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2015 POST-AA RAMBLINGS

 
Neil Patrick Harris

Friday February 27, 2015 
 
THE SHOW (** 1/2)
In my preshow commentary, I questioned whether Neil Patrick Harris would add to the growing current list of non-consecutive hosts of the annual telecast.  Here's my early prediction for next year:  Yes.  Not that the dude was horrible.  He just wasn't that good or even memorable.  I almost missed Degeneres' syrupy shtick from last year.  Well, almost.    NPH's opening, where CGI inserted him in movie clips, has been done before; so nothing memorable there.  And his best bit where he roamed the aisles bantering with the stars he happened upon was done better and easier by Ellen.  His flubbing of names on several occasions actually made John Travolta proud.  And his overlong joke/magic trick involving Octavia Spencer, insisting that she watch his prediction box throughout the show, was embarrassing and annoying.  Was anyone awake at the end to see he had predicted events during the show?  Did anyone really care??  The producers need to hire writers and a host with more of an edge.  Jimmy Kimmel or, now that he might have more time on his hands, Jon Stewart come to mind.
 
As for the show itself, the 87th version clocked in at 3 hours, 22 minutes and 9 seconds (but who's counting).  It was 8 minutes longer than last years extravaganza (and, once again, it seemed a lot longer); but, thankfully, it still was 61 minutes shorter than the all-time snooze-fest in 2002 (can you even imagine!). And, according to "Variety", the final Nielsen numbers translated to a average of 36.6 million viewers and a 10.8 rating in adults 18-49 — declines of 16% and 18% respectively from last year (43.7 million and 13.1). These were the lowest totals in six years.  A large part of that was probably due to the dearth of known popular films among the nominated as only one of the Best Picture nominees (American Sniper) was a box office hit.   Or was it partly due to Harris as the host?  The answer to that one will have to wait until next year.   
 
 
Again, my annual apologies to Sergio Leone, as this breakdown will pretty much sum up the event through this reviewer's eyes:
 
THE GOOD
- The acceptance speeches were, for the most part, concise and even memorable (more on that below).  Also, the orchestra only had to chase the lessor award winners on only a few occasions for going over their time limitation.  (However, see my comment under The Bad where the orchestra did a faux pas during one of these speeches.)
 
- No audience selfies.  Social media had to settle for the multitude of tweets invading cyberspace during the show.
 
- Travolta finally getting Idina Menzel's name right in one of the better introduction bits.
 
- Lady Gaga's tribute to Julie Andrews and The Sound of Music.  The pop star can sing and is trying to prove it to most of the world who consider her as merely a caricature.  The praise she received from Dame Andrews afterward was more than well-deserved. 
 
- The Best Song performances were memorable - especially the upbeat "Everything is Awesome" (from The Lego Movie) and "Glory" (from Selma).  The rousing performance by John Legend and Common from the latter, with support from about 200 folks onstage, had many in the audience in tears. 
 
- Good (but not memorable) was this year's opener mentioned above.  It's time to change things up in this department, Oscar producers. 
 
- Production numbers (other than some of the song nominees) were, once again absent,  which helped keep the running time down (but, unfortunately, not down enough).  Also missing were the usual themes infused with 2 - 3 second clips from past films which usually failed to satisfy and only served to lengthen the proceedings.
 
Birdman walking away with four major awards:  Best Picture, Director, Original Screenplay, and Cinematography:  all totally deserved.   
  
THE BAD
- Harris' name pronunciations.  Was Travolta his coach?  Didn't he have long enough time to practice?? 
 
- And Harris' extremely misguided "joke" after Citizenfour won Best Documentary (about Edward Snowden and his whistleblowing on the massive covert surveillance programs run by the NSA and other intelligence agencies).  The host stated the Snowden couldn't "be here tonight for some treason".  Hey Neil - it would be nice to include that snide remark if the guy, who many consider a national hero, was actually convicted of this crime!  A disgusting ignorant statement that was totally inappropriate and, I'm sure, offended many a viewer - including myself. 
 
- Once again, the producers left out notable mentions during the In Memoriam segment:  Joan Rivers as well as screenwriter Elaine Stritch who has penned numerous scripts during her career.  Rivers definitely should have been included having appeared in numerous films, including writing and directing Billy Crystal in 1978's Rabbit Test.  Not to mention that her yearly presence on the Red Carpet was a mainstay at The Oscars.  Their excuse that there wasn't enough time to include her on the telecast so they placed her on their website, was lame at best. 
 
- According to how you look at it, Harris' bit mocking Birdman in which he was, ultimately, locked out of his dressing room and appearing onstage in his tighty whities.  First of all, a lot of America probably didn't get the joke since so few have seen the film.  And the idea was stolen from the writers over at The Independent Spirit Awards televised the night before - whose skit by ISA hosts Fred Armisten and Kristen Bell was funnier and more original.  (Note:  The Independent Spirit Awards, honoring independent films and held in Santa Monica while being televised each year on IFC the day before the Oscars, is the best award show of the season.  The 30th edition this year was funnier and miles more entertaining that The Oscars.  Held in a tent with liquor on every table makes it an unpredictable affair and worth seeing!)
 
-  The writing - especially for Harris' one-liners and puns which, more often than not, misfired and fell flat. 
 
THE UGLY
- The orchestra unfortunately chimed in and rushed Ellen Goosenberg Kent and Dana Perry (who won the Oscar for best documentary short subject for their film Crisis Hotline: Veterans Press 1) just as Perry began to relate her son's suicide in 2005.  The conductor, or someone, needs to listen to the speeches and determine when it is not appropriate to start the rush-off music. 
 
- If that wasn't bad enough, Harris comes out and poorly times what, unfortunately, was his funniest line of the night (see below).
 
- John Travolta still refusing to age gracefully.  Hey Barbarino, stop groping women's faces and start looking and acting your age already!
 
- Lady Gaga's red leather gloves worn up to her elbows on the Red Carpet.  I wasn't sure if she was attending the Oscars or getting ready to perform an autopsy. 
 
- Sean Penn's announcement of  the Best Picture Winner.  Before divulging the winning film, he referred to the Mexican national director Alejandro G. Iñárritu by joking "Who gave this son of a bitch his green card?" I personally wasn't offended but social media was on fire with the politically incorrect reference.  Including inside jokes is never a good idea when only two people (namely, Penn and Iñárritu) get it while millions of folks, including those in the audience, don't. 
 
- Not getting this broadcast, again, at least under three hours. 
 
 
NOW . . . THE ANNUAL JAY B CINEMA DIARY OSCAR SHOW AWARDS:
 
THE BIGGEST SURPRISE WINNER
None
  
FUNNIEST JOKE OF THE NIGHT
Neil Patrick Harris, commenting on the Dana Perry's dress, which looked liked someone attached a bunch of large black furry balls, joked, "It takes a lot of balls to wear a dress like that".
 
THE WORST TIMING FOR A JOKE
Neil Patrick Harris' joke about Danna Perry's dress came just after Perry's suicide announcement.
 
THE BEST CARRYOVER JOKE FROM LAST YEAR
 Repeated references to John Travolta's mispronouncing of Idina Menzel's name - even by Menzel herself. 
 
BEST SPORT BEING THE OBJECT OF ENDLESS JOKES
John Travolta 
 
BEST ACCEPTANCE SPEECH
Imitation Game's screenwriter Graham Moore after winning the Best Adapted Screenplay.  After revealing that he attempted suicide at the age of 16, Moore spoke to teenagers who might be similarly struggling.  "Stay weird, stay different, and then when it's your turn and you are standing on this stage, please pass the same message to the next person who comes along."
 
2ND BEST ACCEPTANCE SPEECH
Best Director winner Alejandro González Iñárritu who said that, for good luck, he was wearing Keaton's tighty whities.
 
BEST ACCEPTANCE SPEECH DEVOID OF A MILLION THANK YOU'S
J.K. Simmons who implored everyone to "Call your mom, call your dad. If you're lucky enough to have a parent or two alive on this planet, call 'em. Don't text, don't email, call them on the phone. Tell them you love them. Thank them and listen to them for as long as they wanna talk to you."
 
BEST OVERLONG ACCEPTANCE SPEECH THAT IGNORED THE ORCHESTRA
Best Foreign Language Film winner Pawel Pawlikowski (Poland's Ida) ended up thanking everyone from his film crew, his late wife, his deceased parents and his children ("who are hopefully watching, who are still alive!") while telling his drunk crew in Poland to keep drinking.
 
BEST NON-OSCAR PRESENTATIONS
Lego Oscars handed out to several audience member during the "Everything Is Awesome" performance.
 
BEST  SURPRISE REACTION FROM A NON-OSCAR CONTENDER
Oprah
 
BEST RIPOFF OF A COMEDY SKETCH
The Birdman spoof which was done so much better the night before during the Independent Spirit Awards.  I presumed the producers figured virtually no one would be tuning in to the most entertaining awards show of the season, held each year on IFC.  
 
BEST (AND ONLY) POLICITAL ACCEPTANCE SPEECH
Patricia Arquette calling for wage equality for women, which resulted in a firestorm in social media on both sides of the issue. 
 
BEST PUBLIC ACKNOWLEGEMENT OF A EGRECIOUS FLUB BY THE NOMINATING COMMITTEE
Harris' remark while introducing the Outstanding Animation Feature proclaiming that, "If you are at an Oscar party with the guys who made The Lego Movie, now would be an excellent time to start distracting them."
 
MOST SURPRISED OSCAR WINNER
Eddie Redmayne who won the the Best Actor Oscar who genuinely proclaimed, "“I can’t believe I’m up here!”
 
BEST PHILOSOPHICAL QUOTE OF THE NIGHT
Best Director winner Alejandro G. Iñárritu who related that, "Fear is the condom of life. It doesn't allow you to enjoy things."  
 
THE MOST DESERVING FILM TO WIN THE MOST MAJOR OSCARS
Birdman   
 
UPCOMING:  The 2015 Sundance Dramatic Grand Prize and Audience Award winner:  "Me & Earl & The Dying Girl"
 
Oscars TV Review
Harris brings some dignity to the annual extravaganza
 
87th Annual Academy Awards - Show
  Lady Gaga belting out the musical highlight of the evening


2015 PRE-AA RAMBLING THOUGHTS/PREDICTIONS

 
Friday February 20, 2015

-Exit Ellen DeGeneres-enter Doogie Howser.  Neil Patrick Harris' entertainment pedigree/qualifications as an actor, writer, producer, director, magician, comedian and singer appears to make him a natural to host Hollywood's annual pat-on-the-back.  Named by "Time Magazine" as among the 100 most influential people in 2010, Harris certainly brings experience to the show having hosted Broadway's Tony Awards in 2009, 2011, 2012 and 2013 and The Primetime Emmy Awards in 2009 and 2013.  Will he be the latest in what is lately becoming a long line of non-consecutive Oscar hosts?  Stay tuned . . .

- Here's my take on what I consider the two biggest nominating snubs of the year:
 (1)  How The Lego Movie wasn't nominated for Best Picture is beyond me.  But not being nominated for Best Animated Feature is beyond absurd!  I would love for someone to explain how the academy overlooked nominating one of the most original creative films since Pixar animators first began using a computer.  A total head-shaker.
 (2)  The brouhaha over the lack of African-American nominees in general and Selma in particular.  If you ask me, I thought the Academy got it absolutely right with the latter.  For me, despite the importance of its message and historical significance, the film, on its own merits, was a one-note stilted exercise that continually pounded its agenda like a migraine headache.  If anything David Oyelowo, as Martin Luther King, should have garnered a Best Actor nod; but nominating the film as BP would have been totally off base and unworthy-even despite the swirling controversy involving the politics of Lyndon Johnson as portrayed in the movie.  

- Surprise:  Meryl Streep gets nominated for the 19th time-now seven noms ahead of Jack Nicholson  with 12.  However, Streep fans, don't get your hopes up this year.  Although she gave her usual excellent competent performance as a witch in Into The Woods (I can hardly wait for Harris' barbs directed at her this Sunday), Meryl doesn't stand a chance of winning in this category (see below).

- It is starting to appear that a new category needs to be added to the list of 24:  Greatest Cinematographer Never To Win An Oscar.  Once again, long-time nominee Roger Deakins (DP for the Coen Brothers and Sam Mendes) is in the running for Angelina Jolie's forgettable critical flop, Unbroken.  However, his chances of finally walking away with the statuette are slim and none.  This is his 12th nomination as he continues to add to his dubious record of the most ever for a non-winner in this category.  Look for a life-time achievement segment in the not too distant future.

- Bradley Cooper is on a roll.  His amazing performance in American Sniper is his third nomination in three years.  If he is nominated next year, he ties Marlon Brando for the most consecutive.  The only question is whether he wins before Deakins.  My bet is on Bradley.

- The great song writer Diane Warren is trying to win for the first time despite 6 previous nominations.  However, her song "Grateful" from Beyond the Lights, IMHO, has no chance of winning (see below).

- The Foreign Language category welcomes two films for the first time from Estonia and Mauritania.

- There were no repeat 2014 winners nominated this year.

-Finally:  In last year's prediction column, I wrote that the magazine "Slate" named Meryl Streep as the most thanked person in the last dozen years as a result of a survey they conducted.  Now, the website vocativ.com claims they have studied all 1,396 Oscar speeches and tabulated who was thanked the most in Oscar history.  The winner:  Stephen Spielberg.  Here are the top 6:
  1. Steven Spielberg (thanked 42 times)
  2. Harvey Weinstein (thanked 34 times)
  3. James Cameron (thanked 28 times)
  4. George Lucas (thanked 23 times)
  5. Peter Jackson (thanked 22 times)
  6. God (thanked 19 times)

The envelope, please . . . 

BEST PICTURE
What will win:  Birdman (or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
What should winBirdman (or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
Upset possibility:   The Theory of Everything
For me, Birdman is the clear winner on so many levels. (To see why, click here to read my review).  The fact that the academy loves and identifies with films about tortured actors, it would seem that alone would give it a leg up on the competition when it came down to voting time.  When the nominations were announced last month, the early winner in the clubhouse was Boyhood.   Although I admire its bold concept of using the same cast over 12 years of filming (interesting fact:  the film was shot in a total of 39 days!) the film meandered, lacked focus and included an amateurish performance by Ellar Coltrane in the lead .  Other than the fascination of watching humans age 12 years over the course of its LONG 165 minutes, it failed to sustain my interest and I ended up feeling like I aged 12 years in the process.  An intriguing upset possibility is American Sniper.  In its favor is its enormous box office opening in January and the start of the trial of Chris Kyle's killer in Texas which is currently grabbing national headlines.  Also, Clint Eastwood has long been an Academy fav.  The crowd-pleasing and extremely competent The Theory of Everything, or even The Imitation Game, also could upset.  However, I feel it is a little unsettling for biopics to be considered for Best Picture-no matter how well done.  To me, a totally original film gets the nod and Birdman completely fits the bill. 

(FOR THE RECORD:  here are the eight nominated films I rated from best to least: 
(1)  Birdman (or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
(2)  The Theory of Everything
(3)  The Imitation Game
(4)  The Grand Budapest Hotel
(5)  American Sniper
(6)  Boyhood
(7)  Whiplash
(8)  Selma
        THE BEST FILM NOT NOMINATED FOR A BEST PICTURE
        The Lego Movie  (I would have placed this fifth on this list and removed Selma.)
        THE SECOND BEST FILM NOT NOMINATED FOR A BEST PICTURE
        Guardians of the Galaxy (I would have placed this one ahead of both Whiplash and Selma)

BEST DIRECTOR
Who will win:  Alejandro G. Iñárritu (Birdman)
Who should win:  Alejandro G. Iñárritu (Birdman)
Upset possibility:  Richard Linklater (Boyhood)
Anyone who has been reading my blog knows the Best Picture is ALWAYS directed by the Best Director.  However, Hollywood might be totally enamored in the enormous undertaking of not only making a film over twelve years but to have the incredible luck of losing none of the cast members.  But does it deserve special recognition and acknowledgment?  Boyhood failed to impress this reviewer as previously stated.  Therefore, I don't feel Linklater deserves the Oscar based merely on effort or gimmick.  Merit has to be part of the equation.  Iñárritu, on the other hand had directed a multi-layered work that is not only timeless, it will be dissected by film students for generations to come. 

BEST LEADING ACTOR
Who will win:  Michael Keaton (Birdman)
Who should win:  Michael Keaton (Birdman)
Upset possibility:  Eddie Redmayne (The Theory of Everything)
This is one of the closest races of the night.  Redmayne was absolutely brilliant totally embodying the theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking.  Hawking himself commented that he felt that, at times, he was watching himself on the screen.  That being said, Keaton gets the award for creating a non-fiction character all his own.  His acting range as Riggan, the tortured washed-up actor attempting a comeback on Broadway, is among the best I've ever seen on the screen.  And the voting Academy would love to finally acknowledge and award a long career to one of their favorites.  The British actor, Eddie Redmayne, is young and will have more than ample opportunity to reach the podium. 

BEST LEADING ACTRESS
Who will win:  Julienne Moore (Still Alice)
Who should win:  Julienne Moore  (Still Alice)
(Extreme) Upset possibility:  Rosamund Pike (Gone Girl)
The virtual lock of the night.  Moore will finally win her first Oscar.  However, I loved the English Actress Rosamund Pike as the nefarious Amy Dunne in the best-selling novel adaptation.  There hasn't been a knockout surprise/shocker in a major category for years - so maybe this will be it.  But I doubt it. 
     
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Who will win:  J.K. Simmons (Whiplash)
Who should win:  J.K. Simmons (Whiplash)
(Extreme) Upset possibility:  Edward Norton (Birdman)
Another virtual lock.  As the sadistic music teacher in Whiplash, Simmons is so terrifying and unnerving he effectively removed any possible joy I might have taken from watching the film.  Known mainly for portraying quiet likeable characters, he goes completely against type in this role.  However, I thought Norton might upset as a narcissistic actor attempting to sabotage Keaton's comeback.  It would fall under the knockout surprise/shocker if he does.
 

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Who will win:  Patricia Arquette (Boyhood)
Who should win: Emma Stone (Birdman)
Upset possibility:  (None)
The Academy is going to have to award Boyhood somehow, and this is the easiest way to do it.  Arquette dedicated 12 years of her life to Linklater's project and the likeable actress appears to be in line for her first Oscar.  Personally, I thought her acting was unremarkable, while Emma Stone, Michael Keaton's petulant daughter, is unforgettable in every scene she appears.  However, Arquette is the overwhelming favorite and should win easily.


BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
What will win:  How to Train Your Dragon 2
What should win: The Lego Movie (Not nominated)
Upset possibility:  Big Hero 6
If How to Train Your Dragon 2 wins, it will be the first animated sequel to win since Toy Story 3 in 2010.  However, none in this category is close to being as deserving as the snubbed Lego film.


BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
What will win:  Birdman (or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
What should win:  Birdman (or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)
Upset possibility:  The Grand Budapest Hotel
The word on the street is that this could go to Boyhood.  Personally, I thought its script was one of the weakest aspects of the film and I would be shocked if it won.  I wouldn't be surprised if a nod to Wes Anderson's lively screenplay for The Grand Budapest Hotel was awarded.  However, the ingenious script by Alejandro G. Iñárritu, Nicolás Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris, Jr. and Armando Bo is what ultimately makes Birdman tick and truly unforgettable.


BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
What will winWhiplash
What should winThe Theory of Everything
Upset possibility:  The Imitation Game
Admittedly, this is one of the toughest categories to predict.  The fury of Damien Chazelle's script based on his experiences in the Princeton High School Studio Band probably pushes Whiplash to the forefront as the favorite.  However, the winning crowd-pleasing screenplay by Anthony McCarten for The Theory of Everything, adapted from Jane Hawking's memoir, produced words that lyrically flowed as exquisitely as the visuals.  I wouldn't be surprised, though, if Graham Moore's intelligent script for The Imitation Game edged out these two nominees.

BEST DOCUMENTARY
What will winCitizenFour
What should winVirunga
Upset possibility:  Finding Vivian Maier
CitizenFour is gathering the most consistent buzz.  However, for my money, the beautiful but heartbreaking doc about the plight to save the gorillas in The Congo's Virunga National Park amidst the civil war conflict currently being waged, was the best documentary I screened in 2014.

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
What will winBirdman
What should winBirdman
(Extreme) Upset possibility:  The Grand Budapest Hotel
Emmanuel Lubezki will be accepting his second Oscar in a row (he won last year for Gravity) and is even more deserving this time around.  His incredibly lengthy tracking shots in one glorious take are a true cinematic marvel in a film that will be considered a classic for years to come.  Although Robert Yeoman's camera work in The Grand Budapest Hotel might have won in any other year, it was his misfortune to share a nomination with Lubezki who should easily win. 

BEST ORIGINAL SONG
What will win:  "Everything is Awesome" from The Lego Movie
What should win:  "Everything is Awesome" from The Lego Movie
Upset possibility:  "Glory" from Selma
The Academy members will be throwing this proverbial bone to The Lego Movie to give any recognition it can to one of the best films not nominated for a major award.  And, you will be humming this winning song long after the lights come up.  Perhaps being released way back in February 2014 hurt Lego's overall nomination chances.  Whatever the reason, it is almost unconscionable in this reviewer's humble opinion.  If you haven't seen this movie, run, don't walk, to your nearest Netflix outlet and see it!!

Stop back for my post-AA report next week.

"TIMBUKTU" - ***1/2 (97 minutes)



 February 7, 2015
 
Anyone who watches the news on a regular basis almost daily sees the images of horror and outrage as radical Islamic rule overtakes people whose culture and customs reach back into centuries.  Mauritanian filmmaker Abderrahmane Sissako puts a human face on these minutes long newscasts as he takes you into the milieu of one of these societies who are faced with conforming to the invading jihadists' demands (including banning music, soccer, and smoking) - or suffer the consequences including flogging and even death.

Sissako's inspiration was the 2012 Islamic takeover of Timbuktu and other parts of northern Mali.  Various subplots are included but the main focus is on a cow herding family.  Kidane, his wife Satima and 12-year-old daughter Toya live in a tent on the outskirts of Timbuktu.  Their mundane existence seems to be mostly unaffected by the radical demands in nearby Timbuktu - that is, until an unexpected tragedy results from a neighbor dispute and the resulting justice which will be imposed by the ruling jihadists.

Interspersed with this drama are scenes of various defiant confrontations between the new fundamentalist rulers and the townspeople trying desperately to maintain their customs, dignity and self-respect.  Sissako necessarily includes images of punishment but, thankfully, tones down the outrageous violence which, in the final analysis, is more effective without being sensationalistic. 

There are several breathtaking scenes of contrasting beauty offered by cinematographer Sofiane El Fani.  (One in particular is a long shot of Kidane wadding through a river after a violent confrontation with his neighbor).  The occasional music by Amine Bouhafa includes traditional Malian melodies as well as more Western influences and is effectively placed in the action.
  
Overall, the film is a quiet but profound meditation on the continuous domination and injustice that, unfortunately, is much too prevalent on the planet.
 
The film, one of five nominated in the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar category, opened on a limited basis on January 28th, and in the D.C. area on February 13.

UPCOMING FRIDAY:  My annual Academy Awards Thoughts/Predictions commentary.
 
 (l to r) Satima (Toulu Kiki), Kidane (Ibrahim Ahmed) and
Toya (Layla Walet Mohamed) relax in their open tent home
in the desert outside of Timbuktu

THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING - ***1/2 (123 minutes)

 
Thursday November 20, 2014
 
The biopic is a genre that has a long and generally successful cinematic history.  The most challenging projects involve subjects currently among the living as inevitable comparisons will be made and scrutinized.  I am quite pleased to report that first-time narrative director James Marsh (whose superb Man On Wire deservedly won the 2008 Best Documentary Academy Award, and his terrific 2011 documentary Project Nim was the recipient of numerous accolades) has successfully transferred to the screen the love story between the brilliant English theoretical physicist, Stephen Hawking, and his first wife, Jane Wilde.  Their marriage lasted 25 years and produced 3 children.
 
Screenwriter Anthony McCarten, has scripted an intelligent touching rendition of their life together that began while both were attending the University of Cambridge in the early 60's.  Based on Jane's memoir “Traveling to Infinity: My Life With Stephen,” we first meet Stephen just prior to his knowledge that he had contracted amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) - better known as Lou Gehrig's disease - a revelation that came just after he began courting the medieval Spanish poetry student.  Told he has two years to live, he is determined to end the relationship - to the chagrin of Jane who is determined to continue their affair no matter the dire predictions of Stephen's health. 

Eddie Redmayne (Les Misérables) will be a serious contender for Best Actor.  Redmayne gives a bravura performance that demands extreme physicality and expressiveness.   His Hawking is so chilling and exact that the physicist commented in an Email to the director and screenwriter that he felt he was watching himself.  And, his approval of the script resulted in allowing the filmmakers to use his mechanized voice after a tracheotomy was performed in 1985.   Jane is played by the always dependable Felicity Jones (Like Crazy) whose acting is subtle and less ostentatious - but equally impressive.  The brilliant Icelandic composer Jóhann Jóhannsson (who also composed the haunting score for Foxcatcher) has added a sweeping score that is both memorable and melodic without  overwhelming the visuals. 
 
There are minor problems.  Mainly, the toning down of Hawking's documented difficult nature, and the script's over simplification of Hawking's attempt to produce an explanation for the universe and time and space.  That being said, The Theory of Everything is more a love story than a formal pronouncement of quantum physics (for that I recommend Christopher Nolan's Interstellar which employed Hawking's colleague Kip Thorne to help explain black holes and space-time singularities). 

Marsh is able to transform a potentially depressing story of a brilliant genius who overcame physical and emotional limitations into a crowd-pleasing love story that will definitely have you leaving the theater feeling uplifted and positive.

UPCOMING NEXT WEEK:  Review of "Timbuktu" (Oscar nominated for Best Foreign Language Film) and my annual Academy Awards Thoughts/Predictions column to be posted Friday, February 20th
 
Stephen (Eddie Redmayne) and
Jane (Felicity Jones) pose on
their wedding day

BIRDMAN or (The Unexpected Virture of Ignorance) - **** (119 minutes)

 
Tuesday October 28, 2014
 
One often hears about actors declining certain roles for fear of being pigeonholed into a specific character or genre for the rest of their careers.  Usually these are performers who have established themselves in successful (and sometimes not so successful) franchise films replete with sequel after sequel.  Those who chose to repeat themselves, either due to financial gain or popular pressures or comfort level, at some point will come to the realization that, to prove themselves worthy to themselves and the world, they must tackle roles and genres late in their lives long after their signature character has faded from the theater marquees. 
 
Riggan Thomson (Michael Keaton) made his mark in the 80's playing Birdman.  Now in his 60's, his ego and career have blazingly crashed to earth - like the meteor depicted falling through the sky that opens the movie.  Shift to the rear view of Riggan as he hovers above the floor in lotus position meditating in his St. James Theater dressing room as he converses with his alto-ego Birdman voice discussing his current state of affairs.  We soon learn that he is attempting to jump start his profession by directing and starring in a Broadway adaptation of  a Raymond Carver short story, “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love". 
 
It is the day before previews begin and during the dress rehearsal an unexpected accident leaves the production without one of its major players.   Enter the co-star's (Naomi Watts) boyfriend as a replacement:  loose cannon egomaniac Mike Shiner (Ed Norton) -  whose immediate infusion of energy and talent might just increase the possibility the play and Riggan become a critical and popular success.

However, Riggan must deal with more drama and neurotic characters swirling around him than the play itself which only serves to further enhance his insecurities.  There is his girlfriend and second co-star, Laura (Adrian Riseborough) who announces she's pregnant.  There is his estranged impish daughter Laura (Emma Stone) fresh out of rehab who is Riggan's reluctant personal assistant.  There is Riggan's best friend and producer, Jake (comic actor Zach Galifianakis in an excellent against type straight role) who is frantic on keeping the play on course when Riggan threatens to quit after that aforementioned accident.  There is Riggan's ex-wife Sylvia (Amy Ryan) hovering around the proceedings who still loves the star while clearly wearing her emotions on her sleeve.  There is the supercilious New York Times drama critic Tabitha Dickinson (Lindsey Duncan) who has the power to close a play overnight and who has utter disdain for the lead.   And then there is Shiner, whose method-acting and narcissism continuously threaten the production's success both on and off the stage.

Acclaimed Mexican director Alejandro González Iñárritu (Amores Perros, 21 Grams, Babel, Biutiful) is known for somber dark dramas virtually absent of any humor.  However, here he and his co-writers Nicolas Giacobone, Alexander Dinelaris and Armando Bo, have created a biting meta satire on a par with Academy Award winner Paddy Chayefsky's brilliant script for Sidney Lumet's 1976's Network.  The theater, Hollywood, insecurity, the search for fame and celebrity, narcissism, social media:  these are just a few of the topics granted equal reference and ridicule.  Not to mention the myriad of inside jokes that repeated viewings are a must in order to savor them all.   

Iñárritu's selection of Keaton as Birdman is nothing short of brilliant.  His role here is a wink towards Keaton's Batman from 1989 and 1992 which began the onslaught of comic strip films that continue to this day.  And, although Keaton has appeared in numerous films since, his roles have been largely unremarkable - until now.  Keaton's incredible range struggling with reality and the fantasy of Birdman and his superpowers (which culminates in an eye-popping fantasy sequence in the third reel) puts him as a front-runner for an Oscar.

Each of the supporting players are excellent and I would not be surprised if Ed Norton appears on the Best Supporting list come January.  Also, Stone and Duncan both deliver memorable soliloquys that are distinctly Oscar caliber. 

One "character" gets a special mention:  the camera of cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki.  Six time AA nominated (including for The New World, Children of Men and The Tree of Life) and fresh off his Oscar for last years Gravity, Lubezki is in line to win his second.  His use of long uninterrupted tracking shots (along with seamless editing by Douglas Crise and Stephen Mirrione) gives the impression the movie was shot in one continuous take.  This is a technical marvel that will make you feel that you are part of the action as it swirls in and around the nooks and crannies of the St. James Theater without interruption for most of the film.  Add to this an incessant drumming soundtrack by the great jazz musician Antonio Sanchez whose cadences serve to connect the unfolding craziness on the screen.  

Birdman receives my four star rating after it passed my overnight four-star-test when I woke up the following morning and immediately started thinking about this film.  It is clearly the best movie I've seen this year.

UPCOMING:  The Stephen Hawking biopic "The Theory of Everything"
 
(l to r) Riggan (Michael Keaton) and Mike Shiner (Edward
Norton) prepare to duke it out backstage of the St. James Theater 

 Riggan and daughter Sam (Emma Stone) having a heart-to-heart conversation
 
Riggan, co-star Lesley (Naomi Watts) and producer Jake (Zach Galifianakis) try and stop Riggan from quitting

ST. VINCENT - ** (103 minutes)



Tuesday October 2, 2014

Lord, we've seen this plot before:  curmudgeon (Bill Murray) meets sweet innocent little boy (Jaeden Lieberher) who attempts to transform curmudgeon into a likable human being.  Jack Nicholson is the staple of this franchise.  (At the premiere at the Toronto Film Festival, Bill Murray was asked how he got the role and replied it was because Jack was unavailable.) 

That being said, my expectations of seeing Murray perform his usually excellent acting chops was through the roof; but, alas, Murray and the talented cast couldn't overcome the lame predictable script by first time writer/director Theodore Melfi.

The film begins with Murray reciting an old joke (even that one is recycled) on a black screen that opens with him sloshing several cocktails at his local Brooklyn watering hole.   He proceeds to back his 1983 Chrysler Le Baron convertible (one of the most memorable characters in the film) into his picket fence followed by a kitchen mishap that results in a bashed-in face.  The next morning he "meets" his new next door neighbor Maggie (Melissa McCarthy) and her 12-year-old son, Oliver, when her moving van causes a tree branch to land on said convertible.  A relationship is made that eventually places the grumpy Murray as mentor and babysitter to Oliver while mom is working double shifts at a local hospital to earn enough money to fight a custody battle with her separated husband. 

The supporting talent tries their best to propel the script including McCarthy, who plays it straight and tones down her usually outrageous comedic persona exhibited in previous roles such as Bridesmaids, The Heat, and Tammy.  Chris O'Dowd has a competent minor role as Father Geraghty, a hip teacher at Oliver's Catholic school, while Terence Howard has a few brief scenes as a loan shark trying to collect a debt from the nearly penniless Murray.  However, Naomi Watts, sporting a Russian accent, seems miscast as a pregnant hooker with a heart who services Murray throughout the movie.

Melfi, who got his start directing commercials, fills his script with predictable set pieces and supporting characters that, by the time the inevitable syrupy climax rears its head, you'd wish you would have waited and paid for the rental instead of first-run money.

St. Vincent opens nationwide on October 24.

UPCOMING:  Michael Keaton's latest comedy "Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)" by acclaimed Mexican director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu

Vincent (Bill Murray) and Oliver (Jaeden Lieberher) out on 
the town

(l to r) Maggie (Mellissa McCarthy), Oliver, and Daka (Naomi
Watts)

THE SKELETON TWINS - *** (93 minutes)

 
 The Skeleton Twins

Sunday September 21, 2014
 
Nobody does dysfunction better than independent films-something I learned after attending Sundance for seven years where it seemed three of every four narratives I screened were dedicated to the subject  (Two of my favorites were 2003's Pieces of April and 2006's highly successful AA nominee Little Miss Sunshine.)  It was also not surprising that this indie won the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award for co-writers Mark Heyman and director Craig Johnson at this years festival which also boasts a talented cast.
 
Ex-Saturday Night Live alums Kristin Wiig and Bill Hader portray Maggie and Milo, two siblings who, after a ten-year hiatus, reunite in the oddest of ways:  each is attempting suicide at virtually the same instant.  How they reunite is one of the highlights of the film so I'll leave it at that.  When Milo comes to temporarily stay with Kristin and her nice-guy husband Lance (Luke Wilson in a distinguished supporting role), we get to learn how these two siblings got to the point where suicide was their choice for handling their present dilemmas and whether or not their reunion leads to personal redemption and understanding.  
 
Wiig gives another solid performance.  However it is Hader, who portrays her gay brother, who surprises.  For those familiar with his SNL character Stefon, his Milo is nowhere near that over-the-top representation.  Instead, his character is subtle and quieter and is certain to result in calls for future roles.  The actors exhibit tremendous chemistry on screen which,  I am certain, the two comedians  developed and honed from their seven-year working relationship on the long running TV show.  Also, notable is a small but memorable role by Joanna Gleason as Judy, Maggie's and Milo's earth mother who just could be a major source of their dysfunction.   
 
The film is not without problems, though.  Left unanswered is why the two decided to stop communicating for ten years.  And the ending seemed too abrupt, unbelievable, and tacked on-which left me wondering if the screenwriters were in a hurry to wrap things up to meet that 90 minute running time typical of indies.  However, that solid script and ensemble acting makes Johnson's second directorial outing worthy of  93 minutes of your time. 
 
The Skeleton Twins, which is more serious than comedic, had a limited opening (including DC) on September 12 and opens in Baltimore on September 26. 

UPCOMING:  Bill Murray's latest comedy "St. Vincent"
 
Maggie  (Kristis Wiig) and Milo (Bill Hader)
 
Lance (Luke Wilson)


 

2014 AFI Docs

 

The twelfth edition, of what prior to 2013 was known as SILVERDOCS, almost never was. In need of a presenting sponsor, at the last minute, AT and T came to the rescue. The result: in terms of content and quality, nearly all of the seventeen films screened by this reviewer were more consistently highly rated compared to any of the previous twelve documentary festivals. There were some changes such as the departure of long-time Festival Director Sky Sitney in February who was ably replaced in the interim by filmmaker Christine O'Malley (Word Play, If You Build It). And after some grumblings by long time Silver Spring residents and film goers, all three of the AFI Silver Springs screens were back in action to present, with few exceptions, at least one showing of the 84 features that were selected from over 2,000 submissions. Also, downtown DC venues were made more desirably accessible by replacing the Natural Museum of American History with the Naval Heritage Center, which allowed attendees to easily walk between screening locations in The District. However, traveling back and forth from Silver Spring using Metro, although better than transit via automobile, still made it more difficult for the dedicated festival attendee intent on seeing maximum screenings if it involved Silver Spring and DC theaters.
Finally, the Annual Guggenheim Award went to Alex Gibney, whose searing documentary indicting the Bush Administration, Taxi to the Dark Side, deservedly won an Academy Award in 2007. Director of equally superlative films such as 2002's The Trials of Henry Kissinger, 2005's Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room (which was nominated for an AA), 2008's Gonzo: The Life and Work of Hunter S. Thompson, and 2010's Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer made his selection of the distinguished award richly earned. After a wonderful 25 minute video retrospective highlighting some of his most influential works, talented Washington Post critic Ann Hornaday was on tap once again to moderate. Her interview was so relaxed and informative, I felt as if I was eavesdropping on an intimate conservation between two friends. The attendees to the free event held at the National Portrait Gallery were treated to a wonderful symposium honoring one of film's superlative documentary directors.

MY TOP 5 AT THE 2014 AFI DOCS
(1)  Art and Craft 
(2)  Virunga
(3)  Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory
(4)  Keep On Keepin' On
(5)  Dinosaur 13

Below are the reviews in alphabetical order of the 17 films I screened.  (NOTE:  The Audience Award for Best Feature went to "An Honest Liar" by directors Justin Weinstein & Tyler Meaom (reviewed below), and the Audience Award for Best Short went to "Beyond Recognition: The Incredible Story of a Face Transplant” by director Sam Thonis) 


112 Weddings  (** ½ out of 4 - 92 minutes)
My least favorite film was interesting in conceit but failed to resonate in the final analysis. Director Doug Block made extra cash filming weddings. He wondered, after filming the number in the title over two decades, as to what had happened to those seemingly blissful couples down the marital road? After recontacting several of the couples who agreed to update us on how it all turned out, we receive the myriad of answers that will surprise no one - single, married, or divorced. Like one of the reality shows plastered daily on television, we get to be voyeurs as we witness each of the major factors that lead to 50% of all marriages ending in divorce court: infidelity, finances, dealing with child rearing - even mental illness. In other words, most of the lovely challenges married couples inevitably face after the fun and frivolity they experience on Day 1 and after the honeymoon ends. A Rabbi friend of the filmmaker sums it all up beautifully when he intones, “The wedding is the easiest day to make happy. You've just thrown a ton of money and liquor at it. Marriage is harder. When you throw money and liquor at it, it makes it worse.” The doc tells us nothing new about this peculiar human condition, except prompting us to question why humans continue to pursue marriage despite the low odds of it working. Other than being a must-see for all those preparing for this journey (and good luck with that!), I cannot recommend spending 92 minutes of your life watching these couples - unless you are a true fan of reality TV. The HBO-produced doc started airing on the cable channel June 30.
 
Alive Inside:  A Story of Music and Memory (**** out of 4 - 74 minutes)
My third favorite film won this year's Audience Award at Sundance and the Best Documentary Award at the Milan International Film Festival. At the conclusion of its expeditious 74 minutes, you will know why it was the favorite of the crowds at Robert Redford's annual independent film fest. You will smile, laugh and cry more than just a few times as you witness the amazing discovery social worker Dan Cohen shared with first-time filmmaker Michael Rossati-Bennett. When Dan asked Michael to accompany him for a day to witness what he discovered when he placed I-Pod headphones on dementia and Alzheimer patients, the director ended up spending three years to produce this amazing and important document. It seems music was the key that unlocked memories and emotions thought forever lost among such patients. Music it seems connects to a portion of the brain that is not affected by the ravages of these diseases - and the results are astounding. The solution is a simple one: just provide each of the over 16,000 nursing facilities with $40 I-Pods. Not that simple - despite the fact that our government is willing to spend thousands on sometimes ineffective anti-psychotic drugs. As Dr. Bill Thomas, a gerontologist and advocate for long-term care reform states in the film, “The health care system imagines the human being to be a very complicated machine. We have medicines that can adjust the dials, but we haven’t done anything medically speaking to touch the heart and soul of the patient.” The good news is that about 500 institutions currently have I-Pods added to their therapies. The bad news is that there is still a long way to go to provide awakenings for the remainder of dementia and Alzheimer residents in the remaining facilities. Although the doc is not as slickly produced as other films in the festival, its message and the joy these souls exhibit will stay with you long after you see the final credits. Alive Inside: A Story of Music and Memory begins a platform U.S. release beginning July 18.

An Honest Liar  (*** ½ out of 4 - 92 minutes)
Most folks won't recognize the name James Randi. That is, unless you place “The Amazing” in front of it. Following in the footsteps and using the techniques of Harry Houdini, the world-renowned magician and escape artist has been performing his craft for over half a century. However, he has also been dedicating his life investigating charlatans such as psychics, faith healers, and the like. Co-directors Justin Weinstein and Tyler Measom spend a good portion of the film early-on recanting the life of the Toronto-born magician who ran away from home at age 17 to join a carnival. However, when they start focusing on his incessant campaign against those people who lie and deceive, but do not admit it, the narrative really revs up the interest. In particular were Randi's focus on exposing psychic Uri Geller and faith healer Peter Popoff. Randi was a frequent guest on The Tonight Show in the early 70's and was consulted by Carson's staff to help expose the spoon-bending psychic who was gaining national fame. (Interestingly, despite Geller's trickery being clearly exposed to a national audience, he continues to thrive to this day and surprisingly makes an appearance for the film.) Popoff 's trickery and the manner in which he was uncovered are much more compelling since his shameless deception played on people's emotions as well as their pocketbooks. However, the film finally questions whether Randi was actually being deceived in his personal life, after meeting and falling in love with Jose Alvarez 25 years earlier. At the age of 81, the magician publicly announced his homosexuality but now had to deal with the possible deportation of the much younger Alvarez who was charged with identity fraud. The film flows and is tightly edited so that those 92 minutes fly by. I would have liked the directors to explain Geller's appearance and motivations in the documentary and also finally explain the relationship between Randi and Alvarez. However, in the final analysis, unanswered questions are the basic elements at the root of the film about a magician. An Honest Liar was the winner of this year’s AFI Docs Audience Award.

Art and Craft  (**** out of 4 - 89 minutes)
My favorite film at the festival is this thoroughly entertaining movie that involves deception of another kind: art forgery. And the captivating twist is that the art forger has absolutely no interest in financial gain - only notoriety. Mark Landis is a peculiar dude who has an equally unusual talent: he is so capable of recreating masterpieces by great artists such as Picasso, Matisse, etc. that, over 30 years, 46 notable museums across the U.S were willing to accept and display them without meticulously examining their authenticity. A Cincinnati registrar, Matt Leininger, whose self-proclaimed obsession (OCD?) to uncover the source of the forgeries ended up costing him his job at the museum, exposed Landis after seeing the same painting in different museums. Although Landis is clearly psychologically challenged, the film is chock full of humor. For example, Landis chuckles as he reads a laundry list of his diagnosed maladies - which one would think would drive a person to the nearest bridge. Also, the methods he employs to disguise himself, such as dressing as a priest, are hilarious. Or “aging” the backs of frames holding his forgeries by pouring instant coffee on them. Priceless. Except, of course, to the myriad of duped institutions. The final irony is revealed in the last reel when the Cincinnati museum where Leininger was employed actually presented Landis with his own exhibition of his forged works. His meeting with his nemesis at the exhibition is a fitting climax to one of the best films of the year. Co-directors Sam Cullman, Jennifer Grausman, and Mark Becker have created a lovingly touching and humorous tribute to Landis that is so heart-felt that, in the end, you will be rooting for this troubled gentleman to succeed while wondering what motivates his actions and why he doesn't create original work with his own signature. A wonderful score by Stephen Ulrich accompanies a great soundtrack that complements a film that will, assuredly, have you gasping, smiling, and laughing-out-loud throughout. My early pick for a Best Documentary nomination by The Academy. Oscilloscope is distributing the film and plans a platformed national release beginning September 19.

Back On Board  (*** out of 4 - 88 minutes)
Greg Louganis won four Olympic medals over two consecutive games and is considered the greatest Olympic diver of all time. Yet, despite his boyish good looks and his historic accomplishments, his face has never appeared on a Wheaties Box. In fact, he never received the financial windfalls from Corporate America - unlike many of his counterparts. Director Cheryl Furjanic has painted an intimate portrait of the athlete (which had its World Premiere at AFI Docs) which may offer an explanation as to why. It is not breaking news that Louganis is gay (which was revealed in his 1995 Best Seller, Breaking the Surface); however, what was not known at the time was that he had HIV when he slammed his head on a diving board and bled in the water during a preliminary dive during the 1988 games. The extreme angst Greg experienced is covered in the narrative. However, I would have liked a more detailed focus on the obvious moral issue of why he decided not to reveal this fact to the other athletes who may have been exposed to the virus in the water instead of merely glossing over the occurrence. Despite that, the film is nicely edited and interestingly follows Greg's life from being adopted, to his Olympic accomplishments, to dealing with almost continuous financial and medical hardships, to his being selected as a mentor to the U.S. diving team at the London 2012 Olympics.

Bronx Obama  (*** out of 4 - 91 minutes)
Louis Ortiz is a single father from the Bronx. In 2008, he found himself unemployed during a time when more than a few Americans were out of work. The timing couldn't have more perfect. Sporting an uncanny resemblance to a presidential candidate, Louis realized that if he shaved his goatee and removed his earring, he may have discovered a new career path. Director Ryan Murdock humorously covers Louis' difficult journey that clearly shows that looking like a president doesn't mean you sound like one as he embarks on learning how to speak and intone like Obama. Starting his “career” in Times Square, he obtains bit parts in music videos and television, travels to Japan and Australia for movie roles and appearance, and even appears onstage at a world peace concert with impersonators of Bono, Nelson Mandela, and the Dalai Lama. Louis eventually ends up on a bus tour during the 2012 campaign with a Mitt Romney and Bill Clinton lookalike debating the current issues. Murdock balances the humor and onstage antics with poignant scenes of Louis and his daughter-whom he sent to live with her grandparents in Florida while he pursues his new calling. The only question one is left with: Despite all the work Ortiz has put into his character, will the demand for his services still exist after that second term ends?

Dinosaur 13  (**** out of 4 - 95 minutes)
My fifth favorite film is the East Coast Premiere of Todd Miller's saga involving ownership of the thirteenth T-Rex discovered on the planet. The previous twelve were less than 40% intact. What made this one special was that this was not only the largest T-Rex ever found, it was over 80% complete. The skeleton was uncovered in 1990 by a scientific team from the for-profit South Dakota's Black Hills Institute of Geological Research. They nicknamed the skeleton “Sue” after Susan Hendrickson, the member of the team who discovered the vertebrae of the dinosaur protruding from a cliff after the rest of her party ventured to town to fix a flat tire and spare. Thinking that it was merely finders-keepers they forked over a measly 5K to the dude who owned the land. After spending two years carefully uncovering and boxing the bones for later display, they found themselves suddenly surprised by dozens of FBI and National Guardsmen. The prized discovery was seized only to languish for years in a university maintenance building while a prolong custody legal battle ensued. It seems the bones were “stolen” from Federal lands that involved regulations Uncle Sam made with Native American Tribes. To make matters incredibly worse, Federal charges were filed for not completing a customs form – for this particular instance when one is not normally completed. What follows from this court battle becomes even more infuriating as the film carefully recounts yet another government injustice involving what is considered by some to be “the greatest paleontological find in history.” Miller weaves the tale using a few minimal re-enactments, fabulous photography by d.p. Thomas Petersen, some terrific archival footage, and a memorable score by Matt Morton. Lionsgate purchased the film (based on the book Rex Appeal: The Amazing True Story of Sue, the Dinosaur That Changed Science, the Law, and My Life by Peter Larson, Kristin Donnan, Robert Bakkerand) and will begin its limited U.S. distribution on August 15.  

The Dog  (** ½ out of 4 - 101 minutes)
Sidney Lumet's 1975 acclaimed film Dog Day Afternoon, was based on a true event recounting one of the most bizarre bank robberies ever attempted. Al Pacino portrayed John Wojtowicz, a self-proclaimed pervert from Brooklyn New York, who needed extra cash to fund his lover's sex change operation and in the process caused a media and public circus when New York's finest caught him in the act. Directors Allison Berg and Frank Keraudren intimately explore the garish character that took his fifteen minutes of fame and made it a career choice, despite his notoriety. (An example: signing autographs in front of the Brooklyn bank he tried to rob after his release from prison.) The directors use multiple video images from 1970's New York gay life movement to help paint the lurid life of a guy whose only redeeming quality is that his robbery attempt in 1972 resulted in one helluva Hollywood movie. Ten years in the making, the documentary includes interviews with John before his death by cancer in 2006 and his mom Terry Basso who lovingly stood by her son to the end. (An eccentric character herself, oddly there are no interviews of them together.) However, John's seediness is front and foremost because the directors allow him to take control of the narrative almost throughout the running time. Like a car crash you cannot look away from, the film did hold my interest. However, I felt a shower was desperately needed after the lights came up. The film, which had its East Coast Premiere at the festival, was bought for distribution by Dafthouse Films and plans a platform release beginning August 8. 

Holbrook/Twain: An American Odyssey  (*** ½ out of 4 - 95 minutes)
The World Premiere, and Opening Night film, is director Scott Teems' loving portrait of two paragons of American artistry. For 60 years, Hal Holbrook has been performing his award-winning one-man show on television, movies and the theater as the venerable wordsmith and satirist, Mark Twain. His performances have spanned all 50 states and internationally (including behind the Iron Curtain) and is the longest running one-man show in theatrical history. Now 89, Holbrook is still continuing his amazing run to sold out audiences. Teems' decision to film in glorious black and white via cinematographer Rodney Taylor is a wise one as it causes one to focus more or the rich material expertly delivered by the talented actor. Holbrook's amazing career includes his journey from a young penniless actor who arrives in New York with wife and child in tow, a chance role performing as Twain, an appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show in the 60's, and finally film roles that he first landed at the age of 40. Interspersed are his incredible preparations for the role as well as marvelous snippets of his onstage presentations throughout his career. Hal's encyclopedic knowledge of Twain, and his methodical notes maintained from each performance, has allowed him to pick and choose a wealth of content so that each performance is unique.  Sean Penn, Martin Sheen, Emile Hirsch, Cherry Jones, Robert Patrick and Annie Potts offer comments regarding their inspiration received from Holbrook.  Teems does mentions blemishes in Hal's life, such as his three marriages and estrangement from his children, but it is the actor's life devotion to portraying one of America's most beloved literary treasures that earns high praise, respect, and acknowledgment.
  
The Internet's Own Boy  (*** ½ out of 4) - 105 minutes 
You might not know the name Aaron Swartz but you might know his work. Creator of the RSS web-based format and the social sharing service Reddit (the sale of which made him an instant millionaire at the age of 19), Swartz was more interested in providing worldwide information access to humanity than in obtaining personal financial gain. His crusade to liberate and provide unlimited Internet information ultimately led him to commit suicide at the age of 26 in January 2013. This is yet another example of government over-zealously hounding and harassing individuals (see Dinosaur 13 above) which, in this case, resulted in the loss of a brilliant mind, innovator, and social activist. Director Brian Knappenberger, whose film last year at the 2013 AFI Docs, We Are Legion: The Story of the Hacktivist about the group Anonymous, presents a much more sympathetic story here. Swartz's troubles began when he decided to download two million MIT files of scholarly journals that were only available for fees. When Aaron's activities were caught on security cameras, the Feds moved in. After he turned down a three month sentence (Swartz thought that a criminal record would hinder any possible future Presidential aspirations), the government decided to make him an example by doggedly pursing a possible 30+ year imprisonment prosecution as a result. Although Aaron's suicide is never explained (no suicide note was left) one can only imagine that the government's relentless pursuit was the primary cause. Although the doc is shamelessly one-sided, it is important to note that none of Swartz's protagonists, such as prosecutor Stephen Heymann, agreed to participate. The five year project is finely edited and so engrossing and its message so important that you will leave the theater furious that our justice system is allowed to run unchecked when common sense and freedoms should clearly be a part of the equation. The film had its East Coast Premiere at AFI Docs and began its limited theatrical release on June 27.

Keep on Keepin' On  (**** out of 4 - 86 minutes)
The winner of The Best Documentary and Best New Documentary Director awards at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival is first-time director Alan Hicks' marvelous story that melds age and talent. My forth favorite film at AFI Docs is this fabulous account of one of jazz's greatest legends, Clark Terry, at age 93, instructing a blind 23-year-old blind piano prodigy, Justin Kauflin, who had a propensity for stage fright. A mentor to Miles Davis and Quincy Jones, Terry's numerous accomplishments include being one of the few musicians to play with both Duke Ellington and Count Basie bands, as well as the first African-American to break the color barrier in the 1960's as a regular member of “The Tonight Show” band. Fabulous archival material is included to help illustrate the enormous talent of the fabled nonagenarian. However, those lengthy meetings between mentor and men-tee are what makes the doc a standout. (A running gag is Clark continuously asking Justin, “What time is it?” when clearly it is in the wee hours of the morning, as each is impervious to time spent when the love of teaching and learning their craft is involved.) The film boasts a terrific producer pedigree which includes Paula DuPre' Pesmen (2010 Academy Award winner The Cove and last year’s Oscar nominated Chasing Ice) as well as seven time Academy Award nominee Quincy Jones – who was initially asked to participate because of his relationship with Terry. When he recognized Kauflin's talent potential purely by chance after appearing at Clark's house during one of the mentoring sessions, Jones signed on as producer and eventually placed Kauflin on a European tour. A special mention also goes to the inventive score provided by Kauflin which just might make you a jazz convert by the time the credits start to roll. Radius-TWC is beginning its limited release on August 8.

Life Itself  (*** ½ out of 4 - 118 minutes)
The only thing film critic Roger Ebert loved more than movies was, well, life itself. Acclaimed director Steve James (1994's Hoop Dreams) gives us a moving unflinching bio-doc covering the life of the famed Pulitzer Prize winning critic of the Chicago Sun-Times who finally succumbed to papillary thyroid cancer in April of 2013. Based on Ebert's 2011 autobiography of the same name, the film is chaptered and narrated by Ebert like the book and presents the famed critic - warts and all. Two thirds of the film include the usual bio material recounting his early beginnings growing up in working class Illinois then moving on to his years at the University of Illinois editing the college newspaper. When asked to write movie reviews for the Chicago Sun-Times (a job that wasn't an aspiration) a career was born which led to a local PBS show reviewing films opposite Gene Siskel from the Chicago Tribune where those thumbs became an industry trademark. It is those clips and outtakes James presents from their long-running show, as well as their frequent appearance on Carson's Tonight Show, that bring the most pleasure. Despite many attempts by others to duplicate their series, none were close to being as successful or as memorable. His early carousing and later struggles with alcohol are not ignored (he met his wife Chaz Hammelsmith at an AA meeting in 1992), as is his somewhat failed attempt as a screenwriter when he penned the script for Russ Meyer's 1970 campy Beyond the Valley of the Dolls. However, nearly one-third of the movie is spent with Ebert after his lower jaw was removed and observing him in physical therapy and in the hospital while his days were numbered. One scene is nearly unwatchable as you watch him struggling with a suctioning procedure. I question James' decision to include it and other heart-breaking scenes of Ebert struggling to survive. Also, curiously, no mention is made of his co-hosts after Gene died in 1999 of brain cancer. However, that being said, the film celebrates the life of one of our most cherished writers and personalities who continued to communicate through social media while exuding extreme grace and dignity to the very end. The AFI Docs closing night film, Life Itself began its limited theatrical run by Magnolia on July 4.

Misconception  (** ½ out of 4 - 93 minutes)
The multi-award winning writer/director Jessica Yu, whose Breathing Lessons: The Life and Work of Mark O'Brien won the 1997 Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject (her 2004 film In the Realms of the Unreal is one of my all-time favorite docs) turns her attention here to world population. Alas, this effort is nowhere near as satisfying as Yu disjointedly attempts to explain away the “misconception” for the reasons the world population growth has exploded over the past 50 years. Focusing on three individuals from diversely different areas on the planet, the question is raised as to what are the real answers behind the population growth (the current world population number of 7 billion is expected to rise to 9 billion by 2050) and the validity of those theories. The best of the three segments is the first which concentrates on the exhaustive efforts of a 29-year-old Beijing man to find a mate in a society where men clearly outnumber women. Utilizing the cinematographic skills of documentarian Lixin Fan (2009's Last Train Home), a separate feature could easily be made as Yu concentrates on the crisis faced by Chinese males and the pressures to marry based on traditional mores. The second follows the efforts of a Canadian conservative activist and her crusade to globally spread the anti-abortion gospel. The least successful of the three segments depicts the saintly effort of a Ugandan journalist to locate the parents of abandoned children in a country that has 35 million people and the third highest global birth rate. Interspersed are commentary by global health professor and statistician Hans Rosling who attempts to connect the dots and raise the contradictions. In the final analysis, although the facts he presents are interesting and thought-provoking, they only help to muddle the conclusions. The film is slickly produced and edited with an appropriate score provided by Nick Urata. However, overall, Misconception is a disappointment from a talented filmmaker.

The Search For General Tso  (*** ½ out of 4 - 73 minutes)
Did you ever wonder why the Chinese-American food staple General Tso chicken is named after a General? And who was General Tso anyway?? Director Ian Cheney attempts to whimsically answer these queries that, like its cuisine, might have you hungry for more an hour after it ends. Cheney surrounds these questions with a delightful history of Chinese food and its popularity in the U.S. that includes a broader look at Chinese immigration and the growth of the cuisine in American culture. The latter is given an immeasurable boost by the changes in immigration policies in the 1960's and even Nixon's historic visit to China in 1972. Talking heads include food experts, scholars, historians, restaurateurs, customers, and Harley Stiller, a New Yorker with peculiar penchant for collecting thousands of Chinese menus-eventually bought by a Canadian University. However, it is Cheney's visit to China in search of the origin of the spicy deep-fried chicken where things really get interesting. It seems the general was an officer from Hunan during the 19th century Qing Dynasty. Interestingly, very few of the billion-plus Chinese have ever heard of the dish (“It looks like frog”, intones a Chinese man-on-the-street) as well as other Chinese-American creations such as chop suey, egg rolls, and fortune cookies. The director includes humorous animated sequences to add to the fun while taking the viewer around the globe in search of the answers to questions posed by the title. Expert editing contributes to the overall lightness, which, at the conclusion, could have you high-tailing it to the nearest Asian restaurant.

SlingShot  (*** ½ out of 4 - 93 minutes)
Inventor extraordinaire Dean Kaman has devoted his life to bettering mankind to such a degree that he decided to forgo any thoughts of raising a family - realizing that time is so precious and fleeting that his complete dedication and attention to his craft is paramount to reaching his goals. Some of his past successes include the home dialysis machine, an insulin pump, and an all-terrain wheelchair. Ironically, what he is best known for is the two-wheel balancing vehicle, The Segway, which he himself considers an overall failure – at least for the moment. However, if his latest project for bringing clean water to the world holds merit, he will not only be canonized but his place in history will be forever secured. The scarcity of pure water, especially in so many underdeveloped countries, is not science fiction and it is a real threat to mankind in general. His portable machine, the SlingShot, is the prototype that might literally save the planet. Director Paul Lazarus spends the first third of the film focusing on Dean's life growing up as the son of EC comics artist Jack Kamen and his corroborations with his surgeon sibling, Bart. Also, time is spent with his FIRST organization which promotes and encourages young people to think outside of the box. However, it is the remaining focus on the extremely personable and communicative Dean and his quest to solve one of mankind's most serious threats that make this more than an infomercial. A movie that was seven years in the making, this is one of the most important intriguing and uplifting character profiles I have seen in recent years. Kaman points out that Americans tend to place athletes, movie stars and musicians on pedestals while those brilliant minds who better the world languish in relative obscurity. Hopefully, enough folks will view this important film and realize that Kaman and his ilk deserve tons more recognition and hero worship.

Virunga  (**** out of 4 - 96 minutes)
My #2 favorite film at AFI Docs is this remarkable film by London-based director, and former snowboarder, Orlando von Einsiedel that is part environmental conservatism and part investigative journalism. At the Q and A the director mentioned that his initial intention was to make a positive film about Virunga, a UNESO World Heritage site that is Africa's oldest national park in eastern Congo. It also happens to be the only natural home on earth to the last few hundred surviving mountain gorillas. What he ended up with was a film that was entirely different. After a brief history of the country's bloody colonial past, we are told that, despite an uneasy civil war truce beginning in 2003, fighting between the government and rebel groups has continued in the region resulting in the pillaging of precious park resources. In addition, poachers are still wreaking havoc on the gorilla population. Now, with the discovery of oil beneath Virunda's Lake Edward, the corrupt government has allowed a shady British company (SOCCO) to begin drilling – an act forbidden by International law. However, in the midst of all of this chaos and intrigue are dedicated park rangers and guardsmen intent on preserving this important natural resource. Orlando has populated his tautly constructed narrative with enough good vs. evil personalities and plot lines that would make most Hollywood fiction writers foam at the mouth. The fact that it is all true makes it that more amazing. Between gorgeous scenes of the strikingly beautifully landscape (kudos to the cinematography by the director and Franklin Dow) are exciting battle action shots and hidden camera footage – activities which clearly put the filmmaker and others in mortal danger. Then there are the breathtaking images of those human-like gorillas reacting to the mayhem and carnage around them. The score by Patrick Jonsson is exceptional and a perfect adjunct to the action, as is the editing by Masahiro Hirakubo (Trainspotting) and Peta Ridley. The film, which is worthy of an Academy Award nomination, is opening in 44 countries, including the U.S. in September.
 
Whitey: United States of America v. James J. Bulger  (** ½ out of 4 - 107 minutes)
Director Joe Berlinger (who, along with Bruce Sinofsky was honored with the 2012 SIVERDOCS Guggenheim Award) details the history, arrest, and controversial 2013 trial of one of this nation's most notorious gangsters, South Boston's James “Whitey” Bulger. (Jack Nicholson portrayed him in Scorsese's The Departed and next year Johnny Depp does the same in Black Mass based on the book ­ Black Mass: Whitey Bulger, the FBI and a Devil’s Deal.) The leader of the Winter Hill crime gang, Bulger, now in his 80's, terrorized Boston for over 30 years and was on the lam for the last 16 years when he was finally captured in Florida. What appears a clean cut case is anything but. There is no question Bulger, who at one time was #2 on the FBI's most wanted list behind Osama Bin Laden, was a ruthless racketeer and murderer. What is in doubt is the role the FBI had in the whole sordid affair. Was Bulger tipped off by the Feds as a result of him being an informant against the Italian-American mafia, as contended by the prosecution? Or, as his defense maintained, was the reason for his successful years on the run a result of his dealings with corrupt FBI officials who gained outside favors and imparted inside information to Bulger? These are pertinent questions that are explored but never fully resolved by the film which includes interviews with victims, their families, former FBI officials, and DOJ attorneys. Curiously, no one from the current FBI agreed to be interviewed which only emphasizes the mystery. It was disappointing that the only voice we hear from Bulger is over his attorney's telephone. In the end Whitey seemed more concerned about being perceived as a rat than the appropriate prison sentence he received which guarantees that he will die in jail. Ultimately, Berlinger's focus on all of these issues seems scattered and rushed. Although you will practically need a scorecard to sort out all the characters and accusations the director throws at you, your interest will never wane over the course of the nearly two hours running time. Warner Bros. began its platform U.S. release on June 27.