I'm back!
Since I last posted (over 3 months ago), I've spent more time travelling and checking sites off my bucket list than I have spent watching movies. I could tell you more, but that's for another time....This is a movie blog, not a travel blog. (Although someday, I may need to start writing one of those too...) So today's post is about the movies I've squeezed in, both before and after those trips.
(Note: in the 'where to stream' information below, "the usual platforms" refers to Apple, Amazon, Vudu, Google Play and Redbox.)
The Princess (director: Ed Perkins)
Did we really need yet another documentary about Princess Diana? Is there anything left to say about the most over-analyzed, over-documented, over-worshipped woman of our times?
With The Princess, the answer to those questions turns out to be "Maybe." What this documentary has to say isn't entirely new, but it's packaged and presented in a singularly incisive fashion.
Director Ed Perkins has made a revelatory and provocative film about the late princess by eschewing both narration and the usual round of talking head commentary by royal watchers like Penny Junor, Ingrid Seward and Tina Brown. (Missing too, blessedly, is Diana's former personal assistant, the nauseatingly unctuous Paul Burrell.) Instead, Perkins assembles news coverage of Diana, chronologically from her courtship with Prince Charles through her funeral, and alternates it with the reactions of both the news media and ordinary Britons to every development along the way. It feels almost like a standard narrative film rather than a documentary.
Ultimately, The Princess is the story of a mismatched couple who were never really happy together, but whose relationship was transfigured - both by an adoring public starving for happy endings and a craven news media - to comply with the mythos of fairy tales. As that fairy tale devolved, the public unflinchingly projected their own issues onto the royal couple while the British news media happily stirred the pot. That's not necessarily an original point of view, but the thoughtful and compelling way that Perkins has assembled his material makes this point with stinging clarity. The clips of Diana and Charles together are painfully revealing; in a pre-wedding interview, Diana's body language is so tortured - her shoulders hunched so high and tense - that she looks like a turtle trying to disappear into its shell. Charles looks unmistakably glum as the couple exit St. Paul's Cathedral after the wedding. These signs were overlooked by everyone in those early hopeful days, but it's still startling to hear so many Brits let fly with nasty and ugly comments once the fairy tale is exposed for the sham it always was.
I'm not sure whether Perkins means to imply that we are complicit in Diana's tragedy (being an American. it's easy - or at least convenient - for me to exempt myself from that implication). But he's unsparing in exposing the public's overinvestment in her life.
(The Princess is available to stream only on HBO Max.)
Amsterdam (director: David O. Russell)
The first adjective that comes to mind when I think of Amsterdam is 'overstuffed.' It's got some great performances (mainly by its central trio of Christian Bale, John David Washington and Margot Robbie), while other, elsewhere wonderful actors barely make an impression (Andrea Riseborough, Anna Taylor-Joy). There's too much plot to keep track off - too many tossed off subplots that deserve more weight and consideration - while the overall tone of non-stop zaniness and comic caricature overwhelms the sadder and more serious elements of the story (the rise of fascism and the tragedy of discarded World War I veterans chief among them). These are weaknesses shared with Russell's earlier star-studded hit American Hustle, but are even more problematic and glaring here. Sometimes, I long for the simple, highly enjoyable goofiness of Russell's early, low-budget efforts like Flirting with Disaster, which was much tighter and funnier than this film, although much less ambitious. Amsterdam, however, might have worked better as a television mini-series. Given some time to better develop the plot and the supporting characters, it could have been a helluva ride.
(Amsterdam is now playing in theaters. A streaming date has not yet been announced.)
Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris (director: Anthony Fabian)
This is a perfectly sweet and charming little movie version of a Paul Gallico novel that hit the best seller list in 1957. Lesley Manville plays the widowed British charwoman who wins the lottery and decides to splurge on a Christian Dior dress. Her ability to pay cash for her dress gets her into the snooty but struggling post-war House of Dior, and she manages to charm and endear herself to the elegant Parisians. (Even, ultimately, to the snooty Dior administrator, played with full 'good sport about playing a French cliché' energy by Isabelle Huppert.) The movie sparkles and shines, both literally (Paris and Dior look suitably glamorous) and emotionally. Manville is warm and brisk at the same moment, and there are happy endings for all.
Blonde (director: Andrew Dominik)
Emily the Criminal (director: John Patton Ford)
A great performance from Aubrey Plaza makes this film an especially compelling experience. Plaza plays a restaurant delivery worker who's struggling - and failing - to pay off student loans while making the rent. Given the opportunity to make fast cash as part a credit card fraud ring, she's at first hesitant, then all in. Emily the Criminal subverts expectations; at first glance, it appears to be an almost Ken Loach-esque tale about the impossibility of getting by in the gig economy, but it evolves into something darker and more particular. Plaza's Emily is a complex and not altogether sympathetic character. At some point, it becomes difficult to tell which characters are criminals and which are victims.
Where the Crawdads Sing (director: Olivia Newman)
I'll cut to the chase here. I hated the book - didn't even finish reading it, in fact - and only saw the movie because my friends had chosen it. But the film version of Delia Owens' best-selling novel is an amazing example of how good casting and good direction can elevate mediocre material.
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