Because it’s Mexico City, 1986, as if any gay men of that time and place would confuse the two capitals.
Because it’s Mexico City, 1986, as if any gay men of that time and place would confuse the two capitals.

Your first thought is, “That could never happen today, the country’s too polarized,”and then a montage showing how violently divided America was back then makes you wonder.
Watching “Woodstock: Three Days that Defined a Generation” the weekend after another blast of American mass shootings is the ultimate disconnect. How DID they do that without cops, metal detectors, without some hippie-hating gun-nut goaded into shooting the place up?
You remember the music. But no other film has ever immersed itself in the logistical disaster turned into humanitarian miracle that this seminal event was.
And it’s taken 50 years, but perhaps the culture is ready to move beyond grinning at the event’s court jester Wavy Gravy (Hugh Romney), and look at him as the hero of Woodstock, its patron saint, the embodiment of what separated it and every other major outdoor concert of its era, especially Altamont.
This PBS film, airing Monday night, does not displace Michael Wadleigh’s 1970 Oscar-winning classic of the genre, it complements it — provides context, treats it as the ancient history it now is.
“Three Days” is much more about an era, of “The Generation Gap,” the Vietnam War, protests and assassinations. It dwells on the backstage life, the grand moments of humanity displayed by concertgoers, concert promoters, conservative townsfolk and New York’s hippie-hating Republican oligarch of a governor.
It’s an oral history, with plenty of archival footage (Wadleigh’s crew included young Martin Scorsese, and shot MILES of film) and period TV interviews underscored by the key team that made the show happen, a few who performed and legions of those who went, “pilgrims, on a pilgrimage” — some identified, others not — their voices painting an aural memory of a signal event in their young lives.
One thinks of Henry’s V’s “St. Crispin’s Day” speech from Shakespeare, of those of us who didn’t get to go holding “their manhoods cheap” whenever one of the chosen few who did speaks of Woodstock.
The word that sticks out, underlined and circled in my notes from watching the movie, is “LOGISTICS.” The footage assembled by PBS co-directors Barack Goodman and Jamila Ephron captures an unfolding disaster, where “everything that could possibly go wrong was happening,” from tiny, reactionary Wallkill, N.Y. pulling approval for the show at the last minute to the losing race to prep a site in bucolic Bethel, New York for the coming onslaught.
You may tear up, as I did, at a first glimpse of that “natural amphitheater” on Max Yasgur’s dairy farm. But a tidal wave of OSHA violations are here for us to marvel over, frantic crews building a stage, taking every safety shortcut imaginable as they do, giving up on building a fence so that the promoters could collect tickets and at least break even on the financial debacle they were presiding over.
The greatest traffic jam in history, rain turning an unhoused city of 400-450,000 into a mud bowl, running out of food, medical supplies — the drugs, the nudity — all footnotes in Wadleigh’s documentary that step front and center in “Three Days that Defined a Generation.”
The music has become a cultural cliche, so much so that mere samples of Richie Havens, Joan Baez, Crosby, Stills and Nash and Joe Cocker are enough to conjure up what we remember or have heard about the show over the past 50 years. They’re musical shorthand for “Woodstock.”
Snippets of footage capture the chaos created by the flood of people and everything that goes wrong and most-famous-promoter (one of four) Michael Lang’s sweet-spirited but out of his depth responses. A glimpse of the original super-promoter Bill Graham showing up, as a guest, and laying down the law about what was needed, on the spot, reminds us of what a near-disaster this all was.
“Helicopters!”
And then there’s Wavy Gravy and his merry, enterprising Hog Farm commune, the police force that regarded itself as a “please force,” as in “Please, would you do this,” please would you help with that. What Baby Boomers came to call “The Spirit of Woodstock” is embodied by this goofball’s canny grasp of the situation and what was necessary to keep things cool and mellow.
Drug trips by the tens of thousands were triaged at Hog Farm’s backstage encampment, holding hands with kids lost in an LSD haze. And when those stoners came down, “See that guy coming in the tent? That was you, three hours ago, man. Go help him the way we helped you.”
I was delighted by how funny this “Woodstock” is, the hilarious ailments listed on draft notice medical exams, the boys and girls “exposed” to more nudity than they’d ever seen in the pages of “Playboy.”
I was shocked at how emotional the film, covering familiar ground with a lot of familiar footage, could be. Revel in the thrilling singing of Baez, the stunning showmanship of Sly and the Family Stone, the lightning emanating from Jimi Hendrix’s Fender Stratocaster, a beatific Grace Slick, worn out and starting a Jefferson Airplane set at dawn, beaming like a consummate professional just doing a gig — in front of 400,000+ muddy, weary and sometimes strung-out American youth.
And the film sharply underscores why this strictly subcultural event — under 30, overwhelmingly white, drug-friendly and left-leaning — has cast such a broad shadow over American history. It didn’t “define a generation” by representing all of it, but by what it brought out in those touched by it, old and young, urban and rural, leftist or rightist, growing in legend as it fades into the haze of memory.

MPAA Rating: drug abuse, nudity
Cast: David Crosby, Richie Havens, Joan Baez, Joe Cocker, Michael Lang and Carol Green
Credits: Directed by Barak Goodman, Jamila Ephron. A PBS/”American Experience”
Running time: 1:46
At the Timicua Arts Foundation in Orlando for a special showing of this new epic 50th anniversary doc.
I’ve had an abiding interest in Woodstock, tracking down fans who went and interviewing Baez and Arlo, Levon, Ravi Shankar and Richie Havens, Melanie and Graham Nash who performed there.
And there’s this unit publicist I used to work through whenever movies would film in Florida. It turns out, before she was the helpful PR person who got me on sets and interviews with directors and film stars, Carol Green was in Bethel, New York in the summer of ’69, cooking for the producers and crew who built the temporary venue that made history.
Who knew? She’s in the movie.
My REVIEW of “Woodstock: Three Days that Defined a Generation” is viewable via this link.
Here’s the trailer to the PBS film.
He made it to 94, a long life and a seminal career. From the shape of docs to “reality TV,” it all harks back to cinema veritae, which Pennebaker perfected half a century ago.
“The War Room” and “Don’t Look Back” are (with partner Chris Hegedus) his big statement pictures, but there were others.
From THR “At a ‘Don’t Look Back’ screening, Dylan told him he would “write down all of the things we have to change” on a yellow pad. “At the end of the film, he held up the pad and there was nothing on it. He said, ‘That’s it.’” https://t.co/2bYE15alLj https://twitter.com/MikeBarnes4/status/1157762183712739329?s=17
A big Thursday night and huge Friday have put “Hobbs & Shaw” on track to clear $60 million on its opening weekend. Very good. Not great for a “Fast/Furious” pic, so at least Vin Diesel is thrilled.
“Lion King” is adding another $37 and change. It never ends.
“Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood” is still three hours long, so figure that into its $19.3 second weekend. That’s a
53% drop, weekend to weekend.
A decent hold, not a dazzling one. It will stick around through August, anyway.
“Spider-Man” is still making bank, “Yesterday” and “The Farewell” are in the top ten one more weekend, films with real low budget staying power.
https://t.co/qEqvWrrRsF https://t.co/Fl5pxAiLXT https://twitter.com/Variety/status/1157697914753490944?s=17
The kids who grew up on TV’s “Dora the Explorer” are in college, now.
So selling the pre tween Dora to them in movie form was a non starter.
Make Dora more mature. Tween to teen. Turn her into a Tomb Raider?
Ok.
Still not sure who this movie is for.
Paramount is uncertain, too. They’re screening it and embargoing SOME reviews, with a few reviews already out.
Smells like teen spirit? Smells like fear.
Once upon a time, in a much more segregated Hollywood, Sidney Poitier and Bill Cosby starred in a buddy comedy about two working Joes who lose a winning lottery ticket while out at an Uptown club.
An Odyssey through a world the movies never showed — hustlers and hoodlums and hotties and heaven knows who all and what all, all black — ensued and a classic was born.
Various African American Stars have looked into remaking “Uptown Saturday Night,” most famously Will Smith.
Now a “Blackish” writer, the director of “Dope,” Rick Famuyiwa, and superdooperstar Kevin Hart are on board.
Do you go older with casting the co star, maybe Anthony Anderson, or find somebody younger than Hart to pair up with him?
Hannibal Burress!
Will Smith is hanging on as a producer.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/rick-famuyiwa-direct-uptown-saturday-night-remake-1228766

The timing of the indie drama “Light of My Life” has the ring of atonement about it.
It stars a recent Oscar winner, Casey Affleck, who also wrote and directed it. But a tiny studio is releasing it.
The writer-director-star was caught up in the tidal wave of #MeToo.
And here he is playing a fanatically-devoted father on “The Road” with his endangered daughter, taking care to “Leave No Trace” as he protects her from the world after the viral apocalypse, the one that killed almost all of the women.
So yeah, there’s a hint of the offscreen world making its way, symbolically, onto the screen with this dystopian flipside of “The Handmaid’s Tale.”
He calls the child Rag (Anna Pniowsky of TV’s “The Hot Zone”). And every night before dozing off in their tent, he tells Rag a story he makes up on the spot, stories that teach, about “listening to your inside voice,” about Noah and some foxes on the arc, borrowing a bit from the Old Testament when it suits his purposes.
Rag has short hair and dresses like a kid who has been camping with Dad ever since the disease struck (Elisabeth Moss plays the mother, seen in flashbacks). Rag is just entering her rebellious tweens, challenging Dad, and questioning him.
“Am I the only girl of my species?”
Probably not. But maybe. As they make their way through the depopulated anarchy of the rainy Pacific Northwest, everybody’s a stranger, everybody’s a loner, everybody’s a threat.
Some guy stumbles into their camp and gets the cold shoulder from Dad and “my son, Alex.”
“We’re not looking for any more company, sir.”
Keeping the child safe when she was younger was easier. She didn’t hesitate to hide when ordered to. She didn’t question his authority, his reasoning about every stranger.
“He’s a doddering old man.”
“Him, and everybody he knows.”
They’ve been on the run for a long time, we learn from their snatches of conversation as they evaluate whether to take shelter in an abandoned house
It’s “better than the barn,” she reasons.”Better than the greenhouse…the pond house.”
“I don’t think this is a safe place to be…I’m not going to be surprised by people like we were at the greenhouse.”
But they move inside out of the rain, and that’s where “Alex” or “Rag” makes her most rebellious decision, coming out as a straight girl, trying on girl’s pants and bedazzled jackets in the closets. She is getting too mature to keep her sexuality a secret from the world even if she’s still too immature to accept that maybe she should still heed her father’s fearful caution.
That conflict, within her and between her and her father, sets up the tense drama and confrontations to come.
Affleck ratchets up the suspense and raises the stakes with the film’s third act, but takes his sweet indulgent time getting us there. He establishes the relationship and the characters in a patience-testing twelve minute opening scene, almost a monologue — Dad telling Rag a story, her interrupting, correcting or questioning it as he does.

Her questions get harder than the simple math and spelling he’s quizzed her about, something any parent will recognize.
“What’s the difference between morals and ethics?”
Or the big one, “When will (the world) be right again?”
“When it’s balanced.”
“When will it be balanced?”
“When there are more women.”
That has a hint of “Handmaid’s Tale” about it. But Affleck’s film leans most heavily on the Cormac McCarthy adaptation “The Road” as it shows the absent mother’s illness, the wrenching decisions that packed them off and sent them off the disintegrating “grid.”
Dystopias and the rainy falls and winters of this corner of the Pacific Northwest fit together easily — grey skies, drab colors made more drab by all the damp. Spray paint “All hail the mothers” on an abandoned building, and viola, you’ve got your sci-fi dystopia.
The kid is affecting, the various men they encounter — even the kindly looking ones — have the taint of villainy and guilt about them.
“But not all men are sad and alone and angry.” Not even here.
And Affleck takes his brooding introversion to new levels here, a man wracked by grief and burdened with responsibility, a “moral” man eschewing violence and guns facing men with no such qualms.
In “Light of My Life,” he’s made an mournful and strikingly slow movie, one that allows us to ponder his reasons for making it even while watching it. Maybe it doesn’t atone for the harassment he was accused of, but it’s fascinating to see it that way as we watch his aching, conflicted desperation — a non-violent man living for one purpose, forced to not just explain the difference between “morals and ethics,” but to act on it — sometimes with violence.

MPAA Rating: R for some violence
Cast: Casey Affleck, Anna Pniowsky, Elisabeth Moss
Credits: Written and directed by Casey Affleck. A Saban Films release.
Running time: 1:59

Thrashing, hooning, beating transmissions. Putting off desperately needed oil changes…that poor McLaren! From The Onion
“Learning that these beautiful cars were subjected to such inhumane working conditions made me sick to my stomach.”
https://t.co/TSGYFwcXFj https://twitter.com/TheOnion/status/1157443965702017024?s=17
Exotic and apt casting, I say.
As any Hedy fan knows, she died in relative isolation– media shy, anyway — and one of my first assignments at the Orlando newspaper was to write this fascinating woman’s obituary. Documentaries have come out since her death focusing on her inventive mind, patent fights, etc. A pre Code bombshell (nude in her breakthrough European film), a Hollywood mainstay for a brief period.
This should be interesting, although it being a Showtime limited series, we may see more skin than deep dives into her formidable brain. https://t.co/goPU8sQ5qK https://twitter.com/joblocom/status/1157414302736777222?s=17