Saturday, December 3, 2016

Three documentaries, two books, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them

Now for a break from your regular Lord of Three Realms programming...a smattering of reviews of some recent brain food.

Three Documentaries


Staying Woke 101: watch a documentary and find discourse

Before the Flood - highly recommend

Leonardo DiCaprio's documentary about climate change is a sincere and ethos-laden warning siren about climate change. While Before the Flood does not cover much new ground, it brings the discussion of climate change once again to the mainstream, complete with interviews with heads of state, diplomats, scientists, and laypeople who recognize the dire consequences of the anthropocene. Indeed, it updates the narrative and turns the lens towards many aspects of the global ecological crisis, not just rising temperatures and sea levels, melting ice caps, or the ozone hole. This is a somber and comprehensive documentary with footage from Leo's UN appearance and the Paris Conference. Leo begins with a comparison to Hieronymous Bosch's The Garden of Earthly Delights and delivers through it a bleak message: capitalism and overconsumption will lay waste to the planet, and we must mobilize as a society to confront these systemic evils.

The True Cost - recommend

This one's been out for awhile and I feel that a lot of folks have heard of it. Fast fashion is one arm of global capitalism that has had tremendous ecological, economic, and mortal consequences. The Rana Plaza collapse, King Cotton abroad, pollution and emissions, and the ethical murkiness of sweat shop labor are all covered. I don't have much psychology or sociology book learning so some of the consumer behavior stuff was new to me, but I suppose this film will prompt many people to seriously consider their own consumption and relationship with objects. The documentary got the message out, but at times it does seem naively optimistic. I preferred Before the Flood much more.

Escape Fire - recommend


We watched this documentary for our public health class and it essentially lays out the status of health care in the United States today, and how unsustainable and costly it is. A few key points are how lack of primary care, exploitative private insurers and pharmaceutical executives, and the fee for service model is contributing to high-cost, poor-outcome care. I liked this film, though the narratives were fairly scattered and generally glossed over many structural flaws in American society that directly influence health care, but are not immediately obvious. I highly recommend this documentary as an introduction to medicine in the USA, with the caveat that there is much, much more to read and see.

Two books



All Souls - recommend; highly recommend for Bostonians and those interested in urban health, poverty and crime, and community activism

Before medical school, my knowledge of Southie predominantly came from Good Will Hunting, The Depahted, that one Anthony Bourdain episode, and Black Mass; I knew of Whitey and Billy Bulger, the desegregation riots, the Irish Mafia, etc. All Souls is one man's personal tragedy, and the community's long tragedy, that resulted from poverty and crime Bulger's drug trade. It is a story of the people of South Boston and their identity, and how it loved and feared, protected and was harmed by organized crime. All Souls is deeply moving memoir of growing up poor in South Boston, tragic and difficult to read, but an important perspective. One of the first patients I interviewed was an old lady who lived her entire life in Southie who, thinking back now, had been referencing some of the messages All Souls was trying to convey. South Boston has changed now, but All Souls was still an important read, especially for a newcomer who must learn a thing or two about Boston.

Also, our hospital features a few times in this book; if violent crime happens in Boston, chances are it will come through this trauma bay.

Hot Lights, Cold Steel - highly recommend

This is probably one of my favorite memoirs of all time. Dr. Collins write with great humor and thoughtfulness about his four years as an orthopedic surgery resident at the Mayo Clinic. From an impostor syndrome-afflicted intern to an admirable chief resident, Dr. Collins shows the highs and lows of surgery, the work ethic and discipline demanded of a resident at the Mayo at a time before the 80-hr/week cap. The graphic descriptions of surgeries are intense, gory, and left this wannabe future orthopod starry-eyed. Some cases are tremendously sad, and generally, I felt exhausted and overwhelmed reading about his life...orthopedic surgery resident, rural ER moonlighter, and father to one, then two, three, four, and more children during residency. I read this book in two sittings and didn't want it to end.

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them - recommend, but watch Moana or Arrival in theaters instead



This movie was a pretty indulgent visual feast with a perplexing lack of direction. I loved this movie, am confused by the direction of the Harry Potter franchise, and will probably throw money at the wizarding world for the sake of nostalgia. Eddie Redmayne plays a charmingly eccentric Newt Scamander, who I hope will star in the next movies instead of Johnny Depp. It was a fun romp through the wizarding world and roaring 20s New York, but had a loose plot with flat characters and poor sense of mood. However, I liked it quite a bit and will probably not watch the next one in theaters.

10 comments:

  1. Both the books sound really interesting. I do need to read more non-fiction.

    I enjoyed Fantastic Beasts as well, it was fun but I agree that the plot was all over the place. I was definitely annoyed by the appearance of Johnny Depp.

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    1. Favorite part of the movie: the Thunderbird by a wide margin. Least favorite part of the movie: Johnny Depp by a wide margin.

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  2. I was just watching Fantastic Beasts in theaters yesterday! I felt largely the same way - the plot was really all over the place and the story just wasn't working for me. Nonetheless, I did enjoy it (I pretty much only watch big-budget sci-fi/fantasy and comic book and/or other big-franchise type movies in theaters) and still had fun. I don't know how they're going to have a five-movie series.

    The books you wrote about also sound good! I haven't been reading as much, with too much reading and writing at work, I generally get too mentally tired to read for fun by the time I get on the train home.

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    1. As a visual spectacle, it was wonderful. Thunderbird, Obscurus, the MACUSA architecture, costuming, etc were all incredibly indulgent. Seeing it in theaters made that aspect of it so much more of an experience, which I guess is why I like the big sci-fi/fantasy productions as they come out. My friend pointed out that Johnny Depp probably wouldn't have been brought on board unless this was going to be the start of a big cash cow franchise, which I'm not pleased with.

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  3. Fantastic Beasts, Moana, and Arrival are all already on my to-watch list! Also on my list are Sausage Party and Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children :D -Audrey | Brunch at Audrey's

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    1. I really hope to see Moana and Arrival over winter break. I've heard a lot of good things about them from friends!

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  4. Before the Flood sounds interesting! It's definitely on my watch list now. I've always wanted to read Hot Lights but never got to it, it always seems too stressful for me; might finally check it out though.

    Fantastic Beasts seems to be well-liked and I do want to see it, but I can't get over the fact that they employed an abuser. I don't know if I'm overreacting or not but it's a rather uncomfortable fact.

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    1. I wasn't aware that someone on the Fantastic Beasts cast was an abuser. If that conflicts with your personal ethics, then I think watching it semi-legally on the internet may be your way to go.

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  5. Before the Flood is one of my favorite documentaries for the year. I'll watch the other two on your list during the holidays. Thank you for the recommendations
    - SA
    https://dearbeautifulworld.com

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    1. I think Before the Flood sets a new high bar for me. The other two are just fine documentaries and hopefully will help mobilize more people towards change.

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