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Reviews

November '16 Digital Week III

Blu-rays of the Week 
Citizen Kane—75th Anniversary
(Warner Brothers)
Rightly celebrated as The Great American Movie, Orson Welles’ towering debut remains a remarkable cinematic achievement, with an innovative narrative structure that still works its strange magic 75 years later. And the sterling Blu-ray transfer only enhances Gregg Toland’s lustrous B&W compositions, as well as throwing Welles’ youthful genius into sharp relief: he never topped himself in the next 40+ years of making (or trying to make) movies, although he came close with his follow-up, The Magnificent Ambersons.
 
 
 
Warner Brothers’ latest Blu-ray release comes on the heels of its stacked 70th anniversary edition in 2011; there are fewer extras this time around: Roger Ebert and Peter Bogdanovich commentaries, still photography with Ebert commentary, interviews and world premiere footage.
 
 
 
 
 

Doc Savage
(Warner Archive)
In one of the laziest superhero movies ever made, Ron Ely (TV’s Tarzan) plays the “Man of Bronze” in Michael Anderson’s 1975 camp fest, which isn’t very amusing, exciting or entertaining throughout its turgid 112 minutes.
 
 
 
Aside from a nice performance by Pamela Hensley in the sole female role (she’s of course just eye-candy), this remains an often cringe-worthy flick that probably won’t warrant repeat viewings even for camp fans. The film does have a sparkling transfer, so there’s at least that.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Finding Dory 
(Disney)
The latest animated Pixar juggernaut is this cute tale of a fish with short-term memory loss who gets by with a little (actually a lot) of help from her friends—including some voiced with aplomb by Albert Brooks and Ed O’Neill.
 
 
 
Ellen DeGeneres provides the engaging voice of Dory, while the clever director Andrew Stanton (Finding Nemo) is back for more, which brightens up this sequel immensely. The hi-def transfer is spectacular; extras (spread out over two discs) include shorts, featurettes and deleted scenes.
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Goodbye Girl
(Warner Archive)
Richard Dreyfuss won the 1977 Best Actor Oscar for his fresh and ingratiating comic portrayal of a down-on-his-luck actor who befriends—and soon falls for—the dumped girlfriend of the guy who sublet a Manhattan apartment to him, along with her adorable little daughter.
 
 
 
 
Neil Simon’s script is funny and tender in equal measure, Herbert Ross’s directing brings everything into comedic and romantic harmony, and Marsha Mason and 10-year-old Quinn Cummings are as terrifically irresistible as Dreyfuss. The hi-def transfer is solid and detailed.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Lone Wolf and Cub 
(Criterion)
Six films’ worth of a samurai and a stroller-bound toddler, filed with geysers of blood and stylized violence might seem a bit too much, but that’s what this boxed set brings together: the half-dozen Lone Wolf films, made in a creative spurt by four directors between 1972 and 1974.
 
 
 
 
Although it’s overkill (pun intended), there’s great fun in watching our hero vanquish opponents with the greatest of ease, all with his kid watching the increasingly bloody proceedings. All of the films have stunning new transfers and are complemented by extras comprising Shogun Assassin, the American recut of the first two films, which was a hit over here; interviews; and featurettes.
 
 
 
 
 

The Rolling Stones—Havana Moon
(Eagle Rock)
Mick, Keith and what’s left of the boys performed in Havana last March in front of over a million fans, who responded ecstatically to a sharp and polished performance that’s highlighted by bulls-eye versions of “Angie” and “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” (complete with choir) among the handful of timeless tracks on the set list.
 
 
 
 
The band sounds as tight as ever, and extras feature an additional five songs that were cut from the concert film for some reason, the best of which is a surprisingly funky “Miss You.” Both hi-def audio and video are outstanding.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
DVDs of the Week 
Art in the Twenty-First Century—Season 8
(PBS)
The latest series of programs dealing with several cutting-edge artists from across the country and the world touches down in Chicago, Los Angeles, Mexico City and Vancouver to profile four artists in each city, all of whom are making their own mark and staking their own claim in an increasingly fractured and crowded art market in the age of the internet.
 
 
 
 
The most interesting of these artists are both from L.A.:Edgar Arceneaux, whose investigation of history includes his reenactment of Ben Vereen’s discomfiting performance at President Reagan’s 1981 inaugural ball, and Liz Larner, whose remarkable sculptures play with time and space.
 
 
 
 
 

Okinawa—The Afterburn
(First Run)
The still unresolved status of the island of Okinawa—under the control of the United States, with its army bases, since the end of the Second World War—is encountered head on by director John Junkerman, who interviews survivors from both sides of the incredibly bloody and drawn-out battle, along with Americans and Japanese who either lived or were stationed on the island in the intervening decades.
 
 
 
 
Although he is clearly on the side of those many who are still loudly protesting the presence of the U.S. military bases, Junkerman cuts to the heart of and illuminates a still polarizing subject for Americans and Japanese alike. Extras comprise additional interviews.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CD of the Week 
Lang Lang—New York Rhapsody
(Sony Classical)
Now that he’s reached classical super-stardom, pianist Lang Lang can make any kind of album he wants, including this pell-mell stew of pop and Broadway tunes, jumbled together and turned into ersatz light-jazz, which adversely afflicts Don Henley’s “New York Minute,” Alicia Keys’ “New York State of Mind,” and even Lou Reed’s “Boulevard,” mashed-up insipidly with “Summertime” by George Gershwin.
 
 
 
 
These New York-inspired tunes are rounded out by a flashy version of Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue.” Lang has always been an idiosyncratic player, but too often on this disc he sounds like a mere cocktail-bar ivory tickler.

Off-Broadway Review—Athol Fugard’s “’Master Harold’…and the Boys”

“Master Harold”…and the Boys
Written and directed by Athol Fugard
Performances through December 4, 2016
 
Sahr Ngaujah, Leon Addison Brown and  Noah Robbins in "Master Harold"...and the Boys (photo: Joan Marcus)
Unfortunately, “Master Harold”…and the Boys, Athol Fugard’s 1982 play about apartheid—the South African racist system which crumbled in 1994 with the election of President Nelson Mandela—is not dated: the current off-Broadway revival, warmly directed by the author himself, shows that it’s as unnervingly relevant as ever.
 
It’s Port Elizabeth in 1950. “Master Harold” is Hally, a 17-year-old who drops into the tea room his parents own one rainy afternoon after school, where two 40-ish black employees, Sam and Willie, clean and ready the still-empty place. Fugard shrewdly explores the power dynamics of these relationships—Sam and Willie are equals but Sam, more worldly, is the wiser one, while Hally is friendly with both men, but especially so with Sam, who is a kind of father figure: a kite-flying episode when Hally was a small boy is recalled by both of them.
 
Gradually—amid discussions of Hally’s homework and the Sam and Willie’s love of ballroom dancing—Hally’s own messy family life (sickly father and put-upon mother weigh on him) rears its head, causing Hally to end up lashing out at his unseen parents and then at Sam after the older man asks him not to say something about them he might regret. In a fit of supreme pique and unmitigated rage, Hally spits in Sam’s face.
 
The tension in this quietly devastating drama is built slowly and skillfully by Fugard the writer and director to that precise moment when Hally, Sam and Willie realize that their friendship has been forever altered, both by these seemingly quotidian events and by the strictures already locked in place by apartheid.
 
It’s all shown in painful and penetrating detail through the powerhouse performances of Sahr Ngaujah as Willie and especially Leon Addison Brown as Sam—Noah Robbins’ Hally, though persuasive, is less formidable—which allow Fugard’s percolating drama to sear itself into our very souls, dramatizing a bygone era of racism that remains, most distressingly, in near-perfect alignment with our nation’s own current political predicament.
 
“Master Harold”…and the Boys
Signature Theatre, 480 West 42nd Street, New York, NY
signaturetheatre.org

Off-Broadway Review—Richard Nelson’s “Women of a Certain Age”

Women of a Certain Age
Written and directed by Richard Nelson
Performances through December 4, 2016
 
Mary Ann Plunkett, Patricia Maxwell, Amy Warrren and Jay O. Sanders in Women of a Certain Age (photo: Joan Marcus)
Leave it to Richard Nelson to write so elegantly about the most inelegant era in our country’s recent history. The third play of Nelson’s Gabriel Family trilogy, Women of a Certain Age,finds the family (82-year-old matriarch Patricia, her daughter Joyce, son George, his wife Hannah and their dead brother Thomas’s wives, number one Karen and number three—and widow—Mary) gathered at the long-time Rhinebeck, NY family home this past Election Night, November 8, which is when I saw it.
 
For 100 minutes, these six people discuss many things, including their sense of loss—Thomas’s death a year earlier, the family house going up for sale, Patricia now in an assisted-living center—and their hope for the future—George and Hannah’s college-age son voting for the first time and the possibility of the first female president—all while preparing a meal that was the Gabriel kids’ favorite from an old Betty Crocker cookbook.
 
In my previous reviews of the Gabriel plays, I may have downplayed the importance of food in these seminal works: Nelson’s characters sit in the kitchen in all three plays, preparing and cooking an actual meal, which the actors do as believably and entertainingly as they embody these rational, relentlessly normal people. When the Shepard’s pie comes out of the oven, piping hot, the actors leave the stage, one by one, as the family prepares to eat in the dining room and the play ends.
 
It all seems simple, even simplistic, in summary, but Nelson’s exquisitely detailed writing—his often funny and pointed dialogue takes mundanity to new heights of poetic realism—and deft directing are joined by the flawless performances of Roberta Maxwell (Patricia), Jay O. Sanders (George), Lynn Hawley (Hannah), Amy Warren (Joyce), Meg Gibson (Karin) and Mary Ann Plunkett (Mary) to make this intimate but expansive play help in the healing that our divided nation will be needing come January 20.
 
Women of a Certain Age
The Public Theater, 425 Lafayette Street, New York, NY
publictheater.org

November '16 Digital Week II

Blu-rays of the Week 

The Durrells in Corfu—Complete 1st Season

(PBS)
In this breezily entertaining Masterpiece series, a widow, Louisa, and her four unruly children decide to leave stuffy old England for the Greek island of Corfu: unsurprisingly, drama and romance ensue as the five of them adjust to a very different way of living.
Despite its soap opera contrivances, Durrells is quite involving, thanks to glorious Mediterranean locations and persuasive acting, especially by Keeley Hawes, who invests Louisa with the three-dimensionality of a character in a great novel. The hi-def transfer is excellent; extras include making-of featurettes.
Einstein on the Beach
(Opus Arte)
I might be in the minority, but I find this 4-1/2 hour “opera” by Philip Glass and Robert Wilson to be one of the most enervating and sleep-inducing pieces of musical theater I’ve ever experienced: but if you’re on the Glass/Wilson wavelength, this 2014 Paris production will do very nicely—with the added bonus of pausing it whenever the many musical and dramatic repetitions rear their heads.
The performers (both dancers and singers) are remarkable in their ability to sing and move in unison, so there is that. The hi-def video and audio are first-rate.
 
Indian Summers—Complete 2nd Season 
(PBS)
As the friction between the Indians and their British occupiers grows more tense by the moment, the second season of this conventionalM asterpiece series creeps up and shakes viewers out of your complacency, as the violence becomes more common both politically and personally, with often fatal consequences.
The splendid acting includes Julia Walters as a magnificently malevolent matron, and Jemima West, Amber Rose Revah and Fiona Glascott as women who, despite their second-class status, find that their own actions make for a kind of historic change. The Blu-ray transfer is stunning; extras include a 45-minute making-of featurette.
The Initiation
(Arrow)
Daphne Zuniga plays dual roles—a panicky college student with awful nightmares and her twin sister—in this moderately scary 1984 horror entry about a few sorority pledges and their boyfriends locked in a store at night with a murderous mental-hospital escapee around.
Director Larry Stewart repeats his formula killings—bludgeonings with an axe or garden tools—but a game cast (which includes Vera Miles and vivacious Hunter Tylo, under the name Deborah Morehart) keeps things percolating for a watchable 95 minutes. The hi-def transfer is good and grainy; extras include interviews, commentary and extended scene.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Motley Crue—The End 
(Eagle Rock)
After three decades of playing schlocky cock-rock, Motley Crue said goodbye at a recent L.A. concert, pulling out all the visual stops that overpower their wan hard rock that, shockingly, many of their fans consider the crème de la crème of heavy music.
Mainly it’s the elaborate drum setup for Tommy Lee, which during his solo moves him up, down, around and upside down (he was already doing it in 1987, when I saw them, only without cutting-edge technology); singer Vince Neil, guitarist Mick Mars and bassist Nikki Sixx are adequate, and familiar tunes like “Girls Girls Girls” and “Doctor Feelgood” keep thousands of fans sated. Hi-def video and audio are first-rate; extras comprise band interviews.
Private Property
(Cinelicious)
This tense low-budget 1960 thriller pits two psychotic criminals (Corey Allen and Warren Oates) against a young married woman who obliviously allows them into her Southern California mansion while her husband’s away.
Shot on location at director Leslie Stevens’ own home, the terrorizing is forced at times, but Oates and Allen are especially effective villains and actress Kate Manx (Stevens’ wife) is full of a vivid aliveness that makes this creepy tale credible—tragically, she killed herself three years later. The film has been restored and the tangy B&W photography looks crisp in hi-def; lone extra is a new interview with technical consultant Alexander Singer.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
DVDs of the Week 
Indian Point
Among the Believers
(First Run)
Ivy Meeropol’s documentary Indian Point is a sober and even-handed look at supporters and protestors of the Indian Point nuclear plant—only 35 miles from New York City—in the wake of Japan’s Fukishima disaster. Though both sides make their points (for the most part) non-hysterically, all evidence points to an ongoing danger for all of us living nearby.
Hemal Trivedi and Mohammed Ali Nagvi's documentary Among the Believers trenchantly explores the never-ending War on Terror by showing the frightening indoctrination of children at the Red Mosque, a Pakistani fundamentalist organization; its matter-of-factness is its most chilling feature. Both discs’ extras comprise deleted scenes.
Saving Mes Aynak
(Icarus)
In Afghanistan, a priceless ancient place of archeological treasures—some 5,000 or more years old—is in danger of being destroyed by a Chinese company, who wants to harvest copper from directly underneath it.
Director Brent E. Huffman urgently chronicles the efforts of a local archeologist as he races against time, the Chinese and—of course—the Taliban to try and save a huge chunk of Afghan and Buddhist history from being obliterated. Extras are deleted scenes.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CD of the Week 
Frank Martin—Ein Totentanz zu Basel im Jahre 1943
(CPO)

Swiss composer Frank Martin wrote this piece for choir, percussion and massive orchestral forces during World War II for a staged drama featuring Death as a sympathetic character; since it’s visual as well as musical, this CD provides only half the work. But thanks to a vivid, persuasive performance by the superb choristers, pummeling percussionists and first-rate orchestral musicians conducted by Bastiaan Blomhert, this recording gives of a flavor of the entire work, an interesting oddity from the most sophisticated of 20th century composers.

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