Movies to Watch Right Now (at home)

NIGHT ON EARTH

More overlooked movies to watch at home: the funniest and saddest movie – all in one – and two jaw-dropping documentaries. Plus an amazingly charismatic star in a classic noir…from Poland! Scroll down for remembrances of Jerry Stiller and Little Richard.

ON VIDEO

SPACESHIP EARTH, Courtesy of Spaceship Earth

Spaceship Earth: The latest from Silicon Valley native filmmaker Matt Wolf, this documentary traces an audacious scientific quasi-experiment of the 1990s, the Biosphere 2, perhaps the Last Stand of the Renaissance Man. Just released this weekend, Spaceship Earth can be streamed from iTunes, Hulu, Vudu, YouTube and Google Play.

Cold Case Hammarskjöld: This eccentric and irresistible documentary purports to solve a historical mystery, buts it”s an excuse for the filmmaker to hop around Africa talking to aged fixers and mercenaries. It’s both an investigatory documentary and a send-up of the genre. Available on most streaming platforms.

Night on Earth: this Jim Jarmusch indie has one of the very funniest scenes and one of the very saddest scenes – in the same movie.  Night on Earth is comprised of five vignettes, each in a taxi and each in a different city: Los Angeles, New York, Paris, Rome and, of all places, Helsinki. It’s now available to stream from the Criterion Collection and Amazon. Do not confuse this 1991 Jarmusch film with the 2020 miniseries of the same name.

Ashes and Diamonds: This Polish thriller is one of my Overlooked Noir. A masterful director and his charismatic star make this a Can’t Miss. Last week I wrote when Turner Classic Movies aired it, but if you missed it, you can stream Ashes and Diamonds from Amazon and iTunes.

The most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE:

ON TV

On May 16, Turner Classic Movies will air The Crimson Kimono, another sensationalistic and deliciously exploitative cop noir from the great Sam Fuller.  Always looking to add some shock value, Fuller delivered a Japanese-American leading man (James Shigeta), an inter-racial romance and a stripper victim.  The groundbreaking aspect of The Crimson Kimono is that Fuller’s writing and Shigeta’s performance normalized the Japanese-American character.  This film is on my list of Overlooked Noir.

James Shigeta (Right) in THE CRIMSON KIMONO

REMEMBRANCES

Jerry Stiller, along with his wife and professional partner Anne Meara (scroll down), was a comedy pioneer. He’s best remembered for playing George Costanza’s father on TV’s Seinfeld and for being Ben Stiller’s real life dad. But Stiller sandwiched some good work in movies (The Taking of Pelham One Two Three, The Ritz, Hairspray) between the early and later phases of his work.

The Rock pioneer Little Richard has died. I fondly remember his hilarious turn in Down and Out in Beverly Hills as the neighbor to Richard Dreyfus’ family, Orvis Goodnight. He appeared in one of the very first rock n roll movies Don’t Knock the Rock (1956), a same-year followup to Rock Around the Clock. His music was featured in hundred of films and television shows.

COLD CASE HAMMERSKJOLD: a historical mystery and a quirkier investigation

Cold Case Hammarskjöld

Mads Brügger’s eccentric and irresistible documentary Cold Case Hammarskjöld purports to solve a historical mystery. In 1961, Secretary-General of the United Nations Dag Hammarskjöld was flying to cease-fire negotiations near the Congo-Rhodesia border when his plane crashed, killing all aboard. There has never been a satisfactory explanation of why or how the plane crashed.

Danish filmmaker Brügger enlists the Swedish private investigator Göran Björkdahl, who has been researching the Hammarskjöld crash, and heads off to Africa in search of witnesses and clues. Björkdahl is dead serious. Brügger is, well, entertaining. With an ironic wink at the audience, Brügger begins by equipping the two with pith helmets for their African exploration.

The two come across a very plausible conspiracy that the Hammarskjöld plane was targeted. And, as they move among the shady world of South African reactionaries, they encounter an even more shocking conspiracy theory. But Brügger is a story-teller, not a historian; fortunately, he doesn’t have to deliver a smoking gun.

Idiosyncratically, Brügger chooses to narrate his film by dictating the “script” to two African secretaries. Midway, he admits that what really drives him is the excuse to hop around Africa talking to aged fixers and mercenaries. And it’s a rich collection of scoundrels that he finds, some revealing old secrets, some covering them up and some apparently spinning wild tales.

That’s the fun of Cold Case Hammarskjöld, now available from all the usual streaming services.