Best of 2024, arts•meme movie picks!

Film
in mumbai, with ‘all we imagine as light’

We’ll leave THE BRUTALIST, MARIA, Timothée Chalamet, Angelina Jolie descending the staircase of the Metropolitan Opera House in a St. Laurent cape although she probably never went to the opera before playing the goddess Callas. Leave all that to others. Can we merely say “oh my god no thank you” to THE SUBSTANCE? As for ANORA, well, just the latest in the male filmmaker’s undying obsession with the whore with the golden heart. EMILIA PEREZ was all over the map, but we liked the dance sequences. And, shoot me, I liked THELMA, listed below. So much fun.

Here’s where you have the lowdown, the skinny, the minimal ‘must see’s. These are the sparse pictures we unabashedly loved in the year, even though two of them are not going into wide distribution till 2025!

HARD TRUTHS, writer/director Mike Leigh
Speaking of THE BRUTALIST, it took a full week to recover from the tough love on view in British maestro Mike Leigh’s domestic drama, a journey into the perils of intimacy — and mental illness. I loved it. But hard-hitting. A tour de force performance by an actress with the chops to pull it off, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, depicting a mother afflicted with depression and the rough ride that gives those around her.
ALL WE IMAGINE AS LIGHT, writer/director Payal Kapadia
Boy it’s so good, it’s so good, it’s still so good, and then, meh, in the last sequences it isn’t. Someone glommed a twenty-minute “resolution denouement” onto this stunning “vie quotidienne” of three ladies in Mumbai, a steady nurse whose personal life has left her in shock; a sexy young lady whose hormones are in overdrive; and a low-person on the social totem pole, a cook in a hospital whom society renders nearly invisible. Ah, the elegance of camera work capturing the pounding urban landscape of India. A mesmerizing film that leaves its story with a neat bow it really does not need.
NICKEL BOYS, writer/director RaMell Ross
Using a fluid camera in a subjective capture of the experience of a young Black kid living the best life Florida has to offer him in the early ’60s, and that’s a pretty low bar, RaMell Ross provides a shattering, immersive cinematic experience that no objective rendering could equal. I loved the movie and wrote remarks here.
PERFECT DAYS, cowriters Wim Wenders & Takuma Takasaki, director Wim Wenders
More daily life in Asia, this time in Tokyo, where a simple man, by choice, cleans toilets and looks at trees. And so it flows. A masterwork reviewed on artsmeme here.
THELMA, writer/director Josh Margolin
She’s no little old lady from Pasadena. No, she’s a Jewish grandma in Encino played by June Squibb. Adorable set-ups, clever script, many laughs, and Richard Rountree in his final movie role. Further artsmeme remarks here.

And three arts documentaries we liked and recommend.

OBSESSED WITH LIGHT: LOIE FULLER
The history, impact, and influence of Loie Fuller, a self-made genius dance artist experimenting in the effects of color and velocity on the dancer essentially hidden draped in fabric. The film features talking heads in ancillary fields, architecture, fashion design, puppetry, and of course dance, describing Fuller’s influence. It features the champion of Loie Fuller in the contemporary dance community, Jody Sperling.
THAT’S THE WAY GOD PLANNED IT: BILLY PRESTON
A child of South Los Angeles reared in traditions of the gospel church who grew up pounding piano and organ keyboards he could barely reach, Billy Preston went on to give soulful underpinnings to, significantly, the Beatles, Rolling Stones and many more sixties bands. His very credible run at a solo career slowly crumbled, brought down in great part by a nasty drug habit. Further remarks here.
ONCE UPON A TIME: MICHEL LE GRAND
Well, you’re talking about a genius. Le Grand’s scope, sparkling musicality, and his vast contribution to film scoring, particularly in collaboration with his dear associate, filmmaker Jacques Demy, makes for delightful and insightful viewing in David Dessite’s labor-of-love documentary.

We are holding out for THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO seeing very soon.

Picks by artsmeme editor Debra Levine

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Jeremy Denk’s profound encounter with ‘crazy uncle’ Charles Ives at 92nd & Lex

Music
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Jeremy Denk, piano
all photos: Joseph Sinnott for 92nd St Y

Jeremy Denk, one of our leading classical pianists, winner of a MacArthur fellowship and the Avery Fisher Prize, originally dismissed the gnarly genius Charles Ives  as “the crazy uncle of American music, weaving familiar tunes—hymns, ragtime, marches—into unsettling quilts.” But over time Denk has evolved into one of the composer’s most discerning interpreters, and on Thursday night at the 92nd Street Y’s Kaufmann Concert Hall he gave a thrilling and moving account of the monumental second piano sonata, Concord, Mass., 184060, preceded by a thoughtfully curated program of two Beethoven sonatas (Opus 90 and Opus 110) bookending Scott Joplin’s “Bethana, A Concert Waltz,” Louis Moreau Gottschalk’s “The Banjo,” William Bolcom’s “Graceful Ghost” rag (substituting for the previously-announced “Poltergeist”), and an arrangement by the great jazz pianist Nina Simone of Jule Styne’s “Just in Time” from the musical Bells Are Ringing.

Denk is a contextualist who excels in exploring connections between disparate artists and eras, and the opening half of this recital was the set-up: It acknowledged Ives’s debt to that earlier revolutionary, Beethoven, whose Fifth Symphony is quoted in the Concord, highlighting dynamic and emotional contrasts in the two sonatas — the tumultuous first movement and the lyrically pastoral second movement of the Opus 90, the singing first movement and the poignant and introspective second and third movements of the Opus 110 — that seemed to prefigure Ives’s turbulent soundscape. It nodded at Ives’s sometimes raucous, sometimes tender use of American 19th century popular forms with elegant and unexpectedly inflected interpretations of the elegiac Joplin, the glitteringly syncopated Gottschalk, and the whimsical, haunting Bolcom. And with Nina Simone’s marvelously eccentric mashup of jazz, baroque, and Broadway, it prepared the way for Ives’s inclusive embrace of high and low, sometimes in the same phrase.

So when, after the intermission, Denk took his seat on the bench for the 45-minute Concord, his audience was ready, and Denk did not disappoint. The sonata, which Ives began drafting early in the 20th century and kept revising even past its publication (in 1920) and first public performance (in 1938), is famously difficult, sprawling in structure and full of complex, dissonant chords that America’s other crazy uncle, Walt Whitman, might have described as a “barbaric yawp.” The piece evokes the 19th century Transcendentalist writers — Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, philosopher Bronson Alcott and his novelist daughter Louisa, and Henry David Thoreau — after whom the four movements are named; but its grand ambition is to make an integrated statement of the composer’s own philosophy of life.  To give the music the rhythm of prose, Ives has written many sections without bar lines, and avoided specific notations about tempo or dynamics. In the “Hawthorne” movement there are “tone clusters,” to be produced by pressing on the black keys with a piece of wood the length of a ruler. And instead of introducing a theme, then complicating and resolving it, the sonata begins with “what seems like chaos” (as Denk has described it) before gradually drawing its theme out of a welter of motifs.

Jeremy Denk, Claire Chase

Denk (whose new album, Ives Denk, has just been released by Nonesuch) met all these challenges, plunging assertively into the introductory “Emerson” section of the piece, then turning to quicksilver virtuosic syncopation in “Hawthorne.” With “The Alcotts” he delicately laid bare the beating heart of the sonata, a hymn tune Ives called “the human faith melody”; finally, in “Thoreau,” after pianistically wandering through the woods to Walden Pond, he was briefly joined onstage by the flutist Clare Chase, who hauntingly reprised the hymn tune before drifting away, leaving Denk to bring the movement, and the sonata, to a meditative and profoundly moving close. For a moment after the last note died away he remained motionless on the bench, his hands barely resting on the keys, as if reluctant to leave them — and the house burst into applause.

“I am large, I contain multitudes,” Walt Whitman said in Leaves of Grass; and that’s what Jeremy Denk showed us about Charles Ives on Thursday. “Ives is not the easiest man or composer to love,” the pianist has written. “But the animating idea [of his music] is generous: a restless search to find more in America than we thought, or even hoped, to find.”


Amanda Vaill is a best-selling and award-winning biographer, journalist, and screenwriter with a focus on history, arts, and culture. Her next book, Pride and Pleasure: The Schuyler Sisters in an Age of Revolution, will be published in October 2025.

Kaufmann Concert Hall
92nd Street Y
1395 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY
December 12, 2024

Joplin, Bethena
Gottschalk, The Banjo
Jule Styne, “Just in Time” (arr. Ethan Iverson, after Nina Simone)
William Bolcom, The Poltergeist Rag, from Three Ghost Rags
Beethoven, Sonata No. 31 in A-flat Major, Op. 110
Beethoven, Sonata No. 27 in E Minor, Op. 90
Ives, Sonata No. 2, “Concord, Mass., 1840–60”

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Stirring farewell to ‘Dancing Spirit’ Judith Jamison at New York City Center

Dance
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There was a vast family gathering at New York City Center on Wednesday December 11, and it felt like a warm embrace encompassed everyone in the theater. While there were no blood relatives of Judith Jamison speaking from the stage at this superbly and lovingly produced tribute, the Alvin Ailey family was out in full ...

Joey Luft to fete Mother in MGM ‘Meet Me in St. Louis’

Film
Luft & Mom (1954) Judy Garland’s son, Joey Luft 2010 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jonathan Leibson/FilmMagic) Our friends at Hollywood Heritage have invited us to attend an event at the Lasky-DeMille historic film-making “barn” on Highland Avenue, across from the Hollywood Bowl. They entreat us to join them at the Fair – the 1903 ...

To historic Sierra Madre Playhouse, for ‘Bob Baker’s Nutcracker’

Dance · Theater
We’re heading into the beauty time in Southern California, the holiday season when the air grows nippier, the sun seems more yellow and warming than ever, and white caps of snow decorate the San Gabriel Mountains as you venture east toward the desert. And what better stopover than the charming Sierra Madre Playhouse, where this ...

REVIEW: Nickel Boys’ immersion-cinema rings true in sadness

Film
They look innocent, right? And why shouldn’t they? Two young guys growing up in the late ’50s to early ’60s contemporaneous to the launch of the U.S. space program — where the sky was literally the limit — shouldn’t look any other way. But things on the ground were very different for some. Innocence was ...

Special big-screen viewing of ‘BRUTALIST’ in New York/Los Angeles

Uncategorized
brutalist/futurist architecture Geisel LIbrary, UC San Diegoarchitect: William Pereira photo by Erik Jepsen It’s really nice that film distributor A24 is going to extra effort to make sure THE BRUTALIST, shot by director Brady Corbet in 70 mm film format, can be seen not just by elites but by a wide-spreading audience projected on the ...

‘Once Upon a Mattress’ soon at Ahmanson: from Carol Burnett to Sutton Foster

Theater
We know it is based on a Hans Christian Anderson fairy tale, “The Princess and the Pea.” We know its revival has been a big hit on Broadway in the 2023-24 season and that we are getting the New York cast with two-time Tony Award winning Sutton Foster in the lead. The incredibly fun and ...

Sugar Plums for the ages, in ABT’s ‘The Nutcracker’ at Segerstrom Center

Dance
Her name is Antonietta Dell’Era (1861-1945), and, as legend goes, in 1892 she was the first to dance to Tchaikovsky’s magical foray on the celesta as the Sugar Plum Fairy. That music the brilliant composer concocted to give aural evocation of “drops of water shooting from a fountain.” Ms. Dell’Era’s first performance received good reviews, ...

Westside Ballet of Santa Monica stages vibrant ‘Nutcracker’ starring Tiler Peck, Roman Mejia 1

Dance
An invitation to attend a holiday production of “The Nutcracker” — that of Westside Ballet of Santa Monica, with live music from the Santa Monica College Symphony Orchestra, and starring New York City Ballet principal dancers Tiler Peck & Roman Mejia — is an offer a ballet fan finds hard to refuse. Peck is at ...