Veteran screen actress Jacqueline Bisset stars in the dramatic feature, Here And Now. In which she portrays the mother of Sarah Jessica Parker, a celebrated singer faced with sudden, traumatic issues in her life. And Bisset as her estranged mother struggling with issues of her own - namely an inability to emotionally connect to her troubled daughter, hard as she may try.
Here And Now, directed by Fabien Constant and originally titled Blue Night, is an impressive showcase for three eminent actresses that includes Renee Zellweger as well. And the delicately layered ways in which women bond and unbond, however awkward or misread, when men aren't around.
And though Parker's character Vivienne has fashioned a far from typical career as a musical star, what comes across most poignantly is the critical meaning and significance in one's life, of the work they do no matter what. And how profound the potential loss, even of one's core identity, when that threatened loss looms.
55 STEPS REVIEW
While over-medicating the institutionalized, whether mental patients or nursing home residents, has always been promoted as a benevolent medical practice, a horrendous dark side has existed. Namely, not only pressure from the pharmaceutical corporations on the government to permanently purchase these often ineffective and perpetually physically harmful medications, but enabling as well staff layoffs and cuts, substituting the drugs as essentially immobilizing, synthetic caretakers instead. And though 55 Steps, well, side-steps those alarming political issues, with the doctors in question as as essentially a cover for the true medical/pharmaceutical industrial complex villains, at its core this film based on a true story is a remarkable and heart wrenching dramatic feature.
Hillary Swank is Collette Hughes, a Native American San Francisco lawyer whose passion is defending psychiatric patients against institutional abuse. When she receives a phone call from Eleanor Riese (Helena Bonham Carter) seeking help against the policy of forced medication at St. Mary's Psychiatric Hospital, Hughes along with legal partner Mort Cohen (Jeffrey Tambor) face off against the formidable medical establishment with their enormous funds likely enabling them to prevail in court. And in the course of the struggle to champoin the rights of psychiatric patients, the two women, despite class differences, develop an extraordinary female relationship that emotionally nourishes each in turn.
Noteworthy of mention which I've addressed previously, regarding the history and politics of psychiatry, especially in connection with the institutional persecution of females, is that this was a time when women began to liberate themselves from second class citizenship, both during WWI when assuming male positions on the domestic front, and as the women’s suffrage movement gained steam and finally became a reality in 1920, with the 19th Amendment. This, in the context of the Roaring Twenties, though it was in many ways no howl for women. Because as they became more outspoken and independent-minded, the male establishment in turn devised new methods of female disempowerment, of which the mental hospital was key.
And today, there can be found many elderly women forced into mental hospitals back then and warehoused for a lifetime (until no longer capable of functioning in the outside world), precisely for being difficult, rebellious, ‘uncooperative,’ or simply ‘inconvenient.’ In other words, a dumping ground by parents of free thinker daughters, or husbands with a yen for a new woman. And the infliction of medical torture in order to break female spirits and enforce obedience, that really happened on a secretive and routine basis. And as portrayed previously in the 1983 biopic Frances, about the scandalous mental institutionalization of Hollywood star Frances Farmer (played by Jessica Lange), in large part for her radical politics.
And it wasn’t that long ago in time, that medical researchers openly concurred that women had smaller brains therefore unsuited for professional vocations – a male-imposed cultural expectation. This, while the General Psychiatry archives reveal conclusive agreement that domestic violence is not only acceptable but even therapeutic, with “the husband’s aggressive behavior as filling masochistic needs of the wife and to be necessary for the wife’s equilibrium.”
And politicizing so-called psychosis has a deep-seated history in this country. Dr. Benjamin Rush, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, concocted the medical term ‘anarchia’ as a category of ‘insanity’ in order to negatively label the many Americans at the time who were unhappy about the limits of that document, as it did not address issues like any human rights for other than white men with property, not to mention the existence of slavery.
Dr Rush also addressed the discontent of slaves by declaring a mental disease called ‘negritude.’ And by announcing that there was no cure for this condition, but that the ‘disease’ could be contained by isolating black people from the ‘healthy’ white population, the medical profession in effect initiated and legitimized segregation, a scourge that would not be outlawed until several centuries later.
And similarly, Louisiana physician Samuel Cartwright added ‘drapetomania,’ to the shameful lexicon, a mental affliction supposedly causing slaves to attempt to escape. Whipping and toe amputation were prescribed to plantation owners as effective cures. A seasoned Hollywood screenwriter couldn’t make this stuff up.
But curiously, why has this outstanding film been marginalized, while so many releases that pale in comparison have been promoted extravagantly this year. Perhaps related to the questioning of existing corporate institutions in this country, however indirectly. Just sayin.'
Prairie Miller
Wednesday, November 7, 2018
Thursday, October 11, 2018
PRIVATE LIFE: DIRECTOR TAMARA JENKINS AND STAR KATHRYN HAHN PHONE IN
** "I feel like if anything, this is about connecting to the humanity of other people....I think filmmaking is an empathy machine."
Private Life: Director Tamara Jenkins and star Kathryn Hahn phone in together to the show - to talk about their bittersweet infertility drama, and the alternating heartbreak and humor in the struggle to have a child. Screening at the NY Film Festival.
** "Social change was in the air, and that definitely informed the music - there was a definite anger to some of the music that was being made, and directly commensurate with what was happening in society at that time."
Fire Music: A History Of The Free Jazz Revolution. Filmmaker Tom Surgal phones in to discuss his documentary shedding light on the improvisational jazz movement breaking out alongside the Civil Rights era, the rise of black militancy, and the Beat Generation literary renaissance.
With connections in the film to Karl Marx; a music movement known as the October Revolution; the Composers Guild; unionizing musicians and nightclub boycotts; and the New Mainstream attempting to erase those innovations since the 1980s. And what it had to do with Reagan and the Republican Party, trading in dashikis and sandals for designer suits and ties - and frozen consciousness regarding the past. Premiering at the NY Film Festival.
** "NBC has staked its fortunes on figures in uniform: fire, medical and police. If these shows dealt with actual declining circumstances of those workers' lives, they would be interesting - but instead they just celebrate the romance of the uniform."
Bro On The Global Television Beat. Birth Of The Binge: Serial TV And The End Of Leisure - Digital Accumulation And Distracted Audiences.
Arts Express Paris Correspondent, Sorbonne Professor Dennis Broe dissects his latest book. Touching on new developments in resistance cinema, strip mining in Appalachia, multi-national predatory practices to distract audiences, the new corporate personality, and same series different day.
** "I think my thoughts about that are yes, Wilde did have an anti-capitalist philosophy. And um, I don't really have any thoughts about it. Because on the one hand, he's like that - but on the other hand he's a crashing snob."
The Happy Prince: Rupert Everett On The Hot Seat. Uh oh - The British actor embarks on his first directing venture, starring as Oscar Wilde as well as the writer of this biopic. But tending to focus mostly on Wilde's decadence and persecution, and his imprisonment as a gay man back then.
But as for the 19th century esteemed writer's idealistic, ideological beliefs penned in his Soul Of Man Under Socialism - and figuring so prominently in his enduring anti-capitalist tale The Happy Prince that is the chosen title of this film - not at all. While referencing Freud, Benedictine monks, The Prince Of Wales, King Charles I and II, Jeremy Corbyn, and Twitter.
ReRun Review
Veteran time traveler on screen Christopher Lloyd - Back To The Future and many more - is at it once again in ReRun. Never disappointing and in this case lending new meaning to the notion of 'in the closet' - though with more metaphysical implications - Lloyd is George Benson, the rather glum grandfather of a vivacious, multi-generational brood at one Christmas holiday family gathering .
Somewhat reluctantly following his insistent young grandson into his bedroom closet which the young child insists is actually a portal into a myriad of alternate realms - and it apparently is - Benson finds himself tumbling down a metaphorical rabbit hole. And with an ambivalent return to his youth, and assorted romantic conflicts and entanglements that include his late wife, Benson awkwardly seeks to right various wrongs on reset, while simultaneously figuring it all out and how in the world he got there again.
ReRun, directed by Alyssa Rallo Bennett and written by spouse Gary O. Bennet in a clearly intimately conceived family affair, borrows generously from It's A Wonderful Life, but with a dark, bittersweet tone, occasionally laced with whimsical humor. The movie opens at the Woodstock Film Festival, and more information is online at Woodstockfilmfestival.org.
Prairie Miller
Arts Express: Airing on the WBAI/Pacifica National Radio Network And Affiliate Stations.
Private Life: Director Tamara Jenkins and star Kathryn Hahn phone in together to the show - to talk about their bittersweet infertility drama, and the alternating heartbreak and humor in the struggle to have a child. Screening at the NY Film Festival.
** "Social change was in the air, and that definitely informed the music - there was a definite anger to some of the music that was being made, and directly commensurate with what was happening in society at that time."
Fire Music: A History Of The Free Jazz Revolution. Filmmaker Tom Surgal phones in to discuss his documentary shedding light on the improvisational jazz movement breaking out alongside the Civil Rights era, the rise of black militancy, and the Beat Generation literary renaissance.
With connections in the film to Karl Marx; a music movement known as the October Revolution; the Composers Guild; unionizing musicians and nightclub boycotts; and the New Mainstream attempting to erase those innovations since the 1980s. And what it had to do with Reagan and the Republican Party, trading in dashikis and sandals for designer suits and ties - and frozen consciousness regarding the past. Premiering at the NY Film Festival.
** "NBC has staked its fortunes on figures in uniform: fire, medical and police. If these shows dealt with actual declining circumstances of those workers' lives, they would be interesting - but instead they just celebrate the romance of the uniform."
Bro On The Global Television Beat. Birth Of The Binge: Serial TV And The End Of Leisure - Digital Accumulation And Distracted Audiences.
Arts Express Paris Correspondent, Sorbonne Professor Dennis Broe dissects his latest book. Touching on new developments in resistance cinema, strip mining in Appalachia, multi-national predatory practices to distract audiences, the new corporate personality, and same series different day.
** "I think my thoughts about that are yes, Wilde did have an anti-capitalist philosophy. And um, I don't really have any thoughts about it. Because on the one hand, he's like that - but on the other hand he's a crashing snob."
The Happy Prince: Rupert Everett On The Hot Seat. Uh oh - The British actor embarks on his first directing venture, starring as Oscar Wilde as well as the writer of this biopic. But tending to focus mostly on Wilde's decadence and persecution, and his imprisonment as a gay man back then.
But as for the 19th century esteemed writer's idealistic, ideological beliefs penned in his Soul Of Man Under Socialism - and figuring so prominently in his enduring anti-capitalist tale The Happy Prince that is the chosen title of this film - not at all. While referencing Freud, Benedictine monks, The Prince Of Wales, King Charles I and II, Jeremy Corbyn, and Twitter.
ReRun Review
Veteran time traveler on screen Christopher Lloyd - Back To The Future and many more - is at it once again in ReRun. Never disappointing and in this case lending new meaning to the notion of 'in the closet' - though with more metaphysical implications - Lloyd is George Benson, the rather glum grandfather of a vivacious, multi-generational brood at one Christmas holiday family gathering .
Somewhat reluctantly following his insistent young grandson into his bedroom closet which the young child insists is actually a portal into a myriad of alternate realms - and it apparently is - Benson finds himself tumbling down a metaphorical rabbit hole. And with an ambivalent return to his youth, and assorted romantic conflicts and entanglements that include his late wife, Benson awkwardly seeks to right various wrongs on reset, while simultaneously figuring it all out and how in the world he got there again.
ReRun, directed by Alyssa Rallo Bennett and written by spouse Gary O. Bennet in a clearly intimately conceived family affair, borrows generously from It's A Wonderful Life, but with a dark, bittersweet tone, occasionally laced with whimsical humor. The movie opens at the Woodstock Film Festival, and more information is online at Woodstockfilmfestival.org.
Prairie Miller
Arts Express: Airing on the WBAI/Pacifica National Radio Network And Affiliate Stations.
Saturday, September 15, 2018
Black 47: History Written - Or Rather Resurrected - By Principled Filmmakers
A simultaneously visceral, potent excursion into a buried, brutal history of the past, and as timely and familiar as the injustices going down in the world today, Black 47 both spotlights the horrors of colonialism inflicted on Ireland in 1847 and way beyond, during Britain's genocidal Great Hunger famine back then. And that inevitably mirrors the continuing imperialist global repression - and rage - in our present time.
Irish writer/director Lance Daly has crafted his poetic, visually haunting and melancholy yet somehow defiantly triumphant historical epic as that most brilliantly adapted form of classic storytelling, the western. While at the same time reinventing that bleak axiom: history is written - or rather courageously resurrected - by principled filmmakers.
James Frecheville is Fenney, a despondent Irish deserter from the British army following combat in Afghanistan and for an incomprehensible cause, clearly consumed with PTSD. Upon his return, Fenney is confronted with the ravages inflicted on Ireland by the British, a destroyed land and people succumbing to oppression, hunger, disease, death, eviction and homelessness - masses left in desperation to die along the roads of the countryside. Along with forced Protestant religious conversions by clerics withholding soup from the starving, while existing laws forbid recourse through fishing or hunting.
And in a barbaric occupation as the British seize the farmlands and harvests for export to feed England instead, while leaving the Irish to die from starvation as potatoes, the only crop they've been allowed to consume, is destroyed by blight. As scenes of British gentry seizing the land for themselves and demolishing homes, cannot but conjure those war crimes against humanity today in Palestine. And with clear implications as to why Ireland has voted to boycott goods from illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, the first EU nation to do so.
Black 47 is currently the highest grossing film in an Ireland clearly euphoric over the long overdue commemoration of their both tragic and triumphant history. And that will surely have politically conscious implications for the human sting of suppression, outrage and rebellion in movie theaters everywhere else.
Prairie Miller
Friday, August 31, 2018
All About Nina: Or Rather, The Queen Of Comedy
The Queen Of Comedy: And De Niro's brutal portrayal taken to another level, laced with macabre when not pornographic shock jokes, updated and feminized for the 21st century. Mary Elizabeth Winstead is Nina, a gift of gab angry and bitter standup comic, mining her dark side and even more disturbing past for sarcastic laughs on offbeat NYC stages. And bizarrely, nobody in the audience seeming to care, or notice her existential pain while weirdly enjoying the evening.
And navigating a life strung together with one night gigs alternating with one night stands - when not one minute impulsive sex hookups - Nina struggles along the way with barf-fueled anxiety attacks and therapy sessions resolving nothing. Until one day grabbing a chance for the relative big time and venturing off to LA, where she becomes further confused and emotionally torn by a romantic encounter with a persistent local hunk there (Common) who is into her for real.
Written and directed by Eva Vives (Raising Victor Vargas), All About Nina unravels as a dramatic minefield, in large part what it doesn't appear to be about at all. And a ferociously raw comic noir that provocatively stings. Oh, and Common may have the best line in any movie this year, and in a strange way satirically upstaging Winstead's own routine for that wild moment in the movie: "A married cop, he left his wife for you, that's great Nina - I bet he chokes black people for fun too."
Prairie Miller
Tuesday, December 5, 2017
Arts Express: Lois Smith Talks Nuns, Lady Bird, James Dean, Agatha Christie
** "You know, when I worked with James Dean on East Of Eden, he was not an icon. He was a young actor, having his first movie - and he was moody and complicated."
Selected Shorts: Let Us Tell You A Story: Veteran actress Lois Smith, in conversation about a mystery reading of Agatha Christie she is presenting; the nun she plays in Lady Bird, along with an apparition in Marjorie Prime on screen; a memory lane excursion back in time when Smith starred opposite James Dean in East Of Eden; and her take on the history of the Hollywood casting couch through the decades.
LISTEN TO THE SHOW HERE
** "A lot of the other newspapers and television journalists didn't pick up on Watergate for months and months, Ben was hanging out there alone. And so I think he would just say now as he said many times before - 'Nose down, ass up, push forward!' "
Sally Quinn Talks Watergate, The Pentagon Papers, and 'The Newspaperman: The Life And Times of Ben Bradlee.'
The late Washington Post journalist has been referred to as 'the most
dangerous editor in the United States,' in large part for being credited with
taking down then President Nixon in 1975 after the Post broke the
Watergate story, and covertly released the Pentagon Papers. Bradlee's
widow and journalist Sally Quinn phones in to the show to share
recollections. And don multiple critics' hats in a kind of Tale Of Two
Pentagon Movies,' assessing the films being released at the same time
right now - The Newspaperman, and The Post, starring Tom Hanks as
Bradlee. And posed the question as well, what would he be up to
today, with what's gone down at the corporatized Washington Post.
** "This is happening at the same time as the Justice Department debates allowing a merger between one of, if not the main content providers, Time Warner - and one of the major broadband companies providing access to the American home, AT&T,"
** Bro On The Global Television Beat: Net Neutrality, Merger Mania, And French Bread. A look at the looming FCC vote to potentially dump Net Neutrality in favor of profiteering corporations - and the issues at hand. Arts Express Paris Correspondent, Sorbonne Professor Dennis Broe weighs in. And, what all of this has to do with CNN, Amazon, Netflix, Hulu, the Enlightenment, short attention spans, Voltaire and Verizon.
**Best Of The Net Hotspot This Week: A Brief History Of Net Neutrality - Exposing Conflicts Of Interests Between Corporations, Governments And Big Money.
Arts Express: Airing on the WBAI/Pacifica National Radio Network and Affiliate Stations.
Dare To be Different Radio
Selected Shorts: Let Us Tell You A Story: Veteran actress Lois Smith, in conversation about a mystery reading of Agatha Christie she is presenting; the nun she plays in Lady Bird, along with an apparition in Marjorie Prime on screen; a memory lane excursion back in time when Smith starred opposite James Dean in East Of Eden; and her take on the history of the Hollywood casting couch through the decades.
LISTEN TO THE SHOW HERE
** "A lot of the other newspapers and television journalists didn't pick up on Watergate for months and months, Ben was hanging out there alone. And so I think he would just say now as he said many times before - 'Nose down, ass up, push forward!' "
** "This is happening at the same time as the Justice Department debates allowing a merger between one of, if not the main content providers, Time Warner - and one of the major broadband companies providing access to the American home, AT&T,"
** Bro On The Global Television Beat: Net Neutrality, Merger Mania, And French Bread. A look at the looming FCC vote to potentially dump Net Neutrality in favor of profiteering corporations - and the issues at hand. Arts Express Paris Correspondent, Sorbonne Professor Dennis Broe weighs in. And, what all of this has to do with CNN, Amazon, Netflix, Hulu, the Enlightenment, short attention spans, Voltaire and Verizon.
**Best Of The Net Hotspot This Week: A Brief History Of Net Neutrality - Exposing Conflicts Of Interests Between Corporations, Governments And Big Money.
Arts Express: Airing on the WBAI/Pacifica National Radio Network and Affiliate Stations.
Dare To be Different Radio
Wednesday, November 1, 2017
Arts Express: Dressed To Kill, Subversive Sisterhoods
Sarah Gadon Is Alias Grace
** "When I was very young, in my twenties and went for an interview to a Hollywood studio head, it did end up kind of putting his hands all over me in the back of a limo. So I was like pressed up against the door, trying to fight him off - and it was almost as if he treated it like, that's how you act when you're a young woman coming in for an interview..."
Mary Harron Talks Alias Grace, American Psycho: No, not that American Psycho she co-wrote and directed in 2000, but Hollywood Psycho - Harvey Weinstein and other studio predators. Harron is on the line to Arts Express to discuss this mini-series adapted from the Margaret Atwood novel, and based on the true story of Grace Marks, an abused 19th century Irish immigrant servant who was imprisoned for the murder of her Canadian employers. Or did she?
LISTEN TO THE SHOW HERE
The filmmaker has much more on her mind as well, including the subversive servant sisterhood back then, and the dramatic convergence of class, gender, class consciousness, and rebellion in resentment of the Canadian upper classes. Harron is also the director of I Shot Andy Warhol, The Notorious Bettie Page, and the upcoming The Family: The Story of Charles Manson's Dune Buggy Attack Battalion.
** "You know, this 'us and them,' you put somebody in a box and now you can control them. So if it's a black film or a woman's film - and the films of all those white men all those years, we didn't call them men films."
Novitiate: A Conversation With Actress Melissa Leo. Delving into her role as the dreaded Mother Superior presiding in a Tennessee convent over aspiring young nuns dealing with their own issues of devotion and sexuality - in this dramatic feature playing out during the 1960s, just as the Catholic Church was undergoing transformations of its own. And likewise Leo going to extremes between playing her ferocious nun, and atheist activist Madalyn Murray O'Hair at nearly the same time in a very different movie - The Most Hated Woman In America.
** "I'm glad the next generation, mine and the one coming up, like we're ready to talk, and we're ready to make change - and I'm very, very excited about that."
Book Corner: Dear Martin - Author Nic Stone On Her Young Adult Novel. The African-American writer phones in to delve into and read from Dear Martin, about a troubled teenager seeking guidance as to how to live and survive in a racist world - by writing a series of imaginary letters to Martin Luther King Jr. Touching on racial profiling, Black Lives Matter, Klan rallies, burning crosses, the Take A Knee Movement, and racial reconciliation.
In The Fade: Diane Kruger Goes Full Antifa
When Western terrorist attacks by mostly Middle Eastern right wing extremists take place, among the shocked responses in the aftermath, is always the perplexed reaction in disbelief, as to why such a presumably meaningless assault could have taken place. Yet like a long lingering elephant in the room that just won't seem to go away, the evidence is in plain sight.
Say for instance, the murder in recent times and in progress, of over a million people in Iraq and Afghanistan alone by the US military and European allies. And a kind of blowback retaliation on their own soil of the perpetrators, that may not even be those original fighters - but perhaps their surviving inconsolable relatives or children determined to seek revenge.
Such is the intriguing metaphorical premise of Fatih Akin's In The Fade (Aus dem Nichts). The German director of Turkish parentage masterfully flips the script, as Hamburg housewife Katja (Diane Kruger) endures the horror of her Kurdish husband Nuri (Numan Acar), a legal activist for the local Turkish community, along with her young son being murdered in a racially motivated, anti-immigrant targeted bombing of his office by German white supremacist Neo-Nazis.
The emotionally disintegrating, suicidal widow, overcome by feelings of hopelessness and rage, seeks a revenge in kind against the two accused perpetrators - following their acquittal for lack of irrefutable evidence in court. And what ultimately ensues is not just a stunningly executed thriller, but a brilliant parable for our time.
In other words, the immensely provocative notion of victimization reversal, and the perpetrator as perpetrated. Along with ironically, the accusation that has always been raised against Germans where this movie was made - how could you as a people stand by and do nothing while Hitler annihilated civilians and enemies alike in the millions. Well, perhaps exactly what those leveling charges have been doing since then, without much objection or even acknowledgement raised - and the United States alone having killed and continuing to do so, more than 20 million people in thirty-seven victim nations since World War II.
You go, Diane.
Prairie Miller
Arts Express: Airing on the WBAI/Pacifica National Radio Network and Affiliate Stations.
** "When I was very young, in my twenties and went for an interview to a Hollywood studio head, it did end up kind of putting his hands all over me in the back of a limo. So I was like pressed up against the door, trying to fight him off - and it was almost as if he treated it like, that's how you act when you're a young woman coming in for an interview..."
Mary Harron Talks Alias Grace, American Psycho: No, not that American Psycho she co-wrote and directed in 2000, but Hollywood Psycho - Harvey Weinstein and other studio predators. Harron is on the line to Arts Express to discuss this mini-series adapted from the Margaret Atwood novel, and based on the true story of Grace Marks, an abused 19th century Irish immigrant servant who was imprisoned for the murder of her Canadian employers. Or did she?
LISTEN TO THE SHOW HERE
The filmmaker has much more on her mind as well, including the subversive servant sisterhood back then, and the dramatic convergence of class, gender, class consciousness, and rebellion in resentment of the Canadian upper classes. Harron is also the director of I Shot Andy Warhol, The Notorious Bettie Page, and the upcoming The Family: The Story of Charles Manson's Dune Buggy Attack Battalion.
** "You know, this 'us and them,' you put somebody in a box and now you can control them. So if it's a black film or a woman's film - and the films of all those white men all those years, we didn't call them men films."
Novitiate: A Conversation With Actress Melissa Leo. Delving into her role as the dreaded Mother Superior presiding in a Tennessee convent over aspiring young nuns dealing with their own issues of devotion and sexuality - in this dramatic feature playing out during the 1960s, just as the Catholic Church was undergoing transformations of its own. And likewise Leo going to extremes between playing her ferocious nun, and atheist activist Madalyn Murray O'Hair at nearly the same time in a very different movie - The Most Hated Woman In America.
** "I'm glad the next generation, mine and the one coming up, like we're ready to talk, and we're ready to make change - and I'm very, very excited about that."
Book Corner: Dear Martin - Author Nic Stone On Her Young Adult Novel. The African-American writer phones in to delve into and read from Dear Martin, about a troubled teenager seeking guidance as to how to live and survive in a racist world - by writing a series of imaginary letters to Martin Luther King Jr. Touching on racial profiling, Black Lives Matter, Klan rallies, burning crosses, the Take A Knee Movement, and racial reconciliation.
In The Fade: Diane Kruger Goes Full Antifa
When Western terrorist attacks by mostly Middle Eastern right wing extremists take place, among the shocked responses in the aftermath, is always the perplexed reaction in disbelief, as to why such a presumably meaningless assault could have taken place. Yet like a long lingering elephant in the room that just won't seem to go away, the evidence is in plain sight.
Say for instance, the murder in recent times and in progress, of over a million people in Iraq and Afghanistan alone by the US military and European allies. And a kind of blowback retaliation on their own soil of the perpetrators, that may not even be those original fighters - but perhaps their surviving inconsolable relatives or children determined to seek revenge.
Such is the intriguing metaphorical premise of Fatih Akin's In The Fade (Aus dem Nichts). The German director of Turkish parentage masterfully flips the script, as Hamburg housewife Katja (Diane Kruger) endures the horror of her Kurdish husband Nuri (Numan Acar), a legal activist for the local Turkish community, along with her young son being murdered in a racially motivated, anti-immigrant targeted bombing of his office by German white supremacist Neo-Nazis.
The emotionally disintegrating, suicidal widow, overcome by feelings of hopelessness and rage, seeks a revenge in kind against the two accused perpetrators - following their acquittal for lack of irrefutable evidence in court. And what ultimately ensues is not just a stunningly executed thriller, but a brilliant parable for our time.
In other words, the immensely provocative notion of victimization reversal, and the perpetrator as perpetrated. Along with ironically, the accusation that has always been raised against Germans where this movie was made - how could you as a people stand by and do nothing while Hitler annihilated civilians and enemies alike in the millions. Well, perhaps exactly what those leveling charges have been doing since then, without much objection or even acknowledgement raised - and the United States alone having killed and continuing to do so, more than 20 million people in thirty-seven victim nations since World War II.
You go, Diane.
Prairie Miller
Arts Express: Airing on the WBAI/Pacifica National Radio Network and Affiliate Stations.
Tuesday, October 24, 2017
Arts Express: Matt Taibbi Talks Eric Garner - A Killing On Bay Street
**NY Film Festival - Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold: A Conversation with Director Griffin Dunne. And an intimate portrait of the acclaimed veteran prolific novelist and literary journalist by Dunne, who happens to be her nephew. Along with connections to Janis Joplin, Vanessa Redgrave, Leonard Bernstein, scrapbooks, and writers block in the freezer compartment.
LISTEN TO THE SHOW HERE
Rolling Stones journalist Matt Taibbi phone in to Arts Express to talk about, I Can't Breathe: A Killing On Bay Street. Revisiting in his latest book, the unindicted police murder of Eric Garner on Staten Island - venturing behind the scenes to explore a greater chilling national reality of racism and injustice.

** The Russian Revolution 100 Year Anniversary: Actress extraordinaire Mary Murphy reads from the writings of American eyewitness chronicler of the revolution back then, Louise Bryant.
**Poetry Corner: Halloween mischief - courtesy of H. P. Lovecraft, ghosts, suburbia, and Earthling Cinema's Hidden Meaning In The Exorcist.
**Best Of The Net Hotspot: The Last Poets.
More information about the NY Film Festival 2017, is online at https://www.filmlinc.org/nyff2017
Arts Express: Airing on the WBAI/Pacifica National Radio Network and Affiliate Stations.
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