EDEN – Review

Jude Law as Dr. Friedrich Ritter and Vanessa Kirby as Dora Strauch, in Ron Howard’s EDEN. Courtesy of Vertical Entertainment

Little is heavenly in EDEN, a drama based on a true story of jealousy, deceit, revenge, sex and murder, on a tiny island in the Galapagos, in which a group of people destroy each other instead of finding the paradise they sought. Jude Law, Vanessa Kirby, Daniel Bruhl, and Sydney Sweeney star in a crime drama that director Ron Howard and writer Noah Pink set in 1929, at the very end of the Roaring Twenties, the post-WWI decade of prosperity and exuberance everywhere. Everywhere except in Germany, which was saddled with both paying war reparations and soaring inflation, which drives some of the people in this chilling tale to flee all that. One is a German doctor-turned-writer, Dr. Friedrich Ritter (Jude Law), who has sought to escape civilizations strictures and Germany’s problems by moving to a barely-habitable island with his lover, Dora Strauch (Vanessa Kirby), a free-spirited idealist who also rejects convention. While Dora struggles to raise produce in their garden for their vegetarian diet, Dr. Ritter writes newspaper columns, to pay for supplies to supplement their meager but free life. Dr. Ritter’s columns praise their Eden, their free life off the gird, in glowing terms, which ironically becomes the problem.

Those columns provide them funds for occasional deliveries of supplies but they prove surprisingly popular, which also yields something unexpected: visitors who wan to join them in the “Eden” the columns describe. First to show up is another German, Heinz Wittmer (Daniel Bruhl) along with his wife Margret (Sydney Sweeney) and ailing young son, who plan to establish a back-to-land farm on this marginal island. Next comes the Baroness (Ana de Armas), a self-styled aristocrat, international celebrity and wild hedonist, with two lovers in tow (Felix Kammerer and Toby Wallace) and plans to build a grand hotel for all the tourists who will soon arrive. Friedrich’s and Dora’s dream of solitude and freedom are now shattered, as the world they sought to escape follows them to their island Eden.

It never occurred to Dr. Ritter that essays he was writing would draw people who want to emulate his back-to-the-land life but he seemed to omit that this Eden was an unforgiving place. An unforgiving it is: water is scant, soil is thin, and everything, from the wildlife to the plants to the weather, is trying to kill you.

There is, of course, a note of dark, ironic humor in this situation, but director Ron Howard’s crime drama has little humor in it, and the real story the film is based is pretty grim. At first, the doctor-turned-reclusive author tries to re-direct his earnest admirers, who have arrived to emulate his life, to another part of the island, one with the only other source of water but with less land suitable to farm. He hopes they will become discouraged by the harsh life but instead, Daniel Bruhl’s back-to-the-land idealist and Sydney Sweeney as his stoic, hard-working wife proves industrious. They do not leave.

Friedrich and Dora maybe could have lived with that, but when Ana de Armas’ the Baroness and her entourage show up it introduces a lot more chaos. At first tensions between the three groups are dealt with largely by ignoring each other, but soon things escalate, alliances are formed and broken, and all descends into total madness. Late in the unfolding events, another visitor arrives, Allan Hancock (Richard Roxburgh), one of Dr. Ritter’s financial supporters. Allan brings some welcome supplies, as he periodically does, and a bit of break in the building toxic events. But ultimately don’t stop things from going down on their deadly path.

It should be noted that the film opens with some misleading text, suggesting that 1929 was a time of hardship. Actually, that was only true in Germany, whose broken post-WWI economy was saddled with paying war reparations and out-of-control inflation, while the rest of the world enjoyed the Roaring 1920s, a time of prosperity, technological and artistic innovation and wild exuberance. All that came to an end with the October 1929 stock market crash that launched the Great Depression of the 1930s, after the events the movie sets in spring, summer and fall of 1929.

Curiously, the true story the film is based on actually didn’t take place until the 1930s, but setting it at the end of the 1920s makes sense, as it lets the film tap into the decadence and irrational exuberance of the 1920s in setting the tone of the film. Ron Howard cleverly sets this story in 1929 specifically, the waning days to the optimistic 1920s and just before it all came crashing to a halt with the stock market crash of October 1929. Howard then breaks the narrative into sections labeled Spring, Summer and finally, Fall, so we are aware of the ticking time clock counting down to the crash and depression, a disaster the plotting characters are unaware is looming.

The conflict between the Ritters, the island’s original couple, and Whittmers, the new intruders, starts out with just resentment and snubs but that quickly escalates, going from just rude to nasty to sabotage and murder, once the chaotic Baroness arrives. With little in the way of comic relief, the sleight ride of settling scores and toxic competition is a fast, chilling ride. A recap at the film’s end, of what became of the actual people, is chilling as well.

The strength of EDEN is it’s fine cast, all of whom do well. Standouts are Jude Law, very good as the writer who abandoned his medical practice to live a life of freedom to write and little else, and Vanessa Kirby, who perhaps outshines him as the doctor/writer’s fiery, unconventional and idealist lover Dora, who pointedly asserts she is not his wife when anyone dares to assume that, and insists on their vegetarian diet, with produce from the garden she tills tirelessly, with the help of her beloved donkey and despite her periodic bouts of weakness from multiple sclerosis.

Unfortunately, the film is plot heavy, with one bad turn relentlessly sparking another. We don’t really get a deep sense of any of the individual characters. There isn’t really anyone we feel like we can cheer for, as bad behavior abounds, although much worse from some than others. Perhaps Daniel Bruhl’s idealist farmer and his dutiful wife come closest to sympathetic characters, although Sydney Sweeney’s nearly-stoic performance does not help much.

This is one of those true-story tales that you would not believe if it had not actually happened. Director Ron Howard makes the most of this fine cast and this wild, dark story, to create a historical thriller that really grabs you by the throat, but this is a pretty grim story. The Baroness is the major agent of chaos but soon she is matched by the good doctor. Howard gives the actors plenty of space to work as they lie and betray their way into craziness, but the emphasis on plot hardly gives us a moment. Periodically, scenes of the harsh natural world remind us that this unforgiving land has its own threats to survival, with rocky soil, poisonous plants, venomous wildlife and a hot, dry climate.

EDEN opens in theaters on Friday, Aug. 22, 2025.

RATING: 2.5 out of 4 stars

THIRTEEN LIVES – Review

(L to R) Colin Farrell as John Volanthen, Viggo Mortensen as Rick Stanton and Sahajak ‘Poo’ Boonthanakit as Governor Naronsak in THIRTEEN LIVES, directed by Ron Howard, a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Vince Valitutti / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures © 2022 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

When a Thai boys soccer team was trapped in a cave by flash flooding in 2018, the world was riveted as divers attempted to locate and rescue the teenage boys and their coach in the flooded cave, ultimately calling in volunteers who specialized in cave diving. Viggo Mortensen and Colin Farrell play two of those cave divers, middle-aged hobbyists who travel from their homes in the U.K. to volunteer to help save the boys and their coach. As the days dragged on, hope faded and it seemed only a miracle could save them. THIRTEEN LIVES dramatizes that 2018 rescue mission, and demonstrates exactly how miraculous it was.

This dramatic story was told previously in the documentary THE RESCUE, and while this dramatization follows the same facts, the visceral, emotional impact of this improbably rescue is even stronger. THIRTEEN LIVES depicts the risky events in a more detailed, powerful fashion, while still sticking to the already dramatic facts, but the drama allows a deeper, more rounded human story of the people involved in this astonishing rescue.

Director Ron Howard generally sticks to the facts in this true-story based drama, with Colin Farrell and Viggo Mortensen starring as John Volanthen and Richard Stanton, a pair of Brits with an unusual hobby: cave diving. John and Richard, who travel from the UK to volunteer their expertise, later joined by other cave divers, including Australian doctor Richard “Harry” Harris (Joel Edgerton) in the effort to find and save the soccer team and their coach.

When the boys are trapped in the cave by early monsoon rains, the Thai government calls in the Thai Navy SEALs. While the SEALs are experts in rescue, their diving skills are honed for the open ocean and the flooded cave, with its murky water, tight passages and rushing current, proved daunting. But it is exactly the experience the cave divers had, the authorities reluctantly allow these amateurs from half a world away to have a go at it.

Bad luck and good luck both play roles in this story. The primary bad luck aspect was the unusual early arrival of the monsoon rains. After their soccer practice, the boys wanted to go a nearby cave , a “tourist” cave that they frequently visited. The cave was considered safe in June, but closed in mid-July when the monsoon rains that usually arrived. A bit of good luck was that their coach went along, even though the boys knew the cave well and planned only a short visit before a birthday party for one of the boys. A sudden and intense downpour filled the cave with water, trapping the team deep within.

A stroke of luck was that the families quickly realized the boys were missing and recognized their bicycles outside the cave entrance. Another bit of luck was that an expert cave diver who lived in the area had mapped the cave extensively, and also was aware of other cave divers who might be able to help.

When this crisis arose, many of us were as unaware of the hobby of cave diving as officials in Thailand were. At first the Thai SEALs and other Thai officials were skeptical about these foreign amateurs and barred them from entering the cave. Eventually they were persuaded to let them have a try to locate the boys and their coach – at their own risk.

The need to find and rescue the boys before the cave entirely fills with water gives the film a ticking clock urgency, and the international mix of rescuers, along with the anxious parents, sets up potential for both conflict and cooperation. Although the documentary previously told this story, this narrative film depicts the risky events – particularly the astonishing final rescue- in a more powerful fashion.

While taking us through the events of the tension-filled rescue, director Ron Howard still gives the actors room to work so they can develop the characters, which deepens the human story aspect of this rescue. Although running almost two and a half hours, the film never feels that long, as the nail-biting tension of events, the dynamics of the characters, and a brisk pace keep us full involved.

The primary focus is on the British cave divers played by Mortensen and Farrell but Joel Edgerton gets his moment, as do the other actors. Mortensen’s Richard Stanton is a flinty, plain-spoken retired firefighter who has a risky hobby but goes about it in a way to reduce risk. Colin Farrell’s John Volanthen is a more easy-going person, an IT expert who finds cave diving a relaxing escape, but who is a family man particularly moved to help save the trapped boys.

The cast is fairly large and details the multiple fronts of efforts to save these boys. While the Thai SEALs and the cave divers battled daunting conditions searching for the boys, other teams pumped water from the flooded cave and volunteers, including a hydrologist, tried to block the sink holes on the mountain above that channeled water into the cave. The film does a good job conveying this multi-pronged effort in a cinematic way, with animated maps illustrating the various points in the long, complex cave, the fourth largest in Thailand, as we see the rescuers navigating the difficult passages, spiked with stalagmites and stalactites, and filled with rushing water. Fine cinematography by … delivers gripping visuals as the story written by Don McPherson and William Nicholson keeps us in its hold.

The result is a tense, suspense-filled drama, with memorable characters crafted by a strong cast, capped by a jaw-dropped rescue, for a truly uplifting film.

THIRTEEN LIVES opens Friday, August 5, in theaters in select cities and streaming on Amazon Prime Video.

RATING: 3 out of 4 stars

See Viggo Mortensen, Colin Farrell And Joel Edgerton In The Trailer For Ron Howard’s THIRTEEN LIVES – On Prime Video August 5

Prime Video has released the trailer for Ron Howard’s upcoming film THIRTEEN LIVES. The film hits select theaters exclusively for one week on July 29, Launching globally on Prime Video on August 5.

The film stars Viggo Mortensen, Colin Farrell, Joel Edgerton, Tom Bateman, Paul Gleeson, Pattrakorn Tungsupakul, Tui Thiraphat Sajakul, James Teeradon Supapunpinyo, Sahajak Boonthanakit, Weir Sukollawat Kanaros.

Thirteen Lives recounts the incredible true story of the tremendous global effort to rescue a Thai soccer team who become trapped in the Tham Luang cave during an unexpected rainstorm. Faced with insurmountable odds, a team of the world’s most skilled and experienced divers – uniquely able to navigate the maze of flooded, narrow cave tunnels – join with Thai forces and more than 10,000 volunteers to attempt a harrowing rescue of the twelve boys and their coach. With impossibly high stakes and the entire world watching, the group embarks on their most challenging dive yet, showcasing the limitlessness of the human spirit in the process.

THIRTEEN LIVES screenplay is from William Nicholson with a story by Don Macpherson and William Nicholson. Nicholson has been nominated twice for an Oscar – GLADIATOR (Best Original Screenplay) and SHADOWLANDS (Best Adapted Screenplay).

(L to R) Thira ‘Aum’ Chutikul as Commander Kiet, Popetorn ‘Two’ Soonthornyanaku as Dr Karn, Joel Edgerton as Harry Harris, Colin Farrell as John Volanthen and Viggo Mortenson as Rick Stanton in THIRTEEN LIVES, a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Vince Valitutti / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures © 2022 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Director Ron Howard on the set of THIRTEEN LIVES, a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Vince Valitutti / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures © 2022 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Michael Keaton in Ron Howard’s NIGHT SHIFT Now Available on Blu-ray From Warner Archive

“This guy – he doesn’t have fun. I’m gonna teach him – this wild man – how to have fun right now.”

Michael Keaton in Ron Howard’s NIGHT SHIFT (1982) is now available on Blu-ray from Warner Archive

The world of Wall Street drove Charles Lumley III up the wall. His new job at the New York City Morgue is quieter – until Billy “Blaze” Blazejowski shows up with a cool idea on how to liven things up. 

Directed by Ron Howard (A Beautiful Mind), Night Shift is a breakneck farce rife with hysterical ideas thanks to veteran comedy writers Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel (ParenthoodFever Pitch). Henry Winkler (Happy Days) is low-key Lumley in a delightfully offbeat performance. Shelley Long of Cheers also scores as a hapless happy hooker. But the casting triumph is film-debuting Michael Keaton as Billy Blaze, launching a career rich in comedic and dramatic highlights. Is this a great country or what?!

16×9 1.85:1 WIDESCREEN. Includes Theatrical Trailer (HD). 

AMERICAN GRAFFITI at The Sky View Drive-in in Litchfield, IL May 9th – Mother’s Day CRUISE-IN!

“Peel out, I just love it when guys peel out!”

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AMERICAN GRAFFITI screens Sunday Night May 9th at the Sky View Drive-in in Lichtfield, Il. (1500 Historic Old Route 66) ARRIVE EARLY for a MOTHER’S DAY Cruise In, co-sponsored by Gearhead Invasion. Gates open at 5:00 pm. AMERICAN GRAFFITI starts at 8:05. This is part of the Sky View’s ‘Throwback Sundays’. The second Sunday of the month, they screen a classic movie. Drivers of Pre 1979 cars get one free entry! Admission is only $7 (free for kids under 5). The Sky View’s site can be found HERE.

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You can have all the STAR WARS movies, Episodes One through whatever – I’ll trade them all straight up for AMERICAN GRAFFITI and consider myself as having got the best end of the deal.. AMERICAN GRAFFITI (1973) was only George Lucas’ second major film as a director (though he was already plenty experienced at filmmaking) and it is an extraordinary movie that has aged wonderfully. AMERICAN GRAFFITI chronicles one long night in the lives of some recent high school graduates in a north California in 1962. But it’s not just a look at the teenage ritual of cruising. By the time the next day is dawning, the main characters have all learned lessons about life and themselves and glimpsed the directions their futures will go in.

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A group of talented young actors form the core of the large cast in this film. Ronny Howard, as he’s billed here, pulls off the formidable task of turning in a performance that makes one forget about his past as a well-known child actor from a popular TV show. He plays Steve, an All-American boy eager to enter the new world of college, which means leaving home. He talks with his girlfriend Laurie (Cindy Williams) about how their relationship might change now that they’re both soon to be worldly adults. Perhaps they should consider seeing other people. Fighting ensues between the two, causing Laurie to at least temporarily abandon him for another cruiser, one in whom she has no interest whatsoever.

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Steve’s good friend Curt likes to have a good time too, but he’s also a sensitive budding writer. His great ambition is to shake JFK’s hand. But he’s having his doubts this evening about going away to college, something Steve can hardly believe he’s hearing. He spends the night getting mixed up with a local gang and chasing a fantasy woman he sees at a stoplight. Another friend, Terry (or “Toad”), played by Charlie Martin Smith, is in heaven this evening. This Vespa-driving, awkward bumbler is to be entrusted with Steve’s fine automobile while he’s away. In it he picks up a fast girl with a bit of a reputation who under normal circumstances he’d never have a chance with. The group is rounded out by Big John Milner (Paul Le Mat), king of the cruisers who can outrun all challengers in his rod. But this local legend is once again going to be left behind by another group of high-school grads while he cruises the same strip.

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There are also several other fine supporting performances, led by a young Mackenzie Phillips as a 13-year old who gets pawned off on Big John. Bo Hopkins also shines as the leader of the small-time local gang, the Pharaohs. Also seen here are Harrison Ford and Kathy (Kathleen) Quinlan in their pre-star days. In addition, Suzanne Somers, “the girl in the white T-Bird,” has one of the most effective cameo roles in Hollywood history.

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All the actors mentioned are good ones, but they all benefit from Lucas’ guidance. The film is enlivened by a knowledgeable choice of period rock & roll which serves as a pervasive but unobtrusive backdrop for the action. The conclusion wraps things up beautifully as we get a taste of what will happen to these characters we’ve come to care so much about in this short time. George Lucas may have made films with more flash and more popular appeal, but none has more heart and soul than AMERICAN GRAFFITI, a true classic of American cinema. Movie lovers will get a chance to experience AMERICAN GRAFFITI CAUSE in all of its big screen glory when it plays May 9th at The Sky View

WILLOW Series Coming To Disney Plus – Jon M. Chu To Direct Pilot

The magical world of George Lucas’ “Willow,” the epic fantasy adventure set in an age of swords, sorcery, myths and monsters, will be returning in a Disney+ series slated to begin production next year.

Jon M. Chu (“In The Heights,” “Crazy Rich Asians”) is set to direct the pilot, and will serve as executive producer along with showrunners Jonathan Kasdan (“Solo”)and Wendy Mericle (“Arrow”). Jonathan Kasdan wrote the pilot. 

“Growing up in the ’80s, ‘Willow’ has had a profound effect on me,” says Chu. “The story of the bravest heroes in the least likely places allowed me, an Asian-American kid growing up in a Chinese restaurant looking to go to Hollywood, to believe in the power of our own will, determination and of course, inner magic. So the fact that I get to work with my heroes from Kathleen Kennedy to Ron Howard is bigger than a dream come-true. It’s a bucket-list moment for me. Jon Kasdan and Wendy Mericle have added such groundbreaking new characters and delightful surprises to this timeless story that I can’t wait for the world to come along on this epic journey with us.”

Chu directed the film adaptation of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s musical “In the Heights,” which will be released in June 2021. He will also direct and serve as executive producer for the pilot of ABC’s Medical Drama “Triage.”

Ron Howard, director of the original “Willow” film, returns as executive producer on the series with Bob Dolman, writer of the original film, serving as consulting producer.

“It’s creatively exciting to not only revisit the world and characters first conceived by George Lucas, Bob Dolman and myself but to see it take flight in such fresh, fun and cinematic ways through the imagination of Jon Kasdan and Team Willow,” says Howard. “This isn’t a nostalgic throw-back, it’s a creative lean-forward and it’s a blast to be a part of it all.” 

The series, which is Lucasfilm’s first venture into non-Star Wars storytelling since 2015, takes place years after the events of the original “Willow” film. It introduces all-new characters to the enchanted realm of fairy queens and two-headed Eborsisk monsters, and welcomes back its namesake hero, Willow Ufgood, performed once again by the unmatchable Warwick Davis.

“So many fans have asked me over the years if Willow will make a return, and now I’m thrilled to tell them that he will indeed,” says Davis. “Many have told me they grew up with ‘Willow’ and that the film has influenced how they view heroism in our own world. If Willow Ufgood can represent the heroic potential in all of us, then he is a character I am extremely honored to reprise.”

“This is an exciting new era for storytelling at Lucasfilm,” says Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy. “Jon Chu’s vision, coupled with the writing of Jon Kasdan and Wendy Mericle, is going to take Willow into new and exciting directions for the series. Reuniting Ron Howard and Warwick Davis in the world of ‘Willow’ is something that they’ve both wanted to do for some time, and I couldn’t be more proud of the incredible team we’ve put together to bring this series to Disney+.”

Kathleen Kennedy, Michelle Rejwan, Jon M. Chu, Jonathan Kasdan, Wendy Mericle, Ron Howard and Imagine Television will serve as executive producers, with Roopesh Parekh and Hannah Friedman as co-executive producers. Additionally, Bob Dolman will serve as consulting producer with Julia Cooperman as producer. 

The production plans to return to the dramatic and enchanted landscapes of Wales, where much of the original film was shot.

Ron Howard’s HILLBILLY ELEGY Starring Glenn Close And Amy Adams On Netflix November 24

J.D. Vance (Gabriel Basso), a former Marine from southern Ohio and current Yale Law student, is on the verge of landing his dream job when a family crisis forces him to return to the home he’s tried to forget. J.D. must navigate the complex dynamics of his Appalachian family, including his volatile relationship with his mother Bev (Amy Adams), who’s struggling with addiction. Fueled by memories of his grandmother Mamaw (Glenn Close), the resilient and whip-smart woman who raised him, J.D. comes to embrace his family’s indelible imprint on his own personal journey.

Based on J.D. Vance’s #1 New York Times Bestseller and directed by Academy Award winner Ron Howard, with a screenplay by Vanessa Taylor, HILLBILLY ELEGY is a powerful personal memoir that offers a window into one family’s personal journey of survival and triumph. By following three colorful generations through their unique struggles, J.D.’s family story explores the highs and lows that define his family’s experience.

Watch it here: https://www.netflix.com/title/81071970

Catch the movie on Netflix on November 24th.

Ron Howard’s team included casting by Carmen Cuba, Music Supervisor Joe Rudge, Music by Hans Zimmer & David Fleming, Costume Designer Virginia B. Johnson, Edited by James D. Wilcox, ACE, Production Designer Molly Hughes and Director of Photography Maryse Alberti.

REBUILDING PARADISE – Review

Looking back on the last few months, many (including yours truly, I’ll admit) have indulged in bouts of self-pity, perhaps even despair. “I can’t get a haircut”, “The movie theatres are closed”, “The store’s outta’ TP”, were often heard in conversation or on social media. But at least you could complain in the comfort of your home. What happens when that gets wiped out in minutes, or in this case, an entire town (comprised of long-time residents). This new documentary is not focused on faraway land ravaged by earthquakes or tsunamis. Yes, it’s set in the US of A, where parts of the country get battered by floods, tornadoes, hurricanes, along with some nasty tremors. For this film, the makers zero in the West where fire season looks to replace Fall or Winter for a look at an entire town almost wiped off the map. Oh, that filmmaker is an Oscar winner who’s been part of our pop culture for 60 years. He’s our eyes and ears as lots of determined everyday folks begin REBUILDING PARADISE.

It all ignites (literally) two years ago, early on November 8, 2018, as the fires begin seeping out from Feather Creek Canyon. Their destination: Paradise, California a rustic town of over 25,000 in the Sierra Nevada foothills just above the northeastern San Fernando Valley. Daylight quickly gave way to darkness as the black smoke blocked the sun with the flames providing the only illumination. We hear the police and rescue radios relaying the disaster’s progress. Officials dash into neighborhoods, warning residents to evacuate. Via many home videos (mainly cell phones) we’re riding with those fleeing, trying not to look back at engulfed homes, dodging the flames and downed powerlines, and clogging the roads and streets. Days later, when they’re allowed to return, the horrified (former) homeowners find smoldering vacant lots. And many learn the agonizing fate of missing loved ones. Eighty-five neighbors lost their lives in the inferno. The film then follows a diverse group of Paradise citizens. We meet “Woody” Cullerton who proudly proclaims that he’s the former “town drunk” who sobered and became a former mayor. Then there’s the orange-haired “whirlwind” Michelle John, the superintendent of schools who won’t rest until the students can return, but she’s got to set up temporary facilities and arrange for many to be added to nearby towns like Chico. A fixture at the high school is psychologist/counselor Cary Ingersoll who has to deal with her own trauma as she comforts the kids. For many sequences we’re riding alongside police officer Matt Gates in his squad car, serving his community even after the home he shared with his wife and two young sons was leveled. Along the way, we follow two high-schoolers whose senior year plans are scrapped, in addition to a young couple who debate whether to take their two toddlers and settle elsewhere. The doc plays out over time, showing us the town in a month, two months, six months, nine months, and year from that fateful Fall day.

And just who is the big-time director I mentioned above? Why it’s none other than Ron Howard, no stranger to feature-length documentaries although his previous works were set in the world of music makers (profiles of the Beatles, Pavoratti, and behind the scenes of a big music festival). His involvement might make you believe that this is a true-life BACKDRAFT follow-up, but it’s closer to his first big TV acting gig with Paradise not that far removed from Mayberry. After getting our pulses racing with the “middle of Hell’ opening (kudos to the editing team of M. Watanabe Milmore, and Gladys Murphy for stitching together a real “nail-biter’ with the “found footage”), Howard offers an engaging group of character studies, while showing the sorrow-filled return to “nothing”. He’s said in interviews that the strength of these folks is that they “show up”, which is illustrated with stirring footage of the town memorial ( a touching slideshow tribute to those lost), a restrained tree-lighting ceremony (could that be a relative of Charlie Brown’s tree), and several city council meetings. Aside from the fire, there is a “villain”, namely Pacific Gas and Electric, who, we’re told, did not shut down service at the start of the Camp Fire, and never really upgraded their ancient (1920s) equipment. And where’s there are PG&E troubles, who swoops in like a Marvel superhero? Yup, the “for real” Erin Brokovich speaks at another big town gathering imploring that they hold the utility giant’s “feet to the fire” (maybe she’s more like 007 taking down SPECTRE). This adds extra drama to another gathering in which a PG&E rep (guess he drew the short straw) speaks (and apologizes) at another “filled to the brim” meeting, which extolls the residents’ inspiring civility (no screaming and no big boiling pot of tar waiting for the rep). The big “stunners” occur in the final act as two of the main players are cruelly “blindsided” by fate (one is hit with a profound personal tragedy mere hours after their greatest professional triumph). And other than the earlier named utility, Howard points to other contributors, mainly the inaction on climate change, backed up by a tight montage of extreme events around the globe. All this is given big dramatic heft by the subtle haunting scores of Hans Zimmer and Lorne Balfe over the superb cinematography of Kelly A. Cook. In these trying times, many viewers should find inspiration from Howard’s ode to the heroes determined and dedicated to REBUILDING PARADISE.

3 Out of 4

REBUILDING PARADISE opens in select theatres on Friday 7/31 and is available as a Digital Download on several streaming apps and platforms.

REBUILDING PARADISE From Director Ron Howard In Virtual, Physical Theaters And Drive-Ins On July 31 – Music By Hans Zimmer And Lorne Balfe

On the heels of an overwhelmingly successful virtual premiere attended by close to 6,000 people, National Geographic Documentary Films announced today that it will move forward with release plans for REBUILDING PARADISE from Academy Award-winning director Ron Howard and Imagine Documentaries in virtual and physical theaters on July 31, 2020.
 
The documentary, which first premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January to positive reviews, will open in more than 70 markets through a hybrid release. In addition to major virtual releases through Laemmle and ShowcaseNOW (National Amusements), the film will be released in select drive-ins and through individual cinemas including Jacob Burns Center in New York, Coolidge Corner in Brookline, Gene Siskel Film Center and Music Box Theatre in Chicago as well as Balboa and Vogue Theaters in San Francisco. Click here for a full list of markets.
 
“We knew we would have a good turnout for our premiere, but when close to 6,000 people tuned in on a Sunday evening we were stunned. The positive comments and conversations about the importance of community and working together that have sprung from this screening point to the value of sharing this story right now, at a time when our country needs to come together to heal and to rebuild,” said filmmaker Ron Howard.
 
REBUILDING PARADISE is a moving story of resilience in the face of tragedy, as a community ravaged by disaster comes together to recover what was lost. Since its Sundance Film Festival premiere it has also played in the virtual festivals for AFI Docs and Edinburgh Film Festival.

Paradise, CA – Mauny Roethler stands for portraits at a clean up site in Paradise, California. Mauny has been involved in the clean up at a very practical level: clearing lots and removing debris. (National Geographic/Pete Muller)

On the morning of Nov. 8, 2018, a devastating firestorm engulfed the picturesque city of Paradise, California. By the time the fire, known as the Camp Fire, was extinguished, it had killed 85 people, displaced 50,000 residents and destroyed 95% of local structures. It was the deadliest U.S. fire in 100 years — and the worst ever in California’s history.
 
As residents faced the damage to their lives, to their homes and to more than 150,000 acres in and around their 141-year-old town, they did something amazing: They worked together to heal. The community members went on to forge a bond stronger than what they had before the catastrophe, even as their hope and spirit were challenged by continued adversity: relocations, financial crises, government hurdles, water poisoning, grief and PTSD.

Paradise, CA – Michelle John, the emeritus superintendent of Paradise Schools, as she packs her home and prepares to move away from the town in the wake of the fire. (National Geographic/Pete Muller)

From the moment the crisis began, Oscar-winning director Ron Howard led a filmmaking team to the city and would go on to spend a year with Paradise residents, documenting their efforts to recover what was lost. The Camp Fire and its overwhelming aftermath became a de facto lesson in what we all must do: Protect our environment, help our neighbors, plan for future dangers and remember to preserve the traditions that unite us — just as these resilient citizens did when they began the important task of REBUILDING PARADISE.
 
“The requests from theater owners to play this film have been overwhelming. While we all wish REBUILDING PARADISE could debut in more physical theaters, this pivot to include more virtual cinemas and drive-ins will enable us to share the film with a wider audience and continue to highlight the essential work of first responders, and the resilience and determination of the Paradise community” added Carolyn Bernstein, Executive Vice President, Global Scripted Content and Documentary Films at National Geographic.
 
The film is being released through the leading distributor of documentary films, Abramorama.


Directed by Ron Howard, REBUILDING PARADISE was produced by Brian Grazer, Howard, Xan Parker, Sara Bernstein and Justin Wilkes; executive produced by Michael Rosenberg, Louisa Velis, Carolyn Bernstein and Ryan Harrington; co-produced by Lizz Morhaim, with cinematography by Lincoln Else; edited by M. Watanabe Milmore; and music by Hans Zimmer and Lorne Balfe. For additional information, visit www.RebuildingParadise.film.
 
National Geographic Documentary Films previously released the Academy Award-, BAFTA- and seven-time Emmy Award-winning film Free Solo; the Sundance Audience Award winner Science Fair; Emmy winners LA 92 and Jane, both of which were included in the top 15 documentaries considered for an Academy Award in 2017; and duPont Award winner Hell on Earth: The Fall of Syria and the Rise of ISIS. The banner’s latest film, The Cave, from director Feras Fayyad, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2020.

PAVAROTTI – Review

Pavarotti performs at the People’s Assembly in Peking, China. Photo by Vittoriano Rastelli/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images.

In PAVAROTTI, director Ron Howard spotlights opera superstar Luciano Pavarotti, the most famous tenor of the past 50 years, so famous that even people who had never heard an opera knew his name.

Even if you don’t know anything about opera, you have probably heard of the Three Tenors – Luciano Pavarotti, Jose Carreras and Placido Domingo. If you are an opera fan, you know Pavarotti as one the great voices, the best tenor of the second half the last century and beginning of this one. Ron Howard’s affectionate but honest documentary has something for both of those audiences.

Pavarotti was a rock star of an opera star, a pop culture celebrity whose fame reached beyond the rarefied world of opera, something that didn’t always please opera fans. Pavarotti not only sang on opera theater stages but performed in events promoted like rock concerts and taking place in sports stadiums, and even shared the stage with rock stars like Bono of U2.

Ironically, as the film points out, opera started as popular entertainment, and was still popular in rural Italy where Pavarotti grew up. With melodramatic, over-the-top stories, opera featured singers with voices so big they could fill theaters with sound without amplification, in the centuries before sound systems. And of course the singing had to be beautiful too. Pavarotti possessed a uniquely beautiful voice.

Director Ron Howard’s PAVAROTTI is about as well-crafted and entertaining a biographical documentary as one could ask for, hitting the highlights of the singer’s career, his strengths and failings, and telling his personal story. It is a warts-and-all documentary, that looks beneath the famous exterior but which still leaves the audience feeling like they have gained an understanding of the man and a sense of why he has was both a great artist and a beloved star.

Pavarotti had one of the best voices of the late 20th-early 21 centuries. On top of that, he had charisma by the ton, a true star in any era. .Born in the small Italian town of Modena, he grew up in the aftermath of WWII. The son of a baker who was an amateur tenor, Pavarotti was working as an elementary school teacher when he decided, encouraged by his mother, to pursue his dream and switched to opera. He became the “King of the High Cs,” then an international superstar, whose fame reached far beyond the world of opera.

Pavarotti had a golden voice and impressive technique but he had charm and a common touch along with all that talent. Pararotti not only had that voice that he called “a gift from God” but sang with great feeling, great expression, and was very much a performer who brought drama to his roles.

Footage of Pavarotti singing makes this point better than any scholar could, and the film is filled with wonderful, thrilling clips that might make a fan of anyone. Ron Howard has said he wasn’t particularly an opera fan when he started this project but the more he learned – and heard – the more he fell under Pavarotti’s spell like so many before. Howard takes us on that same journey, introducing the non-opera public to this unique man. Yet, opera fans who already know this great artist well will enjoy this journey as well.

Despite the wealth and fame, there were struggles with heartache, self-doubt and loneliness. The documentary features interviews with family and friends, including – notably – both his wives, Adua Veroni and Nicoletta Mantovani. Pavarotti’s three daughters with his first wife Adua Veroni talk about family life and moments with their famous father. Very much a people person, Pavarotti was noted for his warmth and his sense of humor and fun, which comes through particularly with his daughters.

Clips of interviews on television talk shows are shown as well as previously unseen home movie footage, helping create a well-rounded portrait. Ron Howard weaves all this material about the man and his music into a masterfully-constructed documentary, one that sweeps us up into its narrative of Pavarotti’s professional and personal life.

Much of that story is told through stirring, gorgeous performances, which generously dot the narrative. There is no narration, as none is needed – Pavarotti’s singing tells the story.

To Ron Howard’s credit, the documentary does not shy away from the scandals and controversies that were part of Pavarotti’s life but it treats those aspects fairly and factually. Mostly, it offers the audience a wealth of footage of Pavarotti singing, and uses that footage as a way to get to know the artist.

And what a glorious voice it is. The film features some of the best of his performances, with a particularly strong sampling of Pavarotti at his vocal peak, but including other strong examples of his later work. The clips illustrate Pavarotti’s power as an actor as he sang, conveying the emotion of the lyrics with remarkable depth. His stage presence and his expressive delivery have an electric vibrancy, thrilling us as we watch and listen.

Pavarotti embraced his peasant roots and set out to bring the beauty of opera to everyone around the world. The film includes interviews with Pavarotti himself and intimate moments with friends and family. Sequences with children are particularly touching.

Pavarotti’s place as a pop star as well as an opera star comes through especially in the sequences with Princess Diana, who was among his friends, and interviews with Bono talking about their unlikely collaboration. Interview footage with Placido Domingo, one of those famous “Three Tenors,” illustrates that worldwide phenomenon they became, as well as Pavarotti’s big heart in organizing the first concert, partly as a fundraiser and partly to bolster the spirits of Carreras as he recovered from cancer. Later in his career, Pavarotti turned his talents to helping others through charitable events, as he made a remarkable career commitment to charitable works.

It illustrates the singer’s open nature and generous, collaborative spirit. But when Pavarotti’s embrace of other musicians put him on stage with rock stars, there were critics among both fans and music experts. Certainly the rock stars themselves were both awed and intimidated to share the stage with such a talent.

PAVAROTTI is a marvelous documentary that strikes the perfect balance to please both opera-loving Pavarotti fans who know his work well and those who are new to opera and Pavarotti. It is an almost magical feat, but Ron Howard pulls it off. Pavarotti was not elitist and neither was his view of opera, and this entertaining, enlightening documentary delightfully captures that same joyful view of Pavarotti and his music.

PAVAROTTI opens Friday, June 21, at the HiPointe Backlot Theater.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars