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ktincu Blog

  • Doug Block shares his story so we can share ours

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    51 Birch Street  (2005)

    With 51 Birch Street, Doug Block has created a documentary around his journey to understand his parents as people, not just parents, and to understand their marriage in that light. In addition to many conversations with family members, the film includes insight drawn from years of his mother's journals, which were discovered after her death. (The journals include all kinds of information most adults would rather not know about their mothers). Overall, the film is touching, sometimes funny, often sad, but somehow not depressing. It seems to say, "This is life. This is what it means to be human. We all have variations on the same stories."

    I think the most moving part of the film, for me, is an interview Doug has with his mother's best friend of many years, Natasha. He asks her if she thinks his mother would have wanted him to read her journals. Natasha goes through a long process of thinking and making a string of "difficult thinking" expressions before she answers emphatically "Yes!" I love how sure she is after taking the time to think about the issue from many different angles. I also love what she says to back up her response: "What a relief for someone to really know us, and still love us."

    The film held many similar moments for me--moments of articulation that left me feeling that I was understood, not alone. As I talked to both friends and strangers after the screening, it became clear that I was not the only one to be moved in that way. We all have our own, unique stories, yet we are all connected. Films like 51 Birch Street simply bring that connection into the light.



  • Akeelah is a good feel-good

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    I was so not surprised to get sucked in by all the "feel good" feelings while watching Akeelah and the Bee. It has all the necessary trappings:

    - a school official who believes in the potential of an underprivileged child
    - a stressed out, overworked mom who eventually learns to support her child's dreams
    - a friendship between a working class black girl and an upper middle class Hispanic boy
    - the eventual friendship between the black girl and a highly driven Asian boy
    - a brother who "got out" of the neighborhood and another who is "sinking in" (but shows signs of hope by the film's end)
    - a successful man who can't get beyond his own demons until a smart and sassy little girl comes into his life
    - school bullies who are the losers in the end
    - reasons to cheer

    In general, many people in Akeelah's world are obstacles that eventually come around. It doesn't get more feel-good than that.

    But amazingly, this film did not annoy me. In part, it's because Akeelah is such an engaging, endearing character. Even more so, though, it's because I watched the film with three girls, ages 6, 8 and 10. Not only were they completely rapt with attention through the whole film, they promptly began playing "spelling bee" as soon as the film was over. During dinner they even suggested that it would be fun each night at dinner to always spell the last word of any sentence spoken by any person at the table. (We let that go on for about 5 minutes before putting an end to the madness.)

    Overall, I think this is a good family film. Kids sometimes need the cliches and feel-good trappings to get into a film and get what would otherwise be too-subtle messages. My kids haven't seen Spellbound yet, but I'm not sure they would be quite as inspired by it (even though it is a much better film). They didn't love Mad Hot Ballroom the way I expected because there were too many interviews (i.e.: slow parts). Ah kids. There's no accounting for taste.

    For more on my feelings about Akeelah's ties to Starbucks Entertainment, read my SpoutBlog post.


 

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