We spent a long chunk of time yesterday watching One Battle After Another. It's a movie that's been out for awhile, but only recently free to stream on Amazon Prime. I had forgotten how long it was, but happily, we started it in the late afternoon, not at 7:30 at night.
It wasn't until the later part of the movie, during one of the long (LONG) car chases that I became aware of how long it was taking to finish the movie. It was compelling from the beginning until close to the end, compelling in ways that surprised me.
I was impressed with all the chunks of narrative that did manage to come together. Paul Thomas Anderson deserved those Oscars for best director and best adapted screenplay. There were moments when I did some math to try to figure out the revolutionary aspect of it all--if the daughter is 16 or 17, then the revolutionaries were active in 2008 or 2009? The planting of bombs in government buildings and calling in bomb threats from a pay phone seemed so 1972 to me, but clearly, that timeline wouldn't work. It was a nebulous revolutionary movement in the movie, so I was willing to suspend my initial disbelief.
There's another revolutionary movement in the movie, and it's the "Latino Harriet Tubman situation." This movie has a lot to say about a great many issues, and one of the disadvantages of a vast movie is that some issues get short shrift. I'd have liked more about all the Latino issues, especially the nods to the sanctuary movement that are hiding there in plain sight for those of us with eyes to see. It's in the storylines about migration where we see revolutionaries who are working for social justice and working against a government that's against the flourishing of all people--unlike the other revolutionaries, the main characters who seem to be just blowing things up for the thrill of it all.
I try very hard not to fault movies or books or TV shows for not being the story that I wish they could have been. In the end, I was happy to have a well-made movie to watch, a movie with much to mull over, a movie worth re-watching, as so few things are deserving of a second look these days.