Five characters make confessions under quarantine that touch on their lives during the 2020 pandemic and living in a world of deeply divided politics.Five characters make confessions under quarantine that touch on their lives during the 2020 pandemic and living in a world of deeply divided politics.Five characters make confessions under quarantine that touch on their lives during the 2020 pandemic and living in a world of deeply divided politics.
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Hopefully, there is to be an additional monologue to come, and it will be from a person who danced on the grave of Trump!
I wish I could have danced on the grave of Margaret Thatcher, and I feel the same about Trump and Johnson, the two most divisive fascists since Hitler!
God Bless, Miriam.
Opinions of this movie will almost certainly be split along ideological lines. Personally I found Sarah Paulson's character's monologue the most impressive. The movie isn't any sort of masterpiece, but I enjoyed it.
Bette Midler starts things off superbly as Miriam, a woman who has been booked for attacking a man in a coffee shop. She talks about her life in New York as a middle-class Jewish woman and the things that are important to her. Next is Dan Levy as a gay actor in LA trying to get a role in a gay superhero movie and dealing with gay stereotypes.
Third is Issa Rae as the daughter of a wealthy Black businessman who has political ties through her years in boarding school and who talks about the politics of wealth and privilege. Fourth is Sarah Paulson as a meditation guru who talks about her visit back home with her working class family and the blindness of political fervor. Last is Kaitlyn Dever as a NYC nurse dealing with the day-to-day grind in a hospital flooded with pandemic patients and the loss of one special patient.
Tough, trenchant, and funny.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaShot remotely during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic
- Quotes
Miriam Nessler: He's wearing jeans and a windbreaker, and the hat. The red hat. You know the one. The MAGA hat, in New York City. Two blocks from the public theater and Cooper Union, where Lincoln spoke, and Larry Kramer! That's like me going to Nebraska wearing a yarmulke waving a rainbow flag while reading a book!
- ConnectionsReferences Rosemary's Baby (1968)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
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