On Sunday night, CNN is premiering a documentary series called Live Aid: When Rock ‘n’ Roll Took on the World. It's a look back 40 years at the huge summer concerts of 1985 that were held to raise money for famine relief, particularly in Ethiopia. While there's a lot of nostalgia here for people who remember that summer and those shows (how did Madonna dance in that heavy jacket when it was so hot?), the series is at its best wrestling with the limitations and even the arrogance of the initial project. Musician and activist Bob Geldof, who kicked the whole thing off with the Band Aid record "Do They Know It's Christmas?", talks extensively about what he thinks he did right and wrong — and you may agree with him, or not.
The documentary Jaws @ 50 is now streaming on Disney+. It's certainly not the first look back at what many believe to be the original summer blockbuster, but there's something to be said for checking in periodically as the implications of a piece of film history gain new resonances. For one thing, Steven Spielberg talks about the traumatizing experience of shooting the film practically, as a film crew with boats (rather than a specialized marine filming operation). And while everyone agrees that part of what made the film so scary and effective is that it was made up of real, physical interactions between people and objects and the environment, Spielberg might have had fewer nightmares (literally) in later years if it were made now, with much more technological magic. It's all trade-offs, right?
The Roku Channel (where you can watch things for free with ads) has a new short documentary called Going, Going, Gone: The Magic Of The Home Run. Now, this thing was produced in cooperation with Major League Baseball, so you are going to get 100% "rah rah baseball" content, and you should be prepared for that. But it's also hosted by the very affable baseball fan (and terrific comedian) Roy Wood Jr., with appearances from equally affable players including Freddie Freeman and Mookie Betts. So even though it's not exactly hard-hitting journalism, if you like great archival baseball film, there may be something there for you. |