Apple Movie Review: Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie


In the entire history of Television Situation Comedy, there are three all-time greats when it comes to timing and comedic rhythm. Bea Arthur, Betty White, and Michael J. Fox. There are other standouts, but for this extremely rare talent, these 3 comic greats are the best, in my opinion.

The story of Micheal J Fox started when he was just 17 years old in 1978 and just dropped out of high school, when his father drove him from Alberta Canada to Hollywood, to take a remote shot at somehow breaking into show business. Fox lived in the worst slum in Los Angeles in a horrible tiny apartment, where he barely had any bathroom and one sink as his kitchen. From some very low-paying bit parts in several television shows and small movies, Fox was barely able to pay the rent or have any money for about 3 years. Some of the questions that most people normally ask in a dire situation like this, is how long can anyone live in horrible conditions like this before you give up the dream? How many are in the same situation for too many years and never get their lucky break? Is it worth it for anyone to go through something like this for so long, hoping for a 1-in-a-million miracle to happen? Even if you knew going in you would break through somehow, how many of us would be willing to suffer in squalor and extreme poverty for so long? Just because Micheal J. Fox was both extraordinarily fortunate and talented, still does not make his huge success as a movie and television actor an expected result. Deserving something in life is only half the battle.

After 3 years of, according to Fox, “having absolutely zero money” and living in a horrible apartment within a slum where he had to sell his furniture just to survive, an incredible miracle happened. In 1982 when Fox auditioned for the part of Alex P. Keaton for the new sitcom “Family Ties”. Despite the fact that Fox was perfect for this role and the producer of this sitcom, the late Gary David Goldberg wanted him for this part, the head of NBC, Brandon Tartikoff rejected Fox. Despite all of this, Fox prevailed and started a career in television comedy and eventually movies, including the “Back to the Future” franchise that at the time in 1985 (when Fox was only 24) was the highest level of Hollywood success ever seen. Fox received a total of 5 Emmy awards, 3 for Family Ties, and was one of the rare actors in Hollywood who had major success both in movies and television. From the millions who have appreciated Michael J. Fox’s career and his talent as a comedic actor, we can only imagine what it must feel like to be so far down in life and then reach such huge fame and wealth so quickly.

In 1985, after the producers of Back to the Future wanted to replace the lead actor Eric Stolz with Fox, it was decided that Fox would star in both Family Ties and Back to the Future at the same time. This was a risky decision and resulted in Fox getting about 3 hours of sleep a day, for almost 4 months as he worked on Family Ties during the day and then Back to the Future at night. Fox not only pulled off this amazing feat of working almost 24 hours a day, but Back to the Future was a huge #1 hit in 1985 with Family Ties one of the highest-rated shows on Television. After almost 4 months of getting almost no sleep, we will never know if this caused health damage to Fox, eventually being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 1991. Fox’s good fortune also includes finding his wife of 35 years during several episodes of Family Ties, actress Tracy Pollan and having 4 children with her, all of whom appear in his outstanding documentary.

In recent years Fox’s Parkinson’s has become much worse, aging him far beyond 62 and his constant shakes are both far more prevalent and hard to witness in his rare television appearances and in this new documentary. Parkinson’s is one of the most debilitating and hard-to-live-with brain diseases, with the body constantly shaking as the neurological connections with the brain break down. There is no cure for Parkinson’s and it is eventually fatal, taking the life of Muhammad Ali in 2016.

The only good part about Micheal J. Fox’s lifelong struggle with Parkinson’s is entirely about how much good he has done with the charitable organization he has founded to fight the disease, so far raising over 2 billion dollars. Christopher Reeve did the same with his spinal research organization and Olivia Newton-John with her Australian Cancer Research facility. There is no greater understanding of the irony and mystery of life when someone can be so incredibly fortunate, and then they are hit with a horrible disease like Parkinson’s.

The Rotten Tomatoes rating for this great documentary is 99% with my rating of 100% and my highest recommendation.

Hulu Series Review: The Bear Season 2


The new second season of “The Bear” is about the only example where I have seen a television series so respected that several known actors wanted to be in the second season. This list includes Robert Townsend, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Mulaney, Will Poulter, Oliver Platt, Olivia Colman, Gillian Jacobs, and Bob Odenkirk.

The second season is much different than the first as the cast tries to build the new restaurant from finding 300 thousand dollars in a wall inside the first restaurant and help from the families Uncle Jimmy, played by Oliver Platt. The grand total to start the new restaurant is 800 thousand dollars, which was barely enough to gut and build the new building, which included nothing but plumbing, electricity, and even mold problems. As always with this outstanding series, seeing what people go through with their jobs in the restaurant industry with conflict and problem after problem – makes you wonder how any restaurant can become successful, considering the many pitfalls and huge costs.

All the original cast members are back from the second season, including Jeremy Allen White as the star of this series Carmen ‘Carmy’ Berzatto, who is equally outstanding in this second series. As with the first season the nonstop problems, conflicts, and huge arguments are always there, this time – especially in the 6th episode about a Thanksgiving dinner with the entire family, including Jamie Lee Curtis as Donna Berzato, Carmen’s mother. The argument involving Carmen’s brother Micheal played again by Jon Bernthal and his uncle Lee played by Bob Odenkirk and Micheal throwing a fork at him 3 times, is one of the high tension angry high points of this entire series. This argument and so many others during this Thanksgiving episode culminate with Donna driving her car through the front of the house. Happy Thanksgiving.

The different direction this first season goes is about using the budget allocated to build the new restaurant to also train the employees in high-level food preparation skills in some of the best restaurants. The best part of this involves Richard Jerimovich, Micheal Berzato’s best friend who after experiencing a few days as an employee of a top restaurant, owned by Chef Terry, played by Olivia Coleman, transitions from a very angry attacking impossible person to work with into someone who wears a suit and is a far better person entirely due to his experience in working with the people of this top restaurant for only a few days. One of the best lines during this episode is when one of the managers of this restaurant says to Richard, “Every day here is treated like it’s the Super Bowl”.

Another standout in this series is actress Abby Elliot, who plays Carmen’s sister Natalie and has come from being a cast member of Saturday Night Live over 10 years ago, to a breakout actor in this Hulu series. She should receive an Emmy Award nomination for her performance in this series.

In this new season, Carmen reunites with an old girlfriend Claire, played by Molly Gordon. This relationship also has its share of problems and conflicts due to Carmen’s nonstop working life and the stress he is under trying to kick off a new restaurant in the city of Chicago.

The second season does have fewer scenes of food preparation than the first season, but there are so many other great things about this new season that more than compensate for less showing of food preparation.

Actress Ayo Edebiri once again returns as chef Sydney Adamu, and is once again great in her role. Her best scene is with the simple preparation of an omelet she makes for Natalie, showing the expertise it takes to make something that should be simple into something that is worthy of a top restaurant.

This series did win a Golden Globe and has been nominated for many awards, and should be a shoo-in for best drama series Emmy. This great series should run for at least 5 years, it is that good.

The Rotten Tomatoes rating for both season 1 and season 2 of The Bear are a perfect 100% and I agree with this opinion and give this series my highest recommendation.

Movie Review: No Hard Feelings


Jennifer Lawrence won 3 Golden Globe awards and one Oscar for best actress in “Silver Linings Playbook” in 2013. Lawrence is one of the very few actors who have won several major acting awards at a very young age. Jennifer’s last two high-quality acting roles were “Joy” in 2015 and “American Hustle” in 2013. Unfortunately getting the next high-quality movie role requires a great script, written by a great screenwriter – a few-and-far-between miracle that does not come around that often.

As far as deciding to take the role of a bad comedy called “No Hard Feelings”, it is very hard to believe that Lawrence could have read this script, and then decided to actually act in this movie. This film is at best below average, in terms of both the story and any appearance of something that is actually funny. The acid test for any comedy – nobody laughed in the theater I was in.

Once again, Lawrence felt the need to stay relevant, more than her desire to only act in high-quality productions. We can only hope that Jennifer will not be going the Robert De Niro route of making a string of bad comedies, that are well below her standards.

The story of No Hard Feelings is about the parents of a young college-bound boy, Alison and Laird Becker, played by Laura Benanti and Matthew Broderick and Andrew Barth Feldman, who plays their son Percy. Alison and Laird are concerned about Percy’s shy introverted personality before he goes off to college, so they hire Maddie, played by Jennifer Lawrence as a kind of sex surrogate for their son, which creates incidents of attempted comedy that mostly do no work throughout this story. If Maddie can pull off significantly changing their son, then she will get their used car. It is hard to believe that this idea was greenlighted as a mainstream movie. The most insane thing about this movie is Lawrence agreeing to do a nude-fight scene on a beach at night while 3 teenagers are trying to steal her clothes. What was she thinking there?

The Rotten Tomatoes rating for this film is a correctly low 67%, with my rating at 50% for a solid miss this movie opinion.