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February '21 Digital Week II

VOD/Virtual Cinema Releases of the Week 
Falling 
(Quiver Distribution)  
Viggo Mortensen makes his writing-directing debut with this heartfelt but mostly mundane drama about a gay man who tries coming to terms with his sexist, homophobic, bullying father, who in his old age is succumbing to dementia.
 
 
Mortensen writes terrific dialogue for the antagonistic scenes between father (played with piss and vinegar by Lance Hendricksen) and son (played by Mortensen himself) but as a director he too often settles for tried-and-true melodrama, undercutting the emotional strength of his own intimate study.
 
 
 
 
 
A Glitch in the Matrix 
(Magnolia)
Rodney Ascher’s documentary Room 237 was a playfully rigorous look at the most outlandish explanations of Stanley Kubrick’s classic The Shining, and his latest tries to do the same with something even more outré: that real life is not real but instead part of a computer simulation.
 
 
The movie takes as gospel the rantings of author Philip K. Dick and allows several anonymous talking heads—hidden by their video avatars—to spin entertaining bunk about reality vs. virtual reality. It’s interesting for about an hour, then unfortunately spins its wheels for the last 45 minutes; but if glimpses of the original Matrix movie are enough, then this might be the doc for you.
 
 
 
 
 
Reunion 
(Dark Sky Films)
Julia Ormond voraciously chews the scenery as the ultimate bad mom in a weird gothic horror flick whose antagonist makes Faye Dunaway in Mommie Dearest seem like an amateur.
 
 
Opposite Ormond is Emma Draper, who gives it her all as the pregnant daughter who returns to see her mother and relives her worst childhood moments in a series of increasingly redundant flashbacks. It’s unfortunate that writer/director Jake Mahaffy scuttles the promise of his two leading ladies, instead wallowing in hackneyed horror tropes without much visual or narrative distinction.
 
 
 
 
 
Two of Us 
(Magnolia) 
This tender look at the unbreakable bond between two older women whose loving relationship has been kept secret for years—neighbors in an apartment building, they pass as good friends—is a quietly devastating glimpse at how love can triumph over misunderstanding and even severe physical and mental struggles.
 
 
Bolstered by the lovely and subtle performances of Barbara Sukowa and Martine Chevallier in the leads, director Filippo Meneghetti has taken a familiar story and given it a freshness that makes it memorable without being maudlin.
 
 
 
 
 
(Cinedigm) 
An entertaining if overlong erotic thriller about a young woman whose monthly masquerades can’t mask, so to speak, the difficulties in her personal life, X teases viewers with playful intimations of debauchery and voyeurism.
 
 
Director Scott J. Ramsey parades his influences—the masked orgies are out of Eyes Wide Shut, the bathroom sex video is out of A Clockwork Orange, to cite two examples—but that’s part of the fun, along with a cast of unknown faces led by the confident Hope Raymond as the protagonist.
 
 
 
 
 
Blu-ray Releases of the Week
The Fiery Angel 
(Naxos)
Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev’s powerful opera, based on a novel by Russian author Valery Bryusov, provides a formidable role for its leading actress: Renata, an ordinary young woman beset by visions that cause her to be accused of cavorting with the devil.
 
 
In Emma Dante’s strangely potent 2019 production from Rome, Ewa Vesin leads an excellent cast as the disturbed Renata. But with Alejo Perez persuasively conducting the orchestra and chorus, Prokofiev’s intensely dramatic score is the real star of the show. There’s first-rate hi-def video and audio.
 
 
 
 
 
Good News 
The Pajama Game 
(Warner Archive) 
Two hit Broadway musicals received colorful adaptations a decade apart, beginning with 1947’s Good News, an enjoyable if innocuous college romance with Peter Lawford and an irresistible June Allyson as the jock and the brain who fall for each other even though football is more important than the library on-campus.
 
 
And 1957’s The Pajama Game is so exuberant that at times you want it to stop and take a deep breath—but why quibble when there’s Doris Day at her all-American best, Bob Fosse’s dazzling choreography given vivid oomph by dancer Carol Haney in the numbers “Steam Heat” and “Once-a-Year Day,” and songs like “Hey There” and “I’m Not at All in Love” to hum. Both films have sparkling brand-new hi-def transfers; extras are deleted songs and (on Good News) featurettes.
 
 
 
 
 
Madame Claude 
(Cult Epics)
In Just Jaeckin’s 1978 softcore drama, French actress Francoise Fabian plays the infamous Parisian madam—who died in 2015 at age 92—with her usual elegance, grace and intelligence, making this at times slipshod biopic more watchable than it otherwise would have been.
 
 
Fabian might be the only actress in the film not to shed her clothes, and for those who like to see ‘70s models in the altogether, there’s Dayle Haddon as the latest of Claude’s “discoveries.” There’s a decent-looking if unspectacular new hi-def transfer; extras are a commentary along with a new interview with Jaeckin, who is also responsible for such glittery ‘70s erotica as Emmanuelle and The Story of O.
 
 
 
 
 
Wander Darkly 
(Lionsgate)
Writer-director Tara Miele based her script off a serious car crash she and her husband were involved in—but the resulting enigmatic exploration of the intricate mysteries of love, life and death is more often enervating than enlightening. It also doesn’t help that Miele mimics Terrence Malick in her visual style, which keeps us at a further remove from this couple hovering between life and death—or are they?
 
 
In the leads, Diego Luna is good, Sienna Miller is (as usual) spectacular, but we never feel for their predicament or relationship—even if Miele heavyhandedly plants a newborn in their lives right before the crash that starts everything in motion. The stunning images look remarkably strong in hi-def; extras are a Miele commentary and making-of featurette.
 
 
 
 
 
CD Release of the Week
Plaisirs illuminés 
(Alpha Classics)
Taking its title from a surrealist Salvador Dalí painting, Spaniard Francisco Coll’s 2018 double concerto for violin, cello and chamber orchestra, Les plaisirs illuminés, is the ebullient final work on a recording that centers around the great Hungarian composer Béla Bartók, represented by a brief Duo Pizzicato for two violins.
 
 
Three of Bartok’s students are also featured: György Ligeti and György Kurtág also have short pieces performed, but Sándor Veress—whose accomplished music is too infrequently programmed and recorded—has a major work, the scintillating Musica concertante for 12 strings, played. Rounding out this marvelous disc is the Concerto for Strings by Argentine master Alberto Ginastera. Chamber ensemble Camerata Bern plays brilliantly on the Coll, Veress and Ginastera works, and esteemed soloists Patricia Kopatchinskaja (violin) and Sol Gabetta (cello) make invaluable contributions throughout.

Thinking About The Forefront of Controversy and Crime In A Netflix Doc Series


An opionion piece.

Once again child abuse is in the news, although this time coming out of the fulsome mouths of such Republican nut cases as newly elected Georgia Congressional representative Marjorie Taylor Greene. The right-wing QAnon conspiracy believer has spoken of the demonic Dems who have a child sex cult consuming the blood of Christian children — ideas right out of the anti-Semitic Protocols of Zion playbook.

In spewing this babble, QAnon followers manage to obscure the actual history of child sexual abuse that has been unveiled in the last several years. From errant priests to Boy Scout leaders, from public school teachers to private tutors, such abuse has often been present and then swept under the rug with disastrous results.
Recently, the brother of a good friend committed suicide in his 40s after his local Catholic Church had stopped paying for his therapy and other expenses. It had been sending checks for over 10 years after he had been allegedly abused by a priest when he was in his teens. He was never able to hold a proper job and, though he married, had not managed his personal life with much success.

Thanks to a visit with friends, I got to binge on the last portion of the seven-part docu-series, The Keepers, veteran director Ryan White’s detailed exploration of a nun’s unsolved murder and the horrific secrets and pain that still linger nearly five decades after her death.

Though I didn’t see every episode, I got the idea. Clearly, the Catholic church had played a profound role in the acquiescence, obfuscation and denial surrounding this tortured tale.


In this true-crime documentary from Netflix (released in May 2017), The Keepers explores the 1969 death of 26-year old Catholic nun and Baltimore schoolteacher Sister Cathy Cesnik and touches on 20 year-old Joyce Malecki‘s murder four days later. Both slayings remain unsolved. The cover-up that followed echoed Spotlight — the 2015 award-winning feature film directed by Tom McCarthy which told the story of the intense investigation of abuse by priests in the Boston area.

Starting a Facebook group in 2014, Gemma Hoskins and Abbie Schaub, two retired 60-something grandmothers and former students of Sister Cathy’s at Archbishop Keough High School, still felt distressed by the almost-half-century-old cold case. Who had savagely beaten and then murdered their beloved teacher Sister Cathy? In reaching out to others to share information about Sister Cathy’s murder, these two seniors -– as intrepid and analytical as Agatha Christie‘s Miss Marple — uncovered a cold case like no other. They found evidence that neither the Baltimore police nor the Catholic Church had dealt with. It pointed to the late Father Joseph Maskell who was accused of abuse and then moved around by the Diocese where he is further accused of molesting his young female students.

As the series ends, many questions and actions are left unanswered. First of all, I bring all this up to praise White — who is getting attention for his latest controversial documentary, Assassins, a feature film about the assassination of Kim Jong-nam, half-brother of the North Korean leader, which premiered to raves at last year’s Sundance Film Festival.

More profoundly, at a time when President Biden spotlights the positive morality he learned from his Catholic education, we are all reminded that any wonderful idea can be twisted out of shape. If we allow that to happen and tolerate those who abuse, either because of fear or intimidation, then we are collaborating in perpetuating these crimes of twisted action or of psychological distortion.

February '21 Digital Week I

Blu-ray Releases of the Week 
The Ascent 
(Criterion Collection)
The talented Russian director Larisa Shepitko died three years after making this masterly 1976 war film about Soviet soldiers fighting in World War II. Shepitko potently dramatizes a series of desultory skirmishes fought in the bitter cold, which becomes a jumping-off point for an explicitly Christian allegory replete with cross imagery. Crammed with unforgettable B&W images and suffused with Shepitko’s honesty and humanism, The Ascent points toward where her artistry would have headed if she had lived to make more accomplished films.
 
 
Criterion’s hi-def transfer looks luminous; plentiful extras which contextualize Shepitko’s life and career comprise an introduction by Anton Klimov, son of Shepitko and director Elem Klimov; new interview with actress Lyudmila Polyakova; Shepitko’s 1967 feature, The Homeland of Electricity; Elem Klimov’s 1980 tribute short to his wife, Larisa; two 2012 documentaries about Shepitko; a 1999 TV program with an archival Shepitko interview; and an audio commentary.
 
 
 
 
 
After the Thin Man
Room for One More 
(Warner Archive)
William Powell and Myrna Loy are delightful as intrepid sleuths Nick and Nora Charles in After the Thin Man, W.S. Van Dyke’s 1936 sequel to the original Thin Man that’s equally entertaining; with a spiffy script based on a Dashiell Hammett story, the duo (and the delectable dog Asta) solves a murder mystery that has a quite surprising denouement.
 
 
Norman Taurog’s 1952 Room for One More is a tug-at-the-heartstrings dramedy about a couple with three kids who adopt two more—a lonely young girl and a physically handicapped boy—starring Cary Grant, suave as ever, interacting breezily and believably with the children, as well as Grant’s then wife, Betsy Drake. Both B&W films have first-rate hi-def transfers; Thin Man extras are a classic short, classic cartoon and a radio show with Powell and Loy, while Room extras are two classic cartoons.
 
 
 
 
 
Doom Patrol—Complete 2nd Season 
(Warner Bros)
As the ragtag troupe of super heroes regroups following the events that ended the first season, they must deal with a new dilemma: the arrival of the Chief’s daughter, Dorothy, who has the unfortunate ability to bring her invisible friends to life, compromising their ongoing efforts to save the world from evil.
 
 
The series’ protagonists are a combination of mushiness and black humor, and that toggling back and forth keeps this from becoming either too melodramatic or too self-parodic. The series’ nine episodes look stunning in hi-def; extras comprise two featurettes.
 
 
 
 
 
VOD/Virtual Cinema Releases of the Week
Dear Comrades 
(Neon)
Russian director Andrei Konchalovsky is still going strong at age 83, as his latest, a critical dissection of the Soviet Union, searingly shows.
 
 
Based on a true incident—the killing of several strikers in the town of Novocherkassk by local officials in 1962—Dear Comrades chronicles the awakening of Lyudmila, a loyal party worker who witnesses the inhumane cruelty behind the façade of Communism and searches for her teenage daughter when she goes missing. As Lyudmila, Julia Vysotskaya burns a hole through the screen with her incendiary and emotionally resonant performance. 
 
 
 
 
 
Notturno 
(Neon)
The unrelenting brutality of war dominates Gianfranco Rosi’s latest documentary, which explores with images of inhumanity that nonetheless have an unreal beauty how people who have been subjected to unspeakable atrocities attempt to pick up the shards of their ruined lives while living in Middle East war zones.
 
 
Shooting on location in some of the most war-ravaged countries on earth—Lebanon, Syria, Kurdistan and Iraq—Rosi artfully shows that horrific loss can coexist with resilience in the face of impending annihilation, although the lack of context somewhat blunts, if not outright undercuts, its lasting power.
 
 
 
 
 
Preparations to Be Together for an Unknown Period of Time 
(Greenwich Entertainment)
Director Lili Horvát’s sophomore feature follows Márta, a Hungarian expatriate returned from America who begins working in a Budapest hospital as a brain surgeon and successfully operates on a man whose young son shows his interest in her, but wants to rekindle her affair with another doctor, whom she was with in the States.
 
 
Based on a stanza of a Sylvia Plath poem, Horvát’s film incisively makes psychological inroads into the brain expert’s heart even as it tries too hard to be enigmatic and abstract, like its final perfunctory image straining to be symbolic. Still, Natasa Stork’s performance as Márta is never less than wonderfully realized, which makes her often convoluted journey one worth taking.
 
 
 
 
 
True Mothers 
(Film Movement)
In Naomi Kawase’s intimate and moving drama, the opposite lives of two mothers—a teenager who gave up her baby for adoption and a middle-class wife who adopted him—are illustrated by the inevitable difficulties that crop up when the young mom wants to be part of her child’s life followed by the unexpected and bittersweet resolution.
 
 
Kawase walks a tightrope of sentimentality and contrived plotting, but her characterizations are dead-on and honest, transforming this far above the soap opera it might have been. Kudos also to the immeasurably strong acting by the leads, Hiromi Nagasaku (the adopted mother) and Aju Makita (the real mother), who embody these women with am unaffected naturalness that’s astonishing to watch.
 
 
 
 
 
DVD Release of the Week
Night Shift 
(Distrib Films US)
France’s Anne Fontaine has proven herself a director of versatility and insight in such films as How I Killed My Father (2001), Coco Before Chanel (2009) and The Innocents (2016)—her latest, a police procedural (its actual French title is simply Police), studies events through the eyes of three cops, two men and one woman, juxtaposing their messy personal lives with their demanding and violent professional work, culminating in a complicated moral decision.
 
 
Although it seems overly familiar, Fontaine directs tautly, greatly assisted by veteran Yves Angelo’s gritty cinematography and her three stars—Omar Sy, Grgeory Gadebois and Virginie Efira—who give realistic portrayals of these anything but heroic but anything but ordinary protagonists.
 
 
 
 
 
CD Release of the Week 
ElmasPiano Concertos
(Hyperion)
This disc, the 82nd volume in Hyperion’s valuable “The Romantic Piano Concerto” series, presents two appealing works by the scarcely known Albanian composer Stéphan Elmas (1862-1937), whose concertos are big, splashy pieces that owe a debt to Mozart and Chopin’s piano music, but not slavishly so.
 
 
These attractive performances, by the Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra under conductor Howard Shelley—who also does double duty as the excellent soloist—provide many pleasing moments that give these derivative but enjoyable works an undeniable charm.

January '21 Digital Week IV

Blu-ray Releases of the Week 
 
Buster Keaton Collection, Volume 4 
(Cohen Film Collection)
Two of Buster Keaton’s second-tier features—Go West (1925) and College (1927)—make up the latest volume of Cohen’s Buster Keaton Collection, but even in these scattershot comedies there’s much to enjoy, notably the uproarious sequences in College of Keaton desperately trying out different track and field events to impress a coed.
 
 
Even second-rate Keaton is worth watching, however, as these both of these films show. There are excellent new hi-def transfers; extras are Hal Roach’s 1923 short, also titled Go West, and a featurette, Buster Keaton: Screenwriter.
 
 
 
 
 
Leonore 
(Naxos)
Beethoven’s only opera Fidelio began life as Leonore before the composer extensively tweaked it, but occasionally the first draft is staged, as it was last March by New York City’s enterprising company Opera Lafayette a week before the COVID-19 shutdown.
 
 
Nathalie Paulin makes a splendid and valiant title heroine, who dresses as a man to spring her beloved husband from prison, in Oriol Tomas’ spirited staging, and Beethoven’s heroic score is given a spirited reading by the orchestra and chorus under conductor Ryan Brown. Both hi-def video and audio are first-rate.
 
 
 
 
 
Snowpiercer—Complete 1st Season 
 (Warner Bros)
Korean director Bong Joon Hoo’s 2013 post-apocalyptic sci-fi flick about a high-speed train circling the globe carrying what’s left of humanity after a disastrous attempt to fix global warming (elites in front, dregs in back) ran off the rails but still spawns this new series starring Jennifer Connolly as the head of Hospitality and Daveed Diggs as leader of the opposition.
 
 
The series depends less on Bong’s willful weirdness but even with top-notch visuals and acting—Connolly’s ice queen hasn’t been used to such good effect since The Hot Spot—there’s a nagging feeling that Snowpiercer is a gigantic allegory in search of a compelling story to tell. The series’ 10 episodes look dazzling in hi-def; extras are several short featurettes.
 
 
 
 
 
VOD/Virtual Cinema Releases of the Week
The Salt of Tears 
(Distrib Films US)
French director Philippe Garrel, who has consistently chronicled relationships that scream male toxicity, creates his most toxic protagonist yet: Luc (Logann Antuofermo), who meets and woos Djemila (Oulaya Amamraon) then discovers his girlfriend Geneviève (Louise Chevillotte) is pregnant then—when he moves for a new job—takes up with Betsy (Souheila Yacoub), only to yearn for the others.
 
 
Despite obviousness and a sense of deja vu, Garrel’s film takes Luc to task in a low-key way, and the acting of the principals (including André Wilms as Luc’s world-weary dad) helps ground things emotionally. 
 
 
 
 
 
A Woman’s Work: The NFL’s Cheerleader Problem 
(1091 Pictures)
When the NFL started getting hit with lawsuits from cheerleaders sick of being paid little or nothing despite working many hours for teams owned by billionaires, the suits were thought of as little more than nuisances, but as Yu Gu’s eye-opening documentary demonstrates, the fearless women behind them are shining a necessary light on the still prevalent belief in the business world that women are worth less than men.
 
 
The director concentrates on two women—Lacy, a Raiders cheerleader, and Maria, a Bills cheerleader—who pressed on with their fights despite overwhelming odds, including pushback from other (current and former) cheerleaders, pundits and fans, all of whom decided that they should be happy doing what they do for literal pennies.
 
 
 
 
 
DVD Releases of the Week
Six in Paris 
(Icarus Films)
This 1965 omnibus film set in various Paris neighborhoods is mainly forgettable because none of the filmmakers are able to make their shorts memorable as both narrative and sense of place.
 
 
In fact, only Claude Chabrol’s final segment, La Muette, despite its heavyhanded O. Henry irony, scores; too bad that someone like Godard whiffs (I expected less from Roach, Rohmer, Douchet and Pollet, and alas got it). Nicely restored in hi-def, the film would at least look much better on Blu-ray, so it’s unfortunate this has been released only on DVD.
 
 
 
 
 
Sudden Fear 
(Cohen Film Collection)
Joan Crawford appropriately chews the scenery as a famous Broadway playwright who falls in love with a middling actor (who’s played with appropriate menace by Jack Palance) in this tautly-made 1952 thriller by director David Miller.
 
 
Miller shrewdly imbues the film with a palpable sense of unsettling dread through the foggy B&W photography of Charles B. Lang, Jr. along with Elmer Bernstein’s intense musical score. The lone extra is an audio commentary.
 
 
 
 
 
 
CD Releases of the Week
Holmboe—String Quartets, Volume 1 
(Dacapo)
Nørgård/Ruders—Works for Solo Cello 
(Ondine)
For such a small country, Denmark has had an outsized influence on classical music for more than a century, since the heyday of the great symphonist Carl Nielsen. Nielsen’s student, Vagn Holmboe (1909-96), though barely known elsewhere (I’ve never had the chance to attend a concert where his music was being played), was a formidable composer of both chamber and orchestral music. 
 
 
The Dacapo label, which released a series of CDs in the late 1990s of Holmboe’s entire string quartet output, played by the Kontra Quartet, now begins a new recording cycle of these accomplished works. As performed by the Copenhagen-based Nightingale String Quartet, the masterworks on the first CD—the early quartets Nos. 1 and 3 and the late No. 15—make a wonderful introduction to a superb and sinfully unknown composer.
 
Versatile American cellist Wilhelmina Smith tackles demanding solo pieces by two contemporary Danish composers on her excellent new disc. Smith performs three solo sonatas by Per Nørgård (b. 1932) as well as Bravourstudien, a set of solo variations by Poul Ruders (b. 1976), and easily meets the myriad challenges of these difficult works with a bracing combination of vigorousness and sensitivity.

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