Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Sing Sing plus Short Takes on some other cinematic topics

The Wheels of Justice Often Grind Slowly

Reviews and Comments by Ken Burke


I invite you to join me on a regular basis to see how my responses to current cinematic offerings compare to the critical establishment, which I’ll refer to as either the CCAL (Collective Critics at Large) if they’re supportive or the OCCU (Often Cranky Critics Universe) when they go negative.  However, due to COVID concerns I’m mostly addressing streaming options with limited visits to theaters, where I don’t think I’ve missed much anyway, but better options are on the horizon.  (Note: Anything in bold blue below [some may look near purple] is a link to something more in the review.)


My reviews’ premise: “You can’t please everyone, so you got to please yourself.”

(from "Garden Party" by Rick Nelson and the Stone Canyon Band, 1972 album of the song’s name)

 

    Sing Sing (Greg Kwedar, 2024)  rated  R  107 min.


Here’s the trailer:

        (Use the full screen button in the image’s lower right to enlarge its size; 

        activate the same button or use “esc” keyboard key to return to normal.)


 

 As with my last review, of I’m Still Here (Walter Salles, 2024), this time I won’t be providing any Spoiler Alerts because this film’s also a docudrama, based on the real-life, previously-reported situations of being incarcerated at upper New York state’s Sing Sing prison, with the focus on John Whitfield (played by Colman Domingo, Oscar-nominated as Best Actor for Rustin [George C. Wolfe, 2023] and this same award this year for Sing Sing) as explored in the writings “The Sing Sing Follies” (a story by John H. Richardson in his book of this name [subtitled A Maximum-Security Comedy: And Other True Stories], 2024) and Breakin’ the Mummy’s Code (Brent Buell, play originally done by Sing Sing inmates which had a short Off-Broadway run in 2005, then a 1-night NYC revival on February 3, 2025 with many of the former inmates once again in the cast [this play’s what’s described briefly below as the inmates' concept]).  Whitfield, known here as “Divine G,” has been locked up for years despite protesting his innocence, is preparing for another parole hearing, this time with new evidence which he hopes will exonerate him.  In the meantime, though, he gives his energies to theatrical productions in the prison under the Rehabilitation Through the Arts (RTA) program with the inmates acting under the guidance of a non-jailed director, Brent Buell (Paul Raci).

 

 As this story begins the group agrees to take on new member Clarence Maclin, later known as “Divine Eye” (playing himself), a surly guy who surprisingly suggests the next production be a comedy to lighten up the prison population.  His idea’s accepted with Buell writing a script based on silly scenes by the cast members except for the Hamlet (William Shakespeare, c. 1599-1601) “To be or not to be” soliloquy, which, again surprisingly, finds Eye auditioning for the role given it’s the only serious part of the show—accepted by the others over G, a superior actor—even as he struggles with it (as explored in Notes on a Scene [10:25] by Kwedar and Domingo) until he finds the necessary fire for delivery.  Initial tensions between G and Eye improve, but G’s devastated when his friend, Mike Mike (Sean San José), suddenly dies of a brain aneurysm.  Things get worse at G’s clemency hearing when his evidence is rejected, he's accused of acting about his sincere desire for freedom (ironically, he’s helped Eye prepare for his own hearing, with upcoming parole granted).  G temporarily quits the play but is encouraged back by Eye, the production a big success.  Years later, G’s finally paroled, finds Eye waiting for him; prior to final credits we get older footage of actual RTA stagings, featuring former inmates who’ve played themselves in this film, including Maclin (of the characters we see on screen the only notable ones with real actors are G, Mike Mike, and Buell; the others are all formerly-incarcerated men who acted in the RTA program).  Further authenticity comes from shooting in decommissioned prisons, with the RTA plays done in nearby Beacon High School.


 Although (after internal struggle) I can’t quite include Sing Sing among my 2024 Top 10 (see our 3/12/2025 posting for my revised version of that list, with a even-more-recent change of #8 from The Last Stop in Yuma County [Francis Gallluppi] to I’m Still Here) because there’s just not one of them I can eliminate even for something as solid as Sing Sing, although Domingo and Maclin are certainly in my 2024 Top 5 for Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor; the CCAL agrees with the quality here as Rotten Tomatoes positive reviews are at 97%, the Metacritic average score is 83%; however, I do heartedly-encourage you to see it, even though your only opportunity now is with streaming, where it’s on Max ($9.99 monthly if you’re not already a subscriber; theatrically it opened domestically [U.S.-Canada] on July 12, 2024, taking in a mere $3.1 million,  $5.3 million worldwide).

 

 I’ll leave you with my usual trope of a Musical Metaphor, this time, though, 2 of them, first “Like a Bird” (Abraham Alexander, Adrian Quesada) at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAE8o7Gal Kg, Oscar nominee, Best Original Song, used under the final credits with shots from the film in this video (“Heaven and evil, caught in the middle / Someone set me free, be wind beneath my wings”), followed by Bob Dylan’s "I Shall Be Released" from The Last Waltz (Martin Scorsese, 1978), a doc of The Band’s final concert from November 25, 1976 with a huge group of guests including Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Van Morrison, Ronnie Wood, Ringo Starr, Neil Diamond (“They say every man needs protection / They say every man must fall / Yet I swear I see my reflection / Some place so high above this wall / I see my light come shining / From the west unto the east / Any day now, any day now / I shall be released”).  That’s all until next week; recently I said I’m ready to leave 2024 behind in favor of current releases, but I’ve yet seen anything in 2025 streaming that’s even close to these 2024 powerhouses I’ve just written about so who knows what I’ll end up with for next week.*

 

*As a literal follow-up to Sing Sing, director Kwedar and his Oscar-nominated co-screenwriter (Best Adapted Screenplay) Clint Bentley (plus Maclin and Whitfield for Oscar's nom) on February 24, 2025 went to the San Francisco area’s grim San Quentin prison to hold a workshop for those inmates on filmmaking.  You can read about it here, where you must scroll right instead of down to see all of it.

            

SHORT TAKES 

                  

Related Links Which You Might Find Interesting:

 

A single option this time for your consideration: (1) Last weekend's domestic theatrical grosses.

 

We encourage you to visit the Summary of Two Guys Reviews for our past posts* (scroll to the bottom of this Summary page to see additional info about your wacky critic, Ken Burke, along with contact info and a great retrospective song list).  Overall notations for this blog—including Internet formatting craziness beyond our control—may be found at our Two Guys in the Dark homepage.  If you’d like to Like us on Facebook (yes?) please visit our Facebook page.  We appreciate your support whenever and however you can offer it unto us!  Please also note that to Post a Comment below about our reviews you need to have either a Google account (which you can easily get at https://accounts.google.com/NewAccount if you need to sign up) or other sign-in identification from the pull-down menu below before you preview or post.  You can also leave comments at our Facebook page, although you may have to somehow register with us there in order to comment (FB procedures: frequently perplexing mysteries for us aged farts).

 

*Please ignore previous warnings about a “dead link” to our Summary page because the problem’s been manually fixed so that all postings since July 11, 2013 now have the proper functioning link.

 

If you’d rather contact Ken directly rather than leaving a comment here at the blog please 

use my email address of kenburke409@gmail.com—type it directly if the link doesn’t work.

            

OUR POSTINGS PROBABLY LOOK BEST ON THE MOST CURRENT VERSIONS OF MAC OS AND THE SAFARI WEB BROWSER (although Google Chrome usually is decent also); OTHERWISE, BE FOREWARNED THE LAYOUT MAY SEEM MESSY AT TIMES.

             

Finally, for the data-oriented among you, Google stats say over the past month the total unique hits at this site were 8,652—a huge drop-off from the marvelous 40-50K of some recent months; never overestimate yourself! (As always, we thank all of you for your ongoing support with our hopes you’ll continue to be regular readers.)  Below is a snapshot of where those responses have come from within the previous week (with appreciation for the unspecified “Others” also visiting Two Guys’ site):


Wednesday, March 19, 2025

I’m Still Here plus Short Takes on other cinematic topics

A Horrifying Story, Among So Many Others

Reviews and Comments by Ken Burke


I invite you to join me on a regular basis to see how my responses to current cinematic offerings compare to the critical establishment, which I’ll refer to as either the CCAL (Collective Critics at Large) if they’re supportive or the OCCU (Often Cranky Critics Universe) when they go negative.  However, due to COVID concerns I’m mostly addressing streaming options with limited visits to theaters, where I don’t think I’ve missed much anyway, but better options may be on the horizon.  (Note: Anything in bold blue [some may look near purple] is a link to something more in the review.)


My reviews’ premise: “You can’t please everyone, so you got to please yourself.”

(from "Garden Party" by Rick Nelson and the Stone Canyon Band, 1972 album of the song’s name)


                            I'm Still Here (Walter Salles, 2024)
                                        rated PG-13   138 min.

Here’s the trailer:

        (Use the full screen button in the image’s lower right to enlarge its size; 

        activate the same button or use “esc” keyboard key to return to normal.)


 No Plot SpoilerAlert this time because the events of this docudrama are public record (including the 2015 memoir, Ainda Estou Aqui, by Marcelo Rubens Paiva about his family), but if you want more plot details please consult this site.  What we’re exploring here is the plight of the Paiva family in 1970 Rio de Janeiro where Dad Rubens (Selton Mello) is an architect living comfortably in a near-seaside home with wife Eunice (Fernanda Torres) and their 5 children, despite the military dictatorship in place since 1964, although oldest daughter Vera’s (Valentina Herszage) sent to London to live with friends as she begins college.  One day, though, in January 1971 their tranquility’s disturbed when he’s brought in for questioning, never to be seen by his family or us again, followed by a new demand Eunice and teenage-daughter Eliana (Luiza Kosovski) also be brought in for questioning.  Eliana’s released after 1 day, but Eunice is locked up for several days while going through harsh questioning about Rubens clandestinely involved with pro-democracy activities which she denies—although we later learn he was, verifying his arrest. Much of the film at this point is about Eunice’s futile attempts to find Rubens, which finally leads to a journalist friend telling her he’s been killed (or “disappeared,” term used by repressive governments of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and other countries in those later-20th-century decades to refer to political prisoners who were never released or found), although the military refuses to confirm this.  Against her kids’ wishes, she decides to move them all to São Paulo to be close to some of her relatives.  Then we move ahead to 1996, with democracy restored, as Eunice finally gets Rubens’ death certificate (but his body was never found), leading to her calls for reparations to the many victims’ survivors.  Next we’re in 2024 where Eunice is 85 (now played by Fernanda Montenegro), confined to a wheelchair, suffering from Alzheimer’s, within a family gathering of her now-adult children, remembering Rubens.


 Graphics before the final credits tell us Rubens was killed in January 1971 but the 5 men identified as responsible were never charged; Eunice at age 48 earned a law degree, worked for various Brazilian/international agencies, died in 2018.  (My minor complaint about this otherwise marvelous, moving film is I’d liked to have seen even brief scenes about this later work of hers rather than just getting a glimpse of it; instead we focus almost entirely on her frustrated grief at knowing for so long nothing concrete her husband.)  Torres won the 2025 Golden Globe award for Best Actress (first Brazilian to win an acting award there), was nominated in that category for a 2025 Oscar (she’d be in my Top 5) where the film did take the trophy for Best International Feature, also nominated for overall Best Picture (first Brazilian film to be a finalist in that category, with both of those other noms losing to Anora [Sean Baker, 2024] ... damn!).  If you haven’t yet seen this compelling film it’s still in 442 domestic (U.S.-Canada) theaters, opened on January 17, 2025, taken in $5.9 million ($33.9 million worldwide) so far, but it’s likely much more available on streaming where you can rent it for $19.99 from Amazon Prime Video or Apple TV+.  Along with me, the CCAL actively recommends watching this (slightly unpolished?) gem where the Rotten Tomatoes positive reviews are at a high of 97%, the Metacritic average score is a whopping (for them) 85%, with the possible (sad) caveat that you might have to force yourself to read subtitles because the dialogue’s in Portuguese.

 

 As I wrap up with my usual tactic of a Musical Metaphor, I’ll try to help condition you for that subtitle reading (this upcoming video's in Spanish) by using another Oscar winner (Best Original Song), “El Mal” (“The Evil,” from another Best Picture and Best International Feature nominee, Emilia Pérez [Jacques Audiard, 2024]) at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vM-voEepRyI (sung by that film’s Oscar winner for Best Supporting Actress, Zoe Saldaña, and Best Actress nominee Karla Sofía Gascón) as it also calls out government corruption: “Losing a loved one is a tragedy / Losing their remains is a condemnation.”  Despite the controversy over statements made by Gascón and Audiard (likely cost them any further Oscar triumphs), I still encourage viewings of Emilia Pérez and I’m Still Here, even if it’s just to help tune up your bilingual skills.  (One final note: I’m Still Here it will need to bump off The Last Stop in Yuma County [Francis Galluppi] as #8 on my 2024 Top 10 list [see our postings of February 20 and March 12, 2025, as I don’t want to repeat the whole thing once again].)

            

SHORT TAKES

               

Related Links Which You Might Find Interesting:

        

Options for your consideration: (1) Recent theatrical releases now available on streaming (Sing Sing interests me to see); (2) IMDb's 5 Things to Watch on the week of 3/17/2025 (or not, I'd say).

 

We encourage you to visit the Summary of Two Guys Reviews for our past posts* (scroll to the bottom of this Summary page to see additional info about your wacky critic, Ken Burke, along with contact info and a great retrospective song list).  Overall notations for this blog—including Internet formatting craziness beyond our control—may be found at our Two Guys in the Dark homepage.  If you’d like to Like us on Facebook (yes?) please visit our Facebook page.  We appreciate your support whenever and however you can offer it unto us!  Please also note that to Post a Comment below about our reviews you need to have either a Google account (which you can easily get at https://accounts.google.com/NewAccount if you need to sign up) or other sign-in identification from the pull-down menu below before you preview or post.  You can also leave comments at our Facebook page, although you may have to somehow register with us there in order to comment (FB procedures: frequently perplexing mysteries for us aged farts).

 

*Please ignore previous warnings about a “dead link” to our Summary page because the problem’s been manually fixed so that all postings since July 11, 2013 now have the proper functioning link.

 

If you’d rather contact Ken directly rather than leaving a comment here at the blog please 

use my email address of kenburke409@gmail.com—type it directly if the link doesn’t work.

           

OUR POSTINGS PROBABLY LOOK BEST ON THE MOST CURRENT VERSIONS OF MAC OS AND THE SAFARI WEB BROWSER (although Google Chrome usually is decent also); OTHERWISE, BE FOREWARNED THE LAYOUT MAY SEEM MESSY AT TIMES.

            

Finally, for the data-oriented among you, Google stats say over the past month the total unique hits at this site were 8,652—a huge drop-off from the marvelous 40-50K of some recent months; never overestimate yourself! (As always, we thank all of you for your ongoing support with our hopes you’ll continue to be regular readers.)  Below is a snapshot of where those responses have come from within the previous week (with appreciation for the unspecified “Others” also visiting Two Guys’ site):


Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Revised 2024 Top 10, Godfather announcement, plus some Short Takes on various other cinematic topics

Short Agenda This Week

Comments by Ken Burke


 Now that I’ve caught up on just about all I wanted to see of 2024 releases—which has led to my revised Top 10 of last year, noted just below (tentative list in our February 20, 2025 postingwith links to their reviews—the time seemed right for my annual (sometimes semi-annual) break from posting reviews in favor of giving my wonderful wife, Nina, a reprieve from her voluntary-but-ongoing kitchen duties so I can bring together some spaghetti and chianti for our 3 nights of viewing of The Godfather trilogy (Francis Ford Coppola; 1972, 1974, 1990), but I’ll return to reviews next week, although you will find farther below the usual Related Links listings which might keep you busy until then, or, if not, I’ll leave you with a Musical Metaphor, the theme from the original Godfather film (composed by Nino Rota), gloriously illustrated with many images from this grand masterpiece.


(Revised) Top 10 of 2024 Theatrical Releases


1.  Conclave (Edward Berger)

2.  Nickel Boys (RaMell Ross)

3.  A Complete Unknown (James Mangold)

4.  The Brutalist (Brady Corbet)

5.  Emilia Pérez (Jacques Audiard)

6.  The Substance (Coralie Fargeat)

7.  The Room Next Door (Pedro Almodóvar) {7}
8.  The Last Stop in Yuma County (Francis Galluppi)

9.  The Piano Lesson (Malcolm Washington)

10. Wicked: Part I (John M. Chu)

              

SHORT TAKES

              

Related Links Which You Might Find Interesting:

 

Some options for your consideration: (1) What's new on Netflix in March 2025; (2) What's new on Max in March 2025; (3) What's new on Hulu in March 2025; (4) What's new on Disney+ in March 2025 (Sorry, but IMDb gave me nothing for Amazon Prime Video in March 2025); (5) IMDb Staff Picks for March 2025; & (6) IMDb's 5 Things to Watch during the week of March 10, 2025.

 

We encourage you to visit the Summary of Two Guys Reviews for our past posts* (scroll to the bottom of this Summary page to see additional info about your wacky critic, Ken Burke, along with contact info and a great retrospective song list).  Overall notations for this blog—including Internet formatting craziness beyond our control—may be found at our Two Guys in the Dark homepage.  If you’d like to Like us on Facebook (yes?) please visit our Facebook page.  We appreciate your support whenever and however you can offer it unto us!  Please also note that to Post a Comment below about our reviews you need to have either a Google account (which you can easily get at https://accounts.google.com/NewAccount if you need to sign up) or other sign-in identification from the pull-down menu below before you preview or post.  You can also leave comments at our Facebook page, although you may have to somehow register with us there in order to comment (FB procedures: frequently perplexing mysteries for us aged farts).

 

*Please ignore previous warnings about a “dead link” to our Summary page because the problem’s been manually fixed so that all postings since July 11, 2013 now have the proper functioning link.

 

If you’d rather contact Ken directly rather than leaving a comment here at the blog please 

use my email address of kenburke409@gmail.com—type it directly if the link doesn’t work.

          

OUR POSTINGS PROBABLY LOOK BEST ON THE MOST CURRENT VERSIONS OF MAC OS AND THE SAFARI WEB BROWSER (although Google Chrome usually is decent also); OTHERWISE, BE FOREWARNED THE LAYOUT MAY SEEM MESSY AT TIMES.

            

Finally, for the data-oriented among you, Google stats say over the past month the total unique hits at this site were 8,652—a huge drop-off from the marvelous 40-50K of some recent months; never overestimate yourself! (As always, we thank all of you for your ongoing support with our hopes you’ll continue to be regular readers.)  Below is a snapshot of where those responses have come from within the previous week (with appreciation for the unspecified “Others” also visiting Two Guys’ site):