Asides

Something to watch tonight: Thursday 31 August

By August 31, 2023No Comments

Let Them All Talk (Soderbergh, 2020) is a digital rental at AroVision

It’s hard to believe that only two years ago this week we were back in Alert Level 4 lock­down and I was pro­du­cing At the Movies for RNZ from my home stu­dio with only down­loads and streams for sub­ject matter.

The Aro Street Video on-demand ser­vice, AroVision, had just launched and this film was one of their early headliners.

In Steven Soderbergh’s cham­ber com­edy Let Them All Talk, Meryl Streep plays a suc­cess­ful author who, for med­ic­al reas­ons, takes a cruise across the Atlantic rather than fly in order to pick up a pres­ti­gi­ous lit­er­ary award. To keep her com­pany – and to help her deal with an enorm­ous case of writer’s block – she brings her old­est friends along, played deli­ciously by Candice Bergen and Dianne Wiest.

From my At the Movies review:

Coincidentally, anoth­er well-known author is on the trip – who knew that New York to Southampton by ship was still so pop­u­lar? He’s suave thrill­er writer Kelvin Krantz whose books out­sell Anne’s by a sig­ni­fic­ant factor and who clearly doesn’t have a prob­lem with writer’s block.

Let Them All Talk is a film about friend­ship and what hap­pens when you don’t tend the garden. These are always watch­able per­formers but Soderbergh’s pro­duc­tion meth­od I think makes it less suc­cess­ful than it might be: filmed over two weeks on the actu­al Queen Mary 2 – that’s time for a return voy­age I think – using nat­ur­al light and only a sound record­ist as addi­tion­al crew, encour­aging the per­formers to impro­vise most of their scenes around cred­ited screen­writer Deborah Eisenberg’s story outline.

Soderbergh has always been known for being fleet and light on his feet but I think this group of char­ac­ters per­haps needed a little more time to cook. Going back through the film to find audio moments to clip for you I was struck by how unfocused indi­vidu­al scenes could be.

But there are some deli­cious moments and it’s a fine show­case for these vet­er­an per­formers and the con­clu­sion is genu­inely moving.



Steven Soderbergh has been on my mind a bit lately so you might see his name crop­ping up a few times in future posts.


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