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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/

  Topics: Reviews , Doug Block, 51 BIRCH STREET
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ARTICLES BY MICHAEL ATKINSON
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  •   REVIEW: THE DEEP BLUE SEA  |  March 29, 2012
    Like a bad dream trapped in amber, Terence Davies's studied film adaptation of Terence Rattigan's famous 1952 play is both spectrally beautiful and frozen in self-regard.
  •   REVIEW: YOU ARE ALL CAPTAINS  |  November 08, 2011
    A sublime meta-fictional trifle that evokes Abbas Kiarostami's '90s mirror-films of children, Oliver Laxe's jaunt lands in a semi-rural Moroccan school for orphans.
  •   REVIEW: WE CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN  |  November 02, 2011
    Made as a communal experiment, the film is an avalanche of amateur avant-garde hijinks, closer to Brakhage and Markopoulos than to Hollywood.
  •   REVIEW: STRAW DOGS  |  September 20, 2011
    Remaking, polishing, and in effect housebreaking what should've remained untamed and feral, Rod Lurie's new version of the Peckinpah classic follows the original's story beats closely, and so the devil is in the details.
  •   REVIEW: THE DISAPPEARANCE OF MCKINLEY NOLAN  |  August 30, 2011
    An investigative doc brimming with cultural resonance and historical savvy, Henry Corra's film has ahold of a pungent story — that of the titular black Texan fella who vanished in Vietnam 40 years ago.

 See all articles by: MICHAEL ATKINSON



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