Eleanor Ringel Cater

Movie column by Eleanor Ringel Cater

‘In Darkness’ – a true Holocaust story of Leopold Socha finding his humanity

In Agnieska Holland’s new movie, “In Darkness,” the director takes us back to the Holocaust and another implausible yet certifiably true story. 1990’s “Europa, Europa,” was about a Jewish boy who hides his religion and ends up a “hero” of the Nazi Youth.

“In Darkness” focuses on a completely different sort of hero: a stolid Polish sewer worker named Leopold Socha (played with great subtly and craft by Robert Wieckiewicz).
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‘We Need to Talk about Kevin’ — Tilda Swinton gives a chilling look at motherhood

We need to talk about “We Need to Talk about Kevin.”

Because, having lost its best shot at an Oscar when its star, Tilda Swinton, wasn’t nominated in the best actress category, it’s likely the film will slip in and out of town without much notice.
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Eleanor’s Oscar predictions: ‘Artist’ may win Best Picture; Hoping ‘Hugo’ will win

Note to Readers: This column was written and posted before Sunday night’s Oscars. Eleanor only missed one prediction — Meryl Streep did win best actress. Maria

What can I say about the Academy Awards that hasn’t already been said?

Perhaps this: I have been watching the televised Oscar show as part of my job description for well over 30 years. I’ve noticed these differences.

- The Red Carpet has basically become more important than who wins what. One hears “Who are you wearing” more often than “And the winner is…”
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‘A Separation’ strikes delicate balance between foreign and familiar

“A Separation,” the excellent new movie from Iran (and likely Oscar winner for best foreign-language picture) begins on a feminist note. A couple with obvious marital differences sits before a judge.

She wants to leave Iran. More opportunity, she feels, for both herself and their adolescent daughter.
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‘Pina’ — Wim Wenders brings miracle of dance to big screen

By Eleanor Ringel Cater

Possible the only thing wrong with “Pina,” the new 3-D dance documentary by Wim Wenders, is its title. I mean, you don’t call a movie “Jagger” and expect people who’ve never heard of the Rolling Stones to know what you mean.

Pina is Pina Bausch, a bracingly original German choreographer who was friendly with Wenders. They’d talked about making a movie showcasing her work for years. Unfortunately, she died in 2009, only 68.
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‘The Grey’ — movie explores that ‘gray zone’ between ‘being and nothingness’

Jack London cozies up to Frederick Nietzsche in “The Grey,” a sweaty-palmed action film about survival of the fittest.

On every imaginable level.

En route to an oil rig in Alaska, Liam Neeson and a snack tray of assorted humans crash-land somewhere in the Great White North. There they must survive wolves, weather and each other.
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Eleanor’s ruminations on recent Oscar nominations

Oscar nominations are out and probably the only thing Oscar addicts enjoy as much as second-guessing the eventual winners is second-guessing who got nominated and who got snubbed.

Here are some random thoughts on last Tuesday’s naming names:

Best Picture

“The Artist” “The Descendants” “Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close” “The Help” “Hugo” “Midnight in Paris” “Moneyball” “The Tree of Life” “War Horse”

With the Best Picture category expanded to anywhere between 5 and 10, you’d think there wouldn’t be any snubs. And there weren’t…well, yeah there were.
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‘Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close’ is both heartfelt and air-headed

About “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close…”

The title alone is like a sitting duck.

It becomes “Extremely Dumb and Incredibly Cloying.” Or “Extremely Self-Absorbed and Dangerously Moronic.” Or…well, I’ll leave it to you.
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Meryl Streep’s portrayal of Margaret Thatcher in ‘The Iron Lady’ is ‘phenomenal’

The superb new movie, “The Iron Lady,” which stars Meryl Streep as the (in?) famous former British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, is about a lot of things.

That said, one thing it isn’t especially about is Mrs. Thatcher’s famously (in?) conservative politics. Yes, her decisions — on everything from taxes to the
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‘A Dangerous Method’ — disappointing portrayal of Freud’s talking method

“What do women want?” Sigmund Freud once famously asked.

Well, this particular woman does NOT want “A Dangerous Method,” David Cronenberg’s surprisingly tepid and disappointing about Freud and his colleague/rival Carl Jung.

Where is the Cronenberg of yore? The envelop-pushing genius behind such creepy cult classics as “The Brood,” “Dead Ringers” and “Videodrome?”
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