Thumbnails Oct 24
by Tony Medley
Lee (10/10): 116 minutes. R.
This isn’t just one of the best movies
I’ve seen this year, it’s one of the best of the Century. Lee Miller
(Kate Winslett) was born in 1907 and became a prominent model for many
magazines, including Vogue. Because she was a vibrant, ambitious woman
she tired of modeling, moved to Paris, studied surrealist photography
and opened her own studio. She hobnobbed with the avant-garde and the
film opens with her vacationing with her libertine friends in 1938
shortly before the start of WWII in the South of France, lunching
outside, two of the women topless (including Lee), setting the tone of
their milieu.
Thus begins the
complex movie that introduces Lee Miller to a world who has never heard
of her. This is not just a slice of her life, but a pivotal slice. It’s
one of the best war movies ever made. But it’s not about a battle (like
1945’s A Walk in the Sun, 1949’s Battleground and Sands
of Iwo Jima and 1998’s Saving Private Ryan). This shows the
results of the devastation caused Parisians by the Nazis occupation,
circas 1940-44, which is as effective as showing the war itself. Those
scenes brought to mind Oscar Hammerstein’s song (melody by Jerome Kern)
The Last Time I Saw Paris (1940), which always brings tears to my
eyes.
The battle scenes
show the lengths to which Lee would go to get the pictures she wanted,
and the horror of battle as Lee was in personal danger on the war front.
Lee fought to be
assigned to photograph the war. When she was finally successful, she met
fellow photographer David E. Scherman (Andy Samberg) and they travelled
the war zone getting their pictures, including the iconic shot of Lee in
Hitler’s bathtub.
Directed by
first-timer (an award-winning cinematographer) Ellen Kuras, the stellar
cast includes Alex Skarsgård, Marion Cotillard (in a heart-rending
performance), and Andrea Riseborough. Although apparently there were
problems with the script (whatever happened, I think it is
Oscar®-quality) the credits go to Marion Hume, Liz Hannah, and John
Collee.
The method of
telling the story is brilliant. An older Lee (also Winslett) is being
interviewed by an unidentified much younger interviewer (Josh O’Connor)
and she is telling her story in flashbacks. When it ended, I was sitting
there stunned.
This was a pet
project of Winslett and she took pains to concentrate on the part of
Lee’s life that would present a true picture of her character. It gets
an R rating probably because of the several topless shots (Winslett has
never been shy about displaying her breasts). While I realize why they
are in the film, I don’t think they are worth having a PG film be
converted into an R rating because this is a wonderful film for young
people to see.
A Very Royal
Scandal (10/10). 3 Episodes of 60 minutes. Amazon. Tells about the
interview of Prince Andrew (Michael Sheen) by Newsnight’s Emily Maitlis
(Ruth Wilson) and the machinations leading up to it. The Brits do these
things so well and this is no exception. With outstanding performances
by Sheen and Wilson, it is based on Maitlis’s book “Airhead: The
Imperfect Art of Making News.”
The Wonderland Massacre & The Secret History of
Hollywood (9/10): Four episodes,
MGM+. Produced by and starring crime novelist Michael Connelly who
conducts the interviews, this delves deeply into the ghastly 1981
murders in Laurel Canyon, and how it involved Liberace and his boy toy
lover, Scott Thorson, and suspect Eddie Nash among many others. LA
Assistant District Attorney Mitzi Roberts lays the groundwork in Episode
1,saying “everything we know about Hollywood; we
had a porn star as a suspect; drugs and money and Liberace; Hollywood
nightclubs, and everything we know of what the ‘70s and ‘80s were in
Hollywood, this mystery has.”
The Perfect Couple (9/10): Netflix. 6
Episodes. TV-MA. This is the best
streamer I’ve seen since “Big Little Lies,” which also starred Nicole
Kidman. In fact, this is referred to as Kidman’s “Big Little Lies
replacement series.” That was a disappointment to me because I was
hoping there would be a sequel to that outstanding tale.
This one is about a
rich Nantucket family getting together for a wedding when one of the
guests is murdered. It delves into the lives of each character as two
dogged police detectives try to figure out what happened and whodunnit.
Directed by Suzanne Bier with multiple writing credits, it stars Liev
Schreiber along with Kidman and Dakota Fanning along with a host of
other equally talented but lesser-known actors. Although the setting is
Nantucket, the bulk of the series was shot in Chatham on the
southeastern tip of Cape Cod. That doesn’t lessen the excellent
cinematography(Roberto De Angelis and Shane Hurlbut) and production
design (Sarah Knoles) of the beautiful settings that appear in the
series.
This isn’t just
about whodunnit, though. Like “Big Little Lies,” it’s mostly about the
relationships among all the characters. It’s not as good as ‘Lies, but
it’s close.
Recommended Reading:
“The Clifton Chronicles” by Jeffrey
Archer, 7 unputdownable books that must be read in order. Then you can
segue into Archer’s Detective William Warwick Series of seven books also
to be read in order. That should keep you busy for months.
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