Home Video Picks & Passes 06.23.19

A remake is designated a ‘pick.’

(photo: Paramount Pictures)

Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont (2006) — PICK

True Grit (2010) — PICK


Two terrific movies you might not have seen — both picks of my annual “Top 10” lists from years past — are new on Amazon Prime.

Utterly charming and unexpectedly moving, Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont is a droll tale of an unlikely friendship between an elderly widow (delightful Dame Joan Plowright) and a charming young slacker (Rupert Friend).

Dan Ireland’s indie comedy is sensitive to the plight of the elderly and neglected, yet suggests that the elderly have as much to offer the young as to gain from them. You’ll be glad you watched it.

For many people, John Wayne is Rooster Cogburn, but the Coen brothers’ True Grit, starring Hailee Steinfeld, Jeff Bridges and Matt Damon, is not only a better movie, it’s also far more faithful to the Charles Portis novel, with its distinctive language and biblical allusions.

From the opening epigram from Proverbs (“The wicked flee when none pursueth”) to the hymn-laden score (mostly Leaning on the Everlasting Arms), True Grit is among the Coens’ most theological, delicately exploring the dance of justice and grace.

 

CAVEAT SPECTATOR: Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont: Mild profanity and crude language, a couple of brief bedroom scenes (no nudity) involving nonmarital sex. True Grit: Recurring, sometimes bloody Western violence; a few gruesome images; occasional profanity and crass language. Both teens and up.

An image of the Sacred Heart in the Church of the Jesu in Rome

Consecration to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Next week, the Bishops of the United States will meet in Orlando and consecrate America to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. This week on Register Radio we are joined by Bishop Kevin Rhoades to explain the importance of the consecration and how we can all take part and then Register senior writer Zelda Caldwell tells us about the remarkable phenomenon of diocesan priests living in community.