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THE GOOD LORD BIRD

December 29, 2021 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Based on the novel by James McBride, THE GOOD LORD BIRD is a miniseries that tells the story of a young slave who is swept up with John Brown toward the Abolitionist’s violent fate at Harper’s Ferry, where he hoped to end slavery with an armed insurrection. I found the show uneven and at times tonally confusing, though it builds up to a very powerful finish.

First, let’s look at the historical John Brown. He became a national figure during the Bleeding Kansas period of violence in the territory over whether it would enter the Union as a free or slave state. While most abolitionists also believed in pacifism, Brown saw the slaveholder as morally sick and tied to an economic system that could only be reformed by destroying it. As a chosen instrument of God, he believed he would be the destroyer. After fighting in several pitched battles in this state-level civil war, he came up with a plan to capture the Federal armory at Harper’s Ferry and arm slaves to fight for their freedom. While this plan failed bloodily, with Robert E. Lee snuffing out the rebellion, it became a major catalyst for the Civil War that finally ended this horrific system.

So who was John Brown? A man who understood slavery as so utterly corrupting it could only be solved with bloodshed? A rabid religious fanatic hell bent on violence? A fool? THE GOOD LORD BIRD starts off with these questions in a story largely told through the eyes of Henry, a slave boy. After a fight with pro-slavery men, he is taken along by Brown to join his little army. As Henry is young, Brown mistakenly believes he’s a girl (and his good luck charm), and Henry plays along with it in the belief it’s keeping him alive.

I said the show was tonally confusing for me, and I’ll explain that. The first few episodes at times comes across as farce, comedy, and serious drama. I’m all for a good farce–I loved George MacDonald Fraser’s richly historically detailed FLASHMAN AND THE ANGEL OF THE LORD, which portrays Brown as being a morally upright and violent lunatic–but while Brown is fair game for a comic take, slavery isn’t for me.

I haven’t read the book, but watching the show, I wondered why the story had to be told from Henry’s point of view at all, as the character adds very little to the story aside from observing. Though Henry was a slave, he’s very young, and he considered his job–helping his father around a barber shop–as being easier than the life of a guerilla. On the slave side, the better mouthpieces are Frederick Douglas, who believes slavery could be solved without violence, and Harriett Tubman, who believes it could be solved with it. After watching extremely powerful stories like UNDERGROUND RAILROAD, I think Henry could have been brought much more to the story with a different background and taken a much stronger role in the conflict and theme. And while the show isn’t supposed to be a direct history lesson, it easily could have accommodated more of the background and events of Bleeding Kansas, a fascinating historical moment in the USA.

As the show proceeds, the comedy aspects fade away to the violent conclusion, which all plays out in a very satisfying way. The final scenes with Brown are stirring and powerful.

The acting is very good in this. Joshua Caleb Johnson brings a lot to the role of Henry, but Ethan Hawke’s John Brown steals the show, chewing every scene he’s in. It was clearly the role of a lifetime for him, and his acting goes a long way to make Brown not only come alive but appear larger than life.

So overall, I found THE GOOD LORD BIRD uneven but quite satisfying, particularly in how it wrapped up. Not highly recommended, but I’d recommend it just the same.

Filed Under: Movies & TV, The Blog

DEADPOOL 2 (2018)

December 27, 2021 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

So I’m going on a tear at Disney+ so I can drop it, and I discovered DEADPOOL 2 popping up. I had a lot of fun with the first one, so I jumped right on it. As a sequel, it’s just as fun if not more so than the original.

In the sequel, Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds being Ryan Reynolds and having fun every minute of it) loses everything he loves, and finds to earn peace he must do something good and unselfish. Along comes Russell, an angry teen mutant tortured at a research center who wants revenge and is the target of Cable (Josh Brolin being an awesome straight man to Reynolds’ shtick), a soldier from the future who wants to kill Russell because the kid is going to become a monster. It’s on Deadpool to do the right thing and get the kid on the right path.

I’m not a huge fan of the Marvel formula of a protagonist who constantly wisecracks his way through everything and otherwise offers a wish fulfillment fantasy. It’s entertaining, but if I knew these guys in real life, I’d probably find them exhausting. Despite being a little grating at times, Reynolds pulls it off, though, irreverent and self aware and keeping it light and fun for the most part. There are four elements in DEADPOOL 2 I found a fantastic addition: Deadpool assembling his own superhero team, who meet a hysterical fate; Zazie Beetz’s Domino, a hero whose superpower is being lucky; Brolin’s Cable, an unstoppable Terminator figure on a noble mission of murder and revenge; and Russell’s teamup with Juggernaut (voiced by Reynolds).

And that’s it, that’s the review. DEADPOOL 2 ain’t deep, it’s just good fun, and this sequel brings in plenty of terrific new elements to keep the party going.

Filed Under: Movies & TV, The Blog

MISSIONARIES by Phil Klay

December 27, 2021 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Phil Klay’s MISSIONARIES is a hell of an interesting read, though it often works better on a nonfiction rather than on a literary level. Let me explain.

Klay is a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps and the author of REDEPLOYMENT, a collection about veterans that earned enormous accolades. MISSIONARIES is a fairly ambitious followup, the result of six years of research. In this novel, a war reporter in Afghanistan, war veterans turned military contractors, narcos, paramilitaries, and intelligence officers in Colombia evaluate, experience, and try to counter the endless cycle of violence and drug trafficking.

The story contains a great deal of fascinating information, written with authority and flair and backed by solid research. It has a documentary feel to it at some points, a brooding SICARIO feel at other points. I love how Klay doesn’t posit easy answers or inject a moral narrative. He just tells you how it is, and how it is is very, very complicated. For me, this is where the novel really shines, in how it holds up for inspection a slice of the War on Drugs as an endless, cyclical war. This is my favorite kind of fiction, where I learn something without feeling like I’m in school, and where I’m exposed to engaging and interesting ideas, of which MISSIONARIES has plenty.

Where the novel works less for me is there are a lot of characters, and despite connections here and there, they don’t really tie together until deep into the last act. I don’t mind a sprawling story, but it needs to tie together thematically early on and eventually through the plot, ideally sooner than near the end. MISSIONARIES has a theme, though I’m not sure what it is other than the War on Drugs became the War on Terror and is now one unending global war, often fought outside the news headlines. Each of the characters is in one way or another an elite playing their part in the game, and we never see them face any real moral dilemmas about the dirty game they’re playing. And the way everything ties together, with a central conflict that doesn’t reveal itself until the last act and then gets resolved pretty quickly and without much fuss, makes this novel more a powerful snapshot of people and ideas than a coherent narrative.

So overall, A+ for ideas and good storytelling at the ground level, more a B or B- for characters and the way the story comes together. In short, I liked it a lot for its positive qualities, and I’m gonna check out his REDEPLOYMENT.

Filed Under: Books, The Blog

THE WHEEL OF TIME

December 27, 2021 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Based on the beloved high fantasy series by Robert Jordan, Amazon Prime’s THE WHEEL OF TIME is about a cyclical battle with evil that occurs every three thousand years in a fantasy world. I grew very curious about it when a reviewer called it superior to GAME OF THRONES, though I ended up finding such comparisons best left alone. The same with LORD OF THE RINGS, with which THE WHEEL OF TIME shares a lot in common. Overall, THE WHEEL OF TIME is engaging and fun, but its odd combination of heavy melodrama and perfunctory storytelling kept it from becoming a favorite, making me wish I’d read the books first.

In this story, Moiraine, a sorceress, is searching for the Dragon, a reincarnated hero who appears every three thousand years to fight the Dark One. What’s interesting about the prophecy is the Dragon could be any gender or even number of people, and the Dragon will either save the world or break it. Moiraine travels to a remote village with a proud history, where she meets five locals, one of whom she believes is the Dragon. Hunted by Trollocs, who are basically the Orcs of this world, they must travel to the White Tower and from there to the Dark One’s lair.

The world building is interesting. The Dark One has made it so any man who uses magic goes mad, basically making women the more powerful sex. Oddly, there is little tension resulting from this; the men just go along with women calling the shots enthusiastically. The sorceresses are pretty cool, with interesting powers, and when they use them in battle, it’s pretty awesome to watch them rain wrath and destruction on their enemies. Sets such as the haunted ruins of a city, the White Tower, the Dark One’s lair, and so on are great to look at. What’s missing, though, is an element tying them together. One could argue GAME OF THRONES is overly dense in the beginning with history and characters and family relationships, but wow, does its world ever looked lived in and feel real.

The characters are interesting enough, though there is a lot of contrived conflict, and it’s a relief to see some of them finally have a rational conversation and solve their problems. The central conflict, meanwhile, remains fairly perfunctory and kind of uninteresting throughout. There’s plenty of romance, though it rarely feels organic with far more telling than showing. Overall, there wasn’t a single character I could really get invested in. Repeatedly, I kept wondering if I would have enjoyed the show more if I’d read the books first, if for nothing else to fill in all the background stuff and get in the characters’ heads more.

So while THE WHEEL OF TIME never reached a favorite status for me the way GAME OF THRONES did (well, up to the fifth season, anyway, when GoT started to jump the shark and screw the pooch), I kept finding myself drawn back to it. It turned into a chicken soup kind of show for me, good but not great, and very comfortable to watch. So overall, I liked it, and I’ll watch a second season, but I’ll go on hoping that somebody, someday, will recreate the magic of GAME OF THRONES.

Filed Under: Movies & TV, The Blog

DON’T LOOK UP (2021)

December 26, 2021 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Written by Adam McKay (THE BIG SHORT, VICE) and David Sirota and directed by McKay, DON’T LOOK UP (2021) is a brilliant satire about how our culture warps reality, while reality hurtles straight at us uncaring what anybody believes it’s real or not. I loved it.

In this film, PhD student Kate (Jennifer Lawrence) discovers a new comet entering our solar system. Her professor, Dr. Mindy (Leonardo DiCaprio) does some calculations on its trajectory and comes to the horrifying realization the comet will smash into Earth in six months and destroy all life on the planet. What follows is a story about two scientists who simply want to convince humanity the threat is real and that they should do something about it.

The President (a blend of Trump and Hillary Clinton played by Meryl Streep) and her son and chief of staff (a blend of Trump’s kids, played by Jonah Hill), politicize the threat. A sociopath Silicon Valley tech billionaire (a blend of Steve Jobs and Elon Musk, played by Mark Rylance) wants to exploit the comet’s resources. Media personalities (played by various actors including Cate Blanchett) trivialize the threat and make its very existence a he said/she said argument. When the comet appears as an angry smear in the sky, humanity becomes galvanized between two sides, those who believe the threat is real (they look up) and those who stubbornly deny its existence.

This is pretty on the nose satire. Denial of science, evocative of climate change, COVID, and vaccine denial. Wonks believing the free market will fix existential crises. The popularity of placing oneself between two sides of an argument that has a clear, factually correct side. Celebrity culture impacting the popularity of one side or the other. Slimy billionaires and elites believing they can insulate themselves from problems facing all humanity while offering solutions that really benefit their own profits. America’s current inability and unwillingness to solve big problems that don’t involve blowing up another country.

Looking at Rotten Tomatoes, viewers generally liked the film, though it got much lower scores from reviewers, who tut-tutted about its tone and laughably became part of the satire themselves. You can skewer American culture with satire but not with too fine a blade, then it’s considered too shrill. In that, DON’T LOOK UP joins the ranks of films like IDIOCRACY.

So yeah, overall, I loved it. And I loved its tone. For me, as CHILDREN OF MEN captured the zeitgeist of the post-9/11 era, DON’T LOOK UP perfectly captures our current moment, and holds up for inspection America’s inability to solve big problems due to corruption, greed, distraction, and short-term thinking.

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, Movies, Movies & TV, The Blog

LAMB (2021)

December 22, 2021 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

LAMB (2021) is a visually striking, weird film about parental love and the natural order. I loved it, though the ending left me wanting.

In rural Iceland, Ingvar and Maria farm their land. The property is filled with animals–sheep, horses, a dog, a cat–but the couple obviously feel empty. Soon, we get hints of the tragic loss of a child. When an unnatural newborn is birthed in their sheep barn, they decide to raise it as their own, though its family seeks to reclaim it.

That’s kind of it as far as the plot goes. Ingvar’s brother Petur, a former rocker with impulse control issues, shows up to stir the pot, but it has little overall bearing on the story. Most of what we see is the couple going about their day, the raising of the strange child, and the hauntingly beautiful Icelandic scenery. This isn’t quite an art house film, but it does require a lot of patience. In that, it kind of reminded me of VALHALLA RISING, slow but striking and soulful in the visual telling. It gets under your skin, assisted in no small part by Noomi Rapace and Hilmir Snær Guðnason’s understated but affecting acting.

What really carries the film is the child itself. It’s weird and unnatural and oddly adorable, and yet the couple treats it as perfectly natural and give it all the love they’ve got. This is a great strength of the film, how seriously it takes its weird element. I found myself utterly sucked into it.

I won’t touch the ending out of fear of spoilers except to say it’s shocking and it makes sense, but it left me wanting, wanting as in I was saying, “Oh, is that it?” The filmmakers said it’s all open to interpretation, but they sort of set up a folk tale lacking a strong moral (or evidence of it through the characters being truly tested), making this one of those indie movies with an ending “intentionally open to interpretation” but where you wonder as a viewer if the makers simply didn’t know how to end it. A few extra minutes would have gone a long way there to bring it all home, define the new normal after the story ends, and crystalize the theme.

But that’s just me. Overall, I loved LAMB and recommend it. It’s a remarkable debut, an odd but firmly grounded modern folk tale.

Filed Under: Movies, Movies & TV, The Blog

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