The easy-listening Doobie Brothers lineup was far from my favorite incarnation of the â70s party band. So I canât claim a good excuse for evoking Michael McDonaldâs earnestly ineffectual vocals in service to the people-powered movements on the march in this weekâs films. But as a wise man once said, âYou go to war with the song lyrics you have, not the song lyrics you wish you had.â
As I write this, itâs unclear which Americansâmasked or unmasked, armed or unarmed, elated or angry, celebratory or destructiveâwill mark the Election Day results by heading out to the main drag for some group therapy. Letâs maintain a bit of perspective: Itâs a signpost on the road to justice.
We Have Boots Now streamingBAMPFA
When Britainâs 99-year lease of Hong Kong ended in 1997 and the sophisticated territory was transferred back to China, change was certain. The speed of that change, however, along with the reaction of the populace, were enormous unknowns. In retrospect, itâs not surprising that China has gradually and inexorably exerted its will on Hong Kongâs political and cultural institutions. The shocker, though, is the emergence of an organized resistance largely led and fueled by young people.
We Have Boots, Evans Chanâs new follow-up to his 2016 documentary, Raise the Umbrellas, is an unequivocally sympathetic recounting of the last several years of protests, augmented with sit-down interviews with most of the opposition leaders. Thereâs something endearing about Chanâs heroes (and the rare heroine), whose idealism far surpasses their strategizing. Their adherence to principles is extraordinarily inspiring, especially in stark contrast to waves of riot police whaling away at unarmed civilians.
From the 2014 heights of the Umbrella Movement through the valleys of arrest, limbo, reinvention and recommitment that followed, We Have Boots catalogsâand replicatesâthe messy chaos of nonviolent democratic aspirations. All the while, China hovers in the shadows and in broad daylight, a far-from-gentle giant.
Misbehaviour Now streamingHoopla
The revolution was televised, didnât you know, smack in the middle of the 1970 Miss World competition from London. But Iâm getting ahead of Phillippa Lowthorpeâs colorful and exuberant feature about the moment that the womenâs liberation movement broke through in England.
A (somewhat) fact-based big-screen movie that hit pay-video-on-demand platforms in late September and is already streaming on Hoopla (for free, that is, for library patrons in San Francisco and many other local burgs), Misbehaviour stars Keira Knightley and Jessie Buckley as birds of a feather with different plumage: Sallyâs a generally conventional grad student and mom whoâs fed up with male presumption while Joâs a red-haired commune-ist who takes on the patriarchy by spray-painting billboards.
Long before the duo has targeted the pageant, the call is coming from within the house. Miss Grenada (Jennifer Hosten, played by Gugu Mbatha-Raw) and Miss South Africa (Pearl Jansen, played by Loreece Harrison) envision parlaying their token presence into better opportunities for themselves and, not incidentally, greater visibility for Black and brown women.
All these ladies arenât working in sync, mind you, but on crossing tracks: The brassy, tip-the-apple-cart outsiders might potentially sabotage the contestantsâ one shot at the apple. Thatâs a welcome dash of nuance for breezy mainstream entertainment.
The men are represented by a caddish Bob Hope (an unconvincing Greg Kinnear) and pageant founder Eric Morley (generously imbued with showmanship, flair and dignity by Rhys Ifans), who are merely challenged to marshal the ability to change with the times. For Sally, Jo, Jennifer and Pearl, the stakes are substantially higher.
The Other Side of Everything Now streamingAmazon Prime
The academics and intellectuals on the ramparts of Hong Kongâs democracy movement can find a wellspring of inspiration in long-time Belgrade activist Srbijanka TurajliÄ. An engineering major in the â60s, she never forgot the feeling of betrayal when her respected instructors failed to speak up and support student demands. Twenty-some years later and a professor herself, she didnât hesitate to grab the microphone and join campus protests against Slobodan MiloÅ¡eviÄ.
Now in her 60s and irrepressibly candid, blunt and self-deprecating, TurajliÄ takes a dynamic stroll through her past and her countryâs history in The Other Side of Everything without hardly leaving the family apartment where sheâs lived since birth. One of the strongest docs from the 2018 SFFILM festival, itâs streaming for free with Amazon Prime.
The filmmaker is TurajliÄâs daughter, whose respect for her subject nonetheless allows for some delicious bits of familial baggage. Thereâs a great moment, for example, when Mila carps about Srbijankaâs numerous televised speeches at rallies (âno one elseâs mother ever did thatâ) and her residual childhood resentment unexpectedly surfaces.
The truth, of course, is that Srbijanka is a mother whom any child would be proud of. Even if, in cataloging her and her generationâs failure to achieve sustained, democratic progress, sheâs much harder on herself than her children could possibly be. Yeah, you could come away a bit downcast from The Other Side of Everything. For my money, though, fighters are always heroes.
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