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    Movie Review

    Daughter honors father by killing him repeatedly in Dick Johnson is Dead

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 1, 2020 | 3:59 pm
    Daughter honors father by killing him repeatedly in Dick Johnson is Dead
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    There have been many fictional and documentary films made about patients with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, but you can count on one hand the number of them that make you laugh. To that tiny list you can now add Dick Johnson is Dead, a documentary that is a loving ode by a filmmaker to her ailing dad.

    Dick Johnson is a psychiatrist in Seattle who’s retiring due to increasing memory issues. His daughter, cinematographer/director Kirsten Johnson, has come to move him to New York to live with her so he can have better care. However, being the creative type, Kirsten refuses to just watch her dad deteriorate.

    Instead, she comes up with a series of macabre-but-funny situations showing Dick dying that she will film for posterity. Dick, being the affable and agreeable type, goes along with the ideas, which often include stunt men standing in for him as he, among other things, gets hit by falling air conditioner, trips down the stairs, or has his jugular punctured by a clumsy construction worker.

    The scenes are all in good fun and are clearly a way for Dick and Kirsten to connect in his waning years. Kirsten also comes up with some truly beautiful tableaus, including a wake for Dick while he’s still alive featuring his family and friends, and a fanciful sequence with dancers wearing oversized faces of Dick and his late wife, Katie Jo.

    All the while, we’re treated to the obviously loving relationship that Dick and Kirsten have. While Kirsten doesn’t shy away from the reality of what Dick is going through, neither does she wallow in the sadness of it. The various death scenes and the film as a whole are meant to be a celebration of the kind of man Dick is, and that purpose comes through in every frame.

    The film is not polished in the slightest, as Kirsten keeps in moments where the camera is out of focus or even pointed at odd angles. But the whole point is for the audience to see and hear the truth of Dick’s condition and their relationship, and those honest moments are what make the film what it is.

    Every good parent deserves to be celebrated the way that Kirsten honors her dad in Dick Johnson is Dead. His condition may be sad, but the film gives many more opportunities to smile and appreciate him than it does making you cry.

    ---

    Dick Johnson is Dead will stream exclusively on Netflix starting October 2.

    Dick Johnson and Kirsten Johnson in Dick Johnson is Dead .

    Dick Johnson and Kirsten Johnson in Dick Johnson is Dead
      
    Photo courtesy of Netflix
    Dick Johnson and Kirsten Johnson in Dick Johnson is Dead .
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    Movie Review

    Military vet gives war film My Dead Friend Zoe warmth and integrity

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 27, 2025 | 4:05 pm
    Natalie Morale and Sonequa Martin-Green in My Dead Friend Zoe
    Photo courtesy of Briarcliff Entertainment
    Natalie Morale and Sonequa Martin-Green in My Dead Friend Zoe.

    When you think about the “war is hell” genre, it’s easy to picture movies that actually depict combat. There have been fewer movies made about what happens after someone returns from war, although they include films like 1947 Best Picture winner The Best Years of Our Lives, the Oscar-winning The Deer Hunter and Born on the Fourth of July, and more recent films like Thank You for Your Service.

    My Dead Friend Zoe does double duty in its storytelling, taking on PTSD in the modern soldier and framing it through the eyes of women, who rarely get showcased in movies about the military. Merit (Sonequa Martin-Green) and Zoe (Natalie Morales) served together in the Army in Afghanistan in 2016, becoming fast friends not least because of the high male-to-female ratio there.

    The bulk of the film takes place sometime after their stint together, with Merit in group therapy with fellow veterans under the guidance of Dr. Cole (Morgan Freeman). Zoe accompanies her everywhere she goes, but - as the title tells you - Zoe is dead, appearing as a hallucination for Merit and alternately helping and torturing her with comments about what Merit is doing with her life. To add even more stress onto Merit, she’s enlisted by her mother, Kris, (Gloria Reuben) to look after her grandfather, Dale (Ed Harris), who’s been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease.

    Directed by Kyle Hausmann-Stokes (an Army veteran himself), and adapted by Hausmann-Stokes and A.J. Bermudez from Hausmann-Stokes’ short film, Merit x Zoe, the film is a strong combination of a story about friendship, family, and the difficulty of reintegrating into a “normal” life after being in a war. Merit’s ability to “see” Zoe is a double-edged sword, as it allows her some measure of happiness in her otherwise depressed state, but it also is indicative of a deep well of pain that she’s not ready to confront.

    To underscore Merit’s mental state, Hausmann-Stokes goes back and forth between scenes depicting Merit and Zoe’s time serving together and the current day. The juxtaposition of the two time periods allows the audience to understand the two women’s friendship better, as well as why Merit continues to find it tough to adjust to life outside of the military. The bond between her and Dale, who also served in the Army, brings an added element of gravity to her story.

    The only slight misstep Hausmann-Stokes makes is by introducing Alex (Utkarsh Ambudkar), a possible romantic interest for Merit. On their own, the scenes between the two of them are relatively charming and it’s easy to understand the temptation to add some levity to the heavy plot. But the subplot never brings anything of substance to the overall film, and it could have easily been excised without affecting the story as a whole.

    Martin-Green is an industry veteran best known for starring in the TV shows The Walking Dead and Star Trek: Discovery. She ably holds her own as the star of the film, cycling through Merit’s highs and lows with ease. Morales is allowed to be more fast and loose with her performance, and she proves to be a great complement to Martin-Green. The steady hands of Freeman, Harris, and Reuben help to keep the story grounded and provide the familiarity that the two stars might not have for all moviegoers.

    My Dead Friend Zoe is a message movie whose message changes as the film goes along. Made by a former member of the military in dedication to people with which he served, it’s an impressive debut feature film for Hausmann-Stokes that brings a desire to see more from him, as well as the two main actors.

    ---

    My Dead Friend Zoe opens in theaters on February 28.

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