Garrett Bradley explores āTimeā in a moving portrait of family and love
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Hello! Iām Mark Olsen, and welcome to the newsletter companion to āThe Envelope: The Podcast,ā where my cohost, Yvonne Villarreal, and I bring you highlights from each weekās 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 weekās 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 weekās Oscar nominations, itās 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.
From the Oscars to the Emmys.
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The WGA awards were given out on Sunday night. While their usual quirks of eligibility mean āBorat Subsequent Moviefilmā winning adapted screenplay over a not-competing āNomadlandā may not bring much clarity to the Oscar race, the win for āPromising 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 āGladiator,ā āErin Brockovich,ā āTraffic,ā āCrouching Tiger, Hidden Dragonā and āChocolatā but also films such as āWonder Boys,ā āYi Yi,ā āBeau Travail,ā āIn the Mood for Love,ā āThe Virgin Suicides,ā āYou Can Count on Me,ā āThe House of Mirth,ā āCastAway,ā āAlmost 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.
As Justin wrote of the trio of āGladiator,ā āTrafficā and āCrouching Tigerā: āLooking back at those three front-runners all these years later, itās 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, āAny time some curmudgeon laments the academyās efforts to diversify its ranks, complaining that the Oscars are no longer about quality but representation, I simply say, ā āChocolatā 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
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 āTime,ā which also just picked up an Academy Award nomination.
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.
āTimeā is a complex and moving exploration of the justice system and its impact on one family, as well as a portrait of Richās development into a dynamic activist.
As Bradley said of the filmās origins, āHaving to go back to the question of again āWhat 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 Iām making films with. And Fox and the family said, āOur 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, āWhat 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 āA Teacherā and Cynthia Erivo for āGenius: Aretha.ā
Listen to the podcast here and subscribe to āThe Envelope: The Podcastā on Apple Podcasts or your podcast app of choice.
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