Thursday, September 23, 2021

Respect (2021)

We loved the official--sanctioned by the Queen of Soul herself--biopic of Aretha Franklin with Jennifer Hudson kicking ass in the lead role of Franklin from pre-teenhood until 1972 (she was 30). Hudson is ably supported by Forest Whitaker as Aretha's father, the Reverend C.L. Franklin; Marlon Wayans as her husband Ted White; Tituss Burgess as gospel conductor James Cleveland; Audra McDonald as her mother Barbara; Marc Maron as producer Jerry Wexler; Skye Dakota Turner as young Aretha; Mary J. Blige as Dinah Washington; Kelvin Hair as Sam Cooke; and so many more.

At 2:25 it's too long but still wonderful for those of us who grew up with her music as well as you whippersnappers who found it later.

Of course the movie was on my radar but listening to Marc Maron's WTF podcast interview with director Liesl Tommy sealed the deal. Tracey Scott Wilson wrote the screenplay and co-wrote the story with Callie Khouri. Nice that the top jobs on this picture went to women.

Kris Bowers is credited with the original score (I'm listening on Apple Music with my subscription) but you're unlikely to remember it when there are so many classic vocal songs, many of which are listed here

Shout out to costume designer Clint Ramos for the marvelous wardrobe.

I have watched one episode of the Nat Geo series about Aretha starring Cynthia Erivo, another terrific singer. It's good and some of the story is different, and I realized that I'd better get this one posted before watching any more of the series so as not to conflate the two.

Hudson was last blogged for Chi-Raq, Whitaker for Black Panther, Wayans for On the Rocks, McDonald for Beauty and the Beast, Burgess for Dolemite Is My Name, Maron for Sword of Trust, Blige for Mudbound, and Bowers United States v. Billie Holiday. This is Turner's second role and the kid has got pipes. Hair has been in one other feature.

Tommy and Wilson make their feature debuts after directing and writing, respectively, some TV episodes. Khouri, the Oscar-winning writer of Thelma & Louise (1991), also wrote Something to Talk About (1995), Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood (2002), and 8 episodes of the long-running series Nashville, which she created. 

Rotten Tomatoes' critics don't, to paraphrase Rodney Dangerfield, give this no respect, averaging only 66%, while its audiences loved it, coming in at 95. We rented it on iTunes on September 1.

In closing, let me give you an earworm: my friend Kim's mother thought the song was R-E-S-P-Beasley Street. Try to forget that!

Thursday, September 2, 2021

East Side Sushi (2014)

Jack and I liked this one, another feel good movie, about Juana (do not say Joo-anna), an immigrant living in East Oakland California with her father and young daughter, who has ambitions to become a sushi chef. The movie earned many festival nominations and wins. Diana Elizabeth Torres as Juana and Yutaka Takeuchi as Aki, the head chef, head up the cast, and the movie has many wins and nominations.

Anthony Lucero makes his feature debut both directing and writing the screenplay, and shot most, if not all, of the movie in his native Oakland, with cinematography by Martin Rosenberg.

The score by Alex Mandel features some taiko drumming and can be streamed on Apple Music, among others, with some tracks available on Soundcloud.

Torres, Takeuchi, Rosenberg, and Mandel have a few other credits but are all new to me.

Eleven years ago, at Vivian's request. I began a list of food movies. She actually recommended this one and it's now number 31 on the list.

Rotten Tomatoes' critics ate it up, averaging 95% and its audiences took a big bite at 83.

We watched it free with our Amazon Prime subscription on August 25.

Pixie (2020)

Jack and I thought this lots of fun. It's a dark comedy, a thriller, a western, a road movie, a gangster pic; talky, but great, as Olivia Cooke, in the title role, leads a couple of young men into crime in their native Ireland. Ben Hardy as Frank and Daryl McCormack as Harland are her bumbling henchmen. Colm Meany, who seems to be in nearly every Irish movie, plays Pixie's stepfather, and Alec Baldwin makes an appearance in, oh, the second act as a dangerous priest.

Barnaby Thompson directs from a script by his son Preston Thompson and the music by Gerry Diver and David Holmes is supplemented by this list of songs.

A few interesting trivia factoids are that McCormack, who is Irish, gave accent tips to Cooke and Hardy, who are English. Barnaby's favorite movie is Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), while Preston's is Something Wild (1986), no surprise given the humor and action in this one. I noted at the time that I enjoyed the photography by John de Borman.

Cooke was last blogged for Sound of Metal, Hardy for playing Roger Taylor (one of the members of Queen) in Bohemian Rhapsody, Baldwin for The Public, Holmes for The Laundromat, and de Borman for Made in Dagenham. I mentioned Meany in my post about Damned United, but did not profile him. So he was nominated for a Golden Globe for The Snapper (1993) which I loved, and his dozens of credits include The Commitments (1991) which I also loved and is part of the same series, Into the West (1992), Con Air (1997), and Get Him to the Greek. Daryl McCormack is new to me but not to his craft.

Barnaby Thompson has produced dozens of features and this is his third time directing, while his son Preston has written one other feature. This is Diver's feature composing debut after only three TV episodes.

Rotten Tomatoes' critics are minimizing this movie's worth, averaging 76%, though most appreciate Cooke's performance, and its audiences belittle it further at 66. Don't care. Liked it a lot.

We rented it on Apple/iTunes on August 4, 2021.

Dream Horse (2020)

What a feel-good movie! Based on a true story, it chronicles a group of Welsh village folks who pool their money to help bartender Jan Vokes raise a champion racehorse. A deglamorized Toni Collette does a wonderful job playing Vokes as does Owen Teale as her husband Brian. Damian Lewis comes in after a bit as a member of the Dream Alliance, and all the character actors are adorable.

Welshman Euros Lyn directs from a script by Neil McKay, and the music by Benjamin Woodgates can be streamed on Apple Music and elsewhere.

Collette was last blogged for I'm Thinking of Ending Things. Teale has dozens of credits but I don't know him. Lewis, who played Steve McQueen in Once Upon a Time...In Hollywood, is best known as Nicholas Brody in 37 episodes of Homeland and Bobby Axelrod in 60 of Billions. Lyn has directed dozens of TV episodes, two other features, and a couple of TV movies and this is the feature screenwriting debut for McKay. It's also Woodgates' feature debut.

There is a wonderful musical bonus during the credits. Do not miss it!

Rotten Tomatoes' critics are trotting along with an 88% average, with its audiences at a full gallop at 97.

We rented it on Apple/iTunes on August 21.