Times Colonist

Documentar­y hints at Obama’s next chapter

- JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK — In the backstage hallways of Washington, D.C.’s Capital One Arena, Michelle Obama walks arm-in-arm with her husband, Barack Obama. She has just finished the third stop on what would be a 34-city book tour of such unpreceden­ted scale that it almost resembled a Beyoncé concert tour.

Nadia Hallgren’s camera is trailing them when Michelle Obama, perhaps looking for reassuranc­e, asks the former president: “Does it seem like a show that you’d like to see?”

Hallgren’s documentar­y, Becoming, is — more so than we’ve seen before — the Michelle Obama Show. It captures the former first lady, in settings both public and intimate, navigating her postWhite House life, interactin­g with fans and generally fostering a spirit of positivity, self-belief and hope that few beside her husband are capable of inspiring.

“My life is starting to be mine again,” she says in the film.

“There’s another chapter waiting for me out there.”

Becoming, which debuted Wednesday on Netflix, is an extension of her 2018 bestsellin­g memoir of the same name and a kind of authorized filmic portrait of Obama. It’s produced by Higher Ground Production­s, the film company founded by the Obamas.

Before now, Higher Ground has backed well-received, socially minded documentar­ies about American labour (the Oscar-winning American Factory) and the disability rights movement (the acclaimed Sundance-winner Crip Camp: A Disability Revolution). It’s been an auspicious, awardwinni­ng beginning for Higher Ground, the most ambitious postWhite House dive into Hollywood of any former U.S. president. With Becoming, one half of Higher Ground now steps in front of the camera, too.

The movie, itself, was a secret until last week when Netflix announced is upcoming première. Hallgren typically worked with small crews or just by herself. Much of Becoming takes place either in arenas crowded with cameras or in private settings — the back seat of an SUV, the childhood home of Obama — so few would have spotted her.

“I think if people saw me, it probably looked very unofficial,” chuckles Hallgren.

Unlike the interview-heavy Hulu doc-series Hillary on Hillary Clinton, Hallgren’s approach is mostly fly-on-the-wall, mixing glossy onstage footage of Obama’s talks with the likes of Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoo­n and Stephen Colbert with more personal scenes offstage. Obama reflects on her eight years in the White House and the often racist-tinged response they engendered. “You hope people were more ready for us than maybe they were,” she says.

Obama doesn’t analyze the 2016 election or the rise of Donald Trump except for one comment lamenting the turnout of African American voters. “That’s my trauma,” she says.

But the main trust of Becoming is not just Obama’s story but what she inspires — how one story begets others. Hallgren, drawing from the photograph­y of Garry Winogrand, lingers on the faces in Obama’s crowds, and in some cases takes a moment to follow their lives. Becoming might be part concert film, but it’s nearly as interested in the audience as it is in the showstoppe­r on stage.

“Oftentimes when Mrs. Obama was on stage, I was not the main camera filming her,” says Hallgren. “So I had the opportunit­y to walk around. There was such an incredible energy in those arenas. The excitement that people had felt special. I thought: I want to capture this.”

 ??  ?? Michelle Obama in a scene from Becoming.
Michelle Obama in a scene from Becoming.

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