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    Movie Review

    Detroit is a frustrating — yet powerful — moviegoing experience

    Alex Bentley
    Jul 27, 2017 | 3:15 pm
    Detroit is a frustrating — yet powerful — moviegoing experience

    Watching the new movie Detroit prompts several feelings. Frustration. Incomprehension. Anger. Fear. Sadness. What never comes is any sense of relief, but that's as it should be, since the people involved in the film’s real-life events never got any, even after that one particular night was far behind them.

    The film mostly centers on events that transpired at the Algiers Motel in Detroit on July 25 and 26, 1967. At that point, riots stemming from a racial incident had been happening across the city for several days. The ongoing violence had kept tensions high for both the African American populace and law enforcement, which had grown to include not just city police but also the state police and National Guard.

    When gunshots were heard from the vicinity of the Algiers, the motel’s annex was raided by police, with multiple people getting lined up for questioning. Over the course of the evening, every occupant in the lineup had been beaten by the police to some degree, with three of them ending up dead.

    Director Kathryn Bigelow and writer Mark Boal, reteaming for the third time after The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty, have created a story that is powerful in its execution, if not its focus. They painstakingly show a series of events that led up to the night at the Algiers, indicating how the decisions made by multiple people can, inadvertently or purposefully, lead to tragedy.

    While it’s the actions of the police, especially one particular patrolman (Will Poulter), who are to blame for the violence at the motel, Bigelow and Boal place import on the inaction of a variety of people for the continuation or escalation of the events. The complicated part of human nature will likely lead to audiences wanting to scream at the injustice of what they are watching, and how it might have been stopped if the right person had spoken up at the right time.

    The cast has a handful of known actors (Poulter, John Boyega, John Krasinski, Anthony Mackie), but the vast majority of the performers have yet to become stars. This is a smart play by the filmmakers, as it allows the emotions of the film to be played out with few preconceived notions by the audience. The one big exception to that is Poulter, whose distinctive face has already led to him playing multiple bad guys at the young age of 24.

    There is much to laud about Detroit, with its deft handling of tricky subject matter and the performances of much of the cast. But the film loses focus toward the end, with Bigelow and Boal deciding they have to include every little part of the story. If they had pulled back a bit, they might have ended up with a masterpiece.

    -----

    Detroit is now playing at AMC NorthPark; it will open wide on Friday, August 4.

    Anthony Mackie in Detroit.

    Anthony Mackie in Detroit
      
    Photo courtesy of Annapurna Pictures
    Anthony Mackie in Detroit.
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    Movie Review

    Steven Soderbergh film Presence is not your typical ghost story

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 23, 2025 | 4:27 pm
    Callina Liang in Presence
    Photo courtesy of Neon
    Callina Liang in Presence.

    There are few directors more adept at moving between genres than Steven Soderbergh. Throughout his career, he has made dramas and comedies, heist films and thrillers, films with serious topics like drug trafficking and films with frivolous subjects like male dancers. He’s also dipped his toe into horror on occasion, something he does again with Presence.

    However, typical of the hard-to-pin-down filmmaker, this film is not your typical ghost story, as its plot is told from the perspective of the presence itself. With the camera as its “eyes,” the audience sees a family of four move into an older-but-updated home: Mother Rebekah (Lucy Liu), father Chris (Chris Sullivan), son Tyler (Eddy Maday), and daughter Chloe (Callina Liang). The family dynamics are established early, as Rebekah favors Tyler and pins her hopes and dreams on him, while Chris has a strained relationship with Rebekah and tries to protect Chloe from stress, who has recently gone through a trauma.

    The family’s various issues keep the atmosphere tense, and for the most part the presence is merely an observer to their conversations and activities. But Chloe can sense it whenever it’s close to her, and this connection leads it to sometimes announce itself via physical interactions with objects in different rooms. As the other family members gradually become aware of it as well, the story’s supernatural aura starts to increase.

    Working from a screenplay by David Koepp, Soderbergh does a kind of switcheroo on audience expectations. In your typical haunted house story, the mystery of the ghost(s) is what drives the plot and keeps things scary. But since the audience, in essence, is the ghost, we know everything it is doing at all times. Instead, the suspense comes from the family itself, who have backstories that make the whole clan dysfunctional, at best.

    Story elements are brought in through different ways than your typical film, with little hints being dropped along the way about various things that have happened in the family’s recent past. Why Tyler seems to be angry with Chloe all the time, or why Rebekah and Chris never seem to be on the same page with anything the family is dealing with are equally as interesting as anything the presence is doing.

    The first-person perspective (used in a much different way than in the recent - and now Oscar-nominated - Nickel Boys) gives an intimacy to the film that is sometimes invasive, sometimes disorienting, but always engrossing. Soderbergh, who acted as the cameraman himself, takes the camera to almost every nook and cranny of the house, often getting so close to the actors that it’s uncomfortable. The constant, silent movement of the presence/camera makes for great viewing, lending the audience a knowledge they rarely have.

    Liu is given a meatier part than she’s had in recent years, and she plays the complicated role for all it’s worth. Sullivan, best known for his role on the NBC TV drama This is Us, is equally good, with a demeanor that’s slightly at odds with his stature, but in a good way. Both Liang and Maday have light resumes (this is Maday’s first credit of any kind), but their performances are what make the film as effective as it is. With the presence more interested in her character than anyone else, Liang is asked to do a lot, and she is especially memorable.

    While more of a family drama than a true horror film, the paranormal aspect of Presence gives enough of a spooky vibe for it to qualify. The highly successful film demonstrates that, 36 years after his breakthrough, Soderbergh remains one of the more fascinating directors out there, willing to try different projects instead of doing the same thing over and over again.

    ---

    Presence opens in theaters on January 24.

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