Wednesday, January 30, 2019

At the Cinema - January 2019 (and year-end wrap up for 2018)


Green Book – 10

Finally, a simple, elegant movie.  Maybe elegant is the wrong word for a movie with some violence, but for some reason that’s the word that I think best describes this one.  Viggo Mortenson plays Tony Lip, a Copacabana bouncer in 1962.  He is an Italian American tough guy from the Bronx with a loving wife and two kids.  When the Copa closes for a two-month renovation, Tony takes a job as the driver for Dr. Don Shirley (Mahershala Ali), a pianist about to go on tour.  But, not just any tour.  They are going to tour the south.  And Dr. Shirley is black.  Welcome to Mississippi.

The best movies transport you to a different time and place, in this case the racially charged times of the early 60’s.  Another welcome characteristic is that the movie just cruises along in chronological order, telling the story with wit and wisdom.  Director Peter Farrelly has a firm grasp of the period.  Much like Bohemian Rhapsody, there has been controversy about the accuracy of the portrayals.  Nevertheless, it’s a nicely relevant story, anchored by two great performances.  Both are up for Oscars, and Ali will probably win his second as a supporting actor.  He is rightfully one of the hottest actors in Hollywood right not, and seems to be everywhere, including HBO’s True Detective currently airing.  As Tony and Don travel through the south they form what will be a life-long bond.  It’s a road movie, it’s a buddy movie, but mostly it’s an old-fashioned feel-good movie.  We don’t get enough of them.

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Tully – 9

Charlize Theron is terrific as Marlo, the new mother trying to keep it together taking care of her second baby.  She’s cracking under the strain and getting no help from her video geek husband (Ron Livingston.) Her brother suggests she get a night nanny to help with the baby.  Enter Tully, portrayed to perfection by Mackenzie Davis.  She is almost too good to be true as she seems to have a sixth sense as to what Marlo needs and when she needs it. 

Director Ivan Reitman and screenwriter Diablo Cody making their third collaboration, weave a simple story of the difficulties of child rearing and the daily pressures and problems.  Cool movie that went under the radar, but has enough surprises to make it memorable.


If Beale Street Could Talk – 7

Director Barry Jenkins makes slow deliberate movies.  With its lingering closeups and lethargic pace, this is a one hour movie spread over two hours.  It’s a story of an interrupted love story of two young people, Tish and Fonny (Kiki Layne and Stephan James) who are separated by a false accusation.  The best part of the movie is how the parents of the couple react to their relationship.  Regina King is an Supporting Actress Oscar Favorite for her turn as Tish’s mother.  Beyond the love story and the crime ramifications, there is a sadness to this story that makes it hard to stick with.  I’m all for great character stories, but the pacing of the story was just too slow for me. 


Eighth Grade – 8

In case you weren’t feeling distant enough from young people, here’s a portrait of an eighth grader who is wrapping up her school year and about to head to high school.  She’s insecure in person, but lively on social media.  Her English is a foreign language, at least to me, but the problems of a teenager are the same as they’ve always been, starting with relating to the opposite sex.  Of course her language is peppered with “likes” and that’s been going on awhile, so that reduces the language barrier. 

This is the third collaboration between Director Jason Reitman and Screenwriter Diablo Cody.  They are in comfortable sync as usual, and there’s just a realistic feel to the movie.  But, I’m still glad I’m not a teenager today.


Roma – 8

Alfonso Cuaron’s latest is a unique movie beautifully filmed in black and white.  It’s showing in theaters, but it was concurrently released on Netlix who produced the movie.  Since the movie is in Spanish, it is subtitled, and that’s a major problem in watching the movie on the small screen.  It is hard to match up the dialogue that is being documented on the screen with who is saying it.  I love great foreign movies, but this one is really hard to follow.  If each line of dialogue was preceeded by the name of the person speaking it on the screen, like this:  John:  “Where’s the dog?” this movie would have been easier to understand.  But, there are so many long shots where several people are saying important things, but we can’t tell who is saying what, it’s very hard to follow.

The movie has been nominated for a Best Picture Oscar and best foreign language film.  It could be the first to capture both, and is the darling of the critics, thus a heavy favorite. 

The first half of the movie is tedious.  The visuals open the story of a maid caring for a small family in Mexico.  The father bops in and out, and the focus is on the maid and the mother as they deal with the children.  The maid, apparently based on the director’s family maid, is played by Yalitza Aparicio, who got a surprise best actress nominee.  When the second half of the movie kicks in, the story picks up the pace with some tragedy, and some good fortune.  The intensity and emotion around a couple of events bring the movie home.

Cuaron, who is writer, director, and cinematographer, is the darling of Hollywood, and could win several Oscars, as he is currently called “the best living director.”  Not sure about all that, as I’ve had a hard time with each of his movies, but one can’t deny that this movie finishes strongly after a languid first half.


Mary Poppins Returns – 8

Emily Blunt capably grabs a hold of the mythical character of Mary Poppins.  Julie Andrews famously won an Oscar for her turn as Mary Poppins in 1965.  I remember clearly that with Sound of Music still ahead of her, Julie was passed over for the role of Eliza Dolittle in the movie version of My Fair Lady.  That role went to Audrey Hepburn, who was great, but had to have her singing dubbed by the amazing Marni Nixon.  It was widely thought that Andrews won to recognize that she had been jilted.  Anyway, My Fair Lady got the 1965 Oscar for Best Picture and The Sound of Music won in 1966.  I’ve always wished I could see Julie Andrews in Camelot and My Fair Lady, as the Broadway recordings played constantly in our house growing up.  Julie’s place in musical history is secure. 

Emily Blunt is a joy, and Lin Manuel-Miranda has parlayed his Hamilton fame into the second banana part here.  Wish he’d tackled the music, which is the weakest part of the movie.  Maybe kids will be singing these songs for the next 50 years, the way we have sung Supercalifragilisticexpealidocious, Chim Chim Chiree, and A Spoonful of Sugar, but I doubt it.  Nevertheless, take those children and grandchildren.


Aquaman – 4

There’s ridiculous, there’s beyond ridiculous, and then there’s Aquaman.  This movie had to have been filmed entirely in front of a green screen with the special effects, mostly underwater, thrown in later.  Maybe that’s how all movies are filmed now, but this one is made particularly ridiculous by the number of underwater conversations that take place with not so much as a bubble.  Not that the visuals aren’t arresting.  They are as impressive as any video game, I’m sure.  I’m a Galaga guy living in a Fortnight world.  (All I know about Fortnight is the name, and I worry that the youth of America is just sitting there instead of experiencing real life.)

I shouldn’t be going to these comic book movies.  This sure isn’t the Aquaman I remember from 50 years ago.  I just keep falling for the buzz and every now and then I see a Deadpool or a Black Panther, but those are the exception.  Aquaman is the rule, and if this is what passes for entertainment we are just going to drown in special effects.


Rampage – 4

Speaking of green screens, let’s acknowledge the King – the Rock.  Dwayne Johnson has got to be the best at green screen acting.  He’s made so many movies with buildings falling down around him, and, in this case, huge genetically altered animals chasing him, that he should get a special award for what he does.  Of course, this movie doesn’t have a believable moment in it, but that’s ok. It’s basically a video game, and if this is what you want, here’s another one.


Scanning the Satellite

Killing Eve – 9
We binged this BBC series starring Sandra Oh, who has been winning “best actress in a drama” awards for her Eve, but it’s Jodie Comer as the assassin Eve is chasing, who powers this series.  Her charisma and believability rock this thing.  I wouldn’t want to have her chasing me.

Jeff Beck:  Still on the Run – 9
Terrific Showtime documentary on the life of Jeff Beck.  A lot I didn’t know, and I now have more appreciation of his abilities

Breslin and Hamill:  Deadline Artists – 9
If you have any interest in journalism, you will love this HBO documentary about two of the greats and their career with New York papers.

Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel
HBO has had this on for 25 years, and I’ve always loved it.  But this month’s feature on Adam Schefter’s professional and personal life is truly haunting.  Both he and the interviewer Jon Frankel, are married to 9/11 widows and it’s raw and compelling TV.

2018 Wrap Up, ranking and awards:

It’s time for my 2018 summary and I thought Mission Impossible:  Fallout was easily the best movie I saw last year.  It was incredibly well plotted and executed and is simply the best action movie ever made – for now.  Like Mad Max: Fury Road it will go largely unrewarded because it’s hard for the industry to recognize it as art.  AND – Tom Cruise is better at the acting that he does, stunts and all, than Oscar nominees are at what they do.  The most compelling documentary I saw all year, and I’ve watched it 3 times because I still don’t believe it, was Three Identical Strangers.  I can’t explain why I found it so interesting, because that would give it away, but it’s now running on CNN. 

RANK OF 2018 MOVIES:

Mission Impossible:  Fallout – 10
A Quiet Place – 10
Green Book - 10
BlackkKlansman 10
Hearts Beat Loud – 10
Black Panther - 9
Bohemian Rhapsody – 9
A Star is Born – 9
Game Night – 9
Tully - 9
Red Sparrow – 9
On the Basis of Sex – 9
Creed II - 8
Chappaquiddick – 8
Roma - 8
Mama Mia – Here we go Again – 8                                                    
Mary Poppins Returns - 8
The Mule - 8
The Girl in the Spider’s Web – 8
Eighth Grade- 8
Widows – 7
Crazy Rich Asians – 7
Vice – 7
If Beale Street Could Talk - 7
First Man – 6
The Favourite - 5
The Old Man and the Gun – 5
Peppermint – 5
Aquaman – 4
Rampage – 4
The Commuter - 4
Ocean’s Eight – 4

Documentaries:
Three Identical Strangers – 10
Fahrenheit 9/11 – 9
RBG – 9
Jane Fonda in Three Acts – 9
Eric Clapton:  Life in 12 Bars – 9
Jeff Beck:  Still on the Run - 9
Love, Gilda - 8


The Ozzies:
Best Picture:  Mission Impossible:  Fallout
Best Actor:  Rami Malik in Bohemian Rhapsody
Best Actress:  Emily Blunt in A Quiet Place
Best Supporting Actor:  Sam Elliott in A Star is Born
Best Supporting Actress:  Tess Thompson in Creed 2
Best Director:  John Krasinski, A Quiet Place

The Lizzies (for TV):
Best Show:  The Good Place
Best Actor:  Bill Pullam, The Sinner
Best Actress:  Rachel Brosnahan, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Best Supporting Actor:  Tony Shaloub, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
Best Supporting Actress:  Jodie Comer, Killing Eve

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