Donald Glover can do just about anything and everything. Brian Tyree Henry is now a highly sought after actor, who I apparently saw on stage in Book of Mormon years before Atlanta, and who stole the show in the excellent If Beale Street Could Talk. I think Hiro Murai also gets a lot of credit for the look and dreamlike feel of the show. And I don't know who the music supervisor is, but they're first rate.
I am a student at Johns Hopkins with a passion for film, media and awards. Here you will find concise movie reviews and my comments on TV, theater and award shows. I can't see everything, but when I finally get around to it, you'll find my opinion here on everything from the classics to the crap.
Showing posts with label Brian Tyree Henry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brian Tyree Henry. Show all posts
Thursday, January 12, 2023
Atlanta (2016-22)
This one leaves a pretty large hole in the television landscape. Atlanta was a landmark. It was experimental. It spent whole episodes without a glimpse of our main characters. It pulled stories from real life. It was raucous and poignant. It had something to say about the black experience in America. And then in its penultimate season they go to Europe and speak to the black American experience abroad. It bravely portrayed white people in a way no other show dares to. Its bizarre-ness is explained in its final episode with a not wholly original but brilliantly executed meta sensory deprived dream. It went from a black Justin Bieber to a white Teddy Perkins to a trannsracial man being interviewed on a Charlie Rose type talk show.
Monday, December 24, 2018
Spider-Man: Into the Spider Verse (2018)
The critics have been saying that this movie totally reinvigorates the superhero genre. They're not wrong. But moreover, this movie takes the broader genre of animation to places it has never been before. Perhaps more than any other movie, it makes innovative use of its medium to depict a moving comic book in a way that only animation can. I want to say this is the first western-style anime in the sense that anime animates manga. And it pays homage to anime in a very obvious way. The style is so refreshing and invigorating, I hope it gets recognized for production design.
Don't let the cheesy title deter you, this is an excellent Spiderman movie .Spiderman is an iconic character, you didn't think they had anything new to say. He's you friendly neighborhood Spiderman, hailing from Queens. Queens is such an essential part of who Peter Parker is. But our Spiderman in this film is not Peter Parker, but Miles Morales, who hails from Brooklyn. This movie makes a clear distinction between Peter and Spiderman. It sends the message that Spiderman is a persona; that anyone can be Spiderman, that we're all Spiderman. It is an empowering message that we needed to hear.
Don't let the cheesy title deter you, this is an excellent Spiderman movie .Spiderman is an iconic character, you didn't think they had anything new to say. He's you friendly neighborhood Spiderman, hailing from Queens. Queens is such an essential part of who Peter Parker is. But our Spiderman in this film is not Peter Parker, but Miles Morales, who hails from Brooklyn. This movie makes a clear distinction between Peter and Spiderman. It sends the message that Spiderman is a persona; that anyone can be Spiderman, that we're all Spiderman. It is an empowering message that we needed to hear.
Thursday, December 20, 2018
If Beale Street Could Talk (2018)
Goosebumps.
This movie gave me goosebumps in a way the book did not. Simultaneously
beautiful, breathtaking, and tragic, this James Baldwin
adaptation is a bold follow-up to Moonlight for Barry Jenkins. His
direction is meticulous. He takes small brilliant liberties in acting
out scenes undescribed in the novel (moving furniture), and sticks
closely to the book in tense scenes of despair (and
one big liberty in changing the ending). The cinematography and
lighting are stunning. The centered head-on shots in which the audience
is confronted by the helpless gaze of our protagonists are
heartbreaking.
The
soundtrack by Nicholas Britell is achingly beautiful. You could feel
the audience in the packed theater all holding our collective breath
in anxiety. The horns and swelling strings cue the viewer to exhale a
sigh of brief reprieve to celebrate the love at the center of the story.
The music slowly pulses the audience along to the tragic fate we know
awaits. And I'd like to say that it is because
I read the book that I know how it ends, but that's not it. We
implicitly know how this story ends because it is the story of being
black in America, in the 70s and in the 21st century just the same. The
film opens with a passage from James Baldwin explaining
the title. The eponymous Beale Street is a stand-in for any main street in an American city where the Fonnys and Tishes survive.
Fonny is a noir-ish character, helpless to change his fate. This is most
devastating in the moments we get to soak in their
joy and love (of partner, of family, of community), in the character of
Daniel foreshadowing what fate lies ahead, and when the baby finally
arrives.
Labels:
Barry Jenkins,
Brian Tyree Henry,
Colman Domingo,
Dave Franco,
Diego Luna,
Ed Skrein,
Emily Rios,
Finn Wittrock,
Kiki Layne,
Michael Beach,
Pedro Pascal,
Regina King,
Stephan James,
Teyonah Parris
Wednesday, November 21, 2018
Widows (2018)
Steve McQueen knows how to make an intense movie. Heist movies, by their very nature, are intense, but McQueen takes it to another level. Hans Zimmer's score as well as the moments of tense silence contribute to the mood. There are some gorgeous tracking shots. And Gillian Flynn of Gone Girl fame writes an engaging screenplay full of twists, grit and excitement.The plot is complex, intertwining race, power, money and gender roles. And the cast is all phenomenal. Viola Davis is a badass.
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