Fort Apache, the Bronx (1981)

The delicate balance between a decaying police precinct and the impoverished neighborhood it serves is thrown when a drugged out Pam Grier, playing against type, shoots two officers point blank. This leads newly appointed captain Ed Asner to take a hardline against the surrounding community. Cynical precinct veteran Paul Newman, partnered with a young Ken Wahl, provides the moral compass in a squad filled with corruption. It’s gritty as if from the previous decade but also feels like the pilot to the police procedurals it would later inspire.   Crime

Cairo (1942)

As a reward for his contributions to the best small town newspaper in America, reporter Robert Young is sent to North Africa to report on World War II. Arriving in Egypt, he gets caught up in silly spy intrigue where he doesn’t know which side is which. It’s quite hokey and didn’t increase my appreciation of Jeannette MacDonald any. What I did enjoy was seeing Ethel Waters in a somewhat meatier role. While still relegated to being a maid, she is given multiple musical numbers and a love interest in the form of Dooley Wilson.   War  Musical

The Story of a Cheat (1936)

Denied dinner as a punishment for stealing, Sacha Guitry becomes the only survivor of a meal that killed his entire family. He soon learns that dishonesty pays and resolves to live his life by this credo. Narrated by the adult Cheat as he’s writing his memoirs, it’s a delightful romp through his adventures as a charming rogue travelling through a life of deceit with occasional attempts at honesty. The film ambitiously weaves the present and the past relying solely on Guitry’s voiceover for much of its dialogue.   Comedy

Kajillionaire (2020)

Raised by two con artist parents Debra Winger and Richard Jenkins, 26 year old Evan Rachel Wood has never been treated as anything other than an accomplice in their schemes. When the family meets Gina Rodriguez during one of their scams, it upends all their lives in different ways. The film somehow takes a weird setup that almost no one should relate to while being a completely raw and real look at people and relationships. Winger and Jenkins are excellent in their roles and makes one wonder how they became their adult selves, but it’s Wood who is the standout. Somehow she becomes the walking embodiment of an infant who was left in a crib and never touched but still survives.

The Bourne Supremacy (2004)

Continuing the tale of Matt Damon’s amnesiac agent Jason Bourne, when it looks like Jason’s warning to leave him ignore has been compromised, he is drawn back into more Treadstone conspiracies. I know there are people who love these films, but I’m not one of them. The action sequences are good, but the plot is unnecessarily twisty and turny, still resulting in the expected ending after all its convolutions.   Action

Doctor Dolittle (1967)

Based on three of the Hugh Lofting books, Rex Harrison is the titular doctor whose great love for animals brought him to learn how to speak various animal languages from his parrot friend. For reasons, this leads him on an expedition to find the Great Pink Sea Snail. I do love a film that respects animals as unique individuals and personalities, even when they are as fictitious as the well-crafted Pushmi-Pullyu, and Geoffrey Holder is delightful as the leader of a village of well-read island natives, but this film is way too damn long. Cut out most of the beginning and one or two of the extraneous episodes and it wouldn’t be much of a loss. The songs are mostly unmemorable with Harrison sing songing his way through the majority, even when accompanied by the film’s delightful visuals.  Best Picture Nomination  Animals

The Boat is Full (1981)

During World War II, ‘neutral’ Switzerland severely limited the number of refugees it would accept, even giving preference to Germany deserters over similar Jewish individuals, claiming as the title suggests that the lifeboat they were providing was too full. Six individuals take the chance to jump off a German train that is momentarily detained in Switzerland and seek temporary refuge at a village remote inn. The group try to work themselves into more acceptable family groups in a desperate hope that they can figure out the perfect combination that’ll allow them to stay instead of being returned to certain death in Germany. Most importantly the film calls into question the idea of neutrality, establishing that a side is always being chosen if one lets atrocities to happen.  War

Oscar Nomination: Best Foreign Language Film

The Express (2008)

Ernie Davis was the first Black player to win the Heisman Trophy. This film, featuring Rob Brown as Davis, chronicles his all too short career. A fairly standard inspirational sports biopic, it also features the requisite fudging with historical accuracy. What it does do well is provide some insight into the experiences of Black players as they played against unintegrated teams, here culminating in brawls during the 1960 Cotton Bowl, and establishes Davis as one of a string of great Black players from Syracuse University, which included Jim Brown and Floyd Little.   Sports

Of Gods and Men (2010)

In 1996, an order of peaceful monks who provided support and medical care for an Algerian community came under attack from an Islamic terrorist organization. Much of the film simply follows the monks as they go about their days, living humbly and piously. As the threat grows closer, the tension becomes stronger as even amongst the monks there is disagreement on how to best serve their vocation when facing great risk from the outside world. A beautifully shot film, it provides insight to what religion can offer to individuals and communities through a real life instance that shows the positives and negatives.

Journey to the Center of the Earth (1959)

Scottish geology professor James Mason leads a group of explorers through an Icelandic volcano to the center of the planet. It’s a brightly colored adventure that has zero basis in reality that is drawn out past 2 hours when 90 minutes would have sufficed. Unfortunately once again, the only female on the expedition, Arlene Dahl, is told she’s too ‘weak’ for such work and relegated to an unnecessary romance in the end, but I do enjoy the peeks into artificial Icelandic culture and the creativity of the inner planetary setting.   SciFi  fantasy  Adventure

Oscar Nominations: Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Color; Best Sound; Best Effects, Special Effects

Scroll to Top