The Oklahoman

MOVIE REVIEWS

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Read reviews on recent movies, including `Clemency,' `Cunningham,' `The Gentlemen,' `The Last Full Measure,' `Color Out of Space,' and `The Song of Names'

It's a veritable crime against cinema that Tulsa native Alfre Woodard isn't nominated for an Oscar for her masterful portrayal as a troubled prison warden in the acclaimed drama “Clemency.”

Throughout her fourdecade acting career, Woodard has garnered an Academy Award nomination, four Emmy Awards and two Golden Globes, but that doesn't quite do justice to her practicall­y preternatu­ral skills as a performer.

Writer-director Chinonye Chukwu's “Clemency” offers a sublime showcase for the native Oklahoman's finely honed powers. The audience first encounters Woodard's Bernadine Williams, the warden of a maximumsec­urity prison, as she is briskly overseeing her 11th execution, that of death-row inmate Victor Jimenez (Alex Castillo).

In a turn of events ripped from Oklahoma's recent headlines, the lethal injection goes wrong, leaving Jimenez bleeding and writhing in pain, and Bernadine and her team scrambling to pull the curtain on the shocked witnesses and figure out what's gone wrong.

The incident cracks Bernadine's normal stoic mask, revealing an isolated, closed-off woman shellshock­ed after three years serving as the system's death-dealer. Haunted by nightmares, she habitually stops by the bar every night for a several belts before going home to her concerned schoolteac­her husband (the great Wendell Pierce), who wants them both to retire and mend their relationsh­ip. Her pal Chaplain Kendricks (Michael O'Neill) already has decided to retire, and her deputy warden (Richard Gunn) is applying for a warden's job at a prison that doesn't have a death row.

Meanwhile, the next execution is already in the works, and it's a controvers­ial one: Anthony Woods (Aldis Hodge, excellent) was given the death penalty after he was convicted of killing a cop during an armed robbery, although the inmate and his steadfast, world-weary lawyer (Richard Schiff) maintain that Anthony didn't do the actual shooting. As she prepares Anthony for his final days, Bernadine is emotionall­y battered on all sides, by the shouting deathpenal­ty protesters in the parking lot, by the victim's overwrough­t parents, by Anthony's emotional exgirlfrie­nd and by Anthony's increasing­ly desperate hope for clemency.

Chukwu's slow-burn drama — which earned the Grand Jury Prize in the U.S. Dramatic Competitio­n at the 2019 Sundance Film Festival, making the NigerianAm­erican filmmaker the first black woman to win the the festival's biggest prize — occasional­ly threatens to sputter out, but it's Woodard's performanc­e that keeps it aflame.

Especially in contrast with Hodge's showier style, Woodard's turn is a masterpiec­e of subtlety, with the smallest changes in her expressive face, sturdy shoulders and striking eyes revealing an often-overlooked aspect of the death penalty: The toll on the public servants tasked with carrying it out.

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 ?? [NEON] ?? Tulsa native Alfre Woodard stars in “Clemency.”
— Brandy McDonnell, The Oklahoman
[NEON] Tulsa native Alfre Woodard stars in “Clemency.” — Brandy McDonnell, The Oklahoman
 ?? [MAGNOLIA PICTURES] ?? The iconic Merce Cunningham and the last generation of his dance company are profiled in Alla Kovgan's documentar­y “Cunningham.”
[MAGNOLIA PICTURES] The iconic Merce Cunningham and the last generation of his dance company are profiled in Alla Kovgan's documentar­y “Cunningham.”

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