Coming home after dark, after dinner, tonight’s full moon was big, yellow, bright, and low in the sky so that it linked with the house lights and street lights and the headlights of the traffic, lending them its weight, dignity, beauty.
I was out watching Philomena, which opened here in Japan this week, and will soon be available on DVD in the UK (March 24) and US (April 15). Here’s my spoiler-free review. I insist that reviews be spoiler-free. In the theater, I close my eyes and cover my ears if there’s a preview of a movie I plan to see. The ideal review tells me if it's something I might want to watch, without telling me any of the details. (Discussing a film after watching, well, that's a different matter.)
Philomena. It’s a mother/child (based on a true) story designed to move, with optional indignation at the powers that caused the pain. It tries a bit hard, and hypocritically exhibits the kind of journalistic manipulation criticized in the film itself. But that’s all and only the better to deliver the kind of Good Story we crave. Steve Coogen is as winning at obnoxious/serious as he is at obnoxious/funny. And Judy Dench does full, delicious justice to a wonderful part. Screw it, for pleasure and emotional satisfaction I’m giving this 5 (out of 5) stars.
--Julian
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