Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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O.J.: Made in America (2016) - 9/10 - This was pretty comprehensive and was very well done.

Last Men in Aleppo (2017) - 7.5/10 - The White Helmets are a volunteer organization in Syria and the film shows them rescuing people from the rubble after Russian airstrikes during the Syrian Civil War. They also secure the dead bodies, clean up some of the rubble, and try to help people. All of this takes a toll and some of the members die during their work. It's a good film, though I was already familiar with the topic due to the earlier White Helmets short and Watani: My Homeland.
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The Battle of Berlin (1973) - 8/10 - This German documentary chronicles a year in Berlin, though it includes events from the frontlines as well. Berlin undergoes several months of daily bombing raids from the western allies and the Soviet forces slowly advance toward the city. Things get pretty bad in the city with the destruction and the lack of food. There was a lot of footage here that I hadn't seen before.

Chariots of the Gods (1970) - 4/10 - There are some cool places shown here that I would love to visit in person - Egypt, Easter Island, pyramids in Mexico, etc., but the ancient astronauts theme wasn't very believable.

20 Feet from Stardom (2013) - 8/10 - A film about a few of the black ladies who sang backup on many records back in the 1960s, 1970s, and beyond. A few of them had their chance at the spotlight, but others found that path blocked. I enjoyed the music, the stories, and the people.
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Life, Animated (2016) - 7/10 - Owen Suskind's autism caused him to retreat into himself and stop talking at age three. His love for Disney animated movies helped bring him out of this a few years later along with a lot of help from his family. The film shows Owen in his 20s, finally moving into his own apartment, though still somewhat dependent on family. It also uses video and drawings to look back on his struggles as a child. It was interesting and a decent film, though I did start to lose interest a bit toward the end.

Minding the Gap (2018) - 8/10 - Three young men grew up in Rockford, Illinois and became friends through skateboarding. One is white, one is black, and one is Chinese, but they all love skateboarding and dealt with abuse while growing up. The film shows them over a 10 year period by Bing, the director of the film and one of the three subjects. They each have their own struggles as adults and grow apart a bit. The film dives into a number of their issues and is very well done.

Man on Wire (2008) - 8/10 - A look back at Philippe Petit and his friends who strung a cable between the twin towers of the World Trade Center in 1974 to set up a 45 minute wire walking performance by Petit. The interviews and pictures/video were pretty cool. It was like a heist film in some ways with what they did to get everything set up. We also get to see a bit of Petit's earlier performances at Notre Dame in Paris and in Sydney plus practice before the event. I certainly wouldn't want to be out on a cable 1300+ feet in the air like that.

Abacus: Small Enough to Jail (2016) - 8/10 - Abacus is a relatively small bank that mainly serves the Chinese community. They were the only bank brought up on fraud charges in relation to the mortgage crisis, even though their mortgage loans have performed well and the charges were based on things that the bank self reported when they were discovered. It was definitely favorable to the bank's case and perhaps there is more to the story, but what was presented here looks really bad for the D.A.'s office.

My Country, My Country (2006) - 7.5/10 - The lead up to the national elections in Iraq in 2005 is covered here while there is still plenty of violence going on in the country. Dr. Riyadh is a Sunni physician who decides to run for the Baghdad council, but his party may decide to sit out the elections due to the continuing violence and distrust of the process. Much of the film focuses on Dr. Riyadh, his practice, and his family. It was an interesting watch.

The Weather Underground (2002) - 6.5/10 - The Weather Underground was a radical left organization in the late 1960s and 1970s that was involved in a bombings and helping break Timothy Leary out of prison. This film features interviews with former members plus archival footage and photographs. It wasn't bad, but it didn't seem as cohesive as it could have been.

The Hellstrom Chronicle (1971) - 7.5/10 - Are insects the true chosen ones who will inherit the Earth. The subject is explored here with some pretty good camerawork and narration looking at how a variety of insects survive, reproduce, act, etc. There are also a few bits from science fiction and horror films mixed in. There are elements of satire here, but the facts presented seem solid.
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Genghis Blues (1999) - 8/10 - Paul Pena was a blind blues guitarist and singer who learned of Tuvan throatsinging over the radio in the 1980s. He took it upon himself to learn how it was done and also to learn something of the Tuvan people and language. Over a decade later, he got the opportunity to travel to Tuva (a Russian Republic in central Asia) to participate in a throatsinging competition. He was accompanied by an amateur documentary crew and a couple of other people. The people there loved and appreciated his performances and he also got to travel across the country with his guide and friends. I enjoyed it quite a bit.

The Times of Harvey Milk (1984) - 8/10 - Harvey Milk was the first openly gay supervisor in San Francisco. He was assassinated in 1978 along with the mayor by a disgruntled former fellow supervisor. This film does a nice job chronicling Milk's election to the Board of Supervisors and what he accomplished there along with the aftermath of the assassination.

Hell and Back Again (2011) - 6/10 - This film follows soldiers in Afghanistan as they interact with locals and fight Taliban. Interspersed with it is one survivor who has returned home with his leg a mess as he tries to readjust to life back in the states and go through rehab. It was okay, but seemed somewhat disorganized in terms of how it was put together,

The Eleanor Roosevelt Story (1965) - 6/10 - Eleanor Roosevelt was a very interesting person. Unfortunately, the first half of this biography is pretty dull, much of that due to the uninspired narration. It gets better after that, though.

The Farm: Angola, USA (1998) - 7/10 - A look at life inside Angola Prison, focusing on a few of the inmates. One of them is on death row and will likely be executed soon and another is old and sick and has mostly stopped eating. Some still hold out hope for a pardon or an appeal, but many will be spending decades or even life in prison. It was a good documentary.

Off the Edge (1976) - 7/10 - Two guys decide to ski and hang glide in the mountains of New Zealand. We get over an hour of them skiing on various mountain slopes, spending their nights in a hut anchored at the top of one ridge, and then hang gliding from one mountain across a variety of terrain to a lake. The narration, scenery, and music were all pretty good.
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The Line King: The Al Hirschfeld Story (1996) - 7/10 - The life story of artist Al Hirschfeld is told through interviews with HIrschfeld, his family, many celebrities, and others. We also get to see plenty of his distinctive art from over the years. The film is worth seeing just for the art.

Searching for Sugar Man (2012) - 7.5/10 - Sixto Rodriguez is a Detroiter who recorded a couple of albums 50 years ago that did very poorly in the U.S., but later did very well in South Africa. Very little was known about Rodriguez, but he might have been more popular than Elvis in South Africa. There were a lot of rumors that he had killed himself on stage, but no concrete information was known. This film is about the search for information about Rodriguez back in the 1990s and the discovery that he was alive and living in Detroit. This led to a number of shows and a bit of a revival of his music career. I thought it was a nice film.

Dirty Wars (2013) - 5/10 - A journalist looks into secret operations by the U.S. military in Afghanistan and Yemen. Important questions are raised, but I didn't like the music used in the film or the style employed by the journalist. At times, it seemed to be more about him.

Twist of Faith (2004) - 6.5/10 - A Toledo firefighter confronts the sexual abuse he suffered as a teen at the hands of a Catholic priest. He meets with other victims of the same person and also attends a conference in St. Louis for survivors of abuse. His story is published in the local newspaper as well.

Black Fox: The Rise and Fall of Adolf Hitler (1962) - 6/10 - Marlene Dietrich narrates this documentary that relates Hitler to the old tales of Reynard the Fox. I don't think this was completely successful. The film uses archival footage and photographs along with drawings to cover Hitler's life, though it becomes more about Germany as a whole than Hitler at times and many things are skipped over, including much of the war from 1941-1945. Overall, it was okay, but I've seen better on the subject. I liked Stoumen's film about photography a lot more than this one.

When We Were Kings (1996) - 8/10 - This film looks back on the Rumble in the Jungle in 1974 between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman. It focuses much more on Ali and uses archival footage plus contemporary interviews with people like Norman Mailer and George Plimpton. There was a music festival in Zaire along with the fight and we get to see a bit of that as well. I thought it was interesting and entertaining, though Ali usually is.

14-18 (1963) - 8/10 - This French documentary does a nice job covering WWI from the assassination of Franz Ferdinand through the Treaty of Versailles. It doesn't really go into a lot of detail, but it gives a good sense of the course of the war and includes multiple perspectives. There is also plenty of footage that I don't recall seeing before in other documentaries and they include parts such as soldiers being granted leave which is interesting. The narration is also well done.
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Old Henry (Potsy Ponciroli, 2021) 10/10

Haunting Western takes old tropes of the genre and entwines truth and myth to form a lyrical story about survival and redemption. An old farmer (Tim Blake Nelson), living with his sheltered teenage son (Gavin Lewis) out in the wilderness of Oklahoma, discovers a near-dead man (Scott Haze) with a cache of bank notes. He brings him home only to be confronted by a posse led by a crook (Stephen Dorff) looking for the man and the loot. It's three men versus a gang of cutthroats with the inevitable shootout played out at the end. However, the screenplay has hidden depth as vague clues gradually reveal the character of the old farmer to be someone with more than a few skeletons in his closet which are revealed during the deadly shootout. Tautly directed film - sharply reminiscent of both Ford and Peckinpah - has an outstanding central performance by Nelson who gets totally into the skin of the character and manages to easily lift the plot and makes it seem fresh. Memorable production values (topnotch cinematography, editing, production design, score) add to the film's stature making it a slice of vintage Americana not to be missed.

Copshop (Joe Carnahan, 2021) 7/10

An homage to "Assault on Precinct 13" with lashings of Tarantino shamelessly part and parcel of its action-packed plot. A rookie cop (Alexis Louder) - petite black female with a Nazi grandfather as part of her quirky background - a hitman (Gerard Butler) and a conman (Frank Grillo) find themselves locked inside the lockup room at a police precinct while a psychotic killer (Toby Huss) with a contract on the conman tries to find his way in. Everyone at the precinct, except for the female cop, is on the make and a crook. The cops who are straight are quickly sent to their maker leaving the field open for the foursome to confront each other. The conman intentionally gets himself jailed to escape his pursuers but a professional hitman also feigns drunkeness and gets himself incarcerated to get at him. Before he can doff the conman another hired killer - witty but psychotic - lays siege to the precinct and tries to flush out his victim. Pulpy thriller straight out of the 1970s but with bloody gore galore is held together by the feather-weight Louder who is more than able to stand ground against the three hulking men who are on a mission of deadly mayhem. It's all been done before. And many times over. Yet manages to be a thrill ride as you root for the good gal to shoot the shit out of the bad guys. Great fun.

Les yeux cernés / Marked Eyes (Robert Hossein, 1964) 6/10

Rather strained noir has atmosphere but moves at a snail's pace. A sawmill owner, hated by all his employees, is found murdered and witnessed by someone. His estranged wife (Michéle Morgan) arrives in the small hillside Austrian town for his funeral. She hadn't seen him in three years, received occasional payments from him and was on the verge of divorcing him. She is informed by his solicitor that she is his sole heir and soon after starts receiving typed letters demanding money. She is also plagued by the constant sound of a typewriter in the hotel. Avoiding the cop on the case she instead confides in the mill's manager (Robert Hossein) who had recently been fired. The man quietly insinuates himself into her affairs spending time with her much to the jealous consternation of his sexy teenage girlfriend (Marie-France Pisier) who appears to know more than she divulges. Hossein directs with a lot of flourish using odd camera placings and acts with appropriate ambiguity - is he the murderer or is it the young prying girl? The deadpan Morgan's glacial expression matches the chilly Austrian environment as the four cast members play out their cat-and-mouse game on outdoor locations - the forest and sloping hillside - and indoors in the corridors, rooms and labyrinth-like basement of the vast empty hotel they are all housed in. Hossein, who also wrote the story, lifts chunks of plot from Henri-Georges Clouzot's "Le corbeau" and "Les diaboliques". Pity it moves so slowly as it could have been much better if Hossein had injected a little more suspense into the screenplay. Pisier is an absolute knockout as the promiscuous young girl constantly on the prowl and gets a great scene where she seduces herself in the mirror which gets Hossein all hot and bothered before jumping into bed with her.
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The Salt of the Earth (2014) - 8.5/10 - This film chronicles the 40 year career of Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado. He's spent his career traveling all over the world, often working on self selected projects for years. This includes Rwanda, Kosovo, and Kuwait during conflicts there. He's published a number of large books and had his photographs published in numerous places. It was very interesting seeing the pictures and video from his various projects as he tells what was happening at the time, including his motivations. He became more interested in nature later in his career. It is a very nice film.

Finding Vivian Maier (2013) - 8.5/10 - John Maloof purchased a trunk full of negatives at an auction and was surprised at the quality of the work. He tracked down items from her estate purchased by others and came up with more pictures. He started looking into who this woman was and discovered that she was a reclusive nanny who had taken photographs for about 60 years, but didn't share them with others. I thought it was a very interesting film as we discover more of who this lady was through interviews with people who knew her. The photographs are also very good.

Burma VJ: Reporting from a Closed Country (2008) - 7.5/10 - Underground reporters take video of conditions in Burma where the military dictatorship keeps strict control of the country. If caught, the reporters face jail, beatings, or worse. Protests by students, monks, and others are captured by the reporters as is the government crackdown in response. It's a decent film.

Children of Fate: Life and Death in a Sicilian Family (1993) - 7/10 - In 1961, filmmakers visited a slum in Palermo called Cortile Cascino and documented the life and struggles there, focusing on one particular family. The documentary ended up not airing, but 30 years later the director's son and daughter-in-law visited Palermo again, found the family from the first film and caught up with how they were doing and what had changed in 30 years. Footage from the original film is interspersed with the new footage. The film wasn't bad and it was interesting comparing 'then and now'.

Murderball (2005) - 7/10 - The rivalry between the U.S. and Canada in wheelchair rugby along with the lives of some of the players/coaches is shown here, culminating in the 2004 Paralympic Games. The actual rugby matches were probably the least interesting parts of the film. The parts exploring the lives of the people were much more interesting.

If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front (2011) - 7/10 - Daniel McGowan and other members of his Earth Liberation Front cell committed a number of arsons back in 2000/2001. The FBI finally caught up with them 5 years later due to one of the members turning informant. They have to decide whether to take a plea deal or potentially face life in prison. The events and motivations are explored here through interviews of parties on both sides. It was decent.

Exit Through the Gift Shop (2010) - 8/10 - Banksy directs this documentary about Thierry Guetta, a French-American who became enamored with street art and started hanging around and filming artists in a number of countries. Banksy eventually took an interest him and encouraged him to try and create his own art. This led to Guetta becoming Mr. Brainwash, a successful and wealthy artist. I don't know how much of this film is true and how much is a put on by Banksy, Shepard Fairey, and Thierry Guetta, but it was a funny and entertaining film.
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@BigMagilla

It was a review after many years.
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Reza wrote:Young Bess (George Sidney, 1953) 8/10

Princess Elizabeth (Jean Simmons), daughter of King Henry VIII (Charles Laughton) who would later go onto become the virgin Queen Elizabeth I, falls in love with Thomas Seymour (Stewart Granger) who in turn is in love with the King's sixth wife Catherine Parr (Deboarah Kerr). Soap opera Tudor style is based on the bestselling historical novel by Margaret Irwin. The somewhat fictional story follows the tempestuous young girl's early life as she is shuttled between court and virtual imprisonment at Hatfield House at the whim of her despotic father while he keeps getting married - Laughton returns briefly to the part which had won him an Oscar way back in 1933. The film was also an occasion for both Granger and Simmons - then married to each other - to act together on screen. This was one of Simmons' most memorable roles and Granger's favorite film. Exquisitely produced at MGM the film's production and costume design received Oscar nominations.
Surprised it took you so long to get around to this one, unless it was a re-showing.

Also of note is the rare casting of Deborah Kerr in a supporting role (as Catherine Parr) during her career peak, three years after starring opposite Granger in King Solomon's Mines and six years after starring in Black Narcissus in which Simmons had a supporting role. Also in it was Kathleen Byron, the mad nun from Black Narcissus as Ann Seymour. Surviving cast member Rex Thompson who played the ill-fated King Edward, later played Kerr's son in The King and I. An under-rated film, this is the one Simmons should have gotten an Oscar nomination for when her votes were split between this and the other two films for which she won the NBR award, The Actress and The Robe.
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Belfast (Kenneth Branagh, 2021) 8/10

Branagh's loving ode to the Belfast of his childhood. A wistful look (in monochrome) at life of a Protestant family living in a mixed neighborhood with Irish Catholics. The story is seen through the eyes of a delightful 9-year old boy (Jude Hill) - as he goes about his business being a kid. We see him at school in class with a crush on a fellow student, his interactions with his granddad (Ciarán Hinds), grandma (Judi Dench), his wayward dad (Jamie Dornan) who works far away in London and visits during the weekend and his lovely willowy and long-suffering mum (Caitriona Balfe) as she worries about her husband's back taxes and gambling debts. There are delightful moments at the cinema as the family watch "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" and "One Million Years B.C." in glaring colour. The story also weaves in the "troubles" as hooligans create religious differences with violent riots witnessed in full fury by the child and his family. Funny, sad and frightening episodes all gell together to create vivid moments in the child's life which Branagh and the sound department help to create by having the camera swoop down to the level of the boy's height as he listens in on snippets of grown-up conversations - some of which he understands and some which confuse and frighten him. Superbly acted film is a lot like John Boorman's "Hope and Glory" where the story was also propelled through the eyes of a young boy during the Blitz in London. Great use of music by Van Morrison on the soundtrack and a lovely moment where Dornan serenades Balfe with song and they dance together.

The Last Duel (Ridley Scott, 2021) 6/10

It took me a while to get used to three full-blooded American actors playing frenchmen from the 14th century but then if I can believe certain other actors fly through the air and climb up walls I can most certainly put aside the old notion that only Brits should be allowed to play in historical epics of the European kind. Scott's epic historical saga - an important cultural legend in France - is about the last "judicial" duel permitted by the French king and the Parliament of Paris. Duels to settle honour were commonplace but this was the last one that was decreed by royal command to settle a dispute. That dispute was over a rape. Marguerite de Carrouges (Jodie Comer), a french noblewoman, confesses to her husband Jean de Carrouges (Matt Damon with a hideous hairdo), a French knight, that in his absence she was raped by their neighbour and his erstwhile friend Jacques Le Gris (Adam Driver) who in turn denies he attacked her. The screenplay (by Nicole Holofcener, Damon & Affleck) attempts to provide a modern #MeToo relevance to the story as the rape of the woman is seen and repeated from different perspectives offering variations on the events from the point-of-view of each of the three central characters not unlike in Kurosawa's "Rashomon". The two men start out as friends but get into a dispute over property received as dowry with the King's cousin (a platinum blonde, Brit-accented Ben Affleck given to constant mutterings of the word "fuck" and indulging in endless orgies) siding with the alleged rapist. The hilarious medieval belief was that a woman could only conceive if she has an orgasm during sex. The lady gets pregnant soon after her rape and the duel is to decide whether the baby's father is the husband or the friend. If the husband kills the rapist during the duel then it proves that the rape occurred. If instead he dies then his wife will be stripped and shorn and burnt at the stake for lying. The woman, no matter how rich or noble, is basically treated like chattel. Sex is something to be endured by a woman while the husband gropes, pokes and comes. Pleasure is the last thing on her mind during the sexual act. The alleged rapist, claiming to be in love with the woman, forces himself onto her but clearly believing in his mind that it is consensual despite hearing her protest and struggle. Surrounding this central theme of sex without consent, which has a strong whiff of soap opera, Scott harks back to his film "Gladiator" with scenes of gut-wrenching violent battles as soldiers in heavy armour clank and kill. Erratic overlong film has outstanding production values with only Jodie Comer a standout amongst the cast.

Curtain Up (Ralph Smart, 1952) 7/10

A tatty little provincial theater is the backdrop for a group of actors trying to rehearse a play. The director (Robert Morley) is very critical of the play and decides to cut pages of dialogue which he feels is superflous much to the horror of the play's author (Margaret Rutherford) who unexpectedly arrives and tries to take charge. The two memorable leads, who come with their very distinct and familar acting tics, set the tone for the inevitable clash. Meanwhile the actors all have problems of their own which does not endear them to either the sarcastatic director or the indignant author. Morley and Rutherford, both hilarious institutions, lead a great cast of supporting actors - lovely Kay Kendall as the leading lady with an alcoholic womanizing husband, Michael Medwin as a twit trying to get laughs from the dialogue when there's none in the play, Joan Rice as the ingenue who thinks maybe acting is not for her and Stringer Davis as her father the vicar. Whacky threadbare plot is held quite firmly by the shenanigans of both Morley and Rutherford.

Young Bess (George Sidney, 1953) 8/10

Princess Elizabeth (Jean Simmons), daughter of King Henry VIII (Charles Laughton) who would later go onto become the virgin Queen Elizabeth I, falls in love with Thomas Seymour (Stewart Granger) who in turn is in love with the King's sixth wife Catherine Parr (Deboarah Kerr). Soap opera Tudor style is based on the bestselling historical novel by Margaret Irwin. The somewhat fictional story follows the tempestuous young girl's early life as she is shuttled between court and virtual imprisonment at Hatfield House at the whim of her despotic father while he keeps getting married - Laughton returns briefly to the part which had won him an Oscar way back in 1933. The film was also an occasion for both Granger and Simmons - then married to each other - to act together on screen. This was one of Simmons' most memorable roles and Granger's favorite film. Exquisitely produced at MGM the film's production and costume design received Oscar nominations.

The Redhead from Wyoming (Lee Sholem, 1953) 6/10

In the midst of a range war over cattle a fiery redhead (Maureen O'Hara), who is part business woman and part stage performer, comes across two men. Her former boyfriend (William Bishop) who not only swindled her years before but plans to swindle everyone on his way to the governorship and the saddle tramp sheriff (Alex Nicol) who loves the redhead. Nothing new but action-packed film with lovely O'Hara always a good enough reason to sit through a western.
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Come and See (1985) - 9/10 - During WWII, a boy leaves his village to join the resistance and fight the invading German army in Byelorussia. He encounters many horrors that quickly terrorize and age him. It's an excellent anti-war film.

Always a New Beginning (1974) - 7/10 - Glenn Doman and the Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential are shown here. Doman developed methods to work with young children who were unable to walk due to brain injuries and get them to progress to the point where they could walk. He found that it also helped in other areas so he began looking into brain development. The film shows visits to numerous countries and people as part of this research, including multiple places in Africa, South America, Asia, and elsewhere. It was interesting.

Balseros (2002) - 8/10 - Back in 1994, many Cubans tried to reach the United States via homemade rafts. Some made it, some died, some had to turn back, and some got taken to Guantanamo. This film follows a number of these individuals and the families that they leave behind. They show how those that make it to the U.S. adjust to life there. They also check in with them again five years later. It's a pretty good film.

Born Into Brothels: Calcutta’s Red Light Kids (2004) - 8/10 - Zana Briski is a British photographer who was in Calcutta photographing the prostitutes there when she befriended their children who also lived in the brothels. She started teaching them photography and tried to help them get into boarding schools so that they would have more opportunities for education and choices once they grew up. It's a good film and was a lot more upbeat than I thought it would be. The kids were interesting and really seemed interested in the photography.

Genocide (1982) - 8/10 - Simon Wiesenthal introduces and Orson Welles narrates (along with Elizabeth Taylor at times) this film about the Holocaust and the events leading up to and after the genocide. I've seen a number of other films on the subject that are also good. This one has a nice score and does a few different things such as split screens and having multiple images.
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March of the Penguins (2005) - 7.5/10 - Every year, emperor penguins walk a long distance from the sea to find a mate, breed, and care for their egg/chick if they are lucky. They go for a long period without food during the Antarctic winter. This film has really nice cinematography and is narrated by Morgan Freeman.

Serengeti Shall Not Die (1959) - 8/10 - This nature documentary has a lot of really nice shots of animals and the land in the Serengeti. A plane and jeep painted like zebras are used to track the animal migration of the various herds and to battle poachers. It's a nice film, though unfortunately the cinematographer died in an accident on location.

Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience (2007) - 7/10 - Veterans of Iraq, Afghanistan, and other wars relate their experiences and the stories that that they wrote about their time there. The stories are reenacted through live action and with drawings.

Walls of Fire (1971) - 6/10 - Ricardo Montalban narrates this documentary about Mexican mural painting, focusing on the careers of three highly regarded artists - José Clemente Orozco, Diego Rivera and David Alfaro Siqueiros. Siqueiros plays a more prominent role since he was the only one of the three alive when this was filmed and we get to see the construction of his March of Humanity exhibit. The artists are clearly talented, but the style of art really didn't appeal to me for the most part. I found the film a bit boring.

Street Fight (2005) - 8/10 - The last 100 days before the 2002 Newark Mayoral election between longtime incumbent Sharpe James and relative newcomer Cory Booker Is documented here. James used police to intimidate those who favored Booker. He also denied access to the filmmaker. It was a good film.

Cutie and the Boxer (2013) - 7/10 - The film looks at a married Japanese-American couple who have been married for about 40 years and are both artists. Ushio turns 80 and creates some of his art by putting on boxing gloves, dipping them in paint, and punching a canvas. Noriko is about 20 years younger and she has created cartoon images with Cutie and a character named Bullie that represent her and her husband. Their marriage has been filled with struggle, poverty, and love. Noriko is asserting herself more as an artist now than when she was younger. I thought it was interesting seeing the old footage from the 1970s/early 1980s with the couple. It was a decent film.

Which Way Home (2009) - 8.5/10 - A film crew follows a number of migrant children as they travel from Central America and southern Mexico to try and reach the United States. They ride on freight trains and encounter a number of dangers along the way and not all of them make it. I thought it was very well done.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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The Other Half of the Sky: A China Memoir (1975) - 7.5/10 - In 1973, Shirley MacLaine took a somewhat diverse group of women to China as part of a cultural exchange. They were accompanied by a film crew consisting of four women to document their journey. At first, the people in China were not sure what to make of these foreigners, but they soon became friends, The group got to interact with many people, see a lot of sights, and get to know the way many of the Chinese people lived. They also got to ask questions about a number of topics to see how life in China was different or the same as life in the U.S. It was interesting and I especially enjoyed seeing the various activities rather than the question and answer sessions.

Sound and Fury (2000) - 8/10 - This documentary is about a family where one son (Peter) is deaf and his wife (Nita) and three kids are also deaf. His brother (Chris) is hearing, but has a wife (Mari) who is a child of deaf adult. Chris has infant twin boys where one of the twins is deaf. He and his wife look into getting a cochlear implant for their son, but Mari's parents are against it. Peter's oldest child (5 year old Heather) asks about getting a cochlear implant, but Peter and his wife are afraid that she will lose her deaf culture. Peter's mother pushes for the implant. There is a lot of debate and conflict here as the two families have to decide what to do. It was pretty well done. I also watched the short documentary that updates the situation six years later.

Murnau’s 4 Devils: Traces of a Lost Film (2003) - 7/10 - This film uses stills, excerpts from the script, and storyboards along with narration to recreate this lost film about four orphans who become circus trapeze artists. There were some interesting bits of information as well. I hope that a print of the original version of the film turns up some day.

A Queen is Crowned (1953) - 5/10 - Laurence Olivier narrates the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II and the associated parades. There is a lot of colorful pageantry and it is somewhat interesting from a historical perspective, but the film itself is pretty boring.

For All Mankind (1989) - 8/10 - This film is narrated by Apollo astronauts and uses actual footage from missions to the moon during the 1960s and 1970s. I thought it was pretty cool.

Daughter from Danang (2002) - 8/10 - Heidi Bub was born in Vietnam in 1968 to a Vietnamese mother and an American father. She was part of Operation Babylift when she was six years old and ended up adopted by a single mother in Tennessee where she became fully Americanized. She sought more information about her birth mother 22 years after her adoption and was able to locate her. A film crew accompanied her on a visit to Vietnam to reunite with her mother, siblings, and other family. Things don't go totally as expected and this is a pretty good film.

Crèvecoeur (1955) - 6/10 - A young French lieutenant arrives in Korea to serve in a French battalion of UN forces. He is initially assigned as a liaison officer to the Americans, but is later given his own command and has to lead his men in battle. It didn't really seem like a documentary, but was labeled as such. The film itself was only so-so.

There is a documentary challenge on another film site that I follow so I'll be busy catching up on a lot of Oscar nominated documentaries this month.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Post by Reza »

The Circle (James Ponsoldt, 2017) 3/10

A techno-thriller devoid of any thrills. Young girl (Emma Watson) gets a job at a powerful internet company - The Circle - and soon finds herself amongst the company's innermost circle, the co-founder (Tom Hanks), who takes a shine to her and persuades her to go "live" via 24-hour camera so viewers can watch her every move at any given time. Of course she gets private time when in the loo although she invades the privacy of her parents (Bill Paxton and Gleanne Headley) when she looks in on them and they are having sex which goes out live to all her viewers much to her parents' polite annoyance. The tricky evil of the tech company - getting people to expose their lives while upbending privacy laws - falls flat as the screenplay follows this boring girl - Watson was nominated for a Razzie as worst actress of the year - who wanders in a trance-like state without realizing the ramifications of the experiment she is involved with. The screenplay starts out by making it clear that this girl is a brainiac so for her to not get what she is doing as something wrong makes the whole story implausible. When she manages to turn the tables on her boss the smiley-faced Hanks merely mutters "we are so fucked". The element of danger and suspense is totally missing hence it makes for a rather dull film with nowhere to go.

Passing (Rebecca Hall, 2021) 8/10

Neither Tessa Thompson nor Ruth Negga can pass for white women yet both play characters, in this exquisite adaptation of Nella Larsen's novel, who do. One moreso than the other. A light-skinned black woman (Tessa Thompson) with a black husband (André Holland) and two young sons runs into a platinum blonde childhood friend (Ruth Negga) at a local hotel in New York. She is not only passing herself off as white but also happens to be married to a white man (Alexander Skarsgård) who not only hates black people but is also unaware of his wife's true ancestry. Hall, who is herself of mixed ancestry, took on this project to settle whatever demons were plaguing her own mind about colour and race. The central concept of "passing" for white remains sort of suspended in the air as the plot takes off on other tangents - the black couple trying to explain racial slurs to their two confused boys, the husband wanting to leave racist America and settling down abroad away from violence and the wife growing suspicious of her husband's growing interest in the flighty friend who seems to be fed up of her white husband and appears to be on the verge of moving back to a life in black Haarlem. Actually none of these topics gets a full run-through as the plot moves in a dream-like haze flitting from scene to scene - Eduard Garu's stunning black and white cinematography helps to achieve the dreamy mood of the characters and the plot. Despite the film's low budget the production and costume design are visually elegant giving the film a marvelous period sheen. The entire cast is impressive with Negga a standout as the bold and dramatic head-turner who seems to be equally comfortable whether living a lie in a white world or getting downright rambunctious in her own black world.

A Boy Called Christmas (Gil Kenan, 2021) 7/10

Little Nikolas (Henry Lawful), fed up with his nasty babysitter aunt (Kristen Wiig), sneaks off with his pet mouse in search of his woodcutter father who has gone on a quest to bring back hope in order to win money in return from the King (Jim Broadbent). Using a map he discovers inside the hat his late mother (she was devoured by a bear - like all good kids' stories death is always presented in the most horrific of manner) left him he treks off in the snow in search of the kingdom of Elfhelm. A reimagining of the Santa Claus story is built around another babysitter (Dame Maggie Smith), grand aunt to three African-American kids (its 2021 so we are in the usual "diversity" territory) who no longer believe in or celebrate Christmas (their mother is also dead while dad is in a confused quandy), so she tells them the bedtime story of little Nikolas as a means to prove the importance of Santa and Christmas. Meanwhile we get to go on the magical journey and meet a reindeer, a troll and a winged pixie and get to see the origin of various Christmas customs built around lessons of kindness and courage. Charming film for kids and grownups who still have the fire of childhood burning inside them. All others who puke at the sight of cute kids and magic may refrain from entering this kingdom of schmaltz. Dame Maggie is her usual vinegary self which makes all her moments on screen count.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Post by gunnar »

tick, tick... BOOM! (2021) - 7.5/10 - It's 1990 and Jonathan Larson is a struggling writer trying to get his rock musical produced and he's about to turn 30. This is years before Rent would become a huge hit. Andrew Garfield is excellent as Larson and the supporting cast is pretty good. I also liked many of the songs, but I did feel that the film dragged a bit from time to time. It's still a good film, though.
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