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Posts Tagged ‘Simon Baker’

“SUNDAY BEST: THE UNTOLD STORY OF ED SULLIVAN” My rating: B+ (Netflix)

90 minutes | No MPAA rating

For millions of Americans in the 1950s and ‘60s, Sunday night meant gathering around the TV to watch Ed Sullivan’s variety show.

Sullivan was notoriously stiff on camera and dismissed by many a teenager as a hopeless square.  Nevertheless he gave us our first glimpses of Elvis and the Beatles, no small thing.

But his greatest achievement, according to the new documentary “Sunday Best,” was defying the societal norms of his times to promote black entertainers in the face of widespread racism.

Directed by Sacha Jenkins (he’s done docs on Louis Armstrong, Wu-Tang Clan and the roots of rap), this surprisingly moving and thoroughly entertaining effort charts Sullivan’s early career as a newspaper sportswriter and, later, Broadway editor of the NY Daily News. He ended up on television almost by accident and in fact Sullivan’s lack of charisma had critics howling for his replacement.

But audiences got on his unconventional wavelength and he settled in to write more than 20 years of broadcast history.

The doc features several vintage TV interviews of Sullivan and testimony from dozens of entertainment figures (Harry Belafonte, Berry Gordy, Smoky Robinson, Oprah Winfrey), but the film’s greatest selling point is its jaw-dropping collection of great on-air performances.

We’re talking a teenage Stevie Wonder, Ike and Tina Turner, The Supremes, Nina Simon, Gladys Knight, Mahalia Jackson, Sammy Davis Jr., Bo Diddley, the Jackson Five, Nat King Cole…and that’s just scratching the surface.

What comes through loud and clear here is that Ed Sullivan truly loved show people. Race didn’t matter. Talent did.

Turns out that wooden exterior masked a great heart and a very good soul.

Simon Baker, Jacob Junior Nayinggul

“HIGH GROUND” My rating: B (Prime)

104 minutes | No MPAA rating

Civilization, observes a character in the Australian-lensed “High Ground,” is the story of bad men doing bad things to pave the way for the rest of us.

Among those “bad things” is blatant racism, a trait the Aussies historically share with us Americans.  Here we enslaved black men and killed Native Americans; in Australia it was all about the destruction of Aboriginal culture.

Set in the decade after WWI, this visually devastating film from writer Chris Anastassiades and director Stephen Johnson  depicts one small outlier in a greater race war and how two men — one white, one black — find themselves caught in the middle.

The film begins in 1918 with the massacre of a clan of Aborigines by white police officers. Among them is Travis (Simon Baker), a former army sharpshooter dismayed when his fellows go on a killing spree.

Only two Aborigines survive the mayhem.  One is Gutjuk,  8 years old when he loses his family. More than a decade later we find Gutjuk (now played by an excellent Jacob Junior Nayinggul) living at a remote Outback mission where he has been renamed Tommy and reared in a more or less caring  environment.

The other survivor is his uncle Bawara (Sean Mununggurr), left for dead but now staging retaliatory raids on white-owned ranches.

Travis is assigned to kill or capture Bawara; Tommy/Gutjuk accompanies him as a guide and interpreter.  Neither man wants to be there.

Among the supporting players are Callan Mulvey as Travis’ old army buddy, now a squinty-eyed hater, and the great Jack Thompson as the local head of police; his mere presence provides a link to the glories of the Australian New Wave of the ‘70s.

This story could be plopped down in the American West (there are more than a few similarities to “Dancing with Wolves”). What makes it especially noteworthy is “High Ground’s” quiet respect for native culture and its awed admiration for the rugged yet beautiful topography, captured by cinematographer Andrew Commis in almost unbearably evocative images and not a few soaring drone shots that momentarily transform the viewer into a hawk floating above a “Lawrence of Arabia”-level landscape.

Several of the executive producers of the film are themselves Aborigine, and it shows. There’s no attempt to romanticize the tribe’s hunter/gatherer lifestyle; an almost documentary observation takes over certain scenes.

A pall of uncertainty and sadness hang over the yarn. We’re not sure who to root for; nor does there seem to be any easy answer to the long-simmering hatreds on display.

But I found myself unexpectedly moved by the film’s brutal yet inescapable conclusion.

“WARFARE” My rating: B (HBO Max)

95 minutes | MPAA rating: R

“Warfare” is an almost minute-by-minute depiction of an actual firefight that took place during the American occupation of Iraq.

It’s about as accurate a look at modern combat as we’re likely to see.

In fact, Ray Mendoza, who co-wrote and co-directed the picture with veteran Alex Garland, is a former Navy SEAL and was a participant in the action recreated here.

There’s no plot. No character development. Instead we spend a night with a group of SEALS who have taken over an Iraqi home to observe terrorist activity in the neighborhood.  

The clan that lives there have been sequestered in a bedroom. The Americans haven’t threatened them, but it’s easy to understand the family’s anxiety and, as time passes, their outrage.

Not a word is wasted here.  Most of the dialogue is radio chatter and ordered commands. The first half of the film displays the boring side of war…sitting around waiting for something to happen.

And when it does happen, the mayhem is anything but glorious.

The cast is peppered with familiar faces (Will Poulter, Joseph Quinn, Michael Gandolfini) but nothing here even remotely resembles a star turn.  

Under the stress of combat these are less individuals than extremely well-oiled cogs in a killing machine.

At the film’s conclusion we see the actors with the real-life SEALs they portray. There could hardly be a more resounding endorsement of the movie’s truthfulness.

| Robert W. Butler

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Tom Basden, Tim Key, Carey Mulligan

“THE BALLAD OF WALLIS ISLAND” My rating: B (Peacock)

99 minutes | MPAA rating: PG-13

Like the character who sets its plot in motion, “The Ballad of Wallis Island” is sorta irritating at first but eventually pulls us in.

This individual in question is Charlie Heath (Tim Key), a burly, bearded denizen of Wallis, one of the more remote of the British Isles. Having come unexpectedly into a small fortune (we will learn that he has won the national lottery not once, but TWICE), Charlie has decided to spend a big chunk of it on a concert by his favorite musician.

That would be Herb McGwyer (Tom Basden), whom we meet bobbing miserably in the tiny boat that is Wallis Island’s principal link to the mainland.  Herb has been lured to the scenic but underpopulated isle by Charlie’s offer of 500,00 pounds for an hour-long concert.

He needs the money.  Herb used to be part of a moderately successful he/she folk duo, but that relationship went south a decade earlier.  Ever since Herb has been trying to get back his musical mojo. Currently he’s recording a rock album, and he desperately needs Charlie’s payday to cover expenses.

A bit of a sourpuss on even a good day, Herb is alarmed to learn that Charlie — a fanboy given to incredibly corny or inappropriate exclamations (”Wowzer in the trousers!”) — will be the the sole member of the audience. 

There’s no hotel on the island, so Herb must stay at Charlie’s quaint but slightly-gone-to-seed mansion.  Which means that there’s no escape from his host’s geeky adulation.

“Ballad…” only really kicks into gear with the arrival of Herb’s old singing partner and one-time paramour Nell (Carey Mulligan), who’s no longer playing professionally and, like Herb, needs the money. Charlie has booked her without consulting Herb.

Tensions mount.

There’s a sort of “Local Hero” vibe wafting around this effort (the screenplay is by stars Key and Basden, the direction by James Griffiths, all of whom collaborated on a “Willis Island” short film a few years back). The movie thrives on low-keyed, character-driven fish-out-of-water humor, but it’s also an affecting meditation on loss (Charlie reveals that Herb and Nell were the favorite recording artists of his late wife).

Don’t be surprised if you find yourself gulping back a few tears.

There’s not a ton of music in the film, but the few songs performed by Basden and Mulligan (all written by Basden) nail the same guy-girl sweet spot that made “Once” so memorable.

So…charming.

Simon Baker

“LIMBO” My rating: B (Amazon Prime)

108 minutes | No MPAA rating

As a minimalist mystery about a crime that will never be solved, the Australia-lensed “Limbo” starts out deep in the hole when it comes to attracting a mainstream audience.

Toss in a subplot about the casual abuse of Australia’s aboriginal population, stark black-and-white cinematography, and the usually-hunky Simon Baker looking like something the cat dragged in, and you’ve got a film that will appeal mostly to hardcore cineastes.

Which is OK with me.

“Limbo” (written and directed by Ivan Sen) got under my skin and refused to be shaken off. 

A good chunk of that has to do with the astonishingly beautiful cinematography (director Sen was his own d.p.). The film’s widescreen format and lack of color are just about the perfect way to capture  an outback burg so windblown and pocked with ugly craters (the area used to be a center for opal mining) that it really does seem like the waiting room to hell.

Our hero — no,  not hero.  Our protagonist is Travis Hurley, a big-city cop assigned to look into a very cold case, the two-decades-old disappearance of a young aborigine woman.

Travis isn’t exactly your gung-ho cop. Initially he seems only to be going through the motions.

Even fans of TV’s “The Mentalist” will require a reel or two to wrap themselves around Baker’s transformation here.  Sporting a buzz cut and month-old beard, his eyes shaded by aviator glasses and his arms covered in tattoos (the result, one surmises, of an undercover  stint with the drug squad that left him addicted to heroin), Travis is Simon Baker as we’ve never seen him.

He starts asking questions but gets few answers. The local cops have a history of racism and the aboriginal community doesn’t trust lawmen.  Eventually the missing girl’s now-grown brother (Rob Collins) and sister (Natasha Wanganeen) provide a bit of insight, but not enough for an arrest.

Everyone has heard the old saw that it’s not the destination but rather the journey that matters. That’s certainly the case with “Limbo,” which I found weirdly compelling despite its lack of resolution.

| Robert W. Butler

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