Category Archives: Drama

Fairyland

Fairyland 4 1/2 stars

Based on the memoir of writer Alysia Abbot, Fairyland follows the life of young Alysia and her father Steve after the sudden loss of Alysia’s mother.  It’s the seventies and the pair move to San Francisco, move into a cheap apartment where Steve develops his writing skills and starts to date men.  The story is told mainly from the child’s perspective and shows how she has to learn to cope with a father who is absent more than he should be. Eventually,  the eighties come and with it the AIDS epidemic which impacts the small family in painful ways.  The success of the movie is helped greatly by the acting skills of Scoot McNairy as Steve and Emilia Jones as the teenage Alysia. It’s a meaningful drama that shows the joy and pain of a father daughter relationship. 

Fancy Dance

Fancy Dance  4 stars

In the US Dramatic category is Fancy Dance,  a fictional account of a missing native American woman and her family’s search for answers that mirrors all too well the reality of Native Americans on reservations.  Jax (Lily Gladstone) is caring for her 13 year old niece Roki since Roki’s mother disappeared weeks earlier.  The police seem to be making little progress in solving the case so Jax takes it upon herself to start asking questions,  taking Roki with her and risking losing her to her father’s custody (Shea Whigham). The movie is a mystery drama that brings focus to the real problem of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women epidemic in this country. 

Chanshi

Chanshi,   4 1/2 stars

A category that was recently added to Sundance is the Indie Episodics. These are typically short series that are intended for TV audiences,  the producers of which are hoping will be picked up by some network. I picked Chanshi, a very amusing comedy series written by and starring Aleeza Chanowitz. Chanshi is a Jewish young woman from Brooklyn who is engaged to a young Jewish man that she does not know well.  Everything should be going well for her.  But the first episode starts with Chanshi traveling to Israel to surprise her best friend who is getting married soon.  It seems that Chanshi’s dream is to have sex with lots of Israeli men,  but not only that,  with men who are soldiers.  So she is basically a train wreck who could destroy her own life while being very disruptive to all those around her as well.  The character is very engaging and funny and involved in some interesting story lines bringing in other characters who can’t help being attracted to her and wanting to straighten her out.  Unfortunately I was not able to stay for the Q&A. I hope this one finds a way to a wider audience. 

Mami Wata

Mami  Wata.   4 stars

From the country of Nigeria comes the movie Mami Wata by C. J. “Fiery” Obasi. This is a story taking place in a fictional African village called Iyi where the old traditional ways are still observed,  but the influence of Western culture is pressuring the people with its promises of development and technology.  Mami Wata is an all powerful water diety that protects the people,  but can only be reached through the Intermediary,  Mama Efe. Mama has two daughters,  one of which,  Zinwe is to be Mama’s successor as Intermediary.  Then a mysterious visitor arrives who is a rebel deserter from a nearby wartorn country and will change everything in this small village.  The movie depicts the struggle between a traditional matriarchal culture and modern militants common in African societies.  The production is relatively simple and is done in black and white.  The language is some combination of an African dialect mixed with English.  Subtitles are provided. The story is full of deceit, treachery, intrigue and murder, all the elements of a Shakespearean tragedy making it fascinating and emotional as the conclusion is reached.  I am hoping to see it chosen as one of the award winners this weekend. 

A Thousand and One

A Thousand and One   4 stars 

A. V. Rockwell tells a story of a young Black mother raising a son against the backdrop of a gentrifying New York City that tends to deny opportunity from the poorer minorities.  Inez (Teyana Taylor) is living in shelters in the 1990’s and as an act of redemption decides to kidnap 6 year old Terry, from foster care where he has been placed.  But there is a secret kept hidden that can shatter their lives if discovered.  We follow this small family for the next twelve years as they struggle to build something together with her friend and eventual husband,  Lucky (William Catlett). Both Inez and Lucky have criminal backgrounds making things a challenge,  but are committed to keeping Terry in school on a path to success.  It is a moving,  well acted and well written story that keeps you rooting for this loving and unlikely family. The cast was present for Q&A including the little boy who played the young Terry and was really charming. The movie was very well received by the packed in audience. It was an excellent movie that I almost missed. 

Sometimes I Think About Dying

Sometimes I Think About Dying  4 stars

Despite the title this movie has a very positive message.  It is a close look at the life and private thoughts of its main character, Fran, a young woman working in a small seaside town in Oregon.  Daisy Ridley stars as the woman who seems to have a rather dull life working in a small office,  only interacting with her coworkers when needed.  The movie starts by showing her normal work and home routine using long stretches of silence,  but blended in are private scenes that convey her thoughts about death or ways to die. One day a new worker, a man in his forties joins the team and he and Fran make a connection and arrange to see each other from time to time.  They find that there are more things that they don’t have in common than things they do,  which leads to some awkward moments in their conversations. Both of the characters are driven to express honest thoughts that can be hurtful.  The film conveys a message of acceptance of others despite the differences we have.  I should also emphasize that Fran’s thoughts on death do not represent any suicidal tendencies.  They are a way of showing the private thoughts we have that are hidden from the outside world. For Ridley this is a real departure from her work on the Star Wars movies. It is one to check out if you find it. 

Radical

Radical  5 stars

There are so many good imaginative movies at Sundance which makes it hard to identify the very best.  But I believe we have one in Radical.  It is a true story about a Mexican teacher starting a new job at one of the poorest and badly performing elementary schools in Mexico. The school is in a border town that is full of violence and corruption where the students come from extreme poverty.   Mexican funny man Eugenio Derbez stars as Sergio Juarez who is taking over the sixth grade class for the new school year.  Derbez is known for the comedy How to Be a Latin Lover and for his role in CODA. His role here is much more of a dramatic one, but he is great in it.  Sergio has a very different approach to teaching where he really gets the students enthused about learning,  but has to deal with disapproval from the Director and from parents who don’t like their children getting their hopes up too high.  The idea of a hero teacher bringing out the potential of underprivileged children has been done a few times but Radical really does an outstanding job at it. Derbez and two of the child actors were present for the Q&A. Many of the scenes shown in the movie happened in real life including the corruption that deprives the school of computers.  At the Q&A it was revealed that after ten years the school still does not have computers and it would be pointless to get them because they would only be stolen for the parts.  The two girls answered that they hope to continue with acting careers. I did not have this one on my initial list but looked for it once I heard some of the word of mouth,  (plus it has Eugenio Derbez, one of the funniest actors I have seen.)

King Richard

King Richard       4 stars

If you want to see another inspirational sports movie then go see King Richard, directed by Reinaldo Marcus Green and written by Zach Baylin. But the movie is more than that as it is also about the unwavering belief and determination of Richard Williams, father of future tennis stars Venus and Serena Williams. Will Smith portrays Richard, the girls’ father who has a written plan for his two daughter’s success and will not accept defeat even in the face of the odds against them, coming from the streets of Compton in the early 1990’s. Even though we know what the eventual outcome is, stardom in the all-white tennis world for two young black women, the obstacles facing them appear all too real. Richard works with the young girls on run-down neighborhood tennis courts while having to fight off the young men of the streets threatening them and forces his way into meetings with the white coaches who are needed for the girls’ success. Richard tells a lot of stories of his growing up in a world of racial prejudice with a father who would not look out for him. (The movie does not even include the worst of it.) He is determined not to have this experience repeated on his daughters. Fortunately, there is also a mother, Brandy (Aunjanue Ellis) who looks out for their interests and calls out Richard when he tries to go too far without consulting her. The white coaches are perplexed at Richard’s insistence that the girls be pulled from the junior tournament circuit when he sees how the parents of the other girls are treating their daughters and the resulting behavior as spoiled brats. Of course the movie would not be the success it is without Will Smith’s convincing acting performance as the father who won’t take No for an answer. He is deserving of the acting Oscar he received (despite all the ceremony controversy). This sports movie delivers with the expected climactic competitive scene as is the tradition, but the focus shifts from the father to daughter Venus when she faces the best in the world. The movie is available on HBOMax.

She Said

She Said               4 ½ stars

She Said takes on the subject of sexual abuse and misconduct in Hollywood from a journalistic approach and from an entirely female perspective. This is the true story of the New York Times investigation and take down of one Hollywood’s most powerful producers, Harvey Weinstein. We have all heard the story before, of the decades of assaults and intimidation and coverup payouts that centered around Weinstein and in the end how it led to the Metoo movement throughout the corporate world. In the film we see the efforts of the two Times investigative reporters, Megan Twohy (Carey Mulligan of An Education and Promising Young Woman) and Jodi Kantor (Zoe Kazan of The Big Sick and The Plot Against America) as they follow leads, knock on doors and are rebuffed at nearly every turn. Through a series of interviews and flashbacks we get the stories of not only repeated abuse of Hollywood actresses (including Rose McGowan and Ashley Judd) and Mirimax employees, but of the multitude of enablers in the industry that allow the abuse to continue. The formula of the movie is one we have seen before, in All the President’s Men, Spotlight and The Post, only this time the reporting is down exclusively by women who in addition to their jobs have to deal with raising children and fending off creeps in bars. Even though we know the eventual outcome we feel the frustration of the reporters as they hear the stories but can’t persuade the victims to go public out of fear of their families learning what happened and retaliation from Weinstein. It is only after being informed of the payouts by the lawyers and accountants that they learn the true scope of the crimes. For the documentary treatment of the subject, see the 2019 movie Untouchable. It gives a firsthand account from some of the women victims and the exposing of Weinstein’s crimes.

Bones and All

Bones and All                     4 stars

From director Luca Guadagnino comes a story of two young lovers on a road trip travelling across the country in the 1980’s in a search for purpose. Timothee Chalamet is Lee, reuniting with the Call Me by Your Name director, and Taylor Russell is a teenage girl, Maren in this teenage romance horror as a young pair learning to deal with the secret that they both share. I won’t reveal what that secret is but let’s just say that it involves a lot of blood and they are not vampires. Bones and All is actually based on a young adult novel by the same name where the heat between the two young travelers gradually intensifies as they drive from one rundown  Midwestern town to another. The story is actually reminiscent of Badlands or Natural Born Killers as they commit certain crimes against the unsuspecting victims. We must understand that this is not a matter of choice. It’s just that this is who they are. Maren is on this journey to try to find her birth mother accompanied by a cassette recording from her father and her own birth certificate that reveals her mother’s hometown. She encounters Lee by scent, revealing that they share something in common. Oh, and there is an old man she meets along the way (Mark Rylance of Bridge of Spies) who teaches her some things about their kind. (This has to be the creepiest role of Rylance’s career to date! He plays it perfectly.) He will show up at the most unexpected of times. The well paced movie alternates between slow cinematic scenes of the country and loving interaction to scenes of utter bloody horror. There are also a few single scene roles for some well known actors including Michael Stuhlbarg, Chloe Sevigny, David Gordon Green and Jessica Harper. Despite their acting skills the movie mainly belongs to Taylor Russell who is very believable as the young Maren. Besides 2017’s Call Me by Your Name, Guadagnino is also known for his films Suspiria (also a horror film), and I am Love. This one is probably best meant to be viewed by the strictly horror movie fans. I look forward to his next project, Challengers, starring Zendaya coming in 2023.