Indie Focus: Midlife melancholy in âOn the Rocksâ
Hello! Iâm Mark Olsen. Welcome to another edition of your regular field guide to a world of Only Good Movies.
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Movie theaters are still struggling as the pandemic drags on. This week Ryan Faughnder wrote about a letter â signed by filmmakers including Judd Apatow, James Cameron, Greta Gerwig, Christopher Nolan, Jordan Peele, Wes Anderson, Clint Eastwood and Ang Lee â asking the federal government for financial support for exhibitors nationwide. âAbsent a solution designed for their circumstances, theaters may not survive the impact of the pandemic,â they said. âCinemas are an essential industry that represent the best that American talent and creativity have to offer. But now we fear for their future.â
Nevertheless, there are still lots of movies opening â more this week worth highlighting, in fact, than the three I usually do. A few Iâll likely pick up next week, but one worth adding this week is âSave Yourselves!â Written and directed by Alex Huston Fischer and Eleanor Wilson, the charming, low-key contemporary satire stars Sunita Mani and John Reynolds as a Brooklyn couple who go to a remote cabin in hopes of unplugging from the internet, only to miss out on the news that an alien invasion has taken over the Earth. So for anyone feeling overwhelmed who has thought, âWouldnât it be nice to take a break from the news?â â maybe think again. In theaters now, the movie hits VOD on Tuesday.
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âOn the Rocksâ
Written and directed by Sofia Coppola, âOn the Rocksâ stars Rashida Jones as Laura, a working mother in New York City who has come to suspect her husband, Dean (Marlon Wayans), of cheating with a co-worker. Enter Lauraâs father, Felix (Bill Murray), a bon vivant who pulls Laura into his orbit under the pretense of keeping an eye on Dean. Released by A24 and Apple TV+, the movie is at drive-ins in Los Angeles and theaters where they are open and begins streaming on Oct. 23.
I spoke to Coppola and Jones, both daughters of larger-than-life fathers, about the movie and its connection to their own lives. On the filmâs mix of fizzy fun and her trademark melancholy, Coppola said, âThe themes weâre talking about are important to me and deep, and then I was trying to do it in a kind of light, fun way. I wanted to do like a father-daughter buddy movie with martinis discussing life and relationships. And I was missing that kind of smart, sophisticated comedy that I grew up with and trying to embrace something a little sillier than my usual realm of what I know how to do. Itâs sort of out of my comfort zone.â
Reviewing the film for The Times, Justin Chang wrote, âIn addition to being an intimate, generally lighthearted comedy of family ties and wayward eyes, then, âOn the Rocksâ is an accidental time capsule of pre-pandemic life, set in a New York that might have looked idyllic even if the movie had been released last year. Seen in the harsh glare of the present, the charactersâ problems â generational differences, marital anxieties, creative inertia â might seem both derivative and almost desirably quaint, though in a way that produces more sympathy than scorn. Weâve been here before, after all. And this is hardly the first Sofia Coppola movie to situate itself at a cautious remove from reality, to treat comedy, romance, fantasy and even history as a kind of bulwark against the tensions and traumas of the outside world.â
For the New York Times, Manohla Dargis wrote, âAgain and again, Coppola visually isolates Laura, often in dark rooms, inviting us to look at her, yes, but also to wonder: What does she see? What does she think? For much of the movie, she seems like a spectator in her own life. She rides along, she goes along. In the past, Coppolaâs embrace of ambiguity could feel like a dodge, a way of evading meaning. But in âOn the Rocks,â a wistful and lovely story about finally coming of age, thereâs nothing ambiguous about how she makes us see a woman too long lost in lifeâs shadow.â
For Vulture, Alison Willmore wrote, âItâs an existence rooted in wealth but presented as mundanely middle class â which reflects how it feels to Laura, who sees herself as reduced to being another mom in the school drop-off line, drained of vitality compared to her father, whose existence is touched by magic. âOn the Rocksâ isnât a great movie, but itâs one overflowing with feelings that it tries to squash into something tidier. Among them are fear of forever being scarred by a father who up and left, anger at how easily he still indulges his impulses while sheâs trapped behaving sensibly, and a broader resentment at how aging can differ for men and women. If itâs difficult to reconcile those raw-edged emotions with the pat conclusion âOn the Rocksâ arrives at, itâs because the film never really manages to do that either.â
For IndieWire, David Ehrlich wrote, ââOn the Rocksâ isnât destined to achieve the same kind of iconic status as some of Coppolaâs previous work. It isnât disposable, but it also doesnât offer anything to obsess about, which is a real change of pace for a filmmaker who launched a zillion Tumblrs and Pinterest boards and gave humanity the gif of Emma Watson saying âI wanna rob.â It isnât an uncool movie, but it isnât a cool one either, and by the time it winds down with a needle drop that might have you second-guessing that assessment, you might just be as cool with that as Coppola seems to be.â
âThe Forty-Year-Old Versionâ
One of the most exciting debuts of the year, âThe Forty-Year-Old Versionâ is written and directed by its star, Radha Blank. She plays a woman named Radha facing her 40th birthday and struggling to break through as a playwright, never having fully followed up on the promise of her early career. As she tries to balance career ambitions with her sense of artistic integrity, she decides to launch herself as a rapper. Blank won the directing prize when the film premiered earlier this year at Sundance, and it is being released by Netflix, playing drive-ins in L.A. and theaters where they are open and streaming on the platform starting Oct. 9.
For The Times, Justin Chang wrote, âThe sly achievement of âThe Forty-Year-Old Versionâ is to turn a critical eye on the very idea of success (by whose standards?) and to ponder exactly what level of compromise is acceptable to secure it. ⌠Blank skirts inspirational-underdog clichĂŠs as deftly as she skewers the trappings of racial and cultural privilege. And she makes clear that wherever Radha ends up â whether she successfully leaps through the cultureâs designated hoops or gives up being an artist altogether â is ultimately less meaningful than the complex, irreducible reality of who she is.â
For the Hollywood Reporter, Beandrea July wrote, âOne gets the sense that Blank is hyper-aware of the âone-and-doneâ phenomenon that has often plagued women directors, especially black women and other women of color, and sheâs not going to waste her chance. The black-and-white cinematography serves as a kind of liberating restraint, as if preserving the pic within cinematic amber so that viewers can see the characters with new eyes. ⌠âThe 40-Year-Old Versionâ is a beautiful achievement, one that ultimately calls attention to the huge gaps in representation of different kinds of black characters on film. Itâs a gap that Blank clearly intends to fill; I canât wait to see what she does next.â
For Xtra, Treâvell Anderson wrote, âBlankâs film debut, after writing for television series including âSheâs Gotta Have Itâ and âEmpire,â âThe 40-Year-Old Versionâ is an instantly canonical comedy with a level of social commentary that will make it forever relevant.â
âThe Gloriasâ
Directed by Julia Taymor, who along with playwright Sarah Ruhl co-adapted Gloria Steinemâs memoir, âMy Life on the Road,â âThe Gloriasâ is an unconventional overview of Steinemâs life. At different times in her life, Steinem is played by different actresses, including Alicia Vikander and Julianne Moore, while also including scenes where the different Glorias are all on a bus ride together, as one carries all the stages of a life forward into the future. The movie is streaming now on Amazon Prime Video.
Reviewing for The Times, Katie Walsh wrote, âUsing every tool at her disposal, Taymor crafts an epic tapestry of a remarkable life, paying tribute to the glorious Gloria Steinem. âThe Gloriasâ ends on a hopeful, almost triumphant note, but in this specific moment, itâs a note that strikes an inadvertently mournful tone. Even the Womenâs March of 2017 feels like ancient history right now. Despite the current challenges facing all that Steinem fought for and achieved in the 1970s, her final words in the film, spoken during the Womenâs March, resonate. âRemember, the Constitution does not begin with, âI the President,â it begins with âWe the People.ââ They are words to heed now more than ever.â
For the Associated Press, Lindsey Bahr wrote, âGloria Steinem is always in conversation with herself in âThe Glorias,â a sprawling and thoughtful biopic of the writer and activist. Director Julie Taymor knows better than to try to capture her entire life in a film, even one as long as this, and her reflective odyssey of a woman and icon who never stops growing is a beautifully messy attempt at something bigger. It doesnât always work but has a natural engine and spirit to it that keeps you focused.â
For Vulture, Jen Chaney wrote, âA movie about such a pivotal figure who fought, and still fights, so hard for gender equality should spark some intense emotion, especially if youâre a woman. Weirdly, âThe Gloriasâ never does that. With a runtime of two and a half hours, it lasts too long and doesnât go deeply enough to register the way it should. At one point on that bus ride, Little Girl Gloria asks the other Glorias, âAre we there yet?â Girl, that I felt.â
Only good movies
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