
‘Ghostlight,' ‘Watcher' and More Streaming Gems
'Ghostlight' (2024)
So few films concern the daily lives of the working class, in any meaningful way, that it's sort of astonishing when one comes along that feels so embedded there. That's the case with this heart-tugging drama from the directors Kelly O'Sullivan and Alex Thompson ('Saint Frances'), in which a grieving father stumbles into a community theater production of 'Romeo and Juliet.' Keith Kupferer is marvelous as the father, beautifully capturing the frustrations and emotional limitations of his class and generation, while Katherine Mallen Kupferer performs modestly as his wife, until a late moment that absolutely clobbers you. And that, in many ways, holds true for the entire movie.
'Goodrich' (2024)
'This midlife crisis is no walk in the park, I'll tell you that,' snorts Andy Goodrich (Michael Keaton) near the end of this poignant comedy-drama, and while his daughter Grace (Mila Kunis) notes the mathematical improbability that 60-something is 'midlife,' the sentiment stands. Andy, the owner-operator of a Los Angeles art gallery that's seen better days, is in free-fall. His wife has just checked herself into rehab, much to his bafflement (he's so checked out, he never noticed her addiction), leaving him to care for their elementary-school aged twins himself. Keaton is credited as an executive producer, and it's easy to see why the project was important to him; the writer-director Hallie Meyers-Shyer hands him a stellar showcase, a guy who talks fast and thinks faster, and whose inherent likability helps soften his obvious flaws. The result is a poignant examination of getting older and wondering if you've lost it — whatever your particular 'it' may be.
'Saint Maud' (2021)
A fair number of minds were blown by 'Love Lies Bleeding,' last year's mash-up of crime thriller, queer romance and surrealist semi-fairy tale from the writer and director Rose Glass, but those who caught this, her debut feature, saw greatness in her future. This nerve-jangling, Catholic-coded psychological thriller stars the bracing Morfydd Clark (currently starring in 'The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power') as the title character, an introverted nurse whose unwavering, self-punishing religious faith coexists uneasily with her own demons and skeletons. Glass's filmmaking is equal parts intellectual and visceral; she pushes the viewer to consider the full ramifications and implications of such unquestioning faith, while taking pains to place us in Maud's shoes (literally, at one point, and quite painfully). It's a debut of striking confidence and exciting, undeniable cinematic skill.
'Watcher' (2022)
The haunted, melancholy visage of Maika Monroe, so well used in 'It Follows' and 'Longlegs,' gets a workout in this deliberately paced, unnervingly crafted thriller from the director Chloe Okuno. Monroe stars as Julia, who accompanies her husband, Francis (Karl Glusman), to Bucharest, Romania, for a career opportunity. He's working all the time, so she's a stranger in a strange land, and Okuno nails the specific, aching solitude of being alone in a crowd where you don't even speak the language — and the feeling that you're being watched and followed. The picture's tension comes from the commonplace, and Okuno uses the simplest of tools (rumbling on the soundtrack, knocks on doors, sudden movements, incoming texts) to build dread and unease. Most of all, she offers a gutsy female interpretation of the male gaze, a story explicitly about being watched, by men, and all of the dangers that can represent.
'Eileen' (2023)
This sublime and absorbing adaptation of Ottessa Moshfegh's 2015 novel takes some of the most durable tropes of pulp literature and film noir — the small-town schlub looking for a way out, the femme fatale whose sexy exterior hides a dark heart — and turns them upside down. Thomasin McKenzie is the title character, a file clerk at a boys' correctional center who cares for her miserable, alcoholic father (Shea Whigham) and can only escape her drab existence with messy sexual fantasies. One day, a new one arrives: the new counselor Rebecca (Anne Hathaway), a blonde knockout who exudes the kind of effortless self-confidence that Eileen can only dream of. Where their attraction goes from there is best left unspoiled; suffice to to say that the director William Oldroyd ('Lady Macbeth') knows the genre road map, and is keenly aware of when to follow it and when to go off-road.
'Waitress: The Musical' (2023)
'Waitress' had quite a circular journey, something akin to those of 'The Producers,' 'Hairspray,' and 'Mean Girls': it began as a nonmusical film (also streaming on Max), was then adapted into a Broadway musical, and then turned back into a movie. The twist here is that rather than restaging it as a traditional movie musical, the directors Diane Paulus and Brett Sullivan instead captured live performances from its 2021 post-lockdown stage revival, creating something of a cross between musical theater and concert performance. The latter influence is especially strong since the production is fronted by singer-songwriter Sara Bareilles, who wrote the words and music and periodically played Jenna, the show's long-suffering protagonist. It's a risky gambit, but it works; Bareilles is a live performer, first and foremost, and Paulus and Sullivan's frisky photography gives the scenes a you-are-there immediacy and intimacy.
'Nomad: In the Footsteps of Bruce Chatwin' (2020)
Werner Herzog's documentaries are never just about their surface subject, as his own interests and preoccupations are ever-present. That's especially true in this tribute to his friend and occasional collaborator Bruce Chatwin, a writer and adventurer whose 1989 death clearly left a hole in Herzog's heart. But this is no cradle-to-grave bio-doc, with Herzog instead serving up a thoughtful rumination on the 'wild characters, strange creatures, and big ideas' that fascinated him and this extraordinary man.
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Fox News
5 days ago
- Fox News
Seth Meyers mocks media frenzy over Biden 'cover-up,' says his age was 'worst-kept secret'
NBC "Late Night" host Seth Meyers mocked the idea of former President Joe Biden's declining health being a major political scandal, claiming it "was the worst cover-up in American history." Questions about Biden's health have resurfaced after the release of "Original Sin," a new book by CNN anchor Jake Tapper and Axios journalist Alex Thompson, which alleges that Biden's inner circle concealed the president's flailing health and cognitive decline for years, despite telling the public that he was mentally sharp and fit for office. Meyers ripped the media for paying attention to the Biden "cover-up" when, according to him, "The Trump Administration and Republicans in Congress are rapidly dismantling American civil society and turning the country into a reclusive oligarchy." "But I don't want to talk about any of that and neither does the media. We both want to talk about something way more important. Joe Biden is, and has been, for a while, very old," he said sarcastically. After playing a montage of figures calling the cover-up a media scandal, Meyers joked, "They're right. This is the biggest scandal in history, bigger than Watergate, bigger than Iran-Contra, bigger than the Teapot Dome Scandal." The late-night host argued that the president's advanced age wasn't a secret and the majority of Americans were against him running for re-election in the 2024 campaign, believing him to be too old to serve again. "Now, you might be thinking to yourself, 'Wait, didn't everybody already know that Joe Biden was old?'" Meyers asked. "'Didn't poll after poll show that the vast majority of Americans, including a clear majority of Democrats, thought he was too old to run for reelection, and wanted someone else? Didn't he biff it so bad in the debate that his own party undertook an unprecedented effort to successfully force him out of the race?'" "'Weren't Democrats ultimately punished for Biden's disastrous choice to run again when they got their asses kicked in the November election?'" he continued. "'Didn't Seth play that clip of Biden falling up the stairs, like, 1,000 times?'" "This was on TV, everyone saw it," he said of Biden stumbling while walking up the stairs of Air Force One in 2021. "If this was a cover-up, if this was the worst [bleep] cover-up in American history. It was the worst-kept secret since Mika and Joe," he joked, referring to the relationship of "Morning Joe" co-hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough who wed in 2018 after years of co-hosting the morning MSNBC show. "This was only like Watergate if the break-in had been live-streamed on Twitch," Meyers added. After poking fun at reports that Biden got lost in his closet in the White House, Meyers turned serious. "It was just a disastrous political choice. And the people who deserve criticism for that are Biden, the aides who convinced him and themselves that he should ignore reality and run again," he concluded. Meyer's Monday night show appears to be the first time he referenced the Biden cover-up revelations from Tapper's book, according to Grabien transcripts. Meyer and fellow liberal late-night hosts Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel have all welcomed Biden for friendly interviews. Most recently, Biden was on "Late Night with Seth Meyers" in February 2024, just days after the release of Special Counsel Robert Hur's report. Hur was heavily attacked by the media at the time for calling Biden a "sympathetic, well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory" in his report. During his February 2024 interview of Biden, Meyers gently broached the subject of Biden's age before quickly moving on to other topics. After Hur's report was released a few days later, Meyers called the special counsel's comments a "gratuitous hypothetical" and stressed that Hur was a "Republican attorney" who "was originally appointed by Trump." "If that kind of language was appropriate in a legal finding, then prosecutors could have done the same thing to Trump," Meyers said before repeatedly drawing attention to President Donald Trump's mental acuity.

Yahoo
6 days ago
- Yahoo
Scranton Shakespeare Festival, in financial need, to charge for some shows
The Scranton Shakespeare Festival will now charge $20 for its previously free summer musicals, a response to financial strain. Its Shakespeare plays, which begin June 20, remain free. 'Despite our best efforts through fundraising and grants, we have reached a point where we simply cannot sustain our work without additional support,' according to an email the nonprofit professional theater troupe sent to patrons Sunday. 'To continue offering the kind of vibrant, ambitious productions our community deserves, and to ensure the future of Scranton Shakespeare Festival for years to come, we must ask for your help in a new way.' Tickets can be earned by helping out with productions. 'No one will be turned away for lack of funds,' according to the email. At all levels of theater, musicals generally draw bigger crowds than plays. The musicals are reliable crowd-pleasers: 'Sister Act,' 'Hairspray' and 'Little Shop of Horrors.' The first, 'Sister Act,' is June 26 to 29, plus July 26. The musical is based on the Whoopi Goldberg movie about a singer who hides out in a convent and brings new life to it. * The upcoming season of the Scranton Shakespeare Festival. (Scranton Shakespeare Festival) * Dane Huggler and Violet Martin in a past production by the Scranton Shakespeare Festival. Martin, a Scranton High School student, will play Juliet in the Festival Youth Ensemble production of 'Romeo and Juliet' and will be in the main stage production of 'Hairspray.' (Brandon Lam Photography) Show Caption 1 of 2 The upcoming season of the Scranton Shakespeare Festival. (Scranton Shakespeare Festival) Expand Buying the rights to the scripts for the summer productions cost $10,417. The total cost of this season, including stipends for the ensemble and staff, is $115,655. The festival receives Lackawanna County grants and solicits donations and sponsors. It stages fundraising shows in the off season, such as a Christmas pantomime. The Shakespeare plays remain free thanks to a new $5,000 sponsorship from PNC Bank. They begin with a youth ensemble production of 'Romeo & Juliet,' beginning June 20, followed by 'Julius Caesar' and 'Timon of Athens' in July. The schedule and box office are online at Reservations are encouraged for the free shows. The festival was started with a 2011 production in Nay Aug Park. Each year brings a different mix of visiting professional and local performers. This year there are 34, who will perform in a theater inside the Marketplace at Steamtown in Scranton. Co-founder and artistic director Michael Bradshaw Flynn could not be reached for comment.
Yahoo
31-05-2025
- Yahoo
The Issue Is: Alex Thompson and 'Original Sin'
LOS ANGELES - "Original Sin" by Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson is the best-selling book in America this week, according to the New York Times. It's dominated the political conversation more than any other book has in years. Co-author Alex Thompson joins us this week on "The Issue Is:" to talk about what was really going on at the Biden White House, reaction to the book, and changes that are needed in the media going forward. "The Issue Is: with Elex Michaelson" is California's statewide political show. Watch more episodes at