Draft winds blow tonight

The Big Story NFL Draft: It comes your way on ESPN and The NFL Network starting Thursday at 8 p.m. and goes through Saturday. Picking fourth and having four in the first 77 and nine picks overall, the Patriots have major skin in the game to make it a fun weekend for Patriot Nation.

Sports 101: Name the only team since 1960 (NFL and AFL teams) to draft a QB in both the first and second rounds in the same draft.

News Item NBA Playoffs: Nothing started off weird in the first weekend. The C’s got off nicely with an easy 103-86 Game 1 win over Orlando; OK City became the sixth team to beat an opponent by more than 50 points in a playoff game, and Golden State used its experience to frustrate upstart Houston. Only the T-Wolves thumping the Lakers was surprising in the weekend.

News Item NFL Draft: Here are a few interesting facts, rumors and pre-draft scuttlebutt.

It was interesting to see that in a pre-draft Big Board on ESPN its author Jeff Legwold ranked presumed No. 1 pick Cam Ward as only the 20th best player in the draft.

With just four, the Vikings have the fewest picks this weekend, while the 49ers and Ravens have the most with 11 each.

One team that could move up to prevent the expected Shedeur Sanders slide is New Orleans, whose QB Derek Carr could be out for all of 2025.

Can an arm that’s 1/16 inch shorter than desired for an offensive tackle be worth all the hullabaloo we’ve heard about LSU’s Will Campbell? Seems like paralysis by over-analysis. If it were me, I’d just look at his tape.

With Matthew Judon still out there in free agency, Eliot Wolf got it right by not giving him the contract extension he demanded last summer. Instead he’ll use the 77th pick he got for Atlanta for him on Friday night.

The Numbers:

4 – errors by Gold Glover Alex Bregman, who by taking over at third base was supposed to solve the Red Sox’ defensive issues of 2024.

11 – earned runs allowed in 2.1 innings in a 16-1 loss to Tampa Bay by Tanner Houck to make it the worst start in Red Sox history, which ballooned his ERA from 4.41 to 9.16.

Of the Week Awards

Thumbs Up Joe Mazzulla: For donating his entire $3.2 million bonus to local charities. This incredibly generous act is made even more impressive because he hasn’t been collecting the big dough for very long.

Inning of the Week the eighth in Chicago: The D-Backs scored 10 in the top half of the eighth and then the Cubs roared back to score six in the bottom half to take a 15-11 lead that became the final.

Astonishingly Incompetent Draft Note of the Week: Boston Globe columnist Chris Gasper reported last week that aside from Julian Edelman, who was a college QB, none of the 10 receivers the Patriots drafted between 2003 and 2024 had more than 58 career receptions or 750 career yards and four touchdowns. An amazing track record of abject failure.

Random Thoughts:

With victory margins of 25, 19, 16 and 5 not a lot of drama in the NBA’s boring play-in games to grab seventh and eighth seed in each division.

Sports 101 Answer: The 1965 NY Jets drafted Joe Namath second overall in the 1965 AFL draft and then took Heisman Trophy winner Notre Dame’s John Huarte in Round 2.

A Little History – John Huarte: Came out of nowhere to win the 1964 Heisman while leading Notre Dame to a shocking 9-0-1 season and a national title. But the pro career was a different story. He lasted just two seasons in NY and six overall where he completed just 39.1% of his 58 passes for one TD.

Final Thought – What Should The Pats Do?

I know they need a left tackle and a lead receiver going into the future. But after what Mike Vrabel and company did in free agency, unless a receiver they can get is the next Randy Moss, I’m willing to pass on both needs to do what I have to do to get Penn State edge rusher Abdul Jabar Carter. Adding a premier pass rusher to a team with three other passing threats and two very good corners gives them a chance to have a top 5 defense or maybe higher. And I’d rather have one dominating unit to always count on and a middling offense than have a 15th-ranked O and 10th-ranked D, because the latter seems to be a formula for 9-8. Then I’d add what’s needed with the 37th pick to move into the first round to get the tackle they need and hope an impact receiver will surface at the mid-year trade deadline.

Prediction – they take LSU’s Campbell in Round 1. Unless N.O. trades up with NY at 3 to get Sanders. Then it’s who’s left between Heisman winner Travis Hunter and my pick, Carter.

Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress.com.

News & Notes 25/04/24

Senate race update

U.S. Rep. Maggie Goodlander told WMUR that she will not seek the U.S. Senate seat in 2026, according to an April 17 report. The race will have no incumbent for the seat as Sen. Jeanne Shaheen has said she will not run for reelection. U.S. Rep. Chris Pappas, a Democrat, announced his campaign for the seat in early April. Earlier this month, former New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu also told WMUR that he wouldn’t run for senate. In the April 17 story, which you can find at wmur.com, Goodlander endorsed Pappas in his campaign for the seat and Pappas endorsed Goodlander in her reelection campaign to the New Hampshire 2nd District seat.

Historic marker

The Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire will hold an unveiling ceremony on Saturday, April 26, at 10 a.m. for a historic marker honoring author Harriet E. Wilson (the first Black novelist in the U.S. whose book was published in 1859), according to a Black Heritage Trail press release. The marker is on the historic Nehemiah Hayward Homestead (19 Maple St. in Milford) where Wilson was indentured as a child, the release said. A statue of Wilson stands in Milford in Bicentennial Park at 123 South St., where the Trail also has a marker about Wilson. See blackheritagetrailnh.org.

Weather ready

April 20 through April 26 has been designated Severe Weather Awareness Week, during which New Hampshire Department of Safety’s Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management will be offering information on preparedness and safety tips, according to a press release. “Flooding is the main disaster that affects New Hampshire. In recent years, the state has seen tornadoes, earthquakes, extreme heat and extreme cold,” the release said. See readynh.gov for tips as well as instructions for signing up for NH Alerts, a serive that will send information about tornades, floods, gas leaks, power outages and other emergencies to your phone or email. The N.H. Forest Protection Bureau and Gov. Kelly Ayotte have also proclaimed April 21-27 Wildfire Awareness Week in New Hampshire as spring is the beginning of wildfire season, according to a press release from the N.H. Department of Natural & Cultural Resources.

Recall reminder

Gerber Products sent out a recall reminder on April 18 for its Gerber Soothe N Chew Teething Sticks, originally recalled and discontinued Jan. 31, “due to a potential choking hazard for babies and young children,” according to the recall notice at nestleusa.com. “We are issuing a second press release about this recall due to recent reports of recalled product still available for sale on some retailer shelves and online,” the release said. The products were sold nationwide, including in New Hampshire.

Plymouth State University will host its annual Showcase of Student Research and Engagement on Friday, May 2, from 2 to 4 p.m. on the Plymouth campus in the Courtroom at HUB and at Silver Center and Museum of the White Mountains, according to a press release. Students from a variety of disciplines including the arts, humanities and sciences will present their projects on topics including mental health, biology, history and more, the release said. The event is free and open to the public. See plymouth.edu/2025-showcase-research-engagement.

Mosaic Art Collective (66 Hanover St. in Manchester; mosaicartcollective.com) will hold a Drop + Draw on Thursday, April 24, 5:45 to 8 p.m. “Open to all to just hang out and make some art together,” according to the post on Mosaic’s Facebook page.

Craftworkers’ Guild Spring Craft Shop at Kendall House (3A Meetinghouse Road in Bedford, behind the Bedford Public Library) will open Thursday, May 1, and stay open through Sunday, May 25, Thursdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. See thecraftworkersguild.org.

Bring Back the Trades will hold a Skills Expo Saturday, April 26, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Londonderry High School (295 Mammoth Road in Londonderry) featuring more than 50 local trades organizations, according to a press release. The event is free and open to all ages and includes live demonstrations, equipment showcases and giveaways, the release said. See bringbackthetrades.org.

The Big Cookie — 04/17/2025

on the cover

10 In this week’s cover story, John Fladd looks at the Big Cookie — you know the one. It’s a supersized sugar or chocolate chip cookie, bigger than your standard teaspoon-full-of-dough size, that is more a full dessert than snack. It offers you sharing opportunities or is a special indulgence just for one. How are they assembled? What are their tastiest qualities? John looks at the art of the gloriously big cookie.

Also on the cover: Take a look back at Manchester history with the book Grenier Air Base (see page 15). Is there a better combination than waffles and doughnuts (page 18)? And find all sorts of live music for your weekend including shows at area bars and restaurants listed in our Music This Week (see page 27) and ticketed shows in our Concerts listings (page 30).

Read the e-edition

A graphic the shape of the state of New Hampshire, filled in with the New Hampshire flag made up of the crest of New Hampshire on a blue field.
Senate race update Former Governor Chris Sununu told WMUR that he will not run for the U.S. Senate seat in ...
Photo of assorted sports equipment for football, soccer, tennis, golf, baseball, and basketball
The Big Story – Celtics Begin Title Defense: The play-in Tournament Tuesday to send four teams to the NBA’s main ...
A graphic the shape of the state of New Hampshire, filled in with the New Hampshire flag made up of the crest of New Hampshire on a blue field.
*#$^&@-%! weather A reminder that New England can still New England in April, the snow totals from last weekend’s snowfall ...
Independent Bookstore Day Logo
Friday, April 18 Chunky’s Cinema Pub (707 Huse Road, Manchester, 206-3888, chunkys.com) hosts a Gilligan’s Island Paint Night this evening ...
The art of supersizing your favorite treat By John Fladd jfladd@hippopress.com If you buy a cookie from a bakery, chances ...
Leah Dearborn. Courtesy photo.
Book recounts the roots of Manchester Airport By Michael Witthaus mwitthaus@hippopress.com Charles Lindbergh’s historic solo flight across the Atlantic in ...
A tall black urn, with a detailed base and large prominent handles.
Hi, Donna. The New Boston Historical Society wonders what you might know about an old urn that’s now in the ...
Family fun for whenever Free wild fun • Discover Wild New Hampshire Day brings the state’s outdoor adventures to the ...
Red round icon that reads Weekly Dish
News from the local food scene By John Fladd jfladd@hippopress.com • New ownership: The Sal Terrae line of spices has ...
The "Waffle Donut Dragon", a food fan that sells waffle donuts.
New Dessert House satisfies a sweet tooth By John Fladd jfladd@hippopress.com Have you ever eaten a doughnut and thought to ...
Nashua sauce-maker Allison Marques holds up her prized "G-Mom's BBQ Sauce".
G-Mom’s BBQ Sauce goes beyond the grill By John Fladd jfladd@hippopress.com Nashua sauce-maker Allison Marques’ dream recipe comes from a ...
A "Shmeegan" (Vegan) Lemon Bundt Cake, sliced and ready to serve. Styled next to a lemon.
There’s a word that rhymes with “shmeegan” that we’re not going to say, because it makes some people nervous. It ...
Iron Lung, Adapting // Crawling (Iron Lung Records) & Mac Sabbath “Pair-a-Buns” (self-released)
Iron Lung, Adapting // Crawling (Iron Lung Records) Holy catfish, fam, this is the craziest thing I’ve heard since — ...
Source Code, by Bill Gates
Source Code, by Bill Gates (Knopf, 315 pages) Of all the Big Tech moguls, Bill Gates is the one getting ...
A scene from G20 (R)
Viola Davis is Madame President Bad-ass in G20, which is like Air Force One but radder. U.S. President Viola Davis ...
By Michael Witthaus mwitthaus@hippopress.com • Folk duo: Celebrating 10 years since releasing their debut album, A Wolf in the Doorway, ...
Hildaland
Brewery concert series welcomes folk duo Hildaland By Michael Witthaus mwitthaus@hippopress.com A wry and oft-repeated maxim at Berklee College of ...

Musical conversation

Brewery concert series welcomes folk duo Hildaland

By Michael Witthaus

mwitthaus@hippopress.com

A wry and oft-repeated maxim at Berklee College of Music is that booking so many gigs that there’s no time for class is a worthy goal, even if it means not graduating. That was fiddler Louise Bichan’s plan when she arrived from Scotland in the mid-2010s, but the connections she made at the Boston school changed her mind.

“I was playing in a band that were kind of doing well and taking off back home when I left for Berklee and I planned to go back and rejoin after a year,” she said in a recent Zoom chat. “It didn’t work out that way; there were so many great people to learn from and to play with … there was so much I wanted to get out of it. So I ended up staying.”

One of the musicians Bichan met was mandolin player Ethan Setiawan. The two became members of Corner House, a four-piece band that formed at Berklee and had their first gig at the 2017 Fresh Grass Festival in the Berkshires. In 2019, they spun off as Hildaland, taking their name from a Scottish folk tale about shape-shifting seals.

Setiawan, during the same Zoom call, said the intimacy of a duo appealed to them. “We can be more improvisational and spontaneous within the framework that we’ve created in these songs and tunes because there’s one line of communication.” A band, on the other hand? “It’s exponential.”

Bichan, a native of Scotland’s Orkney Islands, and Indiana-born Setiawan carry on a lovely musical conversation. In 2019 they recorded an EP, less a debut than an attempt at defining themselves.

“We don’t really sound much like that anymore,” Setiawan said. “It was very experimental … just kind of us playing around.”

Synthesizing those rough beginnings with a few years playing together led to Sule Skerry, an 11-song album that includes reworked traditional tunes like the lovely title track, and uplifting originals. “Silver Dollar,” Bichan’s instrumental tribute to her aunt and uncle’s 25th wedding anniversary, is a standout.

Another gem is Setiawan’s “Weezy & Vera,” with ebullient interplay between the two. There are also covers of Gillian Welch’s “Everything Is Free” and “Fall On My Knees,” a standard that’s been done by Red Clay Ramblers, The Freight Hoppers and others, along with a lush interpretation of the 19th-century Scottish love poem “Ettrick.”

“Our main inspiration comes from my Scottish roots and Ethan’s roots in old-time American and maybe a little bluegrass — and Ethan also is a great jazz musician,” Bichan said. “And the more we’ve worked up new material and played together, the more we’ve refined what our sound is.”

Innovative Celtic harpist and Berklee instructor Maeve Gilchrist was a helpful mentor early on. They worked together in the studio on Corner House’s debut LP.

“Maeve is such a complete musician; we talked about many different aspects of tune writing,” Setiawan said. “She has such a grasp of harmony, and a great sense of playing a melody.”

Hildaland will perform at Blasty Bough Brewing in Epsom on April 18, part of the ongoing Blasty Trad roots music series spearheaded by brewery head Dave Stewart. Bichan performed there a few years back with another band. Surprisingly, she learned about the local series, which began in 2018, while playing overseas.

“David’s daughter Madeline is a great fiddle player; we met in Glasgow, where I used to live,” she said. “We did a live session at BBC Radio Scotland. It was four of us, each in a corner of a big studio; we went around the room and everyone played something. That’s how we met.”

Bichan and Setiawan, who live together in Cornish, Maine, are working on an EP to follow up Sule Skerry.

“It goes back to our tune playing roots,” Setiawan said of the songs, which have developed during their live shows. “That will be coming out later this year. Then we definitely have an eye towards the next sort of full record that will have some more songs and a mix of things.”

Hildaland

When: Friday, April 18, 7 p.m.
Where: Blasty Bough Brewing Co., 3 Griffin Road, Epsom
Tickets: $30 and up at cocoatickets.com

Featured photo. Hildaland. Courtesy photo.

The Music Roundup 25/04/17

By Michael Witthaus

mwitthaus@hippopress.com

Folk duo: Celebrating 10 years since releasing their debut album, A Wolf in the Doorway, The Ballroom Thieves are in the region for a few shows, including one at a music-friendly Lakes Region winery. The duo of Caitlin Peters and Martin Early offers lovely harmonies accompanied by guitar and cello. 2024’s “self-portrait” LP Sundust was a meditation on the nature of tenderness. Thursday, April 17, 7 p.m., Hermit Woods Winery, 72 Main St., Meredith, $45 at eventbrite.com.

Five strings: Though she began her musical career in bluegrass — Alison Brown was for a brief moment in the late ’80s a member of Alison Krauss & Union Station — she’s taken the banjo to another place in recent years. Her eponymous quintet performs a local show. Brown weaves jazz, Celtic and other influences into “a sonic tapestry.” Friday, April 18, 7 p.m., Rex Theatre, 23 Amherst St., Manchester, $33 at palacetheatre.org.

Funny guy: Still going strong in his fifth decade telling jokes, Lenny Clarke began as the open mic host at Cambridge’s Ding Ho Restaurant in the early ’80s, when the scene was booming. Clarke went on to acting success, appearing in films like There’s Something About Mary and starring in his own sitcom, Lenny. Friday, April 18, 8 p.m., Tupelo Music Hall, 10 A St., Derry, $35 at tupelohall.com.

Indie night: An eclectic evening of music downtown, with The Doldrums atop the bill, a raucous band with Green Day and Killers punk ’n’ polish energy belying its name. For something completely different, Regals is a country rock quintet owing a debt to Townes Van Zandt and Gram Parsons. Still Sleeping makes its debut, and Birds, In Theory is a sonically furious powerhouse with smart lyrics. Saturday, April 19, 8 p.m., Shaskeen Pub, 909 Elm St., Manchester, $10 at the door, 21+.

Two tone: Defying the odds, Canadian ska punk band The Planet Smashers are still alive and well after 32 years — at one point, the group disbanded because they couldn’t find their drummer. In 2016, lead singer Matt Collyer fractured his neck and wrote a love song about it. It’s on their ninth album, 2024’s Too Much Information. Collyer is the only founding member still in the band. Wednesday, April 23, 7 p.m., Jewel Music Venue, 61 Canal St., Manchester, $21 at dice.fm.

G20 (R)

Viola Davis is Madame President Bad-ass in G20, which is like Air Force One but radder.

U.S. President Viola Davis — the character’s name is Danielle Sutton but this movie totally supports you thinking “President Viola Davis! Heck yeah! Rock ’n’ roll!” — goes to a G20 summit in South Africa in an attempt to convince world leaders of some plan that supports farmers, particularly in Africa, to end world hunger something something basically she’s being a good guy and we know this in part because British Prime Minister Oliver Everett (Douglas Hodge) is being a real “tut tut well now my dear lady” about it. Meanwhile, she’s dealing with some domestic difficulties — like seriously domestic as her teenage daughter, Serena (Marsai Martin), is sneaking out without her security detail and hacking various systems to do so and just generally being a sassypants in a way that leads to some snide questions from the press. So President Viola Davis decides that Serena and younger brother Demetrius (Christopher Farrar) will accompany her, her husband First Gentleman Anthony Anderson (his character’s name is Derek) and her Treasury Secretary Joanna Worth (Elizabeth Marvel), who was once a presidential rival and has real Hillary vibes, to the summit.

Meanwhile meanwhile, a team of mercenary-types headed by Rutledge (Antony Starr) and his men have infiltrated the security team for the G20 summit. Rutledge has an elaborate plan that goes “something something Deep Fakes something something crash world economy something something cryptocurrency” and also he is bitter about his time in the Australian military during the Iraq war. He takes all the world leaders hostage but in the melee a group manages to escape and hide: President Viola Davis, Secret Service Agent Will Trent (Ramón Rodriguez, his character’s name is actually Manny Ruiz but all I could think is “hey that’s Will Trent from TV’s Will Trent”), the snitty British PM, World Bank lady Elena Romano (Sabrina Impacciatore) and the South Korean first lady (MeeWha Alana Lee), who presents as dignified grandma but is also a bad-ass. They slink around the hotel, getting the drop on various Rutledge henchmen, finding out more about his plan and even rescuing the hotel workers who include two secret agents (Noxolo Dlamini, Theo Bongani Ndyalvane) who help President Viola Davis in her counterstrike plans and about whom her son Demetrius says “you’re from Wakanda” after they balletically take out some baddies.

President Viola Davis starts the evening, pre-hostage-taking, in a stunning tomato-red gown with a cape and some nice heels; later, we get some awesome Buffy the middle-aged Vampire Slayer-style shots of her in sneakers, cape gone, dress torn at the knee for better tactical maneuvering and holding a big ol’ gun. It is chef’s kiss, no notes.

I took zero time to figure out what this movie’s political point of view is, assuming it has one, which it may not; the bad guy plan is unnecessarily complicated, and most of the dialogue is silly or predictable or both. And yet, this movie rocks. It is a total blast for, yes, the fan fiction element of a Viola Davis presidency but also for it just being so much what it is. This is a movie for when you want to watch a person who you believe as a bad-ass do bad-ass things. This is that movie where the Rock fights a building (2018’s Skyscraper), or Gerard Butler does plane (2023’s Plane) or John Wick does anything (all of the John Wicks, 2014-2023). But with Viola Davis. As President. As a serious fil-uhm critic, I think this movie is probably a standard action fare B, maybe even B- for the uncleverness of it all. As a person who watched it and had an excellent time, I think A+, woo-hoo President Woman King! Streaming on Prime Video.

Holland (R)

Nicole Kidman is a strangely square home ec teacher in a suspiciously wholesome town in the thriller/dramady Holland, a movie that doesn’t quite manage to be funny or particularly suspenseful.

Nancy Vandergroot (Kidman) seems like she has an aggressively perfect life with her optometrist/ hobby-train-enthusiast husband Fred (Matthew Macfadyen) and their young son Harry (Jude Hill). But Nancy starts to suspect that Fred’s business trips are just covers for affairs and she gets her work friend Dave Delgado (Gael García Bernal) to help her in a little light PI-ing. But are her suspicions actually a sign of her own unsettled desires, including her obvious attraction to Dave?

I was getting some lady-with-a-screw-loose To Die For energy from Kidman when this movie started and I get the sense that that kind of self-delusion with a dark edge is maybe one of the directions this movie wanted to go with her character. But it goes a lot of other directions with this story too, including one that is super-apparent from the beginning. I think we’re supposed to chuckle at the juxtaposition of the town of Holland, where children learn Dutch dancing and people say “ah sugar” as a form of polite swearing, and the various sins both real and suspected. But the movie treats as dramatic revelations things it basically told us in the beginning and it ultimately makes Nancy kind of a nothing character. I wanted to like this movie for giving Kidman a chance to be kooky. But the movie can’t figure out the vibe it’s going for or the story it wants to tell. C Available on Prime Video.

My Dead Friend Zoe (R)

An Army veteran recently returned to the U.S. from combat abroad is literally haunted by a fallen comrade in My Dead Friend Zoe, a sort of gentle comedy-drama about PTSD from military service.

Merit (Sonequa Martin-Green) stumbles through life, barely participating in court-mandated veteran group therapy run by Dr. Cole (Morgan Freeman) and hitting the road for long runs anytime a situation gets stressful. And through most of her waking hours she is accompanied by Zoe (Natalie Morales), her best friend from her time in the Army. Her dead best friend, as the title indicates. Zoe is mostly there to make snarky comments or bicker with Merit but she also appears to be keeping Merit stuck in a kind of life limbo. Zoe comes with Merit to her grandfather Dale’s (Ed Harris) house to keep an eye on him. Also a veteran, also dealing with stuff, Dale is in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease and can’t quite manage on his own. Merit’s mother/Dale’s daughter Kris (Gloria Reuben) wants to put Dale in a retirement home and sell his lakeside property to ensure that he’ll have full-time care. Neither Dale nor Merit wants that, but Merit does seem to enjoy meeting Alex (Utakarsh Ambudkar), the retirement home’s director with whom she attempts to go out on a date.

This movie is maybe overly simplistic in the points it’s trying to make but it’s a solid story that gets to issues of friendship and the returned veteran experience that you don’t always see in movies. The chemistry of Martin-Green and Morales is really what holds it together and gives it the charm that makes it worth the watch. B Available for rent or purchase.

The Last Showgirl (R)

Pamela Anderson is a faded dancer in a faded “dancing nudes” show in Las Vegas in The Last Showgirl, a highly watchable movie from Gia Coppola (yes, that Coppola — she is a Francis Ford grandchild).

Shelly (Anderson) is still dazzled by the glamour and showmanship of “Le Razzle Dazzle,” the show she’s been dancing in for some 30 years at a casino in Las Vegas. Not one of the big modern “Adele residency” type venues, we gather — a “dirty circus” has taken the best nights and the Razzle Dazzle is more of a weekday affair at this scruffy locale. The other girls (Brenda Song, Kiernan Shipka are the ones we meet) don’t see it with such stars in their eyes — it’s a job, a job for which they are being paid an ever-shrinking amount (and charged back when a costume rips). Eddie (Dave Bautista), the show’s announcer, informs Shelly and the other women that even that will come to an end soon. Shelly, a 57-year-old woman pretending to be a 42-year-old woman pretending to be 37, isn’t sure what to do next and finds that the dance skills and showmanship that made her (at least in her mind) a star might not be enough to carry her to the next thing. Meanwhile, longtime friend, former dancer and maybe gambling addict Annette (Jamie Lee Curtis), a cocktail waitress who is always on the edge of financial ruin, offers a grim look at the even greater instability Shelly could be facing.

Some of the movie’s best scenes are when Shelly is with Hannah (Billie Lourd), her daughter who we gather has been living with another family and who never quite understood the appeal of the job to Shelly. When Hannah sees the show, she just sees a shabby nudie show with a sparse audience that, for all its down-at-the-heels-ness, her mother still put above her. Lourd’s Carrie Fisher (her real life mother) no-nonsense quality really comes through in these scenes, as does her exhaustion with this person Hannah loves and can’t figure out how to live with. Anderson also gives a strong and highly watchable performance. She captures the slow-motion panic and heartbreak of realizing one phase of life is over and trying to figure out what to do next. B+ Available for rent or purchase.

The Life List (PG-13)

Connie Britton tries to fix her daughter’s life from beyond the grave in The Life List.

When makeup company founder Elizabeth (Britton) dies, she shocks her two sons, two daughters-in-law and her daughter Alex (Sofia Carson) by giving one of the daughters-in-law control of the makeup company instead of Alex, who had been working there. Elizabeth’s will requires Alex to find a new job and fulfill the tasks on her “life list,” a list of goals she made as a young teenager. Some of the items are easy — dance in a mosh pit, get a tattoo — and some are harder, like finding love or repairing her fraught relationship with her dad (José Zúñiga). She dumps the goofy boyfriend her mother felt she’d been settling for and begins a relationship with the cultured Garrett (Sebastian De Souza), who should be the love of her life. But what about her fast friendship with her mother’s lawyer, Brad (Kyle Allen)?

Alex gets a cute apartment, cute potential boyfriends are thick on the ground and finding oneself can be done with relatively minimal financial pain due to a general “from money”-ness. The Life List is a nice if slight young adult fantasy but it has little nuggets of slightly more complex family relationships mixed into all the froth. This movie doesn’t try too hard but it also doesn’t ask too much and it is pleasantly fine. C+ Available on Netflix.

Lee (R)

Photographer Lee Miller gets a biopic with Lee.

We get a relatively interesting look at the life of Lee (Kate Winslet), a model turned photographer who we first meet when she is in her 30s in the 1930s, which, ha no she’s not and actually that’s pretty great. I mean, yes, historical person Lee Miller was in her early 30s in the late 1930s, but Kate Winslet the actress is currently 49 and, while she looks great in this 2024 Oscar hopeful, her Lee Miller looks like a woman in her late 40s. A woman in her late 40s living her life as she pleases, having affairs, being professionally ambitious and pushing into combat photography, which is all very rad but just hits differently and makes for a more interesting but not entirely true-to-history character. It heightens the sense that this Lee Miller has lived more of a life than the slice the movie focuses on and there’s always a sense of why aren’t we seeing more of that.

Anyway, Lee, an American, living in London with artist Roland Penrose (Alexander Skarsgård), works for British Vogue during the early years of the war and eventually tries to get herself sent into Europe to cover the Allied army. She finds a way with the American army, even if she’s still told that women can’t attend this press briefing or go on that mission. She does eventually get herself into the field, often in the company of Davy Scherman (Andy Samberg), a fellow photographer. Together they are some of the first American photographers to photograph the horrors of the Holocaust — box cars full of corpses and a concentration camp full of dead, dying and starving people.

Wikipedia her and you learn that Lee took an artistic as well as journalistic approach to her war photography — a “huh interesting” element that the movie only slightly glances at. There is a lot to her life that is of the “huh, interesting” variety — her modeling, her life as part of the Parisian art world, her marriage before Penrose — that this movie either ignores completely or addresses only slightly. There is a lot of telling over showing here, telling us that Lee had to push through a lot of sexist nonsense to do her job, telling us that she had a difficult relationship with the son we see decades later in the film’s very clunky framing device. This is one of those movies where seeing the real person’s photographs at the end of the movie has more of an impact than the narrative the movie creates around them. Both Kate Winslet and Lee Miller deserve better. C+ Available for rent or purchase and streaming on Hulu.

Firebrand (R)

The “survived” final wife of King Henry VIII gets a heroic biopic in Firebrand, a “doubtful but whatever” story about Katherine Parr’s time as queen.

Katherine (Alicia Vikander) is here the politically and religiously (same thing for the era’s purposes) radical Protestant wife of an ailing, somewhat unhinged Henry (a very vanity-free Jude Law). She has become a mother figure to his two youngest surviving children — Edward (Patrick Buckley) and Elizabeth (Junia Rees) — and is supportive, in a politic way, of the English Bible and prayers at a time when Henry has decreed a return to Latin and his daughter Mary (Patsy Ferran) stands by as a possible future queen who supports a full return to Catholicism. Katherine’s goal, it seems, is to keep from being executed for heresy before Henry dies, perhaps even securing a role as young Edward’s regent. She’s perhaps hoping that her impending widowhood would also allow her to marry longtime romantic interest Thomas Seymour (Sam Riley) — not a great guy, usually, in stories about the teen years of eventual Queen Elizabeth, but this movie stays in Henry’s reign.

The movie itself kicks off with title cards that suggest that history involving women might require some wild speculation, and wildly speculate it does. And I am fine with that — Henry and his wives having been riffed on in so many ways and from so many angles it’s fun to see a story that focuses on Katherine, even if it goes a lot of historically dodgy places. Everybody does a credible enough job for this exercise in historical “what if, who knows.” Perhaps this is more an exercise for Tudor completists but it’s an OK time if that’s you. B- Available for rent or purchase and streaming on Hulu.

Featured Image: G20 (R)

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