Sunday, June 25, 2017

                                                       UNJUSTLY ACCUSED
There have been many excellent movies about defendants who were unjustly accused and convicted. In 2012 the peerless Ken Burns weighed in with his take on The Central Park Five. A horrific rape and assault of a female jogger in New York’s Central Park captured the attention of a nation. Five young men in the wrong place at the wrong time are brought in and grilled. Believing they will be allowed to go home if they tell the cops what they want to hear, several confess. Their trials are swift and merciless and they are sentenced to long prison terms. Then, years later, a convicted rapist admits that in fact he was the culprit. This is a fascinating story, made more so by the fact that the prosecutors still maintain their belief in the guilt of these young men in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. 
You don’t have to go far to find a similar case. The Trials Of Darryl Hunt (2006) is about a wrongly accused North Carolina man who spent 19 years in prison for a crime he did not commit. A young reporter for the Winston-Salem Journal was brutally raped and murdered leaving her workplace.  Hunt was convicted on shaky eyewitness testimony placing him near the scene. DNA evidence exonerated Hunt. Another person, linked to the crime by his own DNA, confessed.
The Thin Blue Line (1988) is directed by esteemed documentarian Errol Morris (Gates Of Heaven, Mr. Death, A Brief History Of Time). A policeman is murdered in a drive-by shooting, and a juvenile implicates Randall Dale Adams as the killer. Morris carefully re-enacts the crime from various angles and pretty much proves that Adams is innocent. A year later Adams was exonerated and released.  
Jessica Sanders’ After Innocence (2005) covers not one but seven defendants who were sentenced to prison and later exonerated by DNA evidence. While not as intensive as the films about a single case, Sanders’ method is very convincing and very troubling. This film won several awards and is a real eye-opener. 
Conviction (2010) is not a documentary, but is based on a true story. Hillary Swank plays Betty Ann Waters, a high school dropout who put herself through law school so she could take up the case of her brother Kenny, serving a life sentence for murder.
West Of Memphis (2012) represents the conclusion of a bunch of films about the same incident. HBO shot three films about the West Memphis Three who were jailed on extremely shaky evidence and slipshod police work. Those are all titled Paradise Lost and were released in 1996, 2000 and 2012. They are just fine but perhaps more than most of you will want to know about this incident. West Of Memphis tells the story quite well in about two hours.
All of the movies in this article are available on DVD. All are for mature audiences.

Sunday, June 18, 2017

                                                       GLENNE HEADLY

Glenne Headly died recently at the too-young age of 62 in her home in Santa Monica, California. While many show biz types blather on and on about family, Ms. Headly walked the walk. After becoming a mom, she continued to work, but only in productions close to her home or during school breaks. Her impressive film resume’ is bunched into the 80's and 90's. After that period most of her work was in TV and on the stage. 
Glenne Headly’s break-out role came in 1988. She landed the juicy part of Janet Colgate in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and she definitely made the most of it. Steve Martin and Michael Caine are sleazy con men fleecing innocent rich people on the Riviera. Their attempt to con Janet is turned on its head by her cleverness. She manages to seem both clueless and intelligent in a difficult part that makes the movie a good one. She came up with the surprise ending that director Frank Oz readily put into his film. Oz credited Ms. Headly with the idea and praised her intelligence and savvy. 
The 1990's had a bunch of movies based on comic strips, some good, some not so good. One of the best was Dick Tracy (1990) with Warren Beatty as the square-jawed gung ho detective and Glenne Headly as Tess Trueheart, his girlfriend. Today’s audiences may find this film a bit simple-minded, but the colors are garish and wonderful and the acting spot-on. Do you remember that this strip gave us the famous two-way wrist radios? Everyone now has an even better one! And Tracy’s enemies were famously unique: Flattop, Pruneface, The Mole, Measles, etc.  
Ordinary Magic (1993) features newcomer Ryan Reynolds as a young man raised in India by a very idealistic and activist father. When the father dies, the young man is sent to live with an aunt, played by Glenne Headly, in Canada. When she is faced with an unfair eviction, her nephew motivates the community against this wrongful situation. The cruel landlord is played by, of all people, Paul Anka! Those of you under 60 may not remember him as a popular singer. 
Mr. Holland’s Opus (1995) stars Richard Dreyfuss as a talented musician and composer who accepts a high school teaching position in order to spend more time with his young wife, Iris, played by Glenne Headly, and his infant son. The bureaucrats are after him from day one, contending that music education is not important and a frill to be cut from an already strained budget. They finally get the music budget cut and Mr. Holland is on his way out. But on his last day at the school something wonderful happens,  crafted by his wife and son and many former students. There’s not a dry eye in the house!
After this part, Ms. Headly voiced Zootie the chimpanzee in the gleeful Babe: Pig In The City (1998) and that’s the last of the good stuff, movie-wise. 
Glenne Headly can be glimpsed as Joan, a minor part in Eleni (1985) and as Olive in Saul Bellow’s Seize The Day (1986).
All of the films in this article are suitable for all ages, factoring in the boredom quotient for littlies. 

Sunday, June 11, 2017

                                             INSPIRED BY THE BARD
Here’s an interesting bunch of films that are loosely (some of them tightly) based on Shakespeare’s plays.
Anyone who has the slightest interest in Shakespeare will be intrigued by Al Pacino’s Looking For Richard (1996). It features selected scenes from Richard III (played by Pacino), with Alec Baldwin, Winona Ryder, Aidan Quinn and Kevin Spacey. It also features these actors discussing their roles, background on the play itself, and some insightful points from scholars, as well as actors who have trod the boards in Shakespeare plays. 
Rosencranz And Guildenstern Are Dead (1990) is loosely based on the lives of two fairly minor characters in Hamlet. Unaware that their fates are sealed by their parts in the play, they blindly stumble around trying to deviate from those roles. Gary Oldman, Tim Roth and Richard Dreyfuss star in this comical absurdist film scripted by the talented Tom Stoppard. Though perhaps an acquired taste, this film rewards attentive viewers with solid entertainment.
For a hundred years after Shakespeare’s plays were written and first performed, women were by law banned from acting on stage. This meant that every part, male and female, was played by men. In Stage Beauty (2004), Billy Crudup is an actor famous for portraying women. Claire Danes wants to act, so gets started by playing a woman in a minor league play. This attracts so much attention that  King Charles II is persuaded to change the ban around 1650. How this is accomplished will not be revealed here.  
A Double Life (1947) is 70 years old, but holds up well. Ronald Coleman is a Shakespearean actor best known for his portrayal of Othello. He becomes more and more unable to separate his stage life from real life, with increasingly tragic results.  Ruth Gordon and Garson Kanin penned this excellent screenplay, and they contend that actors getting too much into their characters is a fairly common problem. 
Leonard Bernstein traded warring families for warring New York gangs for the marvelous West Side Story (1961). It’s Romeo and Juliet with music and dancing, and its charm is still evident after more than 50 years. 
King Lear’s terrible daughters (well, two out of three) are the basis for several good films. Japanese master Akira Kurosawa’s Ran (1985) is a colorful take. And A Thousand Acres (1997) is based on Jane Smiley’s novel of family troubles on an Iowa farm. 
Here are two movies based on The Tempest. 1948's Yellow Sky with Gregory Peck as an outlaw seems a bit of a stretch to me. But in1956 came Forbidden Planet with Walter Pigeon, Anne Francis and one of the first screen robots. This one is really close to the Shakespeare plot. 
The crown jewel of this group of films is the marvelous Shakespeare In Love (1998). It is an almost completely fictional account of the life of William Shakespeare at the time he was writing Romeo and Juliet. The Bard is played winningly by Ralph Fiennes and Gwyneth Paltrow is his Juliet-like love interest. This movie won a truckload of Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Actress (Paltrow) and Best Supporting Actress (the iconic Judy Dench). It is also a barrel of fun!
All of the films in this column are available on DVD. 

Sunday, June 4, 2017

                                                           2016 SLEEPERS
                                                           Part 6

Is Mr. Movie about to run out of good 2016 sleepers? Actually, yes, and here are the last five.
The story of Ray Kroc and MacDonalds’ rise to international fame and fortune is well told in The Founder. And the perfectly cast Michael Keaton brings Kroc to life. He starts out as a traveling salesman for milkshake machines. He stumbles on MacDonalds’ hamburgers in a small California town. These guys have maximized cooking and delivery into an art form. They are artistes and he is a money-grubbing entrepreneur. Clashes are inevitable. Getting there is all the fun. Guess who wins.
Whether you like Barack Obama or not, most everybody (even Trump!) likes Michelle. And Southside With You is a very sweet and possibly mostly true biopic about their meeting and subsequent romance. You see flashes of brilliance in both the main characters and nicely rewarding back stories of their lives. How did an unknown lawyer working for pennies for a non-profit rise to the presidency? This movie gives us some idea. Using little-known actors add to the authenticity.
The Infiltrator features Brian Cranston of Breaking Bad fame as Robert Mazur, an undercover agent who merely managed to take down cartel leader Pablo Escobar and the banks that laundered his profits. This is, as they say, based on a true story and there are some white knuckle moments along the way for the main character. This film is based on Mazur’s book and I’m frankly astonished the guy is still alive. 
We’ve liked Sally Field way before she famously told us we did at the Oscars. She is the clueless ugly duckling in Hello, My Name Is Doris. Doris has lived with her mother her whole life, and now lives alone in the family home. She becomes infatuated with a much younger fellow employee and goes after him hammer and tongs. This bittersweet film careens between feeling sorry for her and laughing at and with her, and it is a part not every actor could carry off. But Ms. Field does so with charm and moxie. 
The title alone would tell you that Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children is a Tim Burton film. In darkest Wales Miss Peregrine (Eva Green) runs a home for strange children that nobody else wants. The home was seemingly destroyed by a Luftwaffe raid in 1943, but it turns out there are survivors who continue to live through a portal in time. I know it sounds weird, and it is, but what did we expect? It’s also quite a lot of fun. 
All of the films in this article are available on DVD. All are for adults.