Manuel Puig's Kiss of the Spider Woman makes for an awkward musical, let alone a movie musical. It is a depressing story about two men incarcerated and abused by an authoritarian regime set entirely in a prison -most of it in one prison cell. Sure there are recurring flights of escapist fancy through a storytelling device of one recounting to the other a favourite movie -but it is a Nazi propaganda film. Several ingredients primes for a dour, tasteless musical almost in the vein of "Springtime for Hitler". Regardless, it was in fact produced in 1992, by luminaries Kander and Ebb and Terrence McNally no less, and was a relative success. And now, perhaps to coincide with the fortieth anniversary of the acclaimed film version that inspired the show to begin with, comes a movie adaptation that lays clear the musical's flaws while adding a few of its own -yet being appealingly garish in other regards. After the 1985 movie transferred context to the military dictatorshi...
We all know the common parable. A person suffering and at the end of their ropes suddenly receives a supernatural visitor to convey to them that their life has meaning and value if they’ll only stop and recognize it, punctuating the point by showing what their life would be like had it turned out another way -had they had somebody else’s life instead of their own perhaps. They realize their value and move forward with a new lease on the life they live. It’s a cozy narrative. Unfortunately for a lot of people it is completely wrong. It’s a nice sentiment to say that money won’t solve all your problems, but in such a money-dependent horribly lopsided society as ours, for a lot of folks money will indeed solve all their problems. That is the central joke at the heart of Aziz Ansari’s Good Fortune -his directing debut, a movie that is not only a subversion of popular morality tale, but in doing so is a biting indictment on the effects of the wealth gap in the modern era. Principa...