Friday, November 27, 2015

December Outing: Trumbo


For our December outing on Tuesday, December 1, we'll be seeing Trumbo, which promises to be a real treat for both true movie buffs and all of us who believe that civil liberties and free speech must be protected regardless of where or when we live. Dalton Trumbo was one of the most successful screenwriters in Hollywood in the late 30s and early 40s. Then, in 1947, he was caught in the snare of HUAC, the House Un-American Affairs Committee of the U.S. Congress . He was imprisoned and blacklisted, preventing him from being hired by any filmmakers. But the Oscar-winning Trumbo refused to go down without a fight.

We'll see the film at the Varsity Cinema (Manulife Centre, Bloor & Bay). Screen time is 1:20 p.m., so let's meet near the box office at about 1:00 p.m. If you don't see any Movie Club members, just go in and choose any seat and we'll meet up after the film.

As always, those who wish to chat about the movie over a bite or a drink will go downstairs to Scaccia. Please notify me by noon on Monday, November 30, if you plan to go to the restaurant so I can make a reservation for the correct number of people.




SYNOPSIS:  In 1947, Dalton Trumbo (Bryan Cranston) was Hollywood's top screenwriter until he and other artists were jailed and blacklisted for their political beliefs. TRUMBO (directed by Jay Roach) recounts how Dalton used words and wit to win two Academy Awards and expose the absurdity and injustice under the blacklist, which entangled everyone from gossip columnist Hedda Hopper (Helen Mirren) to John Wayne, Kirk Douglas and Otto Preminger.


TRAILER:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n0dZ_2ICpJE


REVIEWS:  http://www.metacritic.com/movie/trumbo-2015


MORE ON DALTON TRUMBO:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalton_Trumbo

Friday, October 30, 2015

November Pick: Suffragette

Full disclosure: I've been a devout feminist since coming to understand what the term meant in the 70s, when I joined so many other women as we marched and ranted and had our consciousness raised. The understanding I gained back then has informed my life and beliefs and feelings ever since. If you want to get a taste of what it was like back then, specifically in 1975, which was International Women's Year, you may want to read a memoir I wrote, which I've pasted at the bottom of this blog post.


So it's not surprising that I've been dying to see Suffragette, which is our pick for November,ever since I saw a blurb somewhere a couple years ago about Meryl Streep shooting a movie depicting the unbelievably brave and dedicated English women who fought for the vote a century ago.


Meryl Streep plays the movement's leader, Emmeline Pankhurst, which seems just right to me. She doesn't have a lot of screen time, though, because the film's point of view is that of a working woman, played by Carey Mulligan, who joins the struggle almost accidentally, but ends up battling cruel resistance from the male-dominated society.


We'll be seeing Suffragette on Tuesday, October 3, at the Varsity Cinema (ManuLife Centre @ Bay & Bloor). Screen time is 1:20, but let's meet near the box office about 20 minutes earlier. Afterwards, those who wish to have a bite will go escalator ride down to Scaccia. If you plan to join in this, please notify me no later than noon on Monday, October 2, so I can make a reservation for the correct number of people.


 Suffragette     






Synopsis:  A drama that tracks the story of the foot soldiers of the early feminist movement, women who were forced underground to pursue a dangerous game of cat and mouse with an increasingly brutal State. These women were not primarily from the genteel educated classes, they were working women who had seen peaceful protest achieve nothing. Radicalized and turning to violence as the only route to change, they were willing to lose everything in their fight for equality - their jobs, their homes, their children and their lives. Maud was one such foot soldier. The story of her fight for dignity is as gripping and visceral as any thriller, it is also heart-breaking and inspirational.
 



Trailer:  http://www.cinemaclock.com/ont/toronto/movies/suffragette-2015/videos

Review:  http://www.truthdig.com/arts_culture/item/suffragette_movie_review_domestic_terrorist_or_proud_feminist_20151022



International Women’s Year
by Terry Poulton

       Last Thursday was International Women’s Day. As I always do on March 8th, I spent time  
       reminiscing about 1975, which was the United Nation’s International Women’s Year.

            In many ways, it was the most exciting year of my life. I turned 30 that January and instead 
            of deploring the milestone, as so many women had done for so long, I celebrated it with
            gusto. I had recently embraced feminism and was simultaneously bubbling with excitement 
            and bristling with anger.

Every day seemed to bring fresh evidence of women’s progress, or another outrageous attack on our aspiration to be equals with men. Some days brought both. I got to chronicle these events on campus radio at the University of Toronto, where I was then a mature student studying at night. I was news director at Radio Women, which was run by a feminist collective that had wangled one evening per week to do whatever we wanted.

My head was spinning with all the new possibilities for women, things that didn’t seem to have been thought about since the suffragettes won us the vote a half century earlier. I was reading, and being radicalized by, Ms. Magazine, The Feminine Mystique, The Second Sex and The Female Eunuch.

Gloria Steinem came to town and made a speech that still echoes in my mind from time to time. “Make trouble,” she said to hundreds of cheering women.

With all this swirling around in my cranium, I wrote and broadcast 15 minutes worth of stories on the radio every Tuesday evening. Stories like all the “firsts” for women including:  Pauline McGibbon becoming Canada’s first female Lieutenant Governor; Pauline Jewett taking office as the first woman president of a major Canadian university (Simon Fraser); The Times of London naming its first female news editor in 186 years; Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau appointing the second woman in a row as Speaker of the Senate; the RCMP allowing women to join for the first time in its 101-year history; and even the first policewoman in the United States being shot and killed on duty.

I reported many more stories that year, and participated in rowdy protest marches, rabble-rousing women’s events and many, many private “consciousness-raising” meetings.

And in my day job I piloted a big adventure. I was editor of Communiqué, a magazine published by a national lobbying group called the Canadian Conference of the Arts. We nabbed some of the special funding devoted to International Women’s Year and produced a special edition devoted to Women in the Arts in Canada – the only venture of its kind to this day, which is why it now resides in the National Archives.

It was incredibly exhilarating and empowering to assemble a team of writers – among them some of my feminist friends – to showcase women writers, musicians, dancers, actresses, playwrights, filmmakers, craftswomen, and visual artists. Along the way, we discovered forgotten facts including that Anna Leonowens, of The King and I fame, came to Canada after leaving Siam and founded what’s now the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design; and that a Canadian woman named Nell Shipman produced, scripted, directed and acted in silent movies shot here in the late 1920s.

I commissioned then-unknown, now-famous Susan Swan to interview Margaret Atwood, and novelist Marian Engel to write about our homegrown female storytellers. Little old me negotiated with the Vancouver Art Gallery and the Art Gallery of Ontario to get a painting by Emily Carr for our cover.

When my brainchild was published, it drew a lot of attention, including congratulatory letters from the prime minister, senators, cabinet ministers and many others – some of whom were probably just bowing to political correctness rather than exhibiting truly raised consciousness in that special year.

I’m grateful for so much of what happened in 1975, not least the fact that, having discovered me through Communiqué, Peter C. Newman spring-boarded my professional writing career two years later, when he invited me to write for Maclean’s. I also met and bonded with some remarkable women who are still my dearest friends 37 years later.

But perhaps most of all, I’m glad there was something we didn’t know back then: How many sinister forces would slither into prominence decades later to try to roll back what we achieved, and to bring back the dark days when women lacked the power to control their own lives.
 



Friday, September 25, 2015

October Outing: The Intern




The Intern (2015) Poster
If you've enjoyed movies written and/or directed by Nancy Myers (Something's Gotta Give, It's Complicated and many other quirky, upbeat films), you'll likely be glad you joined fellow Movie Club members to see The Intern on October 6. It stars Robert De Niro as a retiree who goes back to work as an intern for company owner Ann Hathaway. Synopsis, trailer, etc. below.


For a change, we'll be seeing the movie at Rainbow Market Square (Front St. just east of Jarvis on north side, entrance in the courtyard beside the north St. Lawrence Market). Yes, the screens are smaller, but it's a funky place that's close to lots of interesting eateries. Sorry if the timing clashes with anyone's class, but the next one was too late for many of us.


Date:          Tuesday, October 6
Time:          Screen - 1:10, meet-up - approx. 20 minutes beforehand)
Restaurant: Bindia Indian Bistro, 16 Market St. (across Front St. from the cinema) www.bindia.ca


As always, there's no need to tell me if you're coming to the movie, but not to eat afterwards. But if you plan to go to Bindia, please notify me by noon Monday, Oct. 6.


Synopsis:  70-year-old widower Ben Whittaker has discovered that retirement isn't all it's cracked up to be. Seizing an opportunity to get back in the game, he becomes a senior intern at an online fashion site, founded and run by Jules Ostin.

Director:

Writer:

Stars:, , Rene Russo

Trailer:       http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2361509/

 Review:   http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rob-taub/movie-review-the-intern_b_8192404.html

 










Friday, August 28, 2015

September Outing: Learning to Drive


Learning to Drive, in which Patricia Clarkson stars as a recently dumped wife who hires Ben Kingsley to teach her to drive, will be our September choice. 

It's on at the Varsity Cinema (ManuLife Centre, Bloor & Bay) and we'll go to the 2:40 screening. So let's meet about 20 minutes before then near the box office.


Those who wish to nosh afterward will head downstairs to Scaccia. As always, no need to let me know if you're planning to see the film but not eat afterwards; but if you do plan to go to the restaurant, please notify me NO LATER THAN NOON on Monday, August 31.

 

Image for the news result Synopsis: 

Academy Award nominee Patricia Clarkson and Academy Award winner Ben Kingsley star in this feel-good, coming of (middle) age comedy about a mismatched pair who help each other overcome life’s road blocks.

Wendy is a fiery Manhattan author whose husband has just left her for a younger woman; Darwan is a soft-spoken taxi driver from India on the verge of an arranged marriage. As Wendy sets out to reclaim her independence, she runs into a barrier common to many lifelong New Yorkers: she’s never learned to drive. When Wendy hires Darwan to teach her, her unraveling life and his calm restraint seem like an awkward fit. But as he shows her how to take control of the wheel, and she coaches him on how to impress a woman, their unlikely friendship awakens them to the joy, humor, and love in starting life anew.​


Director, Cast, etc.:  www.learningtodrivemovie.com
 

Trailer:
http://www.learningtodrivemovie.com/videos#1



Friday, August 7, 2015

August Outing: Ricki & the Flash


We'll be seeing Meryl Streep starring as an aging rock star in Ricki & the Flash on Tuesday, August 11, at the Yonge/Dundas Cineplex Odeon. Screen time is 2:30, so let's meet near the upstairs entrance about 20 minutes earlier.
 

After the film, those who wish to will walk over to Fran's at Shuter & Victoria Streets for a bite. As always, no need to let me know if you're only coming to the movie. But if you plan to join us at Fran's, please email me by noon on Monday, August 10, so I can make a reservation for the correct number of people.
Below are details about the movie. Hope to see you on Tuesday for a rockin' good time.


Terry

Ricki and the Flash

SYNOPSIS

Musical drama by director Jonathan Demme. Meryl Streep stars as Ricki Rendazzo, a guitar heroine who made a world of mistakes as she followed her dreams of rock-and-roll stardom. Returning home, Ricki gets a shot at redemption and a chance to make things right as she faces the music with her family. Streep stars opposite her real-life daughter Mamie Gummer; Rick Springfield, portraying a Flash member in love with Ricki; Kevin Kline as Ricki's ex-husband; and Audra McDonald as Kline's new wife.  


TRAILER
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8PVK6Hky2A 

Friday, July 10, 2015

July Outing: Suite Francaise


Set in France during the Second World War, Suite Francaise sounds like a real treat for WWII buffs like yours truly, and the fact that TIFF has chosen to present the movie speaks well to its quality.


Michelle Williams stars as a young French woman, with Kristen Scott-Thomas as her judgmental mother-in-law and Matthias Schoenaerts (whom we recently saw in Far From the Madding Crowd) as a Nazi officer who goose-steps into their lives. Below is a synopsis and link to the trailer.


We'll be seeing Suite Francaise at TIFF Bell Lightbox (King & John streets) on Tuesday, July 14. Screen time is 12:45, so let's meet near the box office at about 12:20 


As always, if you plan to go with the group to a restaurant after the film, please notify me no later than noon on Monday, July 13, so I can make a reservation nearby for the correct number of people.


SYNOPSIS:
In Nazi-occupied France, Lucille Angellier waits for news of her husband, along with her domineering mother-in-law. When a regiment of German soldiers arrive in the town, they soon move into the villagers' homes. Lucille tries to ignore Bruno, the German commander who has been posted at her house, but she soon falls in love with him.


TRAILER:  https://www.google.com/search?q=suite+francaise+trailer&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8

suite-francaise-1.jpg

Friday, July 3, 2015

Mr. Holmes Preview Screening




Here I am with just a few of our Movie Club members at the free preview screening of Mr. Holmes last evening at the Varsity Cineplex. 

BIG thanks for treating us to this fascinating film about Sherlock Holmes in his later years go to the eOne Group. We huge movie fans appreciate your generosity and would love to accept more of the same in future.

Word to the Wise: One thing eOne could do a LOT better is to inform invitees of the need to redeem their handsome passes for actual tickets before being allowed into the cinema. Because no effort was made to let me know this, so I could alert the group, some of us missed out on something we were very much looking forward to.

See you at the movies,

Terry Poulton
Life Movie Club Moderator









Friday, June 5, 2015

June Outing: I'll See You in My Dreams

On the second Tuesday of the month, June 9, those who haven't already done so on their own will be seeing I'll See You in My Dreams. It's a late-in-life romance starring Blythe Danner (aka Gwyneth Paltrow's mother) and Sam Elliott. Some of our members might deem this film a bit too fluffier than our usual fare, but there's nothing else on just now that I believe would appeal to the majority of us. And I'm pretty sure a pleasant bit of fluff once in awhile won't harm us.


What I would have chosen, if the timing had been better, is Testament of Youth, based on unforgettable the World War I memoirs of Vera Brittain, But it doesn't arrive in our city until June 19.


The Varsity Cinema is the only one in Toronto showing so I'll See You in My Dreams so far, so we'll meet there in front of the box office approximately 20 minutes before the 3:40 screen time.

We'll eschew the Bloor Street Diner afterward because several people (including me) consider it too expensive. So we'll go back to our former spot on the lower level of the ManuLife Centre, Sciaccia. Those who want to go for a bite after the film should notify me no later than noon on Monday, June 8 so I can make a reservation for the correct number of people.


I'll See You in My Dreams


SYNOPSIS:
A widow and former songstress (Blythe Danner), who's finding the dating scene difficult at her age, spends her time with her friends, golfing, gardening and singing karaoke, but still feels lonely.
When she randomly meets a sexy man (Sam Elliott) who's about her age, she realizes that life can begin anew at any age.


TRAILER:  https://search.yahoo.com/search?p=trailer+i%27ll+see+you+in+my+dreams&ei=UTF-8&fr=chr-greentree_ff&ilc=12&type=523482


REVIEW: From the website of the late, great Roger Ebert: http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/ill-see-you-in-my-dreams-2015







Friday, May 1, 2015

May Outing: Far From the Madding Crowd

As requested by several Movie Club members, a remake of Far From the Madding Crowd is the pick for our outing on Tuesday, May 5.


Some of us question whether any new version can top 1967's film of Thomas Hardy's classic novel, in which Julie Christie, Alan Bates and Peter Finch delivered such memorable performances. But we were convinced to give it a go when we watched the trailer, which you can see below.

We'll be seeing the film at the Varsity Cinema (ManuLife Centre, 55 Bloor W.) for the 3:20 screening. I chose the later-than-usual time to accommodate those of us who have Life classes earlier that day. As always, let's meet near the box office at least 15 minutes beforehand and if you don't see me there, go in and find a seat. After seeing the movie, those who wish to discuss it over a snack or meal will go downstairs to the Bloor Street Diner.

As always, there's no need to notify me if you plan to come to the film but not the restaurant. But if you do plan to join us at the Bloor Street Diner, please email me no later than noon on Monday, May 4, so I can make a reservation for the correct number of people: poultonterry@gmail.com.

Hope to see you at the movie,


Terry

Far From The Madding Crowd

SYNOPSIS:  

Based on the literary classic by Thomas Hardy, FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD is the story of independent, beautiful and headstrong Bathsheba Everdene (Carey Mulligan), who attracts three very different suitors: Gabriel Oak (Matthias Schoenaerts), a sheep farmer, captivated by her fetching willfulness; Frank Troy (Tom Sturridge), a handsome and reckless Sergeant; and William Boldwood (Michael Sheen), a prosperous and mature bachelor. This timeless story of Bathsheba’s choices and passions explores the nature of relationships and love – as well as the human ability to overcome hardships through resilience and perseverance.

TRAILER

http://www.cineplex.com/Movie/far-from-the-madding-crowd 

Carey Mulligan sings in the movie: http://www.cineplex.com/News/Carey-Mulligan-sings-in-Far-from-the-Madding-Crowd-trailer?cmpid=contenttag




 

Friday, April 3, 2015

April Outing: Woman in Gold


Yes, Woman in Gold - starring Helen Mirren as the real-life woman who fought to recover art looted by the Nazis - has arrived in Toronto on schedule. Despite somewhat tepid reviews, I feel sure that most of us will enjoy the film, which includes touching flashbacks to when Dame Helen's character was young during the terrifying Nazi era.


Movie Club members will see the film on Tuesday, April 7, at the Varsity Cinema (Bloor & Bay) for the 1:30 screening, after which those who wish to eat and chat will do so at the Bloor Street Diner in the ManuLife Centre. Let's meet near the box office 15-20 minutes earlier, but if you don't see me, just go inside and choose a seat.

As always, there's no need to notify me if you plan to see the movie but not go to the restaurant. But if you do plan to eat, please email me by early afternoon on Monday, April 6, so I can make a reservation for the correct number of people.

... the poster for the upcoming movie woman in gold describing the film as

Storyline

Helen Mirren stars in the incredible story of Maria Altmann, a Jewish refugee who is forced to flee Vienna during World War II. Decades later, determined to salvage some dignity from her past, Maria has taken on a mission to reclaim a painting the Nazis stole from her family: the famous Lady In Gold, a portrait of her beloved Aunt Adele. Partnering with an inexperienced but determined young lawyer (Ryan Reynolds), Maria embarks on an epic journey for justice 60 years in the making.


Trailer: https://search.yahoo.com/search?p=movie+woman+in+gold&ei=UTF-8&fr=chr-greentree_ff&ilc=12&type=523482


Stories About the Film

Here's an article that isn't particularly kind to the movie, but is all about Helen Mirren: http://time.com/3768715/woman-in-gold-helen-mirren/

This is an interesting article about various battles to recover looted art: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/31/arts/design/the-story-behind-woman-in-gold-nazi-art-thieves-and-one-paintings-return.html?action=click&contentCollection=Movies&module=RelatedCoverage&region=Marginalia&pgtype=article 

Saturday, March 7, 2015

March Outing: The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel

The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (2015) Poster
 
 
Wouldn't a visit to balmy India be the perfect antidote to the frigid weather we've been battling this winter? I say yes and that's why we'll be seeing The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel on Tuesday, March 10, at the Yonge/Dundas Odeon Cineplex. Screen time: 1:25
I was hoping that a later afternoon screening would be available for those of us who want to attend Life's March Mingle beforehand. But the best we can do is 1:25 (the next one is 4:30, which is too late to be practical for those who have to travel home from downtown.) The Mingle goes from 12-1:45, with a speech from Ryerson president Sheldon Levy as the highlight.
We should be able to nip over to the cinema in good time. So let's meet in front of the upstairs box office about 15 minutes before the 1:25 screen time. But if you don't see me there, just go into the theatre on your own and we'll meet up later.
After the movie, those who wish to munch & chat will walk a block west to Bay Street to Red Lobster. As always, if you're only coming to the movie, there's no need to notify me. But if you're planning to hit the Lobster, please let me know no later than noon on Monday, March 9, so I can make a reservation.
Here are a synopsis and trailer for Marigold II. All the Brits we love to love are back, starting with Maggie Smith, Judi Dench and Bill Nighy, and they're joined by Richard Gere. Doesn't get much better than that, at least for my taste.
 
Storyline:
The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is the expansionist dream of Sonny (Dev Patel), and it's making more claims on his time than he has available, considering his imminent marriage to the love of his life, Sunaina (Tina Desai). Sonny has his eye on a promising property now that his first venture, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel for the Elderly and Beautiful, has only a single remaining vacancy - posing a rooming predicament for fresh arrivals Guy (Richard Gere) and Lavinia (Tamsin Greig). Evelyn and Douglas (Judi Dench and Bill Nighy) have now joined the Jaipur workforce, and are wondering where their regular dates for Chilla pancakes will lead, while Norman and Carol (Ronald Pickup and Diana Hardcastle) are negotiating the tricky waters of an exclusive relationship, as Madge (Celia Imrie) juggles two eligible and very wealthy suitors. Perhaps the only one who may know the answers is newly installed co-manager of the hotel, Muriel (Maggie Smith), the keeper of everyone's secrets.
 
Trailer: https://search.yahoo.com/search?p=second+best+exotic+marigold+hotel&ei=UTF-8&fr=chr-greentree_ff&ilc=12&type=523482 

Thursday, January 29, 2015

February Outing: Still Alice



Thursday, January 29, 2015

February Outing: Still Alice

This month's pick is Still Alice, for which Julianne Moore has been winning top movie awards for her portrayal of a woman battling early-onset Alzheimer's. I'm well aware that this is a painful topic for some of you, as it is with me because both my parents died of the disease. But when I learned that much of the story line is about a woman's efforts to come up with strategies to help her endure what's happened, I decided to see the film and to invite other Movie Club members to join me if they wish to do so. We'll have to wait and see whether this was a good or a bad decision.

We'll be seeing Still Alice on Tuesday, Feb. 3, at the Varsity Cinema (Bay & Bloor) for the 12:45 screening, meeting about 20 minutes earlier near the box office, as always. My regrets to those whose Life classes clash with this timing, but choosing the later time of 3:45 would meaning going to a restaurant afterward at dinner time, when we would be expected to order full meals, which is not what all of us want to do. Make sense?

Speaking of eating, we'll go to the Bloor Street Diner, so please email me by about noon on Monday, Feb. 2, so I can make a reservation for the correct number of munchers.

Here are details about the film and a trailer.
IMP Awards > 2014 Movie Poster Gallery > Still Alice Poster #2

NOW Magazine:

Still Alice

NOW rating: NNN
  • Rating: PG
  • Duration: 101 minutes
  • Genre: Drama
  • Directed by: Richard Glatzer, Wash Westmoreland
  • Written by: Richard Glatzer,Wash Westmoreland
  • Cast: Julianne Moore, Alec Baldwin, Kristen Stewart, Kate Bosworth, Hunter Parrish, Erin Darke, Victoria Cartagena, Shane McRae, Stephen Kunken,

Still Alice follows a woman slowly losing her mind to early Alzheimer's. It's not easy to give that premise much texture, but Still Alice succeeds because the script focuses less on Alice's (Julianne Moore) relationships with family, including her husband (Alec Baldwin), and more on the ingenious strategies she uses to keep the ravages of her disease at bay. Moore gives a powerful performance (no surprise there), Baldwin's sensitive turn goes against type, and Kristen Stewart, as one of Alice's kids, proves she can show a pulse if given the chance. The film does have a predictable trajectory - how could it not? - but it's certainly not movie-of-the-week fare.

TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrXrZ5iiR0o 

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Friday, January 9, 2015

January Outing: Selma

I postponed our January outing to the second Tuesday of the month for two reasons. One was because a lot of Movie Club members told me they were still crazy-busy with post-holiday chores. The second, and most important reason, was that I wanted us to see Selma, which just arrived in Toronto.

This film is, of course, a biopic about the history-making marches in Alabama led by Martin Luther King in 1965 to shine a spotlight on how African-Americans, especially in the south, were being prevented from voting by violence and trickery.

We'll be seeing Selma at the Yonge-Dundas Cineplex-Odeon on Tues., Jan. 13. Screen time is 1:50, so let's meet near the upstairs box office about 20 minutes earlier.

Two things before I post a trailer and synopsis for Selma. One is that the number of Movie Club members just soared past the 100 mark. Lots of movie lovers at LIFE!

Also, I don't know if any other bloggers dedicate their posts, but I'm doing so now: To Jerry Walker, who died suddenly on November 2nd. Not only was Jerry an enthusiastic Movie Club member, a gifted storyteller for years in Recording Recollections, and one of LIFE's most popular class leaders, he actually took part in the Selma marches. His daughters told us at a memorial for Jerry last month that when he was a young educator in California in 1965, their father dropped everything and scrounged up the money to travel to Alabama to join in the protests. They also said that he rarely spoke about his participation because, he said, he didn't want it to sound like bragging. Good-bye, Jerry, you are sorely missed!



Selma Trailer: http://www.cinemaclock.com/trailers/ont/Toronto/199709/Selma.html 

Roger Ebert Website:
Selma Movie Review
In a perfect world, “Selma” would exist solely as a depiction of darker days long since past, an American history lesson that concludes with reassurances that its horrors will no longer be perpetrated, tolerated nor celebrated. Alas, perfection eludes us on this mortal, earthly plane; “Selma” shows the evolution of change while beaming a spotlight on the stunted growth of that which has not changed. Its timeliness is a spine-chilling reminder that those who do not know their history are doomed to repeat it. Its story provides a blueprint not only of the past, but of the way forward.

There’s a reason why Ava DuVernay’s film is called “Selma” and not “King”. Like Spielberg’s “Lincoln”, “Selma” is as much about the procedures of political maneuvering, in-fighting and bargaining as it is about the chief orchestrator of the resulting deals. “Selma” affords Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. the same human characteristics of humor, frustration and exhaustion that “Lincoln” provided its President. This relatable humanity elevates King’s actions and his efforts. It inspires by suggesting that the reverence for Dr. King was bestowed on a person no different than any of us. If he can provoke change, we have no excuse not to as well.

As King, David Oyelowo is a revelation. Like Anthony Hopkins in “Nixon”, he channels the essence of his character rather than a dead-on visual interpretation. In recreating King’s speaking voice, Oyelowo resists the preacherly curlicues one might be inclined to use based on hearing King’s speeches. Like any good pastor, Oyelowo saves those cadences for his speech scenes, the last of which is so stirring and powerful it knocks the air out of your lungs. Oyelowo channels a conflicted King, a tired man with the weight of the movement on his shoulders, then merges that with defiance, humor, strength and strategic expertise. In Oyelowo’s excellent performance, King becomes a complex, flawed man whose faith in God kept him from utter despair.

Known for her superb indie dramas “I Will Follow” and “Middle of Nowhere”, DuVernay has proven herself a master of small, intimate moments. “Selma” never loses focus on the interpersonal dynamics between King and his followers, his detractors and his family. While touching base with details on SNCC, the SCLC and the organization of the Selma to Montgomery Marches, DuVernay gives memorable scenes to a wide variety of character actors in real-life roles. Andre Holland’s Andrew Young, Stephan James’ John Lewis, Colman Domingo’s Rev. Abernathy and Common’s James Bevel stand out, but eagle-eyed viewers will also notice “Dear White People”’s Tessa Thompson, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Martin Sheen and Wendell Pierce. Even comedian Niecy Nash shows up as a gracious, funny host who invites King and his cohorts into her home.

“Selma” continues DuVernay’s exploration of female empowerment by devoting time to King’s marriage to Coretta Scott King (a powerful Carmen Ejogo). We’re reminded that the movement is as hard on her as it is for her husband, especially since she is home with the kids and the constant victim of harassment from citizens and the government. In one of the film’s best scenes, King is asked a very hard question by his wife. The actors and the director take their time here, with Oyelowo and Ejogo silently and masterfully working the uncomfortable pause between question and answer. In another very good scene, Coretta Scott King meets with Malcolm X (a convincing Nigel Thatch), and their dialogue is an informative piece of strategizing.

In addition to reminding us how good she is with drama, DuVernay puts Hollywood on notice by mastering huge sequences heretofore unseen in her work. Her staging of “Bloody Sunday” on the Edmund Pettis bridge is a spectacular mini-movie that could stand on its own as a short. Narrated by a journalist calling in the story, the scene takes on documentarian proportions. With this scene, and her horrific staging of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing, DuVernay and her editor Spencer Averick make you feel the intensity and chaotic terror of the violence. Dozens of kneeling, peaceful protests fill the screen end to end, and the juxtaposition between the historical depiction on the movie screen and the current images on today’s TV screens does not go unnoticed.

During the fight for voter rights, King has several meetings with President Johnson (a jarring but effective Tom Wilkinson). Their scenes, and Johnson’s scenes with J. Edgar Hoover (Dylan Baker) focus on the political gamesmanship required to bring about change. “Selma” points out the media’s role in influencing the hearts and minds of the American people, and how easily that can be manipulated. King knows about this media power, and how his team handles it is a precursor to today’s social media shenanigans.

The prescient timing of “Selma” could not have been planned. Its opening scene is a casual reminder of what life was like before the Voting Rights Act, with poll taxes and absurd literacy tests suppressing the Black vote. Miss Sofia herself, producer Oprah Winfrey, shows up in the opening scene as a woman on her fourth journey to the voting bureau to take the test that will give her a right she already had. Winfrey disappears into an ordinary person’s countenance, and her gradual disappointment as she realizes once again she will be denied is both heartbreaking and a warning.

“Selma” works as both an epic and a small scale drama, and credit must be extended to DuVernay’s longtime cinematographer, Bradford Young. Young’s camera loves Black skin, and he lights it in beautiful, fearless, shadowy Gordon Willis flourishes the likes of which I have not seen in Hollywood cinema. His stylistic touches during the action scenes are startling and original. That there hasn’t been more talk about his work (he also shot “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints”) is something of a travesty that “Selma” should correct.

This is an emotional movie that aims to anger, sadden and inspire viewers, sometimes in the same scene. “Selma” takes no prisoners and, while it welcomes moviegoers of all hues, it has no intention of sugarcoating its horrors for politically correct comforting. This film—one of the year’s best—is an announcement of a major talent in Ms. DuVernay, but its core message will not be lost nor hidden by the accolades it receives. Through the noise, “Selma” speaks to us: From the top of the hill of progress, it is just as easy to slide down backwards as it is to move forward. Attention must be paid.