Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Flick Picks 12/29/2015: Pawn Sacrifice, He Named Me Malala

Chess, anyone?  Need your faith in humanity restored?  Or perhaps as some truly wintry weather descends upon us (or attacks horizontally in the form of sleet - yikes!), all you want to do is hunker down with a good series and have yourself a marathon.  Whatever the case, we've got you covered.


Feature Films




It's hard to imagine the place that chess and one chess player held in the American imagination in the early 1970's.  Of course, the chess player was the enigmatic Bobby Fischer.  Fischer's 1972 defeat of Russian Boris Spassky for the World Chess Championship in Iceland was followed in the United States with the interest usually reserved for a major sporting event.  Genius that he clearly was, Fischer was also a troubled man.  Tobey Maguire plays Bobby Fisher in Pawn Sacrifice, which focuses on the tempestuous world championship match.

There is also a fascinating nonfiction film on the singular, ultimately sad life of Bobby Fischer, available in our documentary collection:  BOBBY FISCHER AGAINST THE WORLD. 






Good or bad, Quentin Tarrantino's latest film continues an admirable trend on the part of the director in resuscitating careers that Hollywood has left for dead.  In the case of his current The Hateful Eight, there are rich roles for both Kurt Russell and Jennifer Jason Leigh.  We won't have The Hateful Eight on DVD until the spring.  In the meantime, you can enjoy Kurt Russell in the dark, complex and very well-reviewed western Bone Tomahawk.  


Also new:  Robert Redford and Nick Nolte play two old friends hiking the Appalachian Trail in A WALK IN THE WOODS.


Series



The always excellent William H. Macy stars as the frequently drunk single father who in no discernible way leads his family of six children in this Showtime series.  The kids generally have to fend for themselves in this dysfunctional family comedy set in the South Side Chicago neighborhood of Canaryville.  




Liev Schreiber and Jon Voight star in another popular Showtime series about a law firm "fixer" (Schreiber), contending with all sorts of dubious characters, not the least of which is his ex-con father (Voight)






Documentary/Performing Arts



For those unfamiliar with the 18-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai, Davis Guggenheim's documentary tells her better than fiction story.  An activist in her native Pakistan for the rights of girls, especially the right to education, Malala was hunted by the Taliban and shot three times, including one to her head.  As you'll find out, the attack only strengthened the resolve of the exceptional young woman.  He Named Me Malala is currently shortlisted for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.  



The renovation of the Netherlands national museum of arts and history, also known as The Rijksmuseum, was supposed to take five years, from 2003 to 2008.  Ten years and some $500 million dollars later, the museum enjoyed a triumphant reopening.  However, the previous decade saw a surprising amount of drama and even comedy as two museum directors battled detractors and adversaries on all sides.  



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Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Flick Picks 12/21/2015: Mission Impossible Rogue Nation, Time Out of Mind, Goodnight Mommy

As we head into award season and enjoy the release of those serious films - some good, others not so much - that hope to contend for the big prizes, the recent releases on DVD reflect the rest of the cinematic spectrum.  This week we have a good collection of the sort of films that don't often get attention at award time, deserving or not.  For your consideration, we have thrills, we chills, a few laughs and even a little seriousness.  But not too much.  


Feature Films


MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ROGUE NATION

Yes, he actually did this.  Tom Cruise catching a flight the hard
way in Mission Impossible:  Rogue Nation.
Along with Mad Max:  Fury Road, the latest entry in the Mission Impossible franchise sat at the head of the summer blockbuster class.  Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation is the sort of action film towards which others should aspire.  A fairly lean plot, beautifully-filmed action sequences and even a little wit - what more could one ask?  Oh, it's fairly thrilling too.  Enjoy.  


TIME OUT OF MIND


Richard Gere as you have never seen him - as a homeless man, adrift on the streets of New York.  It might not be a Richard Gere for which audiences are clamoring, but the veteran actor gives a committed performance as homeless, mentally-ill man trying to reestablish contact with his daughter. 




Also new:  FANTASTIC FOUR



Foreign Films

GOODNIGHT MOMMY


For those of you who enjoyed the excellent horror film  The Babadook, Goodnight Mommy provides a fine, creepy companion piece.  Goodnight Mommy might begin and end with handsome Austrians serenading us in traditional song, but we're a long, long way from The Sound of Music.  A mother recovering from plastic surgery finds herself in a battle of wills with her twin boys who don't believe their mother is the person who emerges from facial bandages.  Without spoiling the film's major twist or saying too much about the its most difficult scenes, suffice it to say you won't ever look at super glue in quite the same way....


Also new:  Jean Dujardin (The Artist) stars in The Connection, a crime thriller that is a European flipside to William Friedkin's The French Connection.  Dujardin stars as a Marseilles magistrate trying to dismantle a notorious drug smuggling operation.



Series


CHASING SHADOWS



Alex Kingston (formerly of ER) stars in this British crime series that follows the work of a missing persons unit.

ZOO SEASON ONE


In a very strange pandemic, animals are attacking human beings all over the world.  Who can blame them, really?  Nevertheless, a young team from various backgrounds is trying to solve the problem in this CBS series based on a novel by James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge.   


EXTANT SEASON TWO


The second and last season of this CBS series from executive producer Steven Spielberg follows the life of an astronaut (Halley Berry) who returns to her family inexplicably pregnant after spending 13 months in outer space.


Also new:  THE MIDDLE SEASON SIX, THE ROYALS SEASON ONE

Performing Arts

AMY SCHUMER:  LIVE AT THE APOLLO


Concluding what we might call the year of Amy Schumer is this May 2015 performance recorded at the famed Apollo Theater in New York.




Documentary


BURROUGHS


The Criterion Collection has issued a two-disc edition of this 1983 documentary of the inimitable William S. Burroughs.  A fascinating portrait of one of the 20th century's most confounding figures.

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Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Flick Picks 12/14/2015: Ant-Man, Minions, Apu Trilogy


Never fear, Ant-Man is here!  Or perhaps this means nothing to you at all.  Perhaps all your fears are perfectly well-founded.  Flick Picks is not here to tell you how to feel.  We are here merely to report on new arrivals on DVD.  Joining the aforementioned Mr. Ant, we have the even more decidedly cartoonish figures of Minions.  Meanwhile, for the more serious film fan, the cineaste one might even say, there is the welcome arrival of Satyajit Ray's Apu Trilogy.  It's something to behold.      




Feature Films

ANT-MAN


Yes, Ant-Man is here, in the amiable form of Paul Rudd.  The latest Marvel Comics superhero makes it to the big screen in pretty good form, abetted by some solid writing and strong cast.  And lots of action, of course.    

MINIONS


A combination prequel and spin-off to the Despicable Me franchise, Minions little yellow single-cell creatures have existed since the beginning of time (as we all know), serving only the most nefarious of masters.  You might well recognize the voices of Jon Hamm, Michael Keaton and Sandra Bullock, among others.  We have multiple copies of Minions in regular DVD and Blu-ray.  


Also new:  The excellent David Oyelowo (who played Martin Luther King so memorably in Selma) is mesmerizing in the odd, slightly claustrophobic HBO film,  NIGHTINGALE.




Foreign Film

APU TRILOGY

 
These three films by the Indian master Satyjit Ray star the same young actor (Kanu Banerjee) in a coming of age tale like no other in cinema history (sorry, Boyhood).  There is a great deal to appreciate here, including often shimmering cinematography and a wonderfully evocative score by Ravi Shankar.  The Apu Trilogy -  Panther Panchali (1955), Aparajito (1956) and Apur Sansar (1959) - is often listed among the greatest achievements in film history.  Watch the new Criterion Collection Apu Trilogy set and see why.

  




Classics

SPEEDY


Hooray for Harold Lloyd.  The too-often-overlooked silent film star and daredevil is up to his old tricks in Speedy (1928), his last silent film to be released in theaters.  In Speedy, Harold attempts to save the last horse-drawn streetcar in New York, the film contrasting the rush of contemporary urban life with the more genteel pace of yesteryear.  Look for Yankee slugger Babe Ruth as one of Harold's passengers.  


Series

DOC MARTIN, SERIES SEVEN


The seventh series of this popular British series is here.  Martin Clunes stars as general practitioner, ever amusingly at odds with his patients in the small, imagined Cornwall village of Portwenn.  


DOCTOR WHO, SERIES NINE (part 1).


Scottish actor Peter Capaldi turns out to be a flamboyant natural as the 12th incarnation of Doctor Who, the title character of the beloved BBC series which has been running - off and on - since 1963.  


UNDER THE DOME, SEASON THREE


This is the third and final season of the CBS series based of the novel of the same title by Stephen in which the beleaguered residents of Chester's Mill struggle beneath a mysterious dome which has separated them from the rest of the world, cutting off most communication (including cell phone and Internet - the horror!).


Also new:  ELEMENTARY, SEASON THREE

Documentary

SINATRA:  ALL OR NOTHING AT ALL





2015 marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of Francis Albert Sinatra.  Perhaps you've heard of him?  Far, far more than the basic documentary that has been running on HBO, Sinatra:  All or Nothing At All is a four-disc bonanza for Sinatra fans that includes a 46-minute interview with Walter Cronkite and the singer's 1971 "retirement" concert.



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Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Flick Picks 11/20/2015: Mr. Holmes, Best of Enemies Tangerine

Recent arrivals in DVD are highlighted by Ian McKellen bringing us the man behind Conan Doyle's immortal detective...at least the fictional man behind the fictional detective.  We also have one of he year's most memorable films in Tangerine.  And among the rich pickings, fictional, documentary and otherwise, we have one of the craziest films ever made.  Read on....


Feature Films


MR. HOLMES

We should all enjoy our golden years as well as Ian McKellen.  Mr. Holmes provides another rich role for Sir Ian, playing a 93-years-old Sherlock Holmes (McKellen is but 76).  Holmes is living in quiet retirement in a Sussex farmhouse, trying to recall the details of his final case, so he can present his version to the public.  His mind and spirit enjoy a youthful infusion in the form of his housekeeper's inquisitive young son.




TANGERINE

It's the day before Christmas in West Hollywood, where Sin-Dee Rella and and Alexandra, two transgender sex workers, roam their vibrant Los Angeles neighborhood pursuing sometimes common agendas.  Sin-Dee Rella is fresh out of jail and scorching lots of earth in her attempt to find the woman with whom her man has taken up.  While trying to keep Sin-Dee out of trouble, Alexandra plans for a singing gig at a local club.  One of the year's best-reviewed films, Sean Baker's Tangerine is bursting with compassion, humanity, laughter and life.    




ROAR

They just don't make 'em like this any more.  And with good reason.  Roar might be among the most insane films ever made.  How insane?  The film's Wikipedia page has a long paragraph devoted just to the injuries sustained during the very troubled 11-year production, which include a young Melanie Griffith receiving a love swipe to her face that resulted 50 stitches and the feared loss of one eye.  A man is living contentedly with his wild animals - a couple of elephants and over 100 wild cats - in Africa.  Of course, contentment is a relative thing.  For Hank (writer, director and remarkably reckless father and husband Noel Marshall), contentment involves frequently being chased,tackled and mauled by his big cats.  When his family (Marshall's actual family! including wife Tippi Hedren) arrives at his compound for a visit, they have no idea what they've gotten themselves into.  There's real tension as the terrified family desperately seeks shelter in the house as animals run amok in a manner that perhaps no film has ever captured.  Oh, the ridiculous dialog and stilted acting!  Oh, the humanity!  Oh, the insanity!  Roar!  

We would like to say that no one was hurt during the
 filming of Roar, but that just wouldn't be true at all.


Also new:   Another adapation (as with The Fault in our Stars) of a John Green young adult novel:  PAPER TOWNS.  Guy Ritchie gives us a film version the popular 1960s television series in THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E., Based on the notorious 1971 experiment at Stanford University, THE STANFORD PRISON EXPERIMENT is a well-reviewed and thought-provoking thriller.  Tycoon Ben Kingsley tries to cheat death but returns to life in the form of Ryan Reynolds.  A fate worse than death?  Decide for yourself after you've seen SELF/LESS, And, well...he did promise he would be back.  The former governor of California returns to the franchise that helped make him a movie star in TERMINATOR GENISYS,



Series





A top-notch cast is only one of the reasons to watch this 2012 British miniseries, based on William Boyd's espionage novel.  Greats like Michael Gambon and Charlotte Rampling are present, as well as talented up-and-comers like Hayley Atwell and Michelle Dockery (Lady Mary, to you Downton Abbey fans)




Some measure of consolation for forlorn Breaking Bad fans arrives in the form of Better Call Saul, a combination prequel and spinoff from the enormously popular AMC series.  Bob Odenkirk stars as decidedly unconventional lawyer Jimmy McGill.



PENNY DREADFUL, SEASON TWO


Taking its title from a looked down upon form of 19th century serial British fiction, this Showtime series populates it's lurid world with familiar characters (Dorian Gray, Mina Harker and Abraham Van Helsing from Dracula) from fiction of that period.  




More pure escapism arrives in the form of the second season of Black Sails.  Capatain Flint and his young crew are back and fighting for their lives on New Providence Island and the high seas.  By most accounts, season two has found the series delivering better episodes than during its debut season.  Argh!  





The story of  American-born Harry Gordon Selfridge and the London department store he founded continues in season three of this Masterpiece/PBS series.  Jeremy Piven heads a strong cast as the flamboyant Selfridge, who spent 25 years at Chicago's Marshall Field's (remember Marshall Field's?) before establishing one of London's great retail institutions in the first decade of the 20th century.   

Also new:  SILK, SEASON TWOSILENT WITNESS, SEASON THREE; VIKINGS,  SEASON THREE, HAPPYISH, SEASON ONE



Documentary/Nonfiction


BEST OF ENEMIES



The nine televised debates between William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal during the 1968 political conventions on the struggling ABC network may have been the forerunner of today's mind-numbing throwdowns on cable news networks. A dubious legacy perhaps, but Buckley and Vidal carried on their debates with real venom and a remarkably high level of exchange, verbal if not intellectual. This documentary by Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville shows two heavyweights going at it in a manner almost unimaginable by the present-day standards of televised debate.

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