Hot Tips – Film Edition

My first HOT TIP is not a film or a series, but a tool. The number of streaming services available now are, well, too much. To streamline the process there is a great website or app to help – JustWatch.com . Search the film or series you’re looking for and it lists where to find it (Netflix, Apple TV, Amazon Prime, Crave etc) along with the costs to rent or purchase if there is one (other than a subscription cost), so you can compare it all in one place and find things easily. A must.

Summer of Soul: (… Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)

Summer of Soul is a great music documentary about a series of outdoor concerts in Harlem in 1969 that took place over six Sundays. It was filmed with the intention of making a movie about it at the time but the movie never happened. Why not? Well, that was the same summer of the phenomenon Woodstock which totally upstaged these smaller concerts which featured all black musicians in a black neighbourhood in New York City. The footage sat in a basement collecting dust for 50 years until finally being resurrected, restored and turned into something wonderful by Ahmir (Questlove) Thompson (The Roots) who directed it and served as Executive Producer. Performances by Gladys Knight, Stevie Wonder, Nina Simone, Sly and the Family Stone, The Fifth Dimension, B.B. King, Staple Singers, along with other stock footage and interviews with some of the performers reminiscing about the event and the times make for a terrific film and a look back at the music and culture of 1969.

Summer of Soul has won all kinds of awards including an Oscar for Best Documentary Film at the recent Academy Awards – yes THOSE Academy Awards. As a matter of fact you could say that this concert film got upstaged once again, with Will Smith’s ridiculous antics that took place immediately before the award was to be given to them.

Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom

Also in the Academy Awards line up was this nomination for Best Foreign Film – the first ever entry from Bhutan.

This is one of those movies where the setting itself is a major character and the scenery is breathtaking. It’s a story of a young teacher, an urban guy, who is posted to a remote community in the mountains for a school term, a place that is several days’ hike from the nearest town, no cell coverage to his chagrin, and where the school year ends when winter arrives and cuts off the village completely from the rest of the world.

Bhutan has an unexplained place in my heart. I’ve been dreaming of it almost all my life, even before I knew it existed. I had a friend in Manila from Bhutan named Karma and she was with me when I discovered Laos for the first time. The two of us explored the streets of Vientiane together while our spouses were locked up in meetings at the Russian-built high rise hotel, the only high rise and the ugliest building in the country. All kinds of wonderful things happened to us as my love affair with Laos began. We’d sit in an outside bar on the banks of the Mekong, watching the sun set over Thailand on the far shore. We had lunch on a restaurant patio and found ourselves sitting beside two women who coincidentally (?) had just arrived in Vientiane that day from a 3-week visit to Bhutan. Karma ate a plate of rice and a pile of raw hot peppers for lunch and told me about her life. She was a special friend during our years in Manila and on other trips. Later, when I told her about my recurring dreams and that strange sense of deja vu, she just nodded, unsurprised. She said I should return there for a visit. We always meant to do just that, but when it came time to leave Asia after 4 years, we left that behind on the table. It’s probably too late now, so I visit it in films. And dreams.

Pachinko – 2022 Series

Just finished watching the first season of this 8-episode series following a Korean family through three generations from Japanese occupied Korea in the 1920’s to their lives as immigrants in Japan and later to America with the youngest generation grandson. An insight into the history and society of the Korean people during the 20th century told in a very contemporary way. Great characters, acting, sets and costumes, cinematography, plot lines – it has it all and kept my attention every evening for a full week.

NATURE DOCS

Three wonderful nature documentaries worth a visit – each of them quite unusual.

The Year Earth Changed – This shows what happened to wildlife in a number of places around the world when all the humans went into lockdown and travel restrictions during those first months of Covid and how animal behaviour and other things changed in their absence. Narrated by the dulcet tones of David Attenborough.

The Earth at Night in Color – Using specialized super low light cameras, this series follows the nocturnal activities of different animal groups around the world, for the first time showing them completely clearly to the human eye, without that usual grainy, nightvision video that was the best we had until now. What they get up to in the dark is intriguing.

Prehistoric Planet – Move over Jurassic Park, David Attenborough returns to show us what the earth was like and how the dinosaurs behaved when they roamed the planet 66 million years ago. This is a 5-part series with terrific computer generated animation and great story lines.

ESCAPING TO THRILLERS, MYSTERIES, WHODUNITS and MORE

During the dark days (in more ways than one) of this past winter, I watched lots of movies. I like the rogerebert.com site for reviews. Roger Ebert himself is long gone, but the site continues and is a good place for film information. Now these following films for the most part are not recently released movies, but they were new to me, and kept my attention, not an easy thing to do.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood – 2019

Quentin Tarantino says that after 10 movies he’s going to retire from making films and turn his creative attention to other kinds of writing. This 2019 film is number 9 and may be (almost) my favourite – loved it. (Jackie Brown still holds first place in my Tarantino film affections.) Brad Pitt and Leonardo diCaprio are, as usual, terrific.

The Lincoln Lawyer 2011

Matthew McConaughey is great in this thriller about a hustling defence lawyer who works out of the back seat of his chauffeur driven big old Lincoln (he’s lost his license after a DUI), defending bad guys of all types, whoever will pay him. His latest client is an entitled rich kid, accused of a brutal attack. He swears he is innocent and is being set up but is he really? Suspenseful and entertaining.

Margin Call 2011

Margin Call is about the last night in an investment firm in 2008 as the realization dawns on the traders and executives that their firm, along with the rest of the financial world, is about to go belly up as the overextended mortgage market they’ve all been playing fast and loose with is about to collapse and the shit is about to hit the fan. The cast is great. A reminder of what a great actor Kevin Spacey was before he got cancelled.

Cleaner 2007

Samuel L. Jackson. What more is there to say? He could read the phone book. He’s great in this murder mystery with police corruption undertones and lots of twists and misdirections.

Dark Waters 2019

This legal drama tells the true story of lawyer Robert Bilott’s investigation of the chemical manufacturing corporation DuPont as he discovers how they have contaminated a town in West Virginia by dumping toxic waste from unregulated chemicals in the water and soil and the extreme lengths the company went to to literally get away with murder. A David and Goliath story. Robert Bilott is still at it, bringing lawsuits against this disgusting corporate behaviour. Caution: you may want to check closely the pots and pans in your cupboard after watching this.

Argo 2012

Argo won Best Picture a decade back but I’ve only now got around to it. Based on a true story of how 6 Americans, who had taken refuge in the Canadian Ambassador’s residence during the 1979 hostage crisis in Iran, were spirited out of the country by the CIA in plain sight. It is based on the memoir of the CIA operative who carried out the rescue, Master of Disguise, and the Wired article “The Great Escape: How the CIA Used a Fake Sci-Fi Flick to Rescue Americans from Tehran”. It’s a caper movie, that is literally deadly serious with lots of suspense.

Slow Horses – 2022 series

A British spy thriller series about a group of MI5 agent misfits who become embroiled in a domestic terrorist kidnapping where there is lots more to it than meets the eye and they find themselves in danger and up against intrigue within their own organization.

Happy viewing.

Half Past Summer

At the beginning of July, with falling Covid rates and increased vaccinations, the provincial government loosened restrictions in British Columbia. For months people had been prohibited from traveling between regions or coming in from outside the province. No one could travel by ferry across from the mainland for “non-essential travel”, and masks and distancing requirements were still in place. Things were pretty quiet around here.

All that changed and our little summer tourist town was transformed in an instant. Masks are no longer mandatory and social distancing has downgraded to what appears to be a suggestion.

We took advantage of the lifting of travel restrictions and Number One Son Steve and Rosie the Dog came for a visit last weekend. I hadn’t seen him in a year, although he lives just a 2 hour drive away in Victoria. I got to hug my son at long last and it was Bliss.

After such a long time of peace and quiet the immediate flood of people from the mainland and elsewhere descending on us was something of a shock. That first weekend I went to the Saturday Farmers Market to find it packed with visitors, just as it used to be in summers pre-pandemic. It was disorienting after such a long time of constriction and I found it completely unsettling. “Staying in your lane” was out the window and social distancing was crumbling. Some wore masks, some didn’t. Yesterday at the market, a month since the tourists descended, I notice that even more are now maskless, despite the crowds. I am not one of them. I look to my right and I look to my left and I wonder “Are you not wearing a mask because you are double vaxed or because you are never gonna be vaxed?” Twilight zone.

Worth More Standing

News on the island these past months has been about the protests against old growth logging, centred around Fairy Creek on southern Vancouver Island, where protesters have been blocking access to the area to stop the logging companies from going in to rip ’em out. They’ve been camped at the watershed for a year now and since the companies got a court injunction against the protesters 500 have been arrested. This hasn’t stopped them. The government has responded with some temporary halting of cutting and promises to come up with a plan for old growth (and other) forestry changes. Right.

To put this in perspective, on Vancouver Island all but about 1% of old growth forest has been destroyed and trying to save these ecosystems of what little is left is not insignificant. Timber companies continue to cut 10,000 hectares of old growth forest every year. The trees cannot save themselves, it is up to the humans who care to do that. I care. So what can I do? How do you stop the machine?

Old growth remnant, saved by chance. A tree called Big Lonely Doug – 70 metres tall, ~1000 years old, the size of a 20 storey building – note the human at the base of the trunk (magnifying glass may be required). Photo TJ Watt

I heard about a rally and mini-march to be held in our little town in support of our old growth forests and decided to go, more from a sense of helplessness and despair than anything else. I can’t go and get myself arrested at Fairy Creek but I can spend an hour or two to add my body and voice to the count. We were maybe 120 people. It was also the first time I’d been in any kind of group of people in a very long time, which was mildly uncomfortable. I kept my mask on. And lest I become discouraged over our small numbers I have to remind myself that this gathering of people who care, in this little town, was echoed in rallies in other towns and cities as well.

Heat Dome

I think many have heard about the record breaking heatwave we experienced in British Columbia at the end of June. Five days. Over 600 people dead. Shellfish cooked along the shores.

In our backyard the highest temperature reached was 38C. “Normal” temperatures for this time of year (although there’s no such thing anymore) are usually mid-20’s, with overnight temps in the teens. We have no central air, nor do most people around here. I spent 3 of those days more or less staying in one place in front of my own air conditioning system. $30 from Canadian Tire…

BC is on Fire – Again

The town of Lytton in the interior became a violent metaphor for climate change. During the heatwave it earned the painful record of being the hottest place ever recorded in Canada. For three consecutive days long standing national records were broken – the highest temperature clocked at 49.6C. On the fourth day the town literally exploded when forest fire took the entire place out in a matter of minutes.

Lytton after the fire

There are now 240 fires burning on the mainland. Friends of ours in Osoyoos in south Okanagan were forced to evacuate their home a week ago due to fires that reached within half a kilometer from their property. We visited them several years ago and I can appreciate the terrain and the danger they are in high up on Anarchist Mountain. (See Road Trip-A Change of Scenery.)

So far there have been no major fires here on the island. We have had no rain since June 15th. All month we’ve had nothing but clear blue skies and sunshine, then this past Saturday and Sunday it was overcast but not from rain clouds. The smoke generated from the interior fires has made its way to Vancouver and some of this headed across the Strait in our direction. So far, over here we can’t smell the smoke yet, but the skies were hazier and we keep an eye on wind direction as well as everything else in the weather forecast.

My new motto is ‘we’ll see what happens next’.

So it is now a month since the province’s public health re-opening. I continue to take baby steps into the world. A visit in the back garden, coffee with a new friend on a restaurant terrace, taking in the new art exhibitions at our local arts centre – the latter particularly happy-making as the place was closed for over a year and I am SO over looking at art only on a computer screen.

However, a month after relaxing public health orders, we now see new Covid cases in the province again on the rise, and have tripled in the last 10 days, no surprise there. This sign in a local independent grocery store says it plain and simply…

We’ll see what happens next.