Boulder Weekly 6.25.20

Page 18

EVENTS from Page 17

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Satire streams by Michael J. Casey

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lecture may get your point across, but a story illustrates it better. And if you can smuggle in a little humor, it’s a better bet the medicine will go down. Irresistible (reviewed on page 20) got you hankering for more? Here are four to stream right now.

COLD TURKEY

Craving some much needed positive PR, the Valiant Tobacco Company announces a cockamamie scheme: Any American town that can give up smoking for one month will win $25 million, tax-free. Eagle Rock, Iowa — population 4,000 — needs that kind of coin to revamp Main Street and attract a military missile factory that will bring industry and life back to their dying Midwestern town. At least that’s what Rev. Brooks (Dick Van Dyke) hopes happens. Valiant’s PR man (Bob Newhart) sure hopes it doesn’t. Director Norman Lear was a titan of television, but Cold Turkey remains his lone cinematic effort. He made it in 1969, but the movie was shelved for two years because the studio feared it would piss off advertisers. They were right, but so was Lear: His vision of consumers, marketers and politicians all in bed together is as relevant now as it was then. Streaming on Fubu and Watch TCM.

THE DEATH OF STALIN

Multi-hyphenate Armando Iannucci might be the best working satirist today (all seven seasons of Veep are streaming on HBO Max and DirecTV). His take on the transfer of power in the USSR circa 1953 is so loaded with jokes you have to watch it twice to get it all. From backstabbing to assassination, pajamas and concert recordings, it all seems so terribly trivial until it’s all so terribly real. It’s like Mean Girls, only with the fate of millions hanging in the balance. The cast is top-notch, but Jason Isaacs steals the

Catch-22

George Clooney’s 2019 adaptation for Hulu was faithful to Joseph Heller’s novel until it missed the mark. He condemned Yossarian to a Sisyphean hell rather than set him free and off into the world. Clooney’s deviation probably comes from a weariness of the industrial-military complex — placing America forever in that bombardier bubble with a naked and shivering Yossarian. Mike Nichols’ 1970 adaptation of the book hews closer to Heller’s intent, running its motor on humor rather than coasting on resignation. Alan Arkin plays Captain John Yossarian, and Bob Newhart steps into the shoes of Maj. Major Major — it’s a hoot. Streaming on Amazon Prime and Pluto TV.

WALL-E What starts as a charming love story between

two lonely robots à la Chaplin’s City Lights gives way to some serious castigation once humans are involved. The consumer world hasn’t just destroyed the planet; it’s turned individuals into mindless bulbous masses existing only to buy more — pretty sharp stuff for a kid’s movie. Then again, if you want to change the future, you start with the present. And where most tion (Dr. Strangelove, Blazing Saddles, etc.), WALL-E is one of the few that closes on a note of profound hope. And a Peter Gabriel song during the credits doesn’t hurt either. Streaming on Disney+.

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JUNE 25, 2020

Another Black Floyd by Linda Floyd

George, I don’t know how many of us are here who share your Texas line of long chocolate bodies who can dance on and off the court with a smile that warms the heart how many share my Mississippi roots with light skin and blonde curls who prefer their mustards without meat, their tea without sweet because none of these traits matter George as no shared DNA is needed to make you kin, and call you ‘Bro because I, too, am a Floyd and I gasp again and again with a heavy and sad heart when I hear your call for Mama while you begged that man not to silence your voice, your breath, your spirit with his knee George, I am back now where I came from scared and angry and filled up seeing images of our people hanging from a tree dragged by a car beaten with a whip all with tied hands begging for one more breath that didn’t come for they were just like us, George, born black, given the same name I can’t cry anymore and won’t gasp anymore Mama I can’t breathe. Linda Floyd was born in Mississippi 62 years ago, and now lives in Oregon. She shares the family name of George Floyd and wrote this piece in pain shortly after his death.

Calling all creatives! It’s time for BW’s sixth annual short fiction contest. Submit up to five stories of 101 words or fewer to editorial@boulderweekly.com by midnight Sunday, June 28. Winners, honorable mentions and finalists will be published in midJuly. I

BOULDER COUNTY’S INDEPENDENT VOICE