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Garrett Bradley explores ā€˜Timeā€™ in a moving portrait of family and love

Hello! Iā€™m Mark Olsen, and welcome to the newsletter companion to ā€œThe Envelope: The Podcast,ā€ where my cohost, Yvonne Villarreal, and I bring you highlights from each weekā€™s episode.

Well, we jumped the gun. Our podcast episode featuring Mads Mikkelsen and Thomas Vinterberg that was sent out earlier today will not go live until next Wednesday. This weekā€™s podcast makes up for that oversight with an in-depth conversation with filmmaker and artist Garrett Bradley. We apologize for the mix-up!

As things have settled in after last weekā€™s Oscar nominations, itā€™s now possible to get a clearer view of the field. Glenn Whipp took a look at the argument to be made for each of the eight best picture nominees, as well as suggestions for how their respective campaigns move forward.

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The WGA awards were given out on Sunday night. While their usual quirks of eligibility mean ā€œBorat Subsequent Moviefilmā€ winning adapted screenplay over a not-competing ā€œNomadlandā€ may not bring much clarity to the Oscar race, the win for ā€œPromising Young Womanā€ in the original category perhaps does. Bet accordingly?

Glenn joined Justin Chang in looking back to the Oscars of 2001, the year of best picture nominees ā€œGladiator,ā€ ā€œErin Brockovich,ā€ ā€œTraffic,ā€ ā€œCrouching Tiger, Hidden Dragonā€ and ā€œChocolatā€ but also films such as ā€œWonder Boys,ā€ ā€œYi Yi,ā€ ā€œBeau Travail,ā€ ā€œIn the Mood for Love,ā€ ā€œThe Virgin Suicides,ā€ ā€œYou Can Count on Me,ā€ ā€œThe House of Mirth,ā€ ā€œCastAway,ā€ ā€œAlmost Famousā€ and more.

The two of them went through the top categories to give a retrospective look at who won and who should have won, plus a conversation on why they are giving so much attention to an old awards show.

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As Justin wrote of the trio of ā€œGladiator,ā€ ā€œTrafficā€ and ā€œCrouching Tigerā€: ā€œLooking back at those three front-runners all these years later, itā€™s hard not to see them as a kind of Hollywood-at-a-crossroads snapshot, a collective vision of what the industry was already doing well and where it might be headed.ā€

Glenn added, ā€œAny time some curmudgeon laments the academyā€™s efforts to diversify its ranks, complaining that the Oscars are no longer about quality but representation, I simply say, ā€˜ ā€œChocolatā€ was nominated for best picture ā€” in a field of five nominees.ā€™ What these cranks are mourning is that their point of view, their taste, though still dominant, is no longer so overwhelmingly dominant. Sound familiar, Justin?ā€

"Time" director Garrett Bradley is flanked by Fox Rich and her husband, Rob Richardson, at the Sundance Film Festival
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

As I noted, this week on the podcast I talk to Bradley. Besides recently having a solo exhibition of her work at the Museum of Modern Art, Bradley won the documentary directing prize at Sundance in 2020 for ā€œTime,ā€ which also just picked up an Academy Award nomination.

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The movie follows Fox Rich in her 21-year struggle to get her husband released from a Louisiana prison. Bradley weaves together more recent footage with archival home video, much of it shot by Rich herself.

ā€œTimeā€ is a complex and moving exploration of the justice system and its impact on one family, as well as a portrait of Richā€™s development into a dynamic activist.

As Bradley said of the filmā€™s origins, ā€œHaving to go back to the question of again ā€˜What is the intention in wanting to make this film?ā€™ Every project I make starts off with conversations and asking that question with the people Iā€™m making films with. And Fox and the family said, ā€˜Our story is the story of 2.3 million other American families, we feel that our story can offer hope.ā€™ So for me as a filmmaker, I felt my responsibility is to try to distill the abstraction of hope and ask myself, ā€˜What does hope mean and look like for this family?ā€™ ā€

Thanks for reading, listening and subscribing. We have lots more conversations to come, including talks with Kate Mara for ā€œA Teacherā€ and Cynthia Erivo for ā€œGenius: Aretha.ā€

Listen to the podcast here and subscribe to ā€œThe Envelope: The Podcastā€ on Apple Podcasts or your podcast app of choice.

Can't get enough about awards season?

For more, follow us on Twitter at @villarrealy and @IndieFocus, and for a deeper dive into the best new movies, get Markā€™s weekly Indie Focus newsletter.

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