Summer of Soul (…Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) review

Probably not necessary but I feel I should preface this review with the disclaimer that I’m not very good at deconstructing documentaries. Most of the time I just appreciate learning something I didn’t know before and as long as it’s well researched, I’m happy.

This week’s pick is different to the kind of factual content I usually consume, which is of course true crime because I am a middle-aged white woman – but despite this, I can appreciate what it must mean to many people and what an important part of Black history it really is. And it was almost never seen, which is just crackers to me.

Summer of Soul btw is the proud winner of multiple awards including Best Music Film at the Grammys and Best Documentary Feature at the Academy Awards. Not too shabby, eh?

So, come with me now back to the Summer of 1969…

Gladys Knight: It wasn’t just about the music.

Summer of Soul (2021)

Documentary about the legendary 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival which celebrated African-American music and culture and promoted Black pride and unity.

Directors: Questlove
Starring: Ethel Beatty, Al Sharpton, Barbara Bland-Acosta

*Spoilers*

During the Summer of 1969, over six Sundays between June 29 and August 24, Mount Morris Park in Harlem played host to the Harlem Cultural Festival. While the event was filmed in real time, the footage never saw the light of day until it was resurrected for this very documentary, 50 years after the fact.

Blended with stock news articles from 1969 as well as modern-day interviews with real festival goers and musicians, Questlove paints a vibrant picture of what it might have been like to be in attendance – and exactly what it meant to the Black community and Black history, which is all too often erased or omitted from the text books.

The far better known Woodstock festival actually took place on one of the Harlem weekends and received all the press – hm – despite massive attendance at Morris Park and the line-up of hugely impressive performers, including Stevie WonderNina SimoneThe 5th DimensionGladys Knight & the Pips and Sly and the Family Stone. As such Harlem became known as Black Woodstock which seems like lazy journalism to me, but okay.

Just a year earlier, Dr. Martin Luther King had been assassinated, which saw a spate of violent riots rip through Harlem – as well as a campus occupation at Columbia University protesting the building of a racially segregated gymnasium in a nearby park. Club singer Tony Lawrence had the idea to put together a series of concerts to celebrate the Harlem community and maybe dissipate some of the unrest.

Managing to convince the NYC parks department to allow him to host the event, he also called in the support of Mayor at the time and Black rights advocate, John Lindsay. While the programming was designed to showcase an array of Black music, from Jazz to Motown, pop and gospel, police presence was kept to a minimum and actual Black Panthers kept an eye on the crowd, sometimes from the trees.

While the music is stunning and speaks for itself, we hear from festival goers who have been moved by previously unseen footage to revisit their memories of that Summer and what it meant to them. Many of those interviewed were just children at the time and it’s pleasing to hear them acknowledge that it wasn’t all just a beautiful dream after all.

My thoughts

I don’t feel qualified enough to go into the musical side of this, however the richly eclectic program really does have something for everyone. A 19-year-old Stevie Wonder absolutely smashes the drums while a present day narrator, that may have been Chris Rock, praises the risks he took in his career. Nina Simone commands the crowd seemingly effortlessly and, by way of a poem, asks the crowd if they’re ready to fight.

5th Dimension recount us with the taunts that told them they weren’t black enough back then and that their sound just wasn’t cool – and how this gig allowed them to find themselves again which is beautiful.

Probably my favourite part was when some of the crowd were interviewed about Neil Armstrong’s moon landing which happened during the Harlem festival. One gentleman states he couldn’t give a shit while others ponder why the money couldn’t have gone into tackling the very real problems back on Earth. My sentiments exactly.

Most of the reviews I’ve read mention the gospel performances and there is a religious strain to a lot of the music. While this is interesting in itself, I did find myself zoning out a little bit when the discussion turned to the dissolution of faith in the youth at the time. So much shit was going on off the back of the Vietnam war and multiple assassinations, it seems only logical. I can however understand how music can be powerful enough to close the divide and inspire a new generation.

All in all this was a moving, multi-layered slice of magic that I have paid almost no justice to with my thoughts. Again, documentaries always feel a little like homework to me (unless they’re about heinous murder) but I know this is simply my own blocker. I enjoyed learning about this momentous event and absorbing some of the atmosphere secondhand via the medium of these rescued tapes.

– Genres: Music ∙ Documentary
– IMDB user rating: 8.0
– My score: 3.5/5
– Runtime: 118 mins


How did my girl get on with Summer of Soul? Did she rock out with her c**k out or was she slightly more reserved? Find out here.

Licorice Pizza review

Not much of an intro for this one. Nominated for three Academy Awards this year – Best Motion Picture of the Year, Best Achievement in Directing and Best Original Screenplay – PTA’s ode to first love has definitely been a stand-out for many.

Personally, I was most interested in Cooper Hoffman’s acting debut but I also went into this viewing with a slightly wary heart. Two of my most trusted movie buddies really disliked it. Luckily I’m a stubborn mule when it comes to cinema so I tried to shrug that off and form my own view.

So what’s the verdict then? Well, honestly, I’m still going back and forth.

“Fuck off, teenagers!”

Licorice Pizza (2021)

The story of Alana Kane and Gary Valentine growing up, running around and going through the treacherous navigation of first love in the San Fernando Valley, 1973.

Directors: Paul Thomas Anderson
Starring: Alana Haim, Cooper Hoffman

Spoilers

In 1973, in the San Fernando Valley, 25 year old Alana (Haim) meets 15 year old Gary Valentine (Hoffman). A photographer’s assistant, she’s on yearbook duties when she catches the eye of the teen. Instantly smitten, Gary quickly asks Alana on a date, which she 95% rebuffs, though in the short time they speak, there’s definitely a spark between them.

Much to Gary’s surprise, Alana shows up at the designated date spot later, though she already feels it’s against her better judgement. And so begins an epic friendship. Gary is eager to impress Alana so regales her with stories from his acting career and when his mother is unable to chaperone him on tour to New York, Alana goes in her place. She meets Lance on the tour, one of the other actors and begins dating him, though his anti-religious views don’t wash very well with her Jewish family.

Gary’s gutted when he spots Lance and Alana on a date but the pair reconnect again at a business expo where he’s selling waterbeds. Alana goes into business with him and they do pretty well until the oil crisis forces them to close up shop. Meanwhile, Alana decides to try her hand at acting too, auditioning for a role in a Rex Blau (Tom Waits) picture. Here she has a narrow escape when actor Jack Holden (Sean Penn), a motorcycle enthusiast, attempts a daring stunt with her on the back of his bike.

While the pair continue their friendship, Gary keeps pushing a romantic agenda, wondering aloud why Alana would agree to topless movie roles while refusing to show him her boobs. She flashes him. During their last waterbed job, Alana, Gary and team arrive at film producer Jon Peters’ (Bradley Cooper) house to install a waterbed. Peters is a prize arse, threatening to kill Gary’s brother if they mess up his house. While Peters is at a movie premiere, Gary deliberately fucks up the job as an act of revenge.

The team drive away but bump into Peters on the way back home. After a hairy encounter with the inebriated producer, Alana reassesses her life choices and seems keen to change direction – and distance herself from Gary at the same time. She begins to work for city councilman Joel Wachs (Benny Safdie) who’s running in the 1973 mayoral election. Gary finds out pinball machines are no longer illegal and opens his own arcade.

While Alana focuses on Wachs’ campaign, she learns he’s secretly gay. He asks her to pretend to be his boyfriend’s girlfriend to avoid their relationship getting out. She argues with Gary and criticises his immaturity while he makes digs at her being too obsessed with work. After their fight, the pair go looking for one another and it looks like they’re about to enter a new, more adult phase in their relationship.

Ew.

My thoughts

I can’t work out yet if I really didn’t enjoy this or whether I’m obsessed with it. Parts of it work beautifully and others just seem out of place or maybe could have been cut. While I like the study of Alana’s apparent aimlessness – which is very relatable – the film is so long. I don’t mind when a film ambles along if I’m enjoying myself but I started to tune out a few times.

The performances are completely naturalistic – Alana Haim is amazing – and she and Cooper Hoffman seem completely at ease with one another which helps engage you in their friendship. I can’t deny there’s an ick factor though, maybe because 15 year old boys seem so disgusting to me. To call this a romance is a lot but I do understand what Alana gets from Gary. Could she not just give it ten years?

A lot of the little side stories are fun but just add to the mammoth runtime. Gary’s wrongful arrest for murder, I’m looking at you. I also could have done with less (or no) Sean Penn segment and a little less crazy Bradley Cooper. Maybe that’s just me.

All in all, I do think this is worth people’s time – particularly if they’ve enjoyed PTA’s more obscure films (hello 2017’s Phantom Thread). I don’t think it’s his best or even the best film I’ve seen this month, but I’m still sitting with it and that’s not a terrible sign I suppose.

– Genres: Drama ∙ Comedy ∙ Romance
– IMDB user rating: 7.3
– My score: 3.5/5
– Runtime: 133 mins


What does Jill think of Licorice Pizza? Would she conduct a frenetic friendship with it or dump it for being Atheist in front of her parents? Find out here.

Tick, Tick… BOOM! review

This week we explore the fabulous all-singing, all-dancing real life story of Jonathon Larson, American playwright and the man responsible for making me cry every time I hear Seasons of Love from Rent. Except of course it’s not all roses as we experience his struggle to be somebody against the backdrop of the AIDS crisis, borderline poverty, the breakdown of his long-term relationship – oh, and turning thirty.

I hear you, hun.

Since it’s Oscar season on our blogs, I should mention that TTB was nominated in the Best Film Editing category – and our leading man received his second Academy nomination for Best Actor (the first time was in 2017 for Hacksaw Ridge).

Personally I think this is his second best performance of the year.

How much time do we have to do something great?

Tick, Tick… BOOM! (2021)

On the cusp of his 30th birthday, a promising young theater composer navigates love, friendship and the pressures of life as an artist in New York City.

Directors: Lin-Manuel Miranda
Starring: Andrew Garfield, Alexandra Shipp, Vanessa Hudgens, Robin de Jesus

*Spoilers*

In the early 90s, Jonathon Larson (Garfield) is juggling working at the Moondance Diner and finishing his passion project, the play Superbia. He plans to showcase his work and, God willing, take it to Broadway. On the cusp of turning 30, he’s freaking out hard and struggling to finish the last song in the show. For him, his upcoming workshop is his last chance to do something with his life.

At a party at Jonathon’s apartment, his girlfriend Susan (Shipp) tells him about a job she’s accepted outside New York. A dancer with her own issues (a broken ankle and long term physio), she’s keen to move to Jacob’s Pillow to teach dance. She asks him to go with her. While his best friend Michael (de Jesus) sees Susan’s offer as Jonathon’s chance to have a more serious future, he fails to give his girlfriend an answer either way.

Eventually, Susan grows tired of waiting for Jonathon to consider her invitation and she leaves. Meanwhile, Michael – a successful Ad Exec – swings our boy a focus group gig for good money. He deliberately sabotages it, angering his friend in the process. Not only is Michael fucked off about the job, he also feels Jonathon is throwing away a life with the person he loves for an unstable career that may or may not take off. An opportunity he himself, as a gay man amid the AIDS epidemic, doesn’t really have.

As Jonathon keeps on keeping on, just, he attends multiple funerals for his fallen friends, who have died of the disease. The group’s pal Freddy (Ben Levi Ross) has taken a turn for the worse too, and is moved into hospital. This devastates Jonathon who’s torn between finishing his last song and rushing to visit his friend.

Jonathon eventually finishes his musical, the night before his presentation is due – and the next day successfully shows off Superbia to a large group of friends, family, his agent Rosa (Judith Light) and his hero, composer and lyricist, Stephen Sondheim (Bradley Whitford). Unfortunately the play is not picked up which devastates and confounds him.

Will a surprise voicemail from Sondheim motivate Jonathon to keep going – or will he settle down to a more successful (and conventional) career like Michael? And talking of Michael, there’s devastating news ahead which forces Jonathon to re-evalute where his head’s been at all this time.

My thoughts

I loved this and nobody is more surprised than me, I’m not always the biggest musical fan. I guess I just like the cut of Larson’s jib – or, maybe I’m just biased because Rent is my life blood. The songs here are very powerful and fun – I particularly enjoy Come to Your Senses which made me cry. I’m not great at remembering all the songs but I also like the impromptu Boho Days performed at Larson’s house party.

Garfield is fantastic in this role – and he makes you love him even when he’s sabotaging himself and hurting others. I guess you’d be hard pressed not to root for Larson the underdog who just wants to leave his mark on the world, preferably before he turns 30. Who doesn’t relate to the relentless ticking of life’s clock, counting us down to death? I know I do.

What makes this movie so poignant is the fact that Larson passed away at the age of 35, the night before the first show of Rent on Broadway. You can’t get more tragic than that – and this knowledge lends more depth to his mission to build a legacy at any cost. Even if he didn’t know it.

The AIDS deaths are devastating too and really make you think. While I was around during the crisis, I was just a kid with no grasp of what it all meant.

Support is fantastic, particularly Larson’s singer friends, Roger (Joshua Henry) and Karessa (Hudgens) – Hudgen’s voice is gorgeous. She smashes Come to Your Senses with Alexandra Shipp and I love it so much. Rosa the flaky agent is also incredible.

All in all, I will say, I don’t really know my musicals that well but what I see here I dig a lot.

– Genres: Drama ∙ Biography ∙ Musical
– IMDB user rating: 7.5
– My score: 5/5
– Runtime: 115 mins


What does Jill think of this week’s pick? Would she risk everything to get this show on the road or sell-out for a guaranteed monthly pay cheque? Find out here.

The Power of the Dog review

This month we’re catching up on the awards season films we haven’t caught yet, which leaves quite a few options open to us. I’m very behind on what’s been buzzing this year.

This movie’s been on my list for a while but I’ve never really had the urge to sit down to it. Much as I appreciate the work of JC – and the cast involved – it just never seemed like the right time. Plus, I’m still doing the Pandemic thing of re-watching things I’ve seen a hundred times before, like 30 Rock.

Comfort is key, alright?

But let’s get down to brass tacks. Is this Gothic western any bloody good?

“Deliver my soul from the sword. My darling from the power of the dog.”

The Power of the Dog (2021)

Charismatic rancher Phil Burbank inspires fear and awe in those around him. When his brother brings home a new wife and her son, Phil torments them until he finds himself exposed to the possibility of love.

Directors: Jane Campion
Starring: Benedict Cumberbatch, Kirsten Dunst, Jesse Plemons

*Spoilers*
TW: Mention of suicide, animal dissection

Rancher Phil Burbank (Cumberbuns) isn’t exactly the warm and fluffy type. He holds court among his peers, who enjoy his stories (mainly about his friend and mentor Bronco Henry) but are clearly intimidated by his rough exterior. By contrast, his brother George (Plemons) is softly spoken and empathetic. The pair live alone – apart from a maid and their housekeeper – and employ a number of farm hands. I think, I actually don’t really know what ranchers do. Wrangle things?

One day during a meal at a local restaurant, the owner, widowed Rose (Dunst) and her son Peter (Kodi Smit-McPhee) fall foul of Phil’s wicked tongue. His comments about Peter (who doesn’t fit Phil’s masculine ideal) upset not only the boy but his mother, who is caught crying by George. Not long afterwards George and Rose marry – and she goes to live with the brothers.

Phil is just about as welcoming as you’d expect, failing to light the boiler to welcome the new Mrs Burbank on the night she arrives, and barely addressing her. George pushes Phil to make more of an effort with his personal hygiene for his new wife’s sake which causes him to stubbornly miss an important dinner with their parents. And so begins his dedicated campaign to drive Rose out, or at the very least, to the bottle.

Phil does have a somewhat secretive routine however, which involves him bathing in the river and stashing Broncho Henry memorabilia which he seems rather attached to. Could this gruff and stinking cowboy be hiding a painful secret?

When Peter comes to stay at the ranch over Summer break from college, things look set to become even more fraught on the farm. Rose is nervous when Phil takes her son under his wing – after Pete catches him swimming naked in the lake. He also steps in when the boy receives homophobic taunts from the other men. Soon he starts making Peter a braided rope and teaches him how to ride, and it becomes clear he’s molding himself into Pete’s mentor, whether he likes it or not. Pete in turn starts to open up about his father’s suicide. Phil wonders out loud about Rose’s drinking, which has intensified ever since she arrived (can’t think why).

Later Phil admits that Bronco Henry saved his life by lying with him one night to keep him warm. Peter asks if they were naked, which we all want to know frankly. The ensuing silence seems to say it all.

As Rose continues to worry about her son and Phil spending time together – and her drinking gets worse – she takes a pop at him by giving a collection of hides away to a Native American tradesman in exchange for a beautiful pair of gloves. Phil is distraught – and raging – as this means he can’t finish the rope. Luckily, Peter has a procured a hide of his own and is willing to donate the cured strips from it to the project.

Having obtained a bad cut to his hand during a recent work assignment, Phil’s health takes a nasty turn the next morning and this threatens to change the farm’s dynamic for good. But he must get the rope to Pete, above all else.

The actor Sam Elliott was recently criticised for his comments about The Power of the Dog. It seems he wasn’t pleased about the depiction of cowboys running around shirtless in leather chaps, which is strange because by definition I always think of them like this. Cowboy country just seems so innately homoerotic.

This is a beautiful film. It looks gorgeous and the performances are really good. It’s slow and moody though which I happen to enjoy but could be off-putting. Cumberbuns is at his best as the complicated Phil and my heart went out to him many times even though he’s a cruel bastard. Those few moments of him alone in his secret glenn speak to his devastating loneliness and loss – and it’s just all so sad.

The climax of the film seems very sudden but it actually paces out perfectly and is incredibly sinister. It also challenges the notion of strength – something Phil himself has been keen to control throughout. While Pete doesn’t fit the old ideal of what is masculine and powerful, he has a quiet and ambitious streak which pays off for him (and ultimately everybody). He’s an interesting character, as his actions (and preparation) hint at a pitch dark soul and it would be interesting to see where he goes from here.

Dunst is great as Rose too but she’s not given an awful lot to do beside play wife and mother. The subtle torture Phil puts her through is so chilling. The scene in which she’s practicing piano and he mirrors the tune with his own instrument (not that instrument) is premium gaslighting.

Camps won Best Director for this film, making her the third woman to win in this category in the history of the Academy Awards. She deserves it as far as I’m concerned. TPOTD is a powerful Gothic fairy tale in a Western’s stinking clothing – and I liked it.

– Genres: Drama ∙ Romance ∙ Western
– IMDb user rating: 6.9
– My score: 4.5/5
– Runtime: 126 mins


What does Jill think of this week’s pick? Would she donate raw hide to it, or leave it in the dust? Find out here.