Published July 8, 2021, 1:18 PM
The two films reviewed today are quality films you should make the effort to watch. One is a music documentary that chronicles the ‘Black Woodstock’ of 1969; while the second is the latest from Steve Soderbergh, a noir film set in the 1950’s.
Summer of Soul (Hulu) – Part concert film, and part Black History lesson, this multi-awarded Sundance documentary gets its opportunity to be widely watched on the popular streaming platform Hulu. And yes, for anyone with a love for Music, this will be an enjoyable, vicarious eye-opener. And if you get sucked in into the history lesson, count yourself blessed, as it will help you understand and appreciate the struggle the Black man and woman has had to endure in the USA. The mere fact that this documentary even exists only today is an abject lesson in Black reality. The concert being recorded is the Harlem Cultural Festival of 1969, the same year Woodstock happened. But the footage was left ignored an
Review: Steven Soderbergh s No Sudden Move is a noir in which everyone wants their cut
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Steve Soderbergh, un cineasta sobreviviente de la pandemia
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Tribeca arranca su vigésima edición con esperado estreno de In The Heights
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