“I’m warning you, you’re about to see a real hot mess.” Queens of Drama certainly has the right title. It is one of the most bombastically over-dramatic movies I have seen and its chief characters and their extremely turbulent relationship certainly appears to be the driver of most of it. It is also about pop stardom in a distinctly 2000s style with the glitz and the glamour and the broad-sweeping musical hits , which feels appropriate. And it is incredibly queer, in both its story and design, likewise hinted at. Even still, I didn’t quite expect what it was. The movie is overbearing, intentionally so at times, and fairly chaotic in its satire that doesn’t gel with its earnest central precepts. But those are still engaging and powerful on their own, backed up by a hyper-saturated aesthetic that both captures the mood of its reference points and, under thoughtful direction from Alexis Langlois, looks wonderfully pretty. Some of the major disconnect comes in the framing device...
It is bold of Daniel Roher and Charlie Tyrell to call their film The A.I. Doc , as though it is the definitive statement in the documentary space on the subject of A.I. when it is merely one of many that have been produced and no doubt many more to come. But those other docs may not have the backing of the makers of Everything Everywhere All at Once or the legitimacy (earned or not) of some of the biggest figures in the A.I. space being involved. These are the kind of things that can give it a profile, and a theatrical run so rare for a documentary (First Lady vanity project aside). And it is worth being thankful for the privileges bestowed on this film, because its subject matter is incredibly important. Which is also why it is a fortunate thing the movie handles that subject matter responsibly. The most critical thing is that for a movie about A.I., Roher and Tyrell ensured that it’s focal point was entirely human. Roher is a successful documentarian (his film Navalny ...