Sunday, January 12, 2025
A Biochemist Runs Amok in New Zealand Director Sasha Rainbow's Debut Grafted
Monday, January 6, 2025
The Soul of the Midnight Special: Digging (and Digging into) Time Life's Five-Disc Set
This review, written for Video Librarian in 2020, fell between the cracks while the publication was in flux, and I believe the release deserves attention, so I've recreated it here with a few minor updates, revisions, and images. THE SOUL OF THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL
(Stan Harris and Tom Trbovich, 2020, USA, 572 minutes)
The biggest soul, funk, and R&B stars of the 1970s appear on this five-disc Time Life set (condensed from the 10-disc version).
Film and TV producer Burt Sugarman, who created NBC's live music series The Midnight Special (1972 to 1981), had a knack for recognizing emerging artists in addition to masters of the form, like James Brown ("Sex Machine," "The Payback") and Ray Charles ("Georgia on My Mind," and "It Takes Two to Tango," a duet with Aretha Franklin), who were still going strong decades after they launched their careers.
Wolfman Jack served as announcer and host, while Helen Reddy filled the host spot from 1975-1976. The two appear in clips at the top of the show, though artists often introduced other artists, giving them the opportunity to share their thoughts about each other. Paul Williams, for instance, marvels at the height of the black and yellow-clad Stylistics ("Betcha by Golly Wow," "I'm Stone in Love with You"). It's not simply that Williams is short, but that most every man who performed on the show between 1973 and 1976 wore platform heels (Williams also marvels at their dance moves).
It was a different era in other respects, too, since there's no evidence of lip-syncing, though some artists perform to prerecorded backing tracks. Consequently, the strongest voices rise to the top, like Gladys Knight & the Pips ("I Heard It through the Grapevine") and Mavis Staples of the Staple Singers ("Do It Again," "Respect Yourself"). Knight also appears in a bonus interview from 1995 in which she goes into detail about her career. As she notes, "Midnight Train to Georgia" began life as "Midnight Plane to Houston," but the group had no interest in flying and no connection to Texas.
For a few performances, solo singers and vocal groups perform on a bare stage. Barry White, dressed in a rhinestone-studded brocade jacket, takes the opposite tack when he performs several songs, including swirling instrumental "Love's Theme," with the sprawling Love Unlimited Orchestra. It's truly amazing they could all fit on one stage. Bill Withers, by contrast, just needed a guitar for "Ain't No Sunshine When She's Gone" and a piano for "Lean on Me."
When artists, especially less experienced ones, appeared on the show, they knew it might be their only shot, so there isn't an act phoning it in. As interviewee Gerald Alston of the Manhattans (“Shining Star") puts it, "The Midnight Special gave us a time to shine, and boy, did we shine."
Everybody is giving it their all, though some performers have that extra something, like a sensual Al Green ("Tired of Being Alone," "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart"), rollicking Wilson Pickett ("In the Midnight Hour"), and an impassioned Sly Stone ("I Want to Take You Higher").
In addition to their energetic performances, they benefit from sartorial excellence, from Green's tailored suit to Pickett's leather pants and chiffon shirt to Stone's black jumpsuit and wide-brimmed hat, both covered with rhinestone-studded stars and moons. In addition to Knight and Alston, other interviewees include James Brown and Patti LaBelle. Recommended.
The Soul of the Midnight Special is available through Time Life. Images from Pic Click AU (Sly Stone) and BB Product Reviews (Gladys Knight).
Tuesday, December 31, 2024
Stories of Resilience and Survival: Bei Bei, The Issue of Mr. O'Dell, and Warrior Women
BEI BEI
(Marion Lipschutz and Rose Rosenblatt, USA, 2019, 88 minutes)
By 2011, Bei Bei Shuai, a 35-year-old Chinese national, had been living in the United States for 10 years when she attempted to kill herself after a traumatic breakup. Her 53-year-old boyfriend, a married coworker, had promised to help raise their child, but then changed his mind at the last minute. She survived the suicide attempt, but her newborn daughter died shortly after birth, and Indianapolis authorities charged her with feticide.
Co-directors Marion Lipschutz and Rose Rosenblatt (The Education of Shelby Knox) catch up with Bei Bei after she has served 435 days in jail. Initially, she didn't seek a plea agreement for fear of deportation. With the pro bono assistance of trial attorney Linda Pence, she is released on bail.
Though the filmmakers don't provide any details about Pence's background, it's clear this isn't just another job for the longtime litigator, but a case that could have significant repercussions for other women in similar predicaments.Pence sees it as the culmination of the personhood laws that sprung up in the wake of Laci Peterson's murder. Republican Senator Mike Murphy explains to the filmmakers why he co-authored such a law, while VP Mike Pence (no relation to Linda) features in archival footage, during his tenure in Congress, arguing that a fetus should have full legal protections.
Upon her release until trial, Bei Bei returns to the restaurant she managed. She says she used to think she was weak, but now realizes she was suffering from depression. There were also cultural factors at play, like the shame in raising a child by herself. With Linda Pence's help, Bei Bei beats the legal odds, but a dispiriting postscript notes that the fight continues as over 1,000 US women have been arrested under fetal harm laws.
THE ISSUE OF MR. O'DELL
(Rami Katz, 2018, Canada, 35 minutes)
Jack O’Dell, a 95-year-old civil rights activist, looks back at his momentous life in Canadian filmmaker Rami Katz's illuminating documentary. Katz, who shot the film primarily in black and white, constructs it around an interview with O'Dell, an insightful speaker, now based in Vancouver, British Columbia.
O'Dell recalls that he grew up in Detroit with family members who weren't afraid to speak out about injustice, like his father, uncle, and cousin, who all sued a segregated golf club in Florida. If life in prewar Detroit wasn't perfect, he felt like he was part of a community. Once he left to attend college in the South, however, he experienced segregation for the first time.
From there, he went on to the US Merchant Marine through which he became involved with the NMU (National Maritime Union) and the Communist Party, sparking his interest in non-violent direct action.
While working in New Orleans in 1956, he received a summons to testify at the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee. At that point, he decided that he would rather concentrate on activism than politics, since he felt that civil rights had a better chance of catching on in the United States than socialism.
In the 1960s, he joined the Southern Christian Leadership Conference to assist Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. with his efforts on behalf of voter registration. "We were all working," he says, "for the elimination of the insult of segregation." His communist past, however, caught the attention of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, leading President John F. Kennedy to recommend that King cut ties with O'Dell, which he did.
The documentary ends with a recap of O'Dell's post-SCLC activities in addition to his thoughts about direct action today. This is a short, but potent documentary. According to the Cinema Guild website, "Jack O’Dell passed away in 2019 at the age of 96, after this film was completed."
WARRIOR WOMEN
(Christina D. King and Elizabeth A. Castle, 2019, USA, 64 minutes)
Filmmakers and producers Christina D. King and Elizabeth A. Castle profile two generations of Native American activists in Warrior Women, which aired on PBS stations (the documentary draws from Castle's book, Women Were the Backbone and Men Were the Jawbone: Native American Activism During the Red Power Movement).
Throughout the film, the directors alternate between archival footage, present-day appearances, and a round table with Madonna Thunder Hawk, her daughter Marcella, her sister Mabel Ann, and her niece Lakota.
Madonna grew up on a Lakota reservation in South Dakota. When the government built a series of dams along the Missouri River, her family had to move 50 miles away. Their people lost millions of acres of land in the process. She also attended an Indian boarding school, which discouraged cultural traditions, but the experience only served to embolden her.
When the government relocated her to the Bay Area in the 1960s, she learned about organizing from the Black Panthers and the United Farm Workers, and participated in the AIM (American Indian Movement) occupations of Mount Rushmore and Alcatraz before returning to South Dakota to advocate for civil rights, inspiring Marcy to do the same. Since her mother wasn't always there for her emotionally, Marcy reflects, "It's easier for me to think of her as Madonna, the activist, rather than as my mom."
Now Marcy also balances activism with motherhood, while Madonna continues to encourage Native American self-reliance through education, land ownership, and food production.
Just as Madonna oversaw a survival school in the 1970s, Marcy has launched one of her own. Concludes her mother, "That's what we really need; we need the younger generation to pick up the reins." Warrior Women is an encouraging look at a necessary and enduring movement.
Bei Bei is available to stream through Kanopy and Vimeo, The Issue of Mr. O'Dell is available to stream through YouTube and Kanopy and on Blu-ray and DVD for educational use through Cinema Guild, and Warrior Women is available on DVD and streaming for educational use through Good Docs.
Images from DOC NYC (Bei Bei), the IMDb (Bei Bei poster), Cinema Guild (Jack O'Dell), AP / The New York Times (O'Dell in 1956), ITVS (Madonna Thunder Hawk and Marcy Gilbert), and Good Docs (Warrior Women poster).
Sunday, December 29, 2024
Control: Anton Corbijn Paints an Elegiac Portrait of Manchester Musician Ian Curtis
Saturday, December 28, 2024
Unapologetically Audacious: Todd Haynes' Fractured Bob Dylan Portrait I'm Not There
Sunday, December 22, 2024
Scala!!!: Portrait of the London Rep House Celebrates Transgressive Cinema Everywhere
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
Belgian Filmmaker Calls out Belgium--and Commends Jazz--in the Devastating Documentary Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat
SOUNDTRACK TO A COUP D’ETAT
(Johan Grimonprez, 2024, Belgium, 150 minutes)
In 1960, the same year the Democratic Republic of the Congo gained its independence from colonial rule and joined the United Nations, thanks largely to newly-elected Premier Patrice Lumumba, Louis Armstrong brought New Orleans-style jazz to the country. Starting in 1956, the US State Department had been flying jazz ambassadors around the world in order to promote diplomacy. That was the claim, at any rate.
If the Congolese appreciated what Louis and his band were putting down, Russian Prime Minister Nikita Khrushchev failed to see the appeal of jazz, which he found cacophonous--he went so far as to compare it to gastrointestinal distress. More significantly, though, Belgium wasn't prepared to let the Congo go without a fight--not with all its uranium and other valuable resources--and just after Independence Day on June 30, 1960, when everyone should have been celebrating, things got ugly.
There's nothing quite as volatile as the combination of white supremacy and greed, and the UN and the US, especially the wealthy industrialist sector, sided with Belgium over the people of the Congo, who had democratically elected Lumumba. Systematically, the premier and select associates were ostracized, neutralized, replaced--and eventually killed.
When Louis learned that his concert was arranged as a distraction by anti-Lumumba forces, rather than the goodwill gesture he had been promised, he was so incensed he threatened to renounce his US citizenship and move to Ghana, one of several nations that supported Congolese independence.
Khrushchev, another Congolese supporter, may have been wrong about jazz, but he wasn't wrong about colonialism and imperialism (which makes Putin's recent actions vis-a-vis the Ukraine seem uglier than ever).
Using archival footage combined with interviews and readings and on-screen extracts from several non-fiction texts about the era, including Andrée Blouin's 1983 memoir My Country, Africa: Autobiography of the Black Pasionaria, Belgian filmmaker Johan Grimonprez examines the politics of Belgium, the Congo, Russia, Ghana, Guinea, Cuba, and the US to show why a coup d'etat took place–and how jazz was involved.
The African and American music in the film, from Louis, Max Roach and Abbey Lincoln, Miriam Makeba, Nina Simone, and others can't be beat. If the leaders of the Western world abandoned the Congo in its hour of need, the jazz world, combined with literary luminaries like Maya Angelou, did everything they could to call out the injustice and show their support.
Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat, Grimonprez's highest-profile documentary to date, is one of the year's finest—and fiercest—documentaries.
1/10/25 update: On VOD through Fandango at Home and Apple TV+.
Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat opens at Northwest Film Forum on Wed, Dec 4. Images from Kino Lorber (Congo speechwriter/chief of protocol Andrée Blouin) and ABC (Louis Armstrong / Getty Images: Universal Images Group). Kino Lorber releases the film on home video on Jan 7, 2025.