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51 Birch Street

A child discovers his mother
By MICHAEL ATKINSON  |  November 21, 2006
2.5 2.5 Stars

Doug Block comes close to poisoning his family interrogation with dreary self-regard and an NPR-ish tone of simpleton obviousness, but the family, as families often do, offer up some prime rib. After a 54-year marriage, Block’s mother, Mina, suddenly dies, leaving his emotionally distant father stranded in his Long Island home. Or so Block and his two sisters thought. Within a few months, however, the family patriarch, in his 80s, links up with the secretary he’d worked with 30-odd years earlier and prepares to marry. What had been going on? The film is in the end less a detective story than a fascinating portrait of Mina, who’s rediscovered in her own secret diaries as a tempestuously brilliant, literate, chronically frustrated, sexually hungry fireball trapped in Eisenhower Land. If only she had lived longer, or Block had thought to make his movie earlier.

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51 Birch Street's Web site's:http://www.51birchstreet.com/

Related: Eternal returns, It's a mitzvah, Feel-bad cinema, More more >
  Topics: Reviews , Doug Block
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ARTICLES BY MICHAEL ATKINSON
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  •   WILLIAM FRIEDKIN AT THE HARVARD FILM ARCHIVE  |  February 11, 2009
    However we may still praise, and therefore bury, the American New Wave, we do still run the genuine risk of slipping down the wormhole slicked by present-moment techno obsessions and amnesiac entertainment-media narcissism.
  •   REVIEW: CHE  |  January 13, 2009
    An ambitious, whole-hog, four-hour-plus bio-pic of Che Guevara, c'mon.
  •   DREAM CATCHER  |  November 25, 2008
    Karen Shakhnazarov at the MFA
  •   ENDS OF THE EARTH  |  November 07, 2008
    Now in its 20th incarnation, the Boston Jewish Film Festival is almost the oldest three-ring circus of its kind (San Francisco’s annual program got there first by nine years), and in that span we’ve seen the elusive idea of “Jewish film” become an institution.
  •   KINO PRAVDA  |  August 26, 2008
    Because Mosfilm, the subject of the Museum of Fine Arts’ “Envisioning Russia” retrospective, was the Soviet state production studio, any cross-section of its history lays out the entirety of Soviet film history.

 See all articles by: MICHAEL ATKINSON

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