Windsor Detroit Film
Thursday, June 18, 2026
History obviously repeats in this feminist Brit flick
History repeats itself in Virginia Woolf’s Night and Day. But that I mean that just this week, in Britain, there was a blatant case of alleged misogyny at the University of Cambridge. A male professor was accused of being ”wicked” and subjecting a female colleague to “psychological torture.” Not just that but Cambridge’s prestigious Institute of Astronomy was described as having an altogether “bad history of misogyny.” Perfect! And just in time for the opening weekend of Virginia Woolf’s Night and Day (in certain markets). Directed by Tina Gharavi it’s based on the little known Woolf novel of the same name. 116 years doesn’t seem to make a whole lot of difference in the charges hurled again the institute, as our heroine Katharine Hilbery (Haley Bennett - The Magnificent Seven, Hillbilly Elegy), finds. The story takes place in 1910 where headstrong Hilbery, a brilliant amateur astronomer, eschews society’s norms by trying to pursue a singular career outside of a conventional and confining (for women) life. The sets and costumes are spot on in this historical remake. And US actress Hilbery is a more than convincing Edwardian Brit (she also played in Cyrano). Timothy Spall (Mr. Turner, The Last Bus), one of Britian’s premium actors, does a turn as a stuffy authoritarian father, and with his twisted peevish face (reminiscent of a Francis Bacon portrait) he’s perfect for the role. And three-quarters of the film is the sub-plot of Bennett’s efforts to elude his grasps. Lily Allen plays the suffragette Mary Datchet, a major influence on the still evolving Katharine. The other theme is Hilbery’s indifference towards marriage, blowing hot and cold and playfully stringing her slightly buffoonish paramour (Jack Whitehall) along. But there is something very cliché-ridden about the film. We’ve seen this all before – a struggling yet assertive young feminist wanting to break society’s bonds, something albeit a good deal harder to do more than 100 years ago. If you’re a rah-rah feminist you’ll probably cheer her on regardless. Otherwise, the best the film has to offer are the period settings, the cast (very good) and particularly the searing irascible Hilbery (actor Bennett) herself.
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
A nine-hour flight: that will be three films, thank you
My Air Canada Zurich to Toronto flight Monday was going to be a grind, even after a one-and-a-half hour delay leaving Zurich because of some European Union aircraft monitoring program that day. The flight is 8.45 hours. I spent the first hour or so finishing downloaded newspapers from my previous hour-plus flight. Now it was twiddling my thumbs time. Okay, let’s have a look at AC’s entertainment offer. I am one of the few people who praises AC (Canucks notoriously bad mouth the airline). Besides the fact they still offer booze at meals - and in a plastic as opposed to paper cup! – their back-of-seat entertainment system is one of
the most voluminous I’ve seen. As I scrolled through offerings, Polly Findlay’s Midwinter Break came up. Released this year I’d been wanting to see it. It’s the story about a couple from Glasgow, long married, trying to revitalize their relationship with a short trip to Amsterdam. It stars one of my fave Brit actresses Lesley Manville, and Irish actor Ciarán Hinds. They’re Baby Boomers who seem to have arrived together at the end of their tether. The winter scenes of Amsterdam’s streets are gorgeous, as is the artwork in the Rijksmuseum (don’t forget to see the Night Watch). But there is unsettling ennui as the couple stroll by the moonlit canals. Manville’s Stella is
going in an opposite direction to the taciturn Gerry (Hinds) – stereotypical husband alert! – and the trip dissolves. Or does it?.....Next up on my flight were two vintage French films. First was Luis Buñuel’s Belle de Jour (1967) with Catherine Deneuve. I’d seen this before. Deneuve as Séverine is a bored housewife who wants, shall we say, a walk on the wild side or to jump-start her libido. She applies as a prostitute to a high-class Paris brothel (Geneviève Page as Madame Anaïs is especially memorable in projecting an authoritative though tender charm). The film shows many intimate images (though no nudity) and I wondered what the passengers behind me may have thought with a very young and slim Deneuve (her wide eyes reminding me of Princess Beatrice’s), stripping down as she services her mainly bizarre clients…..The third film was a French Nouvelle Vague classic, Jean-Pierre Melville’s 1962 Le Doulos, starring the great Jean-Paul Belmondo and, like in the last film, a personal fave, Michel Piccoli. Le Doulos refers to a police informer. And a hat. And since this is 1962 and criminals looked like businessmen, which in a way they were, they all wore hats. This is an age-old crime flick of betrayal among gangsters, Belmondo’s Silien outsmarting his brothers and the cops among some nasty happenings. This Nouvelle Vague (New Wave) film has all the earmarks of a classic noir, "à la française", with double dealings underlying the cliché, No Honour Among Thieves. Just put your fedora down gently.
Monday, May 25, 2026
Pass the popcorn and ridicule this movie
Normally I would never watch romantic schlock like It Ends with Us (based on the Colleen Hoover book), the 2024 Netflix film directed by Justin Baldoni and starring him and Blake Lively. But given the massive controversy over the film and lawsuits back and forth between the two prime stars, Netflix's release of the film this weekend was a longing-for-popcorn moment. I sat back and watched and smirked the whole way through, constantly mouthing cutting remarks to both of the stars though I sided with Baldoni on this one. Lively filed a lawsuit against Baldoni and Baldoni countersued, then a settlement was reached over the past month. She accused him of sexual harassment, ironically given that is a theme of the film. It was the stuff of constant Hollywood headlines and even I, someone not much into celebrity gossip, couldn't stop reading about it. So regardless of any quality the film might have had technically it's overlaid with the feud surrounding it. It's kind of like watching Tommy Wiseau's The Room, often considered the worst movie ever made. Technically, Ends is well made if a bit romantically syrupy. It oozes cotemporary vibes with Lively striking out as as a small town girl (Lily Bloom - seriously) in Boston opening her own flower shop. On a summer rooftop evening she meets Ryle, whom she takes for a crypto bro (he looks it) but is a neurosurgeon. Love, uh, blooms. And there is loads of intimacy, leading one to see how one or another of the characters may have stepped over the line. In the film Lively struck me as more vulnerable (and younger) than I imagined and Baldoni extraordinary handsome and a take no guff kind of guy (hence counter lawsuit). But what annoyed me the most was how gooey hip contemporary the whole thing was, complete with Rob Simonsen and Duncan Blickenstaff's plaintive emotive score. More chardonnay please, please.
Monday, May 11, 2026
The most famous jazz piano concert record that almost never came off
Köln 75, directed by Ido Fluk, is a documentary that doesn't seem like a documentary. It's about this legendary German music promoter, Vera Brandes, and her production of a Keith Jarrett concert in Cologne (Köln) Germany in 1975. Which just happened to result in the best selling live jazz piano concert recording of all time. Yes, it's an against all odds kind of story but this actually happened. Brandes was a hell-raising 18-year-old when she met famed Brit jazz saxophonist Ronnie Scott, who made romantic overtures in a local club. Nothing came of it but he saw her fearlessness and drive and hired her to book club dates. Learning literally on the job - and by the skin of her teeth - her recognition grew as Cologne became the centre of Germany's jazz scene. While the rest of the world was caught up in mid-1970s rock and roll (remember the Doobie Brothers?) and jazz was seen as old hat Köln and Vera were tuned to a different vibe. The film is creatively made, at turns with a third person narrator, but cutting sharply to a fictionalize style drama. The movie, of course, is about Brandes, and also her rebellion against her staid authoritarian parents, her father especially who despised what she was doing and made no effort to conceal his disdain. But Brandes's "bratty" personality underlined her goal of moving in the moment of the jazz world. When the famed pianist Keith Jarrett came to Germany she was chosen as his promoter. Jarrett, a prodigy and pianist with legendary Myles Davis but who struck out on his own, agreed to come to Köln. But tired and physically in pain and hearing the concert piano was poorly tuned he adamantly refused to play. That put Vera on the spot as she had paid upfront 10K Deutsche Marks and promised her mother (who lent her the money) she would quit music promotion if the concert failed. It didn't. But the excitement builds as Brandes and her friends work to a frenzy to see the concert - with a tuned if otherwise deficient piano - come off. Brandes is played by Mala Emde, Jarrett by John Magaro and Michael Chernus as jazz journalist Mick Watts (the last two of Orange is the New Black fame), who hitches a physically uncomfortable car ride across Europe with Jarrett and his producer Michael Eicher (Alexander Scheer), who'd go on to found ECM Records.
Friday, April 24, 2026
Rediscovering the mania of Werner Herzog's films
It had been a long while since I watched anything from Werner Herzog. And I mean awhile, going back perhaps to the 1980s, where Herzog’s films were in their heyday. Herzog is one of a small handful of German filmmakers who redefined post-war German cinema in the 1970s and 80s. His films were ambitious, to say the least, often shot in remote locations with inexperienced locals in grand plots worthy of the films of David Lean or Cecile B. DeMille. When The Criterion Collection announced this month its slate of Herzog films was disappearing by the end of April, I got to it and started watching. And while I am sure I had seen at least two or three of these films before I can’t remember them. Maybe they were a figment of my imagination as per a character in one of Herzog's films. And with Herzog you get two for one. I mean the actors. In this case the extraordinary Klaus Kinski (top photo) and Bruno S (bottom photo)…..First up was 1972’s Aguirre, the Wrath of God. Many of Herzog’s films are set in South America. Here Aguirre played by the riveting Kinski, leads a group of Conquistadors and Indian slaves deep into the Amazon jungle in search of El Dorado (gold). The journey to say the least is perilous. Kinski as Aguirre is his maniacal self, a creature so wound you can’t take your eyes off him. Then there was Fitzcarraldo, another film set in South America where an ambitious white gringo, the namesake played by Kinski (his wife the esteemed Claudia Cardinale) is consumed with conquering an area of the jungle for a vast rubber plantation. There are scenes in the movie that today would have been recreated by special effects, not so here. The sure audacity of this filmmaking is breathtaking. Then there is Woyzeck, where Kinski plays a personally diminished Polish soldier, fraught with mental pain. Then in Cobra Verde, Herzog take us on a voyage from South America to Africa during the slave trade where Kinski as the namesake is convinced he is the only white man on the continent as he seeks a bargain with African tribes to turn over their captives. Here we have a cast of seemingly thousands in tribal arrays and confrontations. As always Kinski’s character is consumed by a kind of madness – in reality he was diagnosed a psychopath – so, folks, this ain’t acting! The famous collaboration between Herzog, who can only be described as a genius for the making of these and countless other films that pushed the limits, and Kinski, is depicted in the documentary My Best Fiend. That’s right, fiend not friend. Kinski, father of the famed Natassha Kinski, may sear his presence into a character but he alienated virtually everyone around him. There are scenes of him raving at the camera crew and women especially despised him. But Herzog, another searing but actually sane individual, had just the personality that made their collaboration “magic.” Kinski is one great Herzog film character. The other is Bruno S, as in The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser, based on a true story of a boy locked in a dungeon until freed and having to learn the rules of life. Even with Kinski, Herzog says Bruno Schleinstein was “the best” actor he ever worked with.....With just under a week to go, there are many, many other Herzog films to watch before the online screen goes dark.
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
98th Oscars - an admittedly blinkered view
As typically I avoided Sunday night's Oscars. I'm of the same view as Woody Allen and this year Sean Penn (who also skipped them and he won), that these ceremonies are a lot of over the top hokum. The Brits have a good term for actors at awards ceremonies - "luvies" - because they sing each other's praises and throw their arms around one another ad nauseum. (What really happened on those film sets?) And I also didn't see most of the nominated films, either because of lack of interest or they never made it to my city (thanks film distributors!). But let me take a stab at some of the nominated films and winners anyway, as blinkered as my view is. As everyone everywhere predicted One Battle After Another (Paul Thomas Anderson) won. I avoided because, well, I wasn't interested in seeing a violence-spewed flic about ex-radicals. I did see nominees Hamnet, Marty Supreme and Sentimental Value. Of those I'd select Marty Supreme - fast-paced and fine acting in a realistic period setting. Hamnet (Chloé Zhao) was basically a family drama about an errant husband (Will Shakespeare) in the 16th century. Screen wife Jessie Buckley won for best actress but I would have chosen Rose Byrne in If I Had Legs I'd Kick You. Michael B. Jordan won for Sinners, which I didn't see - not really into vampires. I would have chosen Ethan Hawke in Blue Moon, a superb performance to an extent I didn't even know who the actor was (and I'm a long time fan) given the makeup and captivating changed persona. For Best Director I would have chosen Josh Safdie for Marty Supreme (see above). I'll pass on the supporting male and female actors. Norway's Joachim Trier won for Sentimental Value in the international category. For me it was just a meh movie. It's hard for me to comment on some of the other awards because I didn't see most of those movies or have little to compare the winners with. For best documentary I would have liked to have seen the winner Mr. Nobody Against Putin (David Borenstein & Pavel Talankin) and I did think The Perfect Neighbor (Geeta Gandbhir) was excellent, especially given the story was all told from "third party" police bodycam or prison cell footage...... And next year I'll probably also have not seen most of the films on offer.
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Raw footage of a neighbourhood dispute
Here's one film up for an Oscar this month (March 15) you can watch on Netflix. It's nominated for best documentary. It's called The Perfect Neighbor. Directed by Geeta Gandbhir this "immersive" documentary lets the "characters" and action speak for themselves. There is no voiceover or separate third party interviews. The entire film is raw footage taken from police bodycams, dashcams, doorbell ring cameras and police station interrogation videos. The events take place in a working class suburb of Ocala, FL in spring 2023. It's the true story of a neighbourhood conflict between Susan Lorincz, a single middle aged white woman, and her mostly black neighbours. It's a type of dispute that occurs everyday. Lorincz keeps complaining about the kids who live across the street often playing on her property and making a lot of noise. She says the police don't respond enough and she can never get the kids - or their families - to cooperate. When police are called we see the raw footage of their interactions with both Lorincz and the neighbours - both kids and parents. Lorincz seems to have a point though comes across as a little paranoid or in fact mentally disturbed. The neighbours say they cooperate and the kids don't purposely try to harass her but yes sometimes their playthings or they themselves end up on Lorincz's property. There are several instances where the police are called and the tension between Lorincz and the other families escalates. The police are caught in the middle and try to mediate. Without giving too much away eventually a confrontation happens and an arrest is made. We then view the accused in a police cell being interviewed by detectives. This film will hold you because of its stark everyday realism that everyone who lives in an average neighbourhood can relate to, but with the building sense of what's going to happen next. It will make you think about how people interact and the legal framework in which confrontations take place and are dealt with. And while I felt terribly sorry for the victim I also felt some sympathy for the person arrested, guilt notwithstanding.
Last night I caught a documentary, The Storms of Jeremy Thomas, on the Criterion Channel, about a famed producer I had never heard of. His name is Jeremy Thomas and he's produced or directed more than 30 films with some of the major stars of our time - from Brando to Nicholson and Bowie. And worked alongside such famed directors as Bernardo Bertolucci, David Cronenberg and Nicolas Roeg. The central feature of this film is a road trip as Thomas takes this doc's director Mark Cousins through rural France to the 2018 Cannes festival. The film has snippets from major films of the last four decades and interviews with some of the actors who've worked with him. It's a respectful portrait and certainly interesting for anyone who likes cinema. Thomas is one of those people well known and hailed in the film world but to someone like me it was "who knew?"
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