
7 minute read
Arts & Culture
from PW 07.30.20
INSPIRING NEW DOCUMENTARY TRACKS FIVE ACLU LAWYERS FIGHTING LANDMARK CASES
BY BLISS BOWEN
Dale Ho from “The Fight,” a Magnolia Pictures release.
he title sequence for the Sundance Jury Prize-winning documentary “The Fight,”
Twhich follows five ACLU lawyers as they pursue four landmark cases, includes a tally of all the lawsuits, 147 and rising, filed by the ACLU against the Trump administration. According to Silver Lake resident Eli B. Despres, who co-directed the film with Elyse Steinberg and Josh Kriegman (the trio behind “Weiner”), the original cut just listed a number but it changed so often during filming that they eventually “decided to just have the ticker sound continue to run as that number slides offscreen.”
That ramps up the dramatic tension of a film about cases whose ramifications for American citizens could scarcely be more urgent. Lawyers Brigitte Amiri, Joshua Block, Lee Gelernt, Dale Ho and Chase Strangio defend constitutional rights relating to abortion, immigration, voting, and transgender protections — abstract constructs given human form in indelible images: immigrant children in cages, a keening mother rocking her rediscovered daughter in a stairwell, airport crowds protesting the Trump administration’s Muslim ban, a 17-year-old Jane Doe facing away from the camera at an Office of Refugee Resettlement shelter while explaining her fight for an abortion.
Amiri, Block, Gelernt, Ho and Strangio come across as beacons of hope and, not incidentally, brilliant advertisements for the value of competence. Viewer response may be determined by pre-existing attitudes toward the ACLU, but if nothing else the film’s insights should provoke serious discussion of the ACLU’s mission at this critical historical juncture. As Ho says, in what could be the film’s thesis statement: “If I’m not going to be a civil rights lawyer right now, in this moment, when?”
The ACLU’s ardent defense of free speech and civil rights can be a lightning rod for controversy, and a striking sequence shows Amiri, Block, Gelernt, Ho and Strangio reading aloud from their hate mail and listening to vituperative voicemail messages. Some laugh, but the laughs hurt. Ho pins a hateful postcard to the wall over his desk like a strangely humbling talisman. Another, crucial passage covers the tricky intersection of hate speech with free speech in a democracy (a meaty subject worthy of another, separate documentary) and the ACLU’s defense of the Unite the Right rally’s right to take place in Charlottesville in 2017. Staff lawyers voice their staunch opposition to a case that clearly still rankles.
“There is strong disagreement within that organization about how to prioritize the fight for free speech for people with views that everyone there finds abhorrent,” De- spres noted. “You see it in the [scenes about] the fascists in Charlottesville. It’s complicated, and there’s a lot of internal debate at the ACLU. I think it makes the story a lot more interesting and frankly makes me feel a lot more excited about the organization that they’re capable of that self-examination and internal dissent, and that they can process that.”
In another scene, Josh Block, who identifies himself as a cisgender male, and Chase Strangio, who is transgender, talk about how to balance the need for lawyers possessing substantial courtroom experience with the need for lawyers who actually belong to the communities they’re representing. It’s a brief but meaningful exchange poking into a little-explored aspect of the ACLU’s work.
“I think that it really drives home the complicated factors in these issues of representation,” Despres said. “I was in a Q&A with Josh Block where he was talking about [how] he doesn’t get the hate mail that Chase does. And it’s why representation is important — there’s something really critical in having voices from the communities tell their own stories. It’s something we’re wrestling with in the filmmaking community too. It’s changing quickly and it’s good that it’s changing quickly. I’m proud of that scene, and I’m grateful to them for being that vulnerable in that moment while our cameras were rolling.”
Little is shown of the ACLU’s behind-the-scenes support staff, but in humanizing scenes we do see the lawyers talking strategy in their offices, making dinner with their families at home, and hitting the road for clients. Amiri blinks back exhaustion at her laptop while preparing case notes; she and her assistant are later shown celebrating with “train wine” after winning their case. Ho laughs at himself in the bathroom mirror while practicing — and flubbing — his opening statement the night before arguing his first case before the Supreme Court (Department of Commerce v. New York). Gelernt’s befuddled inability to keep his cellphone charged provides comic relief, but the look on his face as he says he thinks about his own kids while defending immigrant children taken from their parents is crushing.
“Lee has children and he’s living and dying by what’s happening to his clients. You can see when he finds out he’s lost the Muslim case while he’s live on air at MSNBC and he gets gutpunched, this is not just a job to this man,” Despres observed. “They all suffer from a surfeit of empathy, and they’re heroic in what they’re willing to do.”
“The Fight” will be available to view via Laemmle’s Virtual Cinema and other on-demand platforms beginning July 31. For more details about the film, visit fightthefilm.com.” n




JERRY O’CONNELL VISUALIZED A ‘SECRET’ ROLE, AND LANDED IT BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI
Actor Jerry O’Connell was on a set of a TV show and frequently complaining about his life, when a coworker gave him a copy of the book “T he Secret.”
He is.
“The Secret: Dare to Dream” hit premium video on demand outlets on July 31. The film was originally slated for an April 17 theatrical release by Roadside Attractions, but the COVID-19 pandemic changed that.
T h e movie tells the story of Miranda Wells (Katie Holmes), a hard-working young widow struggling to raise three children, when she encounters Bray Johnson (Josh Lucas). He’s carrying—literally—a secret that could change Miranda’s life. Meanwhile, she’s involved with her coworker, Tucker, played by O’Connell.
Written by Rhonda Byrne, “The Secret” was one of 2006’s best-selling self-help books, based on an earlier film of the same name. It is based on the belief of the law of attraction, which claims that thoughts can change a person’s life directly. It sold 30 million copies worldwide and has been trans lated into 50 languages.
“T he book has such a fanbase,” O’Connell said. “It has changed so many people’s lives. I’m interested to see what ardent followers of the rules of attraction will think about the scripted version of their beloved book.
“It’s an international phenomenon, ‘The Secret.’ This is a dramatic version of that. I think the most challenging part is making sure the secret, this is the dramatic version of that. I think the most challenging part is making sure—I wouldn’t call it the fans—the followers of ‘The Secret’ are happy with what we did.”
The movie was directed by Andy Tennant, with whom Lucas fans would be familiar because he helmed “Sweet Home Alabama” as well.
O’Connell is keeping busy these days. Amazon’s IMDB TV is carrying his show “Carter,” which is about an actor who played a cop on television and has a problem determining the difference between reality and fiction.
He also voices Cmdr. Jack Ransom on CBS All Access’ “Star Trek: Lower Decks,” which premieres on August 10. He describes the 10-episode run as a comedic version of “Star Trek.”
During the pandemic, O’Connell says he’s using his “laws of attraction” talents and visualization techniques to get his kids back in school. (He’s kid ding.)
He ’s hoping that fans and followers of “The Secret” have as much fun with the movie as he did.
“It was a fun set,” O’Connell saids. “Katie Holmes is such a doll She’s so much fun to work with.
“And man, I wasn’t playing his love interest, but that Josh Lucas is so dreamy. I had scenes with him—not to judge him—but I do get lost in his Paul Newman-esque blue eyes.” n