Posts Tagged Vanessa Redgrave
“Foxcatcher” – Movie Review
Posted by Darshana V. Nadkarni, Ph.D. in Movie Reviews on December 20, 2014
The movie directed by Bennett Miller, from a script written by E. Max Frye and Dan Futterman, is based on actual grim events, surrounding the story of eccentric multi-millionaire John du Pont’s life. Award winning and nominated cast includes Steve Carell, Channing Tatum, Mark Ruffalo, Sienna Miller, and Vanessa Redgrave.
Although painfully slow in the beginning, the movie slowly builds a rhythmic air of suspense. John du Pont (Carell) is desperate to gain the respect of his stern, disapproving mother and begins coaching an olympics-worthy team of wrestlers. Among his early recruits is Mark Schultz (Tatum), a former Olympian, going through a rough time and living in circumstances of dire poverty. For du Pont, as may be the case with SOME super wealthy people, riches are not enough, he wants his team to win and he seeks to get immortalized in history.
Du Pont wants to bring in Mark’s brother, Dave Schultz (Ruffalo) to coach his team, but Dave refuses to uproot his family and join him. At first, it is Mark who joins du Pont on his estate and becomes his new “best friend”. Underneath immense wealth, Du Pont’s is a life of loneliness and despair and possibly of extreme ups and downs, resulting from his mental illness. Du Pont buys his friend, expensive things, also lures him into his drug habits, and confides to Mark that while growing up, his only best friend was the son of his mother’s chauffeur and when he turned 16, he found out “my mother was paying him to be my friend”.
Ultimately, du Pont does manage to lure Dave to come and work at Foxcatcher Farm. Carrel’s performance is so low key crazy-like, that a sense of dread is already beginning to seep in the film and you almost hope that something would make Dave leave du Pont. At this point, Mark is already disappointed, has fallen out with du Pont, and leaves the Foxcatcher farm.
When the violence comes, even though we know the events as they unfolded, it makes you feel incredibly sad, not only because there is no reason for it and it is totally incomprehensible, but deeply loving, loyal family man is the last person you want to see being hurt. This is also a story of deep brotherly love. Upon seeing the movie, Mark Schultz recalled that when he first received the news of his brother’s death, miles away, he trashed his office in anger and spent weeks in mourning for his brother.
The film struck a chord for me because I have an experience with highly eccentric person, in my multi-generational, extended family network. The tragedy is that he is immensely wealthy, and therefore gets away with incredible number of insane actions that ordinarily people would not get away with. It seems, society gives a very long rope to someone with wealth and power at their disposal, to behave crazy, ruthless, mean, mad, and sometimes to do things that are immoral or illegal.
Unfortunately, the movie misses an opportunity to invoke any ideas beyond portraying real-life events. Especially given that this story had extremely lethal combination of immense wealth and slow burning mild insanity, along with Mark du Pont’s relationship with political extremists, it would have provided a perfect platform for further exploration. It is nevertheless a fascinating story with excellent acting, and based on my rating of 1 to 5 with 5 being excellent, I rate the movie as 4.6.
“Lee Daniels’ The Butler” – Movie Review
Posted by Darshana V. Nadkarni, Ph.D. in Movie Reviews on September 6, 2013
“The law was against us” and “I was hungry all the time”. Thus begins the story of Cecil in 1957 Jim Crow era, as he is was leaving the cotton farm after his slave “negro” father was brutally shot and his mother went semi-crazy after being sexually assaulted and after seeing her husband shot down. Cecil had learned to be a house slave and he was fortunate that he found a mentor who taught him to serve as a butler. His mentor paved a way for Cecil to reach Washington DC, where Cecil found work in fine hotels and rose enough to be noticed by some important people and was finally offered a job at the White House.
The movie is partially based on a true story about the life of Eugene Allen, about whom an article was first written in The Washington Post by Wil Haygood. The script for the movie was later written by Danny Strong and is based on a composite sketch from interviews with several White House staff members. Director Lee Daniels’ The Butler, tells the story of Cecil, who served as a Butler during the tenure of eight American presidents, over three decades. Forest Whitaker and Oprah Winfrey give absolutely brilliant and riveting performance as Cecil and Gloria Gaines. OMG – Oprah Winfrey is one amazing character actress! David Oyelowo and Elijah Kelly are fantastic in the roles of their sons, Louis and Charlie. (A side note, the best line in the movie comes from Charlie “Daddy, I like Sidney Poitier”, a simple line that shows that someone has to smooth out the ruffled feathers during family conflict. Lee Daniels’ The Butler can boast of some significant star power. Robin Williams stars as president Dwight Eisenhower, John Cusack as Richard Nixon, Alan Rickman as Ronald Reagan, James Marsden as John F. Kennedy, Live Schreiber as Lyndon B. Johnson. Other well knows stars include Jane Fonda as Nancy Reagan, Alex Pettyfer (in the role of the rapist), Mariah Carey (role of Cecli’s mother), David Banner (as his father), Vanessa Redgrave (as the lady of the plantation), Yaya Alafia (as Louis’ girlfriend), Aml Ameen (as young Cecil), Nelsan Ellis (as MLK) and there are others.
The story crisscrosses the country’s civil rights struggle along with one family’s personal struggles, disagreements and gut wrenching decisions, and the bond of love that transcends it all. Cecil started his job at the White House, with simple instructions, “never listen or react to the conversations” because, it was further explained, “We have no tolerance for politics at the White House”! “You hear nothing, you see nothing, you only serve”, he was told. However, his job allowed him a frequent up-close window into the presidential history, unfolding right in front of him. And while serving, he heard them all; he heard discussions to end the Korean War; he was privy to the tenure of President Kennedy, standing “on the edge of the New Frontier of the 1060s, a frontier of unknown opportunities and perils, a frontier of unfilled hopes and threats”. Cecil was preview to the gut wrenching ending of the Kennedy term, with President Kennedy’s assassination; and he witnessed President Johnson’s challenge and victory in getting Congress to adopt a far-reaching civil-rights bill, and passing a voting-right bill, among other accomplishments. Cecil was witness to the constitutional amendment to ban school busing for racial balance, during the Nixon term, which was a setback to the civil right momentum of the Kennedy-Johnson years. Cecil felt disturbed when President Reagan, who had been extremely good to him personally, promised his advisors to “veto any sanctions against South Africa”. Cecil later retried during the Reagan Presidency.
The Butler, often called the White House Forrest Gump, offers, in addition to the multi decade narrative of one man’s perception of the American cultural history, a story of his and his family’s very personal struggle. It gives an appreciation for the enormous toll on people when society decides they are just a little bit less than others. At the start of the civil rights struggle, Cecil was merely trying to live an ordinary life, create a little oasis of comfort, and impart a simple lesson to his two sons, “We got two faces, us, and the one we show to the white people”. His son Louis however, aspired to change the world, and his younger son wanted to serve the nation, by joining the army. Gloria, his wife, was pulled by conflicting aspirations of her family, and often doused her worries with drinking and smoking. When Louis, with his girlfriend Carol, joined the extremist Black Panther Party, Cecil did not want anything to do with his son. However, by the time Dr. King was assassinated, he acknowledged that “the world was changing and I didn’t know where I fit in”. Eventually, Cecil came to see the aspirations of his children and the concern of his wife, from a fresh new perspective and says in the end, “America’s always turned a blind eye toward what we’ve done to our own”.
This is a fantastic movie. Forest Whitaker and Oprah Winfrey’s performance is truly stellar. There isn’t sloppy performance from anyone of the huge cast nor is there a dialog that seems out of place, in the long history of events. I give it a rating of 5 out of 5.
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