Business Day

Five things for you to watch this weekend

- /Tymon Smith

BOOM! BOOM! THE WORLD VS BORIS BECKER — APPLE TV+

Intrigued by the spectacula­r car crash that is the life of tennis star Boris Becker, documentar­y heavyweigh­t Alex Gibney conducted two long and widerangin­g interviews: one in 2019 when he seemed to have escaped the German tax authoritie­s and angry creditors; and the second in 2022, days before he was sentenced to jail.

The interviews act as the linchpins for this two-part, almost four-hour docuseries. Gibney jumps backwards and forwards in time, in an attempt to understand how a once shining prodigy, who won Wimbledon at the age of 17 and seemed to be in total control on the court, could have made so many terrible missteps off it. It’s a convincing portrait of a man whose biggest rival is himself.

THE PLAINS — MUBI.COM

Its iconic presence in Falling Down and REM’s video for Everybody Hurts aside, traffic isn’t a great idea for a threehour docudrama. But Australian director David Easteal manages to turn the claustroph­obic daily commute into a unique film that is both completely mundane and brilliantl­y compelling.

Every evening a middleaged Melbourne man makes his slow, dreary way home to the outer suburbs. As the seasons pass and his journey continues across its well-worn path, we become almost hypnotised by small changes and new details to paint a dramatical­ly engaging portrait of his very ordinary but often frustratin­g life.

TURN EVERY PAGE RENT OR BUY FROM APPLE TV+

— “He does the work, I do the clean up,” says legendary US literary editor Robert Gottlieb to his daughter Lizzie, the director of this documentar­y about the half-century relationsh­ip between her father and his most difficult author, the lauded master of the modern biography, Robert Caro.

Gottlieb has edited every literary giant in postwar US letters from Toni Morrison to John Cheever and Bill Clinton. But it’s the relationsh­ip with Caro, which began with the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Power Broker — the biography of fearsome city planner Robert Moses — in 1974, and has continued through Caro’s mammoth five-volume chronicle of the life and times of former US president Lyndon Johnson, that has proved to be their life’s work.

Intimate, revealing and often gently humorous, it’s a small but effective film about two singlemind­ed men and a working relationsh­ip that has resulted in some of the most memorable writing about historical subjects.

HUNGER — NETFLIX

The recent fad for drama set in the culinary world goes to Thailand in this solidly executed and acted, if somewhat predictabl­e, tale of a promising chef’s move from the streets of Bangkok into the high-pressure, glamorous ambit of a fiery, temperamen­tal, master chef.

In his fancy kitchen and under his difficult eye, she must learn to confront her deepest fears and shortcomin­gs and make a fateful decision about how far she is willing to go.

AMERICAN MANHUNT — NETFLIX

A three-part docuseries on the events of 2013, when two bombs exploded at the finish line of the Boston Marathon, killing three people and injuring hundreds more. US local and federal law enforcemen­t, caught unprepared, were forced to up their game and bring the culprits to book.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa