Movies to See Right Now (at home)

Laverne Cox in DISCLOSURE. Photo courtesy of NETFLIX.

This week: four new 2020 films – The Traitor, Shooting the Mafia, Mae West: Dirty Blonde, The Ghost of Peter Sellers. Last week: five new 2020 films – Da 5 Bloods, Disclosure, Yourself and Yours, Ella Fitzgerald: Just One of Those Things and You Don’t Nomi. As a tribute to Carl Reiner, it’s time to revisit The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming! Plus a great classic Western on TV.

ON VIDEO

The Traitor: A true life epic spanning four decades and three continents, The Traitor introduces us to the first and most important Sicilian Cosa Nostra informer. The Traitor can be rented from all the major streaming services.

Shooting the Mafia: Another movie about the Sicilian Mafia, this is the biodoc of Letizia Battaglia, whose photojournalistic specialty became photographing murder victims and also documented the grief, trauma and outrage of the Sicilian population. Shooting the Mafia can be streamed on iTunes, YouTube and Google Play.

Disclosure: This insightful (and even revelatory) documentary about the depiction of trans people on screen is moving and thought-provoking. Disclosure is streaming on Netflix.

Mae West: Dirty Blonde: I learned a lot from this excellent biopic: Mae West was more than a drop-in risque caricature – starting a movie career after age 40, she was an uncredited writer and producer of her films. And she did it in a prudish era when women’s aspirations were not encouraged (intentional understatement). Available on demand from PBS stations. Trailer.

The Ghost of Peter Sellers: This documentary tells the story of an uncompleted early 1970s pirate movie parody, Ghost in the Noonday Sun, sabotaged by its star, Peter Sellers. The doc is from the fraught perspective of the director, Peter Medak, whose career was harmed by the fiasco. The 2002 documentary Lost in La Mancha (Amazon, iTunes) which chronicles Terry Gilliam’s disastrous attempt to film Don Quixote, is a much better and more entertaining movie than this one.

The Russians Are Coming! The Russians Are Coming!: Appreciate Carl Reiner, the best Straight Man in American comedy, in this goodhearted and very, very funny Cold War parody.

Alan Arkin, Eva Marie Saint and Carl Reiner in THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING! THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING!

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

ON TV

Millard Mitchell and James Stewart in WINCHESTER ’73

On July 6, Turner Classic Movies presents what is perhaps the best of director Anthony Mann’s “psychological Westerns”, Winchester ’73 (1950) with James Stewart. Winchester ’73 taps the quest and revenge genres, and it has the Western’s requisite Indian battle and climactic shootout.  Westerns were oft about Good versus Bad, but Mann makes Jimmy Stewart’s character in Winchester ’73 much more complex and morally ambiguous – and he has what we now call “unresolved issues”.  The bad guys are Dan Duryea at his oiliest and Stephen McNally at his most brutish.  The 29-year-old Shelly Winters finds herself as the object of several characters’ desires.  Millard Mitchell is perfect as Jimmy’s sidekick. One of my favorite character actors, Jay C. Flippen, shows up as a cavalry sergeant.

Stephen McNally, Shelly Winters and Dan Duryea in WINCHESTER ’73
WINCHESTER ’73

REMEMBRANCES

Carl Reiner, from earlier this week.

Director Joel Schumacher had been a department store window dresser when he broke into movies as a set designer. Then he wrote the screenplay for the wonderful guilty pleasure Car Wash, which led to directing the similar DC Cab. His career took off when he launched the Brat Pack with St Elmo’s Fire, and followed that with Batman and Robin. My favorite Schumacher film is the 2002 thriller Phone Booth, in which an Everyman – or is he? – (Colin Farrell) is trapped in a phone booth by a sniper villain (Kiefer Sutherland); Phone Booth can be streamed from all the usual sources.

Movies to See Right Now

Delroy Lindo in DA 5 BLOODS. Photo courtesy of Netflix.

This week: an absurdist comedy from Korea, a doc that gives voice to trans creatives, an insightful jazz biodoc, a movie about a really bad movie and Spike Lee’s latest.

REMEMBRANCE

Ian Holm in THE SWEET HEREAFTER

The 5’5″ Ian Holm was a giant of the stage, where he created a definitive King Lear, and is most well-known in movies for playing Bilbo Baggins in the Lord of the Rings franchise. I remember Holm’s heartrending performance in Atom Egoyan’s The Sweet Hereafter, my choice as the most profoundly sad movie ever. He also appeared in supporting roles in some of my favorite movies: Young Winston, Jesus of Nazareth and the Branagh Henry V.

ON VIDEO

YOURSELF AND YOURS. Photo courtesy of SFFILM.

Yourself and Yours: The absurdism of Luis Buñuel meets the social awkwardness of Seinfeld in Hong Sang-soo’s Korean comedy. During its Bay Area virtual run at the Roxie, you can stream Yourself and Yours at Roxie Virtual Cinema.

Disclosure: This insightful (and even revelatory) documentary about the depiction of trans people on screen is moving and thought-provoking. Disclosure is streaming on Netflix.

Ella Fitzgerald: Just One of Those Things: A Must See for jazz fans, this well-sourced biodoc brings insights into the juvenile delinquent who became an innovative genius, Includes a never-broadcast interview in which Ella makes clear her views on race. It opens today in the Roxie Virtual Cinema.

Da 5 Bloods: Spike Lee’s latest features a great performance by Delroy Lindo and a couple other compelling elements, but it’s too long and drags. How Spike reflects on the Vietnam War and on the Black experience in America is far more evocative than is the story itself. Da 5 Bloods is streaming on Netflix.

You Don’t Nomi: A deep dive into the making and cult film aftermath of a terrible big Hollywood movie, Showgirls. I don’t find Showgirls, campy as it is, that entertaining on a so-bad-it’s-good basis, but You Don’t Nomi does contain many of its funniest, most awful clips. I watched it on Roxie Virtual Cinema, but it’s available to stream on all major platforms. There are much better movies about bad movies: Ed Wood (about Plan 9 from Outer Space), The Disaster Artist (about The Room), Best Bad Movie (about Troll 2)

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

ON TV

Edward Andrews and John McIntyre in THE PHENIX CITY STORY

On June 30, Turner Classic Movies will broadcast The Phenix City Story; gritty, crisp and unvarnished, it’s a jarring contrast to 1950s Ozzie and Harriett American culture. It’s impossible to imagine a film noir that is more “ripped from the headlines”. The Phenix City Story is one of my Overlooked Noir; it’s hard to find to stream, so set your DVR for TCM this week.

John Larch in THE PHENIX CITY STORY

DISCLOSURE: giving voice to the trans perspective

Laverne Cox in DISCLOSURE. Courtesy of NETFLIX.

I very much admired Disclosure, the insightful – and even revelatory – documentary about the depiction of trans people in film and television and the impacts of that depiction.

The best thing about Disclosure is the unfiltered trans voice – near as I can tell, 100% of the subjects and talking heads are trans or non-binary people, and it’s an uncommonly articulate bunch. I found the most compelling to be Emmy-winning actress Laverne Cox (Orange Is the New Black), actress/writer Jen Richards (Tales of the City), producer Zackary Drucker (Transparent) and actress Candis Cayne (Dirty Sexy Money).

The first 25 minutes – tracing depiction of trans people in film since D.W. Griffin’s silents – is not riveting. But stay with it – Disclosure pays off big time with these moving personal stories. Near the end, Jen Richards comments on an accepting parent that she saw in another documentary – get out the Kleenex for this moment.

I had always thought of Jaye Davidson’s Oscar nomination for her performance as Dil in The Crying Game as a step forward for trans people. It’s complicated. I had always viewed Stephen Rea’s reaction in the Big Reveal scene from my straight male perspective (cis, if you insist); Disclosure made me consider the trans woman’s lens, too.

Disclosure is streaming on Netflix.