Movie Review: Champions


I have seen a number of coaching basketball movies in the last few years where the coach gets into trouble, loses his job, and then gets drunk. The best one of these is the Ben Affleck film, “The Way Back”, released in March 2020, right before the United States declared the Pandemic a national emergency. The difference between The Way Back and the new movie “Champions” is that this movie is much more of a comedy than a serious drama.

The message here is a good one. A down-and-out coach in the NBA J-league Marcus, played by Woody Harrelson has an argument with the head coach and is fired, then he gets drunk and hits a police car. What follows is 90 days of community service coaching a basketball team comprised of mentally challenged teenagers. Over time Marcus mutates from someone who hates his new job to someone who wants to help a group of kids who need all the help they can get. We have all seen movies like this before, but this one is done well enough to recommend.

I also thought that most of the basketball scenes were well done, including one player who could never shoot the ball unless his back was to the basket and shoots without looking. This running joke I also thought had a funny yet predictable resolution at the end of this movie.

The love interest for Marcus is Alex, played by Kaitlin Olson, who is the mother of one of the mentally challenged teenagers. Her life of poverty and borderline desperation is very well portrayed within this mostly comedic but at times dramatic story. An actress with down-syndrome Madison Tevlin who plays Cosentino, just about steals this entire movie with some of her scenes. She is amazingly high functioning for someone with down syndrome.

The Rotten Tomatoes rating for Champions is a stupidly low 53%, with my rating a solid 75%. This is a good family movie with a good message about what is really important.

Movie Review: 65


The new movie “65” with Adam Driver is a very bad movie with a bad title. Nothing up front is explained, other than he has to leave his daughter for 2 years even though she has some undefined medical problem and heads into space for a mission that is never fully defined. How about why is he going to space, what is his mission, and what are they trying to accomplish?. His spaceship hits an asteroid and then the remaining crew dies in cryosleep. He winds up back on planet earth 65 million years ago right at the time Earth is about to be hit by a huge life-ending asteroid. How exactly did this happen? Did they fly through a black hole or something? Another minor detail never fully explained.

Adam Driver (who took the big payday and ran) plays an astronaut named Mills who runs into a young girl named Koa, played by Ariana Greenblatt and what follows is a series of scenes with various dinosaurs and two human beings running for their lives. Unfortunately- there is not much else here and almost no story. It is always a bad sign when any movie comes out early on Thursday, trying to get some box office, before the critics trash another obvious-bad movie.

I agree with the very low 36% ratings on Rotten Tomatoes and recommend that nobody spends any money to see one of those “cookie-cutter-special-effects and no story waste of 2 hours.

Movie Review: Turn Every Page: The Adventures of Robert Caro and Robert Gottlieb


More than any other movie I have ever seen that is all about or partly about the profession of writing, the new documentary, “Turn Every Page: The Adventures of Robert Caro and Robert Gottlieb”, demonstrates what it takes to be a great writer of history more than any other movie or documentary I have ever seen. From the time it takes to write important parts of history accurately, to the years and years of intense research and then finally the editing.

This documentary is about Robert Caro, who has written two major works of history. Caro’s first book, “The Power Broker”, released in 1975 about Robert Moses, who was the real estate developer who is most responsible for the creation of New York City, including not only many buildings but the many highways that surround the city. Caro’s book won the Pulitzer Prize and is considered one of the greatest nonfiction books ever written. The Power Broker took Caro the better part of a decade to write and like all of Caro’s books required years of intensive research. Caro’s collaborator and editor for over 50 years is Robert Gottlieb, who is considered one of the best and most prolific publishers and editors of all time. The reality of this story and what these two men have gone through, and still go through – now into their late 80s and 90s to create a great literary masterpiece is nothing short of incredible. In fact, Robert Caro’s second great work of American History is about Lyndon Johnson and this historic story is so involved he is still working on the 5th volume, almost 50 years since he started the first book in this 5-volume series.

Caro’s description of the research that he and his wife have done to get accurate information about Lyndon Johnson, including the time and dedication involved, is far beyond anything I have ever seen. This included even moving to Johnson’s childhood town in Texas and living there for 3 years. They even interviewed Johnson’s brother in his childhood home to try to get him to remember the abuse he witnessed of Johnson’s father during his childhood while sitting at the dining room table. There was a film of Caro and his wife and their frequent trips to the Johnson Presidential library to research and obtain accurate information about Johnson and his Presidency. One of the major highlights was when it was revealed that Caro’s research over many years proved conclusively that Lyndon Johnson stole the 1948 Senate election, now known as the ”Box 13 Scandal” – an amazing revelation made during this great documentary.

Caro’s writing rituals are equally amazing as he demonstrates that he still uses a low-level and cheap-looking typewriter to create each page of all his novels. At the end of the day, he places the carbon copies on a drawer at the top of his refrigerator, a fact I found as insane as how Woody Allen writes his many screenplays.

The Rotten Tomatoes ratings for this film are an extremely high 96%, with my rating 100% and my highest recommendation for this outstanding documentary about two great men in the literary field.

Robert Caro Books:

The Path to Power: The Years of Lyndon Johnson:

The Passage of Power: The Years of Lyndon Johnson, Book 4:

Means of Ascent: The Years of Lyndon Johnson:

The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York