Monday, March 24, 2025

No Other Land

Last night I went to see the Academy Award winning documentary No Other Land at the Broadway and, no matter where you stand on the conflict between Israel and Palestine, you cannot help but feel devastated and heartbroken after seeing firsthand the fate of people who have been displaced from land owned by their families for generations and who now have no place to go.  In 1980 the Israeli government declares that Masafer Yatta, a collection of 20 rural villages on the southern edge of the West Bank, will now be used for military training.  After a protracted legal battle fighting against expulsion, the Israeli high court rules against the villagers and the army begins demolishing homes with bulldozers.  Basel Adra, inspired by the activism of his parents against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank, decides to to start documenting the destruction in 2019 with the hope that people might be moved by what they see and do something to help.  He gains the attention of an Israeli journalist named Yuval Abraham, who disagrees with what the Israeli government is doing in the West Bank, and together they shoot footage with Hamdan Hallal, a Palestinian filmmaker, and Rachel Szor, an Israeli cinematographer and editor.  The images they capture are visceral and very difficult to watch.  I was in tears when a mother begs the soldiers to stop the bulldozers from tearing down her house because her two daughters are still inside and they tell her that they don't care, when the soldiers shoot a man because he won't give them his generator, when the mother of this man tearfully wishes that he would die because she doesn't have a house in which to care for him now that he is paralyzed, and when a family goes looking for any of their chickens that might still be alive after the soldiers bulldoze their chicken coop but the scene that affected me the most is when a group of crying children watch their school bulldozed to the ground.  I was really struck by the attitude of the Israeli soldiers, which ranges from callous indifference to outright cruelty, towards the villagers in the name of following the law.  However, I was also struck by the growing friendship between Basel and Yuval, contemporaries who have very different lives simply because they were born 30 miles apart, in scenes where they discuss the ongoing conflict because it gives some hope that Israelis and Palestinians might eventually be able to work together for peace despite the events of October 2023 depicted in the epilogue.  This is one of the most powerful and important documentaries I've seen and I am grateful that I had the opportunity to see it (it still does not have a distribution deal in the U.S. so independent theaters like the Broadway are screening it on their own).

Sunday, March 23, 2025

The Alto Knights

Last night I went to see The Alto Knights with my nephew.  I was very intrigued by the idea of having the same actor play the two main characters but I eventually found this gimmick to be incredibly tedious.  Frank Costello and Vito Genovese (Robert De Niro) were once childhood friends who got their start in the criminal underworld as bootleggers.  The hotheaded Genovese is forced to flee the country in order to avoid a double murder charge and this leaves the more diplomatic Costello in charge of their organization.  While World War II keeps Genovese trapped in Europe, Costello legitimizes much of their business, which makes him and members of their organization very wealthy, and he also takes an interest in politics and the charities organized by his wife Bobbie (Debra Messing).  When Genovese eventually returns, he wants to go back to business as usual and to expand into narcotics but Costello strenuously objects to this.  They each vie for control of their organization until Genovese orders an unauthorized hit on Costello, which he survives.  The rest of the narrative, which is convoluted and moves at a glacial pace, focuses on how Costello attempts to leave organized crime and retire.  This is a true story that culminates in a raid that brings organized crime to the attention of the FBI but I didn't find it very compelling.  I actually found it very confusing because there are a lot of secondary characters and they are not developed very well (one very important character is assassinated in a barber shop and I didn't know who he was or why his death had such an impact on the organization until I researched it after the movie).  Even though De Niro does a good job differentiating the two characters (it is amusing to see him play off himself several times when the two characters sit down for meetings), I found it very distracting because I always had to wait until the character spoke to determine who was who.  The best thing about this movie is the 1950s production design, especially all of the cars, but the archival footage does get a bit old.  I would only recommend this to fans of gangster movies but there are definitely better ones out there to watch instead.

Note:  My nephew told me that he could tell I was bored watching this because I kept fidgeting.

Saturday, March 22, 2025

Jazz vs. Celtics

Last night I went to another Utah Jazz game with my friend Angela and I had a lot of fun even though the Boston Celtics beat them pretty soundly.  I think there were twice as many Celtics fans than Jazz fans (a conservative estimate) at the Delta Center and that made it really interesting because they were very vocal whenever their team scored (and that happened often).  The Jazz won the opening tip off and Collin Sexton scored with a jump shot.  One minute later he got a nice three-point shot to put the Jazz ahead 5-0.  I joked that this would be the only lead the Jazz would have during the whole game and, sadly, I was right!  Boston went on to score six three-point shots out of their first seven baskets and they ended the first quarter firmly in control leading Utah 35-18.  The Jazz really struggled with offensive rebounds but they stayed competitive in the second quarter to end the first half down 60-51.  The Jazz battled back in the third quarter with three three-pointers from Sexton and a nice shot from Keyonte George to cut Boston's lead to 71-69.  Then Jayson Tatum (a lot of people sitting near us were wearing his jersey) scored 19 seconds later and that sparked a 13-0 run to put the Celtics up 89-75 at the end of the quarter.  Sexton, who ended the night with an impressive 30 points, and George tried to keep it close in the fourth quarter but Payton Prtchard scored 10 points to lead the Celtics to a 121-99 victory.  It seemed like the only fans in the arena at the end of the game were wearing green!  It has been hard to be a Jazz fan this season (we have the worst record in the entire NBA) but it is always fun to go to games with Angela!

Friday, March 21, 2025

Snow White

I was really interested in the new live-action remake of Snow White because I wanted to determine for myself if the online furor about it was warranted.  Now that I have seen it I can say that some, but definitely not all, of the criticism is unfair and I actually liked it.  A young Snow White (Emilia Faucher) is taught by her parents, the King (Hadley Fraser) and Queen (Lorena Andrea), to be kind and fair to the people of the kingdom but darkness comes when her mother dies and the King marries a temptress (Gal Gadot).  She becomes an Evil Queen after the King is lost in a faraway war and keeps Snow White (Rachel Zegler) locked in the castle as a servant.  The Evil Queen becomes jealous when her Mirror (voiced by Patrick Page) tells her that Snow White is now the fairest one of all so she commands her Huntsman (Ansu Kabia) to kill her and bring back her heart.  He releases her in the forest, instead, where she meets seven dwarfs and a bandit named Jonathan (Andrew Burnap).  When the Evil Queen learns of this deception, she attempts to kill Snow White herself with a poisoned apple but the spell is broken by Jonathan and love's first kiss.  The seven dwarfs as well as Jonathan and his bandits help Snow White become the leader the King knew she could be and she defeats the Evil Queen.  In my opinion, the story is quite faithful to the original (more so than I was led to believe) but I did really like the updates, including the development of the romance between Snow White and Jonathan before the kiss happens and the defeat of the Evil Queen by Snow White's kindness to the people.  I loved Rachel Zegler's charismatic performance and I really enjoyed the new songs, especially "Waiting on a Wish," "Princess Problems," and the romantic "A Hand Meets a Hand" (fun versions of "Heigh-Ho" and "Whistle While You Work" are also included).  The CGI animals are absolutely adorable and the scene where Snow White meets them in the forest is enchanting.  However, the GGI for the seven dwarfs is really creepy!  Their eyes are realistic but their faces are cartoonish and I couldn't get past how weird that combination looked whenever they were on screen.  Gal Gadot is terrible because some of her line readings made me want to laugh (not in a good way) and her singing is even worse (although I did like special effects in her transformation into a hag).  This is not the best live-action remake I've seen (Cinderella holds that title) but it is not as bad as people are saying and I recommend giving it a chance.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Last Breath

My sister recommended the movie Last Breath very highly to me so I braved a snowstorm to see it last night.  I really enjoyed this riveting true story about a group of saturation divers who repair underwater pipelines in the North Sea.  Veteran Duncan Allcock (Woody Harrelson), taciturn and unemotional David Yuasa (Simu Liu), and rookie Chris Lemon (Finn Cole) are deployed 100 meters beneath the surface for routine repairs when their support vessel loses power, and the dynamic positioning system fails, during a storm.  This causes the vessel to drift away from the dive site while David and Chris are underwater.  David is able to make it to safety on the diving platform, known as the "bell," but Chris's umbilical cord is snapped leaving him untethered without a communications link to the surface, power for his light, and, more importantly, air to breathe.  He is left with only ten minutes of air from his auxiliary tank while David, Duncan, and the crew on the ship mount a desperate attempt to rescue him.  This is very straightforward without a lot of embellishment but it is still incredibly tense, almost unbearably so, and there were several times when I was on the edge of my seat and holding my breath.  The hand-held underwater cinematography, atmospheric lighting, and dramatic sound design add to the sense of claustrophobia and terror.  The performances are solid and I really enjoyed seeing all of the technical aspects involved in this highly dangerous job, particularly the pressurized pods the divers must live in for the entire duration of their rotation.  I definitely recommend this taut thriller, especially now that it is available to stream.
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