The Great Debaters (2007)

Based on a true story, this follows the experiences of the Wiley College Debate Team during the 1930s. Denzel Washington portrays the professor who trains and inspires a team that includes Nate Parker, Jurnee Smollett, and Denzel Whitaker. I feel like there aren’t a lot of period pieces regarding educated Black Americans, so the setting here was refreshing though being in the South, there were expected racism experiences. Also interesting to see star and director Denzel Washington as a disheveled socialist and his interactions with college president Forest Whitaker. Somewhat annoyingly, it seems the male debaters were given much more backstory than Smollett. She was relegated to the center of a love triangle and despite having mention in the epilogue, her character didn’t share the name of a real person. I understand there are often changes in ‘true stories’ but they just as often annoy me for their portrayal of alternative facts.

All By Myself: The Eartha Kitt Story (1982)

Eartha Kitt was a force to be reckoned with and this documentary allows her to shine. The film is comprised almost entirely of footage of Kitt just being herself or responding to interview questions. While I sometimes groaned at the obtuseness of the interviewer’s questions, she freely and unabashedly offers up her views on the events in her life including her abandonment by her mother due to colorism and her professional ostracism after sharing her views on the Vietnam War and her feelings on living alone and loving herself. Interestingly while there is some singing performances sprinkled into the film, there isn’t much actual discussion on her career, with few mentions of her television and film career beyond a mention of Catwoman to a teeny Allison Smith. I would have enjoyed seeing an addendum of sorts to include her later life after this film was made as I’m sure she had plenty more to say.

Extremities (1986)

As a dramatic movie, this was comically bad in most parts. After a night at the gym, Farrah Fawcett is assaulted and almost raped in her car. With no evidence, the police aren’t able to help her, but unfortunately the assailant James Russo grabbed her purse in the scuffle and is able to track her down some time later while her two roommates, Diana Scarwid and Alfre Woodard, are away at work. After a rather long intro, there are so many infuriating instances as the two fight in the house. Not trying to victim blame, but Fawcett makes stupid moves left and right to the point where it seems like she was just waiting for him. When her roommates do come home, they sympathize with the rapist instead of the person they have shared a home with. I love all three of the actresses and Farrah gives her physical all in a very weak role., but the material just doesn’t work for them here. I imagine as a play on a barebones set it works incredibly well, particularly as the women provide their various experiences with violent crimes and criminal offenders.

This Boy’s Life (1993)

In the 1950s, nomadic Ellen Barkin and her son Leonardo DiCaprio make a stop in Seattle, moving to nearby Concrete, Washington after she meets and marries charmer Robert De Niro. Underneath De Niro’s charm is controlling personality that explodes into abuse when his authority is questioned. Despite the dire circumstances, the stakes never actually feel very high with De Niro’s mood swings almost comically bizarre, reminiscent of his actual comedy turn in Meet the Parents. Though not given enough screen time, Barkin lends a believability to her character and somehow regardless of his actual age, DiCaprio looks about 11 at the beginning of the film, physically aging to a mid-teenager by the end.

Bob le Flambeur (1956)

In the Montmartre district of Paris, Roger Duchesne’s Bob is a former bank robber, currently living on his gambling winnings which have been dwindling due to a streak of bad luck. Receiving some insider information regarding a casino, he and a safecracking friend formulate a plan to rob their safe at the height of the season. Consider his recent misfortune, it seems like it’d be a bad time to plan a criminal enterprise and it does seem like the universe is against him in the endeavor, but Bob is dedicated to his gambling ways and never loses his cool.   Crime

The Road (2009)

In a post-apocalyptic American wasteland, Viggo Mortensen and his son Kodi Smit-McPhee head to the hopefully warmer south, struggling to find enough food to survive while also avoiding cannibals. It’s a long, dark, and depressing trip, even the ocean lacks color and moments of succor are quickly dowsed. I personally would have gone with mom Charlize Theron who gave up before the film even started.

The Affair of the Necklace (2001)

After watching Marie Antoinette, I was more familiar with the Affair of the Diamond Necklace. This is another retelling of that story, but from the perspective of Hilary Swank’s Jeanne of Valois-Saint-Rémy, a prominent participant in the scandal. For such a tale of intrigue, this film is quite dull. Joely Richardson makes a decent Marie Antoinette and Christopher Walken is amusingly campy as the occultist Count Cagliostro, but Swank is poorly cast in her role. I don’t know if it’s because it’s a period piece or just an inability to encompass the various qualities necessary of the character, but she doesn’t bring an ounce of believability to the role.

Oscar Nomination: Best Costume Design

The Thing (1982)

The tranquility of an Antarctica outpost is interrupted by a Norwegian helicopter hunting down a sled dog. The Norwegians are killed in the confusion, but the dog survives and has brought with him a creature of questionable origin. Between this, They Live, and The Fog, I’m really digging John Carpenters 1980s SciFi Horror. This has the incredible added atmosphere of the remote location and extra tension as paranoia sets in amongst the denizens, no one knowing who has been infected until it’s too late. It also has a pretty great cast that works well together, including Kurt Russell, Keith David, and surprisingly Wilford Brimley.   SciFi  Horror

Twice in a Lifetime (1985)

On the night of his 50th birthday, Gene Hackman goes to a bar without his homebody wife Ellen Burstyn and flirts with the younger, new barmaid Ann-Margret. Despite, or maybe because of, thirty years of marriage with his wife and having three now adult children together, he finds himself falling for Ann-Margret and beginning an affair. It’s a bit exasperating to watch Hackman disintegrate his long-time family unit without much thought, but in parallel, it also shows how people get stuck in patterns without much thought to their happiness or the direction their life is going. I enjoy watching films set locally so I can try to guess the neighborhoods they were filmed in, that is as long as it’s not really Vancouver or some other city pretending.

Oscar Nomination: Best Actress in a Supporting Role

In Our Water (1982)

At this point I’ve seen a number of narrative films based on corporations contaminating water supplies that the details from this film are not all that surprising. A family in South Brunswick, New Jersey discovers that the water coming from their well, and that of their neighbors, has been contaminated by a local landfill. This documents the father becomes an activist and fights to get local, state, and federal governments to acknowledge the problem. It’s all very depressing as it’s a real life story that occurred before those other films and just establishes that these problems keep happening and environmental protections are so easy to reverse or ignore.

Oscar Nomination: Best Documentary, Features

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