I, Origins @ The Ross

Sofi's Eyes (Astrid Bergès-Frisbey)

Sofi’s Eyes (Astrid Bergès-Frisbey)

Michael Pitt commendably plays Dr. Ian Gray, a brooding molecular biologist who researches the eye; more specific the iris and its one-of-a-kind design. He is so mesmerized by the eye, that he photographs those of his family and random people on the street. Science proves that no two persons have the same eye until Karen (Brit Marling), his eager but introspective research assistant, arrives and when he meets and photographs the eyes of Sofi (Astrid Bergès-Frisbey) his irritating and childlike new-age spiritual love interest.

Ian (Michael Pitt) and Karen (Brit Marling) discuss a theory

Ian (Michael Pitt) and Karen (Brit Marling) discuss a theory

Karen and Sofi are like a pair of eyes, each viewing life in different shades and tones. Sofi sees the world through her own take on spirituality; this view shakes up Ian’s world … almost causing an identity crisis. In New York, they are all over each other in the hustle and bustle of the city so much that they get carried away into the courthouse intent on marrying. But they have to wait 24 hours. At that time, Karen interrupts with a scientific discovery, and in the lab, Karen meets Sofi, and each woman rightly sizes the other up. The marriage between the spiritual (Sofi) and the scientific (Ian) does not happen as tragedy strikes Sofi. Karen and Ian or “science and science” marry and start a family. It is a well-delivered pairing, and one that provides the shift from romance to a relationship of scientific inquiry: what if another person has the same set of eyes someone where out there? Is it possible? Ian travels to New Delhi, India to uncover the truth. What he finds will warm your heart.

Ian (Pitt) and Sofi (Astrid Bergès-Frisbey) on their first date

Ian (Pitt) and Sofi (Astrid Bergès-Frisbey) on their first date

Cahill’s I, Origins is an interesting tale, but Astrid Berges-Frisbey’s appearance is like hearing nails on a chalkboard; it was nice when she was offscreen. Brit Marling’s performance is like a spa treatment on a balmy Saturday morning as she inhabits a character who is grounded in her own confidence. The feeling of the movie, itself? Well, think of pouring molasses over a biscuit as you sit in an outside café in the winter … yes! It’s that slow!

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I, Origins plays through August 14 at The Ross Media Arts Center in Lincoln.

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‘Hercules’ ~ The Skinny

Megara (Irina Shayk) looks on as Hercules (Dwayne Johnson) returns home from battle

Megara (Irina Shayk) looks on as Hercules (Dwayne Johnson) returns home from battle


dir. Brett Ratner

Myth is strong because in its more benevolent sense, it gives communities some idea of beginnings and meanings to things, people, and places not easily understood. Myth is the stuff that legends are made of. Mythmaking, however, is powerful and, depending on who’s telling it, this part of storytelling can inspire fear, awe, and wonder in its listeners.

Tydeus (Aksel Hennie)

Tydeus (Aksel Hennie)

We all know the story or the myth of Hercules, the strongest man in the ancient Greco-Roman world who, in the words of my mother, “didn’t let any grass grow under his feet.” Yes, the demi-god made many adventures and completed his 12 labors before he embraced his own myth. Director Brett Ratner with screenwriters Ryan Condal and Evan Spiliotopoulos brings this weathered hero to the screen in his adaptation of Steve Moore’s Radical Comics mini-series.

Hercules & Crew

Hercules & Crew

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson admirably interprets the gigantic legend, and earns respect as he casts aside his own legend as “The Rock” to give Hercules room to breathe. He looks good—real good—yet Johnson plays his muscular body to Hercules not to “The Rock”. Johnson’s Hercules is compassionate, loyal, and, even more commendable, aware that all of his heroic feats in battle could not be accomplished without his crew, among them Amphiarus (Ian McShane Deadwood), Autolycus (Rufus Sewell), Tydeus (Aksel Hennie), a mute warrior, and Atalanta (Ingrid Bolsø Berdal), the uber-skilled archer of Greek Myth. The keeper of the stories of Hercules is his nephew Iolaus (Reece Ritchie), who as a young man comes of age fighting with his uncle.

Atalanta, Archer extraordinaire (Ingrid Bolso Berdal)

Atalanta, Archer extraordinaire (Ingrid Bolso Berdal)

Hercules & Crew invigorate in exhibitions of ride-or-die loyalty in battle scenes that are worth the price of the ticket.

The screenplay is credible, and the plot twists not far-fetched as comments on power and how it is brokered to retain kingdoms are delivered plausibly by King Eurystheus (Joseph Fiennes) and Lord Cotys (John Hurt).

And that’s The Skinny!

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The Week’s End

Friday, July 18, 2014

As we move into the week’s end, think on this:

RasBlkJamJars

Handle your anger. Yes, handle it. In other words, don’t let it sit and course through your veins. It only will flow right back into YOU. Anger, if not tended to, will set up shop on the inside and, before you know it, a den of robbers will begin to steal your joy. That is not good. Anger needs attention; it knows its own power which is why it provides a moment for us to step back and rightly assess a situation. It is only fair to give it an outlet to perform. I remember an episode on Desperate Housewives when husband and father Mike Delfino (James Denton) had been killed. His wife, Susan (Teri Hatcher) and son Preston (Brent/Shane Kinsman) were putting away groceries when Preston accidentally broke a jar of jelly on the floor. Susan paused, then grabbed another jar and smashed it on the floor. What followed was a jelly-jar-smashing orchestral expression of anger over the death of Mike. After that, Susan and Preston began the process of moving through their grief. Remember Jesus brandishing that whip in anger over the thieves in the temple? (I just had a Prince moment). Anyway, He handled his anger. Matthew 21:12-13 tells us after that episode, Jesus declared, “My house will be called a house of prayer”. Exactly! Once you handle that anger you can cease from it as the Psalmist bids us to do in Psalm 37. Peace shall abide.

Run on anger. Walk on anger. Lift weights. Stomp in the basement on anger. Dance. Sing. Write it out in a journal without judgment. Pray on it. Pour water over it. Audition for a play as I did on Tuesday night to deal with my anger over an incident that blindsided me that weekend. Being in the theater was just what the doctor ordered.

Handle your anger; it’s only fair.

May peace and joy abide within you.

Happy week’s end ~ to all of you!

~ K Lynn

Snowpiercer @ The Ross

Snowpiercer, the train

Snowpiercer, the train

Snowpiercer is the latest venture into dystopian society from South Korean film director Joon-ho Bong. Set in the near future, Snowpiercer pierces through the vein of consciousness with rapid speed. It is brutal. It is gruesome. It is cold; difficult to watch. The earth has frozen over destroying all life after a disastrous global warming experiment. Billows and dunes of snow cover the earth; it is the dead of winter–every day … always. Those humans who survived board a train whose engine is designed by Wilford (Ed Harris) to travel around the globe for all eternity. Eighteen years! Eighteen years in an iron box with 1,000 people, and you had better know your place!

Tanya (Octavia Spencer)

Tanya (Octavia Spencer)

Imagine that. Living and having your being on a train; coming of age on a train; dying on a train. Imagine a society set up in long narrow confines where bunk beds abound. Bong depicts the constellation of hierarchies formed within that space without so much as a blink of an eye. The upper crust enjoy lavish living, fine dining, and socializing in the front of the train. The poor, packed in like sardines in the tail end of the train, are tyrannized by Wilford’s minions–and they abuse the children too! Rebellions have occurred; all but one, however, have been quashed by Minister Mason, played with exquisite evil by Tilda Swinton.

Curtis (Chris Evans) fearless leader of the revolt

Curtis (Chris Evans) fearless leader of the revolt

Chris Evans stars as Curtis, the passenger tapped to lead the revolt, and hope for freedom abides not only in him but in the valiant revolutionaries aboard the train who arm themselves to fight with him. The revolutionaries exhibit an indomitable spirit, and even though you know the majority will die, their heroics are worth going through the well-rehearsed visual punishment. The fight scenes are awe-inspiring as each illustrates what the oppressed will do to gain their freedom with the knowledge they may not come back alive from the war. Evans exudes trust through his character Curtis; you know he will make it even though the odds are stacked against him and his crew.

Minister Mason (Tilda Swinton)

Minister Mason (Tilda Swinton)

Make no mistake: The Train, or the snowpiercer is the devil in film. Art director Stefan Kovacik imagines an ominous iron horse that, through Kyung-pyo Hong’s cinematography, pierces all ice it encounters on the track; it is disheartening to know it never will stop–never. Hong takes us underneath the train and lets the audience feel the wheels on the steel track; to feel the relentless speed of the demon; to see the depths of the drop if it derails. No one will hear them scream.

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Snowpiercer plays through July 24th at the Ross Media Arts Center in Lincoln.

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Also playing through July 24th is Big Men, Rachel Boynton’s very impressive documentary on the discovery of oil in the country of Ghana, Africa.

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Halle Berry ‘Extant’

Halle Berry as Molly Woods

Halle Berry as Molly Woods

CBS
Wednesdays
9/8CT

Extant: in existence; still existing; not destroyed or lost

Of course it rankles that the storyline revolves around a woman of color who is pregnant and does not know who or what the father is. That she conceives in outer space with no one on that spaceship but a computer-generated station assistant named Ben is even more bothersome. I won’t move too far into the race and gender territory just yet. I prefer, instead, to make honorable mention of the larger import of Mickey Fisher’s (King of Iron) new television series.

Nyota Uhura (Nichelle Nichols)

Nyota Uhura (Nichelle Nichols)

Extant is very important for historical reasons whether the writer and producers know it or not. The series is paying homage to a legacy of African American astronauts portrayed on television and who are members of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). As for the small screen, Extant‘s main character, Molly Woods (Halle Berry) honors Nyota Uhura (Nichelle Nichols), the communications officer from the United States of Africa aboard the USS Enterprise in Gene Roddenberry’s Star Trek television series (1966-1969). Extant also compliments NASA’s diversity in space flight programs. Dr. Guion Stewart “Guy” Bluford, Jr. was the first African American astronaut in space (1983) and, more specific to Woods, Mae Carol Jemison (1992), the first African American woman in space. For these historical entries, I reserve my comments on the aforementioned categories (well, until later that is).

Mae Carol Jemison

Mae Carol Jemison

Now on to the synopsis/analysis. Extant is compelling, and in the spirit of the singing sensation Ashford and Simpson, the writing and acting are solid as a rock. I wanted the story to keep on going, and I viewed the pilot again and watched every one-to-three-minute Behind The Scenes video on CBS’s website in an effort to satiate my hunger for more.

Mickey Fisher indeed has created a captivating futuristic drama with Steven Spielberg at the helm as executive-producer. Cinematographer M. David Mullen beautifully imagines a pilot production embedded with allusions to other films about androids, outer space, and curious pregnancies, namely Spielberg’s own A.I., Minority Report, Avatar, Rosemary’s Baby, and I Know What You Did Last Summer, among others. The time? Thirty years from now.

Molly Woods in space

Molly Woods in space

Academy Award winner Halle Berry (Monster’s Ball) stars as Molly Wood, an astronaut returning home from a 13-month solo journey in the cosmos. After a medical examination with gynecologist Dr. Sam Barton (Camryn Manheim), Molly learns from Sam that she is pregnant. The expected That’s not possible! I can’t get pregnant! responses come next from the astronaut upon hearing the news. Berry remarks,

The first episode is about reconnecting and then [Molly] finding out she did not come home alone. [While in space] she had an encounter with something … this entity that is able to present itself. […] There is mystery, and it is interesting to watch how it is going to unfold …

Molly wrangles a promise from Sam to withhold that mystery from her report until she has time to sort things out. After all, she just has arrived to earth. Fisher slathers the rest of the plot with a provocative narrative layered with “whodunits” and “who can/not you trust?” overtones. These are enough to encourage the audience to tune in next week.

A happy Molly and Marcus (Sergio Harford) in memory

A happy Molly and Marcus (Sergio Harford) in memory

It is good to see Halle Berry–really good–and her timely choice to return to the small screen after several cancelled shows (Living Dolls, Knots Landing), places her in the room with Black women enjoying major roles in television, most notable Keri Washington (Scandal), Chandra Wilson (Grey’s Anatomy), Nicole Beharie (Sleepy Hollow), Danai Gurira (The Walking Dead), and Viola Davis (How to Get Away With Murder).

Guion Bluford, first African American in space (1983)

Guion Bluford, first African American in space (1983)

An artistic maturity illumines Berry’s comfort and self-assurance as she interprets a vulnerable but tentative (and weary worn) astronaut adjusting to her life on earth. I missed her presence when forced to watch the other plot points of the story; her management of the space ship testifies to her character’s confidence, discipline, and knowledge of the world of space and science. In other words, Molly Woods probably graduated in the top 5% of her class, and with her strong work ethic, she earned respect and trust from her colleagues. She has to be quite skillful and exceptional to have been assigned a solitary mission. This astronaut is awesome!

John (Goran Visnjic) introduces his 'son' Ethan (Pierce Gagnon) to scientists

John (Goran Visnjic) introduces his ‘son’ Ethan (Pierce Gagnon) to scientists

Goran Visnjic plays her matter-of-fact husband, who soothes his desire for fatherhood by ‘conceiving’ Ethan (Pierce Gagnon), an android child he programs to ‘feel’. Writing of feeling, Family Woods comes across as hollow, if not as sterile. If you have shopped in the frozen food section in short sleeves in the winter time, then you know what I am talking about. No warm fuzzies here except when Molly reminisces about her dead but extant former lover, Marcus Dawkins, played with bone-chilling affection by Sergio Harford.

Family Woods

Family Woods

For all of its family drama and debates on artificial intelligence and how to fund it, Extant excites with its state-of-the-art technologies: prototype self-driving cars, transparent iPads that light up, touch screens on refrigerators and bathroom mirrors, a medi-assist bot, flying spaceship toys, and flat-bottomed eggs.

If you are one who waits with baited breath for the next catalogue of newest gadgets as does a child for the Toys R Us Christmas booklet, Extant is your series.

Film • Television • & More coming your way!

Only Lovers Left Alive @ The Ross

Eve (Tilda Swinton) and Adam (Tom Hiddleston)

Eve (Tilda Swinton) and Adam (Tom Hiddleston)

Only Lovers Left Alive is Jim Jarmusch’s latest film endeavor, and it is like watching acute depression in motion; and it is very very slow … slow as molasses in winter. It is a melancholic wallow in angst on the one hand; and anxiety on the other; and there’s blood, too, and it is thick and rich! Tilda Swinton and Tom Hiddleston play Adam and Eve, two somber vampires who are in the vein of a mysterious space that would cause Edgar Allan Poe to shiver. Adam is a reclusive rock musician holed up in a gothic-like mansion on the outskirts of Detroit, Michigan. That was his music you just heard. He is a pack-rat

Adam poses as Dr. Faust on his way to get his supply.

Adam poses as Dr. Faust on his way to get his supply.

enveloped in obsolete technology such as a tube television and an 8-track tape player; he collects vintage guitars, one is a Gretsch Chet Atkins, supplied to him by Ian (Anton Yelchin), an unsuspecting lad in the music business. Eve lives in Tangiers, Morocco where she gets her precious supply of blood from another comrade in the Vampire fold, Christopher Marlowe—yes the Christopher Marlowe, Shakespeare’s nemesis (played by a wizened John Hurt). Jeffrey Wright plays Dr. Watson, from whom Adam buys a fresh supply of the deep red liquid jewel. Adam and Eve are reunited when Eve returns to the U.S. What unfolds thereafter is a set of the moody blues plucked from a piano in a smoky café packed back up the way, and the only entry to it is to amble down a one-lane hard-scrabble road!

Eva after her 'fix' of the deep red jewel

Eva after her ‘fix’ of the deep red jewel

The filmmaker could not have chosen a place more complementary to the style and mood of the film than the city of Detroit. The visual of the city is filmed in the twilight hours, and through that lens, Yorick Le Saux’s cinematography produces a city that languishes in its mistreatment but awaits as does the phoenix to rise from the ashes. On a drive in the wee hours of the morning, Adam asks Eve if she would like to see the Motown museum but cautions her that there is nothing left of it really. He then takes her to the once glorious movie theater developed on the site of Henry Ford’s first automobile workshop in 1925, and it is heartbreaking to see its French-renaissance style décor having faded away and being used for a parking lot. It is a hollow grave of memory! But Eve, in all of her vampire wisdom, looks into the future and declares, and I paraphrase: “While the south burns, Detroit will rise again!”

Adam

Adam

Only Lovers Left Alive is also a story swathed in old world romance. What Jarmusch manages to reveal through Adam and Eve, these vampires in love is a weariness over what humans have become. They’ve lived for centuries; they’ve seen it all but their knowledge of the world has left them fragile. They really are the only lovers left alive. Adam laments the present that, in spite of all of its advances in technology, has produced humans whom Adam calls the Zombies.

Jarmusch’s film is a stylistic visual pleasure that, ironically, will leave you craving for more as do Adam and Eve lust after pure uncontaminated blood.

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Only Lovers Left Alive plays through June 19 at the Ross Media Arts Center in Lincoln.

Also playing through June 19 is Nymphomaniac Volumes 1 and 2 directed by Lars van Trier and starring Charlotte Gainsburg, Uma Thurman, and Christian Slater and Shia La Beouf.

‘Maleficent’ ~ The Skinny

Angelina Jolie delivers as Maleficent

Angelina Jolie delivers as Maleficent

… and here we were thinking it was all because she was not invited to the baby shower! Angelina Jolie is Maleficent in Robert Stromberg’s feature film debut of the same name. Once upon a time, there lived a young and confident fairy named Maleficent (Isobelle Molloy and Ella Purnell), who, though an orphan, loved life and all that it had to offer her. She had wings that gave her freedom, joy, excitement, and pure unadulterated happiness. They were so large that they dragged behind her when she walked. They were strong and they never faltered–not once–and [she] trusted them. She lived in The Moor, a land of innocence where an animated forest, fairies, pixies, water sprites, and other magical creatures roamed free in a verdant lush land undisturbed by the threat of violence–that is until a human stumbled into their land. Stefan (Sharlto Copley), a farm boy, had all the panache of dried leaf. He and Maleficent, nevertheless, formed a friendship in the Moor that is sealed with “true love’s kiss”. Betrayal then followed, fueled by ambition, and a treacherous act Stefan committed that cut deep into the heart. Had I no hope of the recovery, I may have walked out of the theater!

"They were strong [...] and I trusted them!"

“They were strong […] and I trusted them!”

Some parts of the narrative, however, made me wonder. For instance, is Maleficent the only fairy of her kind? Why is Maleficent so isolated in a forest of thorns with creatures for whom she has no direct association? Who are her friends? Why isn’t there someone–an elder, perhaps–with whom she can consult and who can stand with her while she bears her grief? Perhaps, that’s just it: Maleficent lays bare the threat of isolation and how it breeds abuse, even the will to murder, even the act of rape. In this film, Maleficent’s isolation marks her as an open/easy target for those who wish to devour the very essence of who she is. Isolation sets her up for the kill, and Stefan does with abandon! On another note, there were times in the film I kept asking: you’ve got magic! Why won’t you use it get you out of this situation? Perhaps, that’s just it, again: Sometimes, a woman just has to stay the human course and rest on the hope that she will get out alive to use her magic! After all, her body is the vessel she need to deploy her magic. Hope does come to the rescue in the things which have been stolen from Maleficent. They beat for her. They find her. They lift her up out of the muck and mire! They save her! Therein lies the grace of Maleficent. Mercy!

Anne Sheppard’s costume design is grandiose, but Jolie inhabits it with the confidence of a stalking cheetah. The actress easily transitions from a once trusting, vulnerable friend into a bruised and almost-broken double-crossed villain. I tell you, it is a heart-wrenching scene, and the dialogue written by Linda Wolverton (one line in particular) under girds Maleficent’s most traumatic experience.

Maleficent might disappoint in some scenes but go and watch the film. The twist to Sleeping Beauty is inspiring. Let me just say this: the boys ain’t waking us up any more (think Frozen)! You will not be disappointed!

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Cold in July @ The Ross

Richard Dane (Michael C. Hall)

Richard Dane (Michael C. Hall)

It is a shot in the dark made in an ordinary night in an ordinary town and the bullet hit its target. Jim Mickle’s film Cold in July is an engaging mystery that lends itself to the film noir genre. It works as Mickle weaves an intricate tale of suspense around the ordinary life of a husband and father named Richard Dane who reluctantly releases the shot in the dark on an intruder in his house. It’s 1989 in suburbia of East Texas, inhabited by law-abiding citizens with steady jobs who mind their business and find community at the local diner, but that murder, though carried out in self-defense, will turn Richard’s life upside down. Why? The intruder’s father returns to ask some questions. The answers will surprise even him!

Unlikely Heroes (fr left to right) Russell (Sam Shepard), Richard (Michael C. Hall), and Jim Bob (Don Johnson)

Unlikely Heroes (fr left to right) Russell (Sam Shepard), Richard (Michael C. Hall), and Jim Bob (Don Johnson)

The jewel of Cold in July is the lighting, and Cinematographer Ryan Samul selects cold and warm prisms to convey pain, dispassion, and confusion; and desaturated colors to establish firmly the time period. The performances by well-seasoned actors are forceful. Sam Shephard playing Russell, evokes how deep a father’s angst falls even though the son is wanted by the police; Michael C. Hall who so easily plays Richard Dane, walks the line between the man who yearns for the return of everyday routine and a husband/ father who has to protect his family. You will appreciate Vinessa Shaw as Anne Dane as she drives her character through the burden that has been thrown on her shoulders. Oh, I have to mention the suave Don Johnson, who is Jim Bob. He makes a pair of cowboy boots speak a foreign language! Yes, he is that good!

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Cold in July plays through June 5 at The Ross.

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Belle @ The Ross

Dido Elizabeth Belle (Gugu Mbatha-Raw)

Dido Elizabeth Belle (Gugu Mbatha-Raw)

We all have found ourselves in the most insufferable circumstances wherein we hope against all hope that the fates will take pity on us mere mortals and make the way for an escape. We also have been in situations where we were made to feel unwelcomed, and thus we develop a yearning to belong. British film director Amma Asante’s Belle is a film inspired by the 1779 oil portrait of Dido Elizabeth Belle and Lady Elizabeth Murray. The portrait hangs at the Earl of Manchester’s ancestral home, Scone Palace in Scotland. Assante imagines the process of escape and belonging or, specifically, the methods a family uses to include a relative in the household all the while restricted by the socio-cultural mores of the time—that time is when the Atlantic slave trade was in full force … in Britain … in the eighteenth century.

The route of the Atlantic Slave Trade

The route of the Atlantic Slave Trade

Dido, played with unsettling restraint by British actress Gugu Mbatha-Raw, is a mulatto whose British father, Sir John Lindsay, (played by Matthew Goode) searches for then rescues her from the possibility of the auction block when Belle’s mother, Maria Belle, an enslaved woman from a plantation in the West Indies, dies.

Sir John sends Belle to live with her great Uncle, William Murray, The Earl of Manchester (played by Tom Wilkinson) and her great Aunt, Lady Murray played by Emily Watson. Dido grows up with her sister/cousin Lady Elizabeth (played by Sarah Gordon), and is indulged with almost every privilege accorded a young woman of English aristocracy. What follows are the usual performances of the strictest notions of gentility and social manners that govern the behavior of the British aristocracy—all elements of a Jane Austen novel; but when race is added to that setting of opulence and grandeur at Kenwood House in Hampstead, London, you can cut the tension with a knife!

18th Century Portrait of Dido Elizabeth Belle and Lady Elizabeth Murray

18th Century Portrait of Dido Elizabeth Belle and Lady Elizabeth Murray

What is lovely about Amma Asante’s characterization of Dido, is not only the young woman’s confidence; also, Asante’s Belle showcases the Belle’s indirect association with Mabel, an African female domestic servant (played by Beth-Ann Mary James), who waits on her when she travels with the family away from Kenwood. These silent interactions via eye contact and smiles suggest Dido Belle never forgets her own heritage even as she swims in the pleasure of affluence.

Belle is a gracious movie and 18th century England is well-attended by its costumes and landscapes. Yet, Amma Asante’s film refrains from an emotional depth; Dido does not ache for her mother, for example. Instead, Asante focuses on the strong cross-currents of change about to occur in England, the country that abolished slavery in 1807.

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Belle plays through June 5 at the Ross Media Arts Center in Lincoln.

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Jodorowsky’s Dune @ The Ross

Alejandro Jodorowsky

Alejandro Jodorowsky

Harlem Renaissance Poet Langston Hughes asks in his poem of the same name, what happens to a dream deferred? Film Director Frank Pavich offers one answer in his documentary Jodorowsky’s Dune.

In his film, Pavich uncovers the sheer pleasure and excitement in going for our dreams. His interview with cult filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky who made films such as El Topo in 1970 followed by his irreverent film The Holy Mountain in 1973, brings to relief what we will do to stretch our artistic muscle not for glory nor capital gain but for the sheer wonder in where our imaginations can take us.

Jodorowsky's Colossal Storyboard Book

Jodorowsky’s Colossal Storyboard Book

Without cinematic restraint Pavich curries patience in his exploration of Jodorowsky’s dream to bring to the big screen Frank Herbert’s sci-fi novel Dune in the turbulent times of the 1970s. Oh, it was a grand endeavor! The cast and technicians and illustrators made up a magnificent roster of talent Jodorowsky named “spiritual warriors”: We know them all: David Carradine, Mick Jagger, Orson Welles, and Salvador Dali; screenwriter Dan O’Bannon, sci-fi paperback artist Chris Foss, and the artist genius of the late H.R. Giger of Alien fame. Brontis, Jodorowsky’s son, trained for two years in martial arts to prepare for his role.

Jodorowsky assembled all of his storyboard illustrations and bound them into what became a collossal book of source material! In the film Pavich animates those images to give audiences a glimpse of what could have been. Jodorowsky left no stone unturned to realize his dream.

'Dune' The Film that Jodorowsky never made

‘Dune’ The Film that Jodorowsky never made

Jodorowsky, of course is the star of the show, and at 84 years old, he still conveys his intense passion for Dune via a most engaging and entertaining personality. “I wanted to make the most important picture in the history of humanity […] one that would connect to God!” Jodorowsky proclaims! His fervor, even today, still hovers over this most ambitious venture, and he is not alone! Pavich’s interviews with Michel Seydoux, Jodorowsky’s director and producer tapped for Dune; H.R. Giger; Diane, Dan O’Bannon’s widow, among others, all coalesce to reflect on a project that attracted the best talents in Hollywood! Yes, it was a grand endeavor!

… and Hollywood looked at all that he had created and said it was not good. So what happened to the dream deferred? Hmmmm …

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Jodorowsky’s Dune plays through May 22 at the Ross Media Arts Center in Lincoln.

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