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Tag Archives: Movies

Movie Roundup – 2016

27 Tuesday Dec 2016

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Films, Most Enjoyed Films of 2016, Most Enjoyed Movies of 2016, Movies

fm-1

One of the (many) wonderful choices that being retired allows is the ability to see movies whenever you want — during the week, during the day, two in a row on the same day, or 15 over four days at a film festival.

And we’ve done all of the above.

Most of the end-of-the year lists of “Best” Films have been published already, and most come from critics who review films/books for a living.

I don’t have any special film knowledge and just tend to write about how much I liked various films for whatever reasons. Below is a list of many (tho not all) of the films Ellen and I saw in 2016, largely ones that I rated three stars or higher (out of a system of 1-5 stars). If Ellen had a different rating from mine, I have put her ratings in parentheses.

As I was constructing this post, I thought of adjusting a few of the ratings (up or down) but decided to leave the ratings the way I made them a day or two after seeing each film.

These starred categories are somewhat arbitrary, but generally the five and four and a half star films are pretty close, and I enjoyed those tremendously. The four star ones were all good, but I had some (minor) reservations. The three star ones were more problematic films for me but still may be worth checking out. Three starred ones were even more problematic. If a film did not make it into one of these categories, I did not write a review (The Lobster, for example).

If you click on the linked titles below, you will get to my mini-review of that film on MillersTime. For four of the more recent ones, however, I have not yet written about them.

I have also attached a link to a listing of these films that you can print out in the event you like to do that sort of thing.

Five Stars  *****

Manchester by the Sea

Loving

Jackie

The Eagle Huntress

Frantz

OJ: Made in America

I, Daniel Blake

Ixcanul  (Ellen ****)

Four and a Half ****1/2

Queen of Katwe (Ellen *****)

Embrace of the Serpent

Son of Saul

20th Century Woman (Ellen *****)

Lion (Ellen ****)

Human Figures (Ellen *****)

Four Stars ****

La La Land (Ellen *****)

The Unknown Girl

The Oath (Ellen ****1/2)

Graduation

The Salesman

A Man Called Ove (Ellen ***)

Moonlight (Ellen ****1/2)

Sully

Indignation

Hell or High Water

Eye in the Sky (Ellen *****)

Sing Street

The Innocents (Ellen *****)

Viva (Ellen ***)

Dheepan

A War

Three and a Half Stars ***1/2

The Edge of Seventeen (Ellen ***)

Things to Come ***1/2 (Ellen ***)

I Am Not Your Negro (Ellen ***)

Elle (Ellen *****)

Three Stars ***

Tampopo (Ellen ****)

Toni Erdmann (Ellen *****)

Fire at Sea

Do Not Resist (Ellen ****)

To see the above films in a spread sheet for printing, Click Here.

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Six Movies to Consider

05 Sunday Jun 2016

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

"Dheepan", "Eye in the Sky", "Sing Street", "The Innocents"., "The Lobster", "Viva", Films, Movies

I’m not sure if there is a lack of good films available in the theaters just now, or it’s that we have been so preoccupied with other activities that we haven’t seen very many over the last few months.

But here are a two that we have seen recently and four that we saw earlier in the year in our movie club or at the Philadelphia Film Festival. The latter four are either in the theaters now or coming soon.

Eye in the Sky ****

MV5BNTY4Nzg5MTU0OV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwMjY2MjU2NzE@._V1_SY1000_CR0,0,674,1000_AL_A ‘thriller’ of sorts that keeps you closely involved throughout its 102 minutes. The challenge is to capture terrorists, and in this film the emphasis is on using drones to carry out an operation.

However, what was supposed to be a capture assignment turns into a kill operation. And it becomes further complicated and tense when a young girl enters the kill zone.

The acting is terrific. Helen Mirren leads a very strong cast (in a role that was originally written for a male actor). All of the major performances are good ones.

Worth your time as a bit of escapism with some issues that are also worthy of exploring.

Ellen gave it five stars.

Sing Street ****

sing.MV5BMjEzODA3MDcxMl5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwODgxNDk3NzE@._V1_SY1000_SX675_AL_You might have to look around for this Irish tale of a young boy and a girl who are looking for a way out of their unhappy lives. As often seems the case in Irish films, it is through music that an escape is sought.

Conor (well played by Ferdia Walsh-Peelo) is a 14/15 year old boy who wants to impress a slightly older girl, Raphina (also well played by Lucy Boynton) who has issues of her own. Almost on a whim, Conor starts a band, with some advice from his older brother who also is ‘leading’ an unhappy life.

The writer/director John Carney has some how avoided the pitfalls of a coming of age, feel good movie that could easily have gone wrong and been overly sentimental. The story (set in the mid ’80s), the characters, and the music all seem to work well together, and both Walsh-Peelo and Boynton are a big reason it all seems to work.

Ellen gave it four stars.

The Innocents ****

innocents.1.MV5BZTQ2ZTAwOTAtMzg5Ny00MzU4LWI3YTUtNzFlMDUyMmUzMGY2XkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTEwMTY3NDI@._V1_We saw this film earlier this spring in our film club. It’s set in Warsaw in 1945 just after WW II has ended. In a convent, a nun, without the permission of the Mother Superior, sneaks a French Red Cross nurse (Mathilde) into the convent to minister to a sick nun. The convent has always prided itself on its separation from the outside world and bringing in an outsider is forbidden.

Based on a true story, it quickly becomes evident that the sick nun is pregnant, as are a number of other nuns, the result of a Russian occupation of the nunnery. What unfolds is largely the story of Mathilde’s interaction with the nuns who have been traumatized by what has happened to them.

The Innocents is a war story that differs from most, and this one is pretty good.

Ellen gave it 5 stars.

Viva****

Viva.MV5BMjE4MTc4Njk4OV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwOTc4MDI3ODE@._V1_SX1777_CR0,0,1777,778_AL_Another film club presentation, and it’s probably a good thing I didn’t know anything about this film prior to seeing it. Directed by Paddy Breathnach, an Irishman, but set entirely in Havana and in Spanish, it’s about Cuban drag performers in a nightclub.

Jesus, the lead character, does ‘make-up’ for these performers and dreams about being a performer himself. When he finally gets his chance, it’s interrupted when his long-absent father, a former boxer, comes out of the crowd and slugs him. What follows is a father-son “love story as the {two} men struggle to understand one another and reconcile as a family.”

While Viva is about a ‘world’ I never knew, and didn’t think I particularly wanted to know, the themes of following one’s dream and of a father and son conflict and resolution could be set anywhere. I don’t know how our film club rated this film, but the audience, myself included, was entranced by it.

Ellen gave it three stars.

 

And finally, of the two we saw in films festivals, the first is worth searching for, the second is to be avoided. As I posted earlier this year:

Dheepan ****

cannes-dheepan

Though too long and in need of some editing, this film is an absorbing and consuming look at what the refugee experience is like for three, unconnected refugees from Sri Lanka. These individuals flee their war-torn country and end up in another conflict zone, this time in suburbs of Paris. I’m not sure the ending was in concert with the rest of the film or was largely just an attempt to make the audience feel good. Still, this is an engrossing, well acted, and well done film. Given the current events with refugees fleeing Syria and trying to get to Europe, Dheepan is not only timely but also gives insight to what it must be like for individuals and families who must leave their homes and their history in order to stay alive.

Ellen gave it four stars.

The Lobster * 

cannes-film-festival-2015-the-lobster-colin-farrellThis film was highly touted by the festival organizers and was apparently a big hit in Toronto. I couldn’t find much worthy in this one and was never sure what the director intended. Described as a dystopian, dark, comedic love story, it didn’t hold together and was simply weird. It was shocking to us that it was the winner of the Jury Prize at this year’s Cannes Festival. Maybe we just weren’t smart enough to ‘get it.’ (I should have followed my instincts and not the crowd, avoided this one, and gone to see something — anything — else instead.)

Ellen gave it 0 stars on my 1-5 star rating scale.

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Three Foreign Films Worth Your Time

29 Monday Feb 2016

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"45 Years", "A War", "Anomalisa", "Brooklyn", "Carol", "Embrace of the Serpent", "Mustang", "Only Yesterday", "RAMS", "Room", "Son of Saul", "Spotight", "The Big Short", "The Bridge of Spies", "The Club", "Trumbo", "Where to Invade Next", Best Foreign Film, Films, Movies, Oscars

So it’s the morning after the Oscars, and most of the expected results indeed occurred. I see no need to add my two cents, particularly as I have already had my say about many of these films.

However, I was pleased to note that we had seen four of the five Best Foreign Film nominees (Son of Saul, the winner, A War, Embrace of the Serpent, and Mustang), only missing Theeb, which I had tried to see but somehow missed. I’ve found that over the years we tend to see more foreign, documentary  and small budget films than mainstream, big studio films, and thus I’ve focused, so to speak, MillersTime film reviews on these.

Anyway, I’ve had this post in the works for a number of days but was delightfully delayed in completing it by the early arrival of a lovely granddaughter (postings on that, no doubt, will be coming).

I thoroughly enjoyed all three of these very different films .

Embrace of the Serpent****1/2

Embrace2

A wonderful and unusual film about the Colombian Amazon, inspired by the journals of two early 20th century explorers. The story focuses on an Amazonian shaman, who may be the last survivor of his people.

The first part is the story of the young shaman (Karakate) and a very sick German scientist who needs a particular healing plant to stay alive. The second half of the film takes place 40 years later when Karakate (then an old man who is losing his memory) meets a second scientist who is looking for the same plant.

In what almost seems like a documentary (it is not), we see the Amazon largely through the eyes, mind, and life of Karakate. One of the beauties of this film is that it is colonialism as seen through the eyes of the indigenous population.

But it is the filming of Embrace of the Serpent, done largely in black and white, that leads to my high rating above. It felt as if we were in the Amazon a hundred years ago.

(About three-quarters of our film club thought the film was good or excellent and 80% would recommend it to a friend.)

Son of Saul****1/2

son

Another Holocaust film?

Yes.

Someone said there are at least six million Holocaust stories.

What makes this one different from many of the others is that it is told through the perspective of one concentration camp prisoner. The camera rarely leaves the face or presence of this man Saul, a Sonderkommando, a Hungarian Jewish prisoner whose job it is to assist in the herding of prisoners into the gas chambers and disposing of their remains.

Saul seeks to find a rabbi to give a young boy, who may or may not be his son, a proper burial. This is an almost impossible task but one that Saul undertakes with a fierceness that is unrelenting. At the same time, other prisoners are trying to convince him to join a fruitless rebellion against their captors. He largely ignores their efforts to engage him in actions.

The usual scenes of the horrors of camps such as Auschwitz-Birkenau (where this film takes place) are only barely visible in the background. But that somehow only seems to increase the horror. The film is shot in a square picture format and not in the usual wide screen format, and that too adds to the uniqueness of this film.

Directed by Laszlo Nemes, his first film, co-written with Clara Royes, and starring Geza Rohrig, the film is different from most other Holocaust films, and it is riveting.

Last night, it won the the Oscar for Best Foreign Film.

A War****

awar

The particular war in this film is one that takes place in Afghanistan, tho the title A War suggests a universal theme.

The particular story focuses on a Danish company commander, Claus Pederson, and his struggles to lead his men on a particularly difficult peace keeping mission. Meanwhile, his wife struggles to keep their family together at home as their three kids miss their father. The film flips back and forth between these two struggles.

When Claus makes a decision in the midst of battle that leads to the death of 11 civilians (eight of whom are children), their stories come together as Claus is sent home to face a courtroom trial.

Enough said.

This film is one that begs for discussion. And I’d love to talk about it with any of you who may have seen it or do see it.

(Our Sunday cinema club gave A War an excellent/good rating of 89.41% and the recommend rate was above 90%.)

**          **          **          **          **          **          **          **

In addition to the three films above, I’ve noticed that many of the films we saw in our movie club, in the Philly Film Festival, and a few others we saw and rated last year are now out and in the theaters. (Those below in red italics are linked to mini-reviews I wrote in earlier posts.)

Anomalisa ***

The Big Short ****

Bridge of Spies ****1/2 

Brooklyn ****1/2

Carol ***1/2

The Club****

45 Years***1/2

Mustang****

RAMS ****1/2

Room****

Spotlight*****

Trumbo***1/2

Where to Invade Next***

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Favorite Films of 2015

27 Sunday Dec 2015

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

"A Brilliant Young Mind", "About Elly", "Bridge of Spies", "Brooklyn", "Cargel Land", "Clouds of Silas Maria", "Cut Snake", "GHETT", "Ixanul Volcano", "Labrynth of Lies", "Love and Mercy", "Meru", "RAMS", "Selma", "Seymour", "The Fool", "The White Knights, Documentaries, Favorite Movies of 2015, Films, Foreign Films, Movies

Favorite Movies

Most of the end-of-the year lists of “Best” Films, “Best” Books, etc. come from critics who review films/books for a living.

I don’t claim any special film knowledge and just tend to write about how much I liked various films for whatever reasons. Here is a list of many (tho not all) of the films Ellen and I saw in 2015, largely ones that I rated four stars or higher (out of a system of 1-5 stars).

As I was posting this list, I thought of adjusting a few of the ratings (up or down) but decided to leave the ratings the way I made them a day or two after seeing each film.

Ellen’s ratings are in parentheses, some made at the time of seeing it, some as I’m constructing this post. Some she cannot remember. (I have the same memory problems on some of them, but I can refer to the mini-reviews I wrote.)

These starred categories are somewhat arbitrary, but generally the five and four and a half star films are pretty close, and I enjoyed those tremendously. The four star ones were all good, but I had some (minor) reservations. The three and half star ones were more problematical films but still may be worth checking out. Three starred ones were even more problematic.

If a film did not make it into one of these categories, I did not write a review.

A significant number, but certainly not all, of these films are either documentary, foreign, or small films, often only in the theaters for a few weeks, usually in one of the independent theaters in the DC area or in our DC Film Club. We did attend two film festivals in 2015 — one in Miami and one in Philly — where we saw a number of the films listed below. Note that some of the films mentioned are currently in the theaters.

If you click on any of the linked titles below, you will get to my mini-review of that film on MillersTime.

As always, I welcome your Comments about any of these or any others you saw this year which you particularly enjoyed.

Five Stars  *****

  • A Brilliant Young Mind (Ellen rated it a 4)
  • GETT (Ellen – 5)
  • Ixanul Volcano (Ellen rated it 4)
  • Love and Mercy
  • Selma (Ellen – 4)
  • Seymour (Ellen – 5)
  • Spotlight (Ellen – 5)
  • Testament of Youth
  • The White Knights (Ellen – 5)
  • The Fool

Four and Half Stars  ****1/2

  • About Elly
  • Bridge of Spies (Ellen – 4)
  • Brooklyn (Ellen – 4)
  • Cartel Land
  • Clouds of Silas Maria
  • Cut Snake
  • Labrynth of Lies (Ellen – 4)
  • Meru
  • RAMS (Ellen – 4)

Four Stars ****

  • Dheepan (Ellen – 4)
  • Gemma Bovery
  • Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
  • Meet the Patels
  • Mission Impossible Rogue Nation
  • Mr. Holmes (Ellen – 4)
  • Mustang (Ellen rated it 5)
  • Phoenix
  • Remember (Ellen – 5)
  • Room (Ellen – 3 1/2)
  • Rosenwald (Ellen – 5)
  • Spy (Ellen – 3)
  • The Big Short (Not Reviewed, But Rated) (Ellen -5 )
  • The Club (Ellen – 5)
  • The Farewell Party
  • The Salt of the Earth (Ellen – 4)
  • Set Fire to the Stars
  • Warsaw 44
  • When Marnie Was There
  • Wild Tales (Ellen – 5)
  • Woman in Gold (Ellen – 4)

Three and a Half Stars ***1/2

  • Carol (Not Reviewed but rated) (Ellen – 4)
  • 45 Years (Not Reviewed, But Rated) (Ellen – 4)
  • Our Brand Is Crisis (Ellen – 3)
  • Soy Cuba (I Am Cuba)
  • (T)error (Ellen – 4)
  • Trumbo (Not Reviewed, But Rated) (Ellen – 3 1/2)

Three Stars ***

  • American Sniper (and a review by a friend – 5 stars)
  • Anomalisa (Ellen 3; then a 4)
  • End of the Tour
  • Flowers (Ellen – 4)
  • Paco de Lucia
  • Suffragette (Ellen – 3)
  • Where to Invade Next (Ellen – 2)
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Five Good Films, Two Not So Good

15 Sunday Nov 2015

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"Bridge of Spies", "Brooklyn", "Flowers", "Labyrinth of Lies", "Meet the Patels", "Room", "Suffragette", 24th Philadelphia Film Festival, Documentaries, Films, Foreign Language Oscar Submissions, Movies

Four of the five good films mini-reviewed below are in theaters now, and one of the two not so good ones is also widely available around the country.

Labyrinth of Lies ****1/2

labyrinth-of-lies.2

The time is 1958 and a low level young public prosecutor stumbles onto and pursues a story most of post WWII Germans want left alone — the participation and guilt of many Germans who were part of the Auschwitz holocaust.

Labyrinth of Lies is based on true events, but here it is a fictionalized account of what occurred. As Johann Radman (Alexander Feeling) proceeds on a lonely effort to expose war criminals, he meets stiff resistance from virtually everyone in Germany. They just want all of these issue left behind. Yet he perseveres.

Germany’s official entry into the foreign film category of the Oscars, Labyrinth of Lies tells the story of what one person can do, did do, and at what costs and with what results.

(More than 97 per cent of our Sunday Cinema Club rated this film either excellent or good.)

Bridge of Spies ****1/2

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Five Movies to Recommend

06 Sunday Sep 2015

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"Althogh Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself", "Infinite Jest", "Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation", "Phoenix", "Rolling Stone", "Rosenwald", Avalon Theatre, Aviva Kempner, Christian Petzoid, Conrad Anker, David Foster Wallace, David Lipsky, DC Shorts Film Festival, Documentarties, Films, Jason Siegel, Jesse Eisenberg, Jimmy Chin, Julius Rosenwald, Mount Meru, Movies, Nina Hoss, Renan Oztruk, Ronald Zehrfeld, Rosenwald Fund, Rosenwald Schools, Sears. Roebuck & Co., Shark's Fin, The Ciesla Foundation, Tom Cruise

Five more films to consider, including at least one that is available everywhere.

Phoenix ****

Phoenix poster.11191735_ori

Good filmmaking and very good acting make this suspense filled drama engrossing.

Writer and director Christian Petzold creates and tells a story about a woman who returns from a concentration camp badly disfigured and who undergoes facial reconstructive surgery. She then sets out to find her husband, who may or may not have been responsible for her arrest and imprisonment.

While the story has some implausible aspects, it nevertheless grabbed me and held me throughout. Both the women, Nelly (Nina Hoss) and her ‘perhaps’ husband, Johnny (Ronald Zehrfeld), are intriguing characters, strikingly portrayed, and well acted, particularly Nelly.

Phoenix is not a thriller tho it is filled with suspense. Post-war Berlin is the setting, and there is something about the filmmaking that makes it compelling and enthralling.

Rosenwald****

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In Case You Missed Some Summer Posts

29 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, Escapes and Pleasures

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"Between the World and Me", "Cartel Land", "Go Tell a Watchman", "Love & Mercy", "Me, "Mr. Holmes", "Soy Cuba" ("I Am Cuba"), "Spy", "The Precious Ordinary", "When Marnie Was There", Early & the Dying Girl", Ellen's Lens, Ellen's Photos, Harper Lee, John Hersey's "Hiroshima", Kent Haruf, Marilynne Robinson, Movies, National Book Festival, Pico Iyer, Ta-Nehisi Coates

I thought I’d gather in one place a few of the posts you might have missed while you were enjoying the summer.

DC Area Book Lovers – Save the Date:  a reminder about the National Book Festival that takes place here next Saturday, Sept. 5.

Why We Travel – Pico Iyer: one travel writers thoughts about why we enjoy travel.

Broadway as You’ve Never Known It: One very good and one terrific musical that are different from the ones you’ve known.

John Hersey’s Hiroshima: The New Yorker’s free on line release of Hersey’s recounting of what happen to six ‘survivors’ of the Atomic explosion.

Three Very Different Films: Mini-reviews of Cartel Land, Mr. Holmes, & Soy Cuba (I Am Cuba).

A Novel & a Memoir: Each Tells a Story Worth Discussing: Mini-reviews of Harper Lee’s Go Tell a Watchman and Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Between the World and Me

Japan Through Ellen’s Eye: Photos from a recent trip.

Travels to Japan: On Being Schooled by the Younger Generation: Why it’s sometimes a good idea to listen to our kids.

Movies Movies Movies: Mini-reviews of Spy, When Marnie Was There, Me, Earl & the Dying Girl, and Love & Mercy. Plus, links to eight other films we saw in various film festivals over the past year that have now been released to the public.

Baseball Through Ellen’s Lens: Ellen takes her camera to a baseball game (Red Sox, of course).

Through Ellen’s Lens: A Weekend of Baby Sitting. More on the three grand children.

The Precious Ordinary: Reviewing four books by Kent Haruf.

Summer Fiction Update: Reviewing three by Marilynne Robinson.

 

 

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Films, Films, Films

21 Tuesday Apr 2015

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"A Brilliant Young Mind", "About Elly", "Clouds of Silas Maria", "Gemma Bovery", "GETT: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem", "Seymour: An Introduction", "The Curious Incident of the Dog at Midnight", "The Farewell Party", "The Kugelmass Episode", "The Salt of the Earth", "While We Were Young", "Wild Tales", Films, Movies

Ten films for you to keep in mind. Six of these are in the theaters now.

Five of the ten get my highest ratings — four and a half or five stars.

A Brilliant Young Mind *****

x-plus-y06

You’ll have to wait for the summer for this one — Samuel Goldwyn Films just purchased the US distribution rights — but mark it down. It’s a very good one.

A Brilliant Young Mind is Morgan Matthews’ drama about a 16 year old autistic math prodigy; it was inspired by Matthews’ own 2007 documentary, Beautiful Young Minds. That documentary followed the young British International Mathematical Olympiad team through their selection process, their training, and the actual contest itself in 2006.

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Favorite Films, 2014

17 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Favorite Films in 2014, Films, Movies

Favorite Movies

Here is a list of many of the films I saw in 2014, largely ones that I rated four stars or higher (out of a system of 1-5 stars).

As I was posting this list, I thought of adjusting a few of the ratings (up or down) but decided to leave the ratings the way I made them a day or two after seeing each film.

These categories are somewhat arbitrary, but generally the five and four and a half star films are pretty close, and I enjoyed those tremendously. The four star ones were all good, but I had some (minor) reservations. The three and half star ones were more problematical films but still worth checking out.

If a film did not make it into one of these categories, I did not write a review.

The ones listed below I recommend for your consideration.

A significant number of these films are either documentary, foreign, or small films, often only in the theaters for a few weeks, usually in one of the independent theaters in the DC area or in our DC Film Club.

(I have refrained from reviewing or listing any of the ‘children films’ that I have seen with my grand kids. They would be in the one or two star categories, if that. However, I must admit that my grand kids, and the other kiddies who filled the audience, seemed to have a very different opinion from mine.)

If you click on any of the titles below, you will link to my mini-review of that film on MillersTime.

Five Stars:

Clouds of Silas Maria

Finding Vivian Maier

GETT, The Trial of Viviane Amsalem

Ida  (Available on Netflix)

Mommy

Particle Fever  (Available on Netflix)

The Imitation Game

The Square  (Available on Netflix)

Red Army

Selma

Four and a Half Stars:

Abuse of Weakness   (Available on Netflix)

Boyhood

Citizenfour

Happy Valley

Last Days in Vietnam

Life Itself

The Case Against 8

The Past

The Rocket   (Available on Netflix)

The Way He Looks

Two Days, One Night

Whiplash

Four Stars:

A Most Wanted Man

Chef

Child’s Pose   (Available on Netflix)

Cracks in the Concrete

Get on Up

Glass Chin

Manos Sucias

St. Vincent

Still Alice

The Immigrant   (Available on Netflix)

The Lunchbox

National Gallery

Rudderless   (Available on Netflix)

The Theory of Everything

Wild

Words & Pictures

Foxcatcher

Three/Three and Half Stars:

Birdman

Elsa & Fred

Force Majeure

Korengal   (Available on Netflix)

Grand Budapest Hotel

Oscar Nominated Short Action Live Films

Oscar Nominated Documentary Short Films

The Good Lie

The Mountain

Unknown Knowns   (Available on Netflix)

*                    **                    **                    **                    *

Also, if you’re looking for slightly older films to rent, etc., check out these two links from 2013 and 2012.

Favorite Films Seen 2013

My Favorite Films in 2012

As always, please feel free to Comment on any of the above and/or on films you particularly enjoyed in 2014.

 

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Three to See

01 Monday Dec 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"National Gallery", "The Theory of Everything", "WhipLash", Damien Chazelle, Documenatries, Eddie Redmayne, Felicity Jones, Films, Frederick Wiseman, J.K. Simmons, Jane Wilde, Miles Teller, Movies, Stephen Hawkings, West End Cinema

This holiday weekend allowed for one of my (many) favorite ‘escapes and pleasures’ – movies. Here are three I saw and thoroughly enjoyed.

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Favorite Films from First Half of 2014

31 Thursday Jul 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

"MillersTime" Film Reviews, 2014 Film Reviews, Best Films in 2014, Documentaries, Films, Foreign Films, Movies

Compiled below is the list of films I saw between Jan. 1, 2014 and July 31, 2014 that I rated from three and a half to five stars.

These categories are somewhat arbitrary, but generally the five and four and a half star films are pretty close, and I enjoyed those tremendously. The four star ones were all good, but I had some (minor) reservations. The three and half star ones were more problematical films but still worth checking out.

If a film did not make it into one of these categories, I did not write a review.

The ones listed below I recommend for your consideration.

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Seven More Films: Mini-Reviews

20 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

" "Detropia", "A Late Quartet", "A Royal Affair", "Burn", "Central Park Five", "Chasing Ice", "Quartet", "Sky Fall", "The Fitzgerald Family Christmas", "The Life of Pi", "West of Memphis, Documentaries, Films, Movies, Searching for Sugarman

Mini-reviews here of seven films I’ve seen over the last month or so (it’s great to be retired and also to belong to the DC Sunday morning Cinema Club).

And these don’t include Flight, Zero Dark Thirty, Jack Reacher, Les Miserables, and The Waiting Room (any other suggestions?), all of which I plan to see in the next ten days. Nor do they include recently reviewed movies on MillersTime: West of Memphis, Silver Linings Playsbook, A Late Quartet, Lincoln, and Argo.

Once I see the five listed above, I’ll have a post listing the movies this year that I’ve give ratings of four, four and a half, and five stars.

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Two New Films – “Must Sees,” sez Ellen Miller

19 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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" "Detropia", " "Queen of Versailles, "A Royal Affair", "Oranges", Films, Movies, Searching for Sugar Man

For reasons I can no longer remember, I missed the first two of our movie club offerings this fall, but my trusty partner Ellen went and offers the following:

The DC Cinema Club has not disappointed in its first two offerings this fall.

The Oranges – a film about two families who’ve been closest of friends for years – is one of the best written, laugh-out-loud comedies I’ve seen in years.  The premise of the film – the prodigal daughter of one family, falls into a ‘relationship” with the father of the other – is a bit unlikely and unseemly, but the hilarity that ensues between spouses and siblings and the realizations by all brings this unpredictable film to a very entertaining and satisfying viewing.  In the days of “I can hardly remember the last film that I saw,” this one is memorable.  You won’t get it mixed up with anything else you’re going to see this fall.  Must see.

The Oranges, ATO Pictures. In English

(Our Cinema Club gave The Oranges a 79.2% positive rating – Excellent or Good.)

 

A Royal Affair – the second film offering this fall – was a stunning “period” piece that takes place mostly in the early 1800’s. It tells the true story of Denmark under the reign of the mad king Christian VII.  Guided by his personal physician and his Queen, both of whom are entranced by the new ideas of the Enlightenment, the story of political change in a backward country couldn’t be more stunningly told.  Overlay that with the intensity of a forbidden affair that ends in banishment and execution, and you have a real winner. Costumes, direction and production are all superb. Another must see.

A Royal Affair, Magnolia Pictures. In Danish, English and German with English subtitles

(Our Cinema Club gave A Royal Affair a 92.1% positive vote – Excellent or Good.)

 

Ed. Notes – Oranges is playing in the DC area at Landmark’s Bethesda Row Cinema, as is Searching for Sugar Man, if you haven’t seen that good one. A Royal Affair is coming to the DC area Nov. 9, tho I’m not sure at which theater(s).

Also, if you enjoy talking about movies and eating good food, the Millers have room at their table for two more folks to join in on a discussion of some recently seen movies, particularly Queen of Versailles but also Searching for Sugarman, Detropia, The Master, and whatever else you’ve seen in the last few months that is worthy of discussion. We’ll have a Sunday supper and discussion starting at 6 PM at our house in DC on Nov. 11. Let me know if you’re interested in joining us (Samesty84@gmail.com).

 

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Two Films to Consider

06 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Amy Adams, Clint Eastwood, Films, Joaquin Phoenix, Movies, Philip Seyomour Hoffmans, The Master, Trouble With the Curve

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Generally I post about small, independent movies, often ones that are not always easy to find but are usually worth the effort.  Today I post mini-reviews of two films that are easily found.

The Master ***1/2

The main reason to see this film is for the performances of Joaquin Phoenix and Philip Seymour Hoffman. Tho the title of the movie refers to Hoffman’s role as the charismatic leader of what is really a cult, it’s Phoenix’s portrayal of a lost soul, a drifter, the alienated alcoholic Freddy that makes The Master worth seeing.

The film follows Hoffman, Lancaster Dodd, as he tries to convert and give meaning to Freddy’s life and at the same time make sense of his own journey to lead the movement known as “The Cause.” Amy Adams, as his wife Peggy, also gives a strong performance as she seeks to support Dodd and convert Freddy.

For some reason The Master is not an easy movie to “get,” to know what the story and performances want you to learn or to take from it.  Some say it’s an indictment of Scientology and it’s founder L. Ron Hubbard, but I didn’t know that until I read about the film after seeing it. I suspect it’s about more than that.

I just don’t know exactly what that ‘more’ is.

 

Trouble With the Curve ***1/2

If you like baseball and don’t mind a somewhat predictable, mawkish story, then I think you’ll enjoy Clint Eastwood and Amy Adams in this film.

It’s a father-daughter story that held me throughout, even tho I could see what was coming, for the most part. Eastwood gives a solid performance as a crabby, aging scout (Gus Lobel) for the Atlanta Braves, and Adams, as his stubborn, ambitious, hurt daughter (Mickey), keeps up with Eastwood.

Trouble With the Curve has some similarities to Moneyball, but it departs from that good film as we get involved with the lives and struggles of Gus and Mickey.

Maybe this movie doesn’t have the subtleties and artfulness of many of the independent films I usually enjoy, but I liked it.

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Another Film to See

03 Tuesday Apr 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Tags

Boy, Foreign Films, Monsieur Lahzar, Movies

Monsieur Lazhar **** ½

This Canadian film is another one that was nominated for an Oscar in the Best Foreign Language Film category (A Separation won the award and A Footnote was also a contender for the prize).

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