Netflixable? Documentary captures “Martha” Stewart in her Multitudes

At her zenith, Martha Stewart could come off as insufferable, an icy perfectionist who’d never let a hair seem out of place or a place setting pass that didn’t have hand-made touches.

But even her haters had a hunch she got a raw deal from the Bush II Justice Dept., busted and imprisoned for “insider trading,” which she didn’t do, but prosecuted and persecuted by a showboating spotlight hound prosecutor Hillary Clinton could tell you all about.

The average person reading her magazine, watching her TV show and and experiencing her “brand” — perfectionism — showing off her meticuloulsy-kept home in The Hamptons “makes you feel like a failure,” an observer notes.

Yet give the “original” influencer her due. She made the idea that “everyday women” can “bring beauty into their homes” with a little tutelage, encouragement and something Stewart always seems to have — “time” — not just “aspirational” and “marketable,” but approachable and doable.

Yes, she was born beautiful. She long ago lost any grounding sense of self-awareness. But the privilege, dismissive bossiness and curtness that most in her orbit or passing through it experienced? She held herself to higher standards and wasn’t easy on those who didn’t share that.

Stewart didn’t just marry money. She earned fortunes and maybe she lorded it over doubters. And when the “worst possible thing happened,” she took the heat, did the time and staged a late-life third-act “comeback” worthy of Betty White.

A new documentary about her does a decent job of letting us think that’s “a good thing,”

Emmy-winning documentary producer and director R.J. Cutler (“The September Issue,” “Billie Eilish: The World’s a Little Blurry”) gets at the many different phases and faces of “Martha” in his new documentary for Netflix. He even gets under her skin at times as her focuses on her foibles, failed marriages and blinkered hypocrisy.

But I have to say, Stewart comes out of it as more likable than most anyone would expect. When she sat down with her pal-in-privilege Barbara Walters for an early 2000s interview as her empire crumbled thanks to that schadenfreude-filled feeding-frenzy, Stewart isn’t even the most insufferable woman in that two-shot.

She shares stories of her less-than-posh Nutley, New Jersey childhood, crediting a father who didn’t show her much that wasn’t disdain with teaching her and her five siblings to garden and a mother who wasn’t all that affectionate herself for teaching young Martha Kostyra to cook.

We get frank discussions of her ideas of “love” and “fidelity,” and a taste of her West Virginia prison diary, what she did with her time when forced to give up micromanaging for five months.

Cutler’s shooting strategy here has every sibling, employee, friend and “ex-friend” who speaks about Stewart heard on tape, not seen interviewed on camera. That’s reserved for Herself. Production-savvy Stewart shows impatience with some of the questions, lines of questioning and testily offers her “solution” for the tedium of that.

“Take it out of the letters,” she snaps, as she’d given Cutler unprecedented access to her story and her archives, including letters to her ex, etc.

Cutler uses interviews, family photos and “modeling” shots from her youth and decades and decades of footage of her decades on TV, including unflattering outtakes, as well as painted recreations of the dismissals of her “Martha Stewart Living” magazine pitch, her prosecution and trial to create this just-intimate-enough portrait.

And as the warts and all image emerges, with her surgically-polished profile never breaking a sweat, we still can’t help but get a kick out of her Bieber-Snoop fed revival. Because as much as her comeuppance seemed destined, that “comeback” makes her story as American as they come.

Rating: R, profanity, a little skin

Cast: Martha Stewart, archival footage of Barbara Walters, David Letterman, etc., and the voices of Snoop Dogg, Alexis Stewart, many others

Credits: Directed by R.J. Cutler. A Netflix release.

Running time: 1:55

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Movie Review: Reiser and Sarandon and Shameik take bowling into “The Gutter” in this farce

A just-clever-enough conceit and generally cheerful performances are almost enough to put over “The Gutter,” a coarse and comically crude bowling farce featuring an Oscar winner and a Black bowler who just might take over “the whitest sport” while no one is watching.

Shameik Moore brings Kevin-Hart-selling-something-on-TV energy as Walt, a self-absorbed and perpetually unemployed dope who finds himself and his calling when he takes the job spraying roach killer into the shoes at the tumbledown alley known as AlleyCatz Lanes.

And no less than Susan Sarandon, well-preserved and everybody’s idea of the perfect villain but no one’s idea of a convincing bowler, is summoned to play Linda Curson, a legend of the lanes who comes out of retirement to make sure this pipsqueak savant doesn’t break her long-standing records.

D’Arcy Carden of TV’s “The Good Place,” “Barry” and “A League of Their Own” plays the ex-pro/alcoholic washout who takes an interest in “training” our champion-to-be.

And sibling filmmakers Isaiah and Yassir Lester talked Jackée Harry into playing the owner of the aged alley, Kim Fields to play Walt’s broke momma and Paul Reiser to be the venerable TV face and voice of SLOB, the Super League of Bowling for their comedy.

The idea was to vamp on “Kingpin,” throw a lot of talented folks telling PG-to-R-rated jokes against the wall and see what sticks. Not enough does, but there are scattered laughs, even if the Lesters lost their nerve about how far “out there” to take this thing.

Walt is dopey enough to manically overshare his many firings in his job interview with Mozell (Henry), misguided enough to figure he can sex his way into the gig.

“This is how you get a job…in the movies that I watch!”

But she’s desperate — for an employee, not sex. And he’s down for any gig where he can go shirtless.

It’s when he first picks up a ball that his “bowling savant” skills become obvious. Rolled behind his back, over his shoulder or all the way from the concession stand, Walt scores strikes.

That sobers up Skunk (Carden) just long enough to take an interest. She sees the novelty of it all.

“There hasn’t been a Black pro (bowler) since…”

And since Mozell’s about to lose AlleyCatz, “an institution in the Black community,” to code violations, everybody could use the prize money.

Walt, shirted or shirtless and wearing “Porn Hub” stickers in the hope of landing sponsors, charges into the pro bowling circuit — Indianapolis to Tulsa to Houston to Atlanta — with Skunk as his cheerleader/”coach.”

He has a hard time selling the world on his “stage name” for the tour — “Nygga Thyme.” Maybe one of his catch phrases will catch on.

“It’s Walt LIQUOR time!”

But we know he’s never going to win over Linda Curson, or Angelo (Reiser), the over-the-hill insult-comic TV announcer, who refers to him as “the Michael B. Jordan of bowling.”

The whole funny people-given-“funny” characters and lines strategy here doesn’t really land, although a few of the jokes do.

“I wanna wrestle with that dude from ‘Dune,’ Timothee Chalamet. Just to see…what happens.

Moore and Carden’s chemistry is tentative, and the script teeters between going gonzo and raunchy and timidly reaching for PG-13. Pretty much everybody here has been brassier in other roles and other films.

You can pull for Walt/Moore, who starred in “Dope” and who gives voice to the animated “Spiderverse” movies. You can hope the Lesters get their shot at becoming “The New Farrelly Brothers.”

But the characters are never more than caricatures, the set-up is too conventional and the payoff doesn’t pay off at all. As for the jokes? Too many are awaiting that next rewrite or polish. But not this one.

“And now, just like racism in America, this is over.”

Rating: unrated, sexual humor, profanity and smoking

Cast: Shameik Moore, D’Arcy Carden, Jackée Harry, Kim Fields, Paul Reiser and Susan Sarandon

Credits: Directed by Isaiah Lester and Yassir Lester, scripted by Yassir Lester. A Magnolia release.

Running time: 1:32

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Movie Review: More Teased than Terrified by What’s Behind that “Cellar Door”

“Cellar Door” is an attempt at the thriller-as-parable, a suspenseful story about a troubled couple tested by temptation and the ugly “answers” they might find by peeking behind that which they’ve been warned to never open, the cellar door of the film’s title.

Set up as horror, with a tepid script entirely too content to “explain” and over-explain itself in only the least satisfying ways, it never amounts to much more than a 97 minute tease.

Jordana Brewster and Scott Speedman play Sera and John, Pacific northwesterners struggling to have a baby. He’s an architect, she’s a college professor of statistics. And logic?

Their latest failed IVF has them abandon their swank city apartment for the suburbs. But they’re on a budget, and nothing in this place where “we can live the life of our dreams” is within their price range.

That’s why their real estate agent sends them to visit the mysterious and wealthy Emmett (Laurence Fishburne). He is charmed, and they are charmed by him. And next thing you know, he’s offering them his mansion. Like Sera, he associates a place with unhappy memories.

The offer has but one catch. “You must never open the cellar door.” Multimillion dollar house, ours for the asking? For free? Sure, we can do that.

But can they?

The story suggests that all isn’t happy in these lives and this marriage. Complications intervene, and next thing you know, each becomes half-obsessed with finding out what’s in that cellar. Because that’s better than facing the problems (Addison Timlin is set up as “the other woman”) right in front of their faces.

Director Vaughn Stein — “Terminal” and “Inheritance” were his — and his team get the look and tone right, a somber tale told in the grim greys of the coming (Portland) winter. But the entire enterprise feels like a cheat, a movie with no real payoff, no big jolts and no surprises in all this “explaining” in the third act.

We don’t need a new character waltzing in late and using the phrase “Faustian bargain” if the script isn’t delivering that.

The third act twists are undercut by such nonsense. The suspense doesn’t build and the flatlining performances don’t hurtle or even meander into any sort of satisfying or logical melding with those “explanations” of what “secrets” can do to a marriage.

Fishburne is serene, with the barest suggestion of sinister. But Speedman and Brewster, whatever their strong suits, can’t make us believe their characters’ panic, quiet fury or rage in a script that can’t stop teasing that it’s something it will never be.

Rating: R, violence, sex, profanity

Cast: Scott Speedman, Jordana Brewster, Addison Timlin and Laurence Fishburne.

Credits: Directed by Vaughn Stein, scripted by Sam Scott and Lori Evans Taylor. A Lionsgate release.

Running time: 1:37

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Teri Garr: The funny Blonde Next Door –1944-2024

Teri Garr, a character actress always good for a giggle, who always won our sympathy and who even collected an Oscar nomination for her comedic skills, has died.

A scene stealer from the mid-career films of Elvis Presley, to TV’s “Star Trek” through “Young Frankenstein,” “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” an Oscar nominee for “Tootsie,” she was one of the most familiar faces on film in the ’70s and ’80s, pairing-up with Richard Dreyfuss (“Let It Ride”) more than once, appearing Coppola’s “The Conversation” and a couple of Altman films to boot.

An Ohio native and the daughter of show people, she did Broadway, the Monkees’ movie “Head,” played John Denver’s wife in “Oh, God!” Michael Keaton’s breadwinner wife in “Mr. Mom” and the mother in “The Black Stallion. In her prime, she was everywhere. And on “Letterman.” A lot.

Dreyfuss, who played her spouse twice, described her as “vibrant, playful and so funny. Her essence created an ease in every scene we did together” today on Twitter.

Here she is, all worked up, playing the Mrs. to Mr. Dreyfuss for the second time, in the gambling farce “Let It Ride.”

She had survived a brain aneurysm some years back and had struggled with mutiple sclerosis for decades. I remember chatting with her at the New York Film Festival in the early ’90s — she came to press screenings during the day — and I caught up with her after an Orlando appearance, speaking on behalf of MS awareness a few years back.

She was a real sweetheart, wistful about her salad days, plucky about her medical challenges, as disarming as she came off on the screen. Nobody did “sexy” and perky and a bit rattled better. She was Judy Holiday without the kitsch or “dim blonde” stereotyping, someone who “created her own sublime archetype,” screenwriter and wit Paul Rudnick (“In & Out”) said on Twitter.

In my era, if you didn’t have a little bit of a crush on her, funny blondes must not have been your thing.

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Chalamet goes “Subterranean” for this music video from “A Complete Unknown”

Searchlight is doing a swell job of convincing us Timothee can impersonate Bob Dylan. As to the story the movie tells and the way it tells it?

Dec. 25 we’ll have a take on that.

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Movie Review: Martial artist attacks like a “Bangkok Dog”

There’s a charismatic theatricality to the way stuntman, actor and martial artist D.Y. Sao lands a blow and makes sure to give us his best Bruce Lee Face as he does.

That skill, and his fists and feet of fury — he did stunts on “Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings” and “Everything Everywhere All at Once” — are the only things to recommend in his latest, “Bangkok Dog,” a martial arts brawl in search of a better plot, tastier dialogue, etc.

Sao plays an international anti-drug/anti-human trafficking enforcement agent sent from LA to Bangkok to stop a a mysterious and murderous kingpin (Sahajak Boonthanakit) from dumping fentanyl in the U.S. and killing smuggled migrants to do it.

Agent Kang has an adoring partner (Jenny Philomena Van Der Sluijs) who’s learned a lot of her fighting skills from him and a boss (Charles Onken) who just doesn’t “get” him.

“Do you have to ‘kung fu’ up EVERY mission?”

They get just enough information from a captured LA gangster (Brian Le) to send Kang to Thailand posing as that gangster. He’ll cozy up to enforcer Charn Chai (Byron Bishop), beat-up men who owe the big boss, beat-up sexist gun buyers and beat-up anybody who gets in his path as he makes his way up to Mr. Big, Mesian (Boonthankakit).

The formulaic plot doesn’t offer any surprises, just lots of much bigger stuntmen/heavies beating on Kang, with Sao always screaming and punching and kicking and backflipping his way out of a jam

There’s a goofiness to some of the attempted “secret agent” and “secret agent gadgets” served up here, so it’s all meant to be a lark. But it’s not cute, charming or funny in between the action beats.

Take away the fights and there’s no movie, only a somewhat charismatic lead, one or two decent supporting players and one “test the new guy” cliche or “fighting and partying through Thailand” montage after another.

Rating: graphic violence, drug abuse

Cast: D.Y. Sao, Jenny Philomena Van Der Sluijs, Brian Le, Byron Bishop and Sahajak Boonthanakit

Credits: Directed by Chaya Supannarat, scripted by Laurence Walsh. A Well Go USA release.

Running time: 1:28

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Movie Preview: Daniel Craig in Luca Guadagnino’s film of William S. Burroughs’ “Queer”

This gay May-October romance is a period piece from the director of “Call Me By Your Name,” a fiction based on Burroughs’ novel and Burroughs lore, set in Mexico City in the ’50s.

Craig is the protagonist, Drew Starkey could be his great love, with Lesley Manville and Jason Schwartzman and many others in an almost all-male drama about falling for a much younger man.

Love the use of a cover of Nirvana’s “All Apologies” here.

A24 puts this Oscar bait in theaters Nov. 27.

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Movie Review: Berkeley Breathed animates a Porcine Pet Bounty Hunter — “Hitpig!”

Any children’s cartoon built around an armed loner/bounty hunter named “Hitpig!” was always going to be a dubious undertaking.

But it was created by longtime “Bloom County” cartoonist Berkely Breathed. So it’s worth pondering. His cracked, kid-friendly (allegedly) vision comes to the screen as a sometimes unsettling comedy about hunting down a show elephant released by an animal rights activist.

It’s got a touch of animal abuse, an “animals are meant to be free” message and a few big names providing voices in the cast, but little in the script that either amuses or makes for a compelling, holds-your-interest story.

Jason Sudeikis voices the title character, a grizzled veteran of missing pets bounty-hunting summoned by a sadistic “sixth generation” Vegas “animal act” impressario to find his missing elephant.

The rotund Leaping Lord of the Leotard (Rainn Wilson) flexes his ego and mistreats his animals, reassuring his star attraction — the Indian elephant Pickles (Lilly Singh) — that “I lock you up because I love you.”

Portugeuse singer-actress Anitta voices Letitia de Anjos (Portugeuse for “Angel”), the activist who has been Hitpig’s nemesis, the one person willing to free Pickles, but someone not big on follow-through AFTER the “rescue.”

Leaping Lord needs the elephant to catch his “gravity” resenting butt in the “leaping” part of his act. And he’s willing to pay big bucks to recover the pachyderm.

Pickles figures the pig who shows up with all sorts of gadgets including net guns and a souped-up sometimes-airborne VW Microbus is there to “find her family” and take her to it — in India.

But that’s not in the pig’s contract. It’ll take a road trip, encounters with a radioactive polecat (RuPaul), a renegage koala (Shelby Young) and a Super Rooster big screen superhero (Charlie Adler) to make our “just a job” pig see the error of his ways

The Leaping Lord makes a colorful, hissable villain, and Wilson has fun with the voice.

The jokes are often just creative expletives — “What the elllllllllePHANT?” “Son of a BEECHnut!”

The funniest scene might be a blow-gun tranquilizer dart shoot out between our activist and the bounty hunter. Too much screen time is spent on filler, travel montages set to classic rock/pop tunes of the distant past.

Sudeikis sounds disappointed in what he’s agreed to in the recording sessions for Hitpig, barely tolerant, much less enthusiastic for lines like “I think I just cracked a baby back rib!”

The shambolic plot throws in new characters, brings back nearly-forgotten ones, and resolves itself by putting our pig — and everybody else — in space.

But the whole enterprise leaves a sour taste in one’s mouth, thin entertainment that you figure you need to take seriously because of Breathed’s involvement.

Rating: PG, animal abuse

Cast: The voices of Jason Sudeikis, Lilly Singh, Rainn Wilson, RuPaul, Anitta, Flavor Flav and Andy Serkis

Credits: Directed by Cinzia Angelini and David Feiss, scripted by Berkeley Breathed, David Rosenbaum and Tyler Werrin, based on a book by Berkeley Breathed. A Viva Pictures release.

Running time: 1:26

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Movie Preview: Brian Cox is an animated Brit Santa — “That Christmas”

Richard Curtis, Mr. “Four Weddings” and “Love Actually,” wrote this Christmas cartoon for Netflix. So of course Bill Nighy’s in it. Fiona Shaw, Guz Khan, and Rhys Darby also take on a couple of voices. What, no Rowan Atkinson? For shame, Mr. C.

A Brit blizzard, a VW Microbus, and a little pop music decorate Netflix as of Dec. 4.

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Classic Film Review: “The Killing Fields” (1984) at 40, Adventure, Heart and Horror in a High-Minded Epic

Some classic films can overwhelm you with the memories of when you saw them, of the era that created them and of the stars who gained their immortality in filming them.

“The Killing Fields” came out fresh enough on the heels of America’s long, tortured involvement in Southeast Asia’s Vietnam War to sting. But in sympathetically and skillfully telling a horrific story to come out of one corner of that conflict, it found hope and uplift, along with critical accolades and three Academy Awards.

The film’s editor (Jim Clark) and director of photography (Chris Menges) won Oscars, as did “amateur” supporting actor Dr. Haing S. Ngor. The Best Picture Oscar went to Milos Foreman’s film of “Amadeus.” Cinematic 1984 was a very good vintage.

British producer David Puttnam so embodied the “class” of that cinematic era — “Local Hero,” “The Mission,” and “Memphis Belle” were among his credits, and he won the Best Picture Oscar for producing “Chariots of Fire” — that he briefly became head of Columbia Pictures, emphasizing upscale, modest-budgeted and sometimes ambitious failures.

We’re treated to bristling performances by very young Sam Waterston and John Malkovich and fine work by Julian Sands (playing a journalist) and Craig T. Nelson, playing a true-believer military attaché determined to spin this debacle into a “win,” or at least a “not our fault” to the bitter end.

Supporting player Spalding Gray, a writer/actor playing a U.S. Consul in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, made a career out of his monologue/performance art piece “Swimming to Cambodia,” another version of a Cambodia/Vietnam/United States history lesson when it was made into a shockingly entertaining one-man show and film.

“Killing Fields” is a phrase coined by the subject of the saga — the interpreter, Cambodian in-country “fixer” and future photojournalist Dith Pran. It became worldwide, UN-sanctioned shorthand for genocide and the reactionary backwardness that drives it. Dith Pran came to the university I was attending to speak and gave a moving account of Cambodia’s fall to the Khmer Rouge. He was a man with a profound sense of mission about bearing witness and underlining the consequences of Superpower blundering in the Third World.

Forty years later, the film about his experience’s power to move is only slightly diminished. Producer Puttnam’s thing for solo artist electronic scores (partial, in this case) is the sole sour note here (unlike in “Chariot’s of Fire”) that dates the film, and not in a good way.

But the story is a true epic, a survival tale that can’t be trivialized by the cliche “a triumph of the human spirit.” Because “The Killing Fields” is all about mankind at its worst — dogmatic ideology callously applied to human populations and dogma enforced by callow, trigger-happy youth toting AK-47s and sporting red neckerchiefs.

Waterston plays Sydney Schanberg, the award-winning New York Times journalist who as depicted here, took every government/military run-around personally and more fully understood the adversarial relationship between the press and those being covered than pretty much anybody on a similarly high profile beat today.

Sydney is arrogant and bullying, badgering his “fixer” Dith Pran to arrange transport to an “accidental” U.S. bombing, seemingly insisting that the man stick with him to the bitter end and beyond as Nixon’s “Cambodian incursion” becomes a culture-crushing disaster. Yes, he offered and planned to get Pran and his family out of the county. But with a story to grab as the capital falls, Pran is by Schanberg’s side, interpreting in French and Khmer, hands clasped in near prayer as he begs for information, a boat ride, a pass through a checkpoint or for their very lives.

The Khmer Rouge aren’t impressed.

The script’s three act structure introduces the scene, the relationship and the dilemma of Cambodia’s collapse in ’74 and ’75 even as Nixon was resigning. The second act has Dith Pran holed-up with photographer Rockoff (Malkovich) and other journalists (Bill Paterson is a piano-playing Scot, Sands a fellow Brit, with South African playwright/actor Athol Fugard playing a doctor) at the French embassy.

We hear Pran’s wife’s warnings about what is to come and see him eschew a risky escape from civil warriors at war with “progress” itself — the “Year Zero” fanatics of the Khmer Rouge. We hear Sydney’s pleas, expectations and (wrong, as it turns out) and guesses about “the end” and how they’ll all get out.

The foreigners have a chance. An educated, multi-lingual Cambodian employee of foreigners? Pran is sure to be arrested, if not shot on the spot by the hotheated teens who do leader Pol Pot’s dirty work.

The third act covers Dith Pran’s enslavement by the new Cambodian order, hiding his education and street smarts, trying and trying again to escape across a forbidding, corpse-covered terrain (literal “Killing Fields”) under the cover of Vietnam’s brief war with Cambodia in the late ’70s.

The film’s indelible images are of Pran (Ngor) giving us all a taste of what “real” survival requires — objectifying lizards and stolen sucks of cow blood as the protein needed to keep him alive while the regime tries to work him and starve him to death, the caginess it takes to fool your captors about your true nature while at the same time convincing them of your usefulness to them.

A first act summary execution has maybe the most explicit shot-in-the-face effect the movies have ever produced, before or since. The beautiful country torn asunder by conflict, and a sea of extras — city dwellers enslaved on a vast hill-moving project by the civilization-hating Khmer Rouge — adds weight to the label “epic.”

Waterston lets us see tinges of guilt in the blustery, self-serving Schanberg, who wins awards even as he’s writing letters and making calls trying to get his right-hand-man out of a country that literally went dark after its conquest.

Malkovich is as focused and as nimble as we’ve ever seen him, a combat photographer whose instincts kick-in as he clicks away within seconds of the streetside blast that could have killed him.

And Ngor, a real life “Killing Fields” survivor himself (his wife and child died before getting out), lets us see the amateur beneath the performance, a non-actor playacting something not that far removed from his own escape from his renamed homeland — Kampuchea.

It’s still easy to see, in the beautiful celluloid-preserved sunsets, the gritty combat-zone street scenes and intimate framing and alternately emphatic and empathetic editing, why Menges and Clark won their Oscars.

Oscar nominated director Roland Joffé went on to make the Colonial South America epic “The Mission” and the “Oppenheimer” of its day, “Fat Man and Little Boy,” before overreaching with the Indian-set poverty-fighting Patrick Swaynze romance “City of Joy” punctured his balloon. He still works, but even the attempts at high-mindedness (“The Forgiven”) fall flat and fail to register on film fandom’s radar these days.

But he was at his very best on “The Killing Fields,” filming an epoch-defining cinematic classic that recreates that historic horror in “paradise” (Phuket, Thailand was where much of it was filmed) and making that Vietnam War allegory in three acts work — an American who “uses” whoever or whatever pawn is handy in that game of Cold War chess, who then “owes” something to someone he, like his country, used and then let fall to ruin.

Rating: R, graphic violence, profanity

Cast: Sam Waterston, Haing S. Ngor, John Malkovich, Craig T. Nelson, Athol Fugard, Bill Paterson, Spalding Gray and Julian Sands.

Credits: Directed by Roland S. Joffe, scripted by Bruce Robinson. A Warner Bros. release on Roku, Amazon, etc.

Running time: 2:21

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