Shakuntala Devi

Shakuntala Devi was a human whirlwind.

And she knew it. It doesn’t take a math genius to figure that, if you’re going to school just to teach the teachers, your future is bright. She happily sped past hometown and family.

Her globetrotting journey is exciting and impressive. But the second half of the movie is as much about her capabilities as it is about her mistakes. Family life was never her strong suit, and raising a daughter forces her to deal with this.

The movie is based on a true story, though was clearly edited to be light, entertaining, and modern. Some points drag, but they’re soon picked up by Shakuntala’s devastating aptitude and charm.

Let It Burn

We let it, so we should watch it.

Addicts from the streets of Sao Paolo are people, too. We stay with them for a bit in their latest “home,” a repurposed shelter.

Its air is thick with broken dreams. But the residents don’t share sob stories, they just live their lives, letting us watch.

Spending time with them, we can feel the heartbreak, violence, or bad luck. Cramped space and harsh lighting are constant reminders of the prison of their lives. Smiles and songs are too-brief reminders that life can be something better.

It is a nonjudgmental movie where people are the stars. But they live in a sky nobody cares to look at anymore.

Vivarium

Vivarium is life . . . if you can call this living.

Gemma and Tom are looking for a house. An eager, if strange realtor knows just the place for them: A perfect place to live forever.

Anyways, the young couple doesn’t need perfect, and this one-note neighborhood is far from it. Things turn queasy when Gemma and Tom try to leave.

This movie is just spectacular. From beginning to end, every aspect (set design, coloration, editing, cinematography, writing, acting, directing, music, and so on!) creates a plastic, unsettling world that tells a story about ours. Humans can aspire, making perfect little things to use in our perfect little homes. But we’re deluding ourselves. Nature is one, scary thing, and we all know it.

The King of Staten Island

Who’s the King of Staten Island?

It can’t be Scott. He’s aimless; jobless; addicted. And this even though people love and support him. He just can’t seem to move on after his father died fighting a fire.

But his family is. Everyone else is. So something’s gotta change, for better or worse.

There are heavy themes here, but the movie is never heavy. It’s as smart, sweet, and funny as its characters. Perfect casting keeps Scott’s journey real but entertaining, and transports us to a place and mindset called Staten Island.

Father Soldier Son

Father Soldier Son. Words that define.

Brian is enlisted in the U.S. Army. He’s also a single father, worried about leaving his two boys behind. We follow them as the years pass, by interviews and intimate moments.

Life has a way of changing their perspectives: on family, health, and sacrifice. But certain core values always remain.

This is a story riddled with pain, but somehow filled with love. It was important for the Eisch family to share, and important for us to listen to.

The Lovebirds

The Lovebirds have flown into something.

Leilani and Jibran were in love. Now their relationship is failing. It’s a tough conversation to have—and tougher when they come across a murder.

To avoid the police (and gather enough evidence to prove their innocence), they must do exactly what they’ve just realized they can’t: stick together. Their adventure is bumbling, heartfelt, and sometimes hilarious.

The leads have nailed both dramatic and comedic timing. Smart writing gives us realistic worries and reactions, while effortlessly poking fun at tactics used in more outlandish crime-buster movies. It’s a fun time.

Da 5 Bloods

Da 5 Bloods are back at it.

Well, four are. Reuniting in Vietnam to recover the remains of their friend and leader. It’s all smiles and stories. But da Bloods have another, fantastically dangerous and exciting job to do, too. And so an epic story unfolds.

This jungle of a world will require their sacrifice once again. But they’re older and wiser now. They take time to call out the black (male) trailblazers who continue to inspire their lives. In these moments, the movie turns documentary, giving us real names. Real images. This chops the flow a bit, but is informative and powerful, reflective and celebratory.

It’s a complex movie in other ways, looking at pain across years and borders. Of how people pushed up against the wall can claw at each other. Paul’s journey is expertly played, and includes one of the most enveloping soliloquies you’ll see in movies.

Nobody Knows I’m Here

And that’s how Memo likes it.

As a child who tried to share his voice with the world, he found trauma. The hurt was so profound that even now, years later, he has trouble trusting people.

His secluded life seems peaceful. But every so often we glimpse conflict: Memo still yearns to perform. This conflict intensifies when somebody recognizes his promise—and listens to his pain.

The setting is beautiful, as is the movie’s study of how people manage uncomfortable emotions. Every scene is carefully sculpted to explore this theme.

The lead dazzles in portraying Memo’s mostly silent struggle. At a moment’s notice, his face and eyes become windows to deep pain; he transforms a lumbering recluse into a performer radiating energy.

Joan of Arc

Everything about Joan of Arc is different.

For starters, she’s a ten-year-old in charge of the French army. Oh, and she hears voices from heaven. Get the picture?

Some do. Others don’t care for unwavering piety. When Joan acts against the King, she’s put on trial. Its back-and-forth is engrossing: Each party tries to do right by the others, but whoever loses will lose big.

And yet, this movie is as much class clown as Sunday school. It pokes fun at the pomp and formality of the military, the church—prayer itself—in ways so strange and obvious that you’re transported out of the story, wondering if the movie itself is the ridiculous thing.

Mania aside, this is a serious story of human character. Scenes pop with rich colors and varied staging.

Tigertail

Tigertail takes time to unwind.

Pin-Jui has made sacrifices to build a better life. Years later, he replays them in his mind.

We’d never know it from his stone face. Even now, with his mother just having died alone in Taiwan, and with his daughter struggling to find happiness, does he set aside certain emotions to focus on the practical.

Only by piecing together closely-framed flashbacks can we understand why. Experiences of lost love and hard work show us a person who is anything but cold, who always tried to do the best by his poor mother.

Before these flashbacks, the movie is uncomfortable, even slow. Hyperrealistic editing and Pin-Jui’s stoicism create a boring melancholy, one that only hints at the feelings of a full life still being lived. But the tail does eventually unwind. In the end, we’ll know its curves, and watch as a new one forms. It is moving stuff.

Selfie

In an age of conspicuous perfection, Selfie stands out as real.

An innocent teenager has been killed. What was intended to be a movie about his death turns into a movie about life, filmed by two of his friends.

It’s all because the director came across Alessandro and Pietro. With hearts on sleeves and a phone in tow, the teens record life in Naples. It’s a selfless selfie. They think hard about showing all aspects of that life, and so they capture much: their friendship, inadequacies, and boredom; how organized crime pressures different people in different ways.

Whether by editing or the talent of the boys themselves, the contrasts and earnest emotions of this movie make it a treasure. That such beauty can come from hardship—and be captured by young people with a tool that almost anyone can use—it’s hard not to be in awe.

Green Room

Green Room is where you wait. The anticipation kills.

Aint Rights is on tour, and is so underground, it seems, that nobody will attend their shows. Desperate, the band accepts a gig in a remote location. The crowd is . . . a bit rawer than the usual.

The band’s lyrics are hard, but its members are soft. This becomes painfully clear after one of them witnesses a crime. Aint Rights is now too real a name.

Every element of this movie maintains a terrific tension. It’s so good, and so prolonged, that you’ll almost beg for the spark. But fair warning, it’s more lightning than static.

El Hoyo (The Platform)

The Platform is a whole ’nother world.

We don’t know why it exists, who’s in charge . . . or how many people it tortures. Goreng doesn’t either, but he may be the first to explore enough to find out. As the only person to voluntarily enter this place, he’s either its savior or biggest stooge.

From the first moment, our world shrinks to the size of this vertical prison. Trapped with Goreng, his hopes and despairs become ours. Earworm music captures our unease, reminding us that truly, this very moment is all there is.

It is a thought-provoking, exciting, and twisted piece.

MFKZ

MFKZ be wilin!

Sooner or later, Dark Meat City will eat up Angelino. The scrawny punk commands no respect, at work or on the streets. He has more roaches in his apartment than friends in the world.

It’s confusing to everyone, then, when he begins to be chased as if he’s the world’s most wanted. Maybe there’s something to him after all.

This movie is a hood fairy tale of grand proportions. A modern David unlocks his true potential, while uncovering an evil so pervasive Goliath would drown in it. The illustration and writing are meticulous, and create a world where fantasy and cold, hard ghetto mix. Though there are some head-scratching moments, all in all it’s a different and fun movie.

Troop Zero

Troop Zero is an embarrassment.

And Christmas is an outcast. This is partly because kids can be mean, and because Christmas pees her pants. But partly, it’s because she believes her deceased mom is up in the stars. Each night, she tunes in to the sky, waiting for a sign.

Maybe she’s found it. The winner of the local Birdie Scout competition will get to record a message for NASA to send into space. But first, Christmas needs to find herself a troop.

This movie means well—but it was written with a sledgehammer. Each scout is stranger than the next, with basically no character development in explanation. Their relationships are forced, and their rural Georgian community is whitewashed.

It tries desperately to create memorable moments, throwing out one-liners, slow-mo, and anything else that might stick. None of it does.

Blow the Man Down

Aye, it will.

It’s tough times in small town Maine, especially since Mary Beth and Priscilla’s mom died. Could their lives be over, before they really began?

The situation gets bleaker after Mary Beth is put in a compromising situation. From then on, each decision the sisters make seems to spiral things further out of control. Wise old townswomen offer to help. But not just the sisters have secrets.

This movie is a work of art: cheeky, haunting, beautiful. Sights and sounds hook you, the story reels you in, and the ending guts you good.

The Two Popes

It’s a miracle! Two Popes isn’t preachy.

The Catholic Church is losing followers. Joseph thinks the fix lies in tradition, the work of generations of thinkers. Jorge isn’t so sure, and likes to take the pulse of the people. So, they talk it out.

Their chats are funny, intimate, and deep—but never complicated. Turns out they’re just trying to make sense of things like the rest of us. But where Joseph is old school and intellectual, Jorge is a free spirit, open to new ideas, maybe a glass of wine. This disparity adds a delicious humor—and tension—to the movie.

Roman hillsides and Vatican art remind us of the power these men wield, and top notch acting reminds us of their humanity. Though peppered with symbolic imagery, this movie focuses on the real.

American Factory

American Factory ain’t just American.

It used to be, then it closed. Thousands lost their jobs. Now, a Chinese company is moving in, and looking to hire. Maybe things’ll be like how they were?

As we follow their new journeys, employees from each country recount their old ones. Their exchanges are about as unstaged as it gets, and reveal mutual respect and similar values.

But trouble brews. Management expects work done the Chinese way, which is faster, longer, and more difficult than the Americans are used to.

What we have here is a philosophical movie, in a setting anything but.

Jojo Rabbit

Jojo is a sweet little boy who loves his mom. He’s also a Nazi.

Or at least, he thinks he is. You see, Jojo is growing up in Germany during World War II. Nazi posters decorate his room, and Hitler is his imaginary friend. What else is a kid to do?

Attend Nazi youth camp, for starters. But there, it appears that Jojo may not be cut out for the Nazi life. His early-life crisis gets much worse when he learns his mom is hiding a Jewish girl from the authorities.

As Jojo grapples with these realities, he’s determined to get to the bottom of why Elsa and her fellow Jews are evil. In these sad, funny, and touching moments, the movie shines.

The context is horrific, and the movie tries hard to balance it out (even if it may overcompensate). In any case, with its goofy humor; its saturated and magnificent colors; its catchy and upbeat music, it seeks to remind us that even the worst pain is fleeting, and that there will always be beauty in this world.

Little Women

Little Women is astounding.

Jo seems especially smart and determined. Yet so do her three sisters. That they get along is a minor miracle, and seeing their tender childhood moments together is heartwarming.

But children grow up. Life bombards with responsibilities and expectations. These moments aren’t always heartwarming, but they’re just as important for Jo and her sisters to experience. The movie weaves it all together beautifully, past informing present, and present informing past.

There is an energy to this movie that is hard to describe. Thanks to brilliant acting and editing, each scene swells with life. This makes each feel intensely important, yet at the same time leaves us chomping at the bit for the next one.

In the end, Little Women is nothing less than a reminder of life’s possibilities: the good and the bad, the serendipitous and the hard-fought. It’s a reminder of the blank canvas that we all were, and still can be.