Movies to See Right Now (at home)

Helen Mirren in PRIME SUSPECT

This week: a binging recommendation for Labor Day Weekend, a revealing new documentary, a remembrance and the most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE.

REMEMBRANCE

Chadwick Boseman in MARSHALL. Photo credit: Barry Wetcher; courtesy of Open Road Films

Actor Chadwick Boseman, an emerging superstar after his iconic role in Black Panther, was able to humanize real life icons like Jackie Robinson, Thurgood Marshall and James Brown. My favorite Boseman performance was in Marshall, available from all the major streaming platforms,

ON VIDEO

Prime Suspect: Binge the 25 hours of Prime Suspect, with Helen Mirren’s extraordinary performance as Detective Jane Tennison. And here’s a look at its great supporting performances. All seven series of Prime Suspect can be streamed from Amazon (included with Prime).

Coup 53: Superbly researched documentary on the 1953 Iranian coup d’etat manufactured by the UK and the US, complete with new revelations. Available to stream on Virtual Cinema; I watched it at the Roxie.

APOCALYPSE ’45

Apocalypse ’45: Never-before-seen color film and the memories of survivors bring to life the grisly final two years of WWII in the Pacific. It premieres this weekend on the Discovery Channel .

The August Virgin: In the best movie of summer 2020, a young woman switches up Madrid neighborhoods to mix things up in her life. It’s a lovely and genuine story of self-invention, and it’s on my list of Best Movies of 2020 – So Far. The August Virgin is streaming on Virtual Cinemas, like San Rafael’s Rafael or Laemmle’s in LA.

The most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE:

ON TV

On September 6, Turner Classic Movies will broadcast the top heist film ever, the pioneering French classic Rififi: After the team is assembled and the job is plotted, the actual crime unfolds in real-time – over thirty minutes of nerve-wracking silence.

RIFIFI

THE AUGUST VIRGIN: in search of reinvention

Itsaso Arana in THE AUGUST VIRGIN. Photo courtesy of Outsider Pictures.

In the lovely and genuine The August Virgin, 33 year-old Eva (Itsaso Arana) is between relationships, not defined by any career success, and her biological clock is ticking. She knows it’s time for a reset. In August, Eva borrows an acquaintance’s apartment in another Madrid neighborhood and sets off on a series of strolls, in search of possibilities as yet unknown.

Many madrileños escape the city’s oppressive heat for the month of August. But Madrid is still filled with street festivals and tourists. Eva meanders around town, encountering old friends and making new ones. As Eva notes, in Madrid’s August, expectations are relaxed.

Eva is purposeful about shaking things up, but she has no plan other than to be open to the possibilities. That openness, with its fluidity and randomness, leads her to her moment of reinvention.

Eva is played by the film’s co-writer, Itsaso Arana. What’s so singular about Arana’s performance is that her Eva, as dissatisfied as she is with her current situation, is always comfortable in her own skin. She’s never desperate or needy (except when trying to negotiate a reluctant door lock) and always confident enough to engage with a stranger. At one point, the Spanish pop star Soleá sings, “I’ve still got time. I’m still here.”

THE AUGUST VIRGIN. Photo courtesy of Outsider Pictures.

The August Virgin’s other co-writer is director Jonás Trueba, and this is his sixth feature. I recently watched his next most recent film The Reconquest (La Reconquista) on Netflix, and it’s another intensely personal and genuine story, about two 30-year-olds reconnecting 15 years after a teen crush. Jonás Trueba is the son of Oscar-winning director Fernando Trueba (Belle Epoque, Chico & Rita).

Several critics have seen Trueba’s work as an homage to French New Wave filmmaker Éric Rohmer, but I found The August Virgin, with Eva’s serial conversations (real, probing conversations), reminded me of the more accessible work of Richard Linklater.

Madrid itself is on display here, with its searing daytime sun, and the liveliness of the streets, tapas bars and after-hours clubs when the sun goes down.

Trueba and Arana allow Eva her process, and she samples one experience after another, seemingly with the faith that one of them will lead her to where she wants to be. This is not a film for the impatient, but I found its two hours enchanting.

The August Virgin is on my list of Best Movies of 2020 – So Far and will be available to stream beginning Friday, August 21 on Virtual Cinemas, like San Rafael’s Rafael or Laemmle’s in LA.

Movies to See Right Now (at home)

Gemma Arterton and Lucas Bond in SUMMERLAND

This week: three new documentaries, a wonderful essay and the most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE. Plus, a rarely seen film noir is coming up on TCM.

First, I am reminding you about a MUST READ. That most literary of critics, the Bay Area’s own Richard von Busack, writes on the Golden Age and the COVID Era resurgence of drive-in movie theaters in SF Weekly: At the Drive-In: A Remembrance.

ON VIDEO

Summerland: Gemma Arterton and two child actors shine in the contrived melodrama Summerland, which finally arrives at its heartwarming conclusion. Available from most streaming services.

The Go-Go’s: The Go-Go’s have been the only all-female band to write their own music and play their own instruments ever to have a number one Billboard record. This is a modest film about a singular moment in popular music. Streaming on Showtime.

The Booksellers: This amiable documentary slips us into the obscure world of antiquarian book collectors and dealers. It’s a passion that few of us share, but, for the few, a passion it is indeed. Streaming from Amazon, Apple TV, YouTube and Google Play.

A Song for You: The Austin City Limits Story: This doc traces the history of TV’s longest-running music performance show. There’s a very heavy dose of the main producer, Terry Lickona, and the doc dives short shrift to the show’s greatest contribution – introducing mainstream American audiences to artists like Joe Ely, Marcia Ball, Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt. There are behind-the-stage anecdotes about Willie Nelson, Dolly Parton and Merle Haggard. It streams on Amazon (included with Prime).

Campbell Scott in THE 11TH GREEN

The most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE:

ON TV

Diana Dors and Victor Mature in THE LONG HAUL

On August 21, Turner Classic Movies airs The Long Haul, one of my Overlooked Noir. In a vehicle for the curvy Diana Dors, a world weary Victor Mature personalizes weariness, disgust, desperation and adherence to a code. The Long Haul isn’t available to stream, so DVR it on TCM this week.

Movies to See Right Now

Alan Parker’s THE COMMITMENTS

This week: The most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE, two remembrances and a wonderful essay on drive-ins.

That most literary of critics, the Bay Area’s own Richard von Busack, writes on the Golden Age and the COVID Era resurgence of drive-in movie theaters in SF Weekly: At the Drive-In: A Remembrance. This is a MUST READ.

REMEMBRANCES

Alan Parker had a gift for directing modern musicals (Bugsy Malone, Fame, Pink Floyd’s The Wall, Evita) but he was Oscar-nominated for two harrowing dramas, Midnight Express and Mississippi Burning. He also directed the deliciously trashy Angel Heart. My favorite Alan Parker film is the ever-delightful The Commitments.

Wilford Brimley in THE CHINA SYNDROME

Actor Wilford Brimley started out in life as a real cowboy. At age 45, he broke through as an actor playing Jack Lemmon’s loyal assistant engineer in The China Syndrome. More good curmudgeon performances followed on TV and in movies (Cocoon, Absence of Malice). Ironically, this fine actor is most well-known for a Quaker Oatmeal commercial.

ON VIDEO

Natalia Dyer in YES, GOD, YES

The most eclectic watch-at-home recommendations you’ll find ANYWHERE:

ON TV

Ben Gazzara and Timothy Carey in CONVICTS 4

On August 11, Turner Classic Movies is airing the very idiosyncratic Convicts 4, the true-life tail of one convict, played by Ben Gazzara, who develops into a fine artist while in prison. There’s a particularly unforgettable supporting turn by one of my favorite movie psychos, Timothy Carey, here in one of his most eccentrically self-conscious performances. The rich cast includes Stuart Whitman, Vincent Price, Rod Steiger, Jack Albertson, Ray Walton, Brodrick Crawford and Sammy Davis Jr.