• "Unorthodox," "The Queen's Gambit," _The Hand of God_

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 8 23:09:08 2023
    I am about 10 items from finishing up with Netflix!

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    "Unorthodox" was recommended by Jessica Chastain, so it
    is a must see. During COVID times she had one of these
    zoom-telecast with the lead actress Shira Haas, and it
    was mutual admiration society. Watching the head-shaving
    scene immediately tells me why -- it requires the kind
    of emotional acrobatics and control that Chastain herself
    is so justly famous for. I suspect Haas is losing her
    real hair in that shoot, so there can only be one take.
    Impressive. The 4-hour miniseries is taut and lean;
    it only slowly reveals the background to the characters,
    and some early scenes would not be fully explained until
    much later. Maria Schrader directs with great confidence.
    She is never the kind of director who would throw in an
    overhead shot or a freeze-frame, but the use of Berlin
    location is subtle and excellent, and the wedding scenes,
    with Haas' character's mother being ostracized, are
    especially well done. I'm never been acquainted with
    the Orthodox Jewish community in New York, but did
    blunder into the Montreal Outremont community once,
    and it was austere and oppressive ...

    "The Queen's Gambit" is kind of the opposite -- overlong,
    by the numbers, and as quintessentially American as
    "Unorthodox" is unmistakably European -- down to the
    valorizing of substance abuse, of course. I have never
    liked Anya Taylor-Joy. Directors tend to let her exotic
    fish-eyed look dominate her scenes and slow things to a
    crawl. She is actually quite good in this series, not
    Shira Haas-good but solid enough. The problem is that
    the series have extended flashbacks to her character's
    orphanage upbringing, and the child actresses playing
    her younger self are one-note and tiresome. Those
    flashback scenes seem to take forever too -- 20, 30
    minutes at a time, unlike the quicksilver backward
    glances of "Unorthodox." The background music is
    lull-you-to-sleep pop tunes, not the elegiac Schubert
    in "Unorthodox." (Haas's character at one point
    even plays the sonata that Bresson picked for _Au
    Hasard Balthasar_.) I really didn't finish watching
    it. I cheated and skipped forward to the final episode.
    If it were about storming the Raevsky redoubt in "La
    Bataille de Moskova" instead of chess, it might be of
    some interest.

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    Jessica Chastain also mentioned somewhere that she
    liked _The Hand of God_, so I Paulo Sorrentino has
    never been my favorite director; his framing and
    lighting are really good (they make him an Italian,
    and better, Wes Anderson), but his stories are too
    precious, shallow. _The Hand of God_ is lovely
    to look at, and is certainly more emotionally honest
    than _The Great Beauty_ or _This Must be the Place_.
    It is supposed to be autobiographical, about the
    writer-directors' teenage years in Napoli, living
    with his crazy and extended family, watching Maradona
    bring home the serie A title (not sure it was called
    that then). The film's title refers to Maradona's
    deliberate handball goal against England in the 1986
    World Cup. I am not far from Sorrentino's age, and
    that year I was gutted that England was eliminated by
    such a blatant act of cheating, despite Gary Lineker's
    heroics. (The England striker scored 6 goals despite
    having a broken arm in a huge cast -- although I might
    be confusing that with the 1990 world cup.) Hopefully
    that puts things in perspective for the soccer-
    challenged. I wonder how the English cinephiles
    received this film ... Anyway, Sorrentino is a
    fabulist who dreams too much about celebrities and
    cinema; the autobiographical element gives the film
    a grounding that is sorely needed.

    Jessica Chastain is a self-described cinema nerd
    who feasts on these auteurist films. I wonder why
    she hasn't worked more closely with the big-name
    auteurs apart from Malick, Bigelow, del Toro ...
    and I'm counting John Michael McDonagh. Well she's
    also worked with Ridley Scott and Christopher
    Nolan, even though I don't care for Nolan. And
    Liv Ullmann, and the underrated John Madden. OK,
    that's quite a handful actually. But the point
    is, she should really consider directing. I bet
    she has a much firmer grasp on framing and the
    visual language of cinema than most Anglo-
    American actresses who do try their hands at
    directing.

    I still haven't watched her "Tammy and George"
    series -- that needs 120% of my attention for
    6 hours -- but will get to it soon!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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