The Trial of the Chicago 7
Sound of Metal
Heavy metal drummer Ruben suddenly experiences severe hearing loss. A former drug addict, Ruben reluctantly moves in with a support group of other deaf recovering addicts at the recommendation of his sponsor. Though he gradually finds his place within the community, Ruben must choose between making peace with his condition or attempting to correct it at great cost.
Promising Young Woman
Nomadland
Minari
Mank
Judas and the Black Messiah
2021 | Dir. Shaka King | 126 Minutes
As the plot unfolds primary through O'Neal's point of view, lurking in the background quietly assisting the FBI's efforts to undermine Hampton's fight for the people, there is palpable tension throughout the film. With pressure constantly mounting on both sides, O'Neal is constantly in danger. Violence rapidly escalates between law enforcement and the Panthers with O'Neal narrowly evading the crossfire. Suspected informants within Hampton's organization are lethally executed, in reality among the many acts secretly perpetrated by the FBI to sow discord, and O'Neal's cover is frequently tested, in one instance literally at gunpoint. Habitually looking over his shoulder, O'Neal is nearly outed by one of his past marks at a meeting between the Panthers and militant activist group and is startled to see his FBI handler among the audience at one of Hampton's rallies. While the film makes the case for O'Neal's desperation to shut Hampton down out of fear understandable if not justifiable, the final act of the picture in which a visibly shaken O'Neal plays his part in Hampton's brutal execution at the hands of law enforcement is particularly difficult to watch.
LaKeith Stanfield and Daniel Kaluuya are simply outstanding, delivering the very best work of their respective careers so far. As Bill O'Neal, the "Judas" of this story, Stanfield exudes a manic energy that is at times sympathetic but consistently deeply disquietingly frustrating. Kaluuya is positively charismatic as revolutionary leader Fred Hampton, a thoroughly powerful performance. Playing Hampton's girlfriend Deborah Johnson, Dominique Fishback is heartbreaking as the emotional center of the Hampton's storyline. The film also features the effortlessly creepy Jesse Plemons as O'Neal's FBI handler, Martin Sheen under heavy prosthetics as legendary racist J. Edgar Hoover, Dominique Thorne standing out as a particularly aggressive Black Panther Party member, and Lil Rel Howery briefly appearing as an undercover FBI agent.
Judas and the Black Messiah is a challenging, engaging, and truly excellent film. With stylish precision, Shaka King delivers a complex uncompromising narrative in which the establishment utilizes underhanded tactics to destroy a nascent radical revolution. At its heart, the picture is essentially a study of two men condemned in contrasting ways by a system that hates them.
FRAGMENTS
- LaKeith Stanfield, Daniel Kaluuya, and Lil Rel Howery starred in 2018 Best Picture Nominee Get Out
MCU CONNECTIONS
- Daniel Kaluuya (W'Kabi in Black Panther)
The Father
2021 | Dir. Florian Zeller | 97 Minutes
"I feel as if I'm losing all my leaves."
An elderly man named Anthony gradually loses his sense of time and place but he rejects his daughter's attempts to provide him with adequate care. As Anthony's condition worsens, he begins to constantly question his surroundings, to wonder why his younger daughter hasn't been in touch, and to suspect that his wristwatch was stolen from him.
French playwright and theatre director Florian Zeller's cinematic debut, The Father is a heart-wrenching drama centered on the tragic struggle of a fiercely independent man seemingly becoming unstuck from time. Adapted from Zeller's acclaimed stage play Le Père, the script is briskly paced and emotionally devastating, offering an intimate glimpse into a deteriorating mind. While the picture is disorienting by design, it is never difficult to follow on an emotional level as the narrative is skillfully presented to the audience strictly from the lead character's perspective. Viewers feel just as confused as Anthony when the identities of the people populating his flat become unclear and sudden seemingly unexplained changes to the furnishings occur.
While the symbolism of a lost wristwatch or a skipping opera CD isn't exactly subtle, they are effective clues that scenes are playing out in ways that are not as they seem. Little by little, it is made clear to the audience through hints in the production design that moments are presented out of chronological order. The clever set design utilizes the same spatial layout for multiple locations and subtleties in the cast's wardrobe allow more observant viewers to deduct the reality of Anthony's increasingly unreliable perspective before the climatic reveal. The most exceptional moment of the film is an intense dinner scene in the middle of the film that startlingly loops its end back to the beginning of the scene, a beautifully written and performed sequence realized by exceptionally crafty editing.
Despite his increasing erratic behavior, it is never difficult to empathize with the eponymous father as Anthony Hopkins gives one of his best performance ever in the lead role, compellingly alternating from forceful to assertive to charming to befuddled to vulnerable, and ultimately, to heartbroken. Much of Hopkins' performance is enhanced by Olivia Colman's excellent work as hapless daughter Anne, able to exude a plethora of emotions within a single close-up of her face, constantly broadcasting the sad reality that her character's father is unable to perceive. As Anne's ill-tempered boyfriend Paul, the one character in the film that doesn't bother to hide their impatience for the old man, Rufus Sewell is convincingly cruel. The cast also features Mark Gatiss, Olivia Williams, and Imogen Poots in brief but memorable roles.
The Father is a deeply moving film elevated by brilliant performances from its outstanding cast and inventive technical craftsmanship. It is an intimate picture that tells an extremely relatable story about the fragility of the human mind and the brutality of memory and time, potentially hitting close to home for anyone with a family member suffering from dementia.
FRAGMENTS
- Olivia Coleman and Mark Gatiss starred in 2019 Best Picture Nominee The Favourite
- Writer/director Florian Zeller wanted Anthony Hopkins specifically for the lead part in this film adaptation, considering no other actor for the role, even naming the lead character Anthony in the screenplay
- The character Anthony's date of birth, December 31, 1937, is Anthony Hopkins' actual date of birth
MCU CONNECTIONS
- Anthony Hopkins (Odin in Thor, Thor: The Dark World, and Thor: Ragnarok)
- Mark Gatiss (Ted Gilbert in The Fantastic Four: First Steps)
The 93rd Academy Awards
1. Judas and the Black Messiah
2. Minari
3. Promising Young Woman
4. Nomadland *
5. The Trial of the Chicago 7
6. Sound of Metal
7. The Father
8. Mank