-Nominated Songs and Films Online

The 2019 Academy Award nominations have been announced, and whether you want to refresh your memory, or catch up on the nominees, weve rounded up some easy ways to stream the nominated films, documentaries, and songs online before Oscars big night.

Period comedy The Favourite and Alfonso Cuarons Roma lead the pack with 10 nominations apiece, while A Star Is Born follows behind with eight nods. Green Book and Vice nabbed nominations in major categories as well. (See the full list here).

This years Academy Awards ceremony airs live on ABC on February 24th at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT. If you want to stream the show online, Huluis currently offering a one-month free trial for new users (sign up here).

See Alison Krauss, Jamey Johnson at Willie Nelson's 4th of July Picnic Concert 'Stranger Things' Details Season 3 Soundtrack 'Stranger Things 3': A Blockbuster Finale Shakes Things Up Just Enough

If you prefer to watch the show on your TV but dont have cable, try something like this top-rated $23 antenna from Amazon, which lets you enjoy over-the-air networks (like ABC) in your area without paying a monthly fee.

Heres a look at some of the nominees for this years Academy Awards, along with information on where and how to watch them before the big day.

Best Picture
Black Panther stream here via Amazon
BlacKkKlansman stream here via Amazon
Bohemian Rhapsody see tickets and current showtimesor stream here via Amazon
The Favourite see tickets and current showtimes
Green Book see tickets and current showtimes
Roma see tickets and current showtimes or stream on Netflix
A Star Is Born see tickets and current showtimes
Vice see tickets and current showtimes

Best Animated Feature
Incredibles 2 stream here via Amazon
Isle of Dogs stream here via Amazon
Mirai see tickets and current showtimes
Ralph Breaks the Internet see tickets and current showtimes
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse see tickets and current showtimes

Documentary Feature
Free Solo stream here via Amazon
Hale County This Morning, This Evening stream here via iTunes
Minding the Gap stream here via Hulu
Of Fathers and Sons see tickets and current showtimes
RBG stream here via Amazon

Foreign Language Film
Capernaum see tickets and current showtimes
Cold War see tickets and current showtimes
Never Look Away see tickets and current showtimes
Roma see tickets and current showtimes or stream on Netflix
Shoplifters see tickets and current showtimes

Original Score
Terence Blanchard (BlacKkKlansman) stream here via Amazon
Nicholas Britell (If Beale Street Could Talk) stream here via Amazon
Alexandre Desplat (Isle of Dogs) stream here via Amazon
Ludwig Gransson (Black Panther) stream here via Amazon
Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman (Mary Poppins Returns) stream here via Amazon

Original Song
All the Stars (performed by Kendrick Lamar ft. SZA, fromBlack Panther) stream here via Amazon
Ill Fight (performed by Jennifer Hudson, fromRBG) stream here via Amazon
The Place Where Lost Things Go (performed by Emily Blunt, from Mary Poppins Returns) stream here via Amazon
Shallow (performed by Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga, from A Star Is Born) stream here via Amazon
When a Cowboy Trades His Spurs For Wings (performed by Tim Blake Nelson and Willie Watson, from The Ballad of Buster Scruggs) stream here via Amazon

Note: Amazon is currently offering a 30-day free trial to its Amazon Music Unlimited service, which provides access to all the Oscar-nominated tracks, along with more than 50 million other songs. Find out more here.

https://static.apester.com/js/sdk/latest/apester-sdk.js


How to Stream This Years Oscar-Nominated Songs and Films Online

Revisiting Hours: The Manchurian Candidate and Our Era of Perpetual War

Every Friday, were recommending an older movie thats available to stream or download and worth seeing again through the lens of our current moment. Were calling the series Revisiting Hours consider this Rolling Stones unofficial film club. This week: Scott Tobias on Jonathan Demmes 2004 remake of The Manchurian Candidate.

It never sounded like a good idea to remake The Manchurian Candidate. Majors studios are always looking to plunder the vaults, eager to turn yesterdays properties into tomorrows surefire hits, but John Frankenheimers 1962 conspiracy thriller wasnt Starsky and Hutch or Fat Albert or even The Stepford Wives, to name three other I.P. redoes hitting theaters in 2004. Jonathan Demme had tried to work his elusive magic on another early Sixties treasure, the Cary Grant/Audrey Hepburn confection Charade and wound up with The Truth About Charlie, the biggest critical and commercial disappointment of his career. Its better than its reputation look past Mark Wahlbergs wet sock of a lead performance and there are eclectic delights galore but the bad vibes seemed to follow him to which opened late in the summer to respectful reviews and quietly wilted in the August heat. It was never going to live up to the unimpeachable original, despite the ingenious casting of Meryl Streep as the movies Lady MacBeth in a pantsuit.

Revisiting Hours: 'Burn After Reading' and How the Coens Predicted Our Current Mess 20 Most Essential Jonathan Demme Movies Smells Like Teen Spirit: 'Dazed and Confused' at 25

Yet Demmes Manchurian Candidate did what remakes should do, which is to reimagine the same material to much different ends. The director took a Cold War freakout about the Korean conflict and the Communist threat, and turned it into Gulf War I story that actually comments on Gulf War II while continuing to tell the tale of American imperialism in the 21st century. Consider the audacity of the timing alone: Our nations excursion in Iraq had only just started the year before, under the false pretense that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. The Bush administration had done an excellent job ginning up popular support, mostly by fudging a connection between Iraq and the terrorists responsible for 9/11. So not only were Demme and company assessing an ongoing conflict something mainstream films have traditionally never done they were sharply criticizing a war that had not yet been deemed a fiasco. At a time when major studios were plundering the vaults, looking to turn yesterdays properties into tomorrows surefire hits, Demme slipped in like a thief in the night, smuggling a truly radical film under the cover of a Hollywood star vehicle.

Both films are clever acts of subversion. Working from Richard Condons novel about a war hero who returns as the unwitting agent of a communist plot, Frankenheimer and his screenwriter, George Axelrod, flipped a Kennedy-era Red Scare thriller on its head, decrying the paranoia and violence that had consumed American politics. They also provided a lasting metaphor for any politician who acts as a vessel for someone elses agenda, especially if that someone else hails from a hostile foreign nation. (Like, say, Russia.) Of the many tweaks Demme and his screenwriters, Daniel Pyre and Dean Georgaris, made to the original, the most important is changing Manchuria from a region in communist China to an American private equity firm, Manchurian Global, with its hands tucked elbow-deep in Congressional sock puppets. In Sergeant Raymond Shaw (Liev Schreiber), a Medal of Honor winner with a powerful U.S. Senator for a mother, nefarious parties see a chance to install the first privately owned and operated Vice President of the United States. Once there, theyre merely a rifle blast away from the top.

Some of the basics between the two films are the same: Denzel Washington steps into the Sinatra role of Maj. Bennett Marco, commander of a unit thats ambushed and taken hostage. But his memories of the events conflict with his dreams, which tell a much different story. Two of the men from his unit were killed in combat, despite Shaws courageous actions in the field; his dreams suggest, however, that he and Shaw each murdered one of the men under hypnosis (or, in a slight modification here, a high-tech medical implant). In both version, the pawn is not a particularly charismatic or likable man, even though his comrades-in-arms continually describe him as the kindest, bravest, warmest, most wonderful human being Ive ever known in my life. And yet through the insistence of his mother, whos eager to use his heroics to further his familys political legacy, hes thrust into the Presidential race.

Where the movie differ, though, is crucial in appreciating how far Demme has gone recasting The Manchurian Candidate as a searingly of-the-moment political statement. By shifting the role of the Shaw matriarch from Angela Lansburys sinister behind-the-scenes operator to a sitting U.S. Senator, the film not only targets the complicity of Congress in filling the coffers of private war contractors like Halliburton and Blackwater, but specifically puts one sitting Senator in particular, Hillary Rodham Clinton, in the crosshairs. Streep has vociferously denied basing her performance on the politician, but she certainly looks the part. And she more or less acts the role that way as well her Ms. Shaw is a hawkish Senator who voted in favor of the War in Iraq and triggered the attendant boom in contracts to private companies like Halliburton, which happened to be run by Dick Chaney before he became vice president.

Even if youre inclined to deny the connection between Eleanor Prentiss Shaw and Hillary Rodham Clinton though please also note the names, which are only one syllable off in the surname The Manchurian Candidate 04 is the rare case where not assigning parties to politicians is damning. Both parties are guilty. Manchurian Global is an effective stand-in for the entire Military-Industrial Complex, an insatiable beast that feeds on blood and treasure. It has no ideology other than money. The one major irony in the film is such a massive conspiracy isnt necessary. Manchurian Global doesnt have to go through the trouble to stage an ambush, brainwash an entire unit, and take ownership of a Medal of Honor winner with a clear path to the presidency. It just has to cut a check.

For admirers of Demme, there are a handful of appreciable touches on the margins: A Fortunate Son cover by Wyclef Jean, a near-silent (but indelibly sinister) performance by the musician Robyn Hitchcock, and the usual bit parts for delightful character actors and friends like Bill Irwin, Paul Lazar, Ted Levine, Charles Napier and Roger Corman. But The Manchurian Candidate is perhaps the angriest film of his career and one of his least recognizable, because hes so studious in channeling and redirecting Frankenheimers film to a bold new end.

What the filmmaker couldnt have known at the time and what he cant know now thats no longer with us is that his remake would become a movie about an endless war thats quietly, perpetually replenishing itself, with no clear goal or endpoint on the horizon. Over the summer, Blackwater founder Erik Prince renewed his pitch to privatize the war in Afghanistan, preying on President Trumps frustration that the umpteenth troop increase in the country had paid no dividends. This is the environment that Candidate 2.0 identified 14 years ago, when the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan still had popular support, were still viewed as achievable solutions to the terrorist threat. Now its tucked away on streaming services, as neglected and vital as a war buried deep in the queue.

Previously: Short Cuts


Revisiting Hours: The Manchurian Candidate and Our Era of Perpetual War

Greta Review: Isabelle Huppert Steals This Stalker Thriller

Its irresistible whenever Isabelle Huppert plays someone dangerous (see her Oscar-nominated role in Elle). As the title character in the English-language Greta, a thriller directed with mirth and malice by the Irish provocateur Neil Jordan, the great French actress is up to demented, delicious mischief. And Chlo Grace Moretz, doing nice with just the right hint of naughty, plays the innocent whos encounter with Hupperts mysterious Greta will change her life and definitely not for the better. Intrigued? How could you not be?

Jordan (The Company of Wolves, Interview With the Vampire) is known for the tricks he hides up his sleeve, notably the sexual peekaboo of The Crying Game, which earned him an Oscar nomination as best director and the trophy itself for his screenplay. Greta isnt on that level. Jordan, working from a script he conjured up with Ray Wright, is in it for suspense tinged with laughs. But with these two dynamo actresses front and center, this nail-biter keeps you riveted.

'Birds of Passage' Review: Colombian Crime Saga Is Stunning, Surreal, Epic Oscars 2019: Queens, Spikes and the 'Green Book' Best Picture Blues The All-American Nightmares of Jordan Peele

Moretz plays Frances McCullen, a young waitress recently moved to New York from Boston. Her roommate Erica (a live-wire Maika Monroe) does her best to coax her friend out of the sadness shes been feeling since her mother died a year ago. But Frances basically keeps her head down and uses work to alleviate her depression. Until she meets Greta. Actually, she doesnt meet the older woman not at first. She sees Gretas handbag, a green leather purse that has been left on the subway. Our good-girl heroine finds a home address and returns the bag to her. Greta offers tea and sympathy, as well as a mother figure to lean on. Two lonely people find each other. How sweet.

Not in this movie. At first, Frances ignores the thumping noises behind the walls in Gretas Brooklyn carriage house, sounds that cant be disguised no matter how loud she plays Liszt on her piano. Remodeling, says Greta with an insouciant shrug. Then the woman starts calling Frances incessantly. Let the stalking begin. The tension explodes when Greta visits her prey at her chic restaurant. Trying to maintain a false calm, Frances asks her customer, Hows the wine? Gretas reply is chilling: Like you, it promises a lot and then disappoints.

Jordan stages this scene the films best with coiled intensity, and Huppert plays Gretas public breakdown like gangbusters. What happens next deserves not to be spoiled, though the plot points unravel like Hitchcock for Dummies 101. The men of the piece Francess widowed father (Colm Fiore) and a detective (The Crying Games Stephen Rea) are ineffectual. This fight is between two women. Mutual loneliness is a theme the film introduces and swiftly abandons in favor of horror movie tropes. Yeah, youve seen it all before. But Huppert pulls out all the funny-scary stops playing cat to Moretzs mouse. And when the worm turns, fasten your seatbelts. Jordan squeezes the plot for every ounce of campy, disreputable fun. It could have been so much more. But with these two actresses going at it, whos complaining?


Greta Review: Isabelle Huppert Steals This Stalker Thriller

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Vox Lux Review: Natalie Portmans Pop-Star Blues

Brady Corbets knockout of a second feature (following 2015s The Childhood of a Leader, about the growing pains of a fascist tyrant) damn near explodes off the screen. Yes, a movie about the traumatic childhood that formed a formidable pop diva might be too much for some people. But this actor-turned-director doesnt use Vox Lux to show off though there is admittedly a little of that. And you should prepared to be wowed by Natalie Portman, who delivers a take-no-prisoners performance as Celeste,a swaggering rock diva who tends to burn down everything in her path, especially when shes crossed.

Often on the verge of a nuclear meltdown, fueled by alcohol and drugs, Celeste never leans on anyone; shes all she needs, with any leftover glimmers of vulnerability banished from her brand. Hair slicked back, her face slathered in glitter to hide the creeping darkness, this singer-songwriter is a tiny time-bomb of talent and ruthless need. You speculate about how this fame monster lost her innocence how her star ever got born.

Natalie Portman: I Have '100 Stories' of Sexual Harassment in Hollywood The Private Life of Natalie Portman: Rolling Stone's 2002 Cover Story Why Is 'A Star Is Born' So Indestructible?

Which is why Vox Lux begins with our antiheroines wonder years. Willem Dafoe is the narrator who introduces us to the 13-year-old Celeste, played by the remarkable Raffey Cassidy (The Killing of a Sacred Deer): In the beginning, she was kind and full of grace, he says of this shy, Staten Island schoolgirl. Out of the blue, she finds herself badly injured during a Columbine-like school shooting, a tragic common-occurrence staple of the new century. The incident inspires her to write a musical lament and the song, cowritten with her older sister Eleanor (Stacy Martin), surprisingly catapults her into the celebrity sphere virtually overnight. Suddenly, Celeste is being commodified by a manager (Jude Law, sleaze personified) and sold to the highest bidder. From L.A. video shoots to recording studios in Stockholm, the teenager is shoved into a world for which nothing has prepared her, especially a pregnancy that results from a one-night stand with an older Brit rocker.

Corbet and the gifted cinematographer Lol Crawley bring tremendous energy and momentum to the scenes of a young womans rise in a broken pop universe shes Madonna, Britney and Katy rolled into one confused pop princess. In a smash cut to the present, we meet Portmans now-adult Celeste; in a nice touch, Cassidy plays the singers estranged, teen daughter Albertine. This hardened, jaded chanteuse exaggerates everything from her New Yawk accent to her diva demands, yet shes still taken aback when she learns that the terrorists behind a mass shooting in Croatia were wearing masks copied from one of her best-known videos. At an ambush of a press conference, Celeste vainly tries to swat away the intrusive questions about her music being a spark to violence.

The stage is the only place she has left to belong. At the hometown, stadium concert that ends the film with the star singing rousing, electro-pop anthems (written by the Chandelier powerhouse Sia), Celeste carves out a safe harbor in the blinding glare of the spotlight. Striding on stage in dance routines choreographed by Portmans husband Benjamin Millepied, this woman refuses to bear the burden of the films title to be a voice of light. I dont want people to think, I just want them to feel good, she says. But can they? Can Celeste? Can we? Corbet asks those questions with undeniable verve and feeling. Thats what makes Vox Lux such a dynamite provocation. The film creates a universe where fame crowds out humanity. You cant stop thinking about it.


Vox Lux Review: Natalie Portmans Pop-Star Blues

Inside Man: O.G. Star Jeffrey Wright on Life Behind Bars

Nineteen years ago, Jeffrey Wright performed in a trying environment. It was raining a small ocean in Manhattan as he stood atop the outdoor stage of the Delacorte Theater in Central Park, delivering Marc Antonys stirring Friends, Romans, countrymen monologue in Julius Caesar. It was clear the play would soon end, and it was the final Shakespeare in the Park production of the summer. But no one moved as Wright punctured sheets of rain with his fire until Caesar had been fully eulogized. It was extraordinary, even for an extraordinary actor.

In O.G., premiering Saturday night on HBO, Wright works his magic in an even more harrowing setting: the maximum-security Pendleton Correctional Facility in Indiana. Wright portrays Louis, a longtime prisoner whose impending release hits a snag when he decides to help out a new arrival, Beecher (Theothus Carter). Director Madeleine Sackler (The Lottery) shot the film entirely inside the prison and cast many of its inmates, including Carter, as Wrights co-stars. (In the documentary Its a Hard Truth Aint It, which debuts on HBO on February 25th, those cast members shine a light on how they ended up in prison.)

See Alison Krauss, Jamey Johnson at Willie Nelson's 4th of July Picnic Concert Yesterday and Today: The Best Merch for Beatles Fans Amazon Prime Day 2019: What You Need to Know

Wright gives a bravura performance, caked in the grit and brutal realism for which his characters are known. But after the five-week shoot was done, he got to walk back out through the prison gates. His co-stars did not.

Some of the guys we worked with are serving life sentences, or the equivalent of life sentences, so it is a challenge for them to find hope, Wright says. This project was a window of escape for them, a brief experience with hope that they could be better than the conditions they find themselves in. But at the same time, a tension exists for them as a result. Because once filming is done, then what? That routine on the inside goes on.

What did you think when this project came across your desk?
I was intrigued before Id even read the script about the opportunity to go in and educate myself on the realities of incarceration and the conditions on the inside and the experiences of men who found themselves there. I viewed it in some ways as a social experiment.

You knew off the top that youd be working with incarcerated men. What were you told about how that was going to work?
I was told very little, but we took time over the course of the year before filming to visit the prison on multiple occasions. I made four trips out there for a couple of days each trip to understand the space a bit, to exchange with the guys who were eligible to be a part of the film, to research, to listen to them, to hear why they wanted to be a part of this and also to use those conversations to reshape the narrative.

How did talking with them change the story?
We would do readings of scenes with the men to gauge whether they thought the story and the characters were authentic. We also reshaped something fundamental about Louis character: Initially he was illiterate.

For me, one of the most fascinating aspects of the prison experience that I had been aware of was the way in which certain mens intellectual curiosity crystallizes. Malcolm X is the archetypal example of that. But I thought it much more interesting, and much more realistic, too, if [Louis] was a guy who was finding the life of the mind while he was inside, because I think it speaks to the conditions prior to getting there, in which those muscles are not exercised.

That was what I was most struck by in the conversations that I had with the men. It was the universality to their stories. Almost to a man, they came from at least one parent who was drug-addicted or absent and the neglect that followed shaped them. By the time they were five years old, many of them had been abandoned. By the time they were 10 years old, almost to a man, they were out hustling on the street.

Were there points in during scenes when those co-stars said, Hey, yall gotta stop, this would never happen?
We had 100 expert consultants on set at any given moment [laughs], and they would freely share their thoughts or their critiques, both negative and positive. But mostly, they were positive because they had informed the process of making this thing and had a sense of ownership of it.

What feedback did you personally get from them?
I remember the first day, the first scene that we filmed: [Im] walking out of the gym and across the yard and leaning on the wall, this scene that happens early in the film, before meeting Beecher, Theothus character. In the background, there are a couple dozen of the men doing their thing as extras. We finish that first set-up and one of the guys came over to me and he said, You got it. And I was like, Oh, OK I might be able to pull this off, you know?

They were fully, fully engaged in this thing because it obviously was a detour from the mundanity of their lives, and because they thirst for something creative and constructive. Theyre also, many of them, film addicts. So they were intrigued by the process of making film.

A lot of times in prison films, the characters are virtuous, kind, thoughtful like Red in Shawshank Redemption. Never dirty or gang-affiliated. Louis is literate and intellectually curious but hes also been involved in serious crimes. Did the complexity of the character attract you?
Yeah, I mean, the film is not [here] to romanticize the incarcerated man, or even the men who worked with us on this film, at all. But it does try to humanize them. To see them through a lens that reveals the fullness of who they are. The fullness of their mistakes, the fullness of their attempts to overcome those mistakes, and the further mistakes that they made.

Before we started shooting, I heard from a couple people, You know, there are a lot of good guys in there. And I thought to myself, Man, this is a maximum-security prison, people are serving life sentences and longer, sentenced for violent, heinous crimes. What do you mean there are some good guys in here? And when I got in there, I found there are some good guys in there.

Thats not to forgive them for what they did, but there are some guys that were generally trying to reprocess themselves, who are open about the mistakes that they made and some of the forces that led them to those mistakes, including themselves. Its not the first-level reading of the statistics that we get mostly from our daily diet of these stories. Its much more nuanced and layered, and I hope we reflected that.

Does participating in a project like this help to rehabilitate them in some way?
I do think that theres value in coming together with them through this unlikely partnership and creating something constructive, particularly for those who will get out. They see [what] is possible. As Theothus said to me on many occasions, I never had an opportunity to do something like this when I was on the outside. But he had incredible talents to bring to bear. And those talents his charisma and powers of persuasion and leadership and ambition and his mind had all been used in ways that were destructive to himself, to those around him, and led him to incarceration.

Those skills were there; they were just malformed into tools for his own undoing. That was the big realization in my head: For many of these guys, they became incarcerated at age five. Because by the time they were five years old, the story was almost written for them.

In some ways, [laughs], having done Westworld, I reflected on the idea of, as we described them, hosts living inside loops in which they are being programmed to behave in certain ways and towards certain outcomes. Likewise, when you look at the issue of incarceration, theres social and institutional and political and economic programming that goes into shaping one of these men, and goes into leading him on the loop that arrives at incarceration.

What ideas did you come into this project with regarding criminal justice? And then, what did you come out with? Of what notions were you disabused?
I think American society has a very easy relationship with the idea that incarceration is an outcome of poverty. We look at that as a given. And when I was inside, I began to question why that was, because, again, the predominant common denominator among all of those men was that they came from low-income neighborhoods or families that lacked resources.

And if we start thinking about how to decouple incarceration from conditions of poverty, then I think we can begin to get at some of the root causes absence of economic opportunity, absence of educational opportunities from a very young age, absence of a culture of legitimate success, and all these things that we collectively tend to think cant be addressed but can be with the right acknowledgement and the right attention.

The one thing that really was clear was that these creative impulses, these intellectual impulses and all of these things that the men were bringing to bear on this [movie], they need to be fired right out of the gate. And if I could wave a magic wand and legislate any one thing to effect that, it would be universal early childhood education, period.

One of the topics that comes up in the film is restorative justice and, more indirectly, the lack of job training and preparation for a life outside. It really drives home the fear of not just institutionalization but of getting out.
Theres an absence of skill sets that have been developed. An absence of material resources, too, once a person gets out, to be able to rebuild a life. But also its the atrophy of psychological and social muscle and skills. [In prison people are] programmed not to think for themselves too much, not to make choices for themselves too much. Theyve been isolated in a way thats not conducive to reintegrating into society, and all of these things have atrophied within them to the point where they have enormous anxiety about what happens when they do step outside of that wall to the point where they try, in some ways, to sabotage themselves so that they dont have to get out.

Theres so much conditioning of these men while theyre inside to be worse at citizenship when they come out. Which just boggles the mind. I had a conversation with one of the younger kids that I met in there, hes probably early-twenties. He described to me that he felt freer inside the facility. I couldnt quite understand that. He literally said that: I feel freer in here. I said, How can that be? And he said, Im an institution, baby. Ive been institutionalized since I was 12 years old. And when I go outside and hed been out theres just too much going on. Too many variables, too many choices. To the point where it overwhelms him and imprisons him. The freedom of choice is now a cell for him. Being on the inside is home. It just spun my head around.

You spend the most time in the film with your co-star, Theothus Carter. What did you learn about him?
Theothus is a Theothus is a complicated guy. He lives an existential crisis on some level. He recognizes that he has the ability to be so much more. He realizes that theres a part of him thats responsible for creating those conditions. He realizes, too, that there are other external forces that are responsible but its a difficult realization for him to reconcile.

So the film was an opportunity for him to, at least for a while, be a more idealized version of himself. Hes a charismatic, ambitious, curious, smart, young man. And he wants that to be known. But at the same time the experience only reminds him of what his limitations are.

Hes representative, sadly, of a lot of guys, who are inside. Hes a cautionary tale, cause he could have done so much more, you know? I think he shows that through his work here. Im really proud of what he did. People say, Youve worked with [Al] Pacino, youve worked with Anthony Hopkins! Intense? And I say, Oh, no, Ive worked with Theothus Carter. Hes on a different floor of the intensity building. [Laughs.]


Inside Man: O.G. Star Jeffrey Wright on Life Behind Bars

Monday, April 27, 2020

Little Woods Review: Tessa Thompson Saves Down-and-Out-in-U.S.A. Drama

Whats it like living strapped in America? Little Woods, an uneven but compelling feature debut from writer-director Nia DaCosta, takes you right into the trenches. Things are booming in the remote town of Little Woods, North Dakota, as long as youre in the oil business. But if youre Ollie (Tessa Thompson), out on probation after doing time for smuggling drugs in from Canada, all you feel is the agony of having your options squeezed. She can barely hold onto the house where she cared for her now-deceased mother. The OxyContin pain pills she obtained from Canadas health care system eased moms burden. And Ollies as well when she starting selling the black-market opioids around town just to get by.

How Tessa Thompson Went From Indie Actor to 'Thor: Ragnarok' Badass 'Man Who Killed Don Quixote' Review: Terry Gilliam Tilts at Windmills and Wins

Now Ollie is determined to go straight with a job offer and the support of her probation officer, Carter (Lance Riddick). But theres a catch theres always a catch. Ollies sister Deb (the excellent Lily James) is back in town; this time with the bastard son she had with no-account drunk Ian (James Badge Dale), And Deb is pregnant again with nowhere to live and in need of an abortion. With the bank threatening foreclose if they cant pony up $3000 in a week, drastic measures are needed. So good sister Ollie, a person of color who was adopted by Debs mother, gets pulled back in, thinking one last score will set things straight.

Its a hoary plot vice, but its all DaCosta has to power the thriller side of her narrative as Ollie, Deb and her son cross the border to scam enough cash for a fresh start. The tension is undeniable. DaCosta, working from a template established by such earlier, better films from female directors as Debra Graniks Winters Bone and Courtney Hunts Frozen River, creates an atmosphere that with invaluable help of cinematographer Matt Mitchell establishes what its like to live on the poverty line while surrounded by corporate wealth.

Still, the films most powerful asset is Thompson (Sorry to Bother You, Thor: Ragnarok) in a performance that cuts through the scripts cliches to find the heart of a character that reflects the plight of a woman alone in a mans world. Sexual predators and a threatening local drug dealer (Luke Kirby) are nothing compared to the pressures applied by economic instability and the American healthcare system. Little Woods can be plodding, humorless and hobbled by trying to cram too much in. But its ambitions, with Thompson putting a human face on urgent contemporary issues, deserve the highest praise.


Little Woods Review: Tessa Thompson Saves Down-and-Out-in-U.S.A. Drama

Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle Director Danny Leiner Dead at 57

Danny Leiner, the director of the stoner comediesHarold & Kumar Go to White Castleand Dude, Wheres My Car?, died Thursday, October 18th at the age of 57. Leiners death was first announced by his former co-producer Ross Putman, with Deadlinelater confirming that the director died following a battle with lung cancer.

If theres one thing I can say about Danny the professional, its that he refused to let us settle for anything less than our best, Putman wrote on Facebook. He pushed us to do what he knew we were capable of.Danny the person was sardonic, sharp, and savvy, with a love for culture and comedy of all kinds. It hasnt really sunk in yet, but the world has lost a good one.

50 Greatest Comedies of the 21st Century It Takes Two: Top 25 Best Buddy Comedies 10 Best Stoner Movies of All Time

Harold & Kumar stars John Cho and Kal Penn also expressed their condolences on Twitter.

I am so saddened to hear about the passing of Danny Leiner, who became my friend when he directed Harold and Kumar go to Whitecastle, wrote Cho. Danny was so sharp, so funny, and a great dinner companion. To his friends and family, my deepest condolences.

Very sad to learn that our friend Danny Leiner passed away, tweeted Penn. We initially got to know each other when he directed Harold & Kumar Go To White Castle. Sending my love to his family & friends. He was such a funny, thoughtful, encouraging person.

Leiner made his feature-lengthfilm debut with the 1996 comedy Layin Low starring Jeremy Piven and Edie Falco. He went onto direct the comediesDude, Wheres My Car? with Ashton Kutcher and Seann William Scottin 2000 andHarold & Kumar Go to White Castlein2004. The latter film was named one of Rolling Stones 50 Greatest Comedies of the 21st Century and one of 10 Best Stoner Movies of All Time.

Leiner also had a long history of directingan array of TV shows includingHow to Make It inAmerica, The Office, The Sopranos, Freaks and Geeks and Arrested Development, andhelmed numerous episodes of the comedy series Backwashfor the network Crackle. The last movie Leiner directed was 2009sBalls Out: Gary the Tennis Coach.His last credited work is a 2014 episode of the canceled ABC series Selfie, which reunited him with Cho in 2014.


Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle Director Danny Leiner Dead at 57

Song of Parkland: Watch Marjory Stoneman Students Find Joy Onstage in Moving Trailer

A new trailer for HBOs upcoming documentary, Song of Parkland, offers a poignant look at how Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School drama teacher Melody Herzfeld helped students cope with the aftermath of the mass shooting that left 17 people dead. The film is set to premiere February 7th.

The day of the shooting, Herzfeld and her students were rehearsing for their annual childrens musical when the alarm went off. Herzfeld famously rushed 65 kids into the closet in her classroom to keep them safe, and in the following weeks, she and her students continued to prepare for the show, recognizing it as an opportunity to both heal and bring back joy to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

The Song of Parkland trailer offers a behind-the-scenes look at the exuberant childrens musical rehearsals that followed the mass shooting, while it also juxtaposes those sequences with footage of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas students leading protests for new gun control laws. The clip also features interviews with several students and Herzfeld, who recalls at the end of the clip, When they came back to school, I said, I promise you, life is so good.'

Herzfelds work during and after the shooting earned her the Tony Awards annual Excellence in Theatre Education Award last year. The show also featured her students performing the Rent hit Seasons of Love.


Song of Parkland: Watch Marjory Stoneman Students Find Joy Onstage in Moving Trailer

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Andrew Garfield on His Sexuality: I Have an Openness to Any Impulses

Andrew Garfield is trying to live his life as openly as possible, he said in a new interview with Out magazine including when it comes to his sexuality.

The Angels in America actor explained that while he currently identifies as a heterosexual man, he is not shutting out the possibility of being attracted to men in the future.

Up until this point, Ive only been sexually attracted to women, he told the publication. My stance toward life, though, is that I always try to surrender to the mystery of not being in charge. I think most people were intrinsically trying to control our experience here, and manage it, and put walls around what we are and who we are.

Andrew Garfield: Gay Comment Taken Out of Context

I want to know as much of the garden as possible before I pass I have an openness to any impulses that may arise within me at any time, he continued. But, if I were to identify, I would identify as heterosexual, and being someone who identifies that way, and whos taking on this seminal role, my scariest thought was, Am I allowed to do this?'

Garfield is set to reprise his role as Prior Walter in the Broadway revival of Angels in America later this month, less than a year after adopting the role for the National Theatre production.

Tony Kushner, the Pulitzer-winning playwright behind Angels in America, told Out that he didnt have any qualms about Garfield being cast to play the role, despite being a heterosexual man.

I think its one of the most remarkable performances of a contemporary gay character by a straight guy Ive ever seen, Kushner said. In the United States, at any rate, you sometimes see a kind of nervousness among straight actors playing gay: Am I making the character too queen?; Is this a stereotype? Theres a certain misunderstanding that queenly behavior has to do with a kind of abjectness or weakness. But, of course, the opposite is true. And Andrew really grasped that instantaneously and ran with it.

Last summer, the Amazing Spiderman actor made headlines after he was quoted as saying that he was a gay man just without the physical act.

Many criticized the remark as insensitive and pandering to gay male stereotypes. He later clarified the intention of his comment during an interview with BBCs Newsbeat.

Thats of course not what I meant at all, he said at the time. That discussion was about this play and how deeply grateful I am that I get to work on something so profound. Its a love letter to the LGBTQ community. We were talking about, How do you prepare for something so important and so big? and I was basically saying, I dive in as fully as I possibly can.'


Andrew Garfield on His Sexuality: I Have an Openness to Any Impulses

Watch Deadwood Gunslingers Fight Modernity in New Trailer

Seth Bullock and Al Swearengen find themselves up against a familiar foe when George Hearst returns to bring the new state of South Dakota into the modern age in the new trailer for Deadwood: The Movie, premiering May 31st on HBO.

The film sequel to the beloved Western is set 10 years after the series wrapped, with the characters reuniting to mark the official statehood of South Dakota. In the new clip, Bullock and Swearengen the U.S. Marshal and crime boss, played by Timothy Olyphant and Ian McShane, respectively must put their rivalry on hold when now-Senator Hearst of California (Gerald McRaney) returns to Deadwood with big plans. Hearst wont take long before he honors the rigors of his putrid fucking nature, Swearengen deadpans to Bullock.

'Deadwood' Rides Again Trailers of the Week: 'Deadwood,' 'Stranger Things 3,' New Tarantino

The clip teases Hearsts efforts to shape Deadwood to his liking as new telephone polls go up and he tires to take land belonging to Bullocks deputy, Charlie Utter (Dayton Callie), while threatening Trixie (Paula Malcomson), the prostitute who famously shot Hearst in the shows final season. Amidst all the scheming and intrigue, the trailer also teases plenty of quintessential brawling and gunslinging.

Much of the original Deadwood cast returned for the film, along with the creative team, including creator David Milch. Milch, however, was recently diagnosed with Alzheimers, and though he was able to write the script and do minor rewrites during the shoot his memory and faculties have started to slow.

Certain complications were present throughout, and compounded as time progressed, Milch told Rolling Stone of battling the disease while filming Deadwood. Im thankful to report my writing process has remained largely as it was. Each day is as it comes. We endeavor to meet life on lifes terms not impose our ambitions on it, to be useful within the present moment.


Watch Deadwood Gunslingers Fight Modernity in New Trailer

Saturday, April 25, 2020

Liam Neeson Apologizes for Unacceptable Thoughts, Racist Revenge Fantasy

Liam Neeson issued an apology Friday, nearly two months after the actor disclosed his racist revenge fantasy while promoting his film Cold Pursuit.

Over the last several weeks, I have reflected on and spoken to a variety of people who were hurt by my impulsive recounting of a brutal rape of a dear female friend nearly 40 years ago and my unacceptable thoughts and actions at that time in response to this crime, Neeson said in the statement (via Variety).

The horror of what happened to my friend ignited irrational thoughts that do not represent the person I am. In trying to explain those feelings today, I missed the point and hurt many people at a time when language is so often weaponized and an entire community of innocent people are targeted in acts of rage.

Liam Neeson Talks Racist Revenge Fantasy on 'Good Morning America' Taken Aback: Liam Neeson's Racist Revenge Fantasy Sparks Outrage

The actor continued, What I failed to realize is that this is not about justifying my anger all those years ago, it is also about the impact my words have today. I was wrong to do what I did. I recognize that, although the comments I made do not reflect, in any way, my true feelings nor me, they were hurtful and divisive. I profoundly apologize.

While promoting the vengeance-minded action film Cold Pursuit at a press junket in February, Neeson recounted an incident where a female friend was raped. I asked, did she know who it was? No. What color were they? She said it was a black person, Neeson told the Independent at the time.

I went up and down areas with a cosh [a heavy stick], hoping Id be approached by somebody Im ashamed to say that and I did it for maybe a week, hoping some black bastard would come out of a pub and have a go at me about something, you know? So that I could kill him.

Neeson continued, It was horrible, horrible, when I think back, that I did that. And Ive never admitted that, and Im saying it to a journalist. God forbid. Its awful. But I did learn a lesson from it, when I eventually thought, What the fuckare you doing, you know?

The actors comments were met with immediate backlash Liam Neeson is canceled was a popular theme on social media and Neesons attempts to clarify his remarks on Good Morning America also missed the mark. We all pretend were all kind of politically correct. In this country and same in my own country, too you sometimes just scratch the surface and you discover this racism and bigotry, Neeson said.

A red carpet premiere for Cold Pursuit in New York was ultimately canceled and the film limped to a $11 million opening at the box office.


Liam Neeson Apologizes for Unacceptable Thoughts, Racist Revenge Fantasy

5 Things We Learned From Paul Butterfield Doc Horn From the Heart

During the blues revival and rediscovery of the Sixties, few dominated like Paul Butterfield, the hard-puffing, hard-living harmonica player and band leader. Assertive and experimental Butterfield Blues Band albums like 1966s East-West, featuring equally manic and inspired guitarist Mike Bloomfield, were essential college-dorm listening. And during the following decade, Butterfields mighty harmonica powered a version of Mystery Train at the Bands Last Waltz concert and movie.

These days, over three decades after his death, Butterfield is largely known only to blues cognoscenti a situation that could hopefully be rectified by director John Andersons documentary Horn From the Heart: The Paul Butterfield Story, which opens at select theaters around the country on Oct. 17th. The movie includes interviews with friends and fellow musicians like Bonnie Raitt, Todd Rundgren, Paul Shaffer, Al Kooper and the late B.B. King, and traces Butterfields story from blues-loving Chicago kid to his groundbreaking work and his subsequent health and addiction issues. (He died from an overdose of substances, including heroin and alcohol, in 1987 at 44.)

We're Living in a Golden Age of Music Documentaries: Five Breakdowns Paul Butterfield Band's Elvin Bishop on 'Amazing' Rock Hall Induction 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

Even for those who know his best work, from the Paul Butterfield Blues Band to his overlooked 1970s group Better Days, Horn From the Heart is an enlightening look at an under-documented musician. Here are five things we learned along the way.

Forget any clichs you have about harmonica playing.
As seen in clip after clip, even during the difficult final decade of his life, Butterfield didnt just play the harp; he shredded it. The documentary elucidates the difference between his aggro style and those of harp legends like Little Walter, Sonny Boy Williamson and Junior Parker. One reason: Butterfield played the harmonica upside down, possibly because he was left-handed. Whatever the reason, his style wasnt just motorized; he seemed to throw himself onto and into the instrument, blasting out single notes over chords and making for a pained, expressive wail all his own.

Especially in Chicago, the blues were bigger and drew more inter-racial crowds than you may remember.
As recalled by singer and cohort Nick Gravenites, Chicago was home to an astounding number of blues bars between 50 and 70 when the two musicians were starting out. Butterfield himself was raised in Hyde Park, a neighborhood in Chicagos South Side that had been predominately white but was racially integrated during his formative years. One of his early gigs was playing a dance party, and we see both white and African-American kids doing the Twist, of all moves, to the blues. That legacy wasnt only heard in Butterfields genre of choice but even his band, whose members were both white (Bloomfield, guitarist Elvin Bishop and keyboardist Mark Naftalin) and African-American (drummer Sam Lay, bassist Jerome Arnold) at a time when that was rarely seen. In the movie, Lay also recounts that Butterfield offered him $20 a night a big bump up from the $7 nightly Lay was getting backing Howlin Wolf.

Bloomfield turned down Bob Dylan to hook up with Butterfield.
One of the top-gun guitarists of the era, Bloomfield was something of an American Eric Clapton. In 1965, played on Dylans Highway 61 Revisited; he was also in Bobs band at that infamous Newport Folk Festival electric show. When Dylan offered him a regular spot in his group, though, Bloomfield declined and went with Butterfield instead. I just want to play the blues, he told Kooper. The guitarist probably lost out on a sizable paycheck, but the clips of him and Butterfield going head to head Bloomfields hands swarming over the fretboard, matching the bandleaders harp frenzy confirm he made the right decision, even if left the band not long after.

Butterfield played Woodstock.
Since one Butterfield Blues Band track appears on the original Woodstock triple LP, this shouldnt be a complete surprise. But since the band wasnt included in the movie, its still startling to be reminded that they were indeed there, ripping it up with a lineup that included saxophonist David Sanborn.

Butterfield really did live the blues.
As shown in the doc, Butterfields high school yearbook sported one of the most poignant inscriptions youll ever read: I think I am better than the people who are trying to reform me. Yet he struggled with reforming himself. Raitt admits she had a crush on him, and for a brief period he seemed to lead a cozy, domestic life with his wife and young son in Woodstock. But Butterfields hellraiser side was always lurking. Even after he was diagnosed with peritonitis, an inflammation connected to the abdomen, he didnt always take care of himself; Shaffer, who played on his final album in 1984, recalls him eating the worst fried peppers despite his stomach problems. Nor did return to a clean and sober lifestyle after his health problems intensified. (This writer had a particularly petrifying experience with the musician a few years before his death, when an initially friendly Butterfield agreed to an interview, disappeared into his dressing room at New Yorks Lone Star Caf for a lengthy period and re-reemerged as an entirely different, paranoid and irate person.) White blues players were sometimes accused of being dilettantes, but that charge could never apply to Butterfield, who lived it as he sang and played it.


5 Things We Learned From Paul Butterfield Doc Horn From the Heart

Friday, April 24, 2020

Eyes of Orson Welles Review: A Love Letter to the Man Who Would Be Kane

Dear Orson Welles thats the first thing you hear in Mark Cousins essay-cum-tribute to the man who gave us Citizen Kane, The Magnificent Ambersons, Touch of Evil, some of the most baroque screen adaptations of the Bard ever made and the template for the modern maligned-maestro filmmaker. There have been more than a few documentaries on Welles, not to mention dozens of bios, hundreds of monographs and deep-dive articles on his movies, endless dissections of specific scenes and shots, and gallons of ink spilled in the name of recounting his rise and fall. Cousins announces his intentions to do something slightly different at the outset. He frames his look back as an open letter to the larger-than-life figure, though it becomes quickly apparent that its really a mash note. Such adoration can often be blinding, but not this time. If you can say nothing else about this free-form valentine, its genuinely eye-opening.

10 Best Documentaries of 2018 The Orson Also Rises: A Brief History of Rescuing 'The Other Side of the Wind' SXSW 2019: Jordan Peele's 'Us' Is Terrifying

Thats not exactly an easy task going back to the Welles for fresh water when youre talking about an artists life story and a filmography so thoroughly perused and pored over. And its why Cousins is really the perfect person to venture once more unto the breach regarding the baritone-voiced visionary. An Irish critic, documentarian, raconteur and harder-than-hardcore cinephile, hes produced a number of movie-mad portraits of directors, regional new waves, recurring screen subjects and other bits of celluloid-centric flotsam. Personal is his default factory setting; his best-known work, The Story of Film: An Odyssey, is a 15-episode miniseries that elevates previously obscure or overlooked corners of cinema to the top of the canon per his own preference. (Be the film history you want to see in the world.) Hes also mastered the art of the tangent, which was something Welles excelled at as well, and has a gift for making travelogues feel more like cultural tours than tourist slideshows. Its a surprisingly simpatico mix between the guy working the camera and genius subject at the center of it all.

So while there is the requisite story of Welles early interest in magic, his twentysomething-years creative rethinking of theatrical works, Kane, the curse of botched or stillborn projects, the excuses and excesses of the later years et al., Cousins also underlines the connection between Orsons work and the geography of the places he loved (Ireland, Morocco, Spain, NYC, Chicago, Paris). Theres a major focus on Welles sketches and drawings, which the doc uses as a sort of constructed Rosetta Stonehenge for how the man saw the movies and the world. It circles back to visual motifs and unpacks them with insight, focusing on compositions and his love of oddball angles; it isnt until the doc presents the Chimes at Midnight scene of Welles Falstaff being rebuked by Prince Hal, the moment isolated from the rest of the narrative, that you realize it can be interpreted as the older self-loathing version of the filmmaker in conversation with his bright-young-thing self. (For this viewer, at least.) And Cousins keeps coming back to a single close-up of a muttonchopped Welles lying on a bed, hand on his cheek and mouth agape, as a grounding element. The artist is neither the boy wonder nor the fat elder you usually associate him to be. Its Orson captured in a split-second of permanently curious repose.

All of which may sound like catnip to folks who would happily pore over seven hours of Criterion Collection supplements or the last word in eyeroll-inducing pretension. The Eyes of Orson Welles may not be your jam if you have an allergy to flowery voiceovers (even ones delivered in lovely, gravelly Gallic lilts) or highly subjective docs; abandon all hope, ye who crave just-the-facts-maam portraits of your artists. Thats not a judgment call so much as a buyer-beware warning its not what Cousins does best, or really, at all. What you do get out of this, however, is an extraordinary, singular, complex take on a man whose work still inspires rhapsodies and close readings. The last words you hear are Cousins saying, Thank you. Its an appropriate ending. Gratitude is exactly the sentiment you feel as well.


Eyes of Orson Welles Review: A Love Letter to the Man Who Would Be Kane

Avengers: Infinity War: Josh Brolins Thanos Plots to Destroy Universe

In the first Avengers: Infinity War trailer, supervillain Thanos warned, In time, you will know what its like to lose. And in the latest teaser, he details his plot for destruction: wiping out half the universe with the snap of his finger.

The clip previews the cinematic showdown between Thanos and the Avengers, as Josh Brolins villain attempts to collect six powerful artifacts known as the Infinity Stones.

Tony Stark/Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) confidently boasts their one advantage against Thanos. Hes coming to us. We have what Thanos wants, so thats what well use. But during Starks awkward meeting with the Guardians of the Galaxy, Peter Quill/Star-Lord (Chris Pratt) rudely explains that he isnt fond of that strategy. Lets talk about this plan of yours, he interjects. I think its good except it sucks. So let me do the plan, and that way, it might be really good.

The trailer teases characters from throughout Marvels cinematic universe, including Spider-Man (Tom Holland), the Wakandans from Black Panther, Doctor Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) and Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson).

Brothers Anthony and Joe Russo directed Avengers: Infinity War, which after a bumped-up release date from Marvel hits theaters on April 27th.


Avengers: Infinity War: Josh Brolins Thanos Plots to Destroy Universe

Burning Review: Love Triangles, Class Envy Fuel Three-Alarm Thriller

This stunning, slow-build thriller from South Korean director Lee Chang-dong sizzles with a cumulative power that will knock the wind out of you. Burning starts like a romance in the manner of The Talented Mr. Ripley as poor boy Jongsu, an aspiring writer played by Yoo Ah-in, falls under the spell of Haemi (Jun Jong-seo), a free spirit in skimpy attire who hawks products on the streets. He doesnt recall that they were once school chums; she remembers that he called her ugly back then. Jongsu is stuck in the country taking care of the ramshackle farm near the North Korean border owned by his quick-tempered father, whos been arrested on an assault charge against a neighbor. But after the couple have sex in her small apartment, he is so taken with the young woman that he agrees to take care of her cat, Boil (she found him in a boiler room), while she vacations in Africa to feed her great hunger for life experience. Visiting Haemis apartment every day, Jongsu masturbates while staring out her window at a wider world that seems beyond his means.

Paul Greengrass: Why I Needed to Make '22 July' Why Is 'A Star Is Born' So Indestructible? 12 Best Things We Saw at Toronto Film Festival 2018

It seems like a small-scale story of two young dreamers until makes an abrupt gear shift when he arrives at the airport to pick up Haemi only to find her in close company with Ben (Steven Yeun), a rich, handsome playboy she met abroad. The hotshot drives a Porsche and casually mentions his occupation isnt work but play. Intoxicated by the perfume of Bens lifestyle, Jongsu finds himself in a competition in which this unfailingly polite and generous new friend seems to hold all the cards. So what if Haemi says hes the only she can trust Ben can feed her great hunger. They pay a surprise visit to his dads farm, where they smoke weed and the young woman dances naked outdoors. Only whores do that, snaps the jealous Jongsu. Later, while shes asleep, Ben confesses that he does have a vice. He likes to torch greenhouses for the sheer pleasure of watching them burn.

What happens next is something audiences should discover on their own, except to say that suspicions are aroused, someone goes missing and Jongsu goes looking to for answers. Lee and co-writer Oh Jung-mi have adapted their script from Haruki Murakamis short story Barn Burning, which not coincidentally is the title of a 1939 story by William Faulkner, the protagonists professed favorite writer. The ensuing game of cat-and-mouse creates shivers of suspense. But Lee is not asking audiences to sit for two and a half hours to watch a whodunit. Burning ignites themes of family, class, envy, crime, rough justice and what Faulkner called the human heart in conflict with itself. With invaluable help from cinematographer Hong Kyung-pyo, editors Kim Hyun and Kim Da-won, composer Mowg and trio of stellar performances, Lee has crafted a hypnotic and haunting film that transcends genre to dig deep into the human condition. You wont be able to get it out of your head.


Burning Review: Love Triangles, Class Envy Fuel Three-Alarm Thriller

Thursday, April 23, 2020

Penny Marshall: What You Saw On Screen Was What You Saw in Life

Penny Marshall, from the Bronx, had a voice you didnt forget.

She talked in a molasses-slow, nasal whine, but her mind moved like a torpedo, finding every laugh where it was needed and the time to talk you through whatever got you down. Penny suffered from depression. She was a funny lady with no end of sorrows that she turned into comic shtick. Her death at 75, from diabetes complications, came after tough times for this actress-director-producer dynamo. Following a lung and brain cancer diagnosis in 2010 (I was a grumpy patient) and a long recovery, she lost her brother Garry Marshall and her best friend Carrie Fisher within months of each other in 2016. To spend time with those people, alone or together, could lift your spirits over any dark clouds. But Penny was the glue. For a woman of limitless kindness, her sarcasm was killer. Hit her too often with compliments or complaints, shed squint and slam you with an, Oh, shut up.

'Toy Story 4': Your Favorite Animated Toy Franchise Does It Again Watch Tom Hanks Steal a Cardboard Cutout of Himself on 'Kimmel' Best Movies to See in June: New 'Men in Black,' 'Toy Story,' 'X-Men'

TV audiences knew Penny best from Laverne & Shirley, in which she and Cindy Williams played Milwaukee brewery workers who laughed at their lousy love lives. The sitcom ran from 1976 to 1983, after which Marshall, who directed a few episodes, moved behind the camera to direct movies. No one expected much, Penny told me in her trademarked deadpan. I guess having Laverne DeFazio behind the camera wasnt a big draw. But her 1985 debut, Jumpin Jack Flash, a spy comedy starring Whoopi Goldberg, made its money back. A profit, even two cents, always get you noticed, Penny said.

Her next film, 1988s Big, did more than get her noticed, it put her on the map, becoming the first film directed by a woman to gross more than $100 million at the box office. And Tom Hanks, who starred as a boy who finds himself in the body of a grown-up dude, won an Oscar nomination as Best Actor. Big feels so spontaneous in its comic execution, youd never guess that Penny struggled with it. I do a lot of takes, she said. It drives actors nuts and the crew, Jesus, they all hate me. Why the uncertainty? I dont know what I like till I see it. Can you imagine?

Hanks couldnt have been that annoyed. He was back in Pennys corner for 1992s A League of Their Own, playing a boozed out ex-baseball player managing a real-life All-American Girls Professional Baseball League organized during World War II while men were off fighting. Geena Davis, Rosie ODonnell and Madonna had key roles. Theres no crying in baseball, Hanks chauvinist manager ranted at the women, who proved more than his equal at the game. League, which also grossed over $100 million, fired a shot in the air for feminism long before the era of #MeToo and #TimesUp. Penny never hid her pride in that accomplishment.

She was equally pleased with Awakenings, the 1990 drama she sandwiched in between Big and League. This time Laverne would direct the legendary Robert De Niro to an Oscar nomination as Best Actor for playing a patient awakened after 30 years in a coma by a doctor, based on Oliver Sacks, who was played by Robin Williams. With Awakenings, Penny became only the second woman in Academy history to direct an Oscar nominee for Best Picture. That Penny herself wasnt nominated had to sting. Ill admit I was depressed, shrugged Penny, adding, but then Im always depressed. Making this movie made me feel good for about five minutes.

Penny continued to direct into the new millennium. There was Renaissance Man(1994), featuring the acting debut of Mark Wahlberg; The Preachers Wife(1996), with Denzel Washington and Whitney Houston (Penny called it the first black Christmas movie); andRiding in Cars With Boys(2001) with Drew Barrymore as a 1960s teen who finds her career sidetracked after getting pregnant by Mr. Wrong.

Penny knew about wrong relationships, having dropped out of college to marry football player Michael Henry and have her first and only child, Tracy. She and Henry divorced after two years. In 1971, she married Rob Reiner, who adopted Tracy. Both actors auditioned for All in the Family, but only Reiner got the part. Her breakup with Meathead after a decade was the definition of amicable. After Marshalls death, Reiner tweeted: I was very lucky to have lived with her and her funnybone. I will miss her.

So will we all. One of my favorite memories of Penny is being invited to an A-list Oscar party she and Carrie threw in L.A. Actually, I wasnt invited. Ill sneak you in, Penny told me, conspiratorially. There were stars. And controlled substances. And Penny being herself, as usual. While Carrie held forth, dishing deliciously about the nominated movies, Penny stuck to the sidelines, talking about baseball, the Lakers (she adored that team), anything sports-related (her doc on Dennis Rodman will be released next year). Mostly, I watched Penny taking time for a quiet moment with the friends who approached her.

I talk good, but I listen better, she said. One fledgling director asked her advice about camera lenses. Penny, peering at him over the tinted glasses that always sat on the the bridge of her nose, delivered a compact lesson in filmmaking. Forget lenses, she told him. Let other people do lenses. You need to think about the story, and how to tell it. Funny is good, but dont force it. And heart, get some heart in there not the self-pitying, crying-in-your-beer bullshit, I hate that. Tell the actors what you want and get out of their way. If you have to tell them how to act, you shouldnt have hired them. And if you dont like what they did, tell them to do it again, until its honest and you can live with it. Whine if you have to, I always do. And if youre still stuck, call me Ill listen.

Penny always listened. Thats why you can feel her laughter and her heart in her work. What you saw on screen was what you saw in life. This is not a woman you can say goodbye to easily. From wherever she is now, I can hear Penny whining, Oh, shut up. So having learned my lesson about listening, I will.


Penny Marshall: What You Saw On Screen Was What You Saw in Life

Book Club Review: Four Screen Legends, Fifty Shades and One Really Bad Movie

Four female friends think they can spice up their book club, and maybe their love lives, by wallowing in the kinky prose of E.L. JamesFifty Shades of Grey.Thats the premise of this life-after-60 comedy, and theres not a doubt in the world that its a pleasure to bask in the company of the four lead actresses Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen and Mary Steenburgen. Until, that is, you see what debuting director Bill Holderman and his cowriter Erin Simms have concocted for this quartet of greats. Some may feel like this smirking sex farce goes down easy. Others may choke on it or worse, feel like theyve wandered into the cinematic equivalent of Christian Greys Red Room of Pain?

Jane Fonda: Weinstein Victims Being Heard Because They're 'Famous and White'

Book Club is set in Los Angeles where everyones living la vida luxe in the sort of dcor porn that Nancy Meyers might envy. Vivian (Fonda) runs a hotel and has a stable of studs to choose from. Sharon (Bergen) is a federal judge whos done with the husband (Ed Begley, Jr.) who dumped her for a young trophy fianc (Mircea Monroe). Diane (Keaton) is a widow who kind of likes being on her own. And Carol (Steenburgen) is a restaurateur with a newly retired husband, Bruce (Craig T. Nelson), whos having trouble both getting and keeping it up.

So does this movie, which keeps putting AARP gags into the mouths of actresses who deserve so much better. Their characters dont need matchmakers they seem to be thriving just as they are, thank you very much. Instead, were told that freewheeling Vivian has to settle down with just one man, her former beau (Don Johnson, a.k.a. father of Dakota Johnson, the lead in the film of Fifty Shades). Diane has to find happiness with a mega-rich aviator (Andy Garcia). Sharon has to go online to find a date (Richard Dreyfuss and Wallace Shawn play two of the candidates). And Carol has to slip Viagra into the drink of her husband to cure his post-retirement impotence.

The insidious
message of this insulting string of tired jokes disguised as a movie is that these
four smart, funny, rigorously independent women, played by top actresses who fit the same description, cant find true happiness without a man.
Seriously? In 2018? In a time of #MeToo
and #TimesUp? No ones knocking finding
a soulmate at any age. But Book Club is
selling Cinderella fantasies that went out last century. Were not buying it.
And neither these women nor you should either.


Book Club Review: Four Screen Legends, Fifty Shades and One Really Bad Movie

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Is the Only Comic-Book Movie Youll Ever Need

Anyone whos ever cut their teeth on superhero comic-books whether as a casual prepubescent collector or someone whose reader alter-ego skews a little closer to this has almost assuredly gone through a Spider-Man phase. Maybe you prefer the Ditko-to-Romitas (Sr. and Jr.) era, or when he changed his suit to all black (long story); its possible that you pine for the days of Todd McFarlanes Amazing run or skew toward the Ultimate reboots. You may even own several mint-condition copies of Web of Spider-Man No. 1, safely tucked away in their mylar bags. Theres a Spidey for all seasons. Some fans discovered the friendly neighborhood webslinger through the late-Sixties TV cartoon, the one with the Ramones-approved theme song, and sought out the books from there. (Never mind the live-action series.) And some discovered him through the movies.

How Superhero Movies Became Too Big To Fail How Spider-Man Conquered the World 20 Best Movies of 2018

Having worked its way through three different big-screen Spider-men at this point, including one still on active duty, Sony Pictures has now given us an animated addition to the ranks. And you would have every reason to view the very existence of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse with emotions ranging from bleary-eyed weariness to hand-drawn-squiggles-around-the-head alarm. Is this just another pull on a cash cows udder one more drop-wringing exploitation of an already globally recognized brand? Did we really need yet another Spider-Man movie to fill time between the Tom Holland entries? (Especially one with a Post Malone voice cameo in it?)

Yes. Yes, we most certainly did need this. You have probably heard, thanks to the early word on the social-media streets, that Spider-Verse is quite good. No its great. Genuinely, jaw-droppingly, mind-bogglingly great. Its probably one of the 10 best animated features youre likely to see, non-classic-Disney division, and one of the five best superhero epics youre likely to see. Its almost assuredly one of the best Spider-Man films youll have the pleasure to sit through. And it is, web-shooting hands down, the best comic-book movie to date.

Theres a distinction to be made between superhero movies, the subgenre of Spider-Man movies and the larger arena of comic-book movies, of course, but first, a synopsis: Theres a guy named Peter Parker. Hes a twentysomething voiced by Chris Pine, and who was once bit by a radioactive spider, yadda yadda can he swing from a web?, yadda yadda great responsibility. When he takes off his mask, hes blond, which is the first sign that something is a little different here. Theres also a kid named Miles Morales (Dopes Shameik Moore), a biracial student who loves street art and hates his live-in elite high school. He, too, gets bit by an enhanced arachnid. Due to a series of circumstances involving a jolly Green Goblin giant, a machine that can open up alternate dimensions and a particularly plus-sized version of the Kingpin (Liev Schreiber), Morales has to take up the Spidey mantle. Otherwise, its the end of the world as we know it, because of course it is.

Luckily, he has help, and heres where things get particularly interesting. Naturally, you mess with the time-space continuum, there are going to be consequences. Enter Peter B. Parker (Jake Johnson), an older version of what well call Spider-Man Classic. He unexpectedly finds himself in a New York sort of like his own, but different hes in Miles timeline now. As is Gwen Stacy (Hailee Steinfeld), a character familiar to readers thanks to a legendary storyline from the days of yore, who exists in a world where she, too, was bitten by an eight-legged science experiment. Cue: Spider-Gwen. If thats not enough for you, theres also Spider-Man Noir (Nicolas Cage), a 30s radio-serial take on the webslinger; Peni Parker (Kimiko Glenn), an anime-like heroine who controls a giant Spider-Bot; and, ah, Spider-Ham (John Mulaney), who is a webslinging pig. That is not a typo.

They have to band together Spidervengers Assemble? to fix things and get everybody back to their individual universes. Mentoring relationships are forged, and familiar faces from the books and movies show up, albeit in different forms than your used to seeing. (Four words: Aunt May, Ass Kicker.) Familial strife is present and accounted for, thanks to Miles protective cop of a dad Jefferson (Brian Tyree Henry, killing it because thats what he does) and his estranged Uncle Aaron (Mahershala Ali). The usual awkwardness of learning how to climb walls and swing via buildings gets screen time; ditto some slam-bang-pow fight scenes. Each superhero gets to make their mark, especially Cages pulpy, pugnacious listen-here-see good guy. Each brings something to the mix, whether its a futureshock riff on an old ideal or an oversized cartoon mallet.

You cant be blamed for thinking that, on the page, this all sounds very Oprah-ish: You get a Spider-Man! And you get a Spider-Man! Or that this is probably just a strictly-for-the-die-hards endeavor, something that will inspire little more than but is it canon?! arguments. But the trio of directors (Bob Perischetti, Peter Ramsey and Robert Rothman) and the two screenwriters (Rothman and Phil Lord) involved know exactly how to set this all up for maximum accessibility. There are deep cuts and in-jokes abound, but alienating newcomers or non-readers isnt on the menu. Lord is 50-percent responsible for The Lego Movie, and that movies irreverence helps keep things buoyant but theres also a reverence for the material that does not talk down to Spider-lovers, either. The animation is a visual mishmash of styles, from Looney Tunes to Adult Swim, Saturday-morning toon-binging to psychedelic, that enlivens every story beat and scene transition. (Dont just take our word for it.) Nobody skimps on the humanity in order to sell more toys.

Its a superhero movie, one that nails the essential dilemma of the key Spider-Man narrative, i.e. the conflict between life outside the suit and the cost of trying to save everyone while youre in it. Not even the Tom Holland screen version captures the teen angst as good as Moores Miles, which is saying something. The fact that its animated doesnt make it any less significant or profound, as the legion of fans who swear by the animated Batman series will tell you, often whether you solicit their opinion on the subject or not. Superhero movies are as much a genre as Westerns or rom-coms at this point, and whether or not you feel theyre sucking up all of the oxygen around other types of movies, any omnivorous film lover worth their salted popcorn can tell the difference between good and bad entries. The way Spider-Verses fluid lines and vibrant artwork, best described as modern-graffitti-on-shrooms with a splash of Bill Sienkiewicz, adds a funky, colorful, complex vibe but doesnt diminish the with-great-power concept one bit. (Writer/critic Evan Narcisse said it best when he noted that, if Ryan Cooglers Black Panther is Shakespeare, then this is Rakim.)

But, and this is the key but among the many weve already mentioned, Spider-Verse nails what its like to enjoy the pleasure principle inherent in reading comics. People have long slagged the medium people still do yet for many, theyre the first step in visual literacy. Our ancestors had cave paintings; we have comic books. They resemble film storyboards, and vice versa. (This was not lost on Zack Snyder, when he made his faithful-to-a-fault adaptation of whats arguably the most highly praised superhero comic of all time.) Theyre also their own form, with their own set of rules to be broken, their own set of borders to be tweaked and warped. This Spider-Man movie replicates the look and language, down to split screens that replicate panels and word balloons popping above characters heads. It also duplicates the rush of being carried along by a great superhero comic story, one with depth and insight and yes, also men and women in tights and capes, throwing punches and dropping quips.

These stories exist, in all their three-color-and-beyond glory. Theyre part of a well-balanced literary diet for many of us, even those whove outgrown childish things yet still recognize that comics do not have be childish by default. Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse may have kid-friendly elements, some of the same superhero-movie clichs as its live-action brethren and a do-gooder whose IRL name is Peter Porker. (Guess which hero?) It also has the sense to embrace what it is and love the form enough to expand upon it, even when or not a phoned-in take on a Spider-Man movie would have still made a gajillion bucks. With great power came great moviemaking. Youll excuse the hyperbole in the headline above its not like wed turn down an incredible Hernandez brothers Love & Rockets movie. For two hours, however, you feel like theres no other comic-book movie, Spider-Blessed or otherwise, youd rather see.


Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Is the Only Comic-Book Movie Youll Ever Need

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Beirut Review: Jon Hamm Adds Class, Movie-Star Charisma to Spy Thriller

Espionage thrillers have it rough these days, what with contemporary headlines beating anything Hollywood can cook up. Still, Beirut has an undeniable retro appeal: Its 1982 in Lebanon, the eve of Israels invasion. A hostage situation is pulling Mason Skiles (Jon Hamm), a former U.S. diplomat in Beirut,back into a spycraft shitstorm hed practically kill to avoid. Hes been mediating low-level labor disputes in Boston, spending his spare time in bars using booze to blast away memories of what happened to him on the job a decade before.

Flashback to 1972, when Mason and his wife Nadia (Leila Bekhti) took in 13-year-old Karim (Yoav Sadian Rosenberg), an orphan refugee. What they didnt know was that Karims older brother, Abu Rajal (Hicham Ouraqa), was a Palestinian terrorist and will turn their lives upside down. Its a recipe for tragedy that predictably ensues and marks Mason for life. Now, 10 years later, the higher-ups want him back in a Beirut ravaged by civil wars; they have one last mission. It seems that CIA agent Cal Riley (Mark Pellegrino), his best friend back in the day, is being held hostage. Mason is just the negotiator to get him out.

Jon Hamm: How the 'Mad Men' Star Became a TV Antihero icon

Why him? Because SPOILER ALERT! the kidnappers are led by Karim (Idir Chender), no longer a kid and eager to trade Cal for the release of someone who lets just say the list of atrocities this persons committed in the name of Palestine has made him notorious. If youre thinking that twist sounds contrived, not to mention reductive of the Muslim world, youre not wrong. But Beirut is not the first movie to use global politics to goose along a talky plot, and director Brad Anderson (The Machinist, Transsiberian), working from a script by Bourne spy master Tony Gilroy, is an expert at filling in the blanks.And theres a cabal of CIA and State Department suits, played by Dean Norris, Shea Whigham and Larry Pine, eager to bury Mason in red tape. His only ally is Sandy Crowder (a terrific Rosamund Pike), a cultural attach with a secret agenda that belies her gancy description as the skirt meant to divert Mason when needed.

Anderson packs the film with atmosphere spiked with intrigue. And Hamm gives his role a James Bond-meets-Don Draper appeal, tossing off one-liners with a weary insouciance. His scenes with Pike give the movie a resonant power it wouldnt otherwise have. But the characters resist deepening in favor of propelling a story that is too often content to travel familiar ground.


Beirut Review: Jon Hamm Adds Class, Movie-Star Charisma to Spy Thriller

Amazing Grace Review: The Gospel According to Aretha Franklin

Its the closest thing to witnessing a miracle just some cameras, a crowd and a voice touched by God. Over two days in January of 1972, Aretha Franklin got up to sing out her gospel at the New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Watts, backed by the Southern California Community Choir. A film crew was there to catch the Queen of Soul blow the roof off the place. Not to get closer to the Lord surely He was already listening but to testify to his glory with the black church music that helped form her and fired her faith. The live recording of the concert became Franklins biggest bestseller. Eight months after Franklins passing at the age of 76, it still is.

New Doc on Suicide Text Case Dives Into Mental Health Struggles The Summer of '85: Relive the Eleven Biggest Musical Moments

Inside Aretha Franklins Amazing Life

So why in the name of all thats holy did it take so long to get the film of that concert into theaters? Its a long story, mostly involving daunting technical problems. Director Sydney Pollack, more than a decade before hed win the Oscar for Out of Africa, failed to properly synchronize image and sound, rendering the film unreleasable. And then, after another four decades, another miracle happened. Digital experts stepped in under the guidance of producer Alan Elliott, and worked out the kinks. So heres Franklin decked out in a caftan, pounding her piano and making a joyful noise to the heavens with image and sound in perfect harmony. Its an unforgettable experience watching her up there, shaking the rafters with What a Friend We Have in Jesus and Marvin Gayes Wholy Holy and finding the ecstatic beauty and forgiveness in the title song. Word has it that good things are worth waiting for. This shining light of a film proves it.

You should know that Amazing Grace lacks any semblance of visual pow. Theres no special effects, no showing off. The cameras barely move. They dont need to. The Queen is present, singing her heart out. Revolving around this supernova is Rev. James Cleveland, openly weeping while choir director Alexander Hamilton waves his hands in air to match the singers energy. Theres the Rev. C.L. Franklin, Arethas father, wiping the sweat off his daughters brow. Drummer Bernard Purdie, guitarist Cornell Dupree and bassist Chuck Rainey are all in thrall, as is the choir itself as its members help Franklin lift her message to the heavens with How I Got Over and The Old Landmark. Theres a glimpse of the young Mick Jagger cheering his ass off in the back row. Even Pollacks team of camera operators look awestruck as they stalk the stage to record a once-in-a-lifetime event for posterity. The result is a concert film to rank with the best, including Martin Scorseses The Last Waltz and Jonathan Demmes Stop Making Sense.

But even those masterpieces didnt have the Queen of Soul. And here she is, barely saying a word to the congregation, knowing instinctively that her singing is all that matters when the time comes to worship and to preach. That truly is amazing grace. How sweet the sound.


Amazing Grace Review: The Gospel According to Aretha Franklin

New Shaft Reboot Attempts to Question What It Means to Be a Man

Its as if a half century of progress in racial and gender politics never happened. Thats Shaft for you. In Ride Along director Tim Storys updated, shamelessly regressive take on the black private dick whos a sex machine to all chicks, three generations of Shafts take center stage. Jessie T. Usher plays JJ, the youngest Shaft, a metrosexual who works as an FBI analyst (he hates guns, loves coconut water!) and is so appalled by the violent, pussy-crazed, homo-hating, un-woke antics of his Harlem-based daddy (Samuel L. Jackson, who played the role for John Singleton in 2000) that hes thankful his upbringing was left to his enlightened mother Maya (Regina Hall, deserving of way better than this). Granddaddy Shaft, played by Richard Roundtree who originated the role in the Gordon Parks 1971 blaxploitation classic, is the block from which his son was chipped. JJ wants nothing to do with either of them. Until he does, that is. JJs ex-junkie buddy has been murdered and he needs real men to get to the bottom of the case in a plot that leads the Shafts to a New York mosque and a shady charity for PTSD veterans.

New Book Chronicles How Trump Cheats at Golf Watch Brie Larson, Samuel L. Jackson Sing Ariana Grande's '7 Rings'

There is potential in the idea hatched by Black-ish creator and Girls Trip co-writer Kenya Barris and Family Guys Alex Barnow. The concept allows the past in all its toxic masculinity to push up against modern idea of what is to be a man. There are even times when the comedy works. Jackson makes street poetry out of spinning untold variations on the word muthafucka. Hes also good with pussy, sometimes pronouncing it puss-ay. Dont accuse this Shaft of not having an arc.

Whats troubling is the way the film decides to take his side. When thugs crash into an elegant restaurant where JJ is dining with his doctor girlfriend Sasha (Alexandra Shipp), the kid finally reaches for a gun and blows the baddies away in an R-rated bloodbath. Cue the closeup on Sasha, near orgasmic with pleasure at seeing her wimp boyfriend turn warrior. Likewise Maya, who previously rejected Shafts brutal response to every challenge, comes to see the error of her ways and embrace him as a gun-toting father protector. By the end, when the three Shafts hit the streets in identical long coats like something out of The Matrix, the message is clear. Rough justice is back to stay. Women are out of the picture, except for sex. Dinosaurs again walk the earth with misogynistic and homophobic impunity. These are the laughs, folks. Dont be surprised if they stick in your throat.


New Shaft Reboot Attempts to Question What It Means to Be a Man