Theeb – 8

“A minor classic,” said one review, and this small film was perfect in its way. It captured a time and place – the Arabia of Lawrence – and above all, a culture. The plot unfolded slowly, through the eyes of a young boy (“Theeb”) who never left camera range. He had to figure out how to survive on his own while simultaneously learning whom to trust, and how far. The underlying fact that pretty much everyone he came in contact with was out to kill someone else both complicated matters and made the story seem relevant today. This movie had SBIFF written all over it, but it was excellent, but underappreciated, in a commercial setting, as well.

Room – 7

This one is all about acting and psychology: how do you feel about what each of the characters lives through, and how well do they portray it? Brie Larson is amazingly equable in a seemingly insupportable situation; when she cracks you’re only surprised it didn’t happen sooner. The kid plays a kid – he’s the remarkable one. William H. Macy makes one wonder what he’s doing in this movie; and for some reason, Joan Allen’s face was unwatchable for me. I cringed every time she appeared onscreen. Other than the usual knocks on the media, the film seemed refreshingly agenda-free. It was, in the end, a study of people coping.

Broadway 2015

 

Yesterday we finished the musicals portion of our fall Broadway season, seeing in one week A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder, Something Rotten and Beautiful, a month after we saw Hamilton. Although criticism is something more than assigning grades, that is where I will start, with the above receiving, respectively, B-, A-, B and B+. While nothing merited the A+ of My Fair Lady, West Side Story or Phantom of the Opera, or the A of a musical with great music, the overall standard was pretty high and we felt fully entertained.

Perhaps gone are the days when one exited the theater humming the tunes and when I would buy my father a record of a show as a Christmas present. While I can still sing numerous numbers from The Pajama Game, Paint Your Wagon, The Most Happy Fella, Guys and Dolls and everything by Rodgers and Hammerstein, what we have now are clever ditties, not memorable melodies – except for jukebox musicals like Beautiful, which is a horse of a different color.

Something Rotten, it turns out, is not so much a spoof on Shakespeare – “The Renaissance,” the opening chorus goes – as on Broadway musicals themselves. In the course of a rollicking two hours, scores of famous shows are alluded to (pun intended), and every expected number – from lovers duet to big production piece – is represented. Will Shakespeare himself is depicted as Conrad Birdie played by Tim Curry, and every member of the cast is delightful. Both Siri and I found ourselves enraptured by one of the chorus girls, she seemed to be having so much fun. The first act was tears-rolling-down-my-face funny; and if the second was slightly less so, it was mainly because the story had to move along to a resolution.

Hamilton is the most touted show of the season, and it is admirable in every way. Making a musical out of Alexander Hamilton’s life is an audacious concept and the biggest boost to American history since who knows when. There are some wonderful characterizations, notably a fey Thomas Jefferson and a comically self-satisfied King George III. Unfortunately, the central character, Secretary Hamilton, is rather nondescript; and while he is at the center of the action he fails to arouse our empathy. Maybe because I was simultaneously reading the Chernow biography on which the play is based, I found myself checking off events as they occurred, rather than feeling them flow. In sum, the play, however clever, felt a bit too dutiful. The production and choreography were exemplary.

Carole King, on the other hand, was an ultra-sympathetic and engaging focal point for a musical biography. Growing up in Brooklyn, missing a father, not particularly attractive, a woman in a man’s world, she succeeded beyond wildest dreams by her determination and talent. And what a legacy of music she gave us! Matching Goffin-King with Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil provided variety and dramatic contrast and allowed the producers to include a few more hits. My two reservations were the sophomoric book and the fact that none of the songs sounded as good as the originals. There was also the anachronistic use of Be-Bop-A-Lula, which made me wonder how much factual credibility I should accord this rock’n’roll history.

A Gentleman’s Guide was the first show of our second fall stint in New York, which is good because it would have paled had we seen any of the others first. It was endlessly clever, and Jefferson Mays was hilarious playing the seven D’Ysquith heirs whom Bryce Pinkham’s character had to remove in succession from succession. The music seemed to derive equally from Gilbert & Sullivan, My Fair Lady and British music halls; but for some reason the equally silly Something Rotten felt authentic, while Gentleman’s Guide felt artificial.

King Charles III is the best Shakespeare play of this century – and maybe I can claim of the last two or three centuries. It recalls Hamlet, Macbeth, King Lear – and maybe one or two others I didn’t recognize – in the best way: a recall that adds tragic depth to the action at hand but is never apery for the sake of cleverness. A “future history play,” as it is subtitled, it hews closely to the world as we think we know it (through press mediation, of course) but moves to a conclusion that we can’t even guess at, although given its obvious forebears we know it won’t be good.

Belgian director Ivo Van Hove’s London-based revival of A View from the Bridge (officially opening tonight) replaces the gritty realism of Arthur Miller’s Red Hook, Brooklyn setting with the spare minimalism of a classic Greek production. Instead of the claustrophobia of a New York tenement, we are shown a furniture-less, soul-less, open square where the characters glide by one another. To further deracinate the play, van Hove has some kind of requiem playing non-stop in the background, occasionally punctuated by Kabuki clonks.

As misguided as the production is, the acting is a bigger problem. Just when I was about to say the acting in King Charles iii was perfect because the actors were all British, I came across the inadequacy of this British cast, and it was not because their off-and-on Brooklyn accents were less than impressive. Phoebe Fox as Catherine was a cipher compared to Scarlett Johansson, who performed on Broadway in 2010. She had none of the latent, burgeoning sexuality that drives both her uncle Eddie and the immigrant boarder Rodolpho. Worse, she swallowed her lines. Nicola Walker as her aunt Beatrice is shapeless; we see her pain but feel nothing. Her predecessor in the 2010 production – although I don’t remember her – was highly praised, and I’d love to think what Alison Janney, who played Bea in 1998, would have done with it. Her voice, too, was hard to hear; having to play to the audiences up on the stage didn’t help. Nor did the two Sicilian brothers, straight off the boat, exude the animal magnetism the play requires. Or even seem Italian.

While it’s common to update a Greek tragedy or Shakespeare play to modern times, it is less usual to take a modern play, as here, and strip it of topicality in an apparent effort to show its timelessness. In his effort to be cool, van Hove left me cold.

A Fool For Love was our theater finale, and it returned us to the theater of the ’60s or ’70s, a very American look at love-hate on the blue-collar level, a roundelay for actors that called to mind Sam Shepard and Jessica Lange, although Sam Rockwell and Nina Arianda were quite good. The performance would have seemed exceptional had we seen it in Santa Barbara or a regional theater. At $140 a pop, 75 minutes on Broadway left us feeling a little short.

 

Trumbo – 8.1

Just as Hollywood-perfect as The Martian, with great acting, fun story and scene-after-scene that brought tears to my eyes – except this story really happened. Bryan Cranston deserves Oscar consideration for his intense portrayal of blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, a hero presented with just enough flaws to avoid treacle. It’s also fun to see actors playing John Wayne, Hedda Hopper, Edward G. Robinson, Otto Preminger and, best of all, Kirk Douglas. Trumbo’s family – the beautiful Diane Lane and sensitive Elle Fanning – add an emotional counterpoint to the larger story, but it is that larger story – how America was bamboozled by the politics of fear – that makes the film important. In a post-screening interview, director Jay Roach made clear that the parallels of today – the Benghazi hearings, Donald Trump, etc. – were never far from his mind. The days of HUAC and Joseph McCarthy were a terrible time, and we should not forget them.

Sicario – 6.5

I look on this as a mood piece with a riveting score, maybe an homage to the Coens’ No Country for Old Men, with Benicio del Toro in the Javier Bardem role. Or it could be a domestic analogue to Zero Dark Thirty, with torture and extra-legal black ops producing the assassination of the Mexican drug kingpin. Looked at as a realistic plot, however, it made about as much sense as The Martian. There was also the continual question of what Emily Blunt – or more exactly, Emily Blunt’s character – was doing in this movie. I kept wondering what particular skill set she had that qualified her to be chosen for the “interdepartmental team.” When we learned that her job was to stay out of the way and keep quiet, it was even clearer that someone – whether the casting director or the estimable Victor Garber – had grossly miscalculated. Even more puzzling was what her (African-American) sidekick was doing on the team, especially since he had been expressly rejected – “No lawyers!” – at the outset. It was a kick to watch Josh Brolin and del Toro waltz through their tough-guy roles: I chortled with pleasure at their drolleries. But the more I thought about the movie afterward, the more annoyed I became. But what should I expect from a French-Canadian director’s take on an American anti-drug mission in Mexico?

The Martian – 7.8

How can you not root for Matt Damon – our generation’s Jimmy Stewart, as one critic said – as he struggles to survive for years all alone on Mars? And how can you not root for Kristen Wiig, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Mackenzie Davis back in Houston. (Jeff Daniels is the resident prig, but how bad can he be?) Meanwhile, Jessica Chastain and Kate Mara, hurtling through space, are pretty cool, too. The story is a basic tear-jerker; you pretty much know what is coming (“Shall we risk our lives to rescue our buddy, or shall we continue home to be with our families?” being a typical fork in the plot), but I shed tears of joy all the same. The elephant in the room, of course, is the total improbability of pretty much everything that happens, starting with why the team would abandon its mission for a sandstorm, then running through Damon’s ability to build, repair, innovate, farm, live with himself and survive on potatoes. What, the Rover never breaks down on Martian soil? And he is never without the proper screwdriver? What the movie did get right was the illogical importance society can attach to the saga of a single individual. When the NASA chief asks, which is more important, saving Mark Watney or preserving the Ares program, the point is that people can identify with an individual, not a program. He becomes a metaphor, a symbol, and saving him is what will save the program. I could’ve done without the “where are they now” PS, but that did give me a chance to wipe my face before heading out to the street.

Mississippi Grind – 7.5

A delightful road trip down to New Orleans with Ryan Reynolds and Ben Mendelsohn, portraying, respectively, a natural winner and a born loser. The ending was not exactly what the story set us up for, but I won’t complain about a little fantasy. For all the gritty shots of Iowa, St. Louis and Memphis, this was still just a movie. Mendelsohn, especially, made us believe.

99 Homes – 7

Not a lot of “up” moments (any?) in this tale of unscrupulous real estate dealings in an overextended Florida housing market. Michael Shannon offered a deal with the devil and Andrew Garfield took it. The drama may have exaggerated the reality, but the knowledge that thousands of people lost their homes in the actual crisis made this a somber movie to watch.

Pawn Sacrifice – 5

Maybe if I hadn’t seen the excellent documentary, Bobby Fischer Against the World, I would have found something of interest in this recounting of the Fischer-Spassky chess championship. As it is, I found the characters cliches, drama lacking and the whole thing rather pointless.

Meru – 7.5

Just when you thought you’d seen an amazing movie about three “professional climbers” (whatever they are) almost making it to the top of the previously unscaled Himalayan peak known as “Meru,” only to be foiled by bad weather, lack of food and frozen toes, you found out that – oh, no! – they’re going to try it again, despite having brain surgery and being caught in an avalanche in the interim. In the process, the concept of “acceptable risk” gets redefined. Fortunately for the viewer, the climbers were pleasant company on-screen, and we knew from the interviews they gave that they weren’t going to die; Jon Krakauer’s presence provided more perspective and credibility. Still, the wonder of how such a feat is accomplished runs close to the wonder of why, and the continuing wonder of, who is taking these pictures?